In J.S.Jadhav v. Mustafa Haji Mohammed Yusuf (AIR

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3. Law is the cement of the society and an essential medium of change.

It is said
"Law is the king of kings, far more rigid and powerful than the kings. Nothing can
be mightier than law by whose aid as by that of the highest monarch, even a weak
may prevail over the strong." Rule of Law is the basic foundation of a democratic
society.

3(a). A lawyer is a guardian of rule of law. The father of the nation described a
lawyer as thus:

"A lawyer is the salt of the nation."

4. In J.S.Jadhav v. Mustafa Haji Mohammed Yusuf (AIR 1993 SC 1535), the


Honourable Apex Court has defined legal profession as follows:

"Advocacy is not a craft but a calling; a profession wherein devotion to duty


constitutes the hallmark. Sincerity of performance and the earnestness of
endeavour are the two wings that will bar aloft the advocate to the tower of
success. Given these virtues other qualifications will follow of their own account.
This is the reason why legal profession is regarded to be a noble one. But it
cannot be allowed to become a sorriest of trades."

5. Similarly, in Sanjiv Bitta v. Deputy Secretary, Ministry of Information and


Broadcasting (1995 (3) SCC 619), the Honourable Apex Court observed as
follows:

"It is in the hands of the members of the legal profession to improve the quality of
the service they render both to the litigant public and to the courts, and to
brighten their image in the society. The legal profession is a solemn and serious
occupation. It is noble calling and all those who belong to it are its honourable
members. The legal profession is different from other professions in that what
the lawyers do, affects not only an individual but also the administration of
justice, which is the foundation of the civilised society. It must not be forgotten
that the legal profession has always been held in high esteem and its members
have played an enviable role in public life."
6. A good legal education is a sine quo non for creating a good lawyer. Such a
legal education is the basis and foundation for creating a good and competent
Judge as well.

7. In P.D.Gupta v. Ram Murti and another {(1997) 7 Supreme Court cases 147},
the Honourable Apex Court observed that the administration of justice is the
concern of Bench and Bar as well and the Bar is the principal ground for
recruiting Judges.

8. The passage from Harry R.Blythe, 21 Green Bag.224, may be usefully quoted in
this context:

"Great God! the hour has come when we must clear the legal fields from poison
and from fear; we must remould our standards--build them higher, and clear the
air as though by cleansing fire, weed out the damning traitors to the law, restore
her to her ancient place of awe

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V.Sudeer vs Bar Council Of India & Anr on 15 March, 1999
Cites 27 docs - [View All]
The Government Grants Act, 1895
The Advocates Act, 1961
Article 145 in The Constitution Of India 1949
Article 14 in The Constitution Of India 1949
Section 17 in The Advocates Act, 1961
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K.Sakthi Rani vs The Secretary on 16 April, 2010
Bar Council Of India vs ( on 24 August, 2007
Bar Council Of India Represented ... vs Saveetha Institute Of Medical And ...
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The Legal Education
Bar Council Of India And Affiliated Law Colleges

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Supreme Court of India
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Bench: S.B.Majmudar, S.N.Phukan

PETITIONER:

V.SUDEER

Vs.

RESPONDENT:

BAR COUNCIL OF INDIA & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 15/03/1999

BENCH:

S.B.Majmudar, S.N.Phukan

JUDGMENT:

S.B.Majmudar, J.

Leave granted in the Special Leave Petitions.

These Writ Petitions under Article 32 of the Constitution of India as well as the
two special leave petitions being S.L.P.(C) Nos.13755 of 1996 and 12989 of 1998
moved by the Bar Council of Maharashtra & Goa and the Bar Council of India
respectively raise a common question for our consideration, namely, whether the
Bar Council of India Training Rules, 1995 (for short `the Rules) as amended by
the Resolution of the Bar Council of India in its meeting dated 19th July, 1998
relating to training to entrants of legal profession are within the competence of
the Bar Council of India or are ultra vires its rule making powers under the
Advocates Act, 1961 (for short `the Act) and in the alternative whether these
Rules are unreasonable and arbitrary and hence violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution of India.

The writ petitioners, who have successfully completed their legal education by
getting requisite Law degrees from the Universities concerned have contended
before us in these writ petitions that their right to practise Law as made available
under the relevant provisions of the Act is being arbitrarily denied by the
impugned rules framed by the Bar Council of India and, therefore, their
fundamental right under Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution of India is being
violated. That the said Rules do not impose any reasonable restrictions on the
exercise of their fundamental right. It is also contended that in any case, the
Rules are so framed as to be totally unworkable and are highly unreasonable and
discriminatory in character and hence they offend Article 14 of the Constitution
of India also. The civil appeal arising out of the SLP by the Bar Council of
Maharashtra & Goa brings in challenge the decision of the Bombay High Court
which upheld the impugned rules and dismissed the writ petition filed by it and
that is how the State Bar Council is before us. Its contention is on the same lines
as canvassed by learned counsel appearing for the writ petitioners. While civil
appeal arising out of SLP (C )No.12989 of 1998 filed by the Bar Council of India,
on the other hand, brings in challenge the Judgment and Order rendered by the
learned Single Judge of Punjab & Haryana High Court, who took the view in
favour of the original writ petitioner - Respondent herein, that the impugned
rules would not apply to the writ petitioner who had obtained his Law degree in
1981 as the Rules were purely prospective in character. It is, therefore, obvious
that all these matters raise a common question regarding legality and validity of
the impugned rules. If the Rules are upheld, then only further question whether
they are prospective in nature or not would survive. This Court has treated the
Writ Petition (Civil) No.398 of 1996 as the leading petition and, therefore, we
shall also refer to the pleadings of the parties and the relevant documents filed
therein in the latter part of this judgment. By order dated 16th September, 1997, a
three Judge Bench of this Court, presided over by S.C.Agrawal, J., appointed Shri
Joseph Vellapally, learned senior advocate as amicus curiae to assist the Court on
behalf of the petitioner. All other petitioners in person were permitted to submit
their written submissions and the oral arguments were permitted to be submitted
on behalf of all of them by learned amicus curiae senior advocate. We have to
place on record our high sense of appreciation for the pains taken by amicus
curiae Senior Advocate, Shri Joseph Vellapally, who has been good enough to
look into all the relevant aspects of the matter and has placed his oral and written
submissions in this connection. By order dated 21st February, 1997, another two
Judge Bench of this Court, while treating writ petition (Civil) No.398 of 1996 as a
leading petition, directed that other petitions that are pending in the High Court
or which may be filed thereafter shall remain stayed till further orders of this
Court. The parties have exchanged relevant pleadings which are all brought on
record supported by documents on which they rely.

It appears that earlier when these group of matters reached final hearing, in the
light of what transpired in the Court then, a Bench of this Court consisting of
S.C.Agrawal and B.N.Kirpal, JJ. by order dated 30th September, 1997 adjourned
these proceedings to enable the Bar Council of India to take a fresh decision in
the matter in the light of its decision taken in the earlier meetings regarding
suitable modification of the impugned rules. It appears that ultimately on 4th
August, 1998, before the Bench of three learned Judges, Shri P.P.Rao, learned
senior counsel, placed a copy of the Resolution of Bar Council of India whereby
the Rules were amended. We have also mentioned the earlier Resolution by
which the impugned rules were amended. It is thereafter that these group of
matters reached for final hearing before us. We, therefore, have to examine the
legality and validity of the impugned rules as amended by the Resolution of the
Bar Council of India dated 19th July, 1998.

Rival Contentions: We may briefly mention the rival contentions submitted for
our consideration by learned counsel Shri N.N.Keshwani, who appeared in
support of Writ Petition No.425 of 1998, as well as learned amicus curiae Shri
Joseph Vellapally on behalf of other writ petitioners and Shri P.P.Rao, learned
senior counsel for the Bar Council of India, which is the author of the impugned
rules in support of their respective cases.

Learned counsel for the petitioners submitted, tracing the history of the relevant
provisions of the Act and the Rules, that there is no power with the Bar Council of
India to frame the impugned rules. That Section 7 of the Act lays down the
statutory functions of the Bar Council of India. The provisions thereof do not
entitle the Bar Council of India to frame such impugned rules prescribing a pre-
condition before enrolment of an applicant as an advocate under the Act by
requiring him to undergo pre-enrolment training and apprenticeship as laid
down under the impugned rules. It was also submitted that Section 24 sub-
section (3)(d) of the Act also was not available to the Bar Council of India to
frame such Rules. As a sequel, it was submitted that rule making power of the Bar
Council of India as laid down by Section 49 could not be pressed in service by it
in support of the impugned rules.

On the other hand, learned counsel in writ petition No.425 of 1998, submitted
that even assuming that the impugned rules fall within the rule making power of
the Bar Council of India, the Rules framed are so obnoxious, arbitrary,
unreasonable and unworkable that they violate the fundamental right of the
petitioners under Article 14 of the Constitution of India in any case. The appeal
arising from SLP No.12989 of 1998 filed by the Bar Council of India, raising the
question of retrospective effect of the Rules in question projected an additional
contention, which may not survive if the Rules are held to be ultra vires the rule
making power of the Bar Council of India. In support of the contentions raised on
behalf of the petitioners by the learned counsel, reliance was placed on a three
Judge Bench judgment of this Court in Indian Council of Legal Aid & Advice &
Ors. vs. Bar Council of India & Anr., 1995 (1) SCC 732, while Shri Rao, learned
senior counsel for the Bar Council of India, submitted on the other hand, that the
said decision while interpreting the provisions of Section 49(1)(ah) of the Act was
rendered per incuriam as it had not noticed the decision of the Constitution
Bench of this Court in re: Lily Isabel Thomas, 1964 (6) SCR 229, as well as the
express provisions of Section 24(3)(d) of the Act. Mr. Rao submitted that the
impugned rules were legal and valid and were properly framed under Section 7
read with Section 24(3)(d) and Section 49(1) and (2) of the Act. In the light of the
aforesaid rival contentions, the following points arise for our consideration :

1. Whether the impugned rules are ultra vires the rule making power of the Bar
Council of India as available to it under the provisions of the Act. 2. If the
aforesaid question is answered in negative and in favour of the Bar Council of
India, whether the impugned rules are arbitrary and unreasonable so as to violate
the guarantee of Article 14 of the Constitution of India; 3. If the impugned rules
are legal and valid, whether the respondent in Bar Council of Indias appeal, who
has got his Law degree prior to the coming into force of these Rules, can be
required to comply with these Rules if he applies for being enrolled as an
advocate under the Act after the Rules came into force; and 4. What final order?
We shall deal with these points seriatim. Point No.1: In order to appreciate the
rival contentions centering round this point, it will be necessary to have a peep
into the historical background of the Act which came into force years back in 1961
and also have a birds eye view of the subsequent amendments thereto spread
over number of years during its currency till date. It will also be necessary to keep
in view the salient features of the relevant provisions of the Act. The Act seeks to
amend and consolidate the law relating to legal practitioners and to provide for
the constitution of Bar Councils and an All-India Bar. A Bill was introduced in the
Parliament seeking to implement the recommendations of the All-India Bar
Committee made in 1953 after taking into account the recommendations of the
Law Commission on the subject of Reform of Judicial Administration in so far as
the recommendations related to the Bar and to Legal Education. The main
features of the Bill were as under :-

(1) the establishment of an All-India Bar Council and a common roll of advocates,
an advocate on the common roll having a right to practise in any part of the
country and in any Court, including the Supreme Court; (2) the integration of the
bar into a single class of legal practitioners known as advocates; (3) the
prescription of a uniform qualification for the admission of persons to be
advocates; (4) the division of advocates into senior advocates and other advocates
based on merit; (5) the creation of autonomous Bar Councils, one for the whole of
India and one (sic) for each State.

Section 2, sub-section (1) clause (a) of the Act defines, amongst others, an
advocate to mean an advocate entered in any roll under the provisions of this Act.
Section 2, sub-section (1) clause (d) defines Bar Council to mean a Bar Council
constituted under this Act. While as per clause (e) Bar Council of India means the
Bar Council constituted under Section 4 for the territories to which this Act
extends. Law graduate is defined by clause (h) to mean a person who has
obtained a bachelors degree in Law from any University established by Law in
India; and a legal practitioner in clause (i) to mean an advocate [or vakil] of any
High Court, a pleader, mukhtar or revenue agent;. The term roll is defined in
clause (k) to mean a roll of advocates prepared and maintained under this Act;.
The State Bar Council is defined in clause (m) as a Bar Council constituted under
Section 3; and State roll is defined in clause (n) as a roll of advocates prepared
and maintained by a State Bar Council under Section 17. When we turn to Section
17, we find that it is in Chapter III of the Act dealing with admission and
enrolment of advocates. Section 16, which precedes Section 17, deals with Senior
and other Advocates and lays down in sub-section (1) thereof that : There shall be
two classes of advocates, namely, senior advocates and other advocates and then
follows Section 17, sub-section (1) which provides that : Every State Bar Council
shall prepare and maintain a roll of advocates. Sub-section (2) reads thereof as
under :- Each such roll of advocates shall consist of two parts, the first part
containing the names of senior advocates and the second part, the names of other
advocates.

Section 22 provides for certificate of enrolment and sub-section (1) thereof lays
down that There shall be issued a certificate of enrolment in the prescribed form
by the State Bar Council to every person whose name is entered in the roll of
advocates maintained by it under this Act. Section 23 lays down Right of pre-
audience and the priority given to the various advocates while addressing Courts.
It lays down the scheme of priority as follows : The Attorney-General of India has
pre-audience over all other advocates. Next comes Solicitor-General of India in
the order of priority for audience. Then, the Additional Solicitor-General of India;
followed by the second Additional Solicitor- General of India, further followed by
Advocate General of any State. Next in the hierarchy of the priority come senior
advocates and last are other advocates having right of audience. It becomes,
therefore, clear that once an applicant is enrolled as an advocate in the State roll
maintained by the State Bar Council, he gets right of audience subject to the
scheme of priorities as mentioned in Section 23 and naturally audience implies
the full right of addressing the Court on all legal and factual issues involved in the
case in which he appears as an advocate under the Act. Now follows Section 24,
which lays down the qualifications for a person to be admitted as an advocate on
a State roll. The said section, with its relevant sub-sections (1),(2) and (3)
deserves to be extracted in extenso at this stage :

Persons who may be admitted as advocates on a State roll. - (1) Subject to the
provisions of this Act, and the Rules made thereunder, a person shall be qualified
to be admitted as an advocate on a State roll, if he fulfils the following conditions,
namely :- (a) he is a citizen of India: Provided that subject to the other provisions
contained in this Act, a national of any other country may be admitted as an
advocate on a State roll, if citizens of India, duly qualified, are permitted to
practise Law in that other country; (b) he has completed the age of twenty-one
years; (c) he has obtained a degree in Law - (i) before the [12th day of March,
1967], from any University in the territory of India; or (ii) before the 15th day of
August, 1947, from any University in any area which was comprised before that
date within India as defined by the Government of India Act, 1935; or [(iii) after
the 12th day of March, 1967, save as provided in sub-clause (iiia), after
undergoing a three-year course of study in Law from any University in India
which is recognised for the purposes of this Act by the Bar Council of India; or
(iii-a) after undergoing a course of study in Law, the duration of which is not less
than two academic years commencing from the academic year 1967-68, or any
earlier academic year from any University in India which is recognised for the
purposes of this Act by the Bar Council of India; or] [(iv) in any other case, from
any University outside the territory of India, if the degree is recognised for the
purposes of this Act by the Bar Council of India; or] [he is a barrister and is called
to the Bar on or before the 31st day of December, 1976; [or has passed the articled
clerks examination or any other examination specified by the High Court at
Bombay or Calcutta for enrolment as an attorney of that High Court;] or has
obtained such other foreign qualification in Law as is recognised by the Bar
Council of India for the purpose of admission as an advocate under this Act]; (d)
[ xx xx xx] (e) he fulfils such other conditions as may be specified in the Rules
made by the State Bar Council under this Chapter; [(f) he has paid, in respect of
the enrolment, stamp duty, if any, chargeable under the Indian Stamp Act, 1899
(2 of 1899), and an enrolment fee payable to the State Bar Council of [six
hundred rupees and to the Bar Council of India, one hundred and fifty rupees by
way of a bank draft drawn in favour of that Council]: Provided that where such
person is a member of the Scheduled Castes or the Scheduled Tribes and
produces a certificate to that effect from such authority as may be prescribed, the
enrolment fee payable by him to the State Bar Council shall be [one hundred
rupees and to the Bar Council of India, twenty-five rupees] . [Explanation - For
the purposes of this sub-section, a person shall be deemed to have obtained a
degree in Law from a University in India on the date on which the results of the
examination for that degree are published by the University on its notice-board
or otherwise declaring him to have passed that examination.] (2)
Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), [a vakil or a pleader who
is a Law graduate] may be admitted as an advocate on a State roll if he - (a)
makes an application for such enrolment in accordance with the provisions of
this Act, not later than two years from the appointed day; and (b) fulfils the
conditions specified in clauses (a), (b), (e) and (f) of sub-section (1). [{3)
Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), a person who - (a)[xx xx]
has, for at least three years, been a vakil or a pleader or a mukhtar, or was
entitled at any time to be enrolled under any Law [xx xx xx] as an advocate of a
High Court (including a High Court of a former Part B State) or of a Court of
Judicial Commissioner in any Union territory; or [(aa) before the Ist day of
December, 1961, was entitled otherwise than as an advocate to practise the
profession of Law (whether by way of pleading or acting or both) by virtue of the
provisions of any Law, or who would have been so entitled had he not been in
public service on the said date; or] (b) [xx xx xx] (c) before the 1st day of April,
1937, has been an advocate of any High Court in any area which was comprised
within Burma as defined in the Government of India Act, 1935; or (d) is entitled
to be enrolled as an advocate under any rule made by the Bar Council of India in
this behalf, may be admitted as an advocate on a State roll if he- (i) makes an
application for such enrolment in accordance with the provisions of this Act; and
(ii) fulfils the conditions specified in clauses (a), (d), (e) and (f) of sub-section (1).
Xx xx xx The aforesaid Section has undergone number of amendments by
passage of time since the enactment of the said Act. It is, therefore, necessary to
refer to the relevant amendments to that Section. It may be noted that Section 24
sub-section (1), as it stands on the statute book on date, does not include clause
(d) which was omitted by Section 18 of amending Act 60 of 1973 with effect from
31st January, 1974. This clause (d) of Section 24 as it stood originally from 1961
read as under :

(d) he has undergone a course of training in Law and passed an examination after
such training both of which shall be prescribed by the State Bar Council; Provided
that this clause not apply to - (i) a barrister who has received practical training in
England or a person who has obtained a degree in Law from any University in
India before the appointed day; (ii) any person who has for at least two years held
a judicial office in the territory of India or is a member of the Central Legal
Service; (iii) any person who has for at least two years held a judicial office in any
area which was comprised before the 15th day of August, 1947, within India as
defined in the Government of India Act, 1935, or has been an advocate of any
High Court in any such area; (iv) any person who has practised before any High
Court and who has discontinued practice by reason of his taking up employment
under the Government, a local authority or any other person; and (v) any other
class of persons who by reason of their legal training or experience are declared
by the Bar Council of India to be exempt from the provisions of this clause;

The aforesaid clause (d) also underwent a change from 1964. The said clause (d),
in the form in which it is extracted above was operative only upto 1964. It was
amended in 1964 and then read as under :

in clause (d) - (i) the words after such training shall be omitted; (ii) in the
proviso, for paragraph (i), the following paragraph shall be substituted, namely :-
(i) a person who has obtained a degree in Law from any University in India on the
results of an examination held before the 31st day of March, 1964 or such other
later date as may be prescribed, or a barrister who was called to the Bar before
such date, or a barrister who, having qualified after that date, has received such
practical training in Law as may be recognised in this behalf by the Bar Council of
India;

It becomes, therefore, clear that between 1961 to 1964, the State Bar Council, as a
condition of enrolment, required an applicant to undergo a course of training in
Law and also required him to pass the examination after such a training. But
after 1964 till 1973, it was permissible for the State Bar Council to prescribe a
course of training in Law as a precondition for enrolment of a candidate and he
was also required to pass the requisite examination during the training or even
after completion of the training course and such examination could be prescribed
by the State Bar Council concerned only. It is further required to be noted that in
the aforesaid Section 24, between 1961 to 1964, there was no sub-section (3).
That sub-section (3) came to be inserted in Section 24 in 1964 by Act 21 of 1964.
In order to appreciate the scope and ambit of sub-section (3) of Section 24, as
inserted by the aforesaid amending Act, it will be profitable to have a look at the
objects and reasons underlying the introduction of the said amendment. These
objects and reasons stated that it was felt necessary to give powers to the Bar
Council of India with a view to enable it to add to the categories of eligible
candidates those persons who were otherwise not eligible to be enrolled under
Section 17 read with Section 24(1) of the Act, as it then stood on the statute book.
In para 3 of the objects of the Bill at Item No.5 was mentioned the fact that
categories of persons who were not by then entitled to be enrolled as advocates
could be brought in by conferring powers on the Bar Council of India as per the
amending provisions. Thus, sub-section (3) of Section 24 was brought on the
statute book by the said amending Act 21 of 1964.

Before we come to the present texture of Section 24, we may mention one more
amending Act 60 of 1973, which by Section 18 thereof, deleted the then existing
clause (d) from sub-section (1) of Section 24. Meaning thereby, after 31st
January, 1974, the State Bar Councils were deprived of their powers to prescribe a
course of pre- enrolment training in Law and examination to be undergone by
Law graduates who were seeking enrolment as advocates on the State roll.

We may at this stage refer to the statement of objects and reasons as mentioned
in the Advocates (Amendment) Bill, 1970 for further amending the Act and which
(Amendment) Bill ultimately resulted into the Amending Act 60 of 1973 by which
Section 24(1)(d) stood deleted. The said clause, as noted earlier, entitled the State
Bar Councils to frame Rules for prescribing pre-enrolment training and
examination subject to which a person would get qualified to be enrolled as an
advocate on the State roll. The reason why this pre- enrolment training and
examination was sought to be done away with by the Parliament is clearly seen
from the statement of objects and reasons for introducing the aforesaid
(Amendment) Bill of 1970. The said statement of objects and reasons was
produced before us by learned Additional Solicitor General,
Shri.C.S.Vaidyanathan for our scrutiny. Amongst others the need for deleting the
statutory provision regarding pre-enrolment training was highlighted by
paragraph (iii) of the said statement of objects and reasons. It is profitable to
reproduce the said paragraph as under :- Pre-enrolment training - The Bar
Council of India has decided that in future a degree in Law can be obtained only
after undergoing a three-year course of study in Law after graduation as a result
of which the age of entry into the legal profession becomes much higher than the
age of entry in other professions. It is, therefore, felt that after a three- year
course in Law in a University it is not necessary to retain the statutory provision
in the Act requiring a further examination or practical training.

It becomes clear from a mere look at the said paragraph that it was the Bar
Council of India itself which had decided that a Degree of Law obtained by a
person after undergoing three years course of study after graduation would be
enough for qualifying him to be enrolled as an Advocate under the Act and,
therefore, pre-enrolment training till then required of him before getting
enrolment was not necessary. This decision of the Bar Council of India was
accepted by the Parliament and aforesaid provision by way of additional
eligibility condition for enrolment as an advocate as then existing under Section
24(1)(d) was deleted. So far as three years LLB degree course is concerned, the
syllabus prescribed by the Bar Council of India itself by its communication dated
21st October, 1997 addressed to the Registrars of all the Universities imparting
Legal Education in India, the Deans of faculties of Laws of Universities and the
Members of the Law colleges makes it clear that practical training to be given to a
Law student prior to his getting degree of Law from University after completing
three years course was to be included in the course of study. As practical training
was suggested by the Bar Council of India itself for being included in the
curriculum to be prescribed by the Universities for Law students, it obviously
became redundant for providing further practical training before enrolment of
such trained graduates in Law. That is precisely the reason why after January,
1974 need for pre-enrolment training was not insisted upon by the legislature and
that too at the suggestion and on the recommendation of the Bar Council of India
itself. However, learned Senior Counsel Shri P.P.Rao for the Bar Council of India
is right when he contends that in those days it may have been so felt, but with
passage of time and experience gained by the Bar Council of India regarding the
actual working of legal profession at various levels in India and also in the light of
the recommendation of higher power committee chaired by Honble Mr. Justice
A.M. Ahmadi to be referred to hereinafter, the need for providing training to
advocates before they become entitled to practise was visualised and that is the
reason why the impugned rules were enacted and that, therefore, what the Bar
Council of India decided in 1973 cannot create any estoppel against the Bar
Council of India in 1995. Even accepting this contention, the question remains
whether the Bar Council of India by resorting to the enactment of impugned rules
had remained within the permissible limits of its rule making power or not and it
is this question which has to be considered by us in the present proceedings.

We may, at this stage, also refer to Section 7, laying down the statutory functions
of the Bar Council of India. This Section, as it stood at the relevant time, read as
under :
7. Functions of Bar Council of India - [(1)] The functions of the Bar Council of
India shall be - (a) [ xx xx xx] (b) to lay down standards of professional conduct
and etiquette for advocates; (c) to lay down the procedure to be followed by its
disciplinary committee and the disciplinary committee of each State Bar Council;
(d) to safeguard the rights, privileges and interests of advocates; (e) to promote
and support Law reform; (f) to deal with and dispose of any matter arising under
this Act, which may be referred to it by a State Bar Council; (g) to exercise general
supervision and control over State Bar Councils; (h) to promote Legal Education
and to lay down standards of such education in consultation with the Universities
in India imparting such education and the State Bar Councils; (i) to recognise
Universities whose degree in Law shall be a qualification for enrolments as an
advocate and for that purpose to visit and inspect Universities [or cause the State
Bar Councils to visit and inspect Universities in accordance with such directions
as it may give in this behalf]; [(ia) to conduct seminars and organise talks on legal
topics by eminent jurists and publish journals and papers of legal interest; (ib) to
organise legal aid to the poor in the prescribed manner; (ic) to recognise on a
reciprocal basis foreign qualifications in Law obtained outside India for the
purpose of admission as an advocate under this Act;] (j) to manage and invest the
funds of the Bar Council; (k) to provide for the election of its members; (l) to
perform all other functions conferred on it by or under this Act; (m) to do all
other things necessary for discharging the aforesaid functions. [(2) The Bar
Council of India may constitute one or more funds in the prescribed manner for
the purpose of - (a) giving financial assistance to organise welfare schemes for
indigent, disabled or other advocates; (b) giving legal aid or advice in accordance
with the Rules made in this behalf; [(c) establishing Law libraries.] (3) The Bar
Council of India may receive any grants, donations, gifts or benefactions for all or
any of the purposes specified in sub-section (2) which shall be credited to the
appropriate fund or funds constituted under that sub-section.]

(Emphasis supplied)

It is to be noted that clause (a) of Section 7, which originally stood, got omitted
with effect from 31st January, 1974. That clause (a) pertained to maintenance of
rolls of advocates. Hence from 1974 the Bar Council of India was not concerned
with maintenance of rolls of advocates which function became the sole concern of
State Bar Councils only. These rolls obviously consisting of names of entrants to
the legal profession were clearly envisaged under Section 24 of the Act. The next
relevant Section is 24-A dealing with disqualification for enrolment of a person
desirous of being an advocate under the Act. That section was inserted by Act 60
of 1973. It is relevant to note that the Legislature thereunder has enumerated
three categories of persons who are disqualified from being enrolled as advocates
even though they might otherwise fulfil the requirements of Section 24 sub-
section (1). The imposition by the impugned Rules of the requirement of an
applicant to undergo pre-enrolment training does not result into any
disqualification of such an applicant if he has not undertaken such a training as it
is not treated by the legislature as one of such disqualifications as envisaged by
Section 24A. In other words, by the statutory provisions of Sections 24(1) and
Section 24-A, after 1973, no legislative intention can be culled out requiring an
applicant law graduate seeking enrolment as advocate under the Act to undergo
any pre-enrolment training as a condition for enrolment nor its absence to be
treated as a disqualification for enrolment. Next relevant Section is Section 28,
which deals with powers of the State Bar Council to make Rules to carry out the
purposes of the Chapter dealing with admission and enrolment of advocates. The
said Section, as standing on the statute book on date, does not contain clause (b)
in sub-section (2) thereof. Clause (b) was deleted by Section 21 of amending Act
60 of 1973 with effect from 31.1.1974. The said sub-clause (b), prior to its deletion
read as under : (b) a course of practical training in Law and the examination to be
passed after such training for admission as an advocate on the roll of the Bar
Council;

A conjoint reading of Section 28, sub-section 2(b) and Section 24(1)(d) as it


existed on the statute book prior to 31.1.1974 makes it clear that from 31st
January, 1974, the legislature did not think it fit to clothe the State Bar Councils
with the power to prescribe any pre-enrolment training and examination to be
undergone by an applicant for enrolment as an Advocate on the State roll. As
clause (d) was deleted from Section 24(1), simultaneously the rule making power
earlier conferred on the State Bar Councils for effective exercise of that statutory
function also stood withdrawn. Meaning thereby, from 31.1.1974 any person who
had a requisite Law degree as laid down by Section 24 sub- section (1), became
entitled to be enrolled as an Advocate on the State roll maintained by the State
Bar Council and he was not required to undergo any such pre-enrolment training
which he was required to undergo prior to 31st January, 1974. It is also pertinent
to note that sub- section (3) of Section 24 had remained operative from 1964
onwards all throughout till 1974 simultaneously with the then existing power of
the State Bar Councils to prescribe pre-enrolment training and examination to be
undertaken by the applicants desirous of being enrolled as advocates. When both
these provisions simultaneously existed on the statute book from 1964 to the
beginning of 1974, it becomes obvious that the question of prescribing pre-
enrolment training and examination to be undertaken by an applicant for being
enrolled as an advocate on the State roll, remained solely in the domain of the
concerned State Bar Councils and the Bar Council of India had nothing to do on
this aspect of the matter. Consequently Section 24(3) dealt with a topic not
covered by the sweep of Section 24(1) especially clause (d) thereof. The next
relevant Section for our present purpose is Section 29, which is found in Chapter
IV dealing with right to practise. The right to practise naturally is available to
those advocates who are enrolled under the Act and whose names are mentioned
in the State roll as per Section 17 of the Act. A new entrant to the legal profession
obviously would be an ordinary advocate and not a senior advocate. But only two
types of advocates are contemplated by Section 17 sub-section (2) of the Act as
seen earlier. An advocate can either be a senior advocate or a non- senior
advocate, meaning thereby, other advocate. Moment a person is enrolled as an
advocate on the State roll, he would become statutorily entitled to practise as laid
down under Section 17 which provides under sub-section (1) that : Every State
Bar Council shall prepare and maintain a roll of advocates in which shall be
entered the names and addresses of - (a) all persons who were entered as
advocates on the roll of any High Court under the Indian Bar Councils Act, 1926
(38 of 1926), immediately before the appointed day [including persons, being
citizens of India, who before the 15th day of August, 1947, were enrolled as
advocates under the said Act in any area which before the said date was
comprised within India as defined in the Government of India Act, 1935, and who
at any time] express an intention in the prescribed manner to practise within the
jurisdiction of the Bar Council; (b) all other persons who are admitted to be
advocates on the roll of the State Bar Council under this Act on or after the
appointed day.

Section 30, which up till now has not come into force lays down :
Subject to the provisions of this Act, every advocate whose name is entered in the
[State roll] shall be entitled as of right to practise throughout the territories to
which this Act extends, - (i) in all Courts including the Supreme Court; (ii) before
any tribunal or person legally authorised to take evidence; and (iii) before any
other authority or person before whom such advocate is by or under any Law for
the time being in force entitled to practise.

So far as clause (i) of Section 30 is concerned, it is not in dispute that even though
the main section has not come into force, all persons who are enrolled as
advocates on the State roll are entitled as of right to practise in all Courts,
including the Supreme Court and no one has challenged their said right. Whether
such enrolled advocates can practise in Tribunals or any other authority would
remain a moot question in the absence of bringing into force Section 30. Section
32 deals with the power of Court to permit appearances in particular cases by
persons not enrolled as advocates. That power of the Court obviously is not
touched by the impugned rules, as fairly stated by learned senior counsel Shri
P.P.Rao for the respondent Bar Council of India. Then follows Section 33 which
deals with the right to practise conferred on the advocates and lays down that :

Except as otherwise provided in this Act or in any other Law for the time being in
force, no person shall, on or after the appointed day, be entitled to practise in any
Court or before any authority or person unless he is enrolled as an advocate
under this Act.

A conjoint reading of Sections 23, 29 and 33 leaves no room for doubt that once a
person is found qualified to be admitted as an advocate on the State roll having
satisfied the statutory conditions of eligibility laid down in sub-section (1) of
Section 24, he will automatically become entitled as of right to practise full-
fledged in any Court including the Supreme Court. Next follows Section 34, sub-
section (1) which provides that : (1) The High Court may make Rules laying down
the conditions subject to which an advocate shall be permitted to practise in the
High Court and the Courts subordinate thereto.

This rule making power of the High Court operates on its own and cannot be
pressed in service by the Bar Council of India for effectively proving the
authorship of their impugned rules and, therefore, we need not dilate on the
same any further. The next relevant section is Section 49. This is the section
which lays down the rule making power of the Bar Council of India and is the
sheet-anchor of the respondent Bar Council of India for supporting the impugned
rules. It is, therefore, necessary to note the relevant provisions of this Section.
Section 49 sub-section [(1)] provides that : The Bar Council of India may make
Rules for discharging its functions under this Act, and, in particular, such Rules
may pr escribe - xxx xxx xxx [(af)the minimum qualifications required for
admission to a course of degree in Law in any recognised University;] (ag) the
class or category of persons entitled to be enrolled as advocates; (ah) the
conditions subject to which an advocate shall have the right to practise and the
circumstances under which a person shall be deemed to practise as an advocate
in a Cou rt; ] xxx xxx xxx

Before considering the next relevant Section, it is necessary to note that clause
(af), as it stands in the present form in Section 49(1), was substituted by Act 60 of
1973 by Section 38 thereof with effect from 31.1.74. Prior thereto, clause (af)
which was in force from 1964 onwards, read as under : (af) the category of
persons who may be exempted from undergoing a course of training and passing
an examination prescribed under clause (d) of sub-section (1) of Section 24;

It, therefore, becomes clear that from 1964 till the end of 1973, the Bar Council of
India had rule making power to exempt those persons who were otherwise
required to undergo pre-enrolment training and passing an examination as
prescribed by the State Bar Councils under Section 24 (1)(d) as it stood on the
statute book during that time. So the power of exemption from undergoing the
training to applicants for enrolment as advocates was with the Bar Council of
India, while the power to prescribe training and examination solely rested with
the State Bar Councils concerned. Once the legislature by Act 60 of 1973,
deprived the State Bar Councils of their rule making power to prescribe training
and examination in view of deletion of clause(d) of sub-section (1) of Section 24
from the parent Act, the rule making power exempting categories of persons from
pre-training and pre-examination prior to enrolment as earlier available to the
Bar Council of India was also withdrawn and clause (af) in the present form got
substituted with effect from 31.1.1974. Clauses (ag) and (ah) were already
inserted in Section 49 by Act 21 of 1964 and they have continued to exist on the
statute book all throughout till date. These topics of rule making power existed
with the Bar Council of India at the same time when the provision regarding pre-
service training and examination as a condition of enrolment existed on the
statute book under Section 24(1)(d). In other words, between 1964 to the end of
1973 i.e. till 31st January, 1974, the topic of prescription of pre-enrolment
training and pre-enrolment examination which remained strictly in the domain
of the State Bar Councils remained excluded from the rule making powers
provided by clauses (ag) and (ah) of Section 49 so far as the Bar Council of India
was concerned. It is axiomatic that these general rule making powers in clauses
(ag) and (ah) of Section 49 necessarily did not take in their sweep the power to
provide for pre-enrolment training and examination for applicants who were
seeking enrolment as advocates under the Act from 1964 to the end of 1973. It is
easy to visualise that the legislature itself dispensed with the concept of pre-
enrolment training and examination for new entrants to the Bar with effect from
31.01.1974. As noted earlier, this was done on the recommendation of the Bar
Council of India itself. Under these circumstances, it cannot be presumed that the
same legislature without expressly including the same topic in the rule making
power of the Bar Council of India, impliedly permitted the Bar Council of India
itself to prescribe pre-enrolment training to new entrants at the Bar
simultaneously with the withdrawal of the same training from 1974 onwards. It is
difficult to countenance the submission of Shri Rao for the respondent Bar
Council of India that there was any concurrent power to prescribe pre-enrolment
training to applicants both with the State Bar Councils and the Bar Council of
India between 1964 and end of 1973. The next relevant Section for our purpose is
Section 49-A, which deals with the power of Central Government to make Rules.
Sub-section (1) lays down that :

The Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, make Rules
for carrying out the purposes of this Act including Rules with respect to any
matter for which the Bar Council of India or a State Bar Council has power to
make Rules.

Thus, powers of the Central Government to make Rules are parallel to the powers
to make Rules available to the Bar Council of India or the State Bar Councils
under the very same Act. Sub-section (2) of Section 49-A, as it stood prior to
31.1.1974, provided amongst others, by clause(d) thereof, rule making power in
connection with the category of persons who were exempted from undergoing a
course of training and passing an examination prescribed under clause (d) of sub-
section (1) of Section 24. It becomes obvious that this provision had become
otiose as it sought to exempt the category of persons from the sweep of
compulsory pre-enrolment training and examination being a condition for
enrolment as advocates under the then existing clause (d) of sub- section (1) of
Section 24 which was deleted from the statute book from 1974 onwards. Thus,
from 1974 there will be no occasion for the Central Government to exercise power
of exemption for such category of persons earlier covered by Section 24(1)(d).
However, it may be noted that Section 49-A sub-section 2 (c) entitles the Central
Government to frame Rules regarding the class or category of persons entitled to
be enrolled as advocates under the Act. It is on the same lines as the rule making
power of the Bar Council of India under Section 49 sub-section (1) clause (ah).
We may note at this stage that the Central Government has not exercised any rule
making power regarding pre-enrolment training for prospective advocates. We,
therefore, need not dilate on this aspect any more. The last relevant Section is
Section 52 which deals with Saving and it lays down that : Nothing in this Act
shall be deemed to affect the power of the Supreme Court to make Rules under
Article 145 of the Constitution - (a) for laying down the conditions subject to
which a senior advocate shall be entitled to practise in that Court; (b) for
determining the persons who shall be entitled to [act or plead] in that Court.

It is in the background of the aforesaid statutory scheme of the Act, as subjected


to various amendments from time to time till date, that the moot question posed
for our consideration about the legal efficacy of the impugned rules will have to
be examined.

It becomes, therefore, necessary to have a close look at the impugned rules as


amended by the Resolution of the Bar Council of India dated 19th July, 1998.
These rules styled as the Bar Council of India Training Rules, 1995 provided for
certain pre-conditions to be complied with by an applicant to be enrolled on the
roll of the State Bar Council. The Rules are said to have been promulgated in
exercise of the Bar Council of Indias rule making powers under Section 24(3)(d)
of the Act. However, Shri Rao, learned senior counsel for the respondent Bar
Council of India, is right when he contends that he can also sustain the Rules
under any other legally permissible rule making power discernible from the
relevant provisions of the Act. Rule 2 of the impugned rules provides that No
person shall be entitled to be enrolled as an advocate unless he is eligible to be
enrolled as such under Sec.24 of Advocates Act, 1961 and has undergone training
as prescribed under these Rules. The said rule 2, as amended up to 19th July,
1998 further reads that: However, while undergoing training, the trainees shall
be enrolled provisionally as Trainee Advocates after approval of name of their
guides by the State Bar Council and the State Bar Council shall issue identity card
to said provisionally enrolled Trainee advocates for their identification. Detailed
procedure has been laid down how a trainee advocate has to function during the
period of training. Such candidate has to maintain two types of diaries as
approved by the State Bar Council - one for the work done in chambers and the
other for the work in Courts. As per Rule 4 the training period shall commence
from the certificate of guide that the candidate is being trained by him. Rule 5
deals with qualification of advocate to become guide of such trainees. Rule 7 deals
with period of training for a minimum of one year. Rule 10 provides that : No
candidate shall engage himself in any employment, profession, business, trade or
calling during the course of training in any manner. Rule 15 lays down seniority
of a trainee advocate on successful completion of the training period by providing
that he shall be entitled to seniority from the date of provisional enrolment as
trainee under the Rules. Such a trainee advocate as per Rule 15 (b) shall be
entitled to appear in the Court for seeking adjournments and to make mentioning
on instruction of their guide and shall be under disciplinary control of the State
Bar Council and the Bar Council of India. Rule 15AA provides that in case period
of training of a particular candidate is extended by the State Bar Council under
Rule 9 on the ground of inadequate training, said extended period shall not be
counted towards seniority.

It becomes at once clear that the impugned rules are said to have been framed by
the Bar Council of India in exercise of its statutory powers under Section 24(3)(d)
of the Act. We have already traced the history of the aforesaid statutory
provisions. It is no doubt true that sub-section (3) of Section 24 starts with a non
obstante clause and provides that notwithstanding anything contained in sub-
section (1), a person mentioned in categories (a),(aa), (c) and (d) may be
admitted as an advocate on a State roll if he applies as laid down in clause (1) and
fulfils the conditions specified in clauses (a), (b), (e) and (f) of sub- section (1).
The objects and reasons for enacting the said provision, as noted earlier, have
clearly laid down that it was felt by the legislature that despite the operation of
Sections 17 and 24 of the Act, there were some persons who though not covered
by the said provision and had not satisfied the conditions for enrolment as laid
down in these provisions deserved to be enrolled as advocates. With that end in
view, the Bar Council of India was provided with the rule making power under
sub-section 3(d) of Section 24 by way of an enabling provision to extend the
statutory coverage of Section 24(1) for bringing in such otherwise ineligible
candidates for enrolment and even for such additional class of persons to be
enrolled as advocates by exercise of rule making power of the Bar Council of
India they had to satisfy the statutory requirements of clauses (a), (b), (e) and (f)
of sub-section (1) of Section 24. This enabling provision available to the Bar
Council of India by Rules to extend the scope of eligibility in favour of those who
were ineligible under Section 24(1) to be enrolled as advocates did not touch
upon the question of eligibility in connection with pre-enrolment training and
examination or to put it differently, the enabling power available to the Bar
Council of India to make eligible otherwise ineligible persons for enrolment as
advocates under Section 24(1) did not cover the question of pre-enrolment
training and examination at all. It must, therefore, be held on express language of
Section 24 sub-section 3(d) that the rule making power of the Bar Council of
India proceeded only in one direction, namely, for bringing into the sweep of
Section 24(1) all those who were not entitled to be enrolled as advocates under
the provisions of Section 24(1). The non-obstante clause with which sub- section
(3) of Section 24 starts, provides that despite the conditions mentioned for
enrolment in sub-section (1) of Section 24 might not have been satisfied by
person concerned, if the Bar Council of India thought that such a person also
deserved to be enrolled as an advocate, then rule making power under clause (d)
of sub-section (3) of Section 24 could be resorted to by the Bar Council of India.
The said power, to say the least, could be utilised for making ineligible persons
eligible for enrolment despite what is stated under sub-section (1) of Section 24
but it could never be utilised in the reverse direction for disqualifying those from
enrolment who were otherwise qualified to be enrolled as per sub- section (1) of
Section 24. It was a power given to the Bar Council of India to extend the
coverage of Section 24(1) and not to whittle it down. It is, therefore, difficult to
appreciate the contention of learned senior counsel, Shri Rao for the Bar Council
of India, that by exercise of the said rule, it could impose a further condition of
disability of otherwise eligible candidate to be enrolled even if he had satisfied all
the statutory conditions laid down by Section 24 sub-section (1). To illustrate the
nature of such rule making power and the limited scope thereof, it may be
visualised that as per Section 24 sub-section (1) clause (c) unless a person has
obtained the degree of Law from any recognised University in India, he would not
be entitled to be enrolled as an advocate. Still the Bar Council of India in its
wisdom and discretion by exercising its enabling rule making power under
Section 24 sub-section (3)(d) read with Section 49(1) may permit a citizen of
India who might have obtained degree from a foreign University like a Law
degree from England or a Law degree from Harvard Law School of America or a
law degree from Canadian or Australian University to be enrolled as advocate.
Such category of persons who could not have been enrolled on the express
language of Section 24 (1) could be enrolled by the State Bar Councils under
Section 24(3)(d) if the Bar Council of India in exercise of its rule making power
had covered them for such enrolment. It is this beneficial and enabling power for
bringing in the sweep of the umbrella of Section 24(1) those who would have
otherwise been out of it which is conferred by Sub-section (3) (d) of Section 24 on
the Bar Council of India read with Section 49(1). It is also necessary to note that
this power is available to the Bar Council of India from 1964 all throughout till
date, while between 1963 to January 1974, pre-enrolment training and
examination could be prescribed as a condition by the State Bar Councils as per
the then existing condition (d) of sub-section (1) of Section 24 for such
enrolment. Consequently, it cannot be said that the rule making power under
sub-section (3) (d) of Section 24 still enables the Bar Council of India, after
deletion of Section 24(1)(d) to promulgate such a rule by which almost by back
door such an additional condition for enrolment to restrict the entry of otherwise
eligible candidates for enrolment under Section 24(1) can be imposed.
Consequently, Section 24 sub-section (3) (d) of the Act cannot be legitimately
invoked by the Bar Council of India for sustaining the impugned rules.

We may also mention one additional submission of senior advocate Shri P.P.Rao
in support of the impugned rules. He contended that Section 24(1) of the Act
itself enables rule making authorities to enact Rules which may go beyond the
statutory provisions of Section 24(1) as enacted by the legislature and, therefore,
the Bar Council of India as a rule making authority can by exercise of the said
power add to the conditions of enrolment as expressly laid down by Section 24(1).
It is not possible to agree with this submission for the simple reason that Section
24 itself contemplates the qualifications of a person who seeks admission as an
advocate on the State roll. To reiterate granting of admission to a person for
being enrolled as an advocate under the Act is a statutory function of the State
Bar Council only. The Bar Council of India has no role to play on this aspect. All it
has to do is to approve any Rules framed by the State Bar Council under Section
24(1) laying down further qualifications for a person to be enrolled by it on the
State roll as an advocate. We have, therefore, to read the rule making power
mentioned under Section 24(1) conjointly with the rule making power of the State
Bar Council as provided by section 28(1) especially clause 2(d) thereof which
provides as under :- (1) A State Bar Council may make rules to carry out the
purposes of this Chapter.

(2) In particular, and without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing power,
such rules may provide for - Xxxx Xxxx Xxxx (d) the conditions subject to which a
person may be admitted as an advocate on any such roll.

Consequently, the submission of Shri P.P.Rao, learned senior counsel for the Bar
Council of India that the Council also can exercise rule making power under
Section 24(1) for imposing an additional condition of qualification for a person to
be enrolled on State roll obviously cannot be accepted. Shri Rao then next turned
to Section 7 of the Act and submitted that, amongst enumerated functions of the
Bar Council of India, at clause (h) of sub-section (1) is specified a provision
regarding promoting the legal education and to lay down standards of such
education in consultation with the Universities in India imparting such education
and the State Bar Councils. It is difficult to appreciate how the aforesaid clause
(h) can also give any support to the impugned rules. Shri Rao, learned senior
counsel for the Bar Council of India, is right when he contends that the concept of
`legal education is not necessarily confined to only class room lectures or
theoretical study of law. It can include practical training of prospective advocates.
But even accepting that legal connotation of the term `legal education, the
question remains as to how the Bar Council of India can promote legal education.
It can obviously promote legal education by laying down standards of such
education in consultation with the respective universities in India imparting such
education. The words Universities in India imparting such education as found in
clause (h) of sub-section (1) leave no room for doubt that the question of
imparting legal education is entrusted to the Universities in India and not to the
Bar Council of India. All that the Bar Council of India can do is to suggest ways
and means to promote such legal education to be imparted by the Universities
and for that purpose it may lay down the standards of education, syllabi in
consultation with the Universities in India. It is, therefore, difficult to appreciate
how for promoting legal education through the Universities imparting legal
education in India, the Bar Council of India can itself take up the role of laying
down pre- enrolment training for applicants seeking to enter legal profession by
getting enrolled under Section 24 of the Act. The history of this relevant provision
spread over years, shows that pre-enrolment training and examination constitute
a topic which the legislature in its wisdom entrusted to the State Bar Councils and
not to the Bar Council of India. Merely because the legislature withdrew even that
rule making power in the light of the withdrawal of the statutory condition of
enrolment by enacting Section 24(1)(d) from the 31st January, 1974, it could not
be said that the then existing rule making power on other topics which was
available to the Bar Council of India got enlarged or elongated by necessary
implication. The power, as couched in the same earlier existing terms, has
remained as it is after deletion of Section 24(1)(d) by the Parliament. It is also to
be noted that the functions of the Bar Council of India under Section 7 were not
enlarged to cover such a provision for pre-enrolment training to applicants by
suitably entrusting the Bar Council of India such a function. Save and except
Section 7(1)(h) there is no sub-section in the said Section which entitles the Bar
Council of India to prescribe any pre-enrolment training or examination to be
undertaken by the prospective professional who wants to enrol himself as such
once he satisfies the requirements and the conditions for such enrolment as laid
down by Section 24 (1). Consequently, the support of Section 7(1) as tried to be
invoked for sustaining the impugned rules also is of no avail to learned senior
counsel Shri Rao for the respondent Bar Council of India. We may now refer to
Section 49 of the Act, which deals with general power of Bar Council of India to
make Rules. Sub-section (1) thereof lays down that the Bar Council of India may
make rules for discharging its functions under this Act, and, in particular, such
rules may prescribe on various topics as enumerated therein from clauses (a) to
(j). A mere look at the aforesaid provision makes it clear that the rule making
power entrusted to the Bar Council of India by the legislature is an ancillary
power for fructifying and effectively discharging its statutory functions laid down
by the Act. Consequently, Rules to be framed under Section 49(1) must have a
statutory peg on which to hang. If there is no such statutory peg the rule which is
sought to be enacted dehors such a peg will have no foothold and will become still
born. The statutory functions entrusted by the legislature to the Bar Council of
India under the Act so far as relevant for our present purpose and which could be
relied upon by Shri Rao, learned senior counsel for the respondent Bar Council of
India, are Section 7(1)(h) and Section 24(3)(d). We have seen earlier that neither
of these statutory provisions entitles the Bar Council of India to provide for the
disqualification or a disability or an additional condition for enrolment of a
person who is otherwise eligible to be enrolled as an advocate under Section
24(1). Once that conclusion is reached, the very foundation for supporting the
impugned rules gets knocked off. Consequently, if any such rule is framed,
supposedly by exercise of the rule making power as enumerated in Section 49(1)
(af), (ag) or (ah) on which also reliance was placed by Shri Rao, the said rule
having not been made for discharging any of the statutory functions of the Bar
Council of India in this connection must necessarily fail as it would be ultra vires
the statutory functions of the Bar Council of India. Any rule framed by rule
making authority going beyond its statutory functions must necessarily be held to
be ultra vires and inoperative at law. Consequently, the valiant attempt made by
Shri Rao for sustaining the Rules under Section 49(1)(af), (ag) and (ah) would
remain abortive only on this short ground. But even that apart, let us see whether
any of these provisions can sustain the impugned rules even on the assumption
that such an exercise otherwise remains a permissible one for the Bar Council of
India. Section 49(1)(af) deals with minimum qualifications required for
admission to a course of degree in law in any recognised University. That
obviously has nothing to do with the impugned rules. Then comes clause (ag)
which deals with the class or category of persons entitled to be enrolled as
advocates. To recapitulate, Section 49(1)(ag) was already on the statute book
since 1964 till January 1974 when the topic of pre-enrolment training and
examination was solely within the domain of the State Bar Councils and once on
the said topic the State Bar Council concerned had framed the requisite rules,
they were then subject to approval by the Bar Council of India. Therefore, there
was a complete code in this connection. Once the State Bar Councils framed such
rules and got them approved by the Bar Council of India, then because of the
thrust of the parent provision of Section 24(1)(d) which was operative at that
time, it became a pre-condition for enrolment. There cannot be two parallel pre-
conditions of enrolment which can be simultaneously imposed, one under
Section 24(1)(d) by the concerned State Bar Council by exercise of its powers
under Section 28(2)(b) which existed on the Statute Book between 1964 to
January, 1974 and also the possible provisions for imposing such pre-conditions
for enrolment by the Bar Council of India taking resort to the supposed wide
wordings of Section 49(1)(ag) during the very same period as during that period
Section 24(1)(d), Section 28(2)(b) and Section 49(1)(ag) conjointly existed on the
statute book. If such a concurrent power is envisaged by Section 49(1)(ag), then
the Bar Council of India instead of being an approving authority at the relevant
time would itself become a prescribing authority in connection with pre-
enrolment training. It has also to be kept in view that on the scheme of the Act
enrolment of advocates is the task of the State Bar Councils and not of the Bar
Council of India. It must, therefore, be held that the rule making power
contemplated by the legislature under Section 49(1)(ag) for being exercised by
the Bar Council of India was pertaining to only those classes or categories of
persons who were thought fit to be enrolled as advocates though they might not
be eligible to be enrolled under Section 24(1) of the Act as it stood on the statute
book. In other words, this enabling rule making power only by which the Bar
Council of India could add to the category of eligible persons for enrolment which
would have otherwise remained outside the sweep of the statutory scheme of
eligibility for enrolment as laid down by Section 24(1), did not contemplate any
power to curtail the existing eligibility of applicants under Section 24(1) for
enrolment as advocates. It is only for such additional class or category of persons
that the enabling provision as per the said rule making power could be available
to the Bar Council of India. It is difficult to appreciate how by any process of
interpretation an enabling provision can be treated as a restrictive one. In fact, on
a conjoint reading of Section 24(3)(d) and Section 49(1)(ag) the conclusion
becomes inevitable that the Bar Council of India in exercise of its statutory
function entrusted to it under sub-section (3)(d) of Section 24(1) can frame
suitable rule for bringing in the umbrella of enrolment provision those who
otherwise would have remained outside. The rule making power under Section
49(1)(ag) has to take colour from the statutory function entrusted to the Bar
Council of India by Section 24(3)(d). As we have already held that Section 24(3)
(d) does not enable the Bar Council of India to impose additional restriction on
the eligibility of an applicant who seeks enrolment as per Section 24(1) by
necessary implication power under Section 49(1)(ag) also cannot enable such an
impermissible exercise. The rule making power under Section 49(1)(ag) is
ancillary to the statutory function entrusted to the Bar Council of India by Section
24(3)(d) and it cannot travel beyond the said statutory sphere.
So far as Section 49(1)(ag) is concerned, it has also to be kept in view, as noted
earlier that Section 24(3)(d) and Section 49(1)(ag) were simultaneously
introduced in the Act in 1964. At that time there were specific provisions
regarding pre-enrolment training under Section 24(1)(d) and Section 28(2)(b).
Thus, the enactment of Section 24(3)(d) and Section 49(1)(ag) could never have
been intended to include implied power/function to make pre-enrolment training
Rules and that too by the Bar Council of India which had nothing to do at the
initial stage of enrolment of advocates on the State rolls. In this connection, it is
also useful to refer to section 49(1)(ag) with section 29 of the Act. Section 29 in
terms provides as under:- Subject to the provisions of this Act and any Rules
made thereunder, there shall, as from the appointed day, be only one class of
persons entitled to practise the profession of Law, namely, advocates.

Section 49(1)(ag) also deals with the class or category of persons entitled to be
enrolled as advocates. Thus, by the said provision the Bar Council of India in
exercise of its rule making power can add to the class of persons contemplated by
Section 29 by enlarging the said class of advocates entitled to practise as full-
fledged advocates. Entitlement to practise the profession of law necessarily
means full- fledged entitlement to plead and argue cases of their clients before
the courts of law. There cannot be any truncated right to practise profession of
law which is sought to be culled out by Shri P.P. Rao, learned Senior Counsel for
the Bar Council of India on a conjoint reading of Sections 29 and 49 (1)(ag) of the
Act. That takes us to the last provision on which reliance was placed by Shri Rao,
learned senior counsel for the respondent. That is Section 49(1)(ah). A mere look
at the said provision shows that it confers rule making power on the Bar Council
of India to prescribe conditions subject to which an advocate shall have the right
to practise and the circumstances under which a person shall be deemed to
practise as an advocate in a Court. It is, therefore, obvious that once a person has
been enrolled as an advocate under the Act, his right to practise can be made
subject to certain conditions if the Bar Council of India seeks to impose such
conditions on an enrolled advocate. In other words, rule making power under
Section 49(1)(ah) deals with a situation which is post enrolment of an advocate
and does not deal with pre-enrolment situation for a candidate seeking
enrolment. The impugned rules provide for pre-enrolment training. It is true that
the Rules also provide for provisional enrolment. But provisional enrolment
envisaged by the rules is totally dehors the scheme of the Act. To recall enrolment
of advocates is a function entrusted by the legislature to the State Bar Councils
and not to the Bar Council of India. Section 17 read with Section 24, leaves no
room for doubt that a person who seeks enrolment as an advocate has to show his
eligibility to be brought on State roll of advocates. A State roll of advocates has to
be maintained only by the State Bar Council. Consequently, there would remain
no occasion for the Bar Council of India to provide for a condition of pre-
enrolment training. The State Bar Councils alone could provide for pre-
enrolment training till Section 24(1)(d) was on the statute book up to January,
1974. After an advocate is enrolled as a full-fledged advocate how his right to
practise is to be conditioned may be made a subject matter of rule making power
of the Bar Council of India as per Section 49(1)(ah). But in the facts of the present
case, the aforesaid provision cannot be of any help to the respondent Bar Council
of India for sustaining the impugned rules for two obvious reasons; firstly,
provision for pre-enrolment training of prospective advocates is not entrusted by
the legislature to the Bar Council of India while laying down its statutory
functions under Section 7, as seen earlier. Therefore, the very first part of Section
49 will hit the said rule as it would not be a rule for discharging the statutory
function of the Bar Council of India. But there is still a second cogent reason for
showing that clause (ah) of sub-section (1) of Section 49 cannot support the
impugned rules. The said rules do not seek to regulate the right of practice
available to an already enrolled full-fledged advocate. The entitlement of an
enrolled advocate is to be culled out from a conjoint reading of Sections 17, 24(1)
and the definition of advocate as found in Section 2(1)(a). Once a person is
enrolled as an advocate, how the right to practise of such enrolled advocate can
be regulated or monitored may legitimately form the subject matter of a rule
framed under Section 49(1)(ah). But the impugned rules by providing the concept
of a trainee advocate with only a limited right to ask for adjournment and
mentioning the cases of his guide totally violate the scheme of the Act. Section 17
sub-section (2) of the Act lays down that there can be only two classes of
advocates; senior advocates and non-senior or ordinary advocates. It is difficult
to appreciate how a trainee advocates class can be created by exercising supposed
rule making power of the Bar Council of India under Section 49(1)(ah). It is also
interesting to note that the Bar Council of India itself in exercise of its rule
making power under Section 49(1)(ah) has framed the Rules laying down
conditions under which an enrolled advocate may not be permitted to practise or
may be suspended from practice or when can he resume practice. Shri Rao,
learned senior counsel for the respondent, was right when he contended that
even though such rules might have been framed in past, if the rule making power
inheres in the Bar Council of India then such power can be exercised from time to
time by framing additional rules. However, the question is whether Section 49(1)
(ah) confers such a power on the Bar Council of India. So far as this question is
concerned, it has stood answered against the respondent Bar Council of India by
a three Judge Bench judgement of this Court reported in Indian Council of Legal
Aid & Advice & Ors. case (supra). A.M.Ahmadi, CJI, speaking for the three Judge
Bench, had to consider in the said decision, the question whether the Bar Council
of India could frame a rule restricting the enrolment of advocates to the State roll
to only those who had not completed 45 years of age. Holding such rule to be
ultra vires the powers of the Bar Council of India under the Act, it was held that
such a rule could not be sustained under Section 49(1)(ah) as the said provision
dealt with a situation after enrolment of advocates and could not take in its sweep
any situation prior to their enrolment. Shri Rao, learned senior counsel for the
respondent Bar Council of India, tried to salvage the situation by submitting that
the said decison was per incuriam on the ground that Section 24(3)(d) was not
noticed. We have already held that Section 24 (3)(d) is the provision which
permits the Bar Council of India by exercise of rule making power to make
otherwise ineligible person eligible for enrolment and does not act in the reverse
direction to make otherwise eligible persons ineligible. Once that conclusion is
reached, Section 24(3)(d) becomes totally irrelevant for deciding the question
whether the rule impugned before the three Judge Bench in that case could have
been sustained by the Bar Council of India by taking resort to Section 24(3)(d).
Non-consideration of such irrelevant provision, therefore, cannot make the ratio
of the decision in the aforesaid case per incuriam. The second ground on which
Shri Rao tried to submit that the said decision was per incuriam was by inviting
our attention to a Constitution Bench judgment of this Court in re: Lily Isabel
Thomas case (supra). Now it must be kept in view that the said decision was
rendered in connection with an entirely different statutory scheme. Section 52 of
the Act, as noted earlier, saves power of the Supreme Court to make Rules under
Article 145 of the Constitution of India for determining persons who are eligible
to practise before the Supreme Court. Thus, the constitutional power of the
Supreme Court for regulating the working of advocates in the Supreme Court who
were otherwise entitled to practise in any Court in India under the Act could be
validly exercised. When we turn to the constitutional power of the Supreme Court
under Article 145, we find clearly mentioned therein that subject to the provisions
of any law made by the Parliament, the Supreme Court may from time to time,
with the approval of the President, make rules for regulating generally the
practice and procedure of the Court including rules as to the persons practising
before the Court. As Section 52 of the Act has expressly saved the powers of the
Supreme Court under Article 145 for determining the persons who shall be
entitled to practise and plead before the Supreme Court, Article 145 could operate
on its own without any fetter being imposed by any statutory law enacted by the
Parliament. Accordingly, in the light of Article 145, a question arose before the
Constitution Bench in the aforesaid case, whether the Supreme Court was
competent to enact a rule in connection with advocates practising before it, who
could act as an advocate on record subject to their passing examination as laid
down under the rules. The term persons practising before the Court as laid down
by Article 145(1)(a) in connection with such rule making power was interpreted to
take in its sweep not only persons actually practising but even entitled to practise
before the Supreme Court. In this connection, the phraseology found in the
Union List in the 7th Schedule of the Constitution in Entry 77, namely, persons
entitled to practise before the Supreme Court was held to be in pari materia with
the phrase persons practising before the Court as found in Article 145(1)(a). In
the light of the aforesaid wide sweep of Article 145(1)(a), expressly saved by
Section 52 of the Act it was held that the rule laying down examination to be
undergone by practising advocates before the Supreme Court before they could
act as advocates on record was within the rule making power of the Supreme
Court. It is difficult to appreciate how the aforesaid decision of the Constitution
Bench rendered in the light of an entirely different constitutional scheme can be
of any assistance to the Bar Council of India in the present case. For sustaining
the rule making power of the Bar Council of India, the express provisions of
Section 7 and Section 24(3)(d) read with Section 49(1)(ah) would be the only
relevant provisions which were considered by this Court in a three Judge Bench
judgment Indian Council of Legal Aid & Advice & Ors. case (supra). The ratio of
the Constitution Bench judgment rendered in connection with an entirely
different question posed for decision in the light of the relevant provisions of the
constitutional scheme dealing with the rule making power of the Supreme Court
under Article 145, therefore, cannot be said to be laying down anything contrary
to what the three Judge Bench judgment laid down in connection with this very
statutory scheme which squarely arises for consideration in the present case.
Hence, even the second ground canvassed by learned senior counsel, Shri Rao for
the Bar Council of India, for whittling down the binding effect of the aforesaid
three Judge Bench judgment of this Court, cannot be sustained.

We may at this stage note one submission of Shri C.S.Vaidyanathan, learned


Additional Solicitor General. He contended that the impugned Rules 15A to 15C
atleast can be sustained under the rule making power of the Bar Council of India
under section 49(1)(ah) of the Act. It is not possible to agree with this contention
for the simple reason that by the impugned rules no training is prescribed
subsequent to enrolment under the Act. Rules seek to impose pre- enrolment
training, as noted earlier. Consequently, such a rule cannot be sustained under
the aforesaid provision as clearly ruled by a Three Judge Bench Judgment of this
Court in Indian Council of Legal Aid & Advice Boards Case (supra). Even that
apart, a close look at Section 49(1)(ah) clearly shows that the said provision
enables the Bar Council of India to lay down conditions subject to which an
advocate who has already got enrolled can have a right to practise. Right to
practise as available to an advocate duly enrolled under the Act is a full-fledged
right to practise which, as noted earlier, would include not only seeking
adjournments but also to plead and argue for the client for whom he appears
before the Court. Thus any truncating of the very right to practise itself in
exercise of rule making power under Section 49(1)(ah) by creating a new class of
trainee advocates cannot be sustained by the said provision. All that the said
provision enables the Bar Council of India to do is to frame a rule under the said
provision which may impose conditions subject to which an enrolled advocate
can carry on his full-fledged practice as an advocate. In this connection, it is
profitable to look at the very Rules earlier enacted by the Bar Council of India
under Section 49(1)(ah) of the Act. They are found in Part VI, Chapter-III of the
Bar Council of India Rules. We have already referred to the gist of these Rules
earlier. However, it will be profitable to extract these Rules in extenso to highlight
the scope and ambit of rule making power vested in the Bar Council of India
under Section 49(1)(ah) as until now understood by the very same rule making
authority.

Conditions for right to practise 1. Every Advocate shall be under an obligation to


see that his name appears on the roll of the State Council within whose
jurisdiction he ordinarily practices.
PROVIDED that if an advocate does not apply for transfer of his name to the roll
of the State Bar Council within whose jurisdiction he is ordinarily practising
within six months of the start of such practice, it shall be deemed that he is guilty
of professional misconduct within the meaning of section 35 of the Advocates Act.

2. An Advocate shall not enter into a partnership or any other arrangement for
sharing remuneration with any person or legal Practitioner who is not an
Advocate.

3. Every Advocate shall keep informed the Bar Council on the roll of which his
name stands, of every change of his address.

4. The Council or a State Council can call upon an advocate to furnish the name
of the State Council on the roll of which his name is entered, and call for other
particulars.

5. (1) An Advocate who voluntarily suspends his practice for any reason
whatsoever, shall intimate by registered post to the State Bar Council on the rolls
of which his name is entered, of such suspension together with his certificate of
enrolment in original.

(2) Whenever any such advocate who has suspended his practice desires to
resume his practice, he shall apply to the Secretary of the State Bar Council for
resumption of practice, along with an affidavit stating whether he has incurred
any of the disqualifications under Section 24A, Chapter III of the Act during the
period of suspension.

(3) The Enrolment Committee of the State Bar Council may order the resumption
of his practice and return the certificate to him with necessary endorsement. If
the Enrolment Committee is of the view that the Advocate has incurred any of the
disqualifications the Committee shall refer the matter under proviso to Section
26(1) of the Act.

(4) On suspension and resumption of practice the Secretary shall act in terms of
Rule 24 of Part IX.
6. (1) An Advocate whose name has been removed by order of the Supreme Court
or a High Court or the Bar Council as the case may be, shall not be entitled to
practice the profession of Law either before the Court and authorities mentioned
under Section 30 of the Act, or in chambers, or otherwise.

(2) An Advocate who is under suspension, shall be under same disability during
the period of such suspension as an Advocate whose name has been removed
from the roll.

7. An officer after his retirement or otherwise ceasing to be in service shall not


practise for a period of two years in the area in which he exercised jurisdiction for
a period of 3 years before his retirement or otherwise ceasing to be in service.

RESOLVED that nothing in these Rules shall prevent any such person from
practising in any Court or tribunal or authority of superior jurisdiction to one in
which he held office.

Explanation: Officer shall include a Judicial Officer, Additional Judge of the High
Court and Presiding Officer or Member of the Tribunal or authority or such other
Officer or authority as referred to in Section 30 of the Act.

Area shall mean area in which the person concerned exercising jurisdiction.

8. No Advocate shall be entitled to practice if in the opinion of the Council he is


suffering from such contagious disease as makes the practice of Law a hazard to
the health of others. This disqualification shall last for such period as the Council
directs from time to time.

These rules show that subject to the conditions laid down in these rules an
enrolled advocate can practise as a full-fledged advocate. His right once granted
cannot be restricted qua his acting in the Court when remaining enrolled as an
advocate on the State roll. It must, therefore, be held that Section 49(1) (ah)
cannot sustain the impugned rules. Shri Rao next contended that Section 34(1) of
the Act which deals with the rule making power of the High Court enabling it to
lay down conditions subject to which an advocate shall be permitted to practise in
the High Court is pari materia with Section 49(1)(ah). It clearly shows that the
High Court can by Rules restrict and impose conditions on practising advocates
before it or before any subordinate Court. Similarly, the Bar Council of India can
also in exercise of similar statutory rule making power under Section 49(1) of the
Act, do so. We fail to appreciate how this analogy can be of any avail to Shri Rao
for the respondent Bar Council of India. Once an advocate is already enrolled on
the State roll conditions subject to which he can practise before the High Court or
Court subordinate to it, can be laid down by the High Court by its rule making
power under Section 34(1). This necessarily is a situation which is post
enrolment. Similar situation would fall for consideration if the Bar Council of
India seeks to exercise its power under pari materia rule making power under
Section 49(1)(ah) but as the impugned rules travel backwards and seek to enter
upon and monitor pre-enrolment situation, the said exercise obviously remains
in a forbidden field for the Bar Council of India. It has also to be appreciated that
the powers of the constitutional Courts like the High Courts which are Courts of
record stand on an entirely different footing as compared to powers of statutory
authority like the Bar Council of India which has to justify exercise of its powers
within the four corners of the Statute which has created it. It is also not the
submission of any learned counsel before us that any of the High Courts has
framed any rule requiring the State Bar Councils not to enrol any advocate on its
roll if he has not undertaken any pre-enrolment training by resorting to its rule
making power under Section 34(1). It is only the Bar Council of India which has
tried to do so by enacting the impugned rules. Consequently, any assistance
sought to be received by Shri Rao for the Bar Council of India from Section 34(1)
on the analogy of the High Courts rule making power also cannot be any avail to
him. These were the only contentions canvassed by learned senior counsel Shri
Rao for the respondent Bar Council of India for sustaining the impugned rules
and as we have found that none of these contentions can be sustained, the
inevitable result is that the impugned rules fail and must be held to be still born
being beyond the rule making power of the Bar Council of India. Point No.1,
therefore, has to be answered in affirmative in favour of the writ petitioners and
the appellant in appeal arising out of SLP (C) No.13755 of 1996 and against the
respondent Bar Council of India in the writ petitions and which is also the
appellant in appeal arising out of SLP (C)No.12989 of 1998.

Point Nos.2 & 3: In view of our findings on point no.1, it is not necessary to
consider these two points and, therefore, were not answered. Before parting with
these matters, it is necessary to note that in the light of the experience of various
Courts in which advocates are practising since the time the Advocates Act has
come into force, the Law Commission of India and other expert bodies that were
entrusted with the task of suggesting improvements in the standards of legal
education and legal practitioners felt it necessary to provide for compulsory
training to young advocates entering the portals of the Court rooms. Training
under senior advocates with a view to equip them with court craft and to make
them future efficient officers of the court became a felt need and there cannot be
any dispute on this aspect. In fact, the question of making some suggestions
regarding admission to law Colleges, syllabus, training, period of practice at
different levels of courts etc., was taken up as Item No.16 in the last Conference of
the Chief Justices held in December, 1993. The Conference resolved that Honble
the Chief Justice of India be requested to constitute a Committee consisting of
Honble Mr.Justice A.M.Ahmadi as its Chairman, and two other members to be
nominated by Honble the Chief Justice of India to suggest appropriate steps to be
taken in the matter so that the law graduates may acquire sufficient experience
before they become entitled to practise in the courts. The said High Power
Committee, after inviting the views of the Chief Justices and State Bar Councils as
well as the Bar Council of India made valuable suggestions. The relevant
suggestions in connection with legal education are suggestion nos.1, 12, 13, 15, 16
which are required to be noted. They read as under : 1. In laying down the
standards of Legal Education, the Bar Councils Legal Education Committee
constituted under Rule 4 of Chapter III of the Bar Council of India Rules, 1965
must reflect the participation of representatives of (1) the Judiciary, (2) the Bar
Council and (3) the U.G.C. It is proposed that the Rules be amended and the
Legal Education Committee be restructured to involve the bodies above-
mentioned. Xx xx xx 12. Rule 21 of the Bar Council Rules directing that every
University shall endeavour to supplement the lecture method with case method,
tutorials and other modern techniques of imparting Legal Education must be
amended in a mandatory form and it should include problem method, moot
courts, mock trials and other aspects and make them compulsory. 13. (i)
Participation in moot courts, mock trials, and debates must be made compulsory
and marks awarded, (ii) Practical training in drafting pleadings, contracts can be
developed in the last year of the study, and (i ii) Students visits at various levels
to the Courts must be exposu re. ma de compulsory so as to provide a greater Xx
xxxx 15. Entrance into the Bar after 12 months@@ II
or 18 months of Apprenticeship with Entry Examination. For obtaining the
Licence/Sanad from State Bar Councils it must be prescribed that one should
secure at least 50 per cent or 60 per cent marks at the Bar Council Examination.
16. So far as the training under a Senior Lawyer during the period of one year or
18 months of apprenticeship, the Act or the Rules must stipulate that the senior
must have at least 10 or 15 years standing at the District Court/High Court and
the students diary must reflect his attendance for three months in the grass root
level in a civil court and for three months in a Magistrates court and at least six
months in a district court. The Advocate in whose office he works must also
certify that the student is fit to enter the Bar. Unless these formalities are
completed, the student should not (sic) be permitted to sit for the Bar Council
Examination. Xx xx xx

It is true that these suggestions of the High Power Committee clearly highlighted
the crying need for improving the standards of legal education and the
requirements for new entrants to the legal profession of being equipped with
adequate professional skill and expertise. There also cannot be any dispute on
this aspect. However, as the saying goes a right thing must be done in the right
manner. We appreciate the laudable object with which the Bar Council of India
has framed the impugned rules for providing training to the young entrants to the
profession by laying down details as to how they should get appropriate training
during their formative years at the Bar. Unfortunately, for the Bar Council of
India that right thing has not been done in the right manner. We equally share
the anxiety of the Bar Council of India for evolving suitable methods for
improving the standards of legal education and legal profession. The aforesaid
recommendations made by the High Power Committee could have been put into
practice by following appropriate methods and adopting appropriate modalities
by the Bar Council of India. Unfortunately, the attempt made by the Bar Council
of India by enacting the impugned rules has resulted into firing at the wrong end
though backed up by a very laudable purpose. We may in this connection usefully
refer to what the High Power Committee itself observed at page 30 of the Report
in connection with Entrance into the Bar after 12 months or 18 months of
Apprenticeship with Entry Examination : Section 28(2) (b) of the Advocates Act,
1961 as it stood in 1961, empowered the State Bar Councils to make Rules for
practical training in Law Courts and for a Bar Council Examination. In exercise
thereof Rules were framed by Bar Councils in the States prescribing the training
and Bar Council Examination. Unfortunately the same was omitted later on in
the Act by amendment and this has been the second major factor responsible for
the deterioration of standards in the legal profession. Now that the Bar Council of
India is wanting the reintroduction of Section 28(2)(b) by Parliament for training
the Law Graduates for a period and for conducting the Bar Council Examination,
the Central Government must soon re-enact the provision. But the new section
must say that the method of training and the Examination must be such as may
be prescribed by the Chief Justice of India after considering the views of the Bar
Council of India. As this matter pertains to entry into the legal profession for
practice in Courts, the final authority in this behalf must be with the Chief Justice
of India but after obtaining the views of the Bar Council of India. So far as the
percentage of marks to be obtained for purposes of receiving a licence/sanad
from the State Bar Councils, it must be prescribed that one should secure at least
50 per cent or 60 per cent marks at the Bar Council examination. So far the
training under a senior Lawyer during the period of one year or 18 months of
apprenticeship, the Act or Rules must stipulate that the senior must have at least
10 or 15 years standing at a District Court/High Court and that the students diary
must reflect his attendance for three months in the grassroot level in a Civil Court
and for three months in a Magistrates Court and at least six months in a District
Court/High Court. The Advocate in whose office he works must also certify that
the student is fit to enter the Bar. Unless these formalities are completed, the
student should not be permitted to sit for the Bar Council Examination above-
mentioned.

These observations of the High Power Committee clearly indicate that it was the
stand of the representative of the Bar Council of India before them that Section
28(2)(b) which was earlier on the statute book and was deleted by the
Parliament, was required to be reintroduced. In other words, it was felt by the
Bar Council of India itself before the High Power Committee that for providing
pre-enrolment training to prospective advocates relevant amendments to the Act
were required to be effected. It is easy to visualise that appropriate amendments
in Sections 7 and 24(1) would have clothed the Bar Council of India with
appropriate power of prescribing such pre-enrolment training for prospective
entrants at the Bar. That would have provided appropriate statutory peg on which
the appropriate rule could have been framed and hanged. It is also necessary to
note in this connection that merely leaving the question of providing pre-
enrolment training and examination to only the State Bar councils may create
difficulties in the working of the All India Statute. It goes without saying that as
an enrolled advocate is entitled to practise in any court in India, common
standard of professional expertise and efficient uniform legal training would be a
must for all advocates enrolled under the Act. In these circumstances,
appropriate statutory power has to be entrusted to the Bar Council of India so
that it can monitor the enrolment exercise undertaken by the State Bar Council
concerned in a uniform manner. It is possible to visualise that if power to
prescribe pre-enrolment training and examination is conferred only on the State
Bar Councils, then it may happen that one State Bar Council may impose such
pre-enrolment training while another Bar Council may not and then it would be
easy for the prospective professional who has got requisite law degree to get
enrolment as the advocate from the State Bar Council which has not imposed
such pre-enrolment training and having got the enrolment he may start practice
in any other Court in India being legally entitled to practise as per the Act. To
avoid such an incongruous situation which may result in legal evasion of the
laudable concept of pre-enrolment training, it is absolutely necessary to entrust
the Bar Council of India with appropriate statutory power to enable it to
prescribe and provide for all India basis pre-enrolment training of advocates as
well as requisite apprenticeship to make them efficient and well informed officers
of the Court so as to achieve better administration of justice. We, therefore,
strongly recommend appropriate amendments to be made in the Act in this
connection.

We may also mention that till the Parliament steps in to make suitable statutory
amendments in the Act for providing pre- enrolment training to prospective
advocates seeking enrolment under the Act, the Bar Council of India by way of an
interim measure can also consider the feasibility of making suitable rules
providing for in-practice training to be made available to enrolled advocates.
Such an exercise may then not fall foul on the touchstone of Section 49(1)(ah).
The impugned rules can be suitably re-enacted by deleting the condition of pre-
enrolment training to advocates and instead of treating them to be a hybrid class
of trainee advocates with limited right of audience in courts, may provide in-
practice training to already enrolled advocates atleast for the first year of their
practice as professionals. Such rules can also provide for appropriate stipend to
be paid to them by their guides, if during that period such enrolled junior
advocates are shown to have no independent source of income. Then in the light
of Section 17(2) of the Act such newly enrolled advocates who are required to
undergo in- practice training for first one year of their entry in the profession can
legitimately fall in the category of other advocates apart from senior advocates as
contemplated by that provision.

We may also mention that all learned counsel for the petitioners and the
appellant, Bar Council of Maharashtra readily agreed to framing of such a rule by
the Bar Council of India. This would remove the infirmity in the impugned rules
in so far as they tried to create an entirely new and truncated class of trainee
advocates who can only ask for adjournment and may mention the matters in the
courts. It would make them full-fledged advocates entitled to practise law with
full vigour in the very first year of their entry in the profession if they are
entrusted with the task of arguing matters either by their seniors or by their
guides or by their clients who may impose confidence in them. This would also
avoid unnecessary complications of deemed seniority and subsequent
retrospective grant of seniority on successful completion of training. This will
also guarantee them proper training in the chamber of senior advocates as their
guides. Successful completion of training by advocates who are new entrants to
the profession of law and the corresponding obligation of their guides would
make them liable to disciplinary action by the State Bar Councils on the ground of
misconduct if they do not discharge their obligations either as stipendiary or non-
stipendiary junior advocates on the one hand and their guides on the other. As
they would be full-fledged advocates the disciplinary jurisdiction of the State Bar
Council can also get effectively attracted in connection with their alleged
misconduct if any. This type of in-practice training would remove all the
unnecessary hardship and can be well sustained under the statutory scheme of
the Act and the rule making power of the Bar Council of India. We recommend
the Bar Council of India to look into this aspect for the benefit of legal profession
as a whole so that the void that will be created by our striking down of the
impugned rules and till future statutory amendment, if any, is carried out by the
Parliament as recommended by us in this judgment, can be effectively filled in by
exercise of rule making power by the Bar Council of India, as aforesaid.

Before parting with this aspect of the matter, we may also mention that in the
present proceedings at an earlier stage a bench of this court which was then
seized of this matter after listening to arguments of the parties for some time had
observed that the Legal Education Committee and the Bar Council of India
should once again consider the recommendations of the Honble Three Judges
Committee, the Law Ministers Conference and the recommendations made in the
Fourteenth Law Commission Report at pages 548 to 550. The Court also gave
appropriate suggestions. The said suggestions have been brought on the record of
this case by way of copy of a letter addressed by advocate Shri Sanjeev Sachdeva
dated 24th September, 1977 to the Chairman, Bar Council of India. The said
suggestions read as under :- a. Only graduates should be allowed to take the
degree course in law.

b. The University course in law should extend for a period of two years and
should be confined to the teaching of theory and principles of law. Procedural,
taxation and other laws of a practical character should not be included in the
University Course.

c. Entry to the law colleges should be restricted by a system of strict tests so that
only deserving candidates are admitted. This restriction of admission is necessary
so that proper standards of teaching may be maintained.

d. A person who after obtaining his degree wishes to enter the profession should
pursue a professional course conducted by the Bar Council in procedural and
practical subjects.

e. The Bar Councils should arrange lectures for the benefit of apprentices
undergoing this professional course.

f. Attendance by the apprentice of a certain minimum number of lectures should


be made compulsory.

g. Those who wish to enter the legal profession should be required to work in the
chambers of an experienced lawyer and maintain diaries showing the work done
by them.

h. The apprentice course should be of one years duration.

i. The apprentices should be subjected to a very stiff practical test.


These suggestions were communicated to the Bar Council of India by its advocate
Shri Sanjeev Sachdeva in the said letter. It is profitable to extract what was
sought to be conveyed to the Bar Council of India as recommendations from this
Court : It also fell from their Lordships that the training should be part of the
curriculum of the University and should not extend the period of study beyond
the existing three years or five years as the case may be. It also fell from their
lordships that the Training could be under the supervision of the respective High
Courts of the State and the State Bar Councils.

It also fell from their Lordships that the training need not be restricted to merely
attending to the Chamber but may also include attending to the court under the
supervision of the concerned Court staff.

It is also to be considered whether post enrolment training for one year or less is
at all required for those entrants to the profession who have already worked as
solicitors article trainees for a number of years before they apply for being
enrolled as advocates. The nature of the training which they have already
undertaken while working in the firms of solicitors may pose the question
whether any duplication of training or any additional training is required for
them for entering the legal profession as advocates. Another aspect which
requires consideration by the Bar Council of India is as to whether the corporate
lawyers meaning those who have already acquired sufficient legal training while
working in the corporate offices as law officers should be subjected to such post
enrolment training either wholly or even partially. The Bar Council of India may
do well to consider all these relevant aspects before taking any decision on this
vexed question. We hope and trust that at least now the Bar Council of India may
do well to look into these suggestions as well as the observations made by us in
the present judgment for salvaging the situation for the entire legal profession in
India and for putting young entrants at the bar on right track so that after
appropriate in-practice training which they get from senior advocates and their
guides they can turn out to be efficient advocates for serving the suffering
humanity having legal problems to be redressed through them and for helping
the cause of justice more effectively. [Before concluding these proceedings, we
must mention that it would be necessary to direct that the present judgment will
operate only prospectively to avoid unnecessary confusion and complications. It
is, therefore, made clear that because of the quashing of the impugned rules, only
applicants who apply for the first time for enrolment after the date of the present
judgment, will not have to undergo pre-enrolment training. However, those
applicants who have already applied for such enrolment during the time the
impugned rules were in operation and have completed their pre-enrolment
training or are in the process of completion of their training and have still not
been enrolled will not get the benefit of the present judgment.]

A copy of this judgment is directed to be sent to the Chairman, Law Commission


of India, Secretary, Department of Law and Justice, Government of India for
considering what appropriate steps can be taken in this connection.

In the result, these writ petitions are allowed. The impugned rules are struck
down. Appeal arising out of the S.L.P. filed by the Bar Council of Maharashtra &
Goa is allowed. The impugned judgment of the High Court is set aside. The writ
petition filed by the Bar Council of Maharashtra & Goa is accordingly, allowed.
The appeal filed by the Bar Council of India arising out of SLP (C)No.12989 of
1998 is dismissed on the ground that the question regarding retrospective effect
of the impugned rules will not survive as the Rules themselves are struck down.
The final decision of the High Court allowing the writ petition of the respondent
is sustained on the aforesaid ground. There will be no order as to costs in all these
cases.

J. [S.B. Majmudar ]

...J. [ S.N.Phukan ] New Delhi, March 12,

1999.

After this judgment was pronounced on 12th March, 1999 and before it could be
signed by both of us, at the request of learned counsel for the parties, this matter
was fixed today for further directions in connection with the retrospective
operation of this judgment as mentioned in the last paragraph of page 79. The
said paragraph put in bracket after hearing the parties, will stand substituted as
under :

Before concluding these proceedings, we must mention that it would be necessary


to direct that the present judgment will operate only prospectively to avoid
unnecessary confusion and complications. It is clarified that this judgment will
have no retrospective effect in the sense that it will not apply to those applicants
for enrolment who have earlier applied for enrolment and have successfully
completed their pre-enrolment training as per the impugned rules. However, all
those who apply for enrolment after this judgment will not have to undergo pre-
enrolment training. This will be irrespective of the fact whether they had earlier
applied for enrolment and have not completed their pre-enrolment training
under the impugned rules till the date of this judgment or whether they had not
earlier applied for enrolment despite getting their law degrees prior to the date of
this judgment.

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