State Under Article 12
Introduction
Fundamental rights are a group of rights which are
guaranteed to all the citizens under Part III of the Constitution of
India, 1950 (COI). The obligation of protecting these rights lies with the
Government or the State. Article 12 of the COI contains the definition of
State.
Meaning of State Under Article 12
Article 12 lays down that unless the context otherwise
requires, the State includes the Government and Parliament of India and
the Government and the Legislature of each of the States and all
local or other authorities within the territory of India or under the
control of the Government of India.
The definition of State is inclusive and
provides that State includes the following:
- Government and Parliament of India i.e., the Executive and Legislature
of the Union.
- Government and Legislature of each State i.e., the Executive and
Legislature of the various States of India.
- All local or other authorities within the territory of India, or under
the control of the Government of India.
Government and Parliament of India
- The term State includes the Government of India i.e., Union
executive and the Parliament of India.
- This term stands to include a Department of Government or any
institution under the control of a Department of Government e.g. the
Income Tax Department.
- The President while acting in his official capacity must be
included in the term and be regarded as State.
Government and Legislature of Each State
- The term State includes the Government of each State that
is the State Executive and legislature of each State that is the State
legislatures.
- It includes Union Territories as well.
Local or Other Authorities Within the Territory of India
- The expression local authorities is defined in Section 3(31)
of the General Clause Act, 1897 as local Authority shall mean a
municipal committee, district board, body of commissioner or other
authority legally entitled to or entrusted by the Government
within the control or management of a municipal or local fund.
- The expression local authorities usually refer to authorities such as
municipalities, District Boards, Panchayats, mining settlement boards,
etc. Anybody functioning under the state; owned; controlled and managed by
the State and carrying out a public function is a local authority and
comes within the definition of the state.
- The term other authorities have nowhere been defined. Therefore,
its interpretation has caused a good deal of difficulty, and judicial
opinion has undergone changes over time.
- The Supreme Court in the case of Union of India v. R.C. Jain
(1981) laid down the test for determining which bodies
would be considered as a local authority under the definition
of State enshrined under Article 12 of the COI. The Court held that if an
authority:
- Has a separate legal existence
- Functions in a defined area
- Has the power to raise funds on its own
- Enjoys autonomy i.e., self-rule
- Is entrusted by statute with functions which are
usually entrusted to municipalities, then such authorities would come
under ‘local authorities’ and hence would be State under Article 12 of
the COI.
Whether a Body falls Under Article 12 or Not
- In R.D Shetty v. Airport Authority of India (1979) Justice
P.N Bhagwati gave 5 Point test. This is a test to determine
whether a body is an agency or instrumentality of the State and goes as
follows –
- Financial resources of the State, where the State
is the chief funding source i.e. the entire share capital is held by the
government.
- Deep and pervasive control of the State.
- The functional character being Governmental in its
essence, meaning thereby that its functions have public importance or are
of a governmental character.
- A department of Government transferred to a
corporation.
- Enjoys monopoly status which State conferred or is
protected by it.
- This was elucidated with the statement that the test is only
illustrative and not conclusive in its nature and is to be
approached with great care and caution.
Whether State includes Judiciary
- Article 12 of the COI does not specifically define judiciary and
a great number of dissenting opinions exist on the same matter.
- Bringing judiciary entirely under Article 12 causes a great deal of
confusion as it comes with an attached inference that the very guardian of
our fundamental rights is himself capable of infringing them.
- However, in Rupa Ashok Hurra v. Ashok Hurra (2002),
the Supreme Court reaffirmed and ruled that no judicial
proceeding could be said to violate any of the Fundamental rights and that
it is a settled position of law that superior courts of justice did
not fall within the ambit of State or other authorities under Article 12.
Case Laws
- University of Madras v. Shanta Bai (1950), the Madras High Court evolved the principle of
‘ejusdem generis’ i.e., of the like nature. It means that only those authorities
are covered under the expression ‘other authorities’ which perform
governmental or sovereign functions. Further, it cannot include
persons, natural or juristic, for example, Unaided universities.
- Ujjammabai v. the State of UP (1961), the Supreme Court rejected the above restrictive scope and held that
the ‘ejusdem generis’ rule could not be resorted to in
interpreting other authorities. The bodies named under Article 12
have no common genus running through them and they cannot
be placed in one single category on any rational basis.
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