BABU RAO ALLIAS P.B. SAMANT Vs. UNION OF INDIA AND ORS.

PETITIONER:
BABU RAO ALLIAS P.B. SAMANT

Vs.

RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT17/12/1987

BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
SINGH, K.N. (J)

CITATION:
1988 AIR  440          1988 SCR  (2) 431
1988 SCC  Supl.  401      JT 1987 (4)    672
1987 SCALE  (2)1322

ACT:
Constitution of  India, 1950:  Articles 83,  118,    352,
353, 364  and 366-Proclamations     of Emergency dated December
3, 1971     and June 25, 1975-Whether ultra vires-Publishing of
Proclamations  in   official  Gazette-Whether    a  mode      of
publication

HEADNOTE:
%
Rules of  Procedure and  Conduct  of  Business  in     Lok
Sabha:     Rules     260,    379   and   382-Non-publication      of
resolutions-Whether resolutions     ineffective-Publication  in
Parliamentary Debates even after delay-Adequate publication.
House of  the People (Extension of Duration) Act, 1976:
Whether ultra vires.
Finance Act, 1976: Validity of.
Indian  Evidence    Act,  1872:   S.  57-Proceedings  of
Parliament-Court to take judicial notice.
The petitioner,  an assessee  under the  Income Tax Act
and Wealth  Tax Act  during the     assessment year 1976-77 and
liable to  pay income  tax and wealth tax in accordance with
the rates  prescribed by  the Finance  Act, 1976,  which was
passed by the Lok Sabha during its extended period under the
provisions  of     the  House  of     the  People  (Extension  of
duration) Act,    1976, filed  a    writ  petition    before    this
Court, challenging  the vires  of the  two Proclamations  of
Emergency issued by the President on 3.12.1971 and 26.6.1975
and also  of the House of the People (Extension of Duration)
Act, 1976  and the  Finance Act,  1976 contending  that     the
duration of  the House    of People  would have  been  validly
extended only  when a Proclamation of Emergency was in force
under the  proviso to cl. (2) of Art. 83 of the Constitution
and since  the two  Proclamations of  Emergency in  question
were either ultra vires the Constitution or had ceased to be
in operation  by the time the House of the People (Extension
of Duration)  Act, 1976     was passed  by Parliament, that Act
had no effect and, consequently all Acts passed by the House
of the    People during  the extended  period,  including     the
Finance Act, 1976
432
were ultra  vires the Constitution, and that even though the
said proclamations had been validly issued, the proclamation
dated 3rd  December, 1971  and 25th June, 1975 had ceased to
be in  operation on 3rd February, 1972 and 26th August, 1975
respectively because  the  Resolutions    passed    by  the     two
Houses of  Parliament approving     the said  Proclamations  of
Emergency as  required    by  cl.     (2)  of  Art.    352  of     the
Constitutions it stood during the relevant time had not been
published in  the official  Gazette  of     the  Government  of
India.
The petition  was opposed    by the    respondent-Union  of
India contending  that the  two Proclamations  had been duly
issued by  the President  and approved by the Resolutions of
the two     Houses of  Parliament as  required by    law and that
actually the Proclamations of 3rd December 1971 and June 25,
1975 had  been revoked    by the    Vice-President acting as the
President by  the Proclamations     dated 27th  March, 1977 and
21st  March,   1977  respectively,  that  in  the  month  of
February, 1976    when the  House of  the People (Extension of
Duration) Act,    1976  was  passed  by  Parliament  both     the
Proclamations of  emergency were  in force  and,  therefore,
Parliament was entitled to extend the period of the House of
the People  for a  period not  exceeding one year at a time,
that the  Finance Act,    1976 passed  duly in  the period  so
extended  had  been,  therefore,  validly  passed  and    that
publication of the Resolutions was not necessary and, in any
event, since  they had    been published    in the Lok Sabha and
Rajya Sabha Debates which were published under the authority
of the    Speaker of  the House of the People and the Chairman
of  the     Rajya    Sabha  respectively,  the  Proclamations  of
Emergency remained in force until they were duly revoked.
Dismissing the writ petition,
^
HELD: 1.  The two    Proclamations of Emergency were kept
in force  by virtue  of the resolutions passed by the Houses
of Parliament  until they  were     duly  revoked    by  the     two
Proclamations which were issued by the Vice-President acting
as President  of India    in the    year  1977.  Since  the     two
Proclamations of  Emergency were  in force when the House of
the People (Extension of Duration) Act, 1976 was passed, its
validity cannot be questioned. [455D-E]
The Lok  Sabha passed  the Finance Act, 1976 during the
extended period of its duration and, therefore, the validity
of Finance Act, 1976 also cannot be questioned. [455E]
2. Article     352 of     the Constitution does not prescribe
that a
433
Proclamation  of   Emergency  should  be  published  in     the
official Gazette.  A  Wherever    the  Constitution  expressly
requires a  certain notification  to  be  published  in     the
official Gazette,  it has  stated that the said notification
shall be  published in    the form  of a    public notification.
[444H; 445C]
A Proclamation  of Emergency,  being a  very  important
event affecting public life, has also to be published in any
manner known  to modern     world and  the publication  in     the
official Gazette  is one  such    mode.  If  the    Constitution
requires that  a particular mode of publication is necessary
then such  mode must be followed, but if there is no mode of
publication prescribed    by the Constitution, then it must be
considered that     the Constitution  has left  the  method  of
publication to    the authority  issuing the  proclamation  in
order t., make it known to the members of the public. [445G-
H; 446A-B]
3.1 In the instant case, the Proclamations of Emergency
have been published in the official Gazette.[446B]
In the  Constitution and  in the  Rules of Procedure of
the Houses of Parliament and of the State Legislatures there
are several  provisions which  provide for resolutions being
passed by  the Houses  of Parliament  or the Houses of State
legislatures. They  are not  required to be published in the
official  Gazette,  even  though  in  some  cases  they     are
published, say,     where a  certain law  is adopted under Art.
252 or    a member  is removed on the ground of privilege etc.
They would not be treated as ineffective merely because they
are not     published in  the official  Gazette. They  are all,
however,  published   in  the    Reports     of  the  Houses  of
Parliament and of the Houses of the State Legislature within
a reasonable time. [446C; 447B-C]
3.2 The  Lok Sabha     Debates and the Rajya Sabha Debates
are the     journals or  the  reports  of    the  two  Houses  of
Parliament which  are printed  and published  by  them.     The
Court has to take judicial notice of the proceedings of both
the Houses  of Parliament under s. 57 of the Indian evidence
Act, 1872 and it is expected to treat the proceedings of the
two Houses  of Parliament as proved on the production of the
copies    of  the     journals  or  the  reports  containing     the
proceedings of    the  two  Houses  of  Parliament  which     are
published by them.[450E-F ]
3.3 What is essential is that the resolutions approving
the Proclamation  of Emergency    should be  passed within the
period of  two months.    A little  delay     in  publishing     the
proceedings  would   not  affect   the    validity   of  there
solutions. [454B-C]
434
3.4 The  reports of  the proceedings  of Parliament and
the  State   Legislatures   are      widely   circulated.     The
newspapers, radio  and the  television are  also  the  other
modern    means    which  give   publicity     to   all  Acts     and
Resolutions  of     Parliament  and  the  Legislatures  of     the
States. The publication in the Parliamentary Debates, though
after some  short  delay  is  adequate    publication  of     the
resolutions of Parliament as there is no rule which requires
that the  resolutions should  be published  in the  official
Gazette. Hence,     mere  non-publication    of  the     resolutions
approving the  Proclamations of     Emergency in  the  offlcial
Gazette did not make them ineffective. [454G-H; 455A-B]
In the  instant case, the resolutions of the Lok Sabha,
and the     Rajya Sabha approving the two resolutions have been
duly published    in the    official reports  of the two Houses.
[455B-C]
Waman Rao    & Ors.    Etc. Etc.  v. Union of India & Ors.,
[1981] 2  S.C.R. 1;  Harla v. The State of Rajasthan, [1952]
S.C.R. 110; State of Punjab v. Sat Pal Dang & Ors., [1969] 1
S.C.R. 478  and Mharendu  Dutt Majumdar v. The King Emperor,
[1942[ F.C.R. 38, referred to.

JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 63 of 1977.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
Petitioner-in-person.
Kuldeep  Singh,   Additional  Solicitor  General,    B.B.
Ahuja, Ms.  A. Subhashini, Ms. J. Wad and C.V. Subba Rao for
the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J.    Shri Baburao  alias P.B. Samant, the
petitioner herein,  who has  argued this case in person with
great  clarity     and  precision     has  raised  the  following
contentions in this petition.
(1) The  Proclamation of  Emergency issued on 3.12.1971
by the    President  of  India  was  either  ultra  vires     the
Constitution or had ceased to be in operation on 4.2.1972.
(2)  The  Proclamation  of     Emergency  dated  25.6.1975
issued by  the President  of India  on 26.6.1975  was either
ultra  vires  the  Constitution     or  had  ceased  to  be  in
operation on 26.8.1975;
(3) The  House of    the People  (Extension of  Duration)
Act, 1976  (No. 30 of 1976) is ultra vires the Constitution;
and
435
(4) The  Finance Act,  1976 (66 of 1976) is ultra vires
the Constitution.
Although the  petitioner had also challenged section 13
of the    Constitution (42nd  Amendment) Act,  1976 and clause
(c) of    section 3  of the Constitution (24th Amendment) Act,
1971 in     the petition he did not press these two contentions
at the hearing of the petition
The petitioner was an assessee under the Income-tax Act
and Wealth  Tax Act  during the     assessment year 1976-77 and
was liable  to pay  income-tax and  Wealth tax in accordance
with the rates prescribed by the Finance Act, 1976 which was
passed by the Lok Sabha during its extended period which was
extended under    the provisions    of the    House of  the People
(Extension of  Duration) Act,  1976 (Act  30 of 1976), after
the expiry  of five  years from     the date  appointed for its
first meeting.    The contention of the petitioner is that the
duration of  the House of the People could have been validly
extended only  when a Proclamation of Emergency was in force
under the  proviso to  clause  (2)  of    Article     83  of     the
Constitution and  since the  two Proclamations    of Emergency
dated 3rd  December, 1971  and 25th  June, 1975     were either
ultra  vires  the  Constitution     or  had  ceased  to  be  in
operation by  the time the House of the People (Extension of
Duration)  Act,      1976    (Act  30  of  1976)  was  passed  by
Parliament, the     House of the People (Extension of Duration)
Act, 1976  (Act 30  of 1976)  had no effect and consequently
all Acts  passed by  the House    of  the     People     during     the
extended period     including the    Finance Act, 1976 were ultra
vires the  Constitution.  He  further  submitted  that    even
though the  said Proclamations    had been validly issued, the
Proclamation of     Emergency  dated  3rd    December,  1971     had
ceased to  be in  operation on    3rd February,  1972 and     the
Proclamation of     emergency dated  25th June,  1975 which was
issued on  26th June,  1975 had ceased to be in operation by
26th August,  1975 because the resolutions passed by the two
Houses of  Parliament approving     the said  Proclamations  of
Emergency as  required by  clause (2)  of Article 352 of the
Constitution as     it stood  during the  relevant time had not
been published    in the official Gazette of the Government of
India.
The petition  is opposed  by the  Union of     India.     The
Union of  India has  contended that the two Proclamations of
Emergency had been duly issued by the President and approved
by the    resolutions of    two Houses of Parliament as required
by law    and that  actually the    proclamation of Emergency of
3rd December,  1971 had     been revoked  by the Vice-President
acting as the President by the Proclamation
436
dated 27th  March, 1977     and the  Proclamation of  Emergency
dated June  25th, 1975    had  been  revoked  by    him  by     the
Proclamation  dated  21st  March,  1977.  In  the  month  of
February, 1976    when the  House of  the People (Extension of
Duration)  Act,      1976    (Act  30  of  1976)  was  passed  by
Parliament both the Proclamations of Emergency were in force
and therefore  Parliament was  entitled to extend the period
of the    House of  the People  for a period not exceeding one
year at     a time.  The Finance  Act, 1976  passed during     the
period so  extended had     been, therefore, validly passed. It
was  further   pleaded    by  the     Union    of  India  that     the
publication of the resolutions was not necessary and that in
any event  since they  had been     published in  the Lok Sabha
Debates and  the Rajya    Sabha Debates  which were  published
under the  authority of     the Speaker  of the  House  of     the
People and  the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha respectively the
Proclamations of Emergency remained in force until they were
duly revoked.
Article  352 of  the Constitution     as it    stood at the
relevant time read as follows:
"352 (1) If the President is satisfied that a
grave emergency  exists whereby  the    security  of
India or  of any  part of the territory thereof is
threatened, whether  by war or external aggression
or internal  disturbance, he may, by Proclamation,
make a declaration to that effect.
(2) A Proclamation issued under clause (1)-
(a) may be revoked by a subsequent Proclamation;
(b) shall be laid before each House of Parliament;
(c) shall  cease to  operate at  the expiration of
two months  unless before  the expiration  of that
period it  has been approved by resolution of both
Houses of Parliament:
Provided that  if any  such  Proclamation  is
issued at  a time when the House of the People has
been dissolved  or the dissolution of the House of
the People  takes place  during the  period of two
months referred  to in  sub-clause (c),  and if  a
resolution approving    the  Proclamation  has    been
passed by the council of States, but no resolution
with respect    to such Proclamation has been passed
by the  House of  the People before the expiration
of that period, the
437
Proclamation    shall    cease  to   operate  at     the
expiration of A thirty days from the date on which
the House  of the  People  first  sits  after     its
reconstitution unless before the expiration of the
said period  of thirty days a resolution approving
the Proclamation has been also passed by the House
of People.
(3) A  Proclamation  of    Emergency  declaring
that the  security of     India or of any part of the
territory thereof  is     threatened  by     war  or  by
external aggression or by internal disturbance may
be made  before the actual occurrence of war or of
any  such   aggression  or   disturbance  if     the
President is    satisfied  that     there    is  imminent
danger thereof."
Clause (1) of Article 352 of the Constitution provided
that if     the President    was satisfied that a grave emergency
existed whereby     the security of India or of any part of the
territory thereof  was threatened whether by war or external
aggression or internal disturbance, he might by Proclamation
make a    declaration to    that effect. The Proclamation issued
under clause (1) of Article 352 of the Constitution could be
revoked by  a subsequent Proclamation. It was required to be
laid  before   each  House   of     Parliament   and  that     the
Proclamation would cease to operate at the expiration of two
months unless  before the  expiration of  that period it was
approved by resolutions of both Houses of Parliament.
On  December  3,    1971  when  India  was    attacked  by
Pakistan the  President issued    a Proclamation    under clause
(1) of    Article 352 as he was satisfied that the security of
India had  been threatened  by external aggression. The said
Proclamation was  published in    the Official  Gazette on the
same date. It reads thus:
MINISTRY OF HOME AFFAIRS
NOTIFICATION
New Delhi, 3rd December, 1971 G
C.S.R.  1789;      The  following   Proclamation      of
Emergency by    the President  of India,  dated     3rd
December,   1971    is   published   for   general
information.
Proclamation of Emergency
438
In exercise of powers conferred by clause (1)
of Article  352 of the Constitution, I, V.V. Giri,
President of    India, by  this Proclamation declare
that a grave emergency exists whereby the security
of India is threatened by external aggression.
New Delhi,
3rd December, 1971
sd/-
V.V. Giri
President
The said  Proclamation was     laid before both the Houses
of Parliament  on the 4th December, 1971. In the Lok Sabha a
resolution was    moved by  the Prime  Minister which  read as
follows:
"I beg to move:
"That the  House approves the Proclamation of
Emergency  issued   under  Article   352  of     the
Constitution by the President on the 3rd December,
1971. "
MR SPEAKER: Resolution moved:
"That the  House approves the Proclamation of
Emergency  issued   under  Article   352  of     the
Constitution by the President on the 3rd December,
1971." (See  Lok Sabha  Debates dated     December 4,
1971 Column 4).
After  some discussion in the House the resolution was
carried unanimously  and it  was  adopted.  (See  Lok  Sabha
Debates dated  December 4,  1971  column  37).    Similarly  a
resolution was adopted by the Rajya Sabha approving the said
Proclamation of     Emergency. (See  Rajya Sabha  Debates dated
December 4,  1971 column  46). The  said resolutions  of the
Houses of  Parliament were  no doubt  not published  in     the
official Gazette.  The above  Proclamation of  Emergency was
revoked by  the Vice-President    acting as  President on     the
27th March, 1977 by a Proclamation which read thus:
439
"MINSTRY OF HOME AFFAIRS
NOTIFICATION
New Delhi, the 27th March, 1977
G.S.R. 132  (E)-The following Proclamation made by
the Vice-President acting as President of India is
published for general information:
PROCLAMATION
In exercise  of the  powers conferred by sub-
clause (a)  of clause     (2) of     Article 352  of the
Constitution,     I,  Basappa  Danappa  Jatti,  Vice-
President acting  as President  of  India,  hereby
revoke the  Proclamation of Emergency issued under
clause (1) of that article on the 3rd of December.
1971 and  published with  the notification  of the
Government  of  India     in  the  Ministry  of    Home
Affairs No.  G.S.R. 1789,  dated the 3rd December,
1971.
New Delhi,
the 27th March, 1977
sd/-
B.D.Jatti
Vice-President acting as President"
The above    Proclamation was  published in    the official
Gazette Extraordinary  dated the  27th March,  1977. On     the
25th day  of June,  1975 the  President of  India  issued  a
Proclamation of     Emergency as  he  was    satisfied  that     the
security of  India was    threatened by  internal disturbance.
That Proclamation  was published  under a notification dated
26th June, 1975 in the official Gazette. It read thus:
"MINISTRY OF HOME AFFAIRS
NOTIFICATION
New Delhi, the 26th June, 1975
G.S.R. 353 (B)
440
The following  Proclamation of  Emergency  by
the President of India, dated the 25th June, 1975,
is published for general information:
PROCLAMATION OF EMERGENCY
In exercise of the powers conferred by clause
(1)  of   Article  352  of  the  Constitution,  I,
Fakkhruddin Ali Ahmed, President of India, by this
Proclamation declare that a grave emergency exists
whereby the  security of  India is  threatened  by
internal disturbance.
New Delhi,
the 26th June, 1975       F.A. Ahmed,
President
No .11/16013/1/75-S&P(D-11)
S.L. Khurana, Secy."
A resolution  was moved  in the  Lok Sabha     on July 21,
1975  seeking    the  approval    of  the     Lok  Sabha  to     the
Proclamation of Emergency dated the 25th June, 1975 and also
the order  of the  President dated  29th June,    1975 made in
exercise of the powers conferred by sub-clause (b) of clause
(4) of Article 352 of the Constitution (as it stood then) as
applying to the State of Jammu and Kashmir. The Proclamation
of Emergency  was also    laid on     the table of the Lok Sabha.
That resolution     was adopted  by the  Lok Sabha     on July 23,
1975. (See  Lok Sabha  Debates dated  July 23,    1975, column
427). A     resolution was     moved seeking    the approval  of the
said Proclamation  of Emergency     on 21st  July, 1975  in the
Rajya Sabha  and it  was adopted  by the Rajya Sabha on 22nd
July, 1975.  (See Rajya     Sabha Debates    dated July  22, 1975
column 124).  The  resolution  of  the    Lok  Sabha  and     the
resolution of  the Rajya  Sabha approving  the    Proclamation
dated 25th  June, 1975    were not  published in    the official
Gazette. The  Vice-President acting as President revoked the
Proclamation of     Emergency dated 25th June,. 1975 by another
Proclamation dated 21st March, 1977 which reads thus:
"MINISTRY OF HOME AFFAIRS
NOTIFICATION
XXXXXXXXXX
G.S.R. 117/E-The     following Proclamation made
by the
441
Vice-President acting     as President  of  India  is
published for A general information:
PROCLAMATION
In exercise  of the  powers conferred by sub-
clause (a)  of clause     (2) of     article 352  of the
Constitution,     I,  Basappa  Danappa  Jatti,  Vice-
President acting  as President  of  India,  hereby
revoke the  Proclamation of Emergency issued under
clause (1)  of that article on the 25th June, 1975
and published     with the  notification of the Govt.
Of India  in the  Ministry of Home Affairs No. GSR
353(b) dated the 26th June, 1975.
B.D.Jatti
Vice-President acting as President
New Delhi,
the 21st March, 1977."
Article 83(2)  of the  Constitution during the relevant
time, that is, before the 42nd Amendment Act of 1976 read as
follows:
"83. (1) .........................
(2) The    House of  the People,  unless sooner
dissolved, shall  continue for five years from the
date appointed for its first meeting and no longer
and the  expiration of  the said  period  of    five
years shall operate as a dissolution of the House:
Provided that  the said    period may,  while a
Proclamation, of  Emergency is  in  operation,  be
extended by  Parliament by  law for  a period     not
exceeding one     year at a time and not extending in
any case  beyond a  period of six months after the
proclamation has ceased to operate."
As the period of five years from the date appointed for
its first  meeting of  the then existing House of the People
was about to come to a close Parliament enacted the House of
the People  (Extension of  Duration) Act,  1976 (Act  30  of
1976) which received the assent of the President on the 16th
February, 1976. Section 2 of that Act read thus:
442
"2. Extension  of  duration  of    the  present
House of  the People.     The period  of     five  years
(being the  period for  which     the  House  of     the
People may,  under clause (2) of article 83 of the
Constitution, continue from the date appointed for
its first  meeting) in  relation  to    the  present
House of  the People shall, while the Proclamation
of Emergency    issued on  the 3rd  day of December,
1971 and on the 25th day of June, 1975 are both in
operation, be extended for a period of one year:
Provided that  if both  or either of the said
Proclamations cease  or ceases  to operate  before
the expiration of the said period of one year.
The Finance Act, 1976 was passed by the Lok Sabha after
its period  was extended  as stated  above and    by the Rajya
Sabha in the early part of the year 1976 and it received the
assent of  the President on the 27th May, 1976. Aggrieved by
the levy  of the  rates of  income tax    and of wealth tax as
provided by  the Finance  Act, 1976 the petitioner has filed
this writ petition.
Two important  questions which  arise for consideration
in this     case are  (i)    whether     the  two  Proclamations  of
Emergency were    validly issued or not? and (ii) whether each
of the    said Proclamations  had ceased to be in force at the
expiration of two months from the date on which each of them
was issued  as the  resolutions of  the Houses of Parliament
approving each    of  them  had  not  been  published  in     the
official Gazette.  In Waman Rao & ors. Etc. Etc. v. Union of
India &     Ors.,[1981]2 S.C.R.1  the validity  of the 40th and
the 42nd  Constitutional Amendments  had been  questioned on
similar grounds.  This Court while it left open the question
whether the  issuance  of  the    Proclamations  of  emergency
raised a  justiciable issue,  on the  basis of    the material
placed before  it came    to the conclusion that they had been
duly issued.  Chandrachud, CJ  observed in the course of his
judgment in Waman Rao’s case (supra) at page 45 thus:
“Thus,  in   the     first    place,    we  are     not
disposed to  decide the question as to whether the
issuance of  a proclamation  of emergency raises a
justiciable issue.  Secondly, assuming it does, it
is not  possible in the present state of record to
answer that  issue one  way  or  the    other.    And,
lastly,  whether   there  was      justification     for
continuing  the   state  of  emergency  after     the
cessation of hostilities with
443
Pakistan is  a matter     on which  we find ourselves
ill-equipped.
Coming to  the two  Acts of 1976 by which the
life of  the Lok  Sabha was extended, section 2 of
the first  of these  Acts, 30     of 1976,  which was
passed on  February 16,  1976, provided  that     the
period of five years in relation to the then House
of the  People shall    be extended  for a period of
one year  “while  the     Proclamation  of  Emergency
issued on the 3rd day of December, 1971 and on the
25th day  of June,  1975, are     both in operation.”
The second  Act of  Extension continues to contain
the  same   provision.  It  is  contended  by     the
petitioners that  the proclamation  of December 3,
1971 should have been revoked long before February
16, 1976  and that  the proclamation    of June     25,
1975 was  wholly uncalled  for and  was mala fide.
Since the  pre-condition on  which the life of the
Parliament was extended is not satisfied, the Act,
it is contended, is ineffective to extend the life
of the  Parliament. We find it difficult to accept
this    contention.   Both  the      proclamations      of
emergency were  in fact  in operation     on February
16, 1976  when the first Act was passed as also on
November 24,    1976 when  the second  Act,  109  of
1976, was  passed. It     is not     possible for  us to
accept the  submission of the petitioners that for
the various  reasons assigned     by them,  the first
proclamation must be deemed not to be in existence
and that  the second    proclamation must be held to
have been  issued mala fide and therefore non-est.
The evidence    produced before     us is    insufficient
for  recording  a  decision  on  either  of  these
matters. It must follow that the two Acts by which
the duration    of the    Lok Sabha  was extended     are
valid     and   lawful.    The   40th  and      the    42nd
Constitutional Amendments  cannot,  therefore,  be
struck down on the ground that they were passed by
a Lok Sabha which was not lawfully in existence.”
The petitioner,  however, contended  before us that the
above decision    had been  rendered on  insufficient material
and that  if it     was open to any person to place before this
Court sufficient  material the    Court should  reconsider the
question of  the validity of the Proclamations of Emergency.
Assuming that  it is  possible for  this Court to reopen the
case, the  petitioner has not been able to place before this
Court any  new material on the basis of which it is possible
for us to
444
conclude that  the Proclamations  had  been  issued  by     the
President without  applying his     mind or  mala fide. We are,
therefore, bound  by the  decision of  this Court  in  Waman
Rao’s  case  (supra)  upholding     the  validity    of  the     two
Proclamations of  Emergency. The  only other  question which
requires to  be considered  is whether    on  account  of     the
non-publication in  the official  Gazette of the resolutions
of  the      two  Houses    of  Parliament     approving  the     two
Proclamations of Emergency, the Proclamations came to an end
on the    expiry of  the period of two months from the date of
issue thereof.
The fact  that the     two Proclamations had been approved
by the    resolutions passed  by both the Houses of Parliament
as set    out earlier  in the  course of    this judgment is not
disputed by  the petitioner.  What the    petitioner, however,
contended before  the Court  was that  the resolutions which
were almost  legislative in  character    and  which  had     the
effect of  converting  the  federal  State  into  almost  an
unitary State  by conferring  large powers  on    the  Central
Executive and  Parliament as  provided in Article 353 and in
some other  provisions of  the Constitution should have been
given wide  publicity  so  that     people     who  were  affected
thereby could  if they did not feel satisfied about the need
for continuing the state of emergency either protest or make
appropriate representation.  The petitioner  urged that     the
democratic  nature   of     the  Constitution  which  had    been
highlighted in    its Preamble  required that  wide  publicity
should be  given to  the resolutions  of the  two Houses  of
Parliament approving  any Proclamation of Emergency and that
the only  means available  for giving such publicity was the
publication of    resolutions in the official Gazette in which
the  Proclamations  of    Emergency  had    been  published.  In
support of  his argument  the petitioner relied upon several
Proclamations Issued  in India    right from the days of Queen
Victoria on  many important  occasions which had been widely
published in  the official  Gazette and     by other  means. He
also  drew   our  attention   to  the  Proclamations  issued
elsewhere which had been given similar publicity through the
official  Gazettes  of    those  countries.  The    petitioner’s
argument in  a nut  shell was that the resolutions passed by
Parliament which  had the  effect of continuing the duration
of emergency  being of    the same  character as Proclamations
themselves, should  have  been    published  in  the  official
Gazette     and   in  the     absence  of  such  publication     the
Proclamations of  Emergency should  be deemed to have become
ineffective on    the expiry  of the period of two months from
the issue thereof.
Article 352 of the Constitution does not prescribe that
a Proclamation    of Emergency  should  be  published  in     the
official Gazette. The
445
“Proclamation of  Emergency” is     defined in  Article 366(18)
thus:
“366. (18)  “Proclamation of emergency” means
a Proclamation  issued under clause (1) of Article
352.”
Article 366(19)  of the  Constitution defines a “public
notification” thus: B
“366.(19)  “public   notification”  means   a
notification in  the Gazette    of India, or, as the
case may be, the Official Gazette of a State.”
Wherever the  Constitution expressly requires a certain
notification should  be published in the official Gazette it
has stated  that the said notification shall be published in
the  form   of    a   public  notification.   By    way   of  an
illustration, reference may be made to Article 364(1) of the
Constitution which reads thus:
“364.(1)     Notwithstanding  anything  in    this
Constitution,     the   President   may     by   public
notification direct  that as from such date as may
be specified in the notification-
(a) any    law made  by Parliament     or  by     the
Legislature of a State shall not apply to any
major  port   or     aerodrome  or    shall  apply
thereto    subject      to  such   exceptions      or
modifications as     may  be  specified  in     the
notification, or
(b) any    existing law  shall  cease  to    have
effect in  any major port or aerodrome except
as respects things done or omitted to be done
before  the   said  date,  or  shall  in     its
application to  such port  or aerodrome    have
effect  subject     to   such   exceptions      or
modifications as     may  be  specified  in     the
notification .. -
Thus it  is seen  that any     public notification  issued
under Article 364(1) of the Constitution has to be published
in the    official Gazette  as provided  by Article 366(19) of
the Constitution.  A Proclamation  of Emergency being a very
important  event  affecting  public  life  has    also  to  be
published in  any manner  known to  the modern world and the
publication in the Official Gazette is one such mode. We are
of the    view  that  if    the  Constitution  requires  that  a
particular mode of publica-
446
tion is     necessary then     such mode  must be  followed but if
there  is   no    mode   of  publication     prescribed  by     the
Constitution  then   it     must    be   considered      that     the
Constitution has  left the  method  of    publication  to     the
authority issuing the proclamation in order to make it known
to the    members of  the public.     In  the  instant  case     the
Proclamations  of  Emergency  have  been  published  in     the
official Gazette.  The petitioner contended that even though
it was not expressly provided that the resolutions passed by
both the  Houses of  Parliament should    be published  in the
official Gazette  they should  have been  published for     the
very same  reason which     compelled the Government to publish
the  Proclamations   in     the   official     Gazette.   In     the
Constitution and  in the Rules of Procedure of the Houses of
Parliament and    of the    Stale Legislatures there are several
provisions which provide for resolutions being passed by the
Houses of  Parliament or  the Houses  of State Legislatures.
They are  among others    (i) Article 123(2)(a)-Disapproval of
an ordinance;  (ii) Article  169-Abolition or  creation of a
Legislative Council;  (iii) Article 213(2)(a)-Disapproval of
an ordinance;  (iv) Article 249-Resolution of the Council of
States empowering  Parliament to  legislate with  respect to
any matter in a State List in national interest; (v) Article
252-Resolutions of the House or Houses of State Legislatures
of two or more States to enable Parliament to legislate on a
State subject or adoption of a law made under Article 252 by
a State     Legislature which  had not  requested Parliament to
make it before it was passed by the Parliament; (vi) Article
312-Resolution passed  by the  Council of  States creating a
new All-India  Service; (vii)  Article 315(2)-Resolutions of
House or  Houses of  State Legislature of two or more States
to enable  Parliament to  provide a  common  Public  Service
Commission to  such States;  (viii) Article 320(5)-Amendment
or repeal  of Regulations  made     by  the  President  or     the
Governor under    the proviso to Article 320(3); (ix) original
Article 352(2)(c) and the present Article 352(4)-Approval of
Proclamations of  Emergency by the Houses of Parliament; (x)
Article 356(3)-Approval     of Proclamation  made under Article
356(1). (xi)  Article 360(2)-Approval of the Proclamation of
financial emergency  by     the  Houses  of  Parliament;  (xii)
Proviso to Article 368-Resolutions to be passed by the State
Legislatures   approving   the     constitutional      amendments
approved by  Parliament; (xiii)     Article 371A(1)(a)-Power of
Nagaland Legislative  Assembly to adopt an Act of Parliament
in respect of certain matters; (xiv) Articles 61, 67(b), 90,
94, 101(4),  124(4), 148(1),  190(4) and 217(1)(b)-relate to
removal of high constitutional dignitaries from office; (xv)
Article 3-State     Legislature expressing     its  views  on     the
alteration of its boundaries of the State
447
concerned; (xvi)  Rule No. 234 to 239 of the Lok Sabha Rules
of  A    Procedure  and     Conduct  of   Business-relating  to
modification of subordinate Legislation and (xvii) Privilege
Motions before    the  Houses  of     Parliament  and  the  State
Legislatures relating  to punishment for contempt or removal
from membership     on account  of highly unbecoming conduct of
members. In  all these    cases any  resolution passed  by the
concerned legislative  body has     far-reaching  consequences.
They are  not required    to  be    published  on  the  Official
Gazette, even  though in some cases they are published, say,
where a Central law is adopted under Article 252 or a member
is removed  on the  ground of privilege etc.. They would not
be treated  as    ineffective  merely  because  they  are     not
published in  the official  Gazette. They  are    all  however
published in  the Reports of the Houses of Parliament and of
the Houses  of the  State Legislature  within  a  reasonable
time.
The petitioner  relied on the decision of this Court in
Harla v.  the State  of     Rajasthan,  [1952]  S.C.R.  110  in
support of  his contention.  In that  case  the     facts    were
these. The  Council of    Ministers  appointed  by  the  Crown
Representative for  the government and administration of the
Jaipur State passed a Resolution in 1923 purporting to enact
a law  called the Jaipur opium Act, but that law was neither
promulgated or    published in  the Gazette  nor made known to
the public. The Jaipur Laws Act, 1923, which was also passed
by the    Council     and  which  came  into     force    on  the     Ist
November, 1924,     provided by section 3(b) that the law to be
administered by     the court  of the  Jaipur  State  shall  be
……… “(b)all  the regulations  now in  force within the
said territories and the enactments and regulations that may
hereafter be  passed from  time to  time by  the  State     and
published in official Gazette.” In 1938 the Jaipur Opium Act
was amended  by adding a clause to the effect that “it shall
come into force from the Ist of September, 1924.” This Court
held that  the mere passing of the resolution of the Council
without further     publication or     promulgation of the law was
not sufficient    to make     the law  operative and     the  Jaipur
opium Act  was not  therefore a     valid law.  It further held
that the  said Act  was not  saved by  section 3(b)  of     the
Jaipur Laws Act, 1923, as it was not a valid law in force on
the Ist November, 1924, and the mere addition of a clause in
1938 that  it came  into force    from 1924  was of no use. In
State of  Punjab v.  Sat Pal Dang & Ors. [1969] 1 S.C.R. 478
one of    the questions  which  arose  for  consideration     was
whether     the   decision     of   the  Governor  proroguing     the
Legislative Assembly was required to be communicated to each
and every  member of  the Legislature before it could become
effective. This     Court    held  that  Article  174(2)  of     the
Constitution which  enabled the     Governor  to  prorogue     the
Legislature did not indicate the manner
448
in which the Governor was to make such orders known and that
he could  follow the  well-established    practice  that    such
orders were  ordinarily made  known by a public notification
which meant  no more  than that     they were  notified in     the
Official Gazette of the State. There was such a notification
on the    11th March, 1968 and the prorogation must be held to
have taken  effect from     the date of publication. It was not
necessary that    the order should reach each and every member
individually before  it could become effective. In so far as
the Governor  was concerned  it was open to him to publish a
notification issued  by him  under  Article  174(2)  of     the
Constitution in     the Official  Gazette of the State and such
publication was     considered to    be sufficient.    But the real
question in  this case    is whether the resolutions passed by
both  the   Houses   of      Parliament   approving   the     two
Proclamations of  Emergency had     also to be published in the
official Gazette.  We shall  assume that  the resolutions of
both the  Houses of  Parliament approving  a Proclamation of
Emergency should  be given  due publicity.  We have  already
shown above  that in  the Lok Sabha Debates and in the Rajya
Sabha Debates the proceedings relating to the resolutions in
question had been published in the usual course. Rule 379 of
the Rules  of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha
provides for  the publication  of the  full  report  of     the
proceedings of the Lok Sabha. It reads thus:
“379.  The   Secretary  shall   cause  to  be
prepared a  full report  of the proceedings of the
House at  each of  its sittings and shall, as soon
as practicable, publish it in such form and manner
as the Speaker may, from time to time, direct.
Rule 382(1) of the said Rules provides for the printing
and publication of Parliamentary papers. It reads thus:
“382. (1) The speaker may authorise printing,
publication, distribution  or sale  of any  paper,
document or report in connection with the business
of the House or any paper, document or report laid
on the  Table or  presented  to  the    House  or  a
Committee thereof.
(2) A  paper,  document    or  report  printed,
published, distributed  or sold  in  pursuance  of
sub-rule (1) shall be deemed to have been printed,
published, distributed or sold under the authority
of the  House within    the meaning of clause (2) of
Article 105 of the Constitution.”
Similarly in  the Rules  of Procedure  and     Conduct  of
Business of
449
the Council of States (Rajya Sabha) Rule 260 provides thus:
“260.   Preparation    and   publication      of
proceedings  of   Council.-The   Secretary-General
shall cause  to be  prepared a  full report of the
proceedings of the Council at each of its meetings
and shall,  as soon  as practicable, publish it in
such form  and manner     as the     Chairman may,    from
time to time, direct.”
The Rules    of Procedure  of  the  both  the  Houses  of
Parliament are made under Article 118(1) of the Constitution
which reads thus:
“118.(1) Each  House of    Parliament may    make
rules for regulating, subject to the provisions of
this Constitution,  its procedure  and the conduct
of its business.
(2) Until  rules are  made under     clause (1),
the rules  of procedure  and    standing  orders  in
force immediately  before the commencement of this
Constitution with  respect to     the Legislature  of
the  Dominion      of  India  shall  have  effect  in
relation   to       Parliament    subject       to    such
modifications     and  adaptations  as  may  be    made
therein by  the Chairman  of the Council of States
or the  Speaker of the House of the People, as the
case may be ………..”
Section  57 of  the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 requires
the Court  to take  judicial  notice  of  the  facts  stated
therein. Clause     (4) of     section 57  of the  Indian Evidence
Act, 1872 reads thus:
“57. The     Court shall take judicial notice of
the fol lowing facts:
………………………………………….
(4) The  course of proceeding of Parliament of the
United Kingdom,  of the  Constituent    Assembly  of
India     of   Parliament  and  of  the    Legislatures
established under  any laws  for the time being in
force in a Province or in the State.”
Section 56     of the     Indian Evidence  Act, 1872 provides
that:
“56. No    fact of     which the  court will    take
judicial notice need be proved.”
Section 74     of the     Indian Evidence Act, 1872 refers to
the docu-
450
ments  which   are  considered     to  be      public  documents.
Sub-clause (iii) of clause (1) of section 74 reads thus:
“74  The      following  documents     are  public
documents:
(1) documents     forming the  acts or records of the
acts-(i) ………..    (ii) ….  (iii)  of  public
officers, legislative,  judicial and    executive of
any part  of India or of the Commonwealth, or of a
foreign country.”
Section 78     of the     Indian Evidence Act, 1872 lays down
the mode  of proof of certain public documents. The relevant
part of it reads thus:
“78. The     following public  documents may  be
proved as follows:
(1)…………………………………….
(2) The proceedings of the Legislatures,-
by the journals of these bodies respectively,
or by     published Acts     or abstracts,    or by copies
purporting  to   be  printed     by  order   of     the
Government concerned.”
The Lok  Sabha Debates  and the Rajya Sabha Debates are
the journals  or the reports of the two Houses of Parliament
which are  printed and    published by  them. The Court has to
take judicial  notice of  the proceedings of both the Houses
of Parliament  and is  expected to  treat the Proceedings of
the two     Houses of Parliament as proved on the production of
the  copies  of     the  journals    or  the     reports  containing
proceedings of    the  two  Houses  of  Parliament  which     are
published by them.
In Niharendu  Dutt Majumdar v. The King Emperor, [1942]
F.C.R.38 the  Federal Court  of India  was  called  upon  to
decide a  question almost  similar to the question which has
arisen before  us in  this case. The facts of that case were
these. Section    102 of    the Government    of India  Act,    1935
authorised the    Governor-General to  issue a Proclamation of
Emergency, the relevant part of which read as follows:
“102.(1)     Notwithstanding   anything  in     the
preceding
451
sections of  this chapter, the Federal Legislature
shall,  if   the  Governor-General   has  in     his
discretion declared  by Proclamation    (in this Act
referred to as a “Proclamation of Emergency”) that
a grave  emergency exists  whereby the security of
India is  threatened, whether     by war     or internal
disturbance,    have   power  to  make    laws  for  a
Province or  any part     thereof with respect to any
of  the   matters  enumerated     in  the  Provincial
Legislative List  or to make laws, whether or not,
for a     Province or  any part thereof, with respect
to any  matter not  enumerated in any of the lists
in the Seventh Schedule to this Act.
………………………………………
(2)……………………………………
(3) A Proclamation of Emergency:
(a) may be revoked by a subsequent Proclamation;
(b)  shall   be  communicated      forthwith  to     the
Secretary of State and shall be laid by him before
each House of Parliament;
(c) shall  cease to  operate at  the expiration of
six months,  unless before  the expiration of that
period it has been approved by Resolutions of both
Houses of Parliament.”
The  Governor-General  had     issued     a  Proclamation  in
exercise  of   his  powers   under  section  102(2)  of     the
Government  of    India  Act,  1935  declaring  that  a  grave
emergency  existed,   whereby  the  security  of  India     was
threatened, by    war on    September  3,  1939  on     receipt  of
information from  His Majesty’s     Government  in     the  United
Kingdom that  a state of war existed between His Majesty and
Germany and  on September  29, 1939 the Defence of India Act
1939 was  enacted. The    appellant in that case was convicted
by the Additional Chief Presidency Magistrate at Calcutta on
the 21st  July, 1941,  of offences  under sub-paragraphs (e)
and (k)     of paragraph (6) of Rule 34 of the Defence of India
Rules and  was sentenced  to be     detained till the rising of
the Court  and to  pay a  fine of  Rs.500, and in default to
undergo six  months’ rigorous  imprisonment. The  conviction
and sentence  were upheld  on appeal  by the High Court, and
the appellant had preferred the above said appeal before the
Federal Court  against the  judgment of     the High  Court  of
Calcutta. On appeal although the appellant was
452
acquitted on  the ground  that the  facts established in the
case did  not make  out the  offences for  which he had been
punished the  Federal Court  negatived the contention of the
appellant that    the Proclamation  of Emergency    issued under
section 102  of the Government of India Act, 1935 had ceased
to be  in force at the expiration of six months as there was
no proof of the fact that the said Proclamation of Emergency
had been  approved by  the resolutions of both the Houses of
the British  Parliament as required by clause (c) of section
102 of    the Government    of India  Act, 1935. Before the High
Court the  relevant volumes  of the  “Parliamentary Debates”
which contained     the official  reports of the debates in the
Houses of  the British    Parliament  had     been  produced     and
accepted by  the  High    Court  as  proof  that    the  British
Parliament had    passed the  necessary resolutions.  But     the
appellant contended  that that    proof was  not adequate     and
that only  copies of the official Journals of the two Houses
had to be produced. The Advocate-General of Bengal contended
that the  court was  not entitled  and indeed  ought to take
judicial notice of the fact that the resolutions were passed
and that  in any  event the  volumes  of  the  Parliamentary
Debates were  all that    was necessary  in the  way of  legal
proof. Gwyer,  C.J., while rejecting the above contention of
the appellant observed at pages 45-47 thus: E
“In our    opinion the  volumes of the official
Parliamentary     Debates   afforded  adequate  legal
proof of the passing of the two Resolutions by the
Houses of  Parliament. Section  78 of     the  Indian
Evidence Act sets our certain categories of public
documents and     the manner  in which  they  may  be
proved. The  first four  categories (as amended by
the Adaptation  of Indian  Laws order,  1937)     are
these: “(1)  Act, orders  or notifications  of the
Central Government  in any  of its departments, or
of any  Provincial Government or any department of
any Provincial  Government”; “(2)  Proceedings  of
the Legislatures,  which may    be  proved  ‘by     the
journals  of    those  bodies  respectively,  or  by
published  Acts   or    abstracts,   or     by  copies,
purporting to     be printed by orders or regulations
issued by  Her Majesty or by the Privy Council, or
by any  department of     Her Majesty’s    Government”;
(3) Proclamations, orders or regulations issued by
Her Majesty  of by  the Privy     Council or  by     any
department of     Her Majesty’s    Government “(4)     The
Acts of  the Executive  or the  proceedings of the
Legislature of  a foreign  country”, which  may be
proved “by  journals published by their authority,
or commonly received in that country as such”, and
in certain other ways not here mate-
453
rial. In our opinion the proceedings of Parliament
fall under  either the  second or  fourth  of     the
categories set  out above. It may be said that the
reference in the second category to proceedings of
“the Legislatures”, following immediately upon the
first category  which is  confined to acts, orders
or notifications  of Governments in British India,
is to     be taken as a reference to the Legislatures
of  British  India  only.  We     find  it  difficult
however  to    beliece     that  s.  78  excludes     any
reference  whatsoever      to  the   proceedings      of
Parliament, especially  when the executive acts of
the Government  of the  United Kingdom are given a
category  to     themselves,  and   we    should    find
ourselves   compelled,    if     we   adopted    that
construction,     to   hold   that   proceedings      in
Parliament fell  into the fourth category, that is
to say,  “the proceedings of the Legislatures of a
foreign country”;  but it  would perhaps  be    even
more difficult to suppose that Parliament can have
been so  described by     the Indian  Legislature  in
1872.      The    explanation   may   be     that    ”the
legislatures” to  which the second category refers
are intended to include all the legislatures which
have the  power to  make laws for British India or
for any  part thereof;  but we  have no doubt that
the present  case must  fall within either the one
category or  the other  ..  …………  We    have
ascertained  by   inquiry  from   the     Legislative
Department of     the Government     of India  that     the
official Reports  of the  Council of    State and of
the Legislative Assembly which follow very closely
the  form   and  manner  of  presentation  of     the
official Parliamentary Debates in England, are the
only record  of the proceedings of the two Houses,
no other record similar to that of the Journals of
the two  Houses of  Parliament  in  England  being
made. The  proceedings of  the Indian     Legislature
could clearly     be proved  by tendering in evidence
copies of  these official  Reports; and we can see
no reason why the proceedings of Parliament cannot
be  proved   by   an     exactly   similar   English
publication, issued with a similar authority.
Having regard  to the  view which  we take on
this    point,     we  need  not    consider  the  other
contention urged by the Advocate-General of Bengal
that    the   passing  of  the    two  Resolutions  by
Parliament was  a matter  of which the Courts were
entitled to take judicial notice.”
454
We have  quoted in     extenso the  relevant part  of     the
judgment in  Niharendu Dutt  Majumdar’s, case  (supra)    with
which we  respectfully agree  since we are concerned in this
case with a similar question.
We  do not  also find much substance in the submission
of the    petitioner that     the publication  in the  Lok  Sabha
Debates and  in the  Rajya Sabha Debates had been made after
about two  months and  therefore until    the resolutions were
published they    were ineffective.  What is essential is that
the resolutions     approving  the     Proclamation  of  Emergency
should be  passed within  the period of two months. A little
delay in  publishing the  proceedings would  not affect     the
validity of  the resolutions. Let us take the case of an Act
of Parliament.    Under section  5 of the General Clauses Act,
1897 where  any Central     Act is     not expressed    to come into
operation on  a particular  day     then  it  shall  come    into
operation on  the day on which it receives the assent of the
President and unless the contrary is expressed a Central Act
shall be  construed as    coming into operation immediately on
the expiration    of the    day preceding its commencement. Even
if there is some delay in the publication of the Central Act
in  the      official  Gazette,  its  operation  does  not     get
suspended until     such publication  unless  the    contrary  is
expressed in the statute itself. While on the face of it, as
observed, by Sir C.K. Allen in his Law and orders (2nd Edn.)
at page     132, it  would seem  reasonable that legislation of
any kind  should not  be binding  until it has some how been
‘made known’ to the public, “that is not the rule of law and
if it  were, the  automatic cogency  of a  statute which has
received the  royal  assent  would  be    seriously  and    most
inconveniently impaired”. The reasoning was that statutes at
least received    publicity of  Parliamentary debate  and that
therefore they    were, or should be ‘known’. But this was not
true of     delegated legislation,     which did  not     necessarily
receive any  publicity in  Parliament or  in any  other way.
That is     the reason for the insistence of the publication of
subordinate legislation     in the     official Gazette  before it
can be    brought into  force. In     so  far  as  the  Acts     and
resolutions passed by the Houses of Parliament and the State
Legislatures are  concerned the     very process of passing the
law or    the resolutions     in the     Houses of Parliament or the
State Legislatures  gives them    ample publicity. The reports
of the    proceedings of Parliament and the State Legislatures
are widely  circulated. The newspapers, radio and television
are also  the other modern means which give publicity to all
Acts and  resolutions of  Parliament and the Legislatures of
the  States.   In  ancient  days  the  King’s  soldiers     and
announcers had    to go  round the  realm to give publicity to
the royal  proclamations. The present day world is different
from the ancient world. The publication in the Parliamentary
Debates though after
455
some short  delay is adequate publication of the resolutions
of Parliament  as there     is no    rule which requires that the
resolutions should  be published  in the  official  Gazette.
Hence mere  non-publication of the resolutions approving the
Proclamations of  Emergency in    the official Gazette did not
make them ineffective.
We are  satisfied that the resolutions of the Lok Sabha
and Rajya Sabha approving the two resolutions have been duly
published in  the official  reports of    the  two  Houses  of
Parliament.  This  ought  to  meet  the     contention  of     the
petitioner that     any public  Act or resolution which affects
public life should be given due publicity. We also hold that
the production    of the    Lok Sabha  Debates and    of the Rajya
Sabha Debates  containing the  proceedings of the two Houses
of Parliament  relating to  the period between the time when
the resolutions     were moved  in each  of the  two Houses  of
Parliament and    the time  when    the  resolutions  were    duly
adopted amounts     to proof of the said resolutions. The Court
is required  to take judicial notice of the said proceedings
under section  57 of  the Indian Evidence Act, 1872. We are,
therefore,  of    the  view  that     the  two  Proclamations  of
Emergency were    kept in     force by  virtue of the resolutions
passed by  the Houses  of Parliament  until they  were    duly
revoked by  the two  Proclamations which  were issued by the
Vice-President acting  as President  of India  in  the    year
1977. Since the two Proclamations of Emergency were in force
when the  House of  the People    (Extension of Duration) Act,
1976 (Act  30 of  1976) was  passed its     validity cannot  be
questioned. The     Lok Sabha  passed  the     Finance  Act,    1976
during the extended period of its duration and therefore the
validity of  Finance Act, 1976 also cannot be questioned. In
view of     the foregoing    this petition  should fail and it is
accordingly dismissed. There will be no order as to costs.
N.P.V.                    Petition dismissed.
456

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