Bill to prevent Ry. wagons being used as godowns passed
1. At a Glance
- The Indian Railways (Amendment) Bill, 1976 was passed by Rajya Sabha on January 12, 1976 to prevent unscrupulous traders from using railway wagons as makeshift warehouses (godowns), thereby creating artificial scarcity and pushing up commodity prices. [S1]
- The Bill amended the parent Indian Railways Act, 1890 by introducing a 7-day mandatory delivery window for consignees, with statutory consequences for non-compliance. [S1]
- It replaced a Presidential Ordinance promulgated on September 25, 1975 — enacted during the Internal Emergency (1975–77) as part of the government's economic disciplining measures. [S1]
- UPSC relevance: intersects GS-II (legislative process, Ordinance power), GS-III (transport, price control, essential commodities), and Indian economic history (Emergency era).
2. Why in the News
- Triggering event (historical, January 1976): Rajya Sabha passage of the Indian Railways (Amendment) Bill, 1976 on January 12, 1976, as reported in The Hindu print edition dated January 13, 1976. [S1]
- Railway Minister Kamalapathi Tripathi described the measure as "long overdue," citing that traders deliberately detained wagons at peak demand periods to create artificial scarcity and inflate prices. [S1]
- The Bill was brought to current UPSC attention as part of The Hindu's archival reprint series (Today's Paper), making historical legislation contextually relevant for polity and economy questions. [S1]
- Static topic with historical trigger — no post-2024 legislative event; relevance is via the Ordinance–Bill conversion process and Emergency-era economic policy.
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1890 | Parent legislation: Indian Railways Act, 1890 (Act IX of 1890) enacted; governs carriage of goods, demurrage, and wharfage. [S2] |
| 1955 | Essential Commodities Act, 1955 enacted — provided the broader framework for regulating supply of essential goods; complementary to railway detention provisions. |
| June 1975 | Declaration of Internal Emergency by President; government acquires sweeping Ordinance-making and legislative powers. |
| Sept 25, 1975 | Presidential Ordinance promulgated under Article 123 of the Constitution to immediately address wagon detention abuse. [S1] |
| Jan 12, 1976 | Rajya Sabha passes the Indian Railways (Amendment) Bill, 1976, replacing the Ordinance with permanent statutory backing. [S1] |
| 1989 | Indian Railways Act, 1890 eventually superseded by the Railways Act, 1989 (Act 24 of 1989), which consolidated and modernised Indian railway law. [S2] |
- Driving rationale: During the Emergency, commodity hoarding via wagon detention was a mechanism used by traders to exploit the gaps between demurrage charges (which were tolerable) and the enormous profits from price inflation. The Bill closed this loophole structurally. [S1]
4. Core Static Facts
- Full name: Indian Railways (Amendment) Bill, 1976
- Passed by: Rajya Sabha, January 12, 1976 [S1]
- Parent Act amended: Indian Railways Act, 1890 [S2]
- Replaced: Presidential Ordinance of September 25, 1975 [S1]
- Piloted by: Railway Minister Shri Kamalapathi Tripathi [S1]
- Key provision — 7-day window: Goods not taken delivery of by consignees within seven days of arrival at the destination station are subject to statutory disposal. [S1]
- Disposal hierarchy: 1. Transfer to Central or State Government or a government-nominated agency [S1] 2. Essential commodities → routed to cooperative fair price shops for public sale [S1] 3. All other goods → sold by public auction [S1]
- Financial settlement: Proceeds from sale/transfer/auction credited to consignor or owner after deducting:
- Railway freight/charges
- Cost of auction [S1]
- Demurrage (key term): Charge levied on consignee for detaining railway wagons beyond the permitted free time; traders willingly paid this as profits from artificial scarcity far exceeded demurrage costs. [S1][S2]
- Wharfage (key term): Charge for goods remaining on railway premises (platforms/yards) beyond permitted free time, distinct from demurrage. [S2]
- Consignor: Sender/dispatcher of goods.
- Consignee: Intended recipient/buyer of goods.
- Implementing ministry: Ministry of Railways (then under Kamalapathi Tripathi)
- Constitutional basis for Ordinance: Article 123 of the Constitution (Presidential Ordinance-making power when Parliament is not in session).
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Traders exploited the price inelasticity of essential commodities — by withholding supply at critical movement windows, they triggered disproportionate price spikes. [S1]
- Demurrage arbitrage: Paying demurrage was a calculated cost; the Bill structurally eliminated this by making 7-day non-delivery trigger physical dispossession of goods, removing the economic incentive entirely. [S1]
- Opportunity cost to Railways: Wagons used as godowns were unavailable for freight movement, reducing railway throughput and revenue; each detained wagon is a lost revenue-earning unit.
- The Bill's public auction provision ensured price discovery through competition, limiting the ability of any single trader to corner supply.
Legal / Constitutional
- Enacted via the Ordinance → Bill conversion pathway: Presidential Ordinance (Art. 123) promulgated during Emergency, then converted to permanent legislation — a textbook example of the Ordinance mechanism tested in UPSC Polity. [S1]
- The 6-week window rule: Ordinances must be laid before Parliament when it reassembles and lapse within 6 weeks unless converted — the Bill fulfils this constitutional obligation. [S1]
- Power to transfer goods to government or nominated agencies raises questions under Article 300A (right to property, post-44th Amendment) — though this was pre-44th Amendment (1978), when property was still a Fundamental Right under Art. 19(1)(f) and Art. 31.
- The provision directing essential commodities to cooperative fair price shops links to Directive Principles (Art. 39(b)) — equitable distribution of material resources.
Administrative / Governance
- The Bill empowered Railways to act as a quasi-regulatory authority over commodity supply chains — an unusual administrative expansion.
- Transfer to "an agency nominated by the Government" introduced executive discretion in disposal, a potential governance concern.
- The measure targeted "anti-social traders" — a term used by the Railway Minister — reflecting the Emergency era's tendency to frame economic regulation in moralistic/disciplinary language. [S1]
Historical
- Passed during the Internal Emergency (June 25, 1975 – March 21, 1977) under PM Indira Gandhi — many economic discipline measures were enacted in this period (20-Point Programme, MISA detentions of hoarders, etc.).
- Kamalapathi Tripathi served multiple stints as Railway Minister; this Bill reflects the broader nationalistic, anti-profiteering impulse of the Congress government of that era.
- The Railways Act, 1890 (British colonial legislation) was used as the vehicle — underscoring how colonial-era railway laws continued to govern independent India's freight regime for nearly a century. [S2]
Social
- Fair price shop routing of essential commodities directly benefits low-income consumers who depend on PDS/cooperative retail for food and fuel.
- Artificial scarcity disproportionately hits urban poor and rural markets farthest from primary supply chains — the Bill's 7-day rule protects this segment.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- No direct legislative action on this specific 1976 amendment in the 2024–26 period.
- The Railways (Amendment) Bill, 2024 (tracked by PRS India) addressed different subjects — primarily governance and safety reforms — and is unrelated to wagon detention. [S3]
- The 1976 provisions were subsumed into the Railways Act, 1989, which currently governs freight operations, demurrage, and wharfage on Indian Railways.
- The Hindu's 2026 archival reprint of this January 1976 article brought it to current attention as a historical document, not as a current event. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)
- The Indian Railways (Amendment) Bill, 1976 was passed by Rajya Sabha (not Lok Sabha first) on January 12, 1976. [S1]
- It replaced a Presidential Ordinance dated September 25, 1975, promulgated under Article 123 of the Constitution. [S1]
- The Railway Minister who piloted the Bill was Kamalapathi Tripathi. [S1]
- Consignees had 7 days from arrival at the destination station to take delivery; failure triggers statutory disposal. [S1]
- Essential commodities not lifted within 7 days are routed to cooperative fair price shops (not public auction). [S1]
- Non-essential goods not lifted within 7 days are disposed of by public auction. [S1]
- Proceeds of disposal are paid to the consignor or owner, not the Railways, after deducting freight charges and auction costs. [S1]
- The parent Act being amended was the Indian Railways Act, 1890 (Act IX of 1890). [S2]
- The Railways Act, 1890 was eventually superseded by the Railways Act, 1989 (Act 24 of 1989). [S2]
- Demurrage = charge for detaining wagons beyond free time; wharfage = charge for goods remaining on railway premises beyond free time — these are distinct charges. [S2]
- The Bill was enacted during the Internal Emergency (1975–77) as part of anti-hoarding economic discipline measures.
- The Bill empowered transfer of unlifted goods to Central Government, State Government, or a government-nominated agency. [S1]
- Traders deliberately paid demurrage because profits from artificial scarcity exceeded the demurrage cost — the Bill's 7-day rule eliminated this incentive structurally. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: GS-II (Polity — Ordinance, Parliament); GS-III (Economy — Transport, Price Control, Essential Commodities)
Syllabus headings: - GS-II: Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business; separation of powers; Ordinance-making power of the President - GS-III: Infrastructure — Railways; effects of liberalisation on the economy; inclusive growth; government policies and interventions for development
Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "The Ordinance-making power of the President under Article 123 has historically served as an instrument of economic regulation. Examine with reference to the Emergency period (1975–77) and the constitutional safeguards built into this power." 2. "Artificial scarcity created by hoarders in commodity supply chains continues to be a structural challenge for the Indian economy. Critically examine the legislative and administrative measures available to address this, with historical and contemporary examples." 3. "How did the Internal Emergency of 1975–77 reshape India's regulatory approach to trade, transport, and essential commodities? Assess the long-term institutional legacy of this period."
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Essential Commodities Act, 1955 | Directly linked — the 1976 Bill channelled unlifted essential commodities through ECA mechanisms (fair price shops). |
| Article 123 — Ordinance-making power of the President | The Bill converted a Presidential Ordinance (Sept 25, 1975); core Polity concept tested in Prelims and Mains. |
| Railways Act, 1989 | Successor legislation to the Railways Act, 1890; subsumes the 1976 Amendment provisions; frequently cited in Prelims. |
| Internal Emergency, 1975–77 (20-Point Programme) | Provides the political-economic context; anti-hoarding and supply-side control were central Emergency-era economic planks. |
| Demurrage and Wharfage in Indian Railways | Specific Prelims-tested facts on freight operation charges; often appears in Economy/Infrastructure questions. |
| Right to Property — Articles 19(1)(f), 31, and 44th Amendment, 1978 | Statutory dispossession of goods (as in this Bill) raises property rights questions; 44th Amendment (1978) removed property from FRs. |
| Public Distribution System (PDS) and Cooperative Fair Price Shops | Essential commodities routed to fair price shops under this Bill; connects to food security, NFSA 2013, and PDS reform questions. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing Rajya Sabha passage with Lok Sabha first: Bills on railway matters (Union List, Entry 22) originate in either House. This Bill was passed by Rajya Sabha — do not assume all government Bills start in Lok Sabha.
- Conflating the 1976 Amendment with the Railways Act, 1989: The 1976 Bill amended the 1890 Act; the 1989 Act replaced it. Aspirants often cite 1989 provisions when asked about pre-1989 railway law.
- Mixing up demurrage and wharfage: Demurrage = detention of the wagon/vehicle; wharfage = goods remaining on railway premises/platform. These are tested as distinct charges.
- Attributing the Ordinance to Parliament: The Ordinance (Sept 25, 1975) was promulgated by the President under Art. 123, not by Parliament or the Railway Ministry directly — a common error in Polity questions.
- Assuming "cooperative fair price shops" applies to all unlifted goods: Only essential commodities go to fair price shops; all other goods go to public auction. The distinction is examinable.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Bill to prevent Ry. wagons being used as godowns passed" — The Hindu print archive, January 13, 1976 (Today's Paper reprint, accessed June 20, 2026) — (Tier 4: thehindu.com) — Primary source for all article-derived facts.
- [S2] The Railways Act, 1890 / Railways Act, 1989 — India Code, Ministry of Law & Justice — https://upload.indiacode.nic.in/view-casepdf?type=act&id=AC_CEN_1_1_00003_198924_1517807322596 — (Tier 1: indiacode.nic.in)
- [S3] "The Railways (Amendment) Bill, 2024" — PRS Legislative Research — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/prs-products/prs-legislative-brief-1732642521 — (Tier 1: prsindia.org)
Note: The 1976 Bill is a historical legislative document. Direct government digitisation of pre-1989 railway ordinances is limited; the article excerpt [S1] is the authoritative primary source for all specific facts in this note. Cross-verify with PRS India and India Code for current statutory provisions.