ASSUMI SIR,
Believe me or not the same question arises in my mind and i am searching after posting reply to the forum after searching , I luckily found the below points ,Please tell me wheather I am right or wrong?
Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of Maharaj Chintamani Saran Nath Shahdeo vs. State of Bihar AIR 1999 SC 3609 in para 22-23 observed as follows:
“22. In Garikapatti Veeraya vs. N.Subbiah Choudhury, 1957 SCR 4888: (AIR 1957 SC 540 ), the Chief Justice S.R. Das speaking for the Court observed as follows (at p.553 of AIR):
‘The golden rule of construction is that, in the absence of anything in the enactment to show that it is to have retrospective operation, it cannot be so construed as to have the effect of altering the law applicable to a claim in litigation at the time when the Act was passed.’
We may also refer to Francis Benion’s Statutory Interpretation, 2nd Edn., at p. 214 wherein the learned author commented as follows:
‘The essential idea of a legal system is that current law should govern current activities. Elsewhere in this work a particular Act is likened to a floodlight switched on or off, and the general body of law to the circumambient air. Clumsy though these images are, they show the inappropriateness of retrospective laws. If we do something today, we feel that the law applying to it should be the law in force today, not tomorrow’s backward adjustment of it. Such, we believe, is the nature of law. Dislike of ex post facto law is enshrined in the United States Constitution and in the Constitutions of many American States, which forbid it. The true principle is that Lex prospicit nonrespicit (law looks forward not back). As Willes, J.said, retrospective legislation is ‘contrary to the general principle that legislation by which the conduct of mankind is to be regulated ought, when introduced for the first time, to deal with future acts, and ought not to change the character of past transactions carried on upon the faith of the then existing law.”