3.06.2010

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The most comprehensive coverage on the construction of Statutes. It includes parts of statutes,Extrinsic-Aids,Intrinsic aids, Reading down, Amendments,Repeals,codifications,Quasi-Judicial agencies,Non-obstante clause,Mandatory/Declatory provisions,Tax ,Beneficial, Criminal,Fiscal Statute's Interpretation and sub-ordinate legislations.Besides it contains the Rules of Interpretation and the Role of Judiciary.Citations are in abundance.



Showing posts with label Parliament debates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Parliament debates. Show all posts

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Reference to Extrinsic material permissible, reports and History

Reference to Extrinsic material permissible, reports and History For Establishing Intent

But avoiding absurd results is not the only reason why courts should be willing to look beyond the plain meaning of a statute. As one commentator noted some years ago, state legislative history is ignored because state legislatures see no need for it. (Stewart, J., dissenting) ("[S]tate statutes are often enacted with little recorded legislative history, and the bare words of a statute will often be unilluminating in interpreting legislative intent."[1]) There is growing recognition that legislators often deliberately employ vague, symbolic, and sometimes meaningless statutory language . . . in order to placate warring interests and achieve compromise, to please as many and alienate as few constituencies as possible, or to avoid difficult policy choices by postponing decision or transferring responsibility to an agency through a broad delegation.[2] ".In the case at bench, the extrinsic evidence in dispute was highly relevant to show the legislative intent underlying the statute. It follows that the trial court was not only free, but also duty bound to admit the challenged extrinsic evidence to ascertain the true intent of the Legislature and to effectuate the purpose of the law[3]. This is consistent with the approach taken by the California Supreme Court in where the court noted the absence of support for plaintiff's argument in the legislative history[4].

  • The trend is growing. Statutory ambiguity is not always a necessity. More and more we see the courts resorting to extrinsic evidence of legislative history that supports a "plain meaning" interpretation of the statutes.

Intrinsic and extrinsic Aids to establish Intent

If the courts could not look at expressions of intention by Parliament, then a fortiori they should not look at such expressions by royal commissions or committees.[5] In contrast, Viscount Dilhorne took the view that it did not follow that the court could refer to Hansard just because it looked at the whole of an official report.[6]

Lord Donaldson, in the House of Lords debate on the Interpretation Bill 1980,[7] expressed concern that “looking at what was said in Parliament” would mean that there would be a real danger that the courts would give effect to the intention, not of Parliament, but of the executive.

Lord Diplock defended the role of the courts in Fothergill v Monarch Airlines Ltd.[8] when he said:

“The constitutional function performed by courts of justice as interpreters of the written law laid down in Acts of Parliament is often described as ascertaining ‘the intention of Parliament’; but what this metaphor, though convenient, omits to take into account is that the court, when acting in its interpretative role, as well as when it is engaged in reviewing the legality of administrative action, is doing so as mediator between the state in the exercise of its legislative power and the private citizen for whom the law made by Parliament constitutes a rule binding upon him and enforceable by the executive power of the state”.

Lord Simon, in refusing to look at the legislative history, stated in Ealing LBC v Race Relations Board[9] that:

“In the absence of ‘preparatory works’ ... the courts must ascertain the legislative intention principally by examining (1) the social background; (2) a conspectus of all relevant law; (3) the long title of the statute and, where possible, the preamble; (4) the actual words used; (5) other statutory provisions which illuminate the meaning of the actual words used ... .”

The Privy Council[10],had ,reasoned at p. 51[11] :

" If one had to guess at the intention of the Legislature it,framing a Section in the words used, one would suppose that they had in mind to encourage the free disclosure of information or to protect the person making the statement from a supposed unreliability of police testimony as to alleged statements or both. In any case the reasons would apply as might be thought a fortiori to an alleged statement made by a person ultimately accused. But in truth when the meaning or words is plain it is not the duty of the Courts to busy themselves with supposed intentions. I have been long and deeply impressed with the wisdom of the rule, none believe universally adopted,at least in the Courts of law in Westminster Hall, that in construing wills and indeed statutes, and all written instruments, the grammatical and ordinary sense of the words is to be adhered to, unless that would lead to some absurdity, or some repugnance or inconsistency with the rest of the instruments, in which case the grammatical and ordinary sense of the words may be modified, so as to avoid that absurdity and inconsistency, but no farther.[12] To quote from the language of Tindal C.J. when delivering the opinion of the Judges[13]:.

‘The only rule for the construction of Acts of Parliament is that they should be construed according to the intent of the Parliament which passed the Act. If the words of the statute are in themselves precise and unambiguous, then no more can be necessary than to expound those words in their natural and ordinary sense. The words themselves alone do in such case best declare the intention of the law-giver. But if any doubt arises from' the terms employed by the Legislature, it has always been held a safe means of collecting the intention, to call in aid the ground and cause of making the statute, and to have recourse to the preamble which according to Dyer.[14] C.J. is a key to open the minds of the makers of the Act, and the mischiefs which they are intended to redress[15].

In dealing with a contention that a statute [p1015] containing an unconstitutional provision should be construed as if the remainder stood alone, the court there said:

“This would be to mutilate the section and garble its meaning. The legislative intention must not be confounded with their power to carry that intention into effect. To refuse to give force and vitality to a provision of law is one thing, and to refuse to read it is a very different thing. It is by a mere figure of speech that we say an unconstitutional provision of a statute is "stricken out." For all the purposes of construction, it is to be regarded as part of the act. The meaning of the legislature must be gathered from all that they have said, as well from that which is ineffectual for want of power, as from that which is authorized by law.Here the excepting provision was in the statute when it was enacted, and there can be no doubt that the legislature intended that the meaning of the other provisions should be taken as restricted accordingly. Only with that restricted meaning did they receive the legislative sanction which was essential to make them part of the statute law of the State; and no other authority is competent to give them a larger application.[16]

“the statute is made to enact what confessedly the legislature never meant. It confers upon the statute a positive operation beyond the legislative intent, and beyond what anyone can say it would have enacted in view of the illegality of the exceptions[17]

.In the same case giving emphasis to the legislative intention it was stated as follows:

“A severability clause does not, however, conclusively resolve the issue. "[T]he determination, in the end, is reached by" asking "[w]hat was the intent of the lawmakers,[18]" and "will rarely turn on the presence or absence of such a clause.[19]"“A severability clause creates a presumption that Congress intended the valid portion of the statute to remain in force when one part is found to be invalid[20]. Carter v. Carter Coal Co[21]"



[1] See Eric Lane, Legislative Process and its Judicial Renderings: A Study in Contrasts, 48 U. PITT. L. REV. 639, 651 (1987). See also City of Lafayette v Louisiana Power & Light Co., 435 U.S. 389, 437 (1978)

[2] Things Judges Do: State Statutory Interpretation [foot note 41 Judith S. Kaye

[3] Pennisi v. Fish & Game (1979) 97 Cal. App. 3d 268, 275. [Emphasis added]

[4] Mercy Hospital & Medical Center v. Farmers Insurance Group of Companies[4] (1997) 15 Cal. 4 th 213, 223

[5] Ibid at 615.

[6] Ibid at 623F.

[7] 503 H.L. Debs, col 288. This was Lord Scarman’s Bill which tried to implement the Draft Clauses contained in the United Kingdom Law Commission’s Report, “The Interpretation of Statutes” (Law Com No. 21) (Scot Law Com No. 11) 1969.

[8] [1981] AC 251, at 279.

[9] [1972] AC 342, at 361.

[10] Pakala Narayana Swami v. EmperorA.I.R. 1939 P.C. 47

[11]as Quoted in: NANDINI SATPATHYvDANI (P.L.),. 1978 AIR 1025: 1978 SCR (3) 608

[12] [Lord Wensleydale in (1875) 6 HLC 613 at p. 106].

[13] in (1844) 11 CL & F 85 at page 143,

[14] (1562) 1 Plowd 353 at p. 369

[15] : Lord Halsbury LC in (1891) AC 531 at p. 542.'

[16] REHNQUIST, J., Dissenting Opinion SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES 462 U.S. 919 INS v. ChadhaAPPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT[See also Frost v. Corporation Comm'n of Oklahoma, 278 U.S. 515, 525 (1929).

[17]Quoted from: REHNQUIST, J., Dissenting Opinion SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES 462 U.S. 919 INS v. ChadhaAPPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT citing Spraigue v. Thompson, 118 U.S. 90, 95 (1886).

[18] Citation ommited

[19] United States v. Jackson, 390 U.S. 570, 585, n. 27 (1968).

[20] Carter v. Carter Coal Co., 298 U.S. 238

[21] See also:298 U.S. 238, 312 (1936); Champlin Refining Co. v. Corporation Comm'n of Oklahoma, 286 U.S. 210, 235 [p1014] (1932).


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Monday, April 19, 2010

Parliamentary Debates:Extrinsic Material

Courts often take recourse to parliamentary material like debates in Constituent Assembly, speeches of the movers of the Bill, Reports of Committees or Commission, Statement of Objects and Reasons of the Bill, etc. As per traditional English view, these parliamentary material or Hansard were inadmissible as external aids, on the basis of ‘exclusionary rule’. This “exclusionary rule” was slowly given up and finally in Pepper v Hart, (1993) 1 ALLER 42 (HL), it was held that parliamentary material or Hansard may be admissible as an external aid for interpretation of a statute, subject to parliamentary privilege, under following circumstances; where (a) legislation is ambiguous or obscure or leads to an absurdity; (b) the material relied on consists of one or more statements by a minister or other promoter of the Bill, together, if necessary, with such other parliamentary material as is necessary to understand such statements and their effect; and (c) the statements relied on are clear.

Indian Courts, in early days followed the ‘exclusionary rule’ which prevailed in England and refused to admit parliamentary material or Constituent Assembly debates for the purpose of interpretation of statutory or constitutional provision (see State of Travancore- Cochin and others v Bombay Co. Ltd., AIR 1952 SC 366; Aswini Kumar Ghose and another v Arbinda Bose and another, AIR 1952 SC 369. However, in subsequent cases, the Supreme Court relaxed this ‘exclusionary rule, much before the law laid down in England in ‘Pepper’ case. Krishna Iyer J. in State of Mysore v R.V. Bidop, AIR 1973 SC 2555, quoted a passage from Crawford on Statutory Construction (page 383) in which exclusionary rule was criticized. The relevant passage is quoted below:-

“The rule of Exclusion has been criticized by jurists as artificial. The trend of academic opinion and the practice in the European system suggests that interpretation of statute being an exercise in the ascertainment of meaning, everything which is logically relevant should be admissible”

Krishna Iyer J. has observed in this case:-

“There is a strong case for whittling down the Rule of Exclusion followed in the British courts and for less apologetic reference to legislative proceedings and like materials to read the meaning of the words of a statute.” (para 5)

In this regard, Bhagwati J. (as he then was) in Fagu Shaw etc. v The State of West Bengal, AIR 1974 SC 613 has stated:

“Since the purpose of interpretation is to ascertain the real meaning of a constitutional provision, it is evident that nothing that is logically relevant to this process should be excluded from consideration. It was at one time thought that the speeches made by the members of the Constituent Assembly in the course of the debates of the Draft Constitution were wholly inadmissible as extraneous aids to the interpretation of a constitutional provision, but of late there has been a shift in this position and following the recent trends in juristic thought in some of the Western countries and the United States, the rule of exclusion rigidly followed in Anglo American jurisprudence has been considerably diluted… We may therefore legitimately refer to the Constituent Assembly debates for the purpose of ascertaining what was the object which the Constitution makers had in view and what was the purpose which they intended to achieve when they enacted cls (4) and (7) in their present form.” (para 45)

Again in R.S. Nayak v A.R. Antulay (Supra), the Supreme Court observed in this regard:

“…Therefore, it can be confidently said that the exclusionary rule is flickering in its dying embers in its native land of birth and has been given a decent burial by this Court.” (para 34)

The Supreme Court in a numbers of cases referred to debates in the Constituent Assembly for interpretation of Constitutional provisions. Recently, the Supreme Court in S.R. Chaudhuri v State of Punjab and others, (2001) 7 SCC 126 has stated that it is a settled position that debates in the Constituent Assembly may be relied upon as an aid to interpret a Constitutional provision because it is the function of the Court to find out the intention of the framers of the Constitution. (para 33)

But as far as speeches in Parliament are concerned, a distinction is made between speeches of the mover of the Bill and speeches of other Members. Regarding speeches made by the Members of the Parliament at the time of consideration of a Bill, it has been held that they are not admissible as extrinsic aids to the interpretation of the statutory provision. (see - K.S. Paripoornan v State of Kerala and others, AIR 1995 SC 1012). However, speeches made by the mover of the Bill or Minister may be referred to for the purpose of finding out the object intended to be achieved by the Bill (see K.S. Paripoornan’s case ( supra). J. S. Verma J (as he then was) in R.Y. Prabhoo (Dr.) v. P.K. Kunte, (1995) 7 SCALE 1 made extensive reference to the speech of the then Law Minister Shri A.K. Sen for construing the word ‘his’ occurring in sub-section (3) of section 123 of the Representation of People Act 1951.

Similarly, Supreme Court in P.V. Narsimha Rao v State, AIR 1998 SC 2120 agreeing with the view taken in Pepper v Hart (Supra) has observed:

“It would thus be seen that as per the decisions of this Court, the statement of the Minister who had moved the Bill in Parliament can be looked at to ascertain mischief sought to be remedied by the legislation and the object and purpose for which the legislation is enacted. The statement of the Minister who had moved the Bill in Parliament is not taken into account for the purpose of interpreting the provision of the enactment.” (Para 77).

The Supreme Court in Sushila Rani v CIT and another, (2002) 2 SCC 697 referred to the speech of the Minister to find out the object of ‘Kar Vivad Samadhan Scheme 1998’.

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