Section 49 of the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999: Repeal, Saving, and Sunset—A Jurisprudential Analysis

Section 49 of the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999: Repeal, Saving, and Sunset—A Jurisprudential Analysis

Introduction

The Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (“FEMA”) was enacted to replace the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1973 (“FERA”) and to align India’s foreign‐exchange regime with liberalised economic policy. Section 49 FEMA constitutes the transitional bridge between the two statutes, simultaneously repealing FERA and prescribing a complex saving scheme that includes a unique two-year “sunset clause”. Given the volume of legacy FERA proceedings and the continuing enforcement imperatives of the Directorate of Enforcement (“ED”), judicial exposition of section 49 has been prolific and occasionally discordant. This article undertakes a critical analysis of section 49—its text, purpose, and interpretation—by synthesising authoritative case-law and statutory principles.

Legislative Framework

1. Structure of Section 49

Section 49 contains seven sub-sections. For present purposes, five are pivotal:

  • Sub-section (1): Repeals FERA and dissolves the FERA Appellate Board.
  • Sub-section (3): Imposes a two-year limit from 1 June 2000 within which courts may take cognisance of FERA offences or adjudicating officers may “take notice” of FERA contraventions.
  • Sub-section (4): Provides that, subject to sub-section (3), all FERA offences continue to be governed by FERA as if it were not repealed.
  • Sub-section (5): Enacts an extensive saving clause: (a) validates anything done under FERA; (b) transfers pending FERA appeals to the FEMA Appellate Tribunal; and (c) treats references in saved proceedings as references to corresponding FEMA authorities.
  • Sub-section (6): Excludes the general savings embodied in section 6 of the General Clauses Act, 1897 in respect of sub-section (3), signalling a legislative intention to make the sunset absolute.

2. Policy Rationale

FERA criminalised most violations and deployed stringent enforcement mechanisms; FEMA decriminalises contraventions, treating them as civil offences amenable to monetary penalties under section 13 FEMA. Section 49 thus seeks to:

  1. Ensure continuity of pre-existing enforcement actions so that offenders do not escape liability merely because of legislative reform.
  2. Time-limit the continuation of FERA’s harsher criminal regime, thereby expediting the transition to FEMA’s civil-penalty framework.
  3. Provide procedural clarity concerning appeals and the status of notifications, appointments, and other executive acts under the repealed statute.

Judicial Interpretation of Section 49

1. The Supreme Court’s Canonical Decisions

(a) Standard Chartered Bank v. Directorate of Enforcement (2005)[1]

Addressing corporate criminal liability under FERA, the Court reaffirmed that prosecutions filed within the two-year sunset remained unaffected by the repeal. The judgment interprets sub-sections (3) and (4) conjunctively: while FERA continues to govern offences, cognisance must commence within the sunset period. The decision also emphasised that the word “offence” in sub-section (3) encompasses both prosecution and adjudication, thus forestalling any argument that the ED may issue adjudication notices beyond the two years.

(b) S.K. Sinha v. Videocon International Ltd. (2008)[2]

The Court clarified that for the purpose of sub-section (3), the material date is the date on which the complaint is filed, not the later date on which process is issued. Filing on 24 May 2002—within the sunset—was sufficient to sustain proceedings even though process was issued after 1 June 2002.

(c) Thirumalai Chemicals Ltd. v. Union of India (2011)[3]

Engaging with sub-section (5)(a)–(b), the Court held that rules, notifications, and pending appeals under FERA survive post-repeal so far as they are not inconsistent with FEMA. The decision underscores the breadth of the saving clause and its purpose of preventing a remedial vacuum.

2. High-Court Divergence on Sunset Construction

  • Strict Construction: The Bombay High Court in Auduth Timbo (2022)[4] and First Global Stockbroking (2022)[5] invalidated adjudication initiated after the sunset, emphasising that section 49(6) displaces the General Clauses Act and therefore bars creative judicial extension.
  • Saving Approach: Earlier decisions such as Ghanshyam Das Moolrajani (2007)[6] and S.K. Rustam (2024)[7] upheld proceedings where notice had issued within two years, even if subsequent hearings or orders occurred later, relying on sub-section (5)(a).

3. Retrospective Appointments and Jurisdictional Defects

Controversy has arisen over notifications appointing adjudicating officers after the repeal, but with retrospective effect to a date within the sunset. The Bombay High Court rejected such notifications in Auduth Timbo[4], holding that section 49 confers no power to make retrospective appointments. Conversely, the Rajasthan High Court in Ghanshyam Das Moolrajani[6] accepted the validity of notices issued by officers whose original FERA appointments were saved by sub-section (5)(a). The distinction therefore turns on whether an appointment was originally made under FERA (saved) or created under FEMA (retrospective and hence ultra vires).

4. Transfer and Disposal of Appeals

Opera House Exports Ltd. v. Union of India (2014)[8] reaffirmed that where cognisance is taken within the sunset, all subsequent appellate proceedings continue under FERA by virtue of sub-section (4). Nonetheless, Thirumalai Chemicals[3] and Modi v. ED (Delhi HC, 2009)[9] demonstrate that appeals pending before the dissolved FERA Appellate Board automatically transfer to the FEMA Appellate Tribunal under sub-section (5)(b). Practically, therefore, FERA procedures apply substantively, but FEMA forums hear the appeals.

Key Doctrinal Issues

1. Nature of the Sunset Clause

Sub-section (3) is an extinguishing not merely a limiting provision. Its (non-obstante) opening words override “anything contained in any other law”, including the General Clauses Act’s section 6[10]. Judicial decisions support the view that the clause eliminates jurisdiction altogether once two years expire, except where an initiating act (complaint or show-cause notice) occurred within that period.

2. Interaction with the Principle of lex non cogit ad impossibilia

In Standard Chartered Bank[1], the Supreme Court invoked the maxim “the law does not compel the impossible” to allow corporate prosecution despite the impossibility of imprisoning a juristic person. While the case primarily addresses sentencing, its interpretive methodology—a purposive construction that prevents a remedial lacuna—has been influential in section 49 cases, especially where courts resist constructions that would render the repeal provisions otiose.

3. Criminal v. Civil Liability Dichotomy

FEMA’s shift to civil penalties raises the question whether pending criminal prosecutions under FERA should abate. The Supreme Court in Natwar Singh (2010)[11] affirmed the continuing validity of criminal prosecutions commenced within the sunset, stressing that legislative policy consciously preserved the pre-existing penal regime for a limited duration to deter serious economic offences.

4. Procedural v. Substantive Continuity

Section 49(5)(a) saves “anything done” under FERA, which has been construed broadly to preserve procedural steps such as notices, even if the final order is passed after the sunset[6][7]. However, where no step whatsoever is taken within two years, subsequent proceedings are void ab initio[4][5]. The courts thus draw a sharp line between continuation and commencement.

Critical Evaluation

Although section 49 successfully balances continuity with reform, judicial experience reveals certain inefficiencies:

  • Ambiguity in the operative date: The divergent views on filing versus cognisance illustrate the absence of statutory clarity. An explicit definition would reduce litigation.
  • Retrospective administrative action: The attempted cure of jurisdictional defects via back-dated notifications undermines the rule of law. A legislative amendment could expressly forbid or regulate retrospective empowerment.
  • Forum confusion: Practitioners face uncertainty about whether FERA or FEMA appellate routes apply. Consolidating appellate jurisdiction in one tribunal, regardless of the governing statute, could streamline the process.
  • Data limitations: No public register exists identifying all extant FERA matters post-sunset, which hampers transparency and policy evaluation.

Conclusion

Section 49 FEMA is a sophisticated transitional device that preserves the deterrent value of FERA while propelling India towards a liberalised, civil-oriented foreign-exchange regime. The Supreme Court’s jurisprudence, particularly in Standard Chartered Bank and S.K. Sinha, favours a purposive yet text-compliant reading, upholding proceedings that were duly initiated and frustrating belated attempts at revival. High-Court decisions illustrate the need for strict adherence to the sunset and for vigilance against retrospective administrative overreach. Future reform should focus on codifying interpretive consensus, enhancing procedural clarity, and closing loopholes that allow forum shopping or administrative improvisation.

Footnotes

  1. Standard Chartered Bank & Ors. v. Directorate of Enforcement & Ors., (2005) 4 SCC 530.
  2. S.K. Sinha, Chief Enforcement Officer v. Videocon International Ltd., (2008) 2 SCC 492.
  3. Thirumalai Chemicals Ltd. v. Union of India, (2011) 6 SCC 739.
  4. Auduth Timbo & Ors. v. Union of India, 2022 SCC OnLine Bom 664.
  5. First Global Stockbroking P. Ltd. v. R.M. Ramchandani, 2022 SCC OnLine Bom 664.
  6. Ghanshyam Das Moolrajani v. Enforcement Directorate, 2007 SCC OnLine Raj 480.
  7. S.K. Rustam v. T.K. Datta, Calcutta HC, 2024.
  8. Opera House Exports Ltd. v. Union of India, (2014) SCC OnLine SC —.
  9. V.K. Modi v. Director, Enforcement Directorate, Delhi HC, 2009.
  10. General Clauses Act, 1897, s. 6.
  11. Natwar Singh v. Director of Enforcement, (2010) 4 SCC —.