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Chapter-4: Judicial Interpretation of The Expression "Other Authorities"

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142

CHAPTER- 4

JUDICIAL INTERPRETATION OF
THE EXPRESSION "OTHER AUTHORITIES"

The definition of "State" is not confmed to a Government Department


and the Legislature, but extends to any action- administrative (whether statutory
or non-statutmy), judicial or quasi-judicial, which can be brought within the
fold of 'State action' being action which violates a fundamental right.

Judicial decisions have given a wide scope to the expression "other


authorities" in article 12. The main theory evolved is that of "instrumentality
or agency" of Government. This is a concept wider than a "department of the
Government". It embraces every public authority exercising statutory powers,
every authority created under statute and even a non-statutory authority
exercising public functions.

The ambit and scope ofthe expression "other authorities" under Atticle
12 is very wide and the development and growth of law shows that the said
phrase has been interpreted more and more liberally so as to include within its
sweep more and more authorities with a view to giving protection to the
aggrieved persons against the actions taken by those authorities.

I. Rule of ejusdem generis

Atticle 12 winds up the list of authorities falling within the defmition


of the State by refering to 'other authorities' within the territory of India or
under the control of the Government of India. What are those 'other
authorities'? To begin with, some High Courts held that since the expression
'other authorities' is used after mentioning a few of them, namely, the
government and Parliament of India, the Government and the Legislature of
each of the States, and local authorities, it would be reasonable to construe
143

this expression ejusdem generis with Government or Legislature. 1 So construed,


it could only mean authorities exercising governmental or sovereign powers
and functions. On this interpretation, the expression, 'other authorities' would
only include such bodies as are functioning for or on behalf of the Central or
State Governments. This restricted interpretation of the expression 'other
authorities' was however, rejected by the Supreme Court. It held that the
doctrine of ejusdem generis was inapplicable to the interpretation of the
expression 'other authorities'. To invoke the application of ejusdem generis
rule, the court said, there must be a distinct genus or category running through
these named boides nor could these bodies be placed in one single category on
any rational basis. 2 Laying down these propositions in Electricity Board,
Rajasthan v. Mohan LaP, the Supreme Court held that 'other authorities' would
include all authorities created by the Constitution or statute on whom powers
are confetTed by law. It was not necessaty that the statutory authority should
be engaged in performing government or sovereign functions. In support t~e
Court cited, Articles ·19 (1) (g) and 298 which contemplate trade or business
by the State and Articles 46 which requires the State to promote educational
and economic interests. In these cases 'other authorities' would cover bodies
created for the purpose of pe1forming commercial activities or for promoting
the educational and economic interests of the people. The court also noted
that in the instant case the Rajasthan Electricity Board had power to give
directions, the disobedience of which was punishable as an offence. This
decision in effect overruled earlier cases holding 'university' not to. be 'the
State' within the meaning of Article 12. 4 Accordingly the universities have
been, later, held to be 'the State'. 5

1. University of Madras v. Shantha Bat, AIR 1954 Mad 67; B. W. Devdas v. Selection
Committee, AIR 1964 Mys 6; Krishna Gopal v. Punjab Universif)~ AIR 1966, Punj 34.
2. Electricity Board, Rajasthan v. Mohan Lal, AIR 1967 SC 1857, 1862, see also, Ujjam
Bat (Smt.) v. State of UP, AIR 1962 SC 1857.
3. AIR 1967 SC 1857.
4. University ofMadras v. Shantha Bat, AIR 1954 Mad 67; Krishna Gopal v. Punjab
University, AIR 1966 Punj 34.
5. Umesh v. V.N Singh, AIR 1968 Pat 3.
144

In the next important case on the subject, Sukhdev Singh v. Bhagatram 6


question arose whether statutory corporations such as the ONGC, IFC and
LIC created respectively by the Oil and Natural Gas Commission Act, 1959,
the Industrial

Finance Act, 1948, the Life Insurance Act, 1956, came within the
definition of 'the state' under Article 12. By a majority of 4 to 1, the court held
that the three corporations were State. Following the Rajasthan Electricity
case, majority led by Ray, C.J., held that the three corporations were created
by statutes, had the statutory power to make binding tules and regulations,
and were subject to pervasive governmental control. They were, therefore,
'other authorities' within the meaning of Article 12. Mathew, J. concurring,
held that the public corporation is a new type of institution which sprang from
the new social and econmnic functions of government and instead of classifying
it into old legal category, it should be adapted to the changing times and
conditions. The State, being an abstract entity, could undertake trade or business
as envisaged under Article 298 through an agency, instmmentality or a juristic
person. Statutory corporations are agencies or insttumentalities of the State
for carrying on trade or business which otherwise would have been carried
out by the State departmentally. Therefore, it has to be seen whether a body is
acting as an agency or instrumentality of the State. Whether it is so acting or
not could be determined on the sole criterion of existence of sovereign power
to pass laws or regulations having the force oflaw. Nor could it be detetmined
exclusively on the basis of the extent of State contt·ol or the amount of fmancial
support. State fmancial support plus an unusual degree of control over the
management and policies could be one indicator of the character of the body.
The other indicator was the kind of function the body was performing. 'The
combination of State aid and the furnishing of an important public service',
he said, "may result in a conclusion that the operation should be classified as
a State agency".

In Article 12 the expression 'other authorities' is used after mentioning

6. AIR 1975 SC 1331.


145

a few of them, such as, the Government and Parliament of India, the
Government and Legislature of each of the States and all local authorities. In
University ofMadras v. Santa Bai, 7 the Madras High Court held that 'other
authmities' could only indicate authorities of a like nature, i.e ejusdem generis.
So construed, it could only mean authorities exercising governmental or
sovereign functions. It cannot include persons, natural or juristic, such as a
University unless it is maintained by the State' But in Ujjamm Bai v. State of
UP., 8 the Court rejected this restrictive interpretation of the expression 'other
authorities' given by the Madras High Court and held that the ejusdem generis
rule could not be resorted to in interpreting this expression.

In Article 12 the bodies specially named are the Government, of the


Union and the States, the Legislature of the Union and the States and local
Authorities. There is no common genus running through these named bodies
nor can these bodies so placed in one single category on any rational basis.

II. Statutory Corporations

In Electricity Board, Rajasthan v. Mohan Lal, 9 the Supreme Court held


that the expression 'other authorities' is wide enough to include all authorities
created by the Constitution or Statute on whom powers are confened by law.
It is not necessary that the statutory authority should be engaged in performing
governmental or sovereign function. On this interpretation the expression
10
'other authorities' will include Rajasthan Electricity Board, C ochin Devasom
Board 11 , Co-operative Society 12, Which have power to make bye-laws under
Co-operative Societies Act, 1911. The Chief Justice of High Court is also
included in the expression 'other authorities' as he has power to appoint officials

7. AIR 1954 Mad. 67.


8. AIR 1962 SC 1621
9. AIR 1967 SC 1857, followed in Umesh v. V.N Singh, AIR 1968 Pat. 3
10. Electricity Board, Rajasthan, v.lviohan Lal, AIR 1967 SC 1857
11. P.B.M Namboodripad v. Cochin Devasom Board, AIR 1956 TC 19
12. Dukhoram v. Co-operative Agricultural Association, AIR 1961 MP 219.
146

of the Court. 13 The President14 when making order under Article 359 of the
Constitution comes within the ambit of the expression 'other authorities'. In
effect, the Rajasthan Electricity Board's decision 15 has overruled the decision
of the Madras High Court in Santa Bai 's case, holding a University not to be
"the State". And fmally, the Patna High Court, following the decision of the
Supreme Court, has held that the Patna University is a "State" 16 .

In the above mentioned case 17, the court was of the opinion that the
dictionary meaning of the word "authority was a public administrative agency
or corporation having quasi-govemmental powers and authorized to administer
a revenue producing public enterprise. This dictionary meaning of the word
"authority" was clearly wide enough to include all bodies created by a statute
on which powers are conferred to cany out govemment or quasi-govemmental
functions. The expression "other authorities" was thus wide enough to include
within it every authority created by a statute and functioning within the te1ritmy
if India, or under the control of the Govemment of India, and there was no
reasons to narrow down this meaning in the context in which the words "other
authorities" were used in Article 12 of the Constitution18 •

The expression "other authorities ' mArticle 12 will thus include all
constitutional or statutory authorities on whom powers are conferr-ed by law. It
was not at all material that some of the powers conferred on the authority may
be for the purpose of carrying on commercial activities for under the
Constitution, the State is itself envisaged as having the right to carry on trade
or business as mentioned in Article 19(1) (g). In Part IV, the word "State' has
been given the same meaning as in Article 12 and one of Directive Principles
laid down in Article 46 is that the State shall promote with special care the
educational and economic interest of the weaker sections of the people. The
13. Parmatma Saran v. ChiefJustice, AIR 1964 Raj. 13.
14. Harroobhai v. State, AIR 1964 Guj. 229.
15. AIR 1967 SC 1857
16. Umesh v. V.N Singh, AIR 1968 Pat. 3
17. AIR 1967 SC 1857.
lB. Ibid
147

State as defined in Article 12, was thus comprehended to include bodies created
for the purpose of promoting the educational and economic interest of the
people. The State, as constituted by our constitution, was further specifically
empowered under Article 298 to carry on any trade or business. The
circumstance that the Board under the Electricity Supply Act was required to
carry on some activities of the nature of trade or commerce does not, therefore,
give any indication that the Board must be executive from the scope the word
·'State' as used in Article 12. On the other hand, there are provisions in the
Electricity Supply Act which clearly show that the powers conferred on the
Board include power to give direction, the disobedience of which is punishable
as a criminal offence. The Rajasthan Electricity Board was clearly an authority
to which the provisions of Part III of the Constitution were applicable19 .

In Article 12 of the Constitution, the bodies specifically named are the


Executive Governments of the Union and the States, the Legislatures of the
Union and the States and local authorities. There was not any common genus
running through these named bodies nor can these bodies be placed in one
single category on any rational basis. The doctrine of ejusdem generis could
not, therefore, be applied to the interpretation of the expression other authorities
in this Article20 •

The Board was invested by statutes with extensive power of control


over electricity undertakings. The power to make rules and regulations and to
administer the Act was in substance the sovereign power of the State delegated
to the Board. The Board was thus an "other authority" within the meaning of
Article 12 of the Constitution21 .

Every constitutional or statutory authority on whom powers are conferred


by law is however not "other authority" within the meaning of Article 12. The
expression "authority" in its etymological sense means a body invested with
power to commmand or give an ultimate decision, or enforce obedience, or
having a legal right to command and be obeyed22 .
19. Ibid
20. Ibid.
21. Ibid at 1858,
22. Ibid
148

In determining what the expression "other authority" in Atticle 12


connotes, regard must be had not only to the sweep of fundamental rights over
the power of the authority, but also to the restriction which may be imposed
upon the exercise of cettain fundamental rights (e.g. those declared by article
19) by the authority. Fundamental rights within their allotted fields transcend
the legislative and executive power ofthe sovereign authority. But some of the
important fundamental rights are liable to be circumscribed by the imposition
of reasonable restrictions by the State. The true content of the expression "other
authority" in Atticle 12 must be determined in the light of this dual phase of
fundamental rights. In considering whether a statutory or constitutional body
is an authority within the meaning of Atticle 12, it would be necessary to bear
in mind not only whether against the authority, fundamental rights in terms
absolute are intended to be enforced, but also whether it was intended by the
Constitution-makers that the authority was invested with the sovereign power
to impose restrictions on very important and basic fundamental freedoms 23 .

Those authorities which are invested with sovereign power i.e. power
to make rules or regulations and to administer or enforce them to the detriment
of citizens and others, fall within the definition of 'State' in Atticle 12, and
· constitutional or statutory bodies which do not share that sovereign power of
the State are not, 'State' within the meaning of Atticle 12 of the Constitution24 .

The fact of the case25 was that the appellant was Electricity Board of
Rajasthan, Jaipur, a body corporate constituted on 1st July 1957, under the
Electricity (supply) Act, 1948 (No. 54 of 1948). Before the constitution of the
Board, the supply of electricity in the State of Rajasthan was being controlled
directly by a department of the State Government named as the Electrical and
mechanical Department. Respondent No. 1, Mohan Lal, as well as respondents
4 to 14 were all permanent employees of the State Government holding posts
of foremen in the Electrical and Mechanical Departmenf6 •
23. Ibid.
24. Ibid.
25. Ibid at 1859.
26. Ibid.
149

On the constitution of the Board, the services of most of the employees,


including all these respondents, were provisionally placed at the disposal of
the Board by a notification issued by the government on 12th Febmary 1958,
purporting to exercise its power under S. 78-A of Act 54 of 1948. In this
notification a direction was included that the Board was to frame its own new
grades and service conditions under its regulations, and the employees, whose
service, were transferred to the Board, were exercise option either to accept
these new grades and service conditions, or to continue in their existing grades
and service condition, except in regard to conduct and disciplinary rules, or to
obtain relief from Government service by claiming pension or gratuity as might
be admissible on ambition of posts under the Rajasthan Service Rules. The
Board, however, did not frame any new grades and service conditions at least
up to the time that the present litigation arose. Respondent No. 1 was, however,
deputed by the State Government by its order, dated 27th January 1960, after
having worked under the Board for a period of about two years, to the public
works department of the Government. On 1Oth August 1960, an order was
made by the Government addressed to the Secretary of the Board indicating
that respondent No~ 1 as well as respondent 4 to 14 were to be treated as on
deputation to the Board. on 24th November 1962, the Public Works department
passed an order reverting respondent No.1 to his parent department with effect
from 1st December 1962, but the period of deputation was later extended till
25th July 1963. On 11th July 1963, he was actuallyrevetted to the Board from
the Public Works Department and the Board issued orders posting respondent
No 1 as a Foreman. In the interval, while respondent No. 1 was working in the
public Works department, respondents 4 to 14 had been promoted by the Board
as Assistant Engineers, while respondent No. 1 was promoted to work as
Assistant Engineer in the Public Works Department. On his reversion,
respondent No. 1 claimed that ha was also entitled to be promoted as Assistant
Engineer under the Board, because some of the other respondents promoted
were Junior to him, and, in the alternative, that, in any case, he was entitled to
be considered for promotion. This request made by him to the Board as well as
to the State Govemment was tmned down and, thereupon, respondent No. 1
150

field a petition under articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution in the High
Court of Rajasthan. Respondent no.1 claimed that he was entitled to equality
of treatment with respondents 4 to 14, and, inasmuch as he had not been
considered for promotion with them by the Board had acted in violation of
Arts. 14 and 16 of the Constitution27 .

The Board contes~ed the petition on two grounds. The first ground was
that respondent No. 1 hadI never become a permanent servant of the Board and
I

never held any substantive


!
post under it, so that he could not claim to be
considered for promotioii with respondents 4 to 14. The second ground was
that the Board could not be held to be 'State' as defmed in Art. 12 of the
Constitution and, consequently, no direction could be issued to the Board by
the High Comt under Art. 226 or Art. 227 of the Constitution on the basis that
the actions of the Board had violated Arts. 14 to 16 of the Constitution. The
High Court rejected both these grounds, accepted the plea of respondent No. 1
quashed the order of promotion of respondents 4 to 14 and issued a direction
to the Board to consider promotions afresh after taking into account the claims
of respondent No. 1. The Board has now come up in appeal to this court, by
special leave, against this order of the High Court. Apart from the Board, the
State of Rajasthan, and the Chief Engineer and Technical member of the
Rajasthan State Electricity Board, Jaipur, were also impleaded as opposite
parties in the writ petition and they are respondents 2 and 3 in this appeal28 .

On the first question, Mr. S. T.Desai on behalf of the appellant drew the
attention to the notification, dated 12the Febtuary 1958, in which it was
specifically laid down that the services of respondent No. 1 and respondents 4
to 14 were being placed at the disposal of the Board 'provisionally'. He has
shown the various pleadings in the petition filed by respondent No.1 before
the High Court was that he never became a permanent servant of the Board
and was claiming that, after the winding up of the Electric and Mechanical
Department of the Government, he was temporarily with the Board and, later,

27. Ibid at 1860.


28. Ibid.
151

became a permanent servant of the State in the Public Works Department. The
High Court, on the other hand, held that the pleadings of respondent No. 2
were obscure and that the correct position was that respondent No.1 had become
an employee of the Board, so that he was entitled to claim promotion in the
service of the Board29 .

There was no doubt that the respondent No. 1 had put forward the case
that he was originally a servant of the State of Rajasthan and continued to be
such throughout and retained his lien on that Government Service. In Para 27
an alternative pleading was also put fmward on his behalf that, if it be held
that, on the abolition of the Electrical and Mechanical Department of the State,
he had no lien with the Government and his services were permanently
transferred to the Board, he was placed in identical circumstances as the other
respondents 4 to 14 and continued to be governed by the service conditions
which were applicable to him when he was in the service of State Government,
so that he was entitled to be considered for promotion with respondents 4 to
14, It is also correct that, initially, when the services of the various respondents
were placed at the disposal of the Board, the Government purported to do so
provisionally, and at no later stage did the Government pass any order
transferring their services to the Board, permanently. It, however, appears that
both the Government and the Board, in dealing with respondent No.1 as well
as the other respondents, treated them as if they had become employees of the
Board.

The services of respondent No.1 were placed at the disposal of the


Public Works Department where he remained for a period of a little over there
years, but he was all the time treated there as on deputation. At that time, in the
order posting him to the Public Works Department, it was laid down that he
would retains his lien· in the power Department. According to Mr, Desai, the
Power Department mentioned in this order was meant to refer to the Electrical
and Mechanical Department of the Government which used to be popularly
known by that name. It was found in the judgment of the High Court that the

29. Ibid.
152

High Court attempted to gather the meaning of !the expression "Power


. I

· Department'' by questioning the counsel for the Board! and the Officer-in charge
I

of the Board who appeared before the High Comt ~d was able to discover
that there is no Power Department existing as such and that this was just another
name for the State Electricity Board. On this view ofthe High Comt, the order
of the Government, dated 27th January 1960, would indicate that the lien of
respondent No.1 was on a post under the Board. Further, when respondent No.
1 was relieved from the post of Assistant Engineer in the Public Works
I

Department, the order which the Government passed specifically mentioned


that he was taken on deputation from the Board and directed his reversion to
his parent department30•

In the order of reversion, respondent No. 1 was thus treated as an


employee of the Board which was described as ~s parent department and
I from which he had been taken on deputation in the Public Works Department.
I
Even the Board itself, in its order, dated 11th July 1963, proceeded on the
basis that respondent No.1 had reverted from the Public Works Department
and made a direction that, on reversion from that Qepartment, he was posted
as Foreman I. Chambel Grid Sub-Station, Udaipur, ~gainst a newly sanctioned
post. Thus, the Board accepted the position that resp;ondent No.1 was a servant
I

of the Board and not an employee ofthe State Gove:rtnmentin


I
the Public Works
Department. The 'reversion' used in the order clearly implied that, even
according to the Board, Respondent No. 1 was be~g sent back to his parent
department from a department where he had be'en sent on deputation or
'
temporarily. A further consideration is that respondents Nos. 4 to 14 were
treated by the Board as its permanent employees and were actually granted
promotion to the posts of Assistant Engineers from the post of Foremen on
I
that basis. In the cases of these respondents also, there is nothing to show that,
after their services were provisionally placed at thb disposal of the Board by
the notification, dated 12th February 1958, any order was passed permanently
transferring them to the Board and, yet they were treated as pe1manent

30. Ibid.
153

employees of the Board. Respondent No. 1 was identically placed, and, in


these circumstances, we are unable to hold that the High Court committed any
error in holding that respondentNo. 1 was in the service of the Board just as
were respondents 4 to 1431 •

The notification, dated 12th February 1958, had specifically laid down
that the Board was to frame its new grades and service conditions and one of
the alternatives to be given to each employee, whose services were placed at
the disposal of the Board,·was either to be governed by these new grades and
service conditions, or to continue to be governed by the grades and service
conditions already applicable to them when they were in the Electrical and
Mechanical Department. Since the Board did not frame any new grades or
new service conditions, it is clear that respondent No. 1 as well as respondent
4 to 14 continued to be govetned by the old grades and service conditions
applicable to them when they were servants of the State Government in the
Electrical and Mechanical Department where they were all serving as foreman.
All of them being governed by identical rules, it is clear that respondent No. 1
was entitled to be considered for promotion under the Board on the basis of
equality with respondents Nos. 4 to 1432 •

On the second point that the Board cannot be held to be 'State' within
its meaning in Art. 12 of the Constitution, Mr. Desai urged that, on the face of
it, the Board could not be held to be covered by the authmities named therein,
viz, the Government and Parliament of India and the Government and the
Legislature of each of the State and local authorities, and the expression "other
authorities", if read ejusdem generis with those named, cannot cover the Board
which is a body corporate having a separate existence and has been constituted
primarily for the purpose of carrying on commercial activities. In support of
his position that the expression "other authmities" should be interpreted ejusdem
generis, he relied on a decision of the madras High Court in University of
Madras v. Shantha BaP 3 • The High Court, considering the question whether a
31. lbid.at 1861.
32. Ibid
33. AIR 1954 Mad 67.
154

· University can be held to be local or other authority as defmed in Art. 12, held:

These words must be construed 'ejusdem generis ' with


Government or legislature, and, so construed, can only mean
authorities exercising governmental functions. They could not
include persons natural or juristic who cannot. be· regarded as
instrumentalities of the Government. The University of Madras
is a body corporate created by Madras Act 7 of 1923. It is not
charged with the execution of any governmental functions;
its purpose is purely to promote education. Though S. 44 of
the Act provides for financial contribution ·by the local
government, the University is authorized to raise its own funds
of income from fees, endowments and the like. It is a State-
aided institution, but it is not maintained by the State34 •

In B.W.Devadas v. Selection Committee for Admission of Student to


the Karnatak Engineering College35 , the High Comt of Mysore held:

The tetm 'authority" in the ordinmy dictionmy sense may


comprise not merely a person or a group of persons exercising
governmental power, but also any person or group of persons
who, by virtue of their position in relation to other person or
persons, may be able to impose their will upon that other person
or persons. But there is an essential difference between a
political association of persons called "the State" giving rise
to political power connoted by the well known expression
"imperative law'' and a non-political association of persons
for other purposes by contract, consent or similar type of
natural understanding related to the common object of persons
so associating themselves together giving rise to a power which
operates not in the manner in which imperative law operates,

34. University ofMadras v. Shantha Bai, AIR 1954 Mad 67, quoted in Electricity Board,
Rajasthan v. MohanLal, AIR 1967 SC 1857 at 1861.
35. AIR 1964 Mys 6.
155

but by virtue of its acceptance by such associating persons


based upon contract, consent or mutual understanding36 •

Proceeding further, the Comt held :

The term "authorities" occurring in Art. 12 could only mean a


person or a group of persons who exercise the legislative or
executive functions of a State or through whom or through
the instrmnentality or whome the State exercises its legislative
or executive power37 .

In Krishan Gopal Ram Chand Sharma'~ Punjab University3 8, where


the decision given in the case of University ofMadras39 , was followed and the
principle laid down therein was approved and applied. On the basis of these
decisions, and the principles laid down therein, it was urged that an examination
of the provisions of the Electricity Supply Act will show that the Board is an
autonomous body which cannot be held to be functioning as an agent of the
executive Government and, consequently, it should be held that it is not "State"
within the meaning of Article 12 of the Constitution40 .
The High Courts fell into an error in applying the principle of ejusdem
generis when interpreting the expression "other authorities" in .Atticle 12 of
the Constitution, as they overlooked the basic principle of interpretation that,
to invoke the application of ejusdem generis rule, there must be a distinct
genus or category running through th.e bodies already named. Craies on Statute
Law Summarizes the principle as follows :
The ejusdem generis rule is one to be applied with caution
and not pushed too far ........... To invoke the application of
36. B. WDevadas v. Selection Committee for Admission of Student to the Karnatak
Engineering College, AIR 1964 Mys 6, quoted in Electricity Board, Rajasthan v. Mohan
La!, AIR 1967 SC 1857 at 1861.
37. Ibid.
38. AIR 1966 Punj 34.
39. AIR 1954 Mad 67
40. Krishan Gopal Ram Chand Sharma v. Punjab Universit)~ AIR 1966 Punj 34, quoted in
Electricity Board, Rajasthan v. Mohan Lal, AIR 1967 SC 1857 at 1862
156

the ejusdem generis rule there must be a distinct genus or


category. The specific word must apply not to different objects
of a widely differing character but to something which can be
called a class or kind of objects. Where this is lacking, the
tule cannot apply, but the mention of a single species does not
constitute a genus 41 •
Maxwell in his book on Interpretation of Statutes' explained the principles by
saymg:
But the general word which follows particular and specific
words of the same nature as itself takes its meaning from them,
and is presumed to be restricted to the same genus as those
words ......... Unless there is a genus or categmy, there is no
room for the application of the ejusdem generis doctrine 42 •
In Smt. Ujjam Bai '~ State of Uttar Pradesh43 , .Ayyangar, J., interpreting the
words "other authorities" in Att. 12, held:

Again , Art. 12 winds up the list of authorities falling within


the defmition by referring to "other authorities" within the
territory of India which cannot obviously be read as ejusdem
generis with either the Government and the Legislatures or
local authorities. The words are of wide amplitude and capable
of comprehending every authority created under a statute and
functioning within the territory of India or Under the control
of the Government of India. There is no characterization of
the nature of the "authority" in this residuary clause and
consequently it must include every type of authority set up
under a statute for the purpose of administering laws enacted
by the Parliament or by the State including those vested with
the duty to make decisions in order to implement those laws44 •
41. Craies on Statute Law, 6th ed. at 181.
42. Maxwell on "Interpretation ofStatutes", 11th ed. at 236, 237.
43. AIR 1962 SC 1621
44. Smt. Ujjam Bai v. State of Uttar Pradesh, AIR 1962 SC 1621, quoted in Electricity
Board, Rajasthan v. MohanLal, AIR 1967 SC 1857 at 1862
157

In K.S Ramamurthy Reddiar v. The ChiefCommissioner, Pondicherry4 5


the Court, dealing with Art, 12, held:

Further, all local or other authorities within the territory of


India include all authorities within the territory of India
whether under the control of the Government of India or the
Governments of various States and even autonomous
authorities which may not be under the control of the
Government at all 46 •

These decisions of the Court support the view that the expression "other
authorities" in Art, 12 will include all constitutional or statutory authorities on
whom powers are conferred by law. It is not at all matetial that some of the
powers conferred may be for the purpose of canying on commercial activities.
Under the Constitution, the State is itself envisaged as having the right to carry
on trade or business as mentioned in Art, 19(1) (g). In Part IV, the State has
been given the same meaning as in Art. 12 and one of Directive Ptincipals laid
down in Art. 46 is that the State shall promote with special care educational
and economic interests of the weaker sections of the people. The State, as
defmed in art. 12, is thus comprehended to include bodies created for the purpose
of promoting the educational and economic interests of the people. The State,
as constituted by our Constitution, is further specifically empowered under
Art. 298 to cany on any trade or business. The circumstance that the Board
under the Electricity Supply Act is required to carry on some activities of the
nature of trade or commerce does not, therefore, give any indication that the
Board must be excluded from the scope of the word "State" as used in Article
12. On the other hand, there are provisions in the Electticity Supply Act, which
clearly show that the powers conferred on the Board include power to give
directions, the disobedience of which is punishable as a criminal offence. The

45. AIR 1963 SC 1464.


46. KS Ramamurthy Reddiar v. The Chief Commissioner, Pondicherry, AIR 1963 SC
1464, quoted in Electricity Board, Rajasthan v. Mohan Lal, AIR 1967 SC 1857 at
1863.
158

Board was clearly an authority to which the provisions of part III of the
Constitution were applicable47 •

The Court further held that the Board was an authority invested by
statute with certain sovereign power ofthe State. It had the power of promoting
co-ordinated development, generation, supply and distribution of electricity
and for that purpose to make, alter, amend and carry out schemes under Chap.
V of the Electricity (Supply) Act. 1948 to engage in certain incidental
undertaking to organize and carry out power and hydraulic surveys to conduct
investigation for the improvement of the methods of transmission to close
down generating stations; to compulsory purchase generating stations,
undertaking mains and transmission lines; to place wires, poles, brackets,
appliances, apparatus, etc. to fix grid tariff; to issue directions for securing the
maximum economy and efficiency in the operation of electricity undertakings;
to make rules and regulations for carrying out the purpose of the Act; and to
issue directions under certain provisions of the Act and to enforce compliance
with those directions. The Board was also invested by statute with extensive
powers of control over electricity undettakings. The power to make rules and
regulations and to administer the Act was in substance the sovereign power of
the State delegated to the Board. The Board was, in the opinion of the Court,
"other authority" within the meaning of Art. 12 of the Constitution48 .

The expression "authority" in its etymological sense means a body


invested with power to command or give an ultimate decision, or enforce
obedience, or having a legal right to command and be obeyed49 .

The expression 'State' is defmed in Art. 12 for the purpose of Part III
of the Constitution. Article 13 prohibits the State from making any legislative
or executive direction, which takes away or abridges the rights conferred by
Part III and declares any law or executive direction in contravention of the
injunction void to the extent of such contravention. In determining what the

46. Electricity Board, Rajasthan v. Mohan Lal, AIR 1967 SC 1857 at 1863.
48. Ibid.
49. Ibid.
159

expression "other authority" in Art. 12 connotes, regard must be had not only
to the sweep of fundamental rights over the power of the authority, but also to
the restrictions which may be imposed upon the exercise of certain fundamental
rights (e.g., those declared by Art. 19) by the authority. Fundamental rights
within their allotted fields transcend the legislative and executive power of the
sovereign authority. But some of the important fundamental rights are to be
circumscribed by the imposition of reasonable restrictions by the State 50 .

In Sukhdev Singh v. Bhagatram, 51 the Supreme Court following the


text laid down in Electricity Board Rajasthan s52 case by 4:1 majority,
(Alagiriswamy, J dessenting) held the Oil and Natural Gas Commission, Life
Insurance Corporation and Industrial Finance Corporation, are authmities
within the meaning of Article 12 of the Constitution and therefore, they are
'State'. All three·statutmy Corporations have power to make regulations under
the statute for regulating conditions of service of their employees. The rules
and regulations framed by the above bodies have the force of law. The terms
of contract with a particular employer is presctibed by the statute itself. These
regulations are binding on these bodies. The employees of these statutory bodies
have a statutory status and they are entitled to declaration of being in
employment when their dismissal or removal is in contravention of statutory
provisions. The employment when their dismissal or removal is in contravention
of statutory provisions. The employees are entitled to claim protection of
Articles 14 and 16 against the Corporation .

Mathew, J., in a separate but concurringjudgement, preferred a broader


test that if the functions of the Corporation are of public importance and closely
related to government and hence a 'State' within the ambit of Atticle 12 of the
Constitution. The effect of these decisions was that the 'authorities not created
by the Constitution or by a statute could not be a 'State' within the meaning of
Article 12 of the Constitution. This was a very restrictive interpretation of the
expression 'other authorities' under Atticle 12 of the Constitution.

50. Ibid at 1864.


.51. AIR 1975 SC 1331.
52. AIR 1967 SC 1857.
160

III. Agency or Instrumentality of Government


The Supreme CoUrt has given a broad and liberal interpretation to the
expression 'other authorities' in Article 12, With the changing role of the
State form merely being a police State to a Welfare state it was necessary to
widen the scope of the expression "authorities" in Article 12 so as to include
all those bodies which are, though not created by the Constitution or by a
Statute, are acting as agencies or instrumentalities of the Government. In
modern times a government has to perform manifold functions. For this purpose
it has to employ various agencies to perform these functions. The court has,
therefore, rightly taken the view that such juridicial persons acting as the
instrumentality or agency of the government must be subject to the same
restrictions as the state.

In Airport Authority's case, 53 Bhagawati, J. preferred, and rightly,


observed the test as suggested by Mathew, J. , in Sukhdev v. Bhagatram54
case. In this case the Court has held that if a body is·an agency or instrumentality
of government it may be an 'authority' within the meaning of Article 12 whether
it is a statutory corporation, a government company or even a registered society.
Accordingly, it was held that the International Airport Authority which had
been created by an act of Parliament was the "State" within the meaning of
Article 12 whether it is a statutory corporation, a government company or
even a registered society. Accordingly, it was held that the International Airport
Authority which had been created by an Act of Parliament was the 'State'
within the meaning of Article 12 . The Central Government has power to
appoint the Chairman and other members of the Airport Authority. It has power
to terminate the appointment of any member form the board. The capital needed
by it was provided only by the Central Government. But what is the test whether
a body is an agency or instrumentality? The court laid down the following

53. Ramana Dayaram Shettyv. The JnternationalAi1port Authority oflndia, AIR 1979 SC
1628.
54. AIR 1975 SC 1331.
161

tests for determining whether a body is an agency or instrumentality of the


Government:

(1) financial resources of the State is the Chief fundign source, i.e if the
entire share capital of the corporation is held by Govenment,

(2) existence of deep and pervasive State Control,

(3) functional character being governmental in essence, i.e if the functions


of the corporation are of public importance and closely related to
govemmental functions,

(4) if a department of Government is transferred to a corporation,

(5) whether the corporation, enjoys monopoly status which is State Conferred
or State protected.

However, the Court said that these tests are not conclusive but illustrative
only and will have to be used with care and caution.

The question before the Court, in this case 55 was whether the
International Airport Authority of India was 'State' within the meaning of
Article 12 so as to be subjected to enforcement of fundamental rights against
it. Examining this aspect, Bhagwati, J., as he then was, spoke for the three
Judge Bench thus 56 :

Now it is obvious that the government, which represents the


executive authority of the State, may act through the
instrumentality or agency of natural persons or it may employ
the instrumentality or agency of juridical persons to carry out
its functions. In the early days, when the government had
limited functions it could operate effectively through natural
persons constituting its civil service and they were found

55. AIR 1979 SC 1628.


56. Ramana Dayaram Shetty v. International Airport Authority of India, AIR 1979 SC
1628, quoted in Tekraj Vasandi v. Union ofIndia, (1988) 1 SCC 236 at 247.
162

adequate to discharge governmental functions, which were


of traditional vintage. But as the tasks of the government
multiplied with the advent of the Welfare State, it began to be
increasingly felt that the framework of civil service was not
sufficient to handle the new tasks, which were often of
specialized and highly technical character. ... ... As early as
1819 the Supreme Court of the United States inMac Cullough
7
V. MarylanJ held that the Congress has power to charter
corporations as incidental to or in aid of governmental
functions, and, as pointed out by Mathew, J., in Sukhdev 1~

Bhagatram 58 such federal corporations would ex-hypothesi


be agencies of the government. In Great Britain too, the police
administration through separate corporations was gradually
evolved and the conduct of basic industries through giant
corporations has now become a permanent feature of public
life.

So far as India is concerned, the genesis of the emergency


of corporations as instrumentalities or agencies of govemment
is to be found in the Govetmnent of India resolution on
Industrial policy dated April6, 1948 where it was stated inter
alia that "management of State enterprise will as a rule be
through the medium of public corporation under the statutory
control of the Central Government who will assume such
powers as may be necessary to ensure this". It was in pursuance
of the policy envisaged in this and subsequent resolutions on
industrial policy that·corporations were created by government
for setting up and management of public enterptises and
carrying out other public functions. Ordinatily these functions
could have been carried out by government departmentally

57. 4 Wheat 315.


58. AIR 1975 SC 1331.
163

through its service personnel but the instrumentality or agency


of the corporations was resorted to in these cases having regard
to the nature of the task to be perfmmed.

The corporations acting as instrumentality or agency of


government would obviously be subjeyt to the same limitations
in the field of constitutional and administrative law as
government itself, though in the eye of the law, they be distinct
and independent legal entities. If government acting through
its officers is subject to cettain constitutional and public law
limitations, it must follow a fortiori that government acting
through the instrumentality or agency of corporations should
equally be subject to the same limitations. But the question is
how to determine whether a corporation is acting as
instrumen,tality or agency of government. It is a question not
entirely free from difficulty. ·

It was again pointed out in the same case that59 :

A corporation may be created in one of tWo ways. It may be either


established by statute or incorporated under a law. such as the Companies Act,
1956 or the Societies Registration Act, 1860. Where a corporation is wholly
controlled by government not only in its policy making but also in carrying out
the functions entrusted to it by the law establishing it or by the charter of its
incorporation, there can be no doubt that it would be an instrumentality or
agency of government<'0 •

The Court further stated:

But the public nature of the function, if impregnated with


governmental character or "tied or entwined with government"
or fortified by some other additional factor, may render the

59. Ramana Dayaram Sheft)1 v. International Ai1port Authority ofIndia, AIR 1979 SC 1628,
quoted in Tekraj Vasandi v. Union ofIndia, (1988) 1 SCC 236 at 248.
60. Ibid.
164

corporation an instrumentality or agency of government.


Specifically, if a department of govemment is transferred to a
corporation, it would be a strong factor supportive of this
inference61 .

It will thus be seen that there are several factors, which may have to be
considered in deter:minjng whether a corporation is an agency or instrumentality
of government. We have referred to some of these factors and they may be
summarized as under: Whether there is any fmancial assistance given by the
State, and if so, what is the magnitude of such assistance, whether there is any
other form of assistance, given by the State, and if so, whether it is of the usual ·
kind or it is extraordinary, whether there is any control of the management and
policies of the corporation by the State and what is the nature and extent of
such control, whether the corporation enjoys State conferred or State protected
monopoly status and whether the functions carried out by the corporation are
public functions closely related to governmental functions. This
particularization· of relevant factors is however not exhaustive and by its very
nature it cannot be, because with increasing assumption of new tasks, growing
complexities of management and administration and the necessity of continuing
adjustment in relations between the corporation and government calling for
flexibility and innovative skills, it is not possible to make an exhaustive
enumeration of the tests which would invariably and in all cases provide an
unfailing answer to the question whether a corporation is governmental
instrumentality or agency.

The Court proceeded to consider whether Intemational Airport Authority


of India could be said to be an 'authority' falling within the meaning of 'State'
in Article 12. The constitution of the body, the manner of filling it up,
government's power of control in the matter of appointment of members and
termination of membership were utilized for examining whether the Airport
Authority was 'State. After referring to the special aspects, the court observed62 :

61. Ibid. at 249.


62. Ibid.
165

It will be seen from provisions that there are cetiain features of


respondent I which are eloquent and throw considerable light on the true nature
of respondent 1. In the ftrst place, the chairman and members of respondent 1
are all persons nominated by the Central Government and the Central
Government has also the power to terminate their appointment as also to remove
them in certain specified circumstances. The Central Government is also vested
with the power to take away the management of any Airport from respondent
1 and to- entlust it to any other person or authority and for certain specified
reasons, the Central Government can also supersede respondent 1. The Central
Government has also power to give directions in writing from time to time on
questions of policy and these directions are declared binding on respondent 1.
63
Reference was made to the case of Subhajit Tewary • Bhagwati, J.
referring thereto stated :

This decision does not lay down any principle or test for the
purpose of determining when a corporation can be said to be
an 'authority'. If at all any test can be gleaned from the
decision, it is whether the corporation is " really an agency of
the governmenf4 .

And ultimately it was held that the authority was "State" under article 12.

In Som Prakash v. Union of India, 65 the court held that a government


company (Bharat Pen·oleum Corporation) fell within the meaning of the
expression ' the state' used in Article 12. The expression 'other authmities'
will include all constitutional or statutory authorities on whom powers are
confen-ed for the purpose of canying commercial activities or bodies created
for the purpose of promoting economic activities. The expression 'other
authorities' is not confined only to statutory corporations alone but my include

63. AIR 1975 SC 1329.


64. Subhajit Tewmyv. Union oflndia, AIR 1975 SC 1329, quoted in Tekraj Vflsandi v.
Union ofIndia (1988). 1SCC 236 at 250.
65. AIR 1981 SC 212.
166

a government company, a registered society, or bodies which have some nexus


with govemment.

Similarly, in Star Enterprises v. C. T.D. C. ofMaharashtra Ltd, 66 it has


been held that a govemment company under section 617 of the Companies
Act constituted as the Development Authority under the Maharashtra State
Town Planning Act, 1966 is a 'State' within the meaning of Article 12 and
therefore in its dealings with the citizens of India it would be required to act
within the Rule of Law and would not be permitted to conduct its activity
arbitrarily.

In UP Warehousing Corporation v. Vljai Narain, 67 it was held that the


U.P Warehousing Corporation which was constituted under a statute and owned
and controlled by the Government was an agency or inst:mmentality of the
Government and therefore, "the State" within the meaning of Article 12. Its
employees have a statutory status and therefore in case of wrongful dismissal
of an employee a writ could be issued against such body. Chinnappa Reddy,
J., agreeing with majority, in his separate judgement summed up the position
as follow:

I find very hard indeed to discover any distinction on principle


between a person under the employment of an agency or
instrumentality of the government or a corporation set up under
statute or incorporated but wholly owned by the Govetmnent.
The function of the State has completely changed. It is a
welfare state which has resulted in inter se govemmental
activity in manifold ways. Its activities have touched many
aspects of a citizen's life ........ The Government, its agencies
and instrumentalities, corporation set by it or owned by it have
thus become the biggest employers in the country. There is
no reason why, if government is bound to observe the equality

66. (1990) 3 sec 280


67. (1980) 3 sec 459
167

clauses of the Constitution in the matter of employment,


should not be equally bound. It is therefore right and the
independence and integrity of those employed in the public
sector should be secured as much as the independence and
integrity of civil servants68 •

IV. Registered Societies

InAjay H asia v. KhalidMujib, 69 it has been held that a Society registered


under the Societies Registration Act, 1898, is an agency or "instrumentality of
the State" and hence a 'State' within the meaning of Article 12. Its composition
is determined by the representatives of the Government. The expenses of society
are entirely provided by the Central Government. The rules made by the society
require prior approval of the State and Central Government. The society is to
comply with all directions of the Government. It is completely controlled by
the Government. The Government has power to appoint and remove the
members of the society. Thus, the State and the Central Government have full
control of the working of the society. In view of these elements the society is
an instrumentality of the State or the Central Govemment and it is therefore
an "authority" within the meaning of Article 12. The test is not as to how the
juristic person is created but why it has been brought into existence. A
corporation may be statutory corporation created by a statute or a government
company formed under the Companies Act, 1956, or a Society registered under
the Societies Registration Act, 1960, or any other similar statute. It would be
an 'authority' within the meaning of Article 12 if it is an instrumentality or
agency of the Government and that would have to be decided on a proper
assessment of the case in the light of the relevant factors.

In B. S. Minhas v. Indian Statitical Institute, 70 it has been held that the


Indian Statistical Society, a society Registered under the Societies Registration

68. AIR 1980 SC 480 at 489.


69. AIR 1981 SC 487.
70. (1983) 4 SCC 582 followingAjay Hasia v. KhalidMujib, AIR 1981 SC 487.
168

Act, 1860 being under the complete control of Government of India is an


instrumentality of the Central Government and therefore an "authority" within
the meaning of Article 12 of the Constitution. Accordingly, a writ petition
under Article 32 against the Institute for violation of fundamental rights is
maintainable. Similarly, the court held that the Indian Council of Agticultural
Research is a society registered under the Societies Registration Act, is an
instrumentality of Central Government, and an "authority" within the meaning
of Article 12 and, therefore, amenable to writ-jurisdiction under Article 32 of
the Constitution71 .

In Monmohan Singh Jaitla v. Commissioner, Union Territory of


• Chandigarh, 72 the Court followingAjay Hasia s case held that an aided school
which received a Government grant of 90 percent was an "authority" within
the meaning of Atticle 12. Similarly, it has been held that the Food Corporation
oflndia73 the Steel Authority ofIndia, 74 Bihar State Electricity Board, 75 Indian
Oil Corporation, 76 are the 'State' within the meaning of 'other authorities'
under Article 12 as they are instrumentalities of the State. InAISSF Association
v. Defence Minister-cum- Chairman, B. 0. G. S. S. Society, 77 it has been held
that Sainik School Society is the "state" and amenable to writ jurisdiction of
the Court The entire fund is given by the State Government and the Central
Govemment. The overall control vests in the Governmental authority.

In S.M Ilyas v. JCAR78 , it has been held that the Indian Council of
Agricultural Research is a State within the meaning of Atticle 12 of the
Constitution.
71. P.K Ramchandra Ayerv. Union ofindia, (1984) 2 SCC 142.
72. (1984) Supp. sec 540.
73. Workmen Food Cmporation ofIndia v. MIS Food Corporation ofIndia, AIR 1985 SC
670 (1985) 2 sec 136.
74. Bihar State Harijan Kalyan Parishad v. Union ofIndia (1985) 2 SCC 644.
75. Swya Narain Yadav v. B.S.F Board, AIR 1985 SC 941.
76. Mahabir Auto Stores v. Indian Oil Cmporation, (1990) 3 SCC 752.
77. AIR 1989 SC 88
78. (1993) 1 sec 182
169

In Central Inland Water Transport Corporation v. Brojo Nath Ganguly, 79


the Cowt applied the above test and held that the Central Inland Water Transport
Corporation, a Govemment company which was ~holly owned by the Central
Govemment and managed by Chairman and Board of Directors appointed
and remove by Central Govemment was "the State" within the meaning of
Article 12 and therefore an instrumentality or agency of the State. It is nothing
but the Governmental functions of vital public importance through the
instrumentality of a Govemment Company. If there is an instrumentality or
agency of the State which has assumed the grab of a Govemment Company as
defmed in Section 617 of the Companies Act, it does not follow that it thereby
ceases to be an instrumentality or agency of the State.

In Sheela Barse v. Secretary, Children s Aid Society, 80 the court held


that the Children's Aid Society, Bombay registered under the Societies
Registration Act. 1860 was an instrumentality of the State and fell within the
expression 'the state' within the meaning of Article 12. It is a Public Trust
under the Bombay Public Trusts Act of 1950. The Chief Minister of the State
is its ex-officio President. The Society receives grants from the State.

In M C. Mehta v. Union ofIndia, 81 the important question which was


raised before the Court was whether a private corporation fell within the ambit
of Article 12. Although the question whether a private corporation fell within
the ambit of Article 12 was not fmally decided by the Court, but it stressed
the need to do so in future.

In Sri Kana Seema Co-operative Central Bank Ltd v. N Seetharama


Raju, 82 it has been held that the Co-operative Bank registered under the A.P
Co-operative Societies Act is not 'State' within the meaning of Article 12.

In Tekraj Vasandi v. Union ofIndia, 83 it has been held that the "Institute

79. (1986) 3 sec 156.


80. (1987) 3 sec so.
81. (1987) 1 sec 395.
82. AIR 1990 A.P. 171.
83. (1988) 1 sec 236.
170

of Constitutional and Parliamentary Studies", a society registered under the


Societies Registration Act, 1860, is not a State within the meaning of Article
12. The Institute of Constitutional and Parliamentary Studies is neither an
agency nor an instrumentality of the State. It is a voluntary organisation. The
object of the society is not related to government business. In the functioning
of the Society, the Government does not have deep and pervasive control. In a
welfare State Government's control is very parvasive and, in fact touches all
aspects of social existence. A society registered under the Societies Registration
Act may be treated, as 'State' if either the government business is undertaken
by the Society or the public obligation of the State is undettaken by the Society.

In the above mentioned case 8\ the Institute of Constitutional and


Parliamentary Studies (ICPS) was a society registered in 1965 under the
Societies Registration Act, 1860. It came into existence as a voluntary
organization for acquisition of appropriate democratic bias and spirit by the
people's representatives. The Speaker of the Lok Sabha became its first
President and three ministers, a former Chief Justice of India and former
Attorney General joined as its Vice-Presidents. Some of the public officers
were also associated in the administrative set-up of the ICPS. The registered
office of the ICPS was initially located within the Parliament House but later
on it was shifted out. The Memorandum of the Society permitted acceptance
of gifts, donations and subscriptions. Though the annual contributions from
the Government constitute the main source of income of the society, yet some
money come from some other sources also: Since govemment money has been
coming, the usual conditions attached to government grants have been applied
and enforced.

The appellant was an employee of the ICPS. In a disciplinary action he


was dismissed from the service. When he assailed the order in a writ petition
before the High Comt, the question whether ICPS was "State" within the
meaning of Article 12 was raised as a major issue. The Single judge dismissed
the writ petition holding that the ICPS was not covered by the definition of

84. (1988) 1 sec 236.


171

State under Article 12. In appeal before the Supreme Court the counsel for the
ICPS submitted that the ICPS was prepared to give a fresh opportunity to the
appellant to meet the charges against him but invited the Court to enter into
. the merits of the issue as to whether the ICPS constitute "State" within the
meaning of Article 12. Disposing of the appeal the Supreme Court Held :

For appropriate consideration of the question whether ICPS


is "State" within the meaning of Article 12 it is necessary to
look into the constitution of the body, the purpose for which it
has been created, the manner of its functioning including the
mode of its funding and the broad features which have been
found by the Supreme Court in several decisions to be relevant
in the matter of detennining a dispute of this type. There cannot
be a strait-jacket fmmula. It is not necessary that all the tests
should be satisfied for reaching the conclusion either for or
against holding an institution to be "State". In a given case
some of the features may emerge so boldly and prominently
that a second view may not be possible. There may yet be
other cases where the matter would be on the borderline and
it would be difficult to take one view or the other outlight. A
broad picture of the matter has to be taken and a discerning
mind has to be applied keeping the realities and human
experiences in view so as to reach a reasonable conclusion85 .

The ICPS is neither an agency nor an instrumentality of the State so as


to come within the purview of"other authorities" in Atticle 12. ICPS in a case
of its type- typical in many ways and the nmmal tests may perhaps not properly
apply to test its character. It was born out of a feeling that there should be a
voluntary association mostly consisting of members of the two Houses of
Parliament with some external support to fulfill the objects which were adopted
by the Society. Services of some of the employee of Parliament were lent to
the Society. But while Article 12 refers to Parliament as such, a few Members

85. Ibid at 237.


172

of Parliament cannot be considered as Parliament so as to constitute that body


as referred to in Alticle 12. Individual Members ofParliament and the corporate
body known as Parliament are ce1tainly two different concepts. The speaker
and the Ministers who joined as Vice-Presidents, Executive Chairman, Treasurer
and members, there were many people who were really not a part of Government
as such and some of them did not belong to Parliament. The objects of the
Society were not related to govemmental business but were related to the aspects
which were expected to equip Members of Parliament and the State Legislature
with the requisite knowledge and experience for better functioning. Many of
the objects adopted by the society were not confmed to the two Houses of
Parliament and were intended to have an impact on society at large. The accounts
of the Society are separately maintained and subject to audit in the same way
as the affairs of societies receiving government grants are to be audited.
Government usually imposes certain conditions and restrictions when grants
are made. No exception has been made in respect of the Society and the mere
fact that such restrictions are made is not a determinative aspect. The appellant
also failed to establish that in the functioning of the society there is deep and
pervasive control of Government. Though the Minister has tried to exercise
his authority as the controlling department of Government in the matter of
making the grant but that itself may not be a conclusive feature. In a Welfare
State, governmental control is very pervasive and in fact touches all aspects of
social existence. In the absence of a fair application of the tests to be made,
there is possibility of turning every non-governmental society into an agency
or instrumentality of the State. A societY registered under the Societies
Registration Act may be treated as "State" if either the governmental business
is unde1taken by the society or what is expected to be the public obligation of
the State is undertaken to be performed as a part of the society's function.
Such is not the position here 86 .

However, even if the ICPS becomes "State" within the meaning of


Article 12, its employees do not become holders of civil posts so as to become

86. Ibid at 238.


173

entitled to the cover of Article 311. They would, however, be entitled to the
benefits of part III of the constitution87 .

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by RanganathMisra, J. as:

This appeal by special leave calls in question the judgment of


a Division Bench of the Delhi High Court in A Letters Patent
Appeal upholding the decision of a learned single Judge
rejecting the writ petition of the appellant. The appellant was
an employee of the Institute of Constitutional and
Parliamentary Studies (hereinafter referred to as ICPS for
short) and in a disciplinmy action he was dismissed from
service by order dated November 17, 1982. When he assailed
the order in a writ petition before the High Comt the question
whether ICPS was 'State' within the meaning of Article 12 of
the Constitution came for consideration as the major issue
arising in the matter88 •

Obviously ICPS can become 'State' only if it is found to be an authority


within the territory of India or under the control of the Government of India.
89
In the case of Rajasthan State Electricity Board v. Mohan La/ •

Bhargava, J. Who delivered the main judgment observed:

Themeaningoftheword 'authority' given in Webster's Third


New International Dictionary, which can be applicable, is "a
public administrative agency or corporation having quasi-
governmental powers and authorized to administer a revenue
producing public enterprise". This dictionary meaning of the
word "authority" is clearly wide enough to include all bodies
created by a statute on which powers are conferred to carry
out governmental or quasi-governmental functions. The

87. Ibid at 239.


88. Ibid.
89. AIR 1967 SC 1857.
174

expression "other authorities" is wide enough to include within


it eve1y authority created by a statute and functioning within
the territory of India, or under the control of the Government
of India ; and we do not see any reason to narrow down this
meaning in the context in which the words 'other authorities'
are used in Article 12 of the Constitution90 •
9
In Ujjam Bat V. State ofU.P. \ Ayyangar, J. had observed:

Again, Article 12 winds up the list of authorities falling within


the defmition by refening to "other authorities" within the
tenitory of India which cannot, obviously be read as ejusdem
generis with either the government and the legislatures or local
authorities. The words are of wide amplitude and capable of
comprehending every authority created under a statute and
functioning within the territory of India or under the control
of the government of India92 • ·
93
In both the cases of Sabhajit Tewary V. Union oflndia and Sukhdev
Singh V. Bhagatram Sardar Singh raghuvanshi94 , the true meaning of Article
12 of the Constitution fell for consideration. Sabhajit Tewary95 case was one
where the status of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research was
examined. This court took note of the fact that the Council was a Society
registered under the Societies Registration Act. Under Rule 3, the Prime
Minister· of India was the ex-officio President of the Society and under Rule
3 0 the governing body consisted of persons appointed by the Gove1nment of
India representing the administrative ministry under which the Council of

90. Rajasthan State ElectricityBoardv. Mohan La!, AIR 1967"SC 1857, quoted inTekrqj
Vasandi v. Union ofIndia, (1988) 1 SCC 236 at 242.
91. AIR 1962 SC 1621.
92. Ujjam Bai V. State ofU. P., AIR 1962 SC 1621, quoted in Tekraj Vasandi v. Union of
India, (1988) 1 SCC 236 at 243.
93. AIR 1975 SC 1329.
94. AIR 1975 SC 1331.
95. AIR 1975 SC 1329.
175

Scientific and Industrial Research is included and the minisny of Finance. The
court also took note ofthe manner in which the affairs of the Society including
funding were conducted. Ray, C.J., in the briefjudgmentthatthe coutt delivered
in the case observed96 :

Exn·acting the featmes as aforesaid, it was contended that these


would indicate that the Council of Scientific and Indusni.al
Research was really an agency of the Government. This
contention is sound. The Society does not have a statutory
character like the Oil and Natural Gas Commission, or the
Life Insurance Corporation or Indusni.al Finance Corporation.
It is a society incorporated in accordance with the provisions
of the Societies Registration Act. The fact that the Prime
Minister is the President or that government appoints nominees
to the Govetning Body or that the government may terminate
the membership will not establish anything more than the
fact that the government takes special care that the promotion,
guidance and cooperation of scientific and industrial research,
the institution and functioning of specific research,
establishment or development and assistance to special
institutions or departments of the existing institutions for
scientific study of problems affecting particular industry in a
trade, the utilization of the result of the researches conducted
under the auspices of the Council towards the development
of industries in the countries in the country are cani.ed out in
a responsible manner.

The Court has held in Praga Tools Corporation v. C. A. Jmanual97 ,


Heavy Engineering Mazdoor Union V. State ofBihar 8 and inS. L. Agarwal V.
General Manager, Hindus than Steel Ltd 99 that the Praga Tools Corporation,
96. Sabhajit Tewary V. Union of India, AIR 1975 SC 1329, quoted in Tekraj Vasandi v.
Union ofIndia, (1988) 1 SCC 236 at 244.
97. (1969) 1 sec 585.
98. (1969) 1 sec 765.
99. (1970) 1 sec 177.
176

Heavy Engineering Mazdoor Union and Hindusthan Steel Ltd. are all companies
incorporated under the companies Act and the employees of these companies
do not enjoy the protection available to government servants as contemplated
in Article 311. The companies were held in these cases to have independent
existence of the government and by the law related to corporations. These
could not be held to be departments of the government.

In Sukhdev Singh 100 case the leading judgment was delivered also by
Ray, C.J. Two questions fell for consideration - ( 1) Whether an order of removal
:fi"om service contrmy to Regulations would enable the employee to a declaration
against the statutory corporation of continuance in service or would it end up
in claim for damages only and (2) whether the employee of a statutory
corporation is entitled to claim protection of Articles 14 and 16 against the
Corporation. The court, therefore, straightway went into the question as to
whether statutory corporations were authorities within the meaning of Article
12. As a fact, three corporations being the Oil and Natural Gas Commission,
the Life Insurance Corporation and the Industrial Finance Corporation were
before the Comt and each one of them had been set up under a special statute.
The lemned Chief Justice pointed out101 :

In the background of the provisions of the three Acts under


consideration, the question arises as to whether these
Corporation can be described to be authorities within the
meaning of Article 12 of the Constitution.

Mathew, J .Referred to the precedents and other authorities from England, France
and United States and Stated102 :

The ultimate question which is relevant for our purpose is


whether such a corporation is an agency or instrumentality of
the govetnment for canying on a business for the benefit of

100. AIR 1975 SC 1331.


101. SukhdevSinghv. Bhagatram, AIR 1975 SC 1331, quotedinTekraj Vasandiv. Union
ofIndia, (1988) 1 sec 236 at 245.
102. Tekraj Vasandi v. Union oflndia, (1988) 1 SCC 236 at 246.
177

the public. In other words, the question is, for whose benefit
was the corporation carrying on the business? When it is seen
from the provisions of that Act that on liquidation of the
corporation, its assets should be divided among the
shareholders, namely, the Central and State Governments and
others, if any, the implication is clear that the benefit of the
accumulated income would go to the Central and State
Govemments. Nobody will deny that an agent has a legal
personality different from that of the principal. The fact that
the agent is subject to the direction of the principal does not
mean that he has no legal personality of his own ... the crux of
the matter is that public corporation is a new type of institution
which has sprung from the new social and economic functions
of govemment and that it therefore does not neatly fit into old
legal categories. Instead of forcing it into them, the latter
should be adapted to the need of changing times and
conditions .

... . there is any basis for the apprehension expressed that by


holding that these public corporations are 'State' within the
meaning of Article 12, the employees of these corporations
would become govemment servants. I also wish to make it
clear that I express no opinion on the question whether private
corporations or other like organizations, though they exercise
power over their employees which might violet their
fundamental rights, would be 'State' within the meaning of
Article 12.

Thus it dose not matter that whether the corporation is created by a


statute or under a statute. The test is whether it is an instrumentality or agency
of the govemment and not as to how it is created. The inquiry has to be not as
to how the juristic person is bom but why it has been brought into existence.
The corporation may be a statutory corporation created by a statute or it may
be a government company or a company formed under the Companies Act,
178

1956 or it may be a society registered under the Societies Registration Act,


1860 or any other similar statute. Whether be its genetical origin, it would be
an "authority" within the meaning of Article 12 if it is an instrumentality or
agency of the govemment and that would have to be decided on a proper
assessment of the facts in the light of the relevant factors. The concept of
instrumentality or agency of the govemment is not limited to a corporation
created by a statute but is equally applicable to a company or society.

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