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The Plantation Tamils of Eelam Privy Council Judgment On Constitutionality Of Citizenship Act [In the Privy Council] 1953
Present : Lord Normand, Lord Oaksey, Lord Tucker, Lord Asquith of |
Cur. adv. vult. May 11, 1953. [Delivered by LORD OAKSEY]- This is an appeal from the judgment of the Supreme Court of Ceylon dated the 28th day of September, 1951, granting a Mandate in the nature of a Writ of Certiorari quashing an order made by the second respondent dated the 2nd July, 1951, that the appellant's name be included in the Register of electors for the Electoral District 84, Ruwanwella, for the year 1950. The issue for determination in this appeal is whether the Supreme Court of Ceylon were right in holding that sections 4 and 5 of the Citizenship Act, No. 18 of 1948 (hereinafter referred to as the Citizenship Act), and section 4 (1) (a) of the Ceylon (Parliamentary Elections) Amendment Act, No. 48 of 1949 (hereinafter referred to as the Franchise Act) were valid or whether as contended on behalf of the appellant and as held by the third respondent (hereinafter referred to as the Revising Officer), these sections were made in contravention of section 29 (2) of the Ceylon (Constitution and Independence) Orders in Council, 1946 and 1947. It is convenient to set out here the provisions of section 29 of the Constitution Order-in-Council, sections 4 and 5 of the Citizenship Act and section 4 (1) (a) of the Franchise Act. Ceylon (Constitution and Independence) Order-in-Council, 1946, as amended :- " 29. (1) Subject to the provisions of the Order, Parliament shall have power to make laws for the peace, order and good government of the Island. (2) No such law shall- (a) prohibit or restrict the free exercise of any religion ; or (b) make persons of any community or religion liable to disabilities or restrictions to which persons of other communities or religions are not made liable ; or (c) confer on persons of any community or religion any privilege or advantage which is not conferred on persons of other communities or religions; or (d) alter the constitution of any religious body except with the consent of the governing authority of that body : Provided that, in any case where a religious body is incorporated by law, no such alteration shall be made except at the request of the governing authority of that body. (3) Any law made in contravention of sub-section (2) of this section shall, to the extent of such contravention, be void. " Citizenship Act, 1948. " (4) (1) Subject to the other provisions of this Part a person born in Ceylon before the appointed date shall have the status of a citizen of Ceylon by descent if- (a) his father was born in Ceylon, or (b) his paternal grandfather and paternal great grandfather were born in Ceylon. (2) Subject to the other provisions of this Part a person born outside Ceylon before the appointed date shall have the status of a citizen of Ceylon by descent if- (a) his father and paternal grandfather were born in Ceylon ; or (b) his paternal grandfather and paternal great grandfather were born in Ceylon. (5) (1) Subject to the other provisions of this Part a person born in Ceylon on or after the appointed date shall have the status of a citizen of Ceylon by descent if at the time of his birth his father is a citizen of Ceylon. (2) Subject to the other provisions of this Part, a person born outside Ceylon on or after the appointed date shall have the status of a citizen of Ceylon by descent if at the time of his birth his father is a citizen of Ceylon and if, within one year from the date of birth, the birth is registered in the prescribed manner- (a) at the office of a consular officer of Ceylon in the country of birth, or (b) where there is no such officer, at the appropriate embassy or consulate in that country or at the office of the Minister in Ceylon. " The Franchise Act as amended in 1950 reads as follows :- " (4) (1) no person shall be qualified to have his name entered or retained in any register of electors in any year if such person- (a) is not a citizen of Ceylon, or if he is by virtue of his own act, under any acknowledgment of allegiance, obedience or adherence to any foreign Power or State which is not a member of the Commonwealth ; " On the 22nd January, 1951, the appellant filed a claim in the prescribed form pursuant to the Ceylon (Parliamentary Elections) Order-in-Council, 1946, to have his name inserted in or retained on the register of electors for the Ruwanwella electoral district. In a letter annexed to his claim he averred that he was a resident in the said electoral district and had been so resident for a continuous period of over six months in the 18 months immediately prior to the 1st June, 1950 ; that he was, and had at the relevant period been, a British subject ; that he was in no way disqualified to be an elector ; and that his name had been included in the register prepared in the year 1949. His letter also included the following 9. I claim that the alternatives in the qualification to be an elector effected by Act 48 of 1949 are not valid and are of no effect in law inasmuch as the said Act was ultra vires the Legislature. 10. I claim that the qualifications to be an elector should be determined according to the Ceylon (Parliamentary Elections) Order-in-Council, 1946, without the same being modified or amended by Act 48 of 1949. According to the said Order-in Council as unamended by the said Act 48 of 1949 I am qualified to be an elector." On the 26th February, 1951, the first respondent as Assistant Registering Officer held an inquiry into the appellant's claim at which the appellant gave oral evidence. In answer to the first respondent he stated (inter alia) as follows :- " I was born in British India. Both my parents and all my other relations were born in British India. All my wife's relations are in India except my brother-in-law who lives with me. I have not sought registration under the Citizenship Act, No. 18 of 1948, or under the Indian and Pakistani Residents Citizenship Act, No. 3 of 1949. I do not own any property in India . . . . I do not own any property in Ceylon either." At the end of the inquiry the first respondent made the following order :- " I have rejected this claim as the claimant is not a citizen of Ceylon within the meaning of the Citizenship Act, No. 18 of 1948 . . . . I accept the statements of fact made by the claimant before me at this inquiry." On the 8th March, 1951, the appellant filed a petition of appeal to the Revising Officer praying that the order of the Registering Officer be set aside and that the appellant's name be included in the register of electors. By an affidavit dated the 15th May, 1951, the appellant deposed (inter alia) as follows :- " 9. The vast majority of the present Indian Immigrant population came to Ceylon long after the year 1852 and though a large number of the members of the Community have been born in Ceylon yet their parents were not born in Ceylon. In the case of the Indian Community unlike in the case of the Singhalese and Ceylon Tamil Communities, the fathers of the persons who belong to this community have not been born in Ceylon as Immigration of Indian Labour commenced only in 1852. Hence the Ceylon Citizenship Act while it confers the status of a Ceylon Citizen on all members of the Singhalese and Ceylon Tamil Communities fails to confer that status on by far the vast majority of the members of the Indian Community settled in Ceylon." The Revising Officer held an inquiry on the 16th, 29th and 30th May, 1951, at which the appellant was represented by Mr. Advocate Nadesan and Mr. Advocate Kanagarayar and the second respondent by the Attorney-General and Mr. Walter Jayawardene, Crown Counsel. On the 16th May Mr. Advocate Nadesan moved to file the appellant's aforesaid affidavit dated the 15th May, 1951. The Attorney-General objected inter alia to paragraph 9
thereof. He raised, however, no objection to the affidavit
being filed provided that, if in the course of the argument
it became necessary for him either to lead evidence or to
file a counter-affidavit he should be allowed to do so. Mr.
Advocate Nadesan had no objection and the Revising Officer
accordingly admitted the affidavit subject to those
conditions. Mr. Advocate Nadesan stated that he did not
propose to call any evidence at this stage of the inquiry,
and that it would be a matter of legal argument. No further
evidence was called. It was common ground between the parties and is in their
Lordships' opinion the correct view that judicial notice
ought to be taken of such matters as the reports of
Parliamentary Commissions and of such other facts as must be
assumed to have been within the contemplation of the
legislature when the Acts in question were passed (cf.
Ladore v. Bennett 1[(1939) A. C. 468 p. 477.]) and both
parties have referred their Lordships to a number of
paragraphs in the report of the Soulbury Commission of 1945. Standards of literacy, of property, of birth or of residence are as it seems to their Lordships standards which a legislature may think it right to adopt in legislation on citizenship and it is clear that such standards though they may operate to exclude the illiterate, the poor and the immigrant to a greater degree than they exclude other people do not create disabilities in a community as such since the community is not bound together as a community by its illiteracy, its poverty or its migratory character but by its face or its religion. The migratory habits of the Indian Tamils (see paragraphs
123 and 203 Soulbury Report) are facts which in their
Lordships' opinion are directly relevant to the question of
their suitability as citizens of Ceylon and have nothing to
do with them as a community. Appeal dismissed. |