Interpretation of Statutes PDF
Interpretation of Statutes PDF
Interpretation of Statutes PDF
Introduction
Enacted laws, especially the modern acts and rules, are drafted by
legal experts and it could be expected that the language used will
leave little room for interpretation or construction. But the
experience of all those who have to bear and share the task of
application of the law has been different.[1]
“Where the words are clear and there is no obscurity, and there is no
ambiguity and the intention of the legislature is clearly conveyed,
there is no scope for court to take upon itself the task of amending
or altering the statutory provisions.”
The correct is one that best harmonises the words with the object of
the statute.[7]As stated by Iyer J. “to be literal in meaning is to see
the skin and miss the soul. The judicial key of construction is the
composite perception of the deha and the dehi of the provision.”[8]
Rules of Interpretation
Meaning
Opponents of the plain meaning rule claim that the rule rests on the
erroneous assumption that words have a fixed meaning. In fact,
words are imprecise, leading justices to impose their own prejudices
to determine the meaning of a statute. However, since little else is
offered as an alternative discretion-confining theory, plain meaning
survives.
This is the oldest of the rules of construction and is still used today,
primarily because judges may not legislate. As there is always the
danger that a particular interpretation may be the equivalent of
making law, some judges prefer to adhere to the law’s literal
wording.
The Mischief Rule
The mischief rule is a certain rule that judges can apply in statutory
interpretation in order to discover Parliament’s intention. It
essentially asks the question: By creating an Act of Parliament what
was the “mischief” that the previous law did not cover?
Heydon’s case
This was set out in Heydon’s Case[3] where it was stated that there
were four points to be taken into consideration when interpreting a
statute:
What was the common law before the making of the act?
What was the “mischief and defect” for which the common law
did not provide?
What remedy the Parliament hath resolved and appointed to
cure the disease of the commonwealth?
What is the true reason for the remedy?
The application of this rule gives the judge more discretion than the
literal and the golden rule as it allows him to effectively decide on
Parliament’s intent. It can be argued that this undermines
Parliament’s supremacy and is undemocratic as it takes lawmaking
decisions away from the legislature.
In the case of Thomson v. Lord Clan Morris, Lord Lindley M.R. stated
that in interpreting any statutory enactment regard should not only
be paid to the words used, but also to the history of the Act and the
reasons which lead to its being passed.
Advantages
For example, imagine there may be a sign saying “Do not use lifts in
case of fire.” Under the literal interpretation of this sign, people must
never use the lifts, in case there is a fire. However, this would be an
absurd result, as the intention of the person who made the sign is
obviously to prevent people from using the lifts only if there is
currently a fire nearby.
Introduction
The letters of the constitution are fairly static and not very easy to
change but the laws enacted by the legislature reflect the current
state of people and are very dynamic. To ensure that the new laws
are consistent with the basic structure of the constitution, the
constitution must be interpreted in a broad and liberal manner giving
effect to all its parts and the presumption must be that no conflict or
repugnancy was intended by its framers. Applying the same logic, the
provisions relating to fundamental rights have been interpreted
broadly and liberally in favor of the subject. Similarly, various
legislative entries mentioned in the Union, State, and Concurrent list
have been construed liberally and widely. There are basically three
types of interpretation of the constitution.
Historical interpretation
Contemporary interpretation
armonious Construction
1. If the words are clear and unambiguous, they must be given the
full effect.
2. The constitution must be read as a whole.
3. Principles of harmonious construction must be applied.
4. The Constitution must be interpreted in a broad and literal
sense.
5. The court has to infer the spirit of the Constitution from the
language.
6. Internal and External aids may be used while interpreting.
7. The Constitution prevails over other statutes.
This doctrine comes into play when a legislature does not possess
the power to make law upon a particular subject but nonetheless
indirectly makes one. By applying this principle the fate of the
Impugned Legislation is decided.
Union & State Legislatures are supreme within their respective fields.
They should not encroach/ trespass into the field reserved to the
other. If a law passed by one trespass upon the field assigned to the
other—the Court by applying Pith & Substance doctrine, resolve the
difficulty &declare whether the legislature concerned was competent
to make the law.
If the pith & substance of the law (i.e. the true object of the
legislation) relates to a matter within the competence of the
legislature which enacted it, it should be held intra vires—though the
legislature might incidentally trespass into matters, not within its
competence. The true character of the legislation can be ascertained
by having regard—to the enactment as a whole — to its object – to
the scope and effect of its provisions.
Principle of eclipse
In this case, the law in question was an existing law at the time when
the Constitution came into force. That existing law imposed on the
exercise of the right guaranteed to the citizens of India by article
19(1)(g) restrictions which could not be justified as reasonable under
clause (6) as it then stood and consequently under article
13(1)[8] that existing law became void “to the extent of such
inconsistency”.
The court said that the law became void not in to or for all purposes
or for all times or for all persons but only “to the extent of such
inconsistency”, that is to say, to the extent it became inconsistent
with the provisions of Part III which conferred the fundamental
rights of the citizens.
The State shall not make any law which takes away/ shortens the
rights conferred by Part III of the Constitution i.e. Fundamental
Rights. Any law made in contravention of the provisions of the
Constitution shall be void and invalid. The invalid part shall be
severed and declared invalid if it is really severable. (That is, if the
part which is not severed can meaningfully exist without the severed
part.) Sometimes the valid and invalid parts of the Act are so mixed
up that they cannot be separated from each other. In such cases, the
entire Act will be invalid.
In this case, the Supreme Court said that in case of repugnancy to the
Constitution, only the repugnant provision of the impugned Act will
be void and not the whole of it, and every attempt should be made
to save as much as possible of the Act. If the omission of the invalid
part will not change the nature or the structure of the object of the
legislature, it is severable. It was held that except Section 14 all other
sections of the Preventive Detention Act, 1950 were valid, and since
Section 14 could be severed from the rest of the Act, the detention
of the petitioner was not illegal.
Principle of Territorial Nexus
Article 245 (2) of the Constitution of India makes it amply clear that
‘No law made by Parliament shall be deemed to be invalid on the
ground that it would have extra-territorial operation’. Thus a
legislation cannot be questioned on the ground that it has extra-
territorial operation. It is well-established that the Courts of our
country must enforce the law with the machinery available to them,
and they are not entitled to question the authority of the Legislature
in making a law which is extra-territorial. The extra-territorial
operation does not invalidate a law. But some nexus with India may
still be necessary in some of the cases such as those involving
taxation statutes.
It signifies that the object to which the law applies need not be
physically located within the territorial boundaries of the state, but
must have a sufficient territorial connection with the state. A state
may levy a tax on a person, property, object or transaction not only
when it is situated within its territorial limits, but also when it has a
sufficient and real territorial connection with it. Nexus test was
applied to the state legislation also
The State of Bihar passed a Sales Tax Act for levy of sales tax whether
the sale was concluded within the state or outside if the goods were
produced, found and manufactured in the state. The court held there
was sufficient territorial nexus and upheld the Act as valid. Whether
there is sufficient nexus between the law and the object sought to be
taxed will depend upon the facts and circumstances of a particular
case.
Laws which are necessary and proper for the execution of the power
or incidental to such power are called implied powers and these laws
are presumed to be constitutional. In other words, constitutional
powers are granted in general terms out of which implied powers
must necessarily arise. Likewise, constitutional restraints are put in
general terms out of which implied restraints must also necessarily
establish.
This is a Legal principle which states that, in general, the rights and
duties of a legislative body or organization are determined from its
functions and purposes as specified in its constitution or charter and
developed in practice.
Conclusion
Introduction
1. Literal Interpretation
2. Logical Interpretation
Internal Aids of Interpretation are:-
A. Long Title
It is now settled that Long Title of an Act is a part of the Act and is
admissible as an aid to its construction. The long title which often
precedes the preamble must be distinguished with the short title;
the former taken along with the preamble or even in its absence is a
good guide regarding the object, scope or purpose of the Act,
whereas the latter 341 being only an abbreviation for purposes of
reference is not a useful aid to construction.
B. Preamble
The preamble of a statute like the long title is a part of the Act and is
an admissible aid to construction. Although not an enacting part, the
preamble is expected to express the scope, object and purpose of
the Act more comprehensively than the long title. It may recite the
ground and cause of making the statute, the evils sought to be
remedied or the doubts which may be intended to be settled. In the
words of SIR JOHN NICHOLL : It is to the preamble more specifically
that we are to look for the reason or spirit of every statute,
rehearsing this, as it ordinarily does, the evils sought to be remedied,
or the doubts purported to be removed by the statute, and so
evidencing, in the best and most satisfactory manner, the object or
intention of the Legislature in making or passing the statute itself.
C. Preamble to Constitution
D. Headings
E. Marginal Notes
F. Punctuation
H. Definition Section
These do not take away the ordinary and natural meaning of the
words, but as used: (i) to extend the meaning of a word to include or
cover something, which would not normally be covered or included;
and (ii) to interpret ambiguous words and words which are not plain
or clear.
I. Proviso
J. Explanation
When internal aids are not adequate, court has to take recourse to
External aids. External Aids may be parliamentary
material, historical background, reports of a committee or a
commission, official statement, dictionary meanings, foreign
decisions, etc. In Prabhakar Rao and others v. State of A.P. and
others[1], O. Chennappa, Reddy J. has observed : Where internal
aids are not forthcoming, we can always have recourse to external
aids to discover the object of the legislation. External aids are not
ruled out. This is now a well settled principle of modern statutory
construction.•
In case where two Acts have to be read together, then each part of
every act has to be construed as if contained in one composite Act.
However, if there is some clear discrepancy then the latter Act would
modify the earlier. Where a single provision of one Act has to be
read or added in another, then it has to be read in the sense in which
it was originally construed in the first Act. In this way the whole of
the first Act can be mentioned or referred in the second Act even
though only a provision of the first one was adopted.
In case where an old Act has been repealed, it loses its operative
force. Nevertheless, such a repealed part may still be taken into
account for construing the unrepealed part. For the purpose of
interpretation or construction of a statutory provision, courts can
refer to or can take help of other statutes. It is also known as
statutory aids. The General Clauses Act, 1897 is an example of
statutory aid. The application of this rule of construction has the
merit of avoiding any contradiction between a series of statutes
dealing with the same subject, it allows the use of an earlier statute
to throw light on the meaning of a phrase used in a later statute in
the same context.
D. Dictionaries
E. Judicial Decisions:
RULES OF CONSTRUCTION
Introduction
1. what was the common law before the making of the Act;
2. what was the mischief and defect for which the common law
did not provide; what remedy Parliament has resolved and
appointed to cure the disease of the commonwealth; and
3. the true reason of the remedy, end then the office of all the
judges is always to make such construction as shall –
suppress the mischief and advance the remedy; and
OPERATION OF STATUTES
Introduction
Retrospective
General Statute
Amending statute
Pending Actions In the pending suits or actions, the law is that the
rights of the parties are decided as per the law as it existed when the
action was commenced. If however the Act provides the
retrospective operation of a statute, it would be construed
accordingly even though the consequences are unjust and hard.
In Smith v. National Association of Operative Plasterers. S4 of the
trade dispute act,1906 enacted that “an action for tort against a
trade union shall not be entertained by any court”. It was held not to
affect decisions of an action commenced before passing of the act.
The general rule is that special Acts prevails over the general act in
the case of inconsistency. A general act cannot repeal a special act. A
Special Act, though earlier in time, deals with special objects and
general law even if enacted later cannot repeal it. Food inspector v.
Suivert and Dholakia Pvt. ltd. If there is a general law and a special
law relating to a particular subjects, the general law must be so
applied as to not to affect the special provision. Only if the intention
to abrogate the special law can be spelled out, the general law shall
prevail.
DELEGATED LEGISLATION
The legislature has to make a variety of laws and the details required
to be provided in each of these laws require knowledge of matters of
technical or local or specialized nature. The executive in consultation
with the experts or with its own experience of local conditions can
better improve these. There is no point in the legislature spending
its time over such details and therefore the power to fill them in is
often delegated to the executive or local authorities or expert
bodies.
(c) The Need for Flexibility
Meaning of Repeal
Expiry does not make the statute dead for all purposes
1. Ejusdem Generis
According to the Black’s Law Dictionary (8th edition, 2004) the
principle of Ejusdem Generis is where general words follow
an enumeration of persons or things, by words of a particular and
specific meaning, such general words are not to be construed in their
widest extent, but are to be held as applying only to persons or
things of the same general kind or class as those specifically
mentioned. It is a canon of statutory construction, where general
words follow the enumeration of particular classes of things, the
general words will be construed as applying only to things of the
same general class as those enumerated.
2. Noscitur a Socis
Where the words of the deed are ambiguous, the court may call in
the acts done under it as a clue to the intention of the parties. Their
acts are the result of usages and practices in the society. Therefore
their acts are useful as an external aid to interpretation of the deed.
This principle may also be applied in case of
statutes. “Contemporanea expositio est optima et fortissinia in
lege” means usage or practice developed under a statute is
indicative of the meaning ascribed to its words by contemporary
opinion. The maxim Contemporanea expositio as laid down by Lord
Coke was applied to construing ancient statutes, but usually not
applied to interpreting Acts or statutes which are comparatively
modern.