PLJ 2007 Peshawar
13 (DB)
Present: Shah Jehan Khan & Ijaz-ul-Hassan, JJ.
M/s. GUL COOKING OIL AND VEGETABLE GHEE (PVT.) LTD.
through its CHIEF EXECUTIVE--Petitioner
versus
PAKISTAN
through CHAIRMAN REVENUE DIVISION CENTRAL BOARD OF REVENUE (CUSTOMS WING), ISLAMABAD
and 6 others--Respondents
W.P. No. 841 of 2004, decided on 19.10.2006.
(i) Administration
of Justice--
----A thing which cannot be done directly, cannot be
allowed indirectly.
[P. 18] B
(ii) Constitution
of Pakistan,
1973--
----Art. 247--Government of India Act, 1935, S.
311--Tribal areas--Held: Tribal Areas were simply those territories along
borders of India which neither formed part of British Dominions or possession
nor fell within the powers of any other State whether Foreign or Indian. [P. 19] C
(iii) Constitution
of Pakistan,
1973--
----Art. 247--Government of India Act, 1935, S.
95-A--Application of Laws to Tribal Areas--Held: Before creation of Pakistan,
the status of Tribal Areas were that of a foreign country within the meaning of
FJA 1890--Since a fundamental change was brought in the status of Tribal Areas,
by making it an integral part of Pakistan, specific provision had to be made
with regard to its administration, the continuity of pre-partition laws and the
continuity of Authority in these areas, a Constitutional arrangement was made
to the effect that laws of Pakistan would not apply to the Tribal Areas unless
specifically issued by the Governor General. [P.
24] D
(iv) Constitution
of Pakistan,
1973--
----Arts. 247, 89 & 128--Government of India Act,
1935 Ss. 92 (i) & 95-A--Extension of laws--Power of President and
Governor--Held: President or Governor had been empowered to make applicable to
the law enacted by Parliament for the settled areas of the country and for
extending an act of Parliament or Ordinance promulgated under Arts. 89 or 128
to the Tribal Areas--Further held: Such powers of President under Art. 247 were
not to be exercised as a prerogative power if they were not supported by the
Constitution. [P. 25] E & F
(v) Constitution
of Pakistan
1973--
----Art. 247(3)--Application of Laws in Tribal
Areas--Powers of President--Held: It is the President and not the Parliament to
decide which Act is to be applied in the Tribal Areas and can also make
modifications or exceptions in the Act of Parliament. [P. 26] H
(vi) Constitution
of Pakistan,
1973--
----Art. 247(7)--Legislative powers of Parliament in Tribal
Areas--Held: Parliament has limited power to legislate for the Tribal Areas in
respect of jurisdiction of Supreme Court or High Court--Any Act of Parliament
in this regard shall not require the scrutiny and approval of President for its
application to the Tribal Areas. [P.
26] I
(vii) Constitution
of Pakistan,
1973--
----Art. 247--Application of law to Tribal Areas--Held:
If an Amending Act is mechanically applied to Tribal Areas on the strength of
extension of the Principal Statute, it shall amount usurpation of
Constitutional powers of the President. [P.
26] J
(viii)
Constitution of Pakistan,
1973--
----Art. 247--Repeal of laws in Tribal Areas--Held: Once
an Act of Parliament is extended to the Tribal Areas, it can only be repealed
by extending the Repealing Act to the Tribal Areas only and in no other way. [P. 27] K
(ix) Constitution
of Pakistan,
1973--
----Arts. 89, 246 & 247--Issuance of Ordinance in
Tribal Areas--Held: Under Art. 89, President can pass an Ordinance which shall
have the same force and effect as an Act of Parliament for a specified period
when the Parliament is not in the session and circumstances so demand--He has
also either to enforce the Act of Parliament wholly or partly with or without
modifications or exceptions in the Tribal Areas--President can also make law in
the shape of regulation for peace and good government in the Tribal Areas. [P. 28] L
(x) Constitution
of Pakistan,
1973--
----Art. 247--Extension of law to Tribal Areas--Held:
Once the President after applying his mind and keeping in view the best
interest of people and the State decide to extend an Act of Parliament to the
Tribal Areas, it cannot be withdrawn/repealed through a subsequent Act of
Parliament named as Amendment in the Principal Statute already extended to
Tribal Areas. [P. 28] M
(xi) Constitution
of Pakistan,
1973--
----Art. 247--Extension of laws to Tribal Areas--Powers
of President--Held--President has twofold powers regarding Tribal Areas i.e the
power to apply Act of Parliament or an Ordinance and the power to make
regulation for peace and good government of the Tribal Areas--These powers
cannot be delegated to the parliament or provincial Assemblies.
[P. 29] N
(xii) Criminal
Procedure Code, 1898 (V of 1898)--
----S. 497--Code of Criminal Procedure (Second Amendment)
Ordinance (LXXI of 1979)--Constitution of Pakistan
1973, Art. 247--Applicability of amendment to PATA--Held: Since Ordinance LXXI
of 1979, an Act of Parliament has not been applied by the Governor of NWFP to
PATA with approval of the President, so the said affecting amendment in S.
497(1) shall not apply to the PATA of the Province and the unamended Code of
Criminal Procedure still holds the field. [P.
35] O
(xiii) Customs
Act, 1969 (IV of 1969)--
----S. 18(1)(2)--Constitution of Pakistan,
1973--Art. 247--Demand of customs and regulatory duty in Tribal Areas--Held:
Respondents cannot demand the excessive customs or regulatory duty imposed
through Amendment Acts which are not enforced in Tribal Areas--Such demands
made by them were declared as unconstitutional. [P.
35] P
1995 SCMR 529; 1984 P.Cr.L.J. 411; PLD 1988 Pesh. 11
& PLD 1995 Pesh. 14, ref.
(xiv)
Interpretation of Statutes--
----Court is empowered to look at the intent and purpose
behind the legislative device. [P. 18] A
PLD 1975 SC 397, 433; 1993 SCMR 1905, 1923 rel.
(xv)
Interpretation of Statutes--
----If Principal Act is amended by an Amending Act of the
Parliament, it shall be presumed that the former changed/altered. [P. 26] G
Mr. M. Sardar Khan, Advocate for Petitioner.
Mr. Salah Uddin Khan, DAG, Abdul Latif Yousuf Zai, for
the Respondents.
Date of hearing: 19.10.2006.
Judgment
Shah Jehan Khan, J.--Writ Petitions Nos. 841, 869,, 936,
1134, 1168, 1169, 1180, 1191, 1195, 1208, 1212, 1239, 1246, 1247, 1260, 1283 of
2004, 5, 6, 157, 158 of 2005, 222, 223, 50, 51, 844, 854, 1845 of 2006, the
same question is involved, therefore, disposed of through this common judgment.
2. The petitioners
are running ghee and oil factories located in the Tribal Areas. Their grievance
is that the respondents are demanding from them custom duty and regulatory duty
under clauses-1 and 2 of Section 18 of the Customs Act, 1969 at the rate
specified through subsequent amendments which are not applied to the Tribal
Areas as required under sub-clause (3) of Article 247 of the Constitution of
Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973. In rebuttal, case of the respondents as
spur out from their written statement placed on WP Nos. 869, 936, 1246, 1195,
1134 of 2004 and 6/2005 is that the main statute i.e. Customs Act, 1969 has
already been applied to FATA as well as PATA and all the subsequent amendments
made in the Customs Act 1969 extend to those Tribal Areas automatically and
there is no constitutional requirement to extend the Amendment Acts in the
Tribal Areas as the amendment becomes part of the statute and there is no need
of its extension independently to Tribal Areas. As preliminary objection, the
jurisdiction of this Court is also challenged but the same is found evasive in
view of this Court judgment in WP No. 657/2002 whereafter relying on AIR 1986
SC 513 quoting the following passage of this judgment and repelled the
objection.
"A piece of subordinate legislation does not carry
the same degree of immunity which is enjoyed by a statute passed by a competent
legislature. Subordinate legislation may be questioned on any of the grounds on
which plenary legislation is questioned. In addition it may also be questioned
on the ground that it does not conform to the statute under which it is made.
It may further be questioned on the ground that it is contrary to some other
statute. That is because subordinate legislation must yield to plenary
legislation. It may also be questioned on the ground that it is unreasonable,
unreasonable not in the sense of not being reasonable but in the sense that it
is manifestly arbitrary".
3. The controversy
agitated by the parties can be culminated in the following manner:
"Whether the petitioners are legally required to pay
custom duty and regulatory duty calculated on the basis of Amendment Acts of
the Parliament in the Principal Statute i.e. Customs Act, 1969 despite the
admitted fact that the Amendment Acts of the Parliament or Provincial Assembly
were not extended to the Tribal Areas in terms of Article 247 (3) of the
Constitution 1973?"
4. Since the
attendance of senior counsel could not be procured despite numerous
adjournments and despite Supreme Court of Pakistan direction through order
dated 23.8.2004 to decide these cases within a month, parties were directed to
produce written arguments for the disposal and these cases pending since 2004
and require early disposal. In compliance of Court direction, senior counsel
for the petitioner Mr. Khalid Anwar, Mr. M. Sardar Khan and Mr. Isaac Ali Qazi,
Advocates, submitted their written arguments, copies whereof were also
delivered to DAG for onwards sending to learned Attorney General of Pakistan
but written arguments were not filed by the respondents after lapse of more
than two weeks (the time given as requested), although it was directed on the
previous date that non-filing of written arguments shall case a presumption
that there is nothing for the respondents to offer in rebuttal. In case
circumstances, there is no other way but to dispose of those cases on the
available record.
5. Mr. Khalid
Anwar, Senior Advocate, Supreme Court of Pakistan states in his written
arguments that the Government has made successive attempts to demand sales tax
on the RBD Palm Oil etc. raw material for Banaspati ghee and oil imported at
Sea Ports Karachi. The raw,
material for consumption in Provincially Administered Tribal Areas and
Federally Administered Tribal Areas were tried to be subjected to Sales Tax
Act, 1990 and the units established in the said Tribal Areas (T.As) were forced
to be registered under the said Act which action was questioned in W.P. No.
1180/2004 wherein it was held that the unit established in the tribal areas are
not subjected to Sales Tax and their registration under the said Act is not required
because the Sales Tax Act has not been applied to T.As in terms of Article 247.
In order to achieve the aforesaid object, the Government malafidely suspended
the bonded warehouse licences of those companies established in the T.As
through order dated 13.4.2002 which action was again question in a contempt of
Court proceedings, resulting in withdrawal of the suspension order but the same
day another attempt was made and it was notified that bonded warehouses could
only be established in areas where Customs Act, 1969, Central Excise Act and
Sales Tax Act 1990 were all applicable and thus the warehouses established in
the tribal areas were deleted from SRO 111/1983. This action was again
challenged in this Court and vide judgment dated 25.2.2003, the action of
withdrawing the warehouse facilities from the Tribal Area due to non-extension
of Sales Tax Act was declared arbitrary, unjust and mala fide, thus strike it
down and the SRO whereunder bonded warehouses were established in the limits of
FATA and PATA was restored. There was another attempt through holding that in
order to provide level playing filed, central excise duty would be recovered in
Value Added Tax (VAT) Mode from FATA Ghee Units. This attempt was made through
Finance Act 2004 whereunder SRO 503(I)/2004 dated 12.6.2004 and SRO 502(I)/2004
dated 12.6.2004 were issued through amendment in SRO 333(I)/2002 dated
15.6.2002 (whereunder there was general exemption of excise duty on the import
except those specified in modification).
6. For the interpretation,
it is well settled that the Court is empowered to look at the intent and
purpose behind the legislative device (PLD 1975 SC 397-433), 1993 SCMR
1905-1923). The federation has attempted through SRO 503 and 502 of 2004 noted
above, to levy for all intent and purposes, sales tax on units established in
T.As although Sales Tax Act has no application in the T.As. A thing which
cannot be done directly can't be allowed indirectly. Thus the aforesaid SROs
are ultra vires and against the command and spirit of Article 247 of the
Constitution.
7. It was held by
august Supreme Court of Pakistan
that the excise duty even if given a broad meaning no dot cover sales tax.
Transmission of excise duty into sales tax is unwarranted under the law (1993
SCMR 1342-1346).
8. The learned
counsel has dig out the historical background of Tribal Areas and Article 247
of the Constitution 1973. They have elaborately discussed the following :
1. Government of India
Act 1935. (G.O.I.A)
2. India
Independence Act, 1947 (I.I.A)
3. Central Excise
Act/Central Excise & Salt Act 1944.
4. Notification
No. 137-F dated 20.6.1945
5. Independence
Day 15.8.1945.
9. There are two
possibilities either amendment in the principal statute would become
enforceable in the tribal area only if the amendment is also extended to the
tribal areas to which the principal statute was already extended (the
contention of petitioners). The other possibility would be that when the
principal statute is extended to tribal area all subsequent amendments should
automatically apply to the tribal area (the contention of respondents). In the
second possibility either amendment would become applicable on its own force or
it would become applicable only after notifying the same in terms of Article
247(3) of the Constitution. At the time of extension of the principal statute
if also provide for future amendments would require consideration, as to
whether such direction regarding future enactment in the shape of amendment in
the Principal Statute is or is not permissible under Article 247?
10. For analysis
of the status of Tribal Areas (T.As), the learned counsels have thrashed the
history of T.As and submitted that under the Government of India Act (GOIA)
1935, Section 311 British India was defined as all territories for the time
being comprised within what were then known as Governors' Provinces and the
Chief Commissioners' Provinces. "India"
was distinctly defined as British India together with
the territories of Indian States and the T.As, thus the concept of both "British
India" and "India"
are quite different. T.As were not included in the "British
India" and it was defined in GOIA as follows:--
"Tribal Area means the areas along the Frontier of
India or in Balochistan which are not part of British India
or of Burma or
of any Indian State
or of any Foreign States".
11. T.As areas
were simply those territories along Borders of India which neither formed part
of British Dominions or possession nor fell within the powers of any other
State whether Foreign or Indian. Then the question arises that how the British
Government came to exercise control and jurisdiction over the T.As? It seems
that in the 19th Century. British Empire continued to
grow certain areas and territories came within the control and jurisdiction of
the British Empire. This Control was acquired through
various means such as treaty, capitulation, grant, usage or sufferance etc.
12. The British
Parliament had from time to time legislated upon matters relating to such
territories and areas. In 1890 Foreign Jurisdiction Act (FJA) was enacted. In
its preamble it was stated that the "British Sovereign" had by means
of treaty, capitulation, grant, usage, sufferance and other similar means
acquired jurisdiction within various foreign countries and it was expedient to
consolidate the law in respect thereof relating to the exercise of jurisdiction
by the "British Sovereign". The "Sovereign Country" as
defined in Section 6 of the FJA is a Country or place out of her Majesty Dominions.
Under Section 1 it was lawful for "Her Majesty the Queen" to hold
exercise and enjoy any jurisdiction which Her Majesty have within a Foreign
Country in the same manner as Her Majesty acquired that jurisdiction by the
session or concur of a territory. Through FJA, the Crown by virtue of its
prerogative had full powers to establish such executive, legislative and
judicial arrangements as the Crown may deem fit and generally to act both
executively and legislatively.
13. Pursuant to
FJA, an Order in Council was made in 1902 respecting relevant Indian
Territories known as Indian
(Foreign Jurisdiction) Order-in-Council 1902. This order dealt with the manner
in which the powers and jurisdiction of British Crown were to be exercised in
the T.As.
14. With the
enactment of GOIA 1935 an alteration was made regarding the manner and exercise
of jurisdiction and power in the T.As. Section 313 (1) of GOIA 1935 provides
that such executive authority as was mentioned in the said section to be
exercised by the Governor General in Council on behalf of "British
Crown". Sub-section 2(c) provide that the Executive Authority so conferred
upon the Governor-General in Council shall include the exercise of such rights,
authority and jurisdiction as exercisable by "His Majesty, the British
Crown" through any Treaty, Grant, Usage, Sufferance, Capitulation or
otherwise in relation to the T.As. Governor General Order-in Council 1902 was
amended through Order of 1937 whereunder Paragraph 3 it was provided that the
1902 Order would cease to apply and have effect with respect to the Tribal
Areas in India.
A change was brought about through Section 313 of the GOIA in relation to the
exercise of powers and jurisdiction in respect of Tribal Areas and now these
powers were to be exercised by the Governor-General in Council.
15. The
Governor-General in Council issued Notification No. 137-F dated 20.6.1945.
Central Excise and Salt Act 1944 was made applicable to the T.As. Not because
the said areas were part of British India but in
exercise of the Crown powers relating to Tribal Areas. Thus it was expressly
provided that all references to British India in the Act
ibid were to be construed as Tribal Areas.
16. The powers of
Governor General in Council under the GOIA namely Sections 91 and 92 of GOIA relates
to Excluded Areas and Partially Excluded Areas (subsequently named as special
areas, Tribal Areas and now FATA and PATA). The British Crown was made
competent to pass an order in council declaring any part of the province to be
Excluded or Partially Excluded Areas. Section 92 reads as under:--
"92(1) The Executive Authority of a Province extends
to "Excluded" and "Partially Excluded" Areas therein, but
notwithstanding anything in this Act, no Act, of the Federal Legislature or of
the Provincial Legislature, shall apply to an excluded area or a partially
excluded area, unless the Governor by public notification so directs, and the
Governor in giving such a direction with respect to any Act may direct that the
Act shall in its application to the area, or to any specified part thereof,
have effect subject to such exceptions or modifications as he thinks fit.
(2) The Governor
may make regulations for the peace and good governance of any area in a
Province which is for the time being an excluded area, or a partially excluded
area, and any regulations so made may repeal or amend any Act of the Federal
Legislature or of Provincially Legislature, or any existing India law, which is
for the time being applicable to the area in question.
Regulations made under this sub-section shall be
submitted forthwith to the Governor General and until assented to by him in his
discretion shall have no effect and the provisions of this part of this Act
with respect to the power of His Majesty to disallow Acts shall apply in
relation to any such regulations assented to by the Governor General as they
apply in relation to Acts of a Provincial Legislature assented to by him.
(3) The Governor
shall, as respects any area in a Province which is for the time being an
excluded area, exercise his functions in his discretion".
17. The
"Excluded Areas" which were part of a Province of British India and
all existing laws shall remain in force even after its notifying as Excluded
Area but for the laws made in the future, the Governor of the Province was to
extend the same under Section 92(1) to that Excluded Area and until such an
order is issued the subsequent Acts would have no implementation in the
Excluded Area. Under sub-section (2), Governor was made empowered to repeal or
amend any law applicable in the Excluded Area either already extended being a
part of the Province or extended to it by Governor General-in-Council after its
declaration as Excluded Area.
18. Upper Tawanal
in the Hazara District of the NWFP was declared Excluded Area by Order in
Council 1936 dated 3.3.1936 under Section 91 of GOIA. On the date of
declaration, all laws of the British India as in force in NWFP were applicable
in the Upper Tanawal being part of the Province (not Excluded or Partially
Excluded) but thereafter Section 92 took effect, no Act of Parliament or
Provincial Assembly applied thereto unless the Governor of the Province
extended the same through an Order in Council. A number of Acts including
amendments acts were extended from time to time in terms of Section 92(1) of
the GOIA. Through Notification dated 20.1.1941, Indian Finance Act 1940 and
Currency Ordinance 1940 (both enacted and promulgated after 3.3.1936) were
applied to Upper Tanawal. The subsequent three amendment
Acts in the Indian Coinage Act 1906 and three Acts amending the Reserve Bank of
India Act 1934 (all existing laws on 3.3.1936 and applied to Upper
Tanawal before its declaration as Excluded Area) were made
applicable to Upper Tanawal through Notification.
Meaning thereby that amending acts were not regarded as automatically
applicable to Upper Tanawal because the Principal Acts
were already in force in that area being part of the Province and before its
declaration as Excluded Area. The laws were extended with such amendment and
modifications as applicable in British India. Penalties
(Enhancement) Ordinance, 1942 promulgated on 2.1.1942 amended through Penalties
(Enhancement) Amendment Ordinance 1942 promulgated on 29.1.1942 was extended to
Upper Tanawal on 26.2.1942 and there was specifically mentioned above the
Amending Ordinance. For the purpose of Section 92 mere reference to the
principal law was not sufficient and the amendment made therein before its
extension to Upper Tanawal was specifically mentioned.
Thus it is clear that while extending a law, it was required to specifically
refer to the amendments already made or at least some language to that effect
was to be used.
19. On 15.8.1947
two independent dominions of Pakistan
and India were
set up through Indian Independent Act, 1947 (I.I.A) and the territories of British
India were divided in the two dominions. The dominions of Pakistan
comprised of five Provinces i.e. East Bengal, West
Punjab, Sindh, Baluchistan and the NWFP but
the Tribal Area being not a part of any of the Province was not included in the
dominion of Pakistan.
Under Section 7 of the I.I.A it was made clear that any Treaty or Agreement in
force between the British Crown and any person having authority in the Tribal
Areas and all obligations of the powers, rights, authority or jurisdiction of
the British Crown in respect of Tribal Area by reason of any Treaty, Grant,
Usage, Sufferance, Capitulation or otherwise lapsed completely with certain
exceptions mentioned in the proviso to clause (c) of sub-section (1). The Crown
prerogative in respect of the Tribal Areas under Section 313 (2) (c) of the
GOIA and Section 8(1) (c) were omitted from GOIA through GGO 22 dated
14.8.1947. The said GGO also omitted Section 123 empowering the Governor
General to direct Governor of any province to discharge any functions in
relation to the Tribal Areas as specified by the Governor General as his agent.
Creating the two Dominions, the British Empire who had de-facto administration,
legislative and judicial powers was not going to transfer the same to the new
dominions because the control in the T.As was not acquired through conquest or
cessation but through treaty rights or capitulation or grant or usage or
sufferance etc and it was left opened for the newly created dominions to enter
into such arrangements with the Tribal Areas. Thus on 9.10.1950, the Government
of India (Seventh Amendment) Act 1950 was enacted with retrospective effect
from 15.8.47 whereby Section 123 of the GOIA whereunder the Governor General of
Pakistan could direct the Governor of a Province to discharge as his agent
functions in relation to the Tribal Areas as specified by the Governor General
was restored on the statute book right from the independence day) keeping in
view the retrospective effect of Amendment Act 1950) Government of India has
de-facto position while the dejure position of the tribal area had been a
foreign country within the meaning of FJA 1890 and since the British Crown was
withdrawing from the said foreign country, all legal powers and jurisdiction
vested in the British Crown were held to be ceased to exist and lapsed.
Thereafter Government of Pakistan took a number of steps to regularize its
dejure position in the tribal areas.
20. Under Section
9 of the I.I.A. Governor General was made empowered to make such provisions
deemed necessary or expedient to give full effect to the partition of British
India between the India
and Pakistan.
These powers were exercisable upto 31.3.1948 which was extended by one year in Pakistan
and on the last date i.e. 31.3.1949 the Governor General issued GGO 5 and 6.
Under Section 5 of the GOIA (adapted by Pakistan)
its dominion was a Federation of five Provinces. Through GGO 6 of 1949 clause
(bb) was added to Section 5 enabling Governor General to add any other area in
the Federation and the Governor General issued notification on 27.6.1950
(gazetted on 6.7.1950) whereby the tribal areas were formally included in and
as integral part of the dominion of Pakistan with retrospective effect from the
independence day i.e. 15.8.1947 and in this way Government of Pakistan got
dejure control over the tribal areas as integral part of Pakistan. Making the
tribal area as integral part of the Pakistan,
there arose three issues, 1. regarding administration of the tribal areas 2.
applicability of laws of Pakistan
in those areas and 3. continuity of authority. There was no provision in the
GOIA with regard to the administration of tribal area so under GGO 5 titled as
"Extra Provincial Jurisdiction Order 1949", the administration powers
was extended to all territories of Pakistan which were not included in any
province or the federal capital and a frame work was provided for its governing
and administration notified through gazette on 6.7.1950. In this Administration
powers were acquired in the T.As. So far as second issue is concerned, laws can
be divided in two categories, 1. the existing law means all those laws which
were in force in British India were made applicable to
dominion of Pakistan.
The second category is of those laws made by legislature after Independence
Day. Both the categories applied to the whole of Pakistan
without exception. The existing British India Laws were not applicable in the
tribal area but applied through piecemeal by the Governor General in Council in
exercise of Crown prerogative. Government of Pakistan
considered it undesirable that the laws in force in Pakistan
should generally become applicable to the tribal area and thus Section 95-A was
inserted in the GOIA which reads as under:--
"95A. (1) The executive authority of the Federation
extends to the areas included in the Federation under clause (bb) of Section 5,
but notwithstanding anything in this Act, no existing law, no Act of the
Federal Legislature and no notification, rule or other instrument whether made
before or after the fifteenth day of August 1947 shall apply to any such area
unless the Governor General by public notification so directs, and the Governor
General in giving such a direction with respect to any such law, Act, notification,
rule or other instrument my direct that the law, Act notification or other
instrument shall in its application to that area or to any part thereof have
effect subject to such exceptions or modifications as he think fit.
(2) Any direction
given under this section may be given so as to be retrospective to any day not
earlier than the fifteenth day of August 1947 and may continue in force on and
after that day and subject as aforesaid any such law, notification, rule or
other instrument in force immediately before that day".
21. The aforesaid
provision is modeled on Section 92 of the GOIA reproduced earlier and the same
was kept alive in the shape of clause 3 of Article 247 of the Constitution
1973. Regarding third issue, since after the withdrawal of British sovereignty
of India, the Crown prerogative in respect of Tribal Area had lapsed and the
measures taken by Governor General under Section 313 of the GOIA had ceased to
exist, the Government of Pakistan to overcome the legal flaw regarding
administration of tribal area, specific provision in terms of Section 95-A was
inserted in GOIA whereunder sub-section (2) it was provided that any direction
by the Governor General under sub-section (1) could be made retrospective from
the independence day i.e. 15.8.1947 and shall continue in force. All laws,
notifications, rules or other instruments already enforced in the T.As shall
continue.
22. By means of
retrospective legislation after independence, the Tribal Areas become integral
part of the dominion of Pakistan
w.e.f. 15.8.1947. Before the creation of Pakistan,
technically speaking the status of T.As were that of a foreign country within
the meaning of FJA 1890. Since a fundamental change was brought in the status
of T.As by making it integral part of the Pakistan, specific provision had to
be made with regard to its administration, the continuity of pre-paration laws
and the continuity of Authority in the tribal areas, a constitutional
arrangement was made to the effect that laws of Pakistan would not apply to the
tribal areas unless specifically issued by the Governor General.
23. Through West
Pakistan Act 1955, the four Provinces i.e. Punjab,
Sindh, Baluchistan and NWFP were merged into newly
created of West Pakistan and the tribal areas were also
incorporated in it as special area. The position that applied to tribal areas
under Section 95-A of the GOIA was specifically provided under the Act ibid,
which provided that no Federal or Provincial Act would apply to special area
unless a specific direction was made by the Government with the previous
approval of the Governor General with certain exceptions or modifications
deemed appropriate.
24. In the
Constitution, 1956 through Article 104 it was again provided that no Federal or
Provincial Act shall apply to any special law unless a specific direction to
this effect is made by the competent authority. The same mechanism was kept
alive in the 1962 Constitution under Article 223. Through West Pakistan
Dissolution Order 1970, newly created Province
of West Pakistan was dissolved and
the tribal areas were divided into FATA and PATA and the mechanism for
application of laws in both these areas were kept intact.
24. Under Article
1 of the Constitution 1973 defined the territories of Pakistan
as four Provinces, the Federal Capital and FATA. Under clause-1 of Article 247,
the Executive Authority of the Federation extends to FATA and the Executive
Authority of the Province extends to the Tribal Areas situated therein. Under
clause 2, the President may give direction to the Governor of a Province in
respect of PATA as he deems fit and the Governor shall follow those directions.
Under clause 4, the Governor with the approval of President makes regulations
for the peace and good governance with respect to PATA. Under clause 5, the
President is empowered to make regulations for peace and good government for
FATA while under clause 6, the President has been empowered to order that the
whole or any part of the Tribal Areas shall cease to be a Tribal Area.
25. Clause-3 of
Article 247 is important for resolution of the question under consideration
which reads as under:--
"No Act of Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) shall apply
to any FATA or to any part thereof, unless the President so directs, and no Act
of Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) or a Provincial Assembly shall apply to PATA or
to any part thereof, unless the Governor of the Province in which the Tribal
Area is situate, with the approval of the President, so directs; and in giving
such a direction with respect to any law, the President or, as the case may be,
the Governor, may direct that the law shall, in its application to the tribal
area, or to a specified part thereof, have effect subject to such exceptions
and modifications as may be specified in the direction".
26. This Article
is almost the same as envisaged in Section 95-A of the GOIA and Section 92(1)
of GOIA (already quoted in preceding paras), Under this Article, the President
or Governor of the Province has been empowered to make applicable to the law
enacted by the Parliament for the settled areas of the country and for
extending an act of the Parliament or Ordinance promulgated under Article 89 or
128 of the Constitution to the Tribal Areas. Constitution has imposed certain
duties upon the President and Governor of the Province i.e. he shall satisfy
himself about the interest of the people and necessity of the extension of the
Act to the Tribal Areas and he shall also consider as to whether the Act of
Parliament or Provincial Assembly or Ordinance as the case may be is to be
extended to FATA or PATA be in the same form or with modifications therein or
exceptions thereto. The powers of the President under Article 247 is not to be
exercised as prerogative powers which is not supported by the Constitution. In
case reported as 1995 SCMR 529 (Controller of Patents and Designs, Karachi vs.
Muhammad Quadir Hussain) it was observed by the august Supreme Court of
Pakistan that the Government of Pakistan or for that matter any office holder
or any government functionary do not enjoy any conventional prerogative as it
was available to the Crown in British India except those discretionary powers
which are specifically conferred upon by the Constitution or under an Act of
Parliament. The powers under Article 247 is co-relative duties and obligations
conferred upon the President. Being special status of T.As., the Parliament or
Provincial Assembly cannot directly legislate for the Tribal Areas and the
legislation enacted by the Parliament or Provincial Assembly shall be extended
to those areas after examining the same by the President or Governor of the
Province and thus if an Act of Parliament or Provincial Assembly cannot
legislate directly for the Tribal Areas then it cannot be done even indirectly.
27. It is an
established principle of interpretation of statutes that when a law is amended
it shall be presumed to be altered. If Principal Act is amended by an Amending
Act of the Parliament, it shall be presumed that the former has
changed/altered. In such circumstances, the amendment made by the Parliament or
Provincial Assembly shall not apply to the Tribal Area automatically but with
due process as envisaged in Article 247. By holding that Amendment Act of the
Parliament shall automatically extend to the Tribal Area, if the Principal Act
has already been extended, it shall negate the command of Article 247 as the
Amending Act is nothing but an Act to alter the principal which was extended to
Tribal Area after due consideration and it shall amount legislation for the
Tribal Area by the Parliament which is not permitted by the Constitution. By
extending the Principal Act to the Tribal Areas with modifications or
exceptions and the Amending Act is held to be automatically extended it shall
undo modifications or exceptions found essential by the President or the
Governor while extending Principal Act to Tribal Area. Under clause 3 of the
Article 247, it is the President and not the Parliament to decide which Act is
to be applied in the Tribal Area and can also make modifications or exceptions
in the Act of Parliament. Accepting automatic extension of the Amendment Acts
would amount to empower the Parliament to legislate for the Tribal Areas which
is not permissible under the Constitution.
28. Under Clause 7
of Article 247, the Parliament has been given a limited power to legislate for
the Tribal Areas in respect of jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of Pakistan or
High Court. Any Act of the Parliament in this regard shall not require the
scrutiny and approval of President for its applications to the Tribal Areas.
Under such powers which was also envisaged in Article 261(1) of the Interim
Constitution 1972, the Supreme Court and High Court (Extension of Jurisdiction
to certain Tribal Areas) Act, 1973 was enacted by the Parliament. Neither the
President nor Parliament can empower the Parliament in future to legislate for
the Tribal Areas. Thus the President while extending an Act of Parliament to
the Tribal Areas in terms of Clause 3 of Article 247 cannot notify that the law
which is going to be extended to the Tribal Areas shall also include the
subsequent amendment made through Act of Parliament. The words "As amended
from time to time" if mentioned in a Notification issued under Clause-3 of
Article 247 regarding a Principal Statute will have no effecton the future
amendments brought in the Principal Statue by the Act of Parliament and it
shall include only the amendments made before the date of extension of
Principal Statute. The President may in his wisdom and discretion apply the
whole statute or its part to the Tribal Area. The Parliament may have imposed
15% duty on a commodity through an Act of Parliament but if its extension to
the Tribal Area is found necessary by the President, he may extend it to the
Tribal Area as it is or may reduce it to 10%
or may increase it to 20%. By doing so the President
shall consider the issue as it was considered by the Parliament for its
application in the country (settled districts). Now if an Amending Act is
mechanically applied to Tribal Areas on the strength of extension of the
Principal Statute, it shall amount usurpation of constitutional powers of the
President relating to Tribal Areas while under constitution it is the President
who shall apply his mind, shall scrutinize, examine and consider the best
interest of the people and the State in extending with or without modification
of an Act of Parliament amending the Principal Statute and on acceptance of
such mechanism the President would become just a spectator and would not be in
a position to amend the same. Once an Act of Parliament is extended to the
Tribal Areas, it can only be repealed by extending the Repealing Act to the
T.As only and in no other way.
29. The Governor
General (subsequently designated as President) decided in 1945 that the
Principal Act of Central Excise and Salt Act 1944 (one of 1944) shall apply to
the Tribal Areas. Subsequently, the Parliament in Pakistan
amended the said Act which was a new legislation and required extension to PATA
as only the Principal Act was enforced in that Area. When the Principal Act is
applied to Tribal Area which is subsequently repealed by an Amending Act of the
Parliament, it shall still remain in force in the Tribal Area unless the
subsequent amendment act repealing the Principal Act is extended to PATA in
terms of Clause-3 of Article 247. There are countless examples that without
extension of amending or repealing laws, the Principal Statute already extended
remain in force as such for want of extension of subsequent legislation in
terms of Article 247 of the Constitution, C.P.C. was extended to PATA through
Regulation-I of 1974 which was subsequently amended in 1976 and 1980 but for
want of extension of Amending Act to PATA it remain in force in un-amended form
till the extension of Amending Acts to PATA through Regulation-II of 1994 and
Regulation-I of 1999 on 14.11.1994 and 16.1.1999 respectively. Likewise, the
different Hudood Laws of 1979 were extended to FATA and PATA on 23.4.1979 and
31.5.1979 respectively. The amendments brought therein was not automatically
extended by those were formally extended through Regulation-II of 1994 and
Regulation-I of 1999. A list of Amending Laws extended to PATA shall be noted
later in this judgment.
30. The contention
that the Amending Act merged into Original or Principal Act and if the
Principal Act is duly applied to Tribal Areas after the amendment, it shall in
force in the amended form is not correct. Had it been so the two different
amendments in the W.P. Motor Vehicle (Amendment) Ordinance (IX of 1970) and
W.P. Amendment of the Amending Ordinance (XVI of 1970) should not have been
extended through the same Notification distinctly to PATA dated 19.4.1976.
Under the Constitution, the consent of the President is required for extension
of an Actof the Parliament and the Amending Act passed by the Parliament. No
distinction can be drawn between the Principal Statute and Amending Act so far
application of Article 247(3) of the Constitution is concerned. The Act of
Parliament amending or repealing the principal statute cannot be extended to
Tribal Area without the approval of the President and in accordance with the
prescribed procedure under clause-3 of Article 247.
31. It is always
legislative powers of the State vests in the Parliament but keeping in view
Article 89 of the Constitution and Article 246 read with 247, the Parliament is
not exclusively empowered. Under Article 89, the President can pass an
Ordinance which shall have the same force and effect as an Act of Parliament.
The President also enjoys limited legislative powers to promulgate an Ordinance
obviously for a specified period and when the Parliament is not in the session
and circumstances so demand. The President has also got the powers either to
enforce the Act passed by the Parliament wholly or partly with or without
modifications or exceptions in the Tribal Areas. The President can also make
law in the shape of regulation for peace and good government in the Tribal
Areas. These provisions make the Parliament not exclusively empowered to
legislate as these provisions of Constitution also empowered the President in
certain circumstances and enforcement of the laws of the country to Tribal
Areas. Since this is legislative powers of the President to extend an existing
law in the Tribal Areas, there is co-relative constitutional duty of the
President to apply his mind and then to decide the form and shape of
legislation, either to extend an existing law as it is or without modifications
or exceptions.
32. Once the
President after applying his mind and keeping in view the best interest of the
people and the State decides to extend an Act of Parliament to the Tribal
Areas, it cannot be withdrawn/repealed through a subsequent Act of Parliament
named as Amendment in the Principal Statute already extended to T.As.
33. Under GGO 20
of 1947, the laws of British India were adapted in Pakistan
w.e.f. the Independence Day. Any Act, Ordinance, Regulation, Rule, Order or
Bye-law which had the force of law immediately before the Independence Day in
the whole or any part of the territories falling within the Dominion of
Pakistan, but on the Independence Day, the Tribal Area was not a part of the
Dominion of Pakistan thus the 1945 Notification regarding extension of Central
Excise and Salt Duty Act 1944 to Tribal Areas, remain no more existing Pakistan
Law despite the fact that 1945 Notification was kept alive but subject to the
Constitution of Pakistan i.e. GOIA as amended from time to time.
34. The 1945
notification had to be construed and applied after the said Areas became part
of the Dominion of Pakistan in the manner consistent with GOIA. In terms of
Section 95-A (1) GOIA no direction could be issued by the Governor General in
terms of which amendments made to a Principal Statute would apply automatically
to the Tribal Areas.
35. The
legislative powers of the President under Article 247 could not be delegated to
the Parliament or Provincial Assembly. The President possessed two-fold powers
in the Tribal Area i.e. the power to apply Act of the Parliament or an
Ordinance and the power to make regulation for peace and good government of the
Tribal Areas. The powers cannot be delegated to the Parliament or Provincial
Assembly. The contention that the Amendment Act of the Parliament or Provincial
Assembly stands automatically extended to the Tribal Areas, if the Principal
Act had already applied to that area would amount to delegation of legislative
powers of the President under Article 247 of the Constitution. Under the Statute,
the powers to frame rule can be delegated but it shall not be derogatory of, or
conflict with the Principal Statute and if rules are found violative of the any
provision of the Statute is always struck down by the Courts under its
Constitutional obligations. Holding automatic extension of the Amendment Acts
of the Parliament to Tribal Areas is certainly in conflict with the basic
statute which is extended to Tribal Areas. Under Article 247 this is a
Constitutional duty cast on the President to determine whether the concerned
Act of Parliament (whether original or amending) is to be applied as it is or
with certain modifications and exceptions which he deemed appropriate thus the
constitution itself deems Parliament inappropriate forum for determining what
legislation is suited or non-suited for the Tribal Areas then how the President
divest himself of his power and duty and delegate the same to the Parliament if
the Amendment Acts are held to be applied to the Tribal Areas automatically.
36. The Customs
Act 1969 was extended to PATA through Regulation-III of 1975 issued through
Gazette of Pakistan Extraordinary Part-I dated 22.7.1975 without any specific
reference to any subsequent Amending Acts of the Parliament. Section of the
Regulation reads as follows:-
"Application of certain Laws to the Provincially
Administered Tribal Areas of the North West Frontier Province:--The laws
specified in the second column of the schedule as in force in the North West
Frontier Province immediately before the commencement of this regulation and,
so far as may be, all rules, notifications and orders made or issued
thereunder, shall apply to such Provincially Administered Tribal Areas of the
North West Frontier Province as are specified in the third column of the schedule".
37. At Serial No.
11 of the Schedule appended with Regulation-III of 1975, Customs Act 1969 was
applied to the District of Chitral, Dir and Swat and Malakand protected area
only (not to entire PATA) as mentioned in column three of the schedule.
38. The un-amended
Customs Act extended to the 4 Districts of PATA, Section 18 of the Customs Act
1969 reads as follows:--
"18. Goods
dutiable. Except as hereinafter provided, customs duties shall levied at such
rates as may be prescribed under the Tariff Act 1934 (XXXII of 1934) or under
any law for the time being in force on--
(a) goods imported
into or exported from Pakistan;
(b) goods brought
from any foreign country to any customs-station and without payment of duty,
through shipment or transported for, or thence carried to, and imported at, any
other customs-station; and
(c) goods brought
in bond from one customs-station to another".
39. The preamble
of the Tariff Act 1934 says "whereas it is expedient to consolidate the
law relating to customs duties on goods imported into, or exported from Pakistan
by sea and to customs duty on goods imported into or exported from Pakistan
by land. It is hereby enacted as follows:--
"S. 2(1) Duties specified in schedule to be levied.
(2) (1) there shall be levied and collected in every port to which this Act
applies, the duties specified in the first and second schedule.
(2) The Central
Government may by notification in the official gazette fixed, for the purpose
of levying the said duties, tariff values of any articles enumerated either
specifically or under general headings, in the said schedule as chargeable with
duty ad valorem and may alter any tariff values for the time being in force.
(3) Different
tariff values may be fixed for different classes of descriptions of the same
article.
(4) Nothing in
this Act shall authorize the levy of customs duty on any articles carried from
one customs port in Pakistan
to another such port except salt, opium or spirit".
Duties on imports and exports by land. S. 5 Where a
custom duty at any rate prescribed by or under this Act or any other law for
the time being in force is leviable on any article when imported into or any
article when exported from, a part in Pakistan, the central government may be
notification in the official gazette direct that a duty of customs at the like
rate shall be leviable on any such articles when imported or exported, as the
case may be by land from or but any territory outside Pakistan which it may by
a like notification declared to be foreign territory for the purpose of this
section.
40. The aforesaid
Tariff Act only Section 5 was extended to Khyber Agency through Gazette of
India Part-I dated 14.1.1939 which reads as follows:--
"In exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (1)
and (2) of the Section 313 of the Government of India Act, 1935 and all other
powers enabling him in this behalf, the Governor General in Council is pleased
to apply Section 5 of the Indian Tariff Act 1934 (XXXII of 1934) to the Khyber
Agency".
41. Section 5 read
with the aforesaid extension notification is evident to show that Khyber Agency
(PATA) was treated as foreign territory which necessitated the issuance of
aforesaid gazette notification.
42. Customs Act
1969 was extended to FATA through Regulation-I of 1984. Section 2 of the
Regulation reads as follows:--
"2.
Application of Customs Act 1969 (IV of 1969) to the Federally
Administered Tribal Areas:--The Customs Act 1969 (IV of 1969) as in force in
Pakistan immediately before the commencement of this regulation and all
amendments which may be made therein after such commencement, and all rules,
notifications and orders which may have been or may be made or issued
thereunder, shall apply to the Federally Administered Tribal Area, subject to modification
that Section 185 thereof shall have effect as if in sub-section (2) after the
word "he" the words "is a Political Agent or" were
inserted".
43. The aforesaid
Section 2 in Regulation-III of 1975 and Regulation-I of 1984 are substantially
different from one another. In Regulation-III of 1975 Customs Act on the date
of issuance of the Regulation with all rules, notifications and orders made
which already issued thereunder were applied to PATA district mentioned in
column-3 of the schedule. While in Regulation-I of 1984 all amendments which
may be made in the Customs Act after commencement of regulation and all rules,
notifications and orders which may have been made or may be made or issued
thereunder (in future) shall apply to FATA and Section 185 as it exists on the
statute book was also extended with amendments wherefrom it can be said with
certainty that at the time of extension of any existing law, the
President/Governor could competently extend the law with modification.
44. Through NWFP Regulation-II
of 1974 certain laws specified in column 2 of the schedule with the
modifications and exceptions specified in column-3 were extended to PATA. At
Serial No. 40 West Pakistan Finance Act, 1963 with exceptions of Sections 3 to
13 and 15, at Serial No. 41 West Pakistan Finance Act 1964 was extended except
Sections 3 to 9. West Pakistan Finance Act 1965 was extended with exceptions of
Sections 3 to 9. At Serial No. 43 West Pakistan Finance Act 1966 was extended
with exceptions of Sections 3 to 8. At Serial No. 44 West Pakistan Finance Act
1967 was extended except Sections 3 to 6. At Serial No. 45 West Pakistan
Finance Act, 1968 was extended except Section 2 to 5. At Serial No. 47 West
Pakistan Finance Ordinance 1969 was extended with exception of Sections 2 to 5.
At Serial No. 48 West Pakistan NWFP Finance Ordinance 1970 was extended with
exception of Sections 2 to 5. At Serial No. 49 NWFP Finance Ordinance 1971 was
extended with exception of Section 3 to 5. At Serial No. 50 NWFP Finance Act
1972 was extended with exception of Sections 34 to 6 and at Serial No. 52 NWFP
Finance Act, 1973 was extended with exception of Section 3. If the contention
of respondent is accepted then there was no need of extending the said Finance
Acts whereby the laws already extended to T.As were unnecessarily extended.
45. The Central
Excise and Salt Act 1944 (one of 1944) was extended to the Tribal Areas beyond
the boundaries of NWFP through Gazette of India dated 23.6.1945 which reads as
follows:--
"Notification No. 137-F dated 20.6.1945. In exercise
of the powers conferred by sub-sections (1) and (2) of Section 313 of the
Government of India Act, 1935, and of other powers enabling him in that behalf,
the Governor General-in-Council is pleased to direct that the Central Excise
and Salt Act 1944 (one 1944) shall apply to the Tribal Areas beyond the western
and northern boundaries of the NWFP, in so far as the same may be applicable
and subject to any amendments to which it is for the time being subject in
British India.
Provided that all references in the said Act to British
India shall, unless there is something repugnant or contrary to context be
construed as reference to the said Tribal Areas.
Provided further that any Court or authority may construe
the provision of the said Act with certain modifications not affecting the
substance as may be necessary or proper to adopt them to the matter before the
Court or Authority."
46. NWFP Finance
Act 1995 and Amending Customs Act 1969 were extended to PATA with exceptions of
Sections 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 through Extraordinary Gazette
Notification dated 12.1.2001. NWFP Finance Ordinance 1983 was also extended but
with exception of Sections 4, 5, 6 and 8 and NWFP Finance Act 1998 was extended
to PATA but with exception of Sections 1,2, 3 (c) 10, 11 and 12 through the
same notification.
47. Finance Act 1986 to the extent of Section 4, 9 and 11
and Finance Act 1987 to the extent of Sections 2 and 9 were extended to PATA
through Extraordinary Gazette Notification dated 7.9.1997.
48. The Finance
Acts 1989, 1992, 1994 and Customs (Amendment) Act 1999 were not applied either
to PATA or FATA in terms of Article 247(3) of the Constitution 1973.
49. There are
numerous examples of extension of Amending Laws to T.As while Principle Statute
was already extended. Some of them are noted below:--
1. W.P. General
Clauses (Amendment) Act, 1957 through notification dated 8.9.1958 (The
unamended W.P. General Clauses Act 1956 and W.P. General Clauses Act 1957 both
were extended).
2. Presidential
Election (Amendment) Ordinance 1964 extended to Tribal Areas through
notification dated 30.11.1964.
3. West Pakistan
Motor Vehicle (Amendment) Amending Ordinance 1979 (XVI of 1979) and West
Pakistan Motor Vehicle (Amendment) Ordinance 1970 (IX of 1970) were extended to
PATA through notification dated 19.4.1976.
4. Labour Laws
(Amendment) Act 1972 (Act V of 1972) and Labour Laws (Amendment) Ordinance 1972
(IX of 1972) were extended to PATA through notification dated 31.12.1973.
5. Criminal Law
(Amendment) Act 1973 was extended to PATA through notification dated 20.5.1974.
6. Land Reforms
(Amendment) Act 1973 was extended to PATA through regulation dated 22.11.1978.
7. West Pakistan
Industrial and Commercial Employment (Standing Orders) (Amendment) Act 1973 was
extended to PATA through regulation dated 31.12.1973.
8. Industrial
Relations (Amendment) Act, 1975, Labour Laws (Amendment) Act 1975, Labour Laws
(Amendment) Act 1976, Labour Laws (Amendment) Act 1977, Road Transport Workers
(Amendment) Act 1975, the Industrial Statistics (Amendment) Act 1980, the
Industrial Relations (Amendment) Ordinance 1984, the Labour Laws (Amendment)
Act 1985, the Labour Laws (Amendment) Act 1994 and the Employees Cost of Living
(Relief) (Amendment) Act 1992 were extended to PATA through notification dated
31.7.1997.
9. Code of
Criminal Procedure (Amendment) Act 1976 was extended to PATA through
notification dated 6.7.1978.
10. Representation
of the Peoples (Amendment) Act 1977, Representation of the People (Third
Amendment) Act 1977 and Representation of the People (Fourth Amendment) Act,
1977 were extended to PATA through notification dated 14.8.1977.
11. Delimitation
of Constituencies (Amendment) Ordinance 1978 were extended to PATA and FATA through
separate notification dated 8.2.1979 and 6.11.1978 respectively.
12. Electoral
Rolls (Amendment) Ordinance 1978 and Electoral Rolls (Second Amendment)
Ordinance 1978 were extended to PATA through separate notification dated
8.2.1979.
13. Land Acquisition
(NWFP Amendment) Ordinance 1978, the Employees Cost of Living (Relief)
(Amendment) Ordinance, 1980 (XXXII of 1980), the Employees Cost of Living
(Relief) (Amendment) Ordinance 1981 (XXV of 1981) and the Employees Cost of
Living (Relief) (Amendment) Ordinance 1985 where extended to PATA through
notification dated 16.3.1987.
14. Code of
Criminal Procedure (Amendment) Ordinance 1979 was extended to FATA and PATA
through separate notification dated 23.4.1979 and 31.5.1979.
15. Electricity
(Amendment) Ordinance 1979 was extended to PATA through notification dated
23.10.1993.
16. Representation
of the People (Amendment) Ordinance 1979 was extended to FATA through
notification dated 6.12.1979.
17. Land Reforms
(NWFP Amendment) Ordinance 1981 was extended to PATA through notification dated
11.8.1982.
18. Zakat and Ushr
(Amendment) Ordinance 1980 was extended to PATA through notification dated
13.10.1980.
19. Criminal Law
(Amendment) Act 1989 and 1991 were distinctly extended to FATA through notification
dated 17.8.2001.
50. The question
raised herein for determination were also examined in (1) Sharbat Khan and
others vs. Haji Lal Gul and others (1984 PCr.LJ 411) (2) Hazrat Muhammad vs.
The State (PLD 1988 Peshawar 11) and (3) Sadbar Khan vs. Amir Hussain and
others (PLD 1995 Peshawar 14), the respective conclusion were drawn as under:--
1. "As
Ordinance LXXI of 1979 by which the proviso has been added has not been
extended to the Tribal Area, the petitioners cannot claim the benefit of the
proviso for their release. The learned AAG has supported the contention of the
learned counsel for the Respondent No. 1. We agree with the contention raised
by the learned counsel for the Respondent No. 1 that the amendment in the
Cr.P.C. in Section 497 has not been extended to the Tribal Area, therefore, the
petitioner are not entitled to the benefit of this provision".
2. "As for
act of a Parliament is concerned including the amending Act or Ordinance, the
same shall be applied independently to PATA by the Governor of the Province in
which the tribal area is situate with the approval of the President. Since the
Code of Criminal Procedure (Second Amendment) Ordinance LXXI of 1979, an Act of
the Parliament has not been applied by the Governor of NWFP to PATA with the
approval of the President, as such, the said law effecting amendment in Section
497(1), Cr.P.C. shall not apply to the PATA of the Province and the unamended
Code of Criminal Procedure still holds the field".
3. "A plain
reading of the above Article has made it clear that any law or act of
Parliament has to be extended to PATA by virtue of President's or Governor's
order. Thus it has been established that without an independent Notification by
the Governor for the application and extension of amendment made in the manner
required by Article 247(3) of the Constitution, the jurisdiction of the
District Court is still not restored, therefore, the objection of the learned
counsel for the respondents being without any force must fail".
Concluding the above discussion, we while accepting the
assertion of the petitioners and repelling the contention of Collector Customs,
answered the formulated question as follows:--
"The respondents cannot demand the excessive customs
duty under sub-section (1) and excessive regulatory duty under sub-section (2)
of Section 18 of Customs Act 1969 imposed through Amendment Acts which are not
enforced in Tribal Areas defined in Article 247 in contemplation of Article
247(3) of the Constitution 1973 and the demand of respondents for customs and
regulatory duty specified through those un-extended Amendments Acts in the T.As
is unconstitutional arbitrary, malafide and unjust. Thus they are directed to
refrain from such illegal demand.
Post dated cheques or indemnity bonds if obtained from
petitioners as consequence of interlocutory order shall stand discharged and be
returned to the petitioners. However, the respondents would be competent to ask
for assurance that the raw material shall be taken to T.As where their units
are established and that the manufactured goods are sold in the T.As. No order
as to costs".
(Javed
Rasool) Writ Petition accepted.