Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAM GOPAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ANANT PRASAD AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/04/1959
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
DAS, S.K.
SUBBARAO, K.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 851 1959 SCR Supl. (2) 692
CITATOR INFO :
R 1963 SC 64 (1,2,7)
ACT:
Appeal-Maintainability-Permit to run stage carriage-
Application for renewal-New applicant’s application for
permit-Order by State Transport Authority renewing Permit
but no order passed on new applicant’s application Appeal to
Appellate Tribunal against order granting renewal-Whether
appeal competent-Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (4 Of 1939), ss.
47, 57, 58, 64.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant who was the holder of a permit to run a stage
carriage, which was about to expire, made an application to
the State Transport Authority for its renewal for a further
period. The respondent made a representation against the
renewal of the appellant’s permit and also applied for the
grant of the permit to himself. The State Transport
Authority made an order in the terms " Renewed for three
years " in respect of the appellant’s permit but no express
order was made on the respondent’s application for the grant
of the permit to him. On appeal by the respondent, the
Appellate Tribunal cancelled the appellant’s permit and
granted the permit to the respondent. The appellant then
moved the judicial Commissioner, Vindhya Pradesh, for a
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writ of certiorari quashing the order of the Appellate
Tribunal on the ground that it disclosed an error on the
face of it because under the Act no appeal lay from the
order that was passed by the subordinate authority. The
learned judicial Commissioner held that the appeal was
competent and dismissed the application for the writ. It
was contended for the appellant that the respondent’s appeal
to the Appellate Tribunal was not maintainable on the
grounds (1) that no express order was made against the
respondent by the State Transport Authority, and so s. 64(a)
of the Act did not give him a right of appeal and (2) that
in view Of ss. 47, 57 and 58 Of the Act, the State Transport
Authority had no jurisdiction to consider the respondents
application or to make an order in respect of it after the
appellant’s permit was renewed, and therefore could not make
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an order rejecting it. It was also contended that s. 64 of
the Act did not provide for an appeal by a person aggrieved
by the renewal of a permit unless he was one of those
mentioned in cl. (f) of that section which the respondent
was not, and therefore even if an appeal by the respondent
was competent under s. 64(a) in such an appeal, the
Appellate Authority could not set aside the order of
renewal.
Held: (1) that the order made by the State Transport
Authority in the present case did amount, infact, to a
refusal to grant the permit to the respondent. The
respondent’s appeal to the Appellate Authority was therefore
maintainable under s. 64(a) of the Act.
S. Gopala Reddi v. Regional Transport Authoyity, North
Arcot,[1955] 2 M.L.J. 130, approved.
V. C. K. Bus Service Ltd. v. Regional Transport
Authoyity,Coimbatore, [1957] S.C.R. 663, distinguished.
(2) that s. 58(2) Of the Act shows that an application for
the renewal of a permit and a fresh application for the
same permit have to be heard together, and that there was
nothing in ss. 47 and 57, indicating a contrary course.
(3) that cl. (f) of s. 64 Of the Act does not in any way
restrict the power of the Appellate Tribunal to grant all
reliefs in an appeal under cl. (a) of the section.
Consequently, the order of the Appellate Tribunal setting
aside the order of renewal was valid.
Dholpur Co-operative Transport Etc. Union Ltd. v. The
Appellate Authority, Rajasthan, A.I.R. 1955 Rajasthan 19, in
so far as it decided to the contrary, disapproved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 284 of 1958.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 21, 1956, of
the former Judicial Commissioner’s Court, Rewa, in Misc.
Civil Writ No. 27 of 1956.
Naunit Lal, for the appellant.
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Bhagwan Das Jain, for respondent No. 1.
1959. April 21. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKAR, J.-This appeal arises out of an application for a
writ of certiorari and involves questions of interpretation
of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (4 of 1939), by. which
grants of permits to run stage carriages and all matters
connected therewith are governed.
The appellant was the holder of a permit to run a stage
carriage on a stretch of the public highway called the Rewa-
Singrauli route, in the State of Vindhya Pradesh which is
now merged in the State of Madhya Pradesh. That permit was
due to expire on December 11, 1955, and so on September 12,
1955, he made an application for its renewal for a further
period. The respondent Anant Prasad who will be referred to
as the respondent, made a representation against the renewal
of the appellant’s permit. He also applied for the grant of
the permit to himself. On December 9, 1955, the State
Transport Authority, Vindhya Pradesh, made an order in the
following terms: " Renewed for three years ". It is not in
dispute that the order meant that the appellant’s permit was
renewed for three years. No express order was made on the
respondent’s application for the grant of the permit to him.
The respondent preferred an appeal against this order to the
Vindhya Pradesh Transport Appellate Tribunal, the appellate
authority under the Act. It was contended by the appellant
before the Appellate Tribunal that the appeal was not
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competent. The Appellate Tribunal rejected this contention
and passed an order cancelling the Permit granted to the
appellant by the State Transport Authority and issuing the
permit to the respondent.
The appellant then moved the Judicial Commissioner, Vindhya
Pradesh, for a writ of certiorari quashing the order of the
Appellate Tribunal on the ground that it disclosed an error
on the face of it because under the Act no appeal lay from
the order that was passed by the subordinate authority. The
learned Judicial Commissioner held that the appeal
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was competent and dismissed the application for the writ.
Hence the present appeal.
The question is, Did an appeal lie to the Appellate Tribunal
from the order made by the State Transport Authority in the
present case ? Section 64 of the Act contains the provisions
for appeals. Whether the appeal lay or not will have to be
decided by reference to these provisions. The portion of
the section which will have to be considered is in these
terms:
" Section 64. Any person-
(a) aggrieved by the refusal of the State or a Regional
Transport Authority to grant a permit,.................or
(e) aggrieved by the refusal of renewal of a permit,....or
(f) being a local authority or police authority or an
association which, or a person providing transport
facilities who, having opposed the grant of a permit is
aggrieved by the grant thereof .........."
may...............appeal to the prescribed authority
The prescribed authority was as we have earlier stated, the
Appellate Tribunal. Clearly the respondent was not a person
contemplated by cl. (e) of the section. It is also not in
dispute that he was not one of those mentioned in cl. (f).
The respondent does not claim that any of these clauses gave
him the right of appeal.
He however claims a right of appeal under cl. (a). In our
view that claim is justified. He had applied for a permit
and had not got it. He was therefore a person aggrieved by
the refusal to grant a permit and clearly came within cl.
(a). It is true that the order of the State Transport
Authority did not expressly refuse him the permit. But that
no doubt was the effect of the order that was made. He had
made an application for the grant of the permit to him and
the application was disposed of without granting him the
permit but granting it to a competing applicant. There was
only one permit which could be granted
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and the result of the order was to give it to the appellant.
The permit was thereby necessarily refused to the
respondent. The fact that an express order was not made
cannot operate to his prejudice. In S. Gopala Reddi v.
Regional Transport Authority, North Arcot (1), in
circumstances identical to those in the present case an
order was made by the Transport Authority in the same terms
as we have here and it was said, " The grant of a permit to
one, would automatically mean the refusal of the permit to
the other ". We are in entire agreement with the view
expressed there. Therefore it seems to us that the
respondent was a person who had been aggrieved by the
refusal to grant him a permit and the appeal by him was
fully competent.
But it was said on behalf of the appellant that in the
present case it would be wrong to imply an order refusing
the permit to the respondent for none such could be made
under the Act and therefore here there was no scope for
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applying s. 64(a). The contention was put in this way: When
there are a number of applications in respect of the same
permit, one of which is by way of renewal to which
objections have been filed and the others, fresh
applications, the latter could not be taken up for
consideration till the former and the objections made to it
had been considered. If the objections to the renewal
failed, the application for renewal had to be granted and
the fresh applications for permit could not then be
considered at all. If on the other hand, the objections to
the renewal succeeded, the renewal could not be granted and
the choice had then to be made from the new applicants for
the permit. In the present case the objection to the
renewal of the applicant’s permit raised by the respondent
failed and the appellant’s permit was in consequence
renewed. Therefore the respondent’s application for a
permit, which was an application for a new permit, never
fell to be considered and that is why no order on it was
made at all.
We think this contention completely lacks substance. It was
said that was the result of ss. 47,
(1) [1955] 2 M.L.J. 13o.
697
57 and 58 of the Act but we find nothing in any of them to
support it. Section 47 does not deal with the order in
which applications for the renewal or grant on a new permit
are to be heard and does not help at all Section 57 (3)
provides that after an application for a permit had been
made others can make representations against it. These are
the objections to an application for the grant or renewal of
a permit earlier referred to. Sub-section (5) of s. 57
provides that the application for a permit which includes an
application for the renewal of a permit and the
representations against it shall be disposed of at a public
hearing at which the person making the application and the
persons making the representations shall be given an
opportunity of being heard. But this does not show that all
other applications for the same permit and all other repre-
sentations in connection therewith, cannot be disposed of at
the same hearing. Indeed, s. 58 (2) puts it beyond doubt
that an application for renewal of a permit and the fresh
applications for the same permit have to be heard together.
That section so far as is relevant is in these terms:
Section 58
(2) A permit may be renewed on an application made and
disposed of as if it were an application for a permit:
(a).......................................................
(b).......................................................
Provided further that, other conditions being equal, an
application for renewal shall be given preference over new
applications for permits ".
The section therefore requires an application for the
renewal of a permit to be dealt with in the same way as a
new application for a permit. Such an application has
therefore to be heard along with new applications for the
permit. Again, no question of giving an application for
renewal preference over new applications for permits which
the section requires to be given, can arise unless they are
considered together. We are therefore unable to hold that
in the present case the 88
698
State Transport Authority had no jurisdiction to consider
the respondent’s application or to make any order in respect
of it as it granted the appellant’s application for renewal.
It follows that the order that was made amounted in fact to
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a refusal to grant the permit to the respondent.
It was then said that a renewed permit was a continuation of
the old permit and hence once the old permit was renewed, no
question of considering the applications for new permit
arose. We find nothing to support this view. It is true
that in V. C. K. Bus Service Ltd. v. Regional Transport
Authority, Coimbatore(1), this Court held that a renewed
permit was a continuation of the old permit but it did not
hold that the appropriate authority could not consider the
applications for a fresh permit along with the application
for renewal of the permit. This case does not assist the
appellant at all.
It was then contended that s. 64 did not provide for an
appeal by a person aggrieved by the renewal of a permit
unless he was one of those mentioned in s. 64 (f), which the
respondent was not, and therefore even if an appeal by the
respondent was competent under s. 64 (a), in such an appeal
the Appellate Tribunal could not set aside the order of
renewal made by the State Transport Authority. It was said
that if in such an appeal the order granting a renewal could
be set aside, in effect an appeal against an order renewing
a permit would become competent though the law did not per-
mit this. We were referred to Dholpur Co-operative
Transport Etc. Union Ltd. v. The Appellate Authority,
Rajasthan (2), in support of this contention. It was there
said:
" Where an appeal has been made under el. (a)against the
refusal of a permit, the Appellate Authority will generally
have the right to give relief to the appellant by the grant
of a permit, but will not have any jurisdiction to cancel
the permit granted to another person, unless a foundation
has been laid before the Regional Transport Authority for an
appeal provided
(1) [1957] S.C.R. 663.
(2) A.I.R. 1955 Rajasthan 19, 26.
699
by el. (f) by an objection of somebody entitled to appeal
under that clause. If such an objection has been made then
it does not matter whether that particular person appeals or
not. In such a case, on an appeal under s. 64(a), the
Appellate Authority may consider the objection of the nature
specified in cl. (f) before the Regional Transport Authority
and give its own decision in the matter."
It was said that the respondent though he had filed
objections was not a person who can claim a right of appeal
under el. (f) of s. 64. It was therefore contended on the
authority of the observations referred to above that no
foundation had been laid for an appeal provided by cl. (f)
and so the Appellate Tribunal could not cancel the permit
granted to the appellant by the subordinate authority.
We are unable to agree that in an appeal which is competent
under cl. (a) of the section, the order renewing or granting
a permit cannot be set aside unless the case was such that
an appeal under el. (f) would have also been competent. So
to hold would result in making the right of appeal given by
cl. (a) wholly infructuous in those cases where no relief
can be given in the appeal except by setting aside the order
granting or renewing a permit, for example, where there was
only one permit to grant as in the present case. Such an
interpretation has to be rejected. It is based on cl. (f).
But this clause cannot be construed in a manner so as to
render infructuous another clause in the same section. Nor
do we find anything in el. (f) to justify such a construc-
tion. The different clauses in the section deal with
different situations. Each is independent of the others.
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Clause (f) deals with a case where an objection had been
filed against the fresh grant or the renewal of a permit but
the permit has none the less been granted or renewed. The
clause gives the objector a right of appeal against the
result of the rejection of his objection if he is one of the
persons mentioned in it. The clause gives him that right
irrespective of the fact whether he has a right of appeal
under any of the other clauses or not. It does not say that
a permit granted or renewed cannot be questioned except at
the
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instance of the persons mentioned in cl. (f); it does not
affect the right of appeal under the other clauses. If an
appeal lies under any of the other clauses, that of course
must be an effective appeal and the appellate authority must
therefore have all powers to give the relief to which the
appellant is found entitled.
Again s. 64 is not concerned with defining the powers of the
appellate authority and does not purport to do so. Nor is
there anything in the Act to lead to the conclusion that an
applicant for a permit is bound to put in objections against
the applications of competing applicants for the grant or
the renewal of the permit. The relief that can be granted
in an appeal by any person which is competent would not
depend on whether he bad put in objections against the
applications of the competing applicants or not.
We do not therefore think that cl. (f) of s. 64 in any way
restricts the power of the Appellate Tribunal to grant all
proper reliefs in an appeal competent under el. (a) of the
section. If cl. (f) does not so restrict the power of the
Appellate Tribunal, nothing else has been pointed out to us
as having that effect. In our view, there is nothing in the
Act to prevent the Appellate Tribunal from setting aside the
order of the State Transport Authority renewinu the
appellant’s permit. We think the matter was correctly put
in S. Gopala Reddi’s case (1) when it was said at p. 132:
"The appeal was, in our opinion, perfectly competent as an
appeal against the order of the Regional Transport
Authority, refusing to grant a permit. The fact that such
an appeal involved an attack on the order granting a renewal
of a permit to the 4th respondent would not prevent the
appeal being what it was, viz., an appeal against a refusal
to grant a permit, to the appellant. The Central Road
Traffic Board erred in presuming that it was not open to
them in the appeal to consider the merits of the order
granting renewal of the 4th respondent’s permit. Indeed,
the first question which had to be determined in the appeal
filed by the appellant would be the propriety of the action
of the Regional Transport Authority in granting
(1) [1955] 2 M.L.J. 130.
701
renewal to the 4th respondent. The filing of the appeal by
the appellant set at large the order of the Regional
Transport Authority granting the renewal."
In the Dholpur Co-operative Transport etc. Union Ltd.
case(’) on which the appellant relies, no objection had been
filed against any of the competing applications for the
grant of a permit and it was held that the appellate
authority had no power in such circumstances on appeal by a
person whose application for the grant of the permit had
been refused, to give relief by cancelling a permit granted
by the subordinate authority to one of the applicants. It
was there thought that Nadar Transport, Tiruchirapalli v.
State of Madras (2) led to this conclusion. For the reasons
earlier mentioned we are unable to agree with this part of
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the decision in the Dholpur Co-operative Transport etc.
Union Ltd. case (1). With the rest of the decision there we
are not concerned and as to that we do not say anything. We
also find nothing in the Nadar Transport case (2), to
support the conclusion arrived at in Dholpur Co-operative
Transport etc. Union Ltd. case(1). In the Nadar Transport
case(2), on the contrary, it was observed that " see. 64,
sub-sees. (a) and (f) are intended in our opinion to apply
to different situations " and that " the power of the
appellate authority is not restricted in any manner either
by the provisions of s. 64 or by any of the rules made under
the powers conferred by the Act ". It was there held that in
an appeal under s. 64 (a) no grounds other than those taken
before the lower authority could be canvassed. That does
not lead to the conclusion that on proper grounds all
reliefs necessary to make the appeal effective cannot be
granted. We think that the Nadar Transport case (2) was
misunderstood.
The result is that this appeal fails and it is dismissed
with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) A. I. R. 1955 Rajasthan 19, 26.
(2) A. I. R. 1953 Mad. 1, 3.
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