The Doctrine Of Repugnancy In The Indian Constitution
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Doctrine Of Repugnancy In The Indian Constitution
Article 254 of the Indian Constitution talks about the doctrine of repugnancy. It involves solving questions of repugnancy between the Central and the State law. According to Article 254(1), if any provision of a state law is repugnant to a provision in a law made by the Parliament, which the Parliament is competent to enact, or with any existing law regarding any matter in the Concurrent List, then the Parliamentary law would prevail over the State law. It will be of no importance whether the Parliamentary law was enacted before or after the State law. To the extent of repugnancy, the State law will be void. It is due to this Article that the power of the Parliament to legislate upon matters contained in List III i.e., the Concurrent List is supreme. The Article gives an overriding effect to any statue which the Parliament is competent to enact and which has been enacted by it. The application of this provision most commonly arises when there is a direct conflict between statues enacted by both the Center and the State on matters in the Concurrent List, and there is repugnancy between them. Repugnancy arises between two statues when they occupy the same field and are completely inconsistent with each other and have absolutely irreconcilable provisions, as stated in the case of Deep Chand v. State of Uttar Pradesh[2]. The Supreme Court held in the case of Bharat Hydro Power Corpn. Ltd. v. State of Assam[3], as well as in the case of Central Bank of India v. State of Kerala[4], that every effort should be made to reconcile the two enactments and construe them both, in such a way, so as to avoid them being repugnant to each other. If the two enactments operate in different fields without encroaching upon each other, then there will be no repugnancy. It is essential that the repugnancy should exist in fact. It should also be clearly and sufficiently shown that the Central and State laws are repugnant to each other. It was held in the case of State of Maharasthra v. Bharat Shanti Lal Shah[5], that there was no such repugnancy between Ss. 13 to 16 of the Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act, 1999 which is a State Act and Section 5(2) of the Telegraph Act, 1885, which is a Central Act. It should be noted that, based on the rule of pith and substance, if the Center made a law upon a subject in the Central or Concurrent List and the State made a law on a matter in the State List, then the question of repugnancy would not arise. As seen in Krishna v. State of Madras[6], and in State of Madras v. Dunkerley[7], a State law would not be rendered invalid, on its incidental encroachment in the Concurrent List, if it is enacted with respect to a matter in the State List. It would be void if it is enacted with respect to a matter in the Union List. Article 254(2) provides a manoeuvre to save a State law which is repugnant to the Central law on matters provided for in the Concurrent List. As such, it relaxes the rule of repugnancy contained in Article 254(1). Under ordinary circumstances, the Central law reigns supreme over a State law, rendering the State law void. However, there may arise some extraordinary circumstances in a State, under which special provisions made by the state will be more desirable than a uniform central law. As such Article 254(2) was incorporated in the Constitution to maintain an element of flexibility and to make it possible to have a State law suitable to local circumstances against a contrary Central law on a matter. The Article states that if a state law has been enacted on a subject in the concurrent list and it contains provisions repugnant to the provisions of a central law, then with respect to that particular matter, the state law will prevail in the concerned state. The law should have been reserved for the consideration of the president and it should have received his assent. The result of this assent will be that, the state law would continue to operate in that particular state and would overrule the application of the central act in that state only. It is essential that both the laws deal with a subject on the concurrent list. Explaining the effect of Article 254(2), the Supreme Court said in the case of Hoechst Pharm Ltd. v. State of Bihar, that the result of obtaining the assent of the president in respect to a state act which was inconsistent with a previous union law relating to a concurrent subject would be that, the state law would prevail in that state and it would override the provisions of the Central act in that state only. However, the final say rests with the centre which would eventually decide whether the central law would give way to the state law or not. The state law so assented to, would prevail only to the extent of its inconsistency with the central law. It would not override the whole of the central law, as held by the court in Ukha Kolhe v. State of Maharsthra[8]. The Supreme Court observed in Zaverbhai Amaidas v. State of Bombay[9], the words with respect to that matter are of great importance in the Article 254(2). It stated that the important thing to consider was whether the legislation was in respect to the same matter. If the later legislation deals with a matter which is distinct from the subject of the earlier legislation but is of a cognate and allied character, then Article 254(2) will have no application. Article 254(2) does not operate when the two Acts operate in different fields. An illustration of this is the case of Official Assignee, Madras v. Inspector General of Registration[10], where the Central Act concerned Insolvency under entry 9 of List III and the State Act related to Stamp duties under entry 44 of List III. It was held that no stamp fees would be payable on the sale deed executed by the Official Assignee. Article 254(2) was implemented with the view of saving those state laws falling under the Concurrent List from being superseded by central laws due to the doctrine of repugnancy. The sub-clause operates when two conditions are present. These conditions are:- There must be a valid central law on the same subject matter and in the same field in the concurrent list to which the central law relates.
- The state law must be repugnant to the central law
- AIR 2002 SC 852, 894
- AIR 1959 SC 648.
- (2004) 2 SCC 553
- (2009) 4 SCC 94
- (2008) 13 SCC 5
- AIR 1957 SC 297
- AIR 1958 SC 560
- AIR 1963 SC 1531
- AIR 1954 SC 752
- AIR 1981 Mad. 54
- (1995) 4 SCC 718
- (2009) 5 SCC 342
- AIR 1972 SC 1738
- AIR 1973 SC 231
- AIR 1976 SC 1031
- AIR 1983 SC 1019
- (2003) 1 SC 228
- AIR 1938 SC 150
- AIR 1987 SC 1960
- AIR 1999 SC 443
- AIR 2001 Kant, 457, 465
- AIR 1956 SC 676
- M.P.Jain, Indian Constitutional Law, 7th Edition, LexisNexis, p.569
- AIR 1972 SC 2301
- AIR 1987 SC 1518
- AIR 1990 SC 2072
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