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Interpretation of Statute

This document discusses several principles of constitutional interpretation that are applied by courts in India when interpreting the constitution. It begins by outlining three types of interpretation: historical, contemporary, and harmonious construction. It then discusses the interpretation of the preamble and lists general rules of interpretation. The remainder of the document delves into several specific principles in more detail, including: colourable legislation, pith and substance, eclipse, and severability. It provides definitions and examples of how courts have applied each principle when determining the constitutionality of laws.

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0% found this document useful (1 vote)
178 views10 pages

Interpretation of Statute

This document discusses several principles of constitutional interpretation that are applied by courts in India when interpreting the constitution. It begins by outlining three types of interpretation: historical, contemporary, and harmonious construction. It then discusses the interpretation of the preamble and lists general rules of interpretation. The remainder of the document delves into several specific principles in more detail, including: colourable legislation, pith and substance, eclipse, and severability. It provides definitions and examples of how courts have applied each principle when determining the constitutionality of laws.

Uploaded by

Izaan Rizvi
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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INTERPRETATION OF STATUTE

PROJECT 6th SEMESTER


PRINCIPLES OF CONSTITUTIONAL
INTERPRETATION
Submitted by – MOHD IZAAN RIZVI

3rd year Regular


Principles of Constitutional
Interpretation
Introduction
The letters of the constitution are fairly static and not very easy to change but the
laws enacted by the legislature reflect the current state of people and are very
dynamic. To ensure that the new laws are consistent with the basic structure of
the constitution, the constitution must be interpreted in a broad and liberal manner
giving effect to all its parts and the presumption must be that no conflict or
repugnancy was intended by its framers. Applying the same logic, the provisions
relating to fundamental rights have been interpreted broadly and liberally in favor
of the subject. Similarly, various legislative entries mentioned in the Union, State,
and Concurrent list have been construed liberally and widely. There are basically
three types of interpretation of the constitution.

 Historical interpretation

Ambiguities and uncertainties while interpreting the constitutional provisions can


be clarified by referring to earlier interpretative decisions.

 Contemporary interpretation

The Constitution must be interpreted in the light of the present scenario. The
situation and circumstances prevalent today must be considered.

 Harmonious Construction

It is a cardinal rule of construction that when there are in a statute two provisions
which are in such conflict with each other, that both of them cannot stand
together, they should possibly be so interpreted that effect can be given to both.
And that a construction which renders either of them inoperative and useless
should not be adopted except in the last resort.

The Supreme Court held in Re Kerala Education Bill[1] that in deciding the
fundamental rights, the court must consider the directive principles and adopt the
principle of harmonious construction so two possibilities are given effect as much
as possible by striking a balance.

In Qureshi v. State of Bihar[2], The Supreme Court held that while the state
should implement the directive principles, it should be done in such a way so as
not to violate the fundamental rights.

In Bhatia International v Bulk trading SA[3], it was held that if more than one
interpretation is possible for a statute, then the court has to choose the
interpretation which depicts the intention of the legislature.

Interpretation of the preamble of the


Constitution
The preamble cannot override the provisions of the constitution. In Re
Berubari[4], the Supreme Court held that the Preamble was not a part of the
constitution and therefore it could not be regarded as a source of any substantive
power.

In Keshavananda Bharati’s case[5], the Supreme Court rejected the above view
and held the preamble to be a part of the constitution. The constitution must be
read in the light of the preamble. The preamble could be used for the amendment
power of the parliament under Art.368 but basic elements cannot be amended.

The 42nd Amendment has inserted the words “Secularism, Socialism, and
Integrity” in the preamble.

General rules of interpretation of the


Constitution
1. If the words are clear and unambiguous, they must be given the full effect.
2. The constitution must be read as a whole.
3. Principles of harmonious construction must be applied.
4. The Constitution must be interpreted in a broad and literal sense.
5. The court has to infer the spirit of the Constitution from the language.
6. Internal and External aids may be used while interpreting.
7. The Constitution prevails over other statutes .

Principles of Constitutional
Interpretation
The following principles have frequently been discussed by the courts while
interpreting the Constitution:

1. Principle of colourable legislation


2. Principle of pith and substance
3. Principle of eclipse
4. Principle of Severability
5. Principle of territorial nexus
6. Principle of implied powers
7.

Principle of Colourable Legislation


The doctrine of colourability is the idea that when the legislature wants to do
something that it cannot do within the constraints of the constitution, it colours
the law with a substitute purpose which will still allow it to accomplish its original
goal.

Maxim: “Quando aliquid prohibetur ex directo, prohibetur et per


obliqum” which means what cannot be done directly cannot also be done
indirectly.

The rule relates to the question of legislative competence to enact a law.


Colourable Legislation does not involve the question of bonafides or malfides. A
legislative transgression may be patent, manifest or direct or may be disguised,
covert or indirect. It is also applied to the fraud of Constitution.
In India ‘the doctrine of colourable legislation’ signifies only a limitation of the
law-making power of the legislature. It comes into picture while the legislature
purporting to act within its power but in reality, it has transgressed those powers.
So the doctrine becomes applicable whenever legislation seeks to do in an indirect
manner what it cannot do directly. If the impugned legislation falls within the
competence of legislature, the question of doing something indirectly which
cannot be done directly does not arise.

In our Constitution, this doctrine is usually applied to Article 246 which has
demarcated the Legislative competence of the Parliament and the State
Legislative Assemblies by outlining the different subjects under list I for the
Union, List II for the States and List III for the both as mentioned in the seventh
schedule.

This doctrine comes into play when a legislature does not possess the power to
make law upon a particular subject but nonetheless indirectly makes one. By
applying this principle the fate of the Impugned Legislation is decided.

Principle of pith and substance


Pith means ‘true nature’ or essence of something’ and substance means ‘the most
important or essential part of something’. The basic purpose of this doctrine is to
determine under which head of power or field i.e. under which list (given in the
seventh schedule) a given piece of legislation falls.

Union & State Legislatures are supreme within their respective fields. They
should not encroach/ trespass into the field reserved to the other. If a law passed
by one trespass upon the field assigned to the other—the Court by applying Pith
& Substance doctrine, resolve the difficulty &declare whether the legislature
concerned was competent to make the law.

If the pith & substance of the law (i.e. the true object of the legislation) relates to
a matter within the competence of the legislature which enacted it, it should be
held intra vires—though the legislature might incidentally trespass into matters,
not within its competence. The true character of the legislation can be ascertained
by having regard—to the enactment as a whole — to its object – to the scope and
effect of its provisions.
Case: State of Bombay v. FN Balsara[6]

Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949 which prohibited sale & possession of liquors in
the State, was challenged on the ground that it incidentally encroached upon
Imports & Exports of liquors across custom frontier – a Central subject. It was
contended that the prohibition, purchase, use, possession, and sale of liquor will
affect its import. The court held that act valid because the pith & substance fell
under Entry 8 of State List and not under Entry 41 of Union List.

Principle of eclipse
The Doctrine of Eclipse says that any law inconsistent with Fundamental
Rights is not invalid. It is not dead totally but overshadowed by the fundamental
right. The inconsistency (conflict) can be removed by a constitutional amendment
to the relevant fundamental right so that eclipse vanishes and the entire law
becomes valid.

All laws in force in India before the commencement of the Constitution shall be
void in so far they are inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution. Any
law existing before the commencement of the Constitution and inconsistent with
the provision of Constitution becomes inoperative on commencement of
Constitution. But the law does not become dead. The law remains a valid law in
order to determine any question of law incurred before the commencement of the
Constitution. An existing law only becomes eclipsed to the extent it comes under
the shadow of the FR.

Case: Keshavan Madhava Menon v. The State of Bombay[7]

In this case, the law in question was an existing law at the time when the
Constitution came into force. That existing law imposed on the exercise of the
right guaranteed to the citizens of India by article 19(1)(g) restrictions which
could not be justified as reasonable under clause (6) as it then stood and
consequently under article 13(1)[8] that existing law became void “to the extent
of such inconsistency”.

The court said that the law became void not in to or for all purposes or for all
times or for all persons but only “to the extent of such inconsistency”, that is to
say, to the extent it became inconsistent with the provisions of Part III which
conferred the fundamental rights of the citizens.

Thus the Doctrine of Eclipse provides for the validation of Pre-Constitution Laws
that violate fundamental rights upon the premise that such laws are not null and
void ab initio but become unenforceable only to the extent of such inconsistency
with the fundamental rights. If any subsequent amendment to the Constitution
removes the inconsistency or the conflict of the existing law with the fundamental
rights, then the Eclipse vanishes and that particular law again becomes active
again.

Principle of Severability
The doctrine of severability provides that if an enactment cannot be saved by
construing it consistent with its constitutionality, it may be seen whether it can be
partly saved. Article 13 of the Constitution of India provides for Doctrine of
severability which states that-

All laws in force in India before the commencement of Constitution shall be void
in so far they are inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution.

The State shall not make any law which takes away/ shortens the rights conferred
by Part III of the Constitution i.e. Fundamental Rights. Any law made in
contravention of the provisions of the Constitution shall be void and invalid. The
invalid part shall be severed and declared invalid if it is really severable. (That is,
if the part which is not severed can meaningfully exist without the severed part.)
Sometimes the valid and invalid parts of the Act are so mixed up that they cannot
be separated from each other. In such cases, the entire Act will be invalid.

Case: AK Gopalan v. State of Madras[9]

In this case, the Supreme Court said that in case of repugnancy to the Constitution,
only the repugnant provision of the impugned Act will be void and not the whole
of it, and every attempt should be made to save as much as possible of the Act. If
the omission of the invalid part will not change the nature or the structure of the
object of the legislature, it is severable. It was held that except Section 14 all other
sections of the Preventive Detention Act, 1950 were valid, and since Section 14
could be severed from the rest of the Act, the detention of the petitioner was not
illegal.

Principle of Territorial Nexus


Article 245 (2) of the Constitution of India makes it amply clear that ‘No law
made by Parliament shall be deemed to be invalid on the ground that it would
have extra-territorial operation’. Thus a legislation cannot be questioned on the
ground that it has extra-territorial operation. It is well-established that the Courts
of our country must enforce the law with the machinery available to them, and
they are not entitled to question the authority of the Legislature in making a law
which is extra-territorial. The extra-territorial operation does not invalidate a law.
But some nexus with India may still be necessary in some of the cases such as
those involving taxation statutes.

The Doctrine of Territorial Nexus can be invoked under the following


circumstances-

 Whether a particular state has extra-territorial operation.


 If there is a territorial nexus between the subject- matter of the Act and the
state making the law

It signifies that the object to which the law applies need not be physically located
within the territorial boundaries of the state, but must have a sufficient territorial
connection with the state. A state may levy a tax on a person, property, object or
transaction not only when it is situated within its territorial limits, but also when
it has a sufficient and real territorial connection with it. Nexus test was applied to
the state legislation also

Case: Tata Iron & Steel Company v. Bihar State [10]

The State of Bihar passed a Sales Tax Act for levy of sales tax whether the sale
was concluded within the state or outside if the goods were produced, found and
manufactured in the state. The court held there was sufficient territorial nexus and
upheld the Act as valid. Whether there is sufficient nexus between the law and
the object sought to be taxed will depend upon the facts and circumstances of a
particular case.

It was pointed out that sufficiency of the territorial connection involved a


consideration of two elements- a) the connection must be real and not illusory b)
the liability sought to be imposed must be pertinent to that connection.

Principle of Implied powers


Laws which are necessary and proper for the execution of the power or incidental
to such power are called implied powers and these laws are presumed to be
constitutional. In other words, constitutional powers are granted in general terms
out of which implied powers must necessarily arise. Likewise, constitutional
restraints are put in general terms out of which implied restraints must also
necessarily establish.

This is a Legal principle which states that, in general, the rights and duties of a
legislative body or organization are determined from its functions and purposes
as specified in its constitution or charter and developed in practice .

Conclusion
The Constitution is the supreme and fundamental law of our country. Since it is
written in the form of a statute, the general principles of statutory interpretation
are applicable to the interpretation of the constitution as well. It is important to
note that the constitution itself endorses the general principles of interpretation
through Article 367(1), which states that unless the context otherwise requires,
the General Clauses Act, 1897 shall apply for the interpretation of this
constitution as it applies to the interpretation of an act of the legislature.

[1] 1959 1 SCR 995

[2] 1958 AIR 731

[3] (2003) 5 SCC (Jour) 22

[4] AIR 1960 SC 845


[5] AIR 1973 SC 1461

[6] AIR 1951 SC 318

[7] [1961] S.C.R. 288

[8] Article 13 (1) – All laws in force in the territory of India immediately before
the commencement of this Constitution, in so far as they are inconsistent with the
provisions of this Part, shall, to the extent of such inconsistency, be void.

[9] AIR 1950 SC 27

[10] AIR 1958 SC 482

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