Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF TAMILNADU ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KARNATAKA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT26/04/1991
BENCH:
KASLIWAL, N.M. (J)
BENCH:
KASLIWAL, N.M. (J)
PUNCHHI, M.M.
SAHAI, R.M. (J)
CITATION:
1991 SCR (2) 501 1991 SCC Supl. (1) 240
JT 1991 (2) 322 1991 SCALE (1)802
ACT:
Inter-State Water Disputes Act, 1956: ss 3.5.11 Notification
dated 2.6.1990 - Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal -
Applications for interim reliefs - Whether has jurisdiction
to entertain and grant.
Constitution of India : Article 262 - Adjudication of
disputes relating to inter-State rivers - Law to be made by
Parliament-Supreme Court’s jurisdiction - Exclusion of -
Whether arises.
Statutory Interpretation : Supreme Court’s power to
interpret statute and decide Parameters, scope, power, and
jurisdiction of a statutory tribunal.
HEADNOTE:
The Government of Tamil Nadu sent a complaint dated
6.7.1986 to the Central Government under s.3 of the Inter
State Water Disputes Act, 1956 on the ground that its
interests were being prejudiciously and injuriously affected
by the executive action taken by the State of Karnataka, and
by failure of that State to implement the terms of the
agreements relating to the use, distribution and control of
the waters of the river Cauvery.
The Central Government by its notification dated
2.6.1990 consistuted the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal
and referred to it for adjudication the water disputes
regarding the Inter-State River Cauvery, and the river
valley there of emerging from the complaint dated 6.7.1986
filed by the State of Tamil Nadu.
During the pendency of the reference the Government of
Tamil Nadu filed an application before the Tribunal praying
that the State of Karnataka be directed not to impound or
utilize waters of Cauvery river beyond the extent impounded
or utilised by it as on 31.5.1972 as was agreed to by the
Chief Ministers of Basin States and the Union Minister for
Irrigation and Power ; and that the State of Karnataka be
restrained from undertaking any new projects, dams,
reservoirs, canals etc. and /or proceeding further with any
such work in the Cauvery Basin.
502
On 8.9.1990, the Union Territory of Pondicherry filed
an application for an interim order directing the States of
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Karnataka and Kerala to release, during the months of
September to March 9.355 TMC of water already agreed to.
The Government of Tamil Nadu filed another emergent
petition to direct the State of Karnataka to release at
least 20 TMC of waters as a first instalment pending final
orders on its earlier application as the Samba crop could
not be maintained without additional supplies at Mettur
Reservoir.
The States of Karnataka and Kerala opposed the
applications and raised preliminary objections that the
Tribunal constituted under the Act had limited jurisdiction
having only those powers which had been conferred on it
under the Act and there was no provisions of law which
authorised or conferred any jurisdiction on it to grant any
interim relief.
The Tribunal held that it was authorised to decide only
the water dispute or disputes which had been referred to it,
and as from the complaint dated 6.7.1988 made by the State
of Tamil Nadu, reference of an interim dispute in regard to
the release of waters by Karnataka Government from year to
year subsequent to the date of request made by State of
Tamil Nadu could not be inferred, it could not entertain the
prayer for inter relief unless that dispute relating to the
same was specifically referred to it. The applications were
dismissed as not maintainable.
In the appeals to his Court by State of Tamil Nadu and
Union Territory of Pondicherry, the respondent State of
Karnataka and Kerala raised an objection that this Court had
no jurisdiction to entertain any appeal against the
impugned order of the Tribunal as Article 262 of the
Constitution clearly provided for adjudication of disputes
relating to waters of inter-State rivers to be decided by
law made by Parliament in this regard.
The appellants’ case was that they have not come to
this Court to get a decision on merits of any disputes which
is already pending before the Tribunal but their grievance
is only to the extend that the Tribunal wrongly decided that
it had no jurisidiction to entertain any application for
interim relief because such dispute was not referred to it
in the reference. They contended that this Court has
jurisidiction to decide the scope of powers of the Tribunal
under the Act and in case the
503
Tribunal wrongly refused to exercise the jurisdiction,
this count is competent to set it right and direct the
Tribunal to entertain such application and decide the same
on merits.
On the question whether : (1) this Court has
jurisdiction, to decide the power and jurisdiction of the
Tribunal under the Act , (2) the prayes in the applications
for interim relief was covered under the dispute referred to
the Tribunal , and (3) the Tribunal has jurisdiction to
entertain the applications for interim reliefs.
Allowing the appeals, this Court,
HELD : (By the Court, Per Kasliwal, J.) 1.
Notwithstanding anything in the Constitution, Parliament is
authorised by law to provide that neither the Supreme Court
nor any other Court shall exercise jurisdiction in respect
of any dispute or complaint relating to the use,
distribution or control of the waters of, or in, any inter
State river or river valley. The dispute referred by the
Central Government to the Cauvery Water Dispute Tribunal
under the Inter State Water Disputes Act related to the
above controversy and as such this Court had no jurisdiction
to decide the merits of the dispute raised by the appellants
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and pending before the Tribunal. [509 C-D]
2. It is the judiciary alone to have the function of
determining authoritatively the meaning of a statutory
enactment and to lay down the frontiers of jurisdiction of
any body or tribunal constituted under a statute. The
Cauvery Water Dispute Tribunal was a statutory authority
constitued under the Inter State Water Disputes Act, 1956,
and this Court being the ultimate interpreter of the
provisions of the said Act, had an authority and
jurisdiction to decide the parameters, scope, power and the
jurisdiction of the Tribunal. This Court had not only the
power but obligation to decide as to whether or not the
Tribunal had any jurisdiction under the Act to entertain
any application for interim relief till it finally decides
the dispute referred to it. [509E-F; 511E-F].
Sanjeev Coke Manufacturing Company v. Bharat Coking
Coal Ltd. & Anr. [1983] 1 SCR 1000 at p. 1029 and Kehar
Singh and Anr. v Union of India & Anr., [1989] 1 SCC 204 at
p. 214, followed.
3. By the order of reference dated 2.6.1990, the
Central Government had referred to the Tribunal the water
disputes regarding the inter, State river Cauvery emerging
from the letter dated 6.7.1986 sent by the Government of
Tamil Nadu. Thus all the disputes emerging from letter dated
6.7.1986 had been referred to the Tribunal. The Tribunal
504
committed a serious error in omitting to read the passage of
the complaint wherein the State of Tamil Nadu was claiming
for an immediate relief as, year after year, the realisation
at Mettur was falling fast and thousands of acres in their
ayacut in the basin were forced to remain fallow. It was
specifically mentioned that the inordinate delay in solving
the dispute was being taken advantage of by the Government
of Karnataka in extending their canal systems and their
ayacut in the new projects and every day of delay was adding
to the injury caused to their existing irrigation. The
Tribunal was thus clearly wrong in holding that the Central
Government had not made any reference for granting any
interim relief. [514D-E; 515C-D].
4. Irrespective of appellants’ case for any interim
relief on merits, the reliefs prayed by them in their
applications before the Tribunal clearly come within the
purview of the dispute referred to it by the Central
Government under s. 5 of the Act, and the Tribunal is
directed to decide the same on merits. [515E ; 516B].
5. The Tribunal did not hold that it had no incidental
and ancillary powers for granting an interim relief, but it
refused to entertain the petitions on the ground that the
reliefs prayed therein had not been referred by the Central
Government. In that view, it is not necessary to decide in
the instant case the larger questions whether a Tribunal
constituted under the Inter State Water Disputes Act, 1956
has any power or not to grant any interim relief . [515E-F].
Tamil Nadu Cauvery Neerppasana Vilaiporulgal
Vivasayigal Nalaurimal Padhugappu Sangam v. Union of India &
Ors. , [1990] 3 SCC 440, referred to.
Statutory Interpretation by Francis Bennions, (page 53
and 548, referred to .
Per Sahai, J.:
Under the Constitutional set up it is one of the
primary responsibility of this Court to determine
jurisdiction, power and limits of any tribunal or authority
created under a statute. [516C].
There are reservations on other issues including the
construction of the letter dated 6th July 1986. However, it
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is not necessary to express any opinion on it since what
started as an issue of profound constitutional and legal
importance fizzled out when the State of Karnataka
505
and Kerala stated through their Counsel that they were
agreeable for determination of the applications for interim
directions on merits. [516C-D].
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 303
304, 2036 of 1991.
From the Judgement and Order dated 5.1.1991 of the
Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal in C.M.P nos. 4, 9 and 5 of
1990.
M. Chander Shekharan, Additional Solicitor General, K.
Parasaran, F.S. Nariman, Dr. Y.S. Chitale, S.S. Javali, A.S.
Nambiar, P.S. Poti, C. Shivappa, M.S. Ganesh, V.
Krishnamurthy, P.K. Manohar, Smt. S. Vasudevan, M.Veerappa,
Mohan Katarki, Atul Chitale, K.H. Nobin Singh, T.T.
Kunhikannan, Mrs. Sushma Suri and A.K,. Srivasatava for the
appearing parties.
The Judgement of the Court was delivered by
KASLIWAL, J., Special Leave granted in S.L.P (C) No.
4991 of 1991.
These appeals by grant of special leave are directed
against the order of the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal
dated January 5, 1991. The above appeals have been filed by
the Governments of Tamil Nadu and Union Territory of
Pondicherry in respect of Civil Misc. Petition (in short
C.M.P) Nos. 4 and 9 of 1990 by the Government of Tamil Nadu
and CMP No. 5 of 1990 filed by the Union Territory of
Pondicherry and dismissed by the Tribunal by a common order
dated January 5, 1991.
As identical questions of law arise in these cases, we
would state the facts of C.M.P filed by the Government of
Tamil Nadu. The Government of Tamil Nadu filed a complaint
dated 6th July 1986 on the ground that the interests of the
State of Tamil Nadu and of its inhabitants (particularly the
farmers in the Cauvery Delta) had been and is prejudiciously
and injuriously affected by the executive action taken and
proposed to be taken by the upper riparian State of
Karnataka and by the failure of that State to implement the
terms of the agreements relating to the use, distribution
and control of the waters of river Cauvery. The said
complaint was made to the Central Government under Section 3
of the Inter State Water Dispute Act, 1956 (hereinafter
referred to as the Act).
506
The Central Government by Notification dated 2.6.1990
constituted the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal and passed
the following order of reference:
No.21/1/90-WD
Government of India
(Bharat Sarkar)
Ministry of Water Resources
(Jal Sansadhan Mantralaya)
New Delhi, 2nd June, 1990.
REFERENCE
In the exercise of the powers conferred by sub-
section (1) of Section 5, of the Inter-State Water
Disputes Act, 1956 (33 of 1956),the Central
Government hereby refers to the Cauvery Water
Disputes Tribunal for adjudication, the water
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disputes regarding the inter-State river Cauvery
and the river valley thereof, emerging from letter
No. 17527/K2/82-110 dated the 6th July, 1986 from
the Government of Tamilnadu(copy enclosed).
By order and in the name of
The President of India
(M.A. CHITALE)
SECRETARY, (WATER RESOURCES)
Chairman,
The Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal,
New Delhi.
During the pendency of above reference the Government
of Tamilnadu filed C.M.P. No. 4 of 1990 praying that the
State of Karnataka be directed not to impound or utilise
water of Cauvery river beyond the extent impounded or
utilised by them as on 31.5.1972, as agreed to by the Chief
Ministers of the Basin States and Union Minister for
Irrigation and Power. It was further prayed that an order be
passed restraining the State of Karnatake from undertaking
any new
507
projects, dams, reservoirs, canals etc., and/or from
proceeding further with the construction of projects, dams,
reservoirs, canals etc. in the Cauvery Basin.
On 8.9.1990 C.M.P. No.5 of 1990 was filed by the Union
Territory of Pondicherry seeking an interim order directing
the States of Karnataka and Kerala to release the water
already agreed to, that is, 9.355 T.M.C. during the months
September to March.
The Government of Tamilnadu filed another emergent
petition C.M.P. No.9 of 1990 to direct the State of
karnataka to release at least 20 T.M.C. of waters as a first
instalment pending final orders on C.M.P. No. 4 of 1990.
This petition was submitted on the ground that the Samba
crop cannot be maintained without additional supplies at
Mettur Reservoir.
All the above C.M.Ps. were opposed by the State of
Karnataka and the State of Kerala both on merits as well as
on a preliminary objection that the Tribunal had no power or
jurisdiction to entertain these petitions to grant any
interim relief. The preliminary objection was based on the
ground that the Tribunal constituted under the Act had
limited jurisdiction. It had no inherent power like an
ordinary civil court. It was having only those powers which
have been conferred on it under the Act and there was no
provision of law which authorised or conferred any
jurisdiction on the Tribunal to grant any interim relief.
The Tribunal upheld the objection raised on behalf of the
State of Karnataka, and State of Kerala and as a result of
which by its order dated January 5, 1991 ordered that the
Tribunal cannot entertain the applications for the grant
interim reliefs and the C.M.P. Nos. 4,5 and 9 were held to
be not maintainable in law and as such dismissed. Aggrieved
against the aforesaid order of the Tribunal these appeals
have been filed by the State of Tamilnadu and the Union
Territory of Pondicherry.
Dr. Y.S. Chitale, appearing on behalf of the
respondent, State of Karnataka raised an objection that this
Court had no jurisdiction to entertain any appeal against
the impugned order of the Tribunal. It was submitted that
Article 262 of the Constitution clearly provided that in
respect of adjudication of disputes relating to waters of
Inter State rivers has to be decided by law made by
Parliament in this regard. Clause (2) of Article 262 further
provided that Parliament may by law provide that neither the
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Supreme Court nor any other Court shall exercise
jurisdiction in respect of any such dispute or complaint
508
as is referred to in Clause (1), notwithstanding anything
contained in this Constitution. It was submitted that the
Inter-State Water Disputes Act, 1956 was enacted by the
Parliament, to provide for the adjudication of disputes
relating to waters of Inter-State river, and river
valleys. Section 11 of this Act provided as under:
"Notwithstanding anything contained in any other
law, neither the supreme Court nor any other court
shall have or exercise jurisdiction in respect of
any water dispute which may be referred to a
Tribunal under this Act."
It was thus contended that the above Section 11 clearly took
away not only jurisdiction of any other Court but also of
the Supreme Court in express terms.
On the other hand Mr. K. Parasaran, learned counsel
appearing on behalf of the State of Tamilnadu contended that
the provisions contained in Section 11 of the Act read with
Article 262 of the Constitution only excluded the
jurisdiction of the Supreme Court or any other Court to
decide any dispute or complaint with respect to the use,
distribution or control of the waters of, or in, any Inter-
State river or river valley. It was submitted that the
appellants have not come before this Hon’ble Court to get a
decision on merits of any dispute which is already pending
before the Tribunal. The grievance of the appellants is
only to the extent that the Tribunal wrongly decided that it
had no jurisdiction to entertain any interim application, as
such dispute was not referred to it in the reference made by
the Central Government. It was submitted that this Court
has the jurisdiction to decide the scope of the powers of
the Tribunal under the Act and in case the Tribunal has
wrongly refused to exercise jurisdiction under the Act, then
this Court is competent to set it right and direct the
Tribunal to entertain such application and to decide the
same on merits.
In order to appreciate the above controversy it would
be proper to refer to Article 262 of the Constitution and
Section II of the Act which read as under:
Article 262-Adjudication of disputes relating to
waters of inter-state rivers or rivers valleys:
(1) Parliament may by law provide for the
adjudication of any dispute or complaint with
respect to the use, distribution or control of
the waters of,or in, any inter-State river or
river valley.
509
(2) Notwithstanding in this Constitution Parliament
may by law provide that neither the Supreme Court
nor any other Court shall exercise jurisdiction in
respect of any such dispute or complaint as is
referred to in clause(1).
Section 11:
"Notwithstanding anything contained in any
other law, neither the Supreme Court nor any other
court shall have or exercise jurisdiction in
respect of any water dispute which may be referred
to a Tribunal under this Act."
A perusal of the above provisions leaves no manner of
doubt that notwithstanding anything in the Constitution,
Parliament is authorised by law to provide that neither the
Supreme Court nor any other Court shall exercise
jurisdiction in respect of any dispute or complaint relating
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to the use, distribution or control of the waters of, or in,
any inter-State river or river valley. The dispute referred
by the Central Government to the Tribunal under the Act
relates to the above controversy and as such this Court has
no jurisdiction to decide the merits of the dispute raised
by the appellants and pending before the Tribunal. The
controversy, however raised by the appellants in these
appeals is that they had submitted the applications before
the Tribunal for granting interim relief on the ground of
emergency till the final disposal of the dispute and the
Tribunal wrongly held that it had no jurisdiction to
entertain the same. The Tribunal is a Statutory authority
constituted under an Act made by the Parliament and this
Court has jurisdiction to decide the parameters, scope,
authority and jurisdiction of the Tribunal. It is the
judiciary i.e. the courts alone have the function of
determining authoritatively the meaning of a statutory
enactment and to lay down the frontiers of jurisdiction of
any body or Tribunal constituted under the Statute. Francis
Bennion in his book ’Statutory Interpretation’ on pages 53
and 548 has dealt the matter as under:
"Under the British Constitution, the function
of determining authoritatively the meaning of a
parliamentary enactment is entrusted to the
judiciary. In the words of Richard Burn they have
the exposition of Acts, which must not be
expounded ’in any other sense than is truly and
properly the exposition of them’. This is but one
aspect of the Court’s general function of applying
the relevant law to the
510
facts of the case before it. The starting point
is, therefore, to consider this function."
"It is the function of the court alone to
declare the legal meaning of an enactment. If
anyone else (such as the draftsman of the
provision) purports to lay down what the legal
meaning is the court will tend to react adversely,
regarding this as an encroachment upon its
constitutional sphere".
A Constitution Bench of this Court in Sanjeev Coke
Manufacturing Company v. Bharat Coking Coal Ltd. & Anr.,
[1983] 1 SCR 1000 at P. 1029 observed as under:
"No one may speak for the Parliament and
Parliament is never before the Court. After
Parliament has said what it intends to say what the
Parliament meant to say. None else. Once a statute
leaves Parliament House, the Court’s is the only
authentic voice which may echo (interpret) the
Parliament. This the Court will do with reference
to the language of the statute and other
permissible aids. The executive Government may
place before the Court their understanding of what
Parliament has said or intended to say or what they
think was Parliament’s object and all the facts and
circumstances which in their view led to the
legislation. When they do so, they do not speak
for parliament. No act of Parliament may be struck
down because of the understanding or
misunderstanding of Parliamentary intention by the
executive government or because their (the
Government’s) spokesmen do not bring out relevant
circumstances but indulge in empty and
selfdefeating affidavits. They do not and they
cannot bind Parliament. Validity of legislation is
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not to be judged merely by affidavits filed on
behalf of the State, but by all the relevant
circumstances which the Court may ultimately find
and more especially by what may be gathered from
what the legislature has itself said. We have
mentioned the facts as found by us and we do not
think that there has been any infringement of the
right guaranteed by Art. 14".
In Kehar Singh and Anr. v. Union of India and Anr.,
[1989] 1 SCC 204 at p. 214, this Court observed as under:
511
"In the course of argument, the further
question raised was whether judicial review extends
to an examination of the order passed by President
under Art. 72 of the Constitution. At the outset
we think it should be clearly understood that we
are confined to the question as to the area and
scope of the President’s power and not with the
question whether it has been truly exercised on the
merits. Indeed, we think that the order of the
President cannot be subjected to judicial review on
its merits except within the strict limitations
defined in Maru Ram v. Union of India. The function
of determining whether the act of a constitutional
or statutory functionary falls within the
constitutional or legislative conferment of power,
or is vitiated by self-denial on an erroneous
appreciation of the full amplitude of the power is
a matter for the Court."
In the dispute relating to river Cauvery itself an
application under Article 32 of the Constitution was filed
by the Tamil Nadu Cauvery Neerppasana Vilaiporulgal
Vivasayigal Nala Urimal Padhugappu Sangam which was said to
be a society registered under the Tamilnadu Societies
Registration Act asking this Court for direction to the
Union of India to refer the dispute under Section 4 of the
Act and this Court in Tamil Nadu Cauvery Neerppassna
Vilaiporulgal Vivasayigal Nalaurimal Padhugappu Sangam v.
Union of India & Ors. [1990] 3 SCC 440 allowed the petition
and directed the Central Government to fulfil its statutory
obligation and notify in the official Gazette the
constitution of an appropriate tribunal for the adjudication
of the water dispute.
Thus, we hold that this Court is the ultimate
interpreter of the provisions of the inter-State Water
Disputes Act, 1956 and has an authority to decide the
limits, powers and the jurisdiction of the Tribunal
constituted under the Act. This Court has not only the
power but obligation to decide as to whether the Tribunal
has any jurisdiction or not under the Act, to entertain any
interim application till it finally decides the dispute
referred to it. There is thus no force in the above
argument raised by Dr. Y.S. Chitale.
We would now examine the controversies raised on merits
in these appeals. It was contended on behalf of the
appellants before the Tribunal that it had jurisdiction to
entertain these miscellaneous petitions for interim relief.
Firstly, for the reason that when the Tribunal while
exercising powers of granting interim relief it will be only
exer-
512
cising ’incidental and ancillary power’, as the interim
reliefs prayed for arise out of the water dispute which has
been referred to the Tribunal. Secondly, under Article 262
of the Constitution of India, once the Parliament has
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enacted the Act providing for adjudication of a dispute in
regard to sharing of water of Cauvery Basin, no other Court
in the country has the jurisdiction to grant an interim
relief and, as such, the Tribunal has the inherent powers to
grant the interim relief, otherwise petitioners shall be
left with no remedy for the enforcement of their rights.
The Tribunal examined the scheme of the Act after
adverting to the provisions of Sections 3 to 6-A of the Act
held that this Act was a complete code in so far as the
reference of a dispute is concerned. The Tribunal was
authorised to decide only the ’water dispute’ or disputes
which have been referred to it. If the Central Government
was of the opinion that there was any other matter connected
with or relevant to the water dispute which had already been
referred to the Tribunal, it was always open to the Central
Government to refer also the said matter as a dispute to the
Tribunal constituted under Section 4 of the Act. The
Tribunal further held as under:
"The interim reliefs which had been
sought for even if the same are connected with or
relevant to the water dispute already referred
cannot be considered because the disputes in
respect of the said matters have not been
referred by the Central Government to the Tribunal.
Further, neither there is any averment in these
petitions that the dispute related to interim
relief cannot be settled by negotiations and that
the Central Government has already formed the
opinion that it shall be referred to the Tribunal.
In case the petitioners of C.M.P. Nos.4,5 and 9 of
1990 are aggrieved by the conduct of the State of
Karnataka and an emergent situation has arisen, as
claimed, they could have raised a dispute before
the Central Government and in case the central
Government was of the opinion that the said dispute
could not be settled by negotiations, the said
dispute could also have been referred by the
Central Government to the Tribunal."
The Tribunal then referred to the reference order dated
2.6.1990 and observed that in the letter dated 6.7.86, from
the Government of Tamilnadu, which is the basis of the
reference, the State of Tamilnadu sought reference of the
following dispute to the Tribunal:
513
(a) The executive action taken by the Karnataka
State in constructing Kabini, Hemavathi, Harangi
Swarnavathi and other projects and expanding any
ayacuts:
(i) which executive action has resulted
in materially diminishing the supply of water to
Tamilnadu;
(ii) which executive action has
materially affected the predescriptive rights of
the ayacutdars already acquired and existing; and
(iii) which executive action is also in
violation of the 1892 and 1924 Agreements; and
(b) the failure of the Karnataka
Government to implement the terms of the 1892 and
1924 Agreements relating to the use, distribution
and control of the Cauvery waters."
The Tribunal from the above letter dated 6.7.86 inferred
that no interim dispute in regard to the release of waters
by the Karnataka Government from year to year subsequent to
the date of the request made by the State of Tamilnadu was
at all referred to the Tribunal. The Tribunal thus held that
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in their opinion the Tribunal cannot entertain the prayer
for interim relief unless the dispute relating to the same
was specifically referred to the Tribunal. The Tribunal then
considered the question as to whether the granting of an
interim relief by the Tribunal will be in exercise of
incidental or ancillary powers. After referring to certain
decisions of this Court, the Tribunal observed that the
incidental and ancillary powers must relate to the actual
dispute referred and not to any other matter including
granting of interim reliefs which are not at all subject
matter of reference. The Tribunal further held that the
Tribunal will have the power to pass such consequential
order as are required to be made while deciding the said
dispute and will also have incidental and ancillary powers
which will make the decision of the reference effective but
these power are to be exercised only to enable it to decide
the reference effectively but not to decide disputes not
referred including a dispute in regard to grant of interim
relief/interim reliefs. The Tribunal also adverted to the
provisions of Sections 9 and 13 of the Act as well as inter-
State Water Disputes Rules, 1959 and held that these
provisions were also indicative of the fact that the
Tribunal had no power to grant any interim relief of the
nature asked for. It was observed in this regard that in
case intention of Parliament was that the Tribunal may be
able to grant any
514
interim relief without the dispute being referred to the
Tribunal, it would have either provided such powers in the
Act itself or in the rules framed under the Act, but this
has not been done.
As regards the second submission the Tribunal held that
it was wrong to contend that the State of Tamilnadu was left
with no remedy available to it, because it was open for the
State of Tamilnadu to approach the Central Government and if
the Central Government found that the dispute was connected
with or related to the water dispute already referred to the
tribunal, it was open to it to refer the said dispute also
to the Tribunal in regard to the granting of an interim
relief. In the view taken above, the Tribunal was of the
opinion that it cannot entertain the applications for the
grant of interim reliefs.
We have considered the arguments made by Mr.K.
Parasaran on behalf of the appellants and Dr. Chitale and
Mr. Nariman for the respondents. Learned counsel for the
Union Territory of Pondicherry adopted the arguments of Mr.
K. Parasaran and learned counsel for the State of Kerala
adopted the arguments of Dr. Chitale.
A perusal of the order of reference dated 2.6.90 as
already extracted above clearly goes to show that the
Central Government had referred the water disputes regarding
the inter-State river Cauvery and the river valley thereof,
emerging from letter dated 6th July, 1986 from the
Government of Tamilnadu. Thus all the disputes emerging from
letter dated 6th July, 1986 had been referred to the
Tribunal. The Tribunal committed a serious error in omitting
to read the following important paragraph contained in the
aforesaid letter dated 6.7.86:
REQUEST FOR EXPEDITIOUS ACTION IN REFERRING
THE DISPUTE TO TRIBUNAL:
"From 1974-75 onwards, the Government of
Karnataka has been impounding all the flows in
their reservoirs. Only after their reservoirs are
filled up, the surplus flows are let down. The
injury inflicted on this State in the past decade
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due to the unilateral action of Karnataka and the
suffering we had in running around for a few TMC of
water every time and crops reached the withering
stage has been briefly stated in note (Enclosure-
XXVIII). It is patent that the Government of
Karnataka have badly violated the interstate
agreements and caused irrepairable harm to the age
old irrigation in this State. Year after year, the
realisation
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at Mettur is falling fast and thousands of acres in
our ayacut in the basin are forced to remain
fallow. The bulk of the existing ayacut in
Tamilnadu concentrated mainly in Thanjavur and
Thiruchirappalli districts is already gravely
affected in that the cultivation operations are
getting long delayed, traditional double crop lands
are getting reduced to single crop lands and crops
even in the single crop lands are withering and
falling for want of adequate wettings at crucial
times. We are convinced that the inordinate delay
in solving the dispute is taken advantage of by the
Government of Karnataka in extending their canal
systems and their ayacut in the new projects and
every day of delay in adding to the injury caused
to our existing irrigation."
The above passage clearly goes to show that the State
of Tamilnadu was claiming for an immediate relief as year
after year, the realisations at Mettur was falling fast and
thousands of acres in their ayacut in the basin were forced
to remain fallow. It was specifically mentioned that the
inordinate delay in solving the dispute is taken advantage
of by the Government of Karnataka in extending their canal
systems and their ayacut in the new projects and every day
of delay is adding to the injury caused to their existing
irrigation. The Tribunal was thus clearly wrong in holding
that the Central Government had not made any reference for
granting any interim relief. We are not concerned, whether
the appellants are entitled or not, for any interim relief
on merits, but we are clearly of the view that the reliefs
prayed by the appellants in their C.M.P. Nos. 4,5 and 9 of
1990 clearly come within the purview of the dispute referred
by the Central Government under Section 5 of the Act. The
Tribunal has not held that it had no incidental and
ancillary power for granting an interim relief, but it has
refused to entertain the C.M.P. Nos . 4,5 and 9 on the
ground that the reliefs prayed in these applications had not
been referred by the Central Government. In view of the
above circumstances we think it is not necessary for us to
decide in this case, the larger question whether a Tribunal
constituted under the Water Disputes Act has any power or
not to grant any interim relief. In the present case the
appellants become entitled to succeed on the basis of the
finding recorded by us in therir favour that the reliefs
prayed by them in their C.M.P. Nos. 4,5 and 9 of 1990 are
covered in the reference made by the Central Government. It
may also be noted that at the fag end of the arguments it
was submitted before us on behalf of the State of Kanataka
that they were agreeable to proceed with the C.M.Ps. on
merits before the Tribunal on the terms that all party
States agreed that all questions
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arising out of or connected with or relevant to the water
dispute (set out in the respective pleadings of the
respective parties), including all applications for interim
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directions/reliefs by party States be determined by the
Tribunal on merits. However, the above terms were not
agreeable to the State of Tamilnadu as such we have decided
the appeals on merits.
In the result the appeals, are allowed, the Judgment of
the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal dated 5.1.1991 is set
aside and the Tribunal is directed to decide the C.M.P. Nos.
4,5 and 9 of 1990 on merits. In the facts and circumstances
of the case we direct the parties to bear their own costs.
SAHAI,J. I agree with brother Kasliwal, J. that under
the constitutional set up it is one of the primary
responsibilities of this Court to determine jurisdiction
power and limits of any tribunal or authority created under
a statute. But I have reservations on other issues including
the construction of the letter dated 6th July, 1986.
However, it is not necessary for me to express any opinion
on it since what started as an issue of profound
constitutional and legal importance fizzled out when the
States of Karnataka and Kerala stated through their counsel
that they were agreeable for determination of the
applications for interim directions on merits.
R.P. Appeals allowed.
517