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The Lahore Conspiracy Case Ordinance, Lahore High Court Bar Association
Report, June 19, 1930
By a resolution of the High Court Bar Association a sub-committee consisting of Dr. Sir
Motisagar, Lala Jagan Nath Aggarwl and the undersigned was appointed to consider and
report on the validity and propriety of Ordinance No. 3 of 1930, dated 1st May 1930,
designed to make provisions for the trial of certain persons accused in the Lahore
conspiracy case. Dr. Sir Motisagar and Lala Jagan Nath were not present in the
deliberations of the committee.
No Justification
The undersigned, having carefully gone into the matter, are unanimously of the opinion
that the said Ordinance is ultra vires of the Governor-General and, therefore, invalid; that,
in any case, its promulgation was inexpedient and inadvisable; and that there was no
justification whatsoever for depriving the High Court of its power of hearing the appeal
from the final order of the Special Tribunal constituted under the Ordinance.
The Ordinance purports to have been promulgated in exercise of the powers conferred
upon the Governor-General by section 72 of the Government of India Act.
A perusal of the Section would show that before the Governor-General can promulgate an
Ordinance (a) an emergency must exist, and (b) the Ordinance must be for the peace and
good Government of India or any part of it.
QUESTION OF EMERGENCY
Statement Examined
(A) On the question of emergency we are clearly of the opinion that the emergency
contemplated in section 72 of the Government of India Act does not exist at all.
Emergency, as defined in Webster Dictionary and as generally understood, mean "an
unforeseen occurrence creating a combination of circumstances which call for an
immediate action." Even the statement of reasons and facts issued by His Excellency the
Governor-General in justification of the Ordinance promulgated by him does not
constitute or disclose any case of emergency justifying this extraordinary measure.
The Statement refers (a) to the murder of Mr. Saunders, Assistant Superintendent of
Police, and Head Constable Chanan Singh, which tragic incident took place on the 17th
of December 1928; (b) to the establishmen of bomb factories at Lahore and Saharanpur;
(c) to the conspiracy resulting in the throwing of bombs in the Legislative Assembly on
the 8th of April 1929; (d) to the hunger-strike of two of the accused, which had been
resorted to before the commencement of the enquiry; (e) to the joining of a number of
other accused in the hunger-strike necessitating the adjournment of the case from time to
time owing to some of the accused being unfit to attend the court; and (f) to interruptions
caused by the defiant and disorderly conduct of some of the accused, which, in the words
of His Excellency. "tend to bring the administration of justice into contempt."
Just Decision
Coming to the facts of the case itself, we are confirmed in our opinion that no emergency
whatsoever has been established.
The case was started on the 11th of July 1929, and a short time after an application was
made on behalf of the High Court asking for an authoritative pronouncement whether a
counsel could be appointed to represent an absent accused against his will. This
application was decided by the High Court of Judicature at Lahore on the 26th of Jul
1929 in which it was held that counsel could not be forced upon an accused against his
will.
Against, an application was made by the Crown asking for the opinion of the High Court
as to whether the evidence originally proposed to be produced against the accused could
be curtailed. The High Court refused to give any direction or advice.
Hunger-strike
The accused had definitely intimated to the Government that in case the grievances of
political prisoners were not satisfactorily settled they would resume the hunger-strike on
a certain date and, as a matter of fact, as His Excellency's own statement shows, the
hunger-strike was resumed on the 4th day of February 1930, creating the difficulty which
this Ordinance seeks to remove.
It is also important to note that when the rules relating to the treatment of political
prisoners were published and were considered satisfactory by those accused who had
gone on hunger-strike the hunger-strike was abandoned, and from the 8th of March to the
1st of May 1930, the case went on in the Magistrate's court without an interruption or
undesirable incident.
It is also clear that the Government itself did not consider that there was any emergency;
otherwise it would not have waited so long from the 26th of July 1929, up to 1st of May
1930, or in any case from the 20th of September 1929, when the Bill for the amendment
of the Criminal Procedure Code referred to above was published, to 1st of May 1930.
Even if alleged defiant and disorderly conduct of the accused could be considered any
justification for the promulgation of the Ordinance, it had ceased to exist long before the
Ordinance was actually promulgated.
GOOD GOVERNMENT