Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAMANA DAYARAM SHETTY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT AUTHORITY OF INDIA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/05/1979
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 1628 1979 SCR (3)1014
1979 SCC (3) 489
CITATOR INFO :
R 1980 SC 840 (15,16,20)
F 1980 SC1992 (10)
F 1980 SC2147 (63)
R 1981 SC 212 (18,31,32,34,36,37,38,39,41,42
E&R 1981 SC 487 (8,9,16)
R 1981 SC1694 (5)
R 1981 SC2001 (6,7)
MV 1982 SC1325 (12)
R 1983 SC 130 (16)
R 1983 SC 624 (8)
F 1983 SC 848 (11)
R 1983 SC1235 (8)
R 1984 SC 363 (22)
D 1984 SC 415 (6)
F 1984 SC 541 (13)
R 1984 SC 657 (16)
R 1984 SC1420 (5)
F 1985 SC1147 (12)
RF 1986 SC 180 (41)
RF 1986 SC 872 (71)
RF 1986 SC1035 (12)
RF 1986 SC1370 (10)
RF 1986 SC1527 (12,19,23)
R 1986 SC1571 (52,54,69,105)
E&R 1987 SC 251 (23)
E 1987 SC1080 (12,TO,17,26,28,29,30)
R 1987 SC1109 (30,35,36)
RF 1988 SC 157 (8,9,10)
RF 1988 SC 268 (30)
R 1988 SC 469 (7,8,10,TO,12)
APL 1989 SC 88 (7)
D 1989 SC1031 (12)
D 1989 SC1076 (11,19,20)
F 1989 SC1629 (13,14)
F 1989 SC1642 (25,27)
D 1989 SC2138 (64,100)
RF 1990 SC1277 (46)
RF 1990 SC1480 (29)
R 1991 SC 101 (237,257,263)
RF 1991 SC 537 (29)
RF 1991 SC1153 (12)
RF 1991 SC1173 (5)
D 1991 SC1579 (6)
RF 1992 SC 1 (133)
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RF 1992 SC 76 (2)
F 1992 SC1858 (19)
ACT:
International Airport Athority Act 1971-Whether an
instrumentality of State-Authority called for tenders for a
job-If could accept a tender not conforming to conditions in
notice.
Administrative law-Statutory body-When an
instrumentality of State.
HEADNOTE:
The first respondent, by a public notice, invited
tenders for putting up and running a second class restaurant
and two snack bars at the International Air port, Bombay.
the notice stated in Paragraph (1) that sealed tenders in
the prescribed form were invited from registered second
class hoteliers having at least five years’ experience for
putting up and running a second class restaurant and two
snack bars at the Bombay Airport for a period of three years
Paragraph (8) stated that acceptance of the tender would
rest with the Airport Director who does not bind himself to
accept any tender and reserves to himself the right to
reject all or any of the tenders received without assigning
any reasons therefor.
out of the six tenders received only the tender of the
4th respondents was complete and offered the highest amount
as licence fee. All the other tenders were rejected because
they were incomplete.
Since the fourth respondents did not satisfy the
description of "registered second class hoteliers having at
least S years’ experience" prescribed in para graph (1) of
the tender notice, the 1st respondent called upon the fourth
respondents to produce documentary evidence whether they
were registered second class hotliers having at least 5
years’ experience. The fourth respondents stated once again
that they had considerable experience of catering for
various reputed commercial houses, clubs, messes and banks
and that they had Eating Houses Catering Establishment
(Canteen) Licence. Satisfied with the information given by
the fourth respondents, the first respondent accepted their
tender on the terms and conditions set out in its letter.
The appellant filed a writ petition before the High
Court challenging the decision of the first respondent in
accepting the tender of the fourth respondents. But it was
rejected.
In appeal to this Court it was contended on behalf of
the appellants that (1) the first respondent which is a
public authority was bound to give effect to the most
important condition of eligibility and acceptance of the
tender by the first respondent was in violation of the
standard or norm of eligibility set up by the first
respondent and (2) had the appellant known that non-
fulfilment of the condition of eligibility would be no bar
for considering a tender he too would have competed for
obtaining the contract.
1015
The fourth respondents, on the other hand, contended
that the requirement A that the tenderer must be a
registered second grade hotlier was meaningless because the
grading is given by the Bombay City Municipal Corporation
only to hotels or restaurants and not to persons running
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them and, therefore there could be no second grade hotlier;
(2) the notice setting out the conditions of eligibility
having had no stautory force, even if there was a departure
from the standard or norm of eligibility, it was not
justiceable and the first respondent was competent to give
the conract to anyone it thought fit; and (3) the 1 Airport
Authority reserved to itself the right to reject all or any
of the tenders without assigning any reasons and, therefore,
it was competent to it to reject all the tenders or
negotiate with any person it considered fit to enter into a
contract.
^
HELD: The action of the first respondent in accepting
the tender of the fourth respondents, who did not satisfy
the standard or norm, was clearly discriminatory since it
excluded other persons similarly situate from tendering for
the contract and it was arbitrary and without reason.
Acceptance of the tender was invalid as being violative of
the equality clause of the Constitution as also of
administrative law inhibiting arbitrary action. [1056C]
(a) What paragraph ( 1 ) of the notice required was
that only a person running a registered second class hotel
or restaurant and having at least 5 years’ experience as
such should be eligible to submit the tender. The test of 1)
eligibility laid down in this paragraph was an objective
test and not a subjective one. If a person submitting the
tender did not have atleast five years’ experience of
running a second class hotel, he was eligible to submit the
tender and it would not avail him to say that though he did
not satisfy this condition he was otherwise capable of
running a second class restaurant and therefore should be
considered. This was in fact how the first respondent
understood this condition of eligibility. The first
respondent did not regard this requirement as meaningless or
unnecessary and wanted to be satisfied that the fourth
respondents had fulfilled this requirement. The fourth
respondents were neither running a second grade hotel or
restaurant nor did they have five years’ experience of
running such a hotel or restaurant. Therefore the fourth
respondents did not satisfy the condition of eligibility
laid down in paragraph(l) of the noice. [1028 B-H]
(b) It is not possible to justify the action of the
first respondent on the ground that it could have achieved
the same result by rejecting all the tenders and entering
into direct negotiations with the fourth respondents
Although there was no statutory or administrative rule
requiring the first respondent to give a contract only by
inviting tenders and that on the terms of paragraph 8 of the
tender notice, it was not bound to accept any tender, the
first respondent did not reject the tenders outright and
enter into direct negotiation with the fourth respondents
for awarding the contract. The process of . awarding a
contract by inviting tenders was not terminated or abandoned
by the first respondent by rejecting all the tenders but in
furtherance of the process the tender of the fourth
respondents was accepted by the first respondent. Nor was
the contract given to the fourth respondents as a result of
direct negotiations. [1029 D-G]
2(a) Today with tremendous expansion of welfare and
social service functions, increasing control of material and
economic resources and large scale assumption of industrial
and commercial activities by the State, the power of
1016
the executive Government to affect the lives of the people
is steadily growing. The attainment of socio-economic
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justice being a conscious end of State policy, there is a
vast and inevitable increase in the frequency with which
ordinary citizens come into relationship of direct encounter
with State power-holders. This renders it necessary to
structure and restrict the power of the executive Government
so as to prevent its arbitrary application or exercise.
Whatever be the concept of the rule of law, there is
substantial agreement in juristic thought that the great
purpose of the rule of law notion is the protection of the
individual against arbitrary exercise of power, wherever it
is found. It is unthinkable that in a democracy governed by
the rule of law the executive Government or any of its
officers should possess arbitrary power over the interests
of the individual. Every action of the executive Government
must be informed with reason and should be free from
arbitrariness. That is the very essence of the rule of law
and its bare minimal requirement. And to the application of
this principle it makes no difference whether the exercise
of the power involves affectation of some right or denial of
some privilege. [1031 F-H]
(b) To.day the Government, in a welfare State? is the
regulator and dispenser of special services and provider of
a large number of benefits. The valuables dispensed by
Government take many forms, but they all share one
characteristic. They are steadily taking the place of
traditional forms of wealth. These valuables which derive
from relationships to Government are of many kinds: leases,
licences, contracts and so forth. With the inereasing
magnitude and range of governmental functions as we move
closer to a wefare State, more and more of our wealth
consists of these new forms. Some of these forms of wealth
may be in the nature of legal rights but the large majority
of them are in the nature of privileges. But on that
account, it cannot be said that they do not enjoy any legal
protection nor can they be regarded as gratuity furnished by
the State so that the State may withhold, grant or revoke it
at its pleasure. [1032 E-H]
(c) The law has not been slow to recognize the
importance of this new kind of wealth and the need to
protect individual interest in it and with that end in view,
it has developed new forms of protection. Some interests in
Government largess, formerly regarded as privileges, have
been recognized as rights while others have been given legal
protection not only by forging procedural safeguards but
also by confining/structuring and checking Government
discretion in the matter of grant of such largess. The
discretion of the Government has been held to be not
unlimited in that the Government cannot give or withhold
largess in its arbitrary discretion or at its sweet will.
[1033 C-D]
Viterolli v. Saton 359 U.S. 535: 3 Law Ed. (Second
Series) 1012, Erusian Equipment and Chemicals Ltd. v. State
of West Bengal, [1975] 2 SCR. 674 referred to.
(d) Therefore, where the Government is dealing with the
public, whether by way of giving jobs or entering into
contracts or issuing quotas or licences or granting other
forms of largess. the Government cannot act arbitrarily at
its sweet will and, like a private individual, deal with any
person it pleases, but its action must be in conformity with
standard or norm which is not arbitrary, irrational or
irrelevant. The power or discretion of the Government in the
matter of grant of largess including award of jobs,
contracts etc., must be con fined and structured by
rational, relevant and non-discriminatory standard or norm
and if the Government departs from such standard or norm in
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any particular case or cases, the action of the Government
would be liable to be struck
1017
down. unless it can be shown by the Government that the
departure was not arbitrary, but was based on some valid
principle which in itself was non-irrational, unreasonable
or discriminatory. [1034 F-H]
(e) The Government which represents the executive
authority of the State may act through the instrumentality
or agency of natural persons or it may employ the
instrumentality or agency of JURIDICAL persons to carry out
its functions. With the advent of the welfare state the
civil service, which traditionally carried out functions of
Government through natural persons, was found inadequate to
handle the new tasks of specialised and highly technical
character. To fill the gap it became necessary to forge a
new instrumentality or administrative device for handling
these new problems and that is done by public corporations
which has become the third arm of the Government. They are
regarded as agencies of the Government. In pursuance of the
industrial policy resolution of the Government of India
corporations were created by the Government for setting up
and management of public enterprises and carrying out public
function. The corporations so created, acting as
instrumentality or agency of Government, would obviously be
subject to the same limitations in the field of
constitutional and administrative law as Government itself
though in the eye of law they would be distinct and
independent legal entities. It Government. acting,, through
its officers is subject to certain constitutional and public
law. limitations, it must follow a fortiori that Government,
though the instrumentality or agency of corporations, should
equally be subject to the same limitations. But the question
is how to determine whether a corporation is acting is
instrumentality or agency of Government. [1035A-C, F-H]
3(a ) The factors for determining whether a corporation
has become an instrumentality or agency of the Government
are: does the State give (my financial assistance and if so
that is the magnitude of such assistance ? Is there any
control of the management and policies of the corporation by
the State, and what is the nature and extent of such
control? Does the corporation enjoy any State conferred or
State protected monopoly status and whether the functions
carried out by the corporation are pubic functions closely
related to governmental functions? It is not possible to
particularise all the relevant factors but no single factor
will yield a safisfactory answer, to the question and the
court will have to consider the cumulative. effect of these
various factors and establish it by its decision on the
basis of a particularised enquiry into facts and
circumstances of each case. [1041 B-E]
(b) Sukhudev v. Bhagatram [1975] 3 S.C.R. 619 at 658
explained, Kerr v. Eneck Pratt Free Library, 149 F. 2d 212,
Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co. 419 U.S. 345, 42 L.ed. 2d
477, Evans v. Newton 382 U.S. 296; 15 L.ed. 2d 373, Pfizer
v. Ministry of Health [1964] 1 Ch. 614, New York v. United
State 326 U.S. 572, Cf. Helvering v. Gerhardt 304 U.S. 405
426, 427 referred to.
(c) Where a corporation is an instrumentality or agency
of Government it would be subject to some constitutional or
public law limitations ns Government. The rule inhibiting
arbitrary action by Government must apply equally where such
corporation is dealing with the public and it cannot act
arbitrarily and c into relationship with any person it likes
at its sweet will. Its action must be in conformity with
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some principles which meets the test of reason and
relevance. [1041 H]
9-409 SC1/79
1018
Rajasthan Electricity Board v. Mohan Lal [1967] 3
S.C.R. 377, and Sukhdev v. Bhagatram [19751 3 S.C.R. 619 at
658 followed.
Praga Tools Corporation v. C.A. Imanuel (1969] 3 S.C.R.
773, Heavy Engineering Mazdoor Union v. State of Bihar
[1969] 3 S.C.R. 995, S. L. Aggarwal v. General Manager,
Hindustan Steel Limited [1970] 3 SCR 363, Sarbhajit Tewari v
Union of lndia & Ors. [1975] 1 SCC 485; held inapplicable.
(d) It is well established that Art. 14 requires That
action must not be arbitrary and must be based on some
rational and relevant principle which is non-discriminatory.
It must not be guided by extraneous or irrelevant
considerations. The State cannot act arbitrarily in enter
into relationship, contractual or otherwise, with a third
party. Its action must conform to some standard or norm
which is rational and non-discriminatory. [1042 C]
E. P. Rayappa v. State of Tamil Nadu [1974] 2 SCR 348,
Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India [1978] 2 S.C.R. 621,
Rashbihari Panda v. State of Orissa [1969] 3 S.C.R. 374, C.
K. Achuthan v. State of Kerala [1959] S.C.R. 78, referred
to,
Trilochan Mishra v. State of orissa & ors. [1971 3
S.C.R. 153, State of Orissa v. Harinarayan Jaiswal & ors.
[1972] 2 S.C.R. 36, Rajasthan Electricity Board v. Mohan Lal
[1967] 3 S.C.R. 377, Praga Tools Corporation Dv. c. A.
Imanuel [1969] 3 S.C.R. 773, Heavy Engineering Mazdoor Union
v. State of Bihar [1969] 3 SCR, 995, S. L. Aggarwal v.
General Manager Hindustan Steel Limited [1970] 3 SCR. 363,
Sarbhajit Tewari v. Union of India & ors. [1975] 1 SCC 485,
held in applicable.
4(a) The International Airport Authority Act, 1971
empowers the Central Government to constitute an authority
called the International Air port Authority. The salient
features of the Act are: the Anthority, which is a body cor
porate having perpetual succession and a common seal,
consists of a Chairman and certain other Members who are
appointed by the Central Government. The Central Government
has power to terminate the appointment or to remove a member
from the Board of the Authority. Although the Authority has
no share capital of its own, capital needed by it for
carrying out its functions is provided wholly by the Central
Government. All non-recurring, expenditure Incurred by the
Central Government for or in connection with the purposes of
the airports upto the appointed date and declared to be
capital expenditure by the Central Government shall be
treated as capital provided by the Central Government to the
first respondent and all sums of money due to the Central
Government in relation to the airports immediately before
the appointed date shall] be deemed to be due to the first
respondent. The functions, which until the appointed date
were being carried out by the General Government, were
Transferred to the Airport Athority by virtue of s. 16. The
first respondent, according to s. 20, should pay the balance
of its annual net profits to the Central Government after
making provision for reserve funds, bad and doubtful debts,
depreciation in assets and so on. The first respondent,
under s. 21, has to submit for the approval of the Central
Government a statement of the programme of its activities
during the forthcoming financial year. Its accounts are
audited by the Comptroller and Auditor General and the
accounts Shall be forwarded to the Central Government. The
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first respondent is required to submit an account of its
activities during a financial year and this report is laid
before the Houses of Parliament by the Central Government.
The Central Government has power to divest the first
respodent temporarily from
1019
the management of any airport and direct ut to entrust such
management to any other person. Power is conferred under s.
34 on the Central Government to supersede the first
respodent under certain specified circumtances. Section 35
gives power to the Central Government to give directions in
writing to the Airport Authority on questions of policy and
the Airport Authority is bound by such directions. Section
37 empowers the Airport Authority to make regulations.
Section 39 provides that contravention of any regulation
made by the Airport Authority is punishable. [1052B-1054C]
(b) A conspectus of the provisions of the Act clearly
shows that every test l down by this Court in deciding
whether a statuority authority comes within the purview of
Art. 12 of the constitution is satisfied in the case of the
first respondent. they leave no room for doubt that it is an
instrumentality or agency of the Central Government and
falls within the definition of State. Therefore, having
regard both to the constitutional mandate of Art. 14 and the
judicially evolved rule of administrative law, the first
respendent was not entitled to act arbitrarily in accepting
the tender of the fourth respondents but was bound to
conform to the standard or norm did down in paragraph I of
tho notice inviting tenders. The standard or norm laid down
by the notice was reasonable and non-discriminatory and once
it is found that such a standard or norm is laid down, the
first respondent was not entitled to depart from it and
award the contract to the fourth respondents who did not
satisfy the condition of eligibility prescribed by standard
or norm. If none of the tenderer satisfied the condition the
first respondent could have rejected the tender and invited
fresh tenders on the basis of less stringent standard or
norm, but it could not depart from the prescribed standard
or norm. [1055 E-A]
(c) In the instant case the appellant had no real
interest in the result of the litigation. There can be no
doubt that the litigation was commenced by the appellant not
with a view to protection his own interest, but had been put
up by others for depriving the fourth respondents of the
benefit of the contract secured by them. The Writ Petition
was filed more than five months after the acceptance of the
tender and the position would have been different had tho
appellant filed it immediately after the acceptance of the
tender. The Fourth respondents have incurred a large
expenditure in making necessary arrangement under the bona
fide belief that their tender had been legally and validly
accepted. It would be most inequitous to set aside the
contract at the instance of the appellant
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISIDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 895 of
1978.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated 23-1-1978 of the High Court at Bombay in Appeal No.
234/77 arising out of Misc. Petition No. 1582/77.
Ashok H. Desai, Y. S. Chitale, Jai Chinai, P. G.
Gokhale and . R Agarwal for the Appellant. II
G. B. Pai, o. c. Mathur and D. N. Mishra for Respondent
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No. 1.
1020
F.S. Nariman, R. H. Dhebar, S. K. Dholakia, H H. Yagnik
and . V. Desai for Respondent No. 4.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J.-This appeal by special leave raises
interesting questions of law in the area of public law. What
are the constitutional obligations on the State when it
takes action in exercise of its statutory or executive
power? Is the State entitled to deal with its property in
and manner it likes or award a contract to any person it
chooses without any constitutional limitations upon it? What
are the parameters of its statutory or executive power in
the matter of awarding a contract or dealing with its
propery ? The questions fell in the sphere of both
administrative law and constitutional law and they assume
special significance in a modern welfare State which is com
mitted to egalitarian values and dedicated to the rule or
law. But these questions cannot be decided in the abstract.
They can be determined only against the back-ground of facts
and hence we shall proceed to State the facts giving rise to
the appeal.
On or about 3rd January, 1977 a notice inviting tenders
for putting up and running a second class restaurant and two
Snack bars at the International Airport Bombay was issued by
the 1st respondent Which is a corporate body constituted
under the International Airport Authority Act, 43 of 1971.
The notice stated in the clearest terms in paragraph (1)
that "Sealed tenders in the prescribed form are here by
invited from Registered IInd Class Hoteliers having at least
5 years’ experience for putting up and running a IInd Class
Restaurant and two Snack bars at this Airport for a period
of 3 years". The latest point of time upto which the tenders
could be submitted to the 1st respodent was stipulated in
Paragraph 7 of the notice to be 12 p.m. On 25th January,
1977 and it was provided that the tenders would be opened on
the same date at 12.30 hours. Paragraph (8) of the notice
made it clear that "the acceptance of the tender will rest
with the Airport Director who does not bind himself to
accept any tender and reserves to himself the right to
reject all or ally of the tenders received without assigning
any reasons therefore " There were six tenders received by
the 1st respondent in response to the notice and one of them
was from the 4th respondents of offering a licence fee of
Rs. 6666.66 per month, and the others were from Cafe Mahim,
Central Catering Service, one A. S. Irani, Cafe Seaside and
Care Excelsior offering progressively decreasing licence fee
very much lower than that offered by the 4th respondents.
The tenders were opened in the
1021
office of the Airport Director at 12.30 p.m. On 25th
January, 1977 and at that time the 4th respondents were
represented by their sole proprietor Kumaria. A. S. Irani
was present on behalf of himself, Cafe Mahim, Cafe Seaside
and Cafe Excelsior and there was one representative of
Central Catering Service. The tenders of Cafe Mahim, Central
Catering Service, Cafe Seaside and Cafe Excelsior were not
complete since they were not accompanied by the respective
income tax certificates, affidavits of immovable property
and solvency certificates, as required by cl. (9) of the
terms and conditions of the tender form. The tenders of A.
S. Irani was also not complete as it was not accompanied by
an affidavit of immovable property held by him and solvency
certificates. The only tender which was complete and fully
complied with the terms and conditions of the tender form
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was that of the 4th respondents and the offer contained in
that tender was also the highest amongst all the tenders.
Now it is necessary to point out at this stage that while
submitting their tender the 4th respondents had pointed out
in their letter dated 24th January, 1977 addressed to the
Airport Director that they had 10 years’ experience in
catering to reputed commercial houses, training centres,
banks and factories and that they were also doing
considerable outdoor catering work for various institutions.
This letter showed that the 4th respondents had experience
only of running canteens and not restaurants and it
appeared that they did not satisfy the description of
"registered IInd Class Hotelier having at least 5 years’
experience" as set out in paragraph (1) of the notice
inviting tenders. The Airport officer, therefore, by his
letter dated 15th February, 1977 requested the 4th
respondents to inform by return of post whether they were a
"registered IInd Class Hotelier having at least 5 years
experience" and to produce documentary evidence in this
respect within 7 days. The 4th respondents pointed out to
the Airport officer by their letter dated 22nd February,
1977 that they had, in addition to what was set out in their
earlier letter dated 24th January, 1977, experience of
running canteens for Phillips India Ltd. and Indian oil
Corporation and moreover, they held Eating House Licence
granted by the Bombay Municipal Corporation since 1973 and
had thus experience of 10 years in the catering line. It
appears that before this letter of the 4th respondents could
reach Airport officer, another letter dated 22nd February,
1977 was addressed by the Airport officer once again
requesting the 4th respondents to produce documentary
evidence to show if they were ’’a registered Ilnd Class
Hotelier having at least 5 years experience". The 4th
respondents thereupon addressed another letter dated 26th
February, 1977 to the Director pointing out that they had
considerable experience of catering for various reputed
commercial houses,
1022
clubs, messes and banks and They also held an Eating House
Catering Establishment (Canteen) Licence as also a licence
issued under the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act. The
4th respondents stated that their sole proprietor Kumaria
had started his career in catering line in the year 1962 at
Hotel Janpath, Delhi and gradually risen to his present
position and that he had accordingly "experience equivalent
to that of a IInd Class or even 1st Class hotelier." This
position was reiterated by the 4th respondents in a further
letter dated 3rd March, 1977 addressed to the Director. This
information given by the 4th respondents appeared to satisfy
the 1st respondent and by a letter dated 19th April, 1977
the 1st respondent accepted the tender of the 4th
respondents on the terms and conditions set out in that
letter. The 4th respondents accepted these terms and
conditions by their letter dated 23rd April, 1977 and
deposited with the 1st respondent by was of security a sum
of Rs. 39,999.96 in the form of fixed Deposit Receipts in
favour of the Ist respondent and paid to the 1st respondent
a sum of Rs. 6666.66 representing licence fee for one month
and other amounts representing water, electricity and
conservancy charges. The 4th respondents thereafter executed
and handed over to the Ist respondent an agreement in the
form attached to the tender on 1st May, 1977. The 4th
respondents also got prepared furniture, counters and
showcases as also uniforms for the staff, purchased inter
alia deep freezers, water coolers, electrical appliances,
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icecream cabinets, espresso coffee machines, crockery,
cutlery and other articles and things and also engaged the
necessary staff for the purpose of running the restaurant
and the two Snack bars But the Ist respondent could not hand
over possession of the requisite sites to the 4th
respondents, since A. S. Irani was running his restaurant
and snack bars on these sites under a previous contract with
the 1 st respondent and though that contract had come to an
end, A. S. Irani did not deliver possession of these sites
to the Ist respondent. The 4th respondents repeatedly
requested the 1st respondent and the Airport Director who is
the 2nd respondent in the appeal, to hand over possession of
the sites and pointed out to the that the 4th repondents
were incurring losses by reason of delay in delivery of
possession, but on account of the intransigence of A. S.
Irani the Ist respondent could not arrange to hand over
possession of the sites to the 4th respondents.
Meanwhile one K. S, Irani who owned Cafe Excelsior
filed Suit No. 6544 of 1977 in the City Civil Court, Bombay
against the respondents challenging the decision of the Ist
respondent to accept the tender of the 4th respondents and
took out a notice of motion for restraining the 1 st
respondent from taking any further steps pursuant to
1023
the acceptance of the tender. K. S. Irani obtained an ad-
interim injunction against the respondents but after hearing
the respondents, the City Civil Court vacated the ad-interim
injunction and dismissed the notice of motion by an order
dated 10th october, 1977. An appeal was preferred by K. S.
Irani against this order, but the appeal was dismissed by
the High Court on 19th october, 1977. Immediately
thereafter, on the same day, the Ist respondent handed over
possession of two, sites to the 4th respondents and the 4th
respondents proceeded to set up snack bars on the two sites
and started business of catering at the two snack bars.
These two sites handed over to the 4th respondents were
different from the sites occupied by A.S. Irani, because A.
S. Irani refused to vacate the sites in his occupation. So
far as the site for the restaurant was concerned, the Ist
respondent could not hand over the possession of it to the
4th respondents presumably because there was no other
appropriate site available other than the one occupied by A.
S. Irani. Since A. S. lrani refused to hand over possession
of the sites occupied by him to the Ist respondent, even
though his contract had come to an end, and continued to
carry on the business of running the restaurant and the
snack bars on these sites, the Ist respondent was
constrained to file suit No. 8032 of 1977 against A. S.
Irani in the City Civil Court at Bombay and in that suit, an
injunction was obtained by the 1st respondent restraining A.
S. Irani from running or conducting the restaurant and the
snack bars or from entering the premises save and except for
winding up the restaurant and the snack bars. A. S. Irani
preferred an appeal against the order granting the
injunction, but the appeal was rejected and ultimately a
petition for special leave to appeal to this Court was also
turned down on 31st July, 1978.
This was, however, not to be the end of the travails of
the 4th respondents. for, as soon as the appeal preferred by
K. S. Irani against the order dismissing his notice of
motion was rejected by the High Court on 19th October, 1977,
A. S. Irani filed another suit being suit No. 8161 of 1977
in the City Civil Court, Bombay on 24th October,1977 seeking
mandatory injunction for removal of the two snack bars put
up by the 4th respondents. This was one more attempt by A.
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S. Irani to prevent the 4th respondents from obtaining the
benefit of the contract awarded to them by the Ist
respondent. He, however, did not succeed in obtaining ad-
interim injunction and we are told that the notice of nation
taken out by him is still pending in the City Civil Court.
It will thus be seen that A. S. Irani failed in his
attempts to prevent the 4th respondents from obtaining the
contract and enjoying its
1024
benefit. The 4th respondents put up two snack bars on the
sites provided by the 1st respondent and started running the
two snack bars from 1 9th october? 1977. The restaurant
however, could not be put up on account of the inability of
the Ist respondent to provide appropriate site to the 4th
respondents and, therefore, the licence fee for the two
snack bars had to be settled and it was fixed at Rs. 4.50O/-
per month by mutual agreement between the parties. But it
seems that the 4th respondents were not destined to be left
in peace to run the two snack bars and soon after the
dismissal of the appeal of A. S. Irani on l9th october, 1977
and the failure of A. S. Irani to obtain an ad interim
mandatory injunction in the suit filed by him against the
1st and the 4th respondents, the appellant filed writ
petition No. 1582 of 1977 in the High Court of Bombay
challenging the decision of the 1st respondent to accept the
tender of the 4th respondents. The writ petition was moved
before a Single Judge of the High Court on 8th November,
1977 after giving prior notice to the respondent and after
hearing the parties, the learned Single Judge summarily
rejected the writ petition. The appellant preferred an
appeal to the Division Bench of the High Court against the
order rejecting the writ petition and on notice being issued
by the Division Bench, the 1st and the 4th respondents filed
their respective affidavits in reply showing cause against
the admission of the appeal. The Division Bench after
considering the affidavits and hearing the parties rejected
the appeal in limine on 21st February, 1978. The appellant
thereupon filed a petition for special leave to appeal to
this Court and since it was felt that the questions raised
in the appeal were of seminal importance, this Court granted
special leave and decided to hear the appeal at an early
date after giving a further opportunity to the parties to
file their respective affidavits. That is how the appeal has
now come before us for final hearing with full and adequate
material placed before us on behalf of both the parties.
The main contention urged on behalf of the appellant
was that in paragraph (1) of the notice inviting tenders the
1st respondent had stipulated a condition of eligibility by
providing that a person submitting a tender must be a
"registered IInd class Hotelier having at least 5 years
experience." This was a condition of eligibility to be
satisfied by every person submitting a tender and if in case
of any person, this condition was not satisfied, his tender
was ineligible for being considered. The 1st respondent,
being a State within the meaning of Art. 12 of the
Constitution or in any event a public authority, was bound
to give effect to the condition of eligibility set up by it
and was not entitled to depart from it at its own sweet will
1025
without rational justification. The 4th respondents had
experience of catering only in canteens and did not have 5
years’ experience of running a IInd class hotel or
restaurant and hence they did not satisfy the condition of
eligibility and yet the 1st respondent accepted the tender
submitted by them. This was clearly in violation of the
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standard or norm of eligibility set up by the 1 respondent
and the action of the 1st respondent in accepting the tender
of the 4th respondents was clearly invalid. Such a departure
from the standard or norm of eligibility had the effect of
denying equal opportunity to the appellant and others of
submitting their tenders and being considered for entering
into contract for putting up and running the restaurant and
two snack bars. The appellant too was not a registered 2nd
class hotelier with 5 years’ experience and was in the same
position as the 4th respondents vis-a-vis this condition of
eligibility and he also could have submitted his tender and
entered the field of consideration for award of the
contract, but he did not do so because of this condition of
eligibility which he admittedly did not satisfy. The action
of the 1st respondent in accepting the tender of the 4th
respondents had, therefore the effect of denying him
equality of opportunity in the matter of consideration for
award of the contract and hence it was unconstitutional as
being in violation of the equality clause. This contention
of the appellant was sought to be met by a threefold
argument on behalf of the 1 st and the 4th Respondents. The
first head of the argument was that grading is given by the
E Bombay City Municipal Corporation only to hotels or
restaurants and not persons running them and hence there can
be a 2nd grade hotel or restaurant but not a 2nd grade
hotelier and the requirement in paragraph (1) of the notice
that a tenderer must be a registered 2nd grade hotelier was
therefore a meaningless requirement and it could not be
regarded as laying clown any condition of eligibility. It
was also urged that in any event what paragraph (] ) of the
notice required was not that a person tendering must have 5
years’ experience of running a 2nd grade hotel, but he
should have sufficient experience to be able to run a 2nd
grade hotel and the 4th respondents were fully qualified in
this respect since they had over 10 years’ experience in
catering to canteens of well known companies, clubs and
banks. It was further contended in the alternative that
paragraph (8) of the notice clearly provided that the
acceptance of the tender- would rest with the Airport
Director who did not bind himself to accept any tender and
reserved to himself the right to reject all or any of the
tenders without assigning any reasons therefor and it was,
therefore, competent to the 1st respondent to reject all the
tenders and to nogotiate with any person it considered fit
to enter
1026
into a contract and this is in effect and substance what the
1st respondent did when he accepted the tender of the 4th
respondents. The second head of argument was that paragraph
(1) of the notice setting out the condition of eligibility
had no statutory force nor was it issued under any
administrative rules and, therefore, even if there was any
departure from the standard or norm of eligibility set out
in that paragraph, it was not justiciable and did not
furnish any cause of action to the appellant. It was
competent to the 1st respondent to give the contract to any
one it thought fit and it was not bound by the standard or
norm of eligibility set out in paragraph (l) of the notice.
It was submitted that in any event the appellant had no
right to complain that the 1st respondent had given the
contract to the 4th respondents in breach of the condition
of eligibility laid down in paragraph (1) of the notice. And
lastly, under the third head of argument, it was submitted
on behalf. Of the 1st and the 4th respondents that in any
view of the matter, the writ petition of the appellant was
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liable to be rejected in the exercise of its discretion by
the Court, since the appellant had no real interest but was
merely a nominee of A. S. Irani who had been putting up one
person after another to start litigation with a view to
preventing the award of the contract to the 4th respondents.
The appellant was also guilty of laches and delay in filing
the writ petition and the High Court was justified in
rejecting the writ petition in limine particularly in view
of the fact that during the period between the date of
acceptance of the tender and the date of filing of the writ
petition, the 4th respondents had spent an aggregate sum of
about Rs. 1,25,000/- in making arrangements for putting up
the restaurant and two snack bars. These were the rival
contentions urged on behalf of the parties and we shall now
proceed to discuss them in the order in which we have set
them out.
Now it is clear from paragraph (1) of the notice that
tenders were invited only from "registered 2nd Class
hoteliers having at least 5 years’ experience". It is only
if a person was a registered 2nd Class hotelier having at
least 5 years’ experience that he could, on the terms of
paragraph (1) of the notice, submit a tender. Paragraph (1)
of the notice prescribed a condition of eligibility which
had to be satisfied by every person submitting a tender and
if, in a given case, a person submitting a tender did not
satisfy this condition, his tender was not eligible to be
considered. Now it is true that the terms and conditions of
the tender form did not prescribe that the tenderer must be
a registered IInd Class hotelier having at least 5 years’
experience nor was any such stipulation to be found in the
form c f the agreement
1027
annexed to the tender but the notice inviting tenders
published in the newspapers clearly stipulated that tenders
may be submitted only by registered llnd Class hoteliers
having at least 5 years’ experience and this tender notice
was also included amongst the documents handed over to
prospective tenderers when they applied for tender forms.
Now the question is, what is the meaning of the expression
"registered Ilnd Class hotelier", what category of persons
fall within the meaning of this description ? This is a
necessary enquiry in order to determine whether the 4th
respondents were eligible to submit a tender. It is clear
from the affidavits and indeed there was no dispute about it
that different grades are given by the Bombay City Municipal
Corporation to hotels and restaurants and, therefore, there
may be a registered Ilnd Class Hotel but no such grades are
given to persons running hotels and restaurants and hence it
would be inappropriate to speak of a person as a registered
llnd Class hoteIier. But on that account would it be right
to reject the expression "registered IInd Class hotelier" as
meaningless and deprive paragraph (1) of the notice of any
meaning and effect. We do not think such a view would be
justified by any canon of construction. It is a well settled
rule of interpretation applicable alike to documents as to
statutes that, save for compelling necessity, the court
should not be prompt to ascribe superfluity to the language
of a document "and should be rather at the outset inclined
to suppose every word intended to have some effect or be of
some use". To reject words as insensible should be the last
resort of judicial interpretation, for it is an elementary
rule based on common sense that no author of a formal
document intended to be acted upon by the others should be
presumed to use words without a meaning. The court must, as
far as possible, avoid a construction which would render the
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words used by the author of the document meaningless and
futile or reduce silence any part of the document and make
it altogether inapplicaple. Now, here the expression used in
paragraph (1) of the notice was "registered IInd Class
hotelier" and there can be no doubt that by using, this
expression the Ist respondent intended to delineate a
certain category of persons who alone should be eligible to
submit a tender. The Ist respondent was not acting aimlessly
or insensibly in insisting upon this requirement nor was it
indulging, in a meaningless and futile exercise. It had a
definite purpose in view when it laid down this condition of
eligibility in paragraph (1) of the notice. It is true that
the phraseology used by the Ist respondent to express its
intention was rather inapt but it is obvious from the
context that the expression "registered llnd Class hotelier"
was loosely used to denote a person conducting or running a
IInd Class hotel or restaurant. It may be ungrammatical but
it docs not offend common-sense to describe a
1028
person running a registered IInd grade hotel as a registered
IInd grade hotelier. This meaning is quite reasonable and
does not do any violence to the language and makes sense of
the provision contained in paragraph (1) of the notice. We
must, in the circumstances, hold that, on a proper
construction, what paragraph (1) of the notice required was
that only a person running a registered llnd Class hotel or
restaurant and having at least 5 years’ experience as such
should be eligible to submit a tender. This was a condition
of eligibility and it is difficult to see how this condition
could be said to be satisfied by any person who did not have
five years’ experience of running a IInd Class hotel or
restaurant. The test of eligibility laid down was an
objective test and not a subjective one. What the condition
of eligibility required has that the person submitting a
tender must have 5 years’ experience of running a II Class
hotel, as this would ensure by an objective test that he was
capable of running a Il Class restaurant and it should not
be left to the Ist respondent to decide in its subjective
discretion that the person tendering was capable of running
such a restaurant. If therefore, a person submitting a
tender did not have at least 5 years’ experience of running
a II Class hotel, he was not eligible to submit the tender
and it would not avail him to say that though he did not
satisfy this condition, he was otherwise capable of running
a IInd Class restaurant and should, therefore, be
considered. This was in fact how the 1 st respondent itself
understood this condition of eligibility. When the 4th
respondents submitted their tender along with Their Letter
dated 24th January, 1977, it appeared from the documents
submitted by the 4th respondents that they did not have 5
years’ experience of running a II Class restaurant. The 1st
respondent by its letter dated l5th February 1977 required
the 4th respondents to produce documentary evidence to show
that they were "registered II Class hotelier having at least
5 years’ experience." The 1st respondent did not regard this
requirement of eligibility as meaningless or unnecessary and
wanted to be satisfied that the 4th respondent did fulfil
this requirement. Now, unfortunately for the 4th
respondents, the had over lO years’ experience of running
can teens but at the date when they submitted their tender,
they cannot running a II grade hotel or restaurant nor did
they have 5 years’ experience of running such a hotel or
restaurant. Even if the experience of the 4th respondents in
the catering line were taken into account from 1962 onwards,
it would not cover a total period of more than 4 years 2
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months so far as catering experience in llnd Grade hotels
and restaurants is concerned. The 4th respondents thus did
not satisfy the condition of eligibility laid down in
paragraph (1) of the notice and in fact this was implidely
conceded by
1029
the 4th respondents in their letter dated 26th February,
1977 where A they stated that they had "experience
equivalent to that of a 2nd class or even 1st class
hotelier." The 4th respondents were, accordingly, not
eligible for submitting a tender and the action of the 1st
respondent in accepting their tender was in contravention of
paragraph (1) of the notice.
It was suggested on behalf of the 1st and the 4th
respondents that there was nothing wrong in the 1st
respondent giving the contract to the 4th respondents since
it was competent to the 1st respondent to reject all the
tenders received by it and to negotiate directly with The
4th respondents for giving them the contract and it made no
difference that instead of following this procedure, which
perhaps might have resulted in the 4th respondents offering
a smaller licence fee and the 1 st respondent suffering a
loss in the process, true 1 st respondent accepted The
tender of the 4th respondents. We do not think there is any
force in this argument. It is true that there was no
statutory or administrative rule requiring the 1st
respondent to give a contract only by inviting tenders and
hence the 1st respondent was entitled to reject all the
tenders and, subject to the constitutional norm laid down in
Art 14, negotiate directly for entering into a contract.
Paragraph (8) of the notice also made it clear that the 1st
respondent was not bound to accept any tender and could
reject all the tenders received by it. But here the 1st
respondent did not reject the tenders outright and enter
into direct negotiations with the 4th respondents for
awarding the contract. The process of awarding a contract by
inviting tenders was not terminated or abandoned by the 1st
respondent by rejecting all the tenders but in furtherance
of the process, the tender of the 4th respondents was
accepted by the 1st respondent. The contract was not given
to the 4th respondents as a result of direct negotiations.
Tenders were invited and out of the tenders received, the
one submitted by the 4th respondents was accepted and the
contract was given to them. It is, therefore not possible to
justify the action of the 1st respondent on the ground that
the 1st respondent could have achieved the same result by
rejecting all the tenders and entering into direct
negotiations with the 4th respondents.
That takes us to the next question whether the
acceptance of the tender of the 4th respondents was invalid
and liable to be set aside at the instance of the appellant.
It was contended on behalf GI the 1st and the 4th
respondents that the appellant had no locus to maintain the
writ petition since no tender was submitted by him and he
was a mere stranger. The argument was that if the appellant
1030
did not enter the field of competition by submitting a
tender, what did it matter to him whose tender was accepted;
what grievance could he have if the tender of the 4th
respondents was wrongly accepted. A person whose tender was
rejected might very well complain that the tender of someone
else was wrongly accepted, but it was submitted, how could a
person who never tendered and who was at no time in the
field, put forward such a complaint ? This argument, in our
opinion, is mis-conceived and cannot be sustained for a
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moment. The grievance of the appellant, it may be noted, was
not that his tender was rejected as a result of improper
acceptance of the tender of the 4th respondents, but that he
was differentially treated and denied equality of
opportunity with the 4th respondents in submitting a tender.
His complaint was that if it were known that non-fulfilment
of the condition of eligibility would be no bar to
consideration of a tender, he also would have submitted a
tender and competed for obtaining a contract. But he was
precluded from submitting a tender and entering the field of
consideration by reason of the condition of eligibility,
while so far as the 4th respondents were concerned, their
tender was entertained and accepted even though they did not
satisfy the condition of eligibility and this resulted in
inequality of treatment which was constitutionally
impermissible. This was the grievance made by the appellant
in the writ petition and there can be no doubt that if this
grievance were well founded, the appellant would be entitled
to maintain the writ petition. The question is whether this
grievance was justified in law and the acceptance of the
tender of the 4th respondents was vitiated by any legal
infirmity.
Now, there can be no doubt that what paragraph (1) of
the notice prescribed was a condition of eligibility which
was required to be satisfied by every person submitting a
tender. The condition of eligibility was that the person
submitting a tender must be conducting or running a
registered 2nd class hotel or restaurant and he must have at
least 5 years’ experience as such and if he did not satisfy
this condition of eligibility his tender would not be
eligible for consideration. This was the standard or norm of
eligibility laid down by the 1 st respondent and since the
4th respondents did not satisfy this standard or norm, it
was not competent to the 1st respondent to entertain the
tender of the 4th respondents. It is a well settled rule of
administrative law that an executive authority must be
rigorously held to the standards by which it professes its
actions to be judged and it must scrupulously observe those
Standards on pain of invalidation of an act in violation of
them. This rule was enunciat-
1031
ed by Mr Justice Frankfurter in Viteralli v. Seton(l) where
the learned Judge said:
"An executive agency must be rigorously held to
the standards by which it professes its action to be
judged. Accordingly, if dismissal from employment is
based on a define(l procedure, even though generous
beyond the requirement that bind such agency, that
procedure must be scrupulously observed. This
judicially evolved rule of administrative law is now
firmly established and, if I may add, rightly so. He
that takes the procedural sword shall perish with the
sword.
This Court accepted the rule as valid and applicable in
India in A. S. Ahuwalia v. Punjab(2) and in subsequent
decision given in Sukhdev v. Bhagatram,(3) Mathew, J.,
quoted the above-referred observations of Mr. Justice
Frankfurter with approval. It may be noted that this rule,
though supportable also as emanation from Article 14, does
not rest merely on that article. It has an independent
existence apart from Article 14. It is a rule of
administrative law which has been judicially evolved as a
check against exercise of arbitrary power by the executive
authority. If we turn to the judgment of Mr. Justice
Frankfurter and examine it, we find that he has not sought
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to draw support for the rule from the equality clause of the
United States Constitution, but evolved it purely as a rule
of administrative law. Even in England, the recent trend in
administrative law is in that direction as is evident from
what is stated at pages 540-41 in Prof. Wade’s
Administrative Law 4th edition. There is no reason why we
should hesitate to adopt this rule as a part of our
continually expanding administrative law. To- day with
tremendous expansion of welfare and social service
functions, increasing control of material and economic
resources and large scale assumption of industrial and
commercial activities by the State, the power of the
executive Government to affect the lives of the people is
steadily growing. The attainment of socio-economic justice
being a conscious end of State policy, there is a vast and
inevitable increase in the frequency with which ordinary
citizens come into relationship of direct encounter with
State power-holders. This renders it necessary to structure
and restrict the power of the executive Government so as to
prevent its arbitrary application or
(1) 359 U. S. 535: 3 Law.Ed. (Second series) 1012
(2) [1975] 3. S. C. R. 82.
(3) [1975] 3. S. C. R. 619.
1032
exercise. Whatever be the concept of the rule of law,
whether it be the meaning given by Dicey in his "The Law of
the Constitution" or the definition given by Hayek in his
"Road to Serfdom’ and ’Constitution of liberty" or the
exposition set-forth by Harry Jones in his "The Rule of Law
and the Welfare State", there is, as pointed out by Mathew,
J., in his article on "The Welfare State, Rule of Law and
Natural Justice" in "democracy Equality and Freedom,"
"substantial agreement is in justice thought that the great
purpose of the rule of law notion is the protection of the
individual against arbitrary exercise of power, wherever it
is found". It is indeed unthinkable that in a democracy
governed by the rule of law the executive Government or any
of its officers should possess arbitrary power over the
interests of the individual. Every action of the executive
Government must be informed with reason and should be free
from arbitrariness. That is the very essence of the rule of
law and its bare minimal requirement. And to the application
of this principle it makes no difference whether the
exercise of the power involves affection of some right or
denial of some privilege.
To-day the Government, is a welfare State, is the
regulator and dispenser of special services and provider of
a large number of benefits, including jobs contracts,
licences, quotas, mineral rights etc. The Government pours
forth wealth, money, benefits, services, contracts, quotas
and licences. The valuables dispensed by Government take
many forms, but they all share one characteristic. They are
steadily taking the place of traditional forms of wealth.
These valuables which derive from relationship to Government
are of many kinds. They comprise social security benefits,
cash grants for political sufferers and the whole scheme of
State and local welfare. Then again, thousands of people are
employed in the State and the Central Governments and local
authorities. Licences are required before one can engage in
many kinds of business or work. The power of giving licences
means power to withhold them and this gives control to the
Government or to the agents of Government on the lives of
many people. Many individuals and many more businesses enjoy
largess in the form of Government contracts. These contracts
often resemble subsidies. It is virtually impossible to lose
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money on them and many enterprises are set up primarily to
do business with Government. Government owns and controls
hundreds of acres of pubic Land valuable for mining and
other purposes. These resources are available for
utilisation by private corporations and individuals by way
of lease or licence. All these mean growth in the Government
largess and with the increasing
1033
magnitude and range of governmental functions as we move
closer to a welfare State, more and more of our wealth
consists of these new forms. Some of these forms of wealth
may be in the nature of legal rights but the large majority
of them are in the nature of privileges But on that account,
can it be said that they do not enjoy any legal protection ?
Can they be regarded as gratuity furnished by the State so
that the State may withhold, grant or revoke it at its
pleasure ? Is the position of the Government in this respect
the same as that of a private giver? We do not think so. The
law has not been slow to recognise the importance of this
new kind of wealth and the need to protect individual
interest in it and with that end in view, it has developed
new forms of protection. some interests in Government
largess, formerly regarded as privileges, have been
recognised as rights while others have been given legal
protection not only by forging procedural safeguards but
also by confinding/structuring and checking Government
discretion in the matter of grant of such largess. The
discretion of the Government has been held to be not
unlimited in that the Government cannot give or withhold
largess in its arbitrary discretion or at its sweet will. It
is insisted, as pointed out by Prof. Reich in an especially
stimulating article on "The New Property" in 73 Yale Law
Journal 733, "that Government action be based on standards
that are not arbitrary or unauthorised." "The Government
cannot be permitted to say that it will give jobs or enter
into contracts or issue quotas or licences only in favour of
those having grey hair or belonging to a particular
political party or professing a particular religions faith.
The Government is still the Government when it acts in the
matter of granting largess and it cannot act arbitrarily. It
does not stand in the same position as a private individual
We agree with the observations of Mathew, J., in V.
Punnan Thomas v. State of Kerala(1) that: "The Government is
not and should not be as free as an individual in selecting
the recepients for its largess. Whatever its activity, the
Government is still the Government and will be subject to
restraints, inherent in its position in a democratic
society. A democratic Government cannot lay down arbitrary
and capricious standards for the choice of persons with whom
alone it will deal". The same point was made by this court
in Erusian Equipment and Chemicals Ltd. v. State of West
Bengal(2) where the question was whether black-listing of a
person without
(1) AIR 1969 Kerala 81.
(2) [1975] 2 S.C.R. 674.
10-409 SCI/79
1034
giving him an opportunity to be heard was bad ? Ray, C. J.,
speaking on behalf of himself and his colleagues on the
Bench pointed out that black-listing on a person not only
affects his reputation which is in Poundian terms an
interest both of personality and substance, but also denies
him equality in the matter of entering into contract with
the Government and it cannot, therefore, be supported
without fair hearing. It was argued for the Government that
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no person has a right to enter into contractual relationship
with the Government and the Government, like any other
private individual, has the absolute right to enter into
contract with any one it pleases. But the Court, speaking
through the learned Chief Justice, responded that the
Government is not like a private individual who can pick and
choose the person with whom it will deal, but the Government
is still a Government when it enters into contract or when
it is administering largess and it cannot, without adequate
reason, exclude any person from dealing with it or take away
largess arbitrarily. The learned Chief Justice said that
when the Government is trading with the public, "the
democratic form of Government demands equality and absence
of arbitrariness and discrimination in such transactions.
The activities of the Government have a public element and,
therefore, there should be fairness and equality. The State
need not enter into any contract with anyone, but if it does
so, it must do so fairly without discrimination and without
unfair procedure." This proposition would hold good in all
cases of dealing by the Government with the public, where
the interest sought to be protected is a privilege. It must,
therefore, be taken to be the law that where the Government
is dealing with the public, whether by way of giving jobs or
entering into contracts or issuing quotas or licences or
granting other forms of largess, the Government cannot act
arbitrarily at its sweet will and, like a private
individual, deal with any person it pleases, but its action
must be in conformity with standard or norms which is not
arbitrary, irrational or irrelevant. The power or discretion
of the Government in the matter of grant of largess
including award of jobs, contracts, quotas, licences etc.,
must be confined and structured by rational, relevant and
non-discriminatory standard or norm and if the Government
departs from standard or norm in any particular case or
cases, the action of the Government would be liable to be
struck down, unless it can be shown by the Government that
the departure was not arbitrary, but was based on some valid
principle which in itself was not irrational, unreasonable
or discriminatory.
Now, it is obvious that the Government which represents
the executive authority of the State, may act through the
instrumentality
1035
Or agency of natural persons or it may employ the
instrumentality or agency of juridical persons to carry out
its functions. In the early days, when the Government had
limited functions, it could operate effectively through
natural persons constituting its civil service and they were
found adequate to discharge governmental functions, which
were of traditional vintage. But as the tasks of the
Government multiplied the advent of the welfare State, it
began to be increasingly felt that the framework of civil
service was not sufficient to handle the new tasks which
were often of specialised and highly technical character.
The inadequacy of the civil service to deal with these new
problems came to be realised and it became necessary to
force a new instrumentality or administrative device for
handling these new problems. It was in these circumstances
and with a view to supplying this administrative need that
the public corporation came into being as the third arm of
the Government. As early as 1819 the Supreme Court of the
United States in Mac Cullough v. Maryland(1) held that the
Congress has power to charter corporations as incidental to
or in aid of governmental functions and, as pointed out by
Mathew, J., in Sukhdev v. Bhagat Ram (supra) such federal
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 38
corporations would ex-hypothesi be agencies of the
Government. In Great Britain too, the policy of public
administration through separate corporations was gradually
evolved and the conduct of basic industries through giant
corporations has now become a permanent feature of public
life. So far as India is concerned, the genesis of the
emergence of corporations as instrumentalities or agencies
of Government is to be found in the Government of India
Resolution on Industrial Policy dated 6th April, 1948 where
it was stated inter alia that "management of State
enterprises will as a rule be through the medium of public
corporation under tile statutory control of the Central
Government who will assume such powers as may be necessary
to ensure this." It was in pursuance of the policy envisaged
in this and subsequent resolutions on Industrial Policy.
that corporations were created by Government for setting up
and management of public enterprises and carrying out other
public functions. Ordinarily these functions could have been
carried out by Government departmentally through its service
personnel, but the instrumentality or agency of the
corporations was resorted to in these cases having regard to
the nature of the task to be performed. The corporations
acting as instrumentality or agency of Government would
obviously be subject to the same limitations in the field of
constitutional and administrative law as Government itself,
though
(1) 4 Wheat 315
1036
in the eye of the law, they would be distinct and
independent legal entities. If Government acting through its
officers is subject to certain constitutional and public law
limitations, it must follow a fortiori that Government
acting through the instrumentality or agency of corporations
should equally be subject to the same limitations. But the
question is how to determine whether a corporation is acting
as instrumentality or agency of Government. It is a question
not entirely free from difficulty.
A corporation may be created in one of two ways. It may
be either established by statute or incorporated under a law
such as the Companies Act 1956 or the Societies Registration
Act 1860. Where a Corporation is wholly controlled by
Government not only in its policy making but also in
carrying out the functions entrusted to it by the law
establishing it or by the Charter of its incorporation,
there can be no doubt that it would be an instrumentality or
agency of Government. But ordinarily where a corporation is
established by statute, it is autonomous in its working,
subject only to a provision, often times made, that it shall
be bound by any directions that may be issued from time to
time by Government in respect of policy matter. So also a
corporation incorporated under law is managed by a board of
directors or committee of management in accordance with the
provisions of the statute under which it is incorporated.
When does such a corporation become an instrumentality or
agency of Government ? Is the holding of the entire share
capital of the Corporation by Government enough or is it
necessary that in addition, there should be a certain amount
of direct control exercised by Government and, if so, what
should be the nature of such control ? Should the functions
which the corporation is charged to carry out possess any
particular characteristic or feature, or is the nature or
the functions immaterial ? Now, one thing is clear that if
the entire share capital of the corporation is held by
Government, it would go a long way towards indicating that
the corporation is an instrumentality or agency of
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Government. But, as is quite often the case, a corporation
established by statute may have no shares or shareholders,
in which case it would be a relevant factor to consider
whether the administration is in the hands of a board of
directors appointed by Government, though this consideration
also may not be determinative, because even while the
directors are appointed by Government, they may be
completely free from governmental control in the discharge
of their functions. What then are the tests to determine
whether a corporation established by statute or incorporated
under law is an instrumentality or agency of Government ? It
is not possible to formulate an all-
1037
inclusive or exhaustive test which would adequately answer
this question ’there is no cut and dried formula, which
would provide the correct division of corporations into
those which are instrumentalities or agencies of Government
and those which are not.
The analogy of the concept of State action as developed
in the United States may not, however, be altogether out of
place while considering this question. The decisions of the
court in the United States seem to suggest that a private
agency, if supported by extraordinary assistance given by
the State, may be subject to the same constitutional
limitations as the State. Of course, it may be pointed out
that "the State’s general common law and statutory structure
under which its people carry on their private affairs, own
property and contract, each enjoying equality in terms of
legal capacity, is not such State assistance as would
transform private conduct into State action". But if
extensive and unusual financial assistance is given and the
purpose of the Government in giving such assistance
coincides with the purpose for which the corporation is
expected to use the assistance and such purpose is if public
character, it may be a relevant circumstance supporting an
extensive that the corporation is an instrumentality or
agency of Government. The leading case on the subject in the
United States is Kerr v. Eneck Pratt Free Library(1). The
Library system in question in this case was established by
private donation in 1882, but by 1944, 99 per cent of the
system’s budget was supplied by the city, title to the
library property was held by the city, employees there paid
by the city payroll officer and a high degree of budget
control was exercised or available to the city government.
On these facts the Court of Appeal required the trustees
managing the system to abandon a discriminatory admission
policy for its library training courses. It will be seen
that in this case there was considerable amount of State
control of the library system in addition to extensive
financial assistance and it is difficult to say whether, in
the absence of such control it would have been possible to
say that the action of the trustees constituted State
action. Thomas P. Lewis has expressed the opinion in his
article on "The meaning of State Action" (60 Colombia Law
Review 1083) that in this case "it is extremely unlikely
that absence of public control would have changed the result
as long as 99% of the budget of a nominally private
institution was provided by government. Such extensive
governmental support should be sufficient identification
with the Government to subject the institution to the
provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment".
(1) 149 F. 2d. 212.
1038
It may, therefore, be possible to say that where the
financial assistance of the State is so much as to meet
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almost entire expenditure of the corporation, it would
afford some indication of the corporation being
impregegnated with governmental character. But where
financial assistance is not so extensive, it may not by
itself, without anything more render the corporation an
instrumentality or agency of government, for there are many
private institutions which are in receipt of financial
assistance from the State and merely on that account, they
cannot be classified as State agencies. Equally a mere
finding of some control by the State would not be
determinative of the question "since a State has
considerable measure of control under its police power over
all types of business operations". But ’a finding of State
financial support plus an unusual degree of control over the
management and policies might lead one to characteristic an
operation as State action" vide Sukhdev v. Bhagatram(1). So
also the existence of deep and pervasive State control may
afford an indication that the Corporation is a State agency
or instrumentality. It may also be a relevant factor to
consider whether the corporation enjoys monopoly status
which is State conferred or State protected. There can be
little doubt that State conferred or State protected
monopoly status would be highly relevant in assessing the
aggregate weight of the corporation’s ties to the State.
Vide the observations of Douglas, J., in Jackson v.
Metropolitan Edison Co.(2)
There is also another factor which may be regarded as
having a bearing on this issue and it is whether the
operation of the corporation is an important public
function. It has been held in the United States in a number
of cases that the concept of private action must yield to a
conception of State action where public functions are being
per formed. Vide Arthur S. Miller: "The Constitutional Law
of the Security State" (10 Stanford Law Review 620 at 664).
It was pointed out by Douglas, J., in Evans v. Newton(3)
that "when private individuals or groups are endowed by the
State with powers or functions governmental in nature, they
become agencies or instrumentalities of the State". Of
course, with the growth of the welfare State, it is very
difficult to define what functions are governmental and what
are not, because, as pointed out by Villmer, L.J., in Pfizer
v.Ministry of Health,(4) there has been, since mid-Victorian
times, "a revolution in political thought and a totally
different conception prevails today as to what is and what
is not within the functions of Government".
(I) [1975] 3 S. C. R. 619 at 658.
(2) 419 U. S. 345: 42 L. ed. 2nd 477
(3) 382 U S. 296: 15 L. ed 2nd 373.
(4) [1964] I Ch. 614.
1039
Douglas, J., also observed to the same effect in New York v.
United States(1): " A State’s project is as much a
legitimate governmental activity whether it is traditional
or akin to private enterprise, or conducted for profit." Cf.
Helverillg v. Gerhardt(2). A State may deem it as essential
to its economy that it own and operate a railroad, a mill,
or an irrigation system as it does to own and operate
bridges, street lights, or a sewage disposal plant. What
might have been viewed in an earlier day as an improvident
or even dangerous extension of state activities may today be
deemed indispensable. It may be noted that besides the so
called traditional functions, the modern State operates a
multitude of public enterprises and discharges a host of
other public functions. If the functions of the corporation
are of public importance and closely related to governmental
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functions, it would be a relevant factor in classifying the
corporation as an instrumentality or agency of Government.
This is precisely what was pointed out by Mathew, J., in
Sukhdev v. Bhagatram (supra) where the learned Judge said
that "institutions engaged in matters of high public
interest or performing public functions are by virtue of the
nature of the functions performed government agencies.
Activities which are too fundamental to the society are by
definition too important not to be considered government
functions."
This was one of the principal tests applied by the
United States Supreme Court in Marsh v. Alabama(3) for
holding that a corporation which owned a Company town was
subject to the same constitutional limitations as the State.
This case involved the prosecution of Marsh, a member of the
Johevah’s witnesses sect, under a state trespass statute for
refusing to leave the side walk of the company town where
she was distributing her religious pamphlets. She was fined
$ 5/- and aggrieved by her conviction she carried the matter
right upto the Supreme Court contending successfully that by
reason of the action of the corporation her religious
liberty had been denied. The Supreme Court held that
administration of private property such as a town, though
privately carried on, was, nevertheless, in the nature of a
public function and that the private rights of the
corporation must, therefore, be exercised within
constitutional limitations and the conviction for trespass
was reversed. The dominant theme of the majority opinion
written by Mr. Justice Black was that the property of the
corporation used as a town not recognisably different from
other towns, lost its identification as purely private
property. It was said that a town may
(l) 326 U.S. 572.
(2) 304 U.S. 405, 426, 427.
(3) 326 U.S. 501: 19 L. ed. 265.
1040
be privately owned and managed but that does not necessarily
aIlow the corporation to treat it as if it was wholly in the
private sector and the exercise of constitutionally
protected rights on the public ,street of a company town
could not be denied by the owner. "The more an owner, for
his advantage, opens up his property for use by the public
in general, the more do his rights become circumscribed by
the statutory and constitutional rights of those who use it.
. . Thus, the owners of privately held bridges, ferries,
turnpikes and railroads may not operate them as freely as a
farmer does his farm. Since these facilities are built and
operated primarily to benefit the public and since their
operation is essentially a public function, it is subject to
state regulation". Mr. Justice Frankfurter, concurring,
reduced the case to simpler terms. He found in the realm of
civil liberties the need to treat a town, private or not, as
a town. The function exercised by the corporation was in the
nature of municipal function and it was, therefore, subject
to the constitutional limitations placed upon State action.
We find that the same test of public or governmental
character of the function was applied by the Supreme Court
of the United States in Evans v. Newton (supra) and Smith v.
Allwight.(1) But the decisions show that even this test of
public or governmental character of the function is not easy
of application and does not invariably lead to the correct
inference because the range of governmental activity is
broad and varied and merely because an activity may be such
as may legitimately be carried on by Government, it does not
mean that a corporation, which is otherwise a private
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entity, would be an instrumentality or agency of Government
by reason of carrying on such activity. In fact, it is
difficult to distinguish between governmental functions and
non-governmental functions. Perhaps the distinction between
governmental and non-governmental functions is not valid any
more in a social welfare State where the laissez faire is an
outmoded concept and Herbert Spencer’s social statics has no
place. The contrast is rather between governmental
activities which are private and private activities which
are governmental. (Mathew, J. Sukhdev v. Bhagatram (supra)
at p. 652). But the public nature of the function, if
impregnated with governmental character or "tied or entwined
with Government" or fortified by some other additional
factor, may render the corporation an instrumentality or
agency of Government. Specifically, if a department of
Government is transferred to a corporation, it would be a
strong factor supportive of this inference.
(1) 321 U. S. 649.
1041
It will thus be seen that there are several factors
which may have to be considered in determining whether a
corporation is an agency or instrumentality of Government.
We have referred to some of these factors and they may be
summarised as under: whether there is any financial
assistance given by the State, and if so, what is the
magnitude of such assistance whether there is any other form
of assistance, given by the State, and if so, whether it is
of the usual kind or it is extraordinary, whether there is
any control of the management and policies of the
corporation by the State and what is the nature and extent
of such control, whether the corporation enjoys State
conferred or State protected monopoly status and whether the
functions carried out by the corporation are public
functions closely related to governmental functions. This
particularisation of relevant factors is however not
exhaustive and by its very nature it cannot be, because with
increasing assumption of new tasks, growing complexities of
management and administration and the necessity of
continuing adjustment in relations between the corporation
and Government calling for flexibility, adapt ability and
innovative skills, it is not possible to make an exhaustive
enumeration of the tests which would invariably and in all
cases provide an unfailing answer to the question whether a
corporation is governmental instrumentality or agency.
Moreover even amongst these factors which we have described,
no one single factor will yield a satisfactory answer to the
question and the court will have to consider the cumulative
effect of these various factors and arrive at its decision
on the basis of a particularised inquiry into the facts and
circumstances of each case. "the dispositive question in any
stale action case," as pointed out by Douglas, J., in
Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Company (supra) "is not
whether any single fact or relationship presents a
sufficient degree of state involvement, but rather whether
the aggregate of all relevant factors compels a finding of
state responsibility." It is not enough to examine seriatim
each of the factors upon which a corporation is claimed to
be an instrumentality or agency of Government and to dismiss
each individually as being insufficient to support a finding
of that effect. It is the aggregate or cumulative affect of
all the relevant factors that is controlling. G
Now, obviously where a corporation is an
instrumentality or agency of Government, it would, in the
exercise of its power or discretion, be subject to the same
constitutional or public law limitations as Government. The
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rule inhibiting arbitrary action by Government which we have
discussed above must apply equally where such corporation is
dealing with the public, whether by way of giving jobs or
entering into contracts or otherwise, and it cannot act
arbitrarily
1042
and enter into relationship with any person it likes at its
sweetwill, but its action must be in conformity with some
principle which meets the test of reason and relevance.
This rule also flows directly from the doctrine of
equality embodied in Art. 14. It is now well settled as a
result of the decisions of this Court hl E. P. Rayappa v.
State cf Tamil Nadu(l) and Maneka Gandhi v. Union of
India(2) that Article 14 strikes at arbitrariness in State
action and ensures fairness and equality of treatment. It
requires that State action must not be arbitrary but must be
based on some rational and relevant principle which is non-
discriminatory: it must not be guided by any extraneous or
irrelevant considerations, because that would be denial of
equality. The principle of reasonableness and rationality
which is legally as well as philosophically an essential
element of equality or non-arbitrariness is protected by
Article 14 and it must characterise every State action,
whether it be under authority of law or in exercise of
executive power without making of law. The State cannot,
therefore act arbitrarily in entering into relationship,
contractual or otherwise with a third party, but its action
must conform to some standard or norm which is rational and
non-discriminatory. This principle was recognised and
applied by a Bench of this Court presided over by Ray, C.J.,
in Erusian Equipment and Chemicals v. State of West Bengal
(supra) where the learned Chief Justice pointed out that
"the State can carry on executive function by making a law
or without making a law. The exercise of such powers and
functions in trade by the State is subject to Part III of
the Constitution. Article 14 speaks of equality before the
law and equal protection of the laws. Equality of
opportunity should apply to matters of public contracts. The
State has the right to trade. The State has there the duty
to observe equality. An ordinary individual can choose not
to deal with any person The Government cannot choose to
exclude persons by discrimination. The order of black-
listing has the effect of depriving a person of equality of
opportunity in the matter of public contract. A person who
is on the approved list is unable to enter into advantageous
relations with the Government because of the order of
blacklisting.... A citizen has a right to claim equal
treatment to enter into a contract which may be proper,
necessary and essential to his lawful calling....It is true
that neither the petitioner nor the respondent has any right
to enter into a contract but they are entitled to equal
treatment with others who offer tender or quotations for the
purchase of the
(1) [1974] 2 S. C. R. 348.
(2) 1978] 2 S. C. R. 621.
1043
goods." It must, therefore follow as a necessary corollary
from the principle of equality enshrined in Article 14 that
though the State is entitled to refuse to enter into
relationship with any one, yet if it does so, it cannot
arbitrarily choose any person it likes for entering into
such relationship and discriminate between persons similarly
circumstanced, but it must act in conformity with some
standard or principle which meets the test of reasonableness
and non-discrimination and any departure from such standard
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or principle would be invalid unless it can be supported or
justified on some rational and non-discriminatory ground.
It is interesting to find that this rule was recognised
and applied by a Constitution Bench of this Court in a case
of sale of kendu leaves by the Government of Orissa in
Rashbihari Panda v. State of Orissa.(1) The trade of kendu
leaves in the State of Orissa was regulated by the Orissa
Kendu Leaves (Control of Trade) Act, 1961 and this Act
created a monopoly in favour of the State so far as purchase
of kendu leaves from growers and pluckers was concerned.
Section 10 of the Act authorised the Government to sell or
otherwise dispose of kendu leaves purchased in such manner
as the Government might direct. The Government first evolved
a scheme under which it offered to renew the Licences of
those traders who in its view had worked satisfactorily in
the previous year and had regularly paid the amount due from
them. The scheme was challenged and realising that it might
be struck down, the Government withdrew the scheme and
instead, decided to invite tenders for advance purchase of
kendu leaves but restricted the invitation to those
individuals who had carried out contracts in the previous
year without default and to the satisfaction of the
Government. This method of sale of kendu leaves was also
challenged by filing a writ petition on the ground inter
alia that it was violative of Articles ]4 and 19(1)(g) and
this challenge, though negatived by the High Court, was
upheld by this Court in appeal. The Court pointed out that
the original scheme of offering to enter into contracts with
the old licences and to renew their terms was open to grave
objection, since it sought arbitrarily to exclude many
persons interested in the trade and the new scheme under
which the Government restricted the invitation to make
offers to those traders who had carried out their contracts
in the previous year without default and to the satisfaction
of the Government was also objectionable, since the right to
make tenders for the purchase of kendu leaves being
restricted to a limited
(1) [1969] 3 S.C.R. 374.
1044
class of persons, it effectively shut out all other persons
carrying on trade in kendu leaves and also the new entrants
into that business and hence it was ex-facie discriminatory
and imposed unreasonable restrictions upon the right of
persons other than the existing contractors to carry on
business. Both the schemes evolved by the Government were
thus held to be violative of Articles 14 and 19(1)(g)
because they "gave rise to a monopoly in the trade in kendu
leaves to certain traders and singled out other traders for
discriminatory treatment". The argument that existing
contractors who had carried out their obligations in the
previous year regularly and to the satisfaction of the
Government formed a valid basis of classification bearing a
just and reasonable relation to the object sought to be
achieved by the sales namely, effective execution of the
monopoly in the public interest, was also negatived and it
was pointed out that: "exclusion of all persons interested
in the trade, who were not in the previous year licencees,
is ex facie arbitrary; it had not direct relation to the
object of preventing exploitation of pluckers and growers of
kendu leaves, nor had it any just or reasonable relation to
the securing of the full benefit from the trade, to the
State".
The Court referred to the offer made by a well known
manufacturer of bidis for purchase of the entire crop of
kendu leaves for a sum of Rs. 3 crores which was turned down
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by the Government and expressed its surprise that no
explanation was attempted to be given on behalf of the State
as to why such an offer, from which the State stood to gain
more than Rs. 1 crore, was rejected by the Government. It
will be seen from this judgment that restricting the
invitation to submit tenders to a limited class of persons
was held to be violative of the equality clause, because the
classification did not bear any. just and reasonable
relation to the object sought to be achieved, namely,
selling of kendu leaves in the interest of general public.
The standard or norm laid down by the Government for
entering into contracts of sale of tendu leaves with third
parties was discriminatory and could not stand the scrutiny
of Article 14 and hence the scheme was held to be invalid.
The Court rejected the contention of the Government that by
reason of section 10 it was entitled to dispose of kendu
leaves in such manner as it thought fit and there was no
limitation upon its power to enter into contracts for sale
of kendu leaves with such persons it liked. The Court held
that the Government was, in the exercise of its power to
enter into contracts for sale of kendu leaves; subject to
the constitutional limitation of Article 14 and it could not
act arbitrarily in selecting persons with whom to enter into
contracts and discriminate against others similarly situate.
The Court criticised
1045
the Government for not giving any explanation as to why an
offer for a large amount was not accepted, the clearest
implication being that the Government must act in the public
interest; it cannot act arbitrarily and without reason and
if it does so, its action would be liable to be invalidated.
This decision wholly supports the view we are taking in
regard to The applicability of the rule against
arbitrariness in State action. B
We may also in this connection refer to the decision of
this Court in C. K. Achuthan v. State of Kerala(1), where
Hidayatullah, J., speaking on behalf of The Court made
certain observation which was strongly relied upon on behalf
of the respondents. The facts of this case were that the
petitioner and the 3rd respondent Co-operative Milk Supply
Union, Cannanore, submitted tenders for the supply of milk
to the Government hospital at Cannanore for the year 1948-
49. The Superintendent who scrutinised the tenders accepted
that of the petitioner and communicated the reasons for the
decision to the Director of Public Health. The resulting
contract in favour of the petitioner was, however,
subsequently cancelled by issuing a notice in terms of
clause (2) of the tender, in pursuance of the policy of the
Government that in the matter of supply to Government
Medical Institutions the Co-operative Milk Supply Union
should be given contract on the basis of prices filed by the
Revenue Department. The petitioner challenged The decision
of the Government in a petition under Article 32 of the
Constitution on the ground inter alia that there had been
discrimination against him vis-a-vis the 3rd respondent and
as such, there was contravention of Article 14 of the
Constitution. The Constitution Bench rejected this
contention of the petitioner and while doing so,
Hidayatullah, J., made the following observation: "There is
no discrimination, because it is perfectly open to the
Government, even as it is to a private party, to choose a
person to their liking, to fulfil contracts which they wish
to be performed. When one person is choosen rather than
another, the aggrieved party cannot claim the protection of
Article 14, because the choice of the person to fulfil a
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particular contract must be left to the Government." The
respondents relied very strongly on this observation in
support of their contention that it is open to the ’State’
to enter into contract with any one it likes and choosing
one person in preference to another for entering into a
contract does not involve violation of Article 1a. Though
the language in which this observation is couched is rather
wide, we do not think that in making this observation, the
Court. intended to lay down any absolute proposition
permitting the state to act arbitrarily in the matter of
entering into contract with
(1) [1959] Supp. 1 S C. R. 787.
1046
third parties. We have no doubt that the Court could not
have intended to lay down such a proposition because
Hidayatullah J. who delivered the judgment of the Court in
this case was also a party to the judgment in Rashbihari
Panda v. State of Orissa (supra) which was also a decision
of the Constitution Bench, where it was held in so many
terms that the State cannot act arbitrarily in selecting
persons with whom to enter into contracts. Obviously what
the Court meant to say was that merely because one person is
chosen in preference to another, it does not follow that
there is a violation of Article 14, because the Government
must necessarily be entitled to make a choice. But that does
not mean that the choice be arbitrary or fanciful. The
choice must be dictated by public interest and Must not be
unreasoned or unprincipled.
The respondents also relied on the decision of this
Court in Trilochan Mishra v. State of Orissa & ors.(1) The
complaint of the petitioner in that case was that the bids
of persons making the highest tenders were not accepted and
persons who had made lesser bids were asked to raise their
bids to the highest offered and their re vised bids were
accepted. The Constitution Bench negatived this complaint
and speaking through Mitter, J., observed:
"With regard to the grievance that in some cases
the bids of persons making the highest tenders were not
accept ed, The facts are that persons who had made
lower bids were asked to raise their bids to the
highest offered before the same were accepted. Thus
there was no loss to Government and merely because the
Government preferred one tender to another no complaint
can be entertained. Government certainly has a right to
enter into a contract with a person well known to it
and specially one who has faithfully performed his
contracts in the past in preference to an undesirable
or unsuitable or untried person. Moreover, Government
is not bound to accept the highest tender but may
accept a lower one in case it thinks that the person
offering the lower tender is on an overall
consideration to be preferred to the higher tenderer."
We fail to see how this observation can help the
contention of the respondents. It does not say that the
Government can enter into contract with any one it likes
arbitrarily and without reason. On the contrary, it
postulates that the Government may reject a higher tender
and accept a lower one only when there is valid reason lo do
so, as for example, where it is satisfied that the person
offering the Lower
1) [1971] 3 S. C. C. 153.
1047
tender is on an overall consideration preferable to the
higher tenderer. There must be some relevant reason for
preferring one tenderer to another, and if there is, the
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Government can certainly enter into contract with the former
even though his tender may be lower but it cannot do so
arbitrarily or for extraneous reason.
There was also one other decision of this Court in
State of Orissa v. Harinarayan Jaiswal & ors.(1) which was
strongly relied upon on behalf of the respondents. There the
respondents were the highest bidders at an auction held by
the orissa Government through the Excise Commissioner for
the exclusive privilege of selling by retail country liquor
in some shops. The auction was held pursuant to an order
dated 6th January, 1971 issued by the Government of orissa
in exercise of the power conferred under section 29(2) of
the Bihar & orissa Excise Act, 1915 and clause (6) of this
order provided that "no sale shall be deemed to be final
unless confirmed by the State Government who shall be at
liberty to accept or reject any bid without assigning any
reason therefor". The Government of orissa did not accept
any of the bids made at the auction and subsequently sold
the privilege by negotiations with some other parties. One
of the contentions raised on behalf of the petitioners in
that case was that the power retained by the Government "to
accept or reject many bid without any reason therefor" was
an arbitrary power violative of Articles 14 and 19(1) (g).
This contention was negatived and Hegde, J. speaking on
behalf of the Court observed:
"The Government is the guardian of the finances of
the State. It is expected to protect the financial
interest of the State. Hence quite naturally, the
legislature has empowered the Government to see that
there is no leakage in its revenue. It is for the
Government to decide whether the price offered in on
auction sale is adequate. While accepting or rejecting
a bid, it is merely performing an executive function.
The correctness of its conclusion is not open to
judicial review. We fail to see how the plea of
contravention of Article 19(1)(g) or Article 14 can
arise in these cases. The Governments power to sell the
exclusive privilege set out in section 22 was not
denied. It was also not disputed that these privileges
could be sold by public auction. Public auctions are
held to get the best possible price. Once these aspects
are recognised, there appears to be no basis for
contending that the owner of the privileges
(1) [1972] 2 S.C.C. 36.
1048
in question who had offered to sell them cannot decline
to accept the highest bid if he thinks that the price
offered is inadequate."
It will be seen from these observations that the validity of
clause (6) of the order dated 6th January, 1971 was upheld
by this Court on the ground that having regard to the object
of holding the auction, namely, to raise revenue, the
Government was entitled to reject even the highest bid, if
it thought that the price offered was inadequate. The
Government was not bound to accept the tender of the person
who offered the highest amount and if the Government
rejected all the bids made at the auction, it did not
involve any violation of Article 14 or 19(1)(g). This is a
self-evident proposition and we do not see how it can be of
any assistance to the respondents.
The last decision to which reference was made on behalf
of the respondents was the decision in P. R. Quenin v. M. K.
Tendel(1) This decision merely reiterates the principle laid
down in the earlier decisions in Trilochan Mishra v. State
of Orissa (supra) and State of Orissa v. Harinarayan Jaiswal
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(supra) and points out that a condition that the Government
shall be at liberty to accept or reject any bid without
assigning any reason therefor is not violative of Article 14
and that "in matters relating to contracts with the
Government, the latter is not bound to accept the tender of
the person who offers the highest amount". Now where does it
say that such a condition permits the Government to act
arbitrarily in accepting a tender or that under the guise or
pretext of such a condition, the Government may enter into a
contract with any person it likes, arbitrarily and without
reason. In fact the Court pointed out at the end of the
judgment that the act of the Government was not "shown to be
vitiated by such arbitrariness as should call for
interference by the Court", recognising clearly that if the
rejection of the tender of the 1st respondent were
arbitrary, the Court would have been justified in striking
it down as invalid.
Now this rule, flowing as it does from Article 14,
applies to every State action and since "State" is defined
in Article 12 to include not only the Government of India
and the Government of each of the States, but also "all
local or other authorities within the territory of India or
under the control of the Government of India", it must apply
to action of "other authorities" and they must be held
subject to the same constitutional limitation as the
Government. But the question arises what are the "other
authorities" contemplated by Article 12 which fall within
the definition of ’State’ ? on this ques-
(1) [1974] 3 S. C. R. 64.
1049
tion considerable light is thrown by the decision of this
Court in Rajasthan Electricity Board v. Mohan Lal(1). That
was a case in which this Court was called upon to consider
whether the Rajasthan Electricity Board was an ’authority’
within the meaning of the expression "other authorities" in
Art. 12. Bhargava, J., delivering the judgment of the
majority pointed out that the expression "other authorities"
in Art. 12 would include all constitutional and statutory
authorities on whom powers are conferred by law. The learned
Judge also said that if any body of persons has authority to
issue directions the disobedience of which would be
punishable as a criminal offence, that would be an
indication that that authority is ’State’. Shah, J., who
delivered a separate judgment, agreeing with the conclusion
reached by the majority, preferred to give a slightly
different meaning to the expression "other authorities". He
said that authorities, constitutional or statutory, would
fall within the expression "other authorities" only if they
are invested with the sovereign power of the State, namely,
the power to make rules and regulations which have the force
of law. The ratio of this decision may thus be stated to be
that a constitutional or statutory authority would be within
the meaning of the expression "other authorities", if it has
been invested with statutory power to issue binding
directions to third parties, the disobedience of which would
entail penal consequence or it has the sovereign power to
make rules and regulations having the force of law. This
test was followed by Ray, C.J., in Sukhdev v. Bhagat Ram
(supra). Mathew, J., however, in the same case, propounded a
broader test, namely, whether the statutory corporation or
other body or authority, claimed to fall within the
definition of State’, is as instrumentality or agency of
Government: if it is, it would fall within the meaning of
the expression ’other authorities’ and would be State’.
Whilst accepting the test laid down in Rajasthan Electricity
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Board v. Mohan Lal (supra), and followed by Ray, C. J., in
Sukhdev v. Bhagat Ram (supra), we would, for reasons already
discussed, prefer to adopt the test of Governmental
instrumentality or agency as one more test and perhaps a
more satisfactory one for determining whether a statutory
corporation, body or other authority falls within the
definition of ’State’. If a statutory corporation, body or
other authority is an instrumentality or agency of
Government, it would be an ’authority’ and therefore ’State’
within the meaning of that expression in Article 12.
It is necessary at this stage to refer to a few
decisions of this Court which seem to bear on this point and
which require a little
(1) [1967] 3 S C, R 377
11-904 SCI/79
1050
explanation. The first is the decision in Praga Tools
Corporation v. C. A. Imanuel.(1) This was a case in which
some of the workmen sought a writ of mandamus against Praga
Tools Corporation which was a company with 56 per cent of
its share capital held by the Centra1 Government, 32 per
cent by the Andhra Pradesh Government and 12 per cent by
private individuals. The Court held that a writ of mandamus
did not lie, because Praga Tools Corporation "being a non
statutory body and one incorporated under the Companies Act,
there was neither a statutory nor a public duty imposed on
it by a statute in respect of which enforcement could be
sought by means of mandamus, nor was there in its workmen
any corresponding legal right for enforcement of any such
statutory or public duty." (emphasis supplied). It is
difficult to see how this decision can be of any help in
deciding the present issue before us. This was not a case
where Praga Tools Corporation claimed to be an
instrumentality of government or an ’authority’ within the
meaning of Article 12. The only question was whether a writ
of mandamus could lie and it was held that since there was
no duty imposed on Praga Tool Corporation by statute, no
writ of mandamus could issue against it.
The second decision to which we must refer is that in
Heavy Engineering Mazdoor Union v. State of Bihar(2). The
question which arose in this case was whether a reference of
an industrial dispute between the Heavy Engineering
Corporation Limited (hereinafter referred to as the
’Corporation’) and the Union made by the State of Bihar
under section 10 of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 was
valid. The argument of the Union was that the industry in
question was "carried on under the authority of the Central
Government" and the reference could, therefore, be made only
by the Central Government. The Court held that the words
"under the authority" mean "pursuant to the authority, such
as where an agent or a servant acts under of pursuant to the
authority of his principal or master" and on this view, the
Court addressed itself to the question whether the
Corporation could be said to be carrying on business
pursuant to the authority of the Central Government. The
answer to this question was obviously ’no’ because the
Corporation was carrying on business in virtue of the
authority derived from its memorandum and articles of
association and not by reason of any authority granted by
the Central Government. The Corporation, in carrying on
business, was acting on its own behalf and not on behalf of
the Central Government and it was therefore not a servant or
agent of the Central Government in the sense that its
actions would bind the Central Government. There
(1) [1969] 3 S. C. R. 773,
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(2) [1969] 3 S. C. R 995.
1051
was no question in this case whether the Corporation was an
instrumentality of the Central Government and therefore an
’authority within the meaning of Article 12. We may point
out here that when we speak of a Corporation being an
instrumentality or agency of Government, we do not mean to
suggest that the Corporation should be an agent of the
Government in the sense that whatever it does should be
binding on the Government. It is not the relationship of
principal and agent which is relevant and material but
wether the Corporation is an instrumentality of the
Government in the sense that a part of the governing power
of the State is located in the Corporation and though the
Corporation is acting on its own behalf and not on behalf of
the Government, its action is really in the nature of State
action. This decision dealing with an altogether different
point has no bearing on the present issue.
We may then refer to the decision in S. L. Aggarwal v.
General Manager, Hindustan Steel Limited.(1) This decision
has also no relevance to the point at issue before us, since
the only question in that case was wether all Assistant
Surgeon in the employment of Hindustan Steel Limited could
be said to be holding a civil post under the Union or a
State so as to be entitled to the protection of Article
311(2) of the Constitution. The Court held that Hindustan
Steel Limited was not a department of the Government nor
were its employees holding posts under the State within the
meaning of Article 311(2). The decision was clearly right
and indeed it could not be otherwise since Hindustan Steel
Limited, which was a distinct and independent legal entity,
was not a department of the Government and could not be
regarded as State for the purpose of Article 311(2). It may
be noted that the Court was not concerned with the question
whether Hindustan Steel Limited was an ’authority’ within
the meaning of Articlc 12.
Lastly, we must refer to the decision in Sarbhajit
Tewari v. Union of India & ors.(2) where the question was
whether the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research
was an ’authority’ within the meaning of Article 12. The
Court no doubt took the view on the basis of facts relevant
to the constitution and functioning of the council that it
was not an ’authority’, but we do not find any discussion in
this case as to what are the features which must be present
before a corporation can be regarded as an ’authority’
within the meaning of Article 12. This decision does not lay
down any principle or test for the purpose of determining
when a corporation can be said to be an ’authority’. If at
all any test can be gleaned from the decision, it is
(1) [1970] 3 S. C. R. 363.
(2) [1975] 1 S. C. C. 485.
1052
whether the Corporation is ’really an agency of the
Government". The Court seemed to hold on The facts that the
Council was not an agency of the Government and was,
therefore, not an ’authority’.
We may examine, in the light of this discussion,
whether the 1st respondent, namely, the International
Airport Authority of India,, can be said to be an authority
falling within the definition of ’State’ in Article 12. It
is necessary to refer to some of the provisions of the
International Airport Authority Act, 1971 (hereinafter
referred to as the Act) for the purpose of determining this
question. Sub-section (1) of section 3 of the Act provides
that the Central Government shall constitute an authority to
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be called the International Airport Authority of India, to
whom we shall hereafter refer as the 1st respondent. Sub-
section (2) states that the 1 st respondent shall be a body
corporate having perpetual succession and a common seal and
sub-section (3) enacts that the Ist respondent shall consist
of a Chairman to be appointed by the Central Government, the
Director General of Civil Aviation exofficio and not less
than six and not more than thirteen members to be appointed
by the Central Government. The term of office of every
member of the 1st respondent is prescribed by sub-section
(1) of section 5 to be 3 years, but the Central Government
is given under the Proviso power to terminate the
appointment of any member who is not a servant of the
Government after giving him notice as also to terminate at
any time the appointment of any member who is a servant of
the Government. The power to remove a member in certain
specified circumstances is also vested in the Central
Government under section 6. Section 32, sub-section (1)
provides that as from the date appointed by the Central
Government all properties and other assets vested in the p
Central Government for the purposes of the airport and
administered by the Director General of Civil Aviation
immediately before such date shall vest in the 1st
respondent and all debts, obligations and liabilities
incurred, all contracts entered into and all matters and
things engaged to be done by, with or for the Central
Government immediately before such date shall be deemed to
have been incurred, entered into and engaged to be done by,
with or for the 1st respondent. This sub-section also says
that all non-recurring expenditure incurred by the Central
Government for or in connection with the purposes of the
airport upto the appointed date and declared to be capital
expenditure by the Central Government shall be treated as
the capital provided by the Central Government to the 1st
respondent and all sums of money due to the Central
Government in relation to the airport immediately before the
appointed date shall be deemed to be due to the 1st
respondent. The 1st respondent is also given the power to
institute or continue all suits
1053
and other legal proceedings instituted or which could have
been instituted by or against the Central Government for any
matter in relation to the airport and every employee holding
any office under the Central Government immediately before
the appointed date solely or mainly for or in connection
with the affairs of the airport shall be treated as on
deputation with the 1st respondent. Sub-section (1) of
section 12 also enacts similar provisions with regard to the
air navigation services and the buildings used exclusively
for such services immediately before the appointed date. The
functions of the 1st respondent are specified in section 16:
sub-section (l) provides that, subject to the rules, if any,
made by the Central Government in this behalf, it shall be
the function of the 1st respondent to manage the airports
efficiently and sub-section (2) casts an obligation on the 1
st respondent to provide at the airports such services and
facilities as are necessary or desirable for the efficient
operation of air transport services and certain specific
functions to be performed by the 1st respondent are
particularised in sub-section (3). These. functions were,
until the appointed date, being carried out by the Central
Government but now under Section 16 they are transferred to
the ] st respondent. Section 20 provides that after making
provision for reserve funds, bad and doubtful debts,
depreciation in assets and an other matters which are
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usually provided for by companies, the 1st respondent shall
pay the balance of its annual net profits to the Central
Government. Section 21 requires the 1st respondent to submit
for the approval of the Central Government a statement of
the programme of its activities during the forthcoming
financial year as well as its financial estimate in respect
thereof at least three months before the commencement of
each financial year and section 24 provides that the
accounts of the 1st respondent shall be audited annually by
the Comptroller and Auditor General and the accounts as
certified by the Comptroller and Auditor General or any
other person appointed by him in this behalf, together with
the audit report thereon, shall be forwarded to the Central
Government and the Central Government shall cause the same
to be laid before both Houses of Parliament. The 1st
respondent is also required by section 25 to prepare and
submit to the Central Government, as soon as may be after
the end of each financial year, a report giving an account
of its activities during the financial year and this report
has to be laid before both Houses of Parliament by the
Central Government. The officers and employees of the 1st
respondent are deemed by section 28 to be public servants
and section 29 gives them immunity from suit, prosecution or
other legal proceeding for anything in good faith done or
intended to he done in pursuance of the Act or any rule or
regulation made under it. Section 33 confers power on the
Central Government
1054
to temporarily divest the 1st respondent from the management
of any airport and to direct the 1st respondent to entrust
such management to any other person. The Central Government
is also empowered by section 34 lo supersede the 1st
respondent under certain specified circumstances. Section 35
gives power to the Central Government to give directions in
writing from time to time on questions of policy and
provides that the 1 st respondent shall in the discharge of
its functions, and duties, be bound by such directions.
Section 36 confers rule making power on the Central
Government for carrying out the purposes of the Act and
power to make regulations is conferred on the 1st respondent
under section 37. Section 39 provides that any regulation
made by the 1st respondent under any of the clauses (g) to
(m) of sub-section (2) of section 37 may make it Penal to
contravene such regulation.
lt will be seen from these provisions that there are
certain features of the 1 st respondent which are eloquent
and throw considerable light on the true nature of the 1st
respondent. In the first place, the chairman and members of
the 1st respondent are all persons nominated by the Central
Government and the Central Government has also the power to
terminate their appointment as also to remove them in
certain specified circumstances. The Central Government is
also vested with the power to take away the management of
any airport from the 1st respondent and to entrust it to any
other person or authority and for certain special reasons,
the Central Government can also supersede the Ist
respondent. The Central Government has also power to give
directions in writing,, from time to time on questions of
policy and these directions are declared binding on the 1st
respondent. The 1st respondent has no share capital but the
capital needed by it for carrying out its functions is
provided wholly by the Central Government. The balance of
the not profit made by the Ist respondent after making
provision for various charges, such as reserve funds, had
and doubtful debts depreciation in assets etc. does not
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remain with the 1st respondent and is required to be paid
over lo the Central Government. The 1st respondent is also
required to submit to the Central Government for its
approval a statement of the programme of its activities as
also the financial estimate and it must follow as a
necessary corollary that the 1 st respondent can carry out
only such activities and incur only such expenditure as is
approved by the Central Government. The audited accounts of
the 1st respondent together with the audit report have to be
forwarded to the Central Government and they are required to
be laid before both Houses of Parliament. So far as the
functions of the 1st respondent are concerned, the entire
department of the Central Government relating to the
administration of airports and air nevigation services
together with its
1055
properties and assets, debts, obligations and liabilities,
contracts, causes A of action and pending litigation is
transferred to the 1st respondent and the 1st respondent is
charged with carrying out the same functions which were,
until the appointed date, being carried out by the Central
Government. The employees and officers on the 1st respondent
are also deemed to be public servants and the 1st respondent
as well as its members, officers and employees are given
immunity for anything which is in good faith done or
intended to be done in pursuance of the Act or any rule or
regulation made under it. The 1st respondent is also given
power to frame Regulations and to provide that contravention
of certain specified Regulations shall entail penal
consequence. These provisions clearly show that every test
discussed above is satisfied in the case of the 1st
respondent and they leave no doubt that the 1st respondent
is an instrumentality or agency of the Central Government
and falls within the definition of ’State’ both on the
’narrow view taken by the majority in Sukhdev v. Bhagat Ram
(supra) as also on the broader view of Mathew, J., adopted
by us.
It is, therefore, obvious that both having regard to
the constitutional mandate of Article 14 as also the
judicially evolved rule of administrative law, the 1st
respondent was not entitled to act arbitrarily in accepting
the tender of the 4th respondents, but was bound to conform
to the standard or norm laid down in paragraph 1 of the
notice inviting tenders which required that only a person
running a registered IInd Class hotel or restaurant and
having at least S years’ experience as such should be
eligible to tender. It was not the contention of the
appellant that this standard or norm prescribed by the 1st
respondent was discriminatory having no just or reasonable
relation to the object of inviting tenders namely, to award
the contract to a sufficiently experienced person who would
be able to run efficiently a IInd class restaurant at the
airport. Admittedly the standard or norm was reasonable and
non-discriminatory and once such a standard or norm for
running a IInd Class restaurant should be awarded was laid
down, the 1st respondent was not entitled to depart from it
and to award the contract to the 4th respondents who did not
satisfy the condition of eligibility prescribed by the
standard or norm. If there was no acceptable tender from a
person who satisfied the condition of eligibility, the 1st
respondent could have rejected the tenders and invited fresh
tenders on the basis of a less stringent standard or norm,
but it could not depart from the standard or norm prescribed
by it and arbitrarily accept the tender of the 4th
respondents. When the 1st respondent entertained the tender
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of the 4th respondents even though they did not have 5
years’ experience of running a IInd Class
1056
restaurant or hotel, denied equality of opportunity to
others similarly situate in the matter of tendering for the
contract. There might have been many other persons, in fact
the appellant himself claimed to be one such person, who did
not have 5 years’ experience of running a IInd Class
restaurant, but who were otherwise competent to run such a
restaurant and they might also have competed with the 4th
respondents for obtaining the contract, but they were
precluded from doing so by the condition of eligibility
requiring five years’ experience. The action of the 1st
respondent in accepting the tender of the 4th respondents,
even though they did not satisfy the prescribed condition of
eligibility, was clearly discriminatory, since it excluded
other person similarly situate from tendering for the
contract and it was plainly arbitrary and without reason.
The acceptance of the tender of the 4th respondents was, in
the circumstances invalid as being violative of the equality
clause of the Constitution as also of the rule of
administrative law inhibiting arbitrary action.
Now, on this view we should have ordinarily set aside
the decision of the,- 1st respondent accepting the tender of
the 4th respondents and the contract resulting from such
acceptance but in view of the peculiar facts and
circumstances of the present case, we do not think it would
be a sound exercise of discretion on our part to upset that
decision and void the contract. It does appear from the
affidavits filed by the parties that the appellant has no
real interest in the result of the litigation, but has been
put up by A. S. Irani for depriving the 4th respondents of
the benefit of the contract secured by them. We find that a
number of proceedings have been instituted for this purpose
from time to time by A. S. Irani either personally or by
instigating others to take such proceedings. The first salvo
in the battle against the 4th respondents was fired by K. S.
Irani, proprietor of Cafe Excelsior, who filed a suit
challenging the decision of the 1st respondent to accept the
tender of the 4th respondents, but in this suit he failed to
obtain an interim injunction and his appeal was dismissed by
the High Court on 19th October, 1977. It is significant that
when the tenders were opened in the office of the Airport
Director, Cafe Excelsior was represented by A. S. Irani,
which shows that either Cafe Excelsior was a nominee of A.
S. Irani or in any event K. S. Irani, proprietor of Cafe
Excelsior, was closely connected with A. S. Irani. Moreover,
it is interesting to note that though the tender of the 4th
respondents was accepted as far back as 19th April, 1977, K.
S. Irani did not adopt any proceedings immediately but filed
the suit only after A. S. Irani was informed by the Airport
Director on 22nd August, 1977 that a final order has been
received from the Ministry
1057
requiring A. S. Irani to immediately close down his
restaurant and snack bars. It is also a circumstance not
without significance that A. S. Irani did not immediately
take any proceeding for challenging the acceptance of the
tender of the 4th respondents, but filed a suit in his own
name only after the appeal of K. S. Irani was dismissed by
the High Court on 19th October, 1977. These circumstances
clearly indicate that the suit was filed by K. S. Irani at
the instance of A. S. Irani or in any event in concert with
him and when the suit of K. S. Irani failed to achieve the
desired result, A. S. Irani stepped into the arena and filed
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his own suit. This suit was for a mandatory injunction
seeking removal of the two snack bars which had in the
meantime’ been put up by the 4th respondents pursuant to the
acceptance of their tender by the 1st respondent. But in
this proceeding also A. S. Irani failed to obtain an ad-
interim injunction. It was only after the failure to obtain
interim relief in these two proceedings, one by K. S. Irani
and the other by A. S. Irani, that the appellant filed the
present writ petition in the High Court of Bombay
challenging the decision of the 1st respondent to accept the
tender of the 4th respondents. Now, it appears from the
record that the appellant was at the material time
conducting a restaurant called Royal Restaurant and Store
which was owned in partnership by three persons, namely, J.
K. Irani, K. M. Irani and G. S. Irani. G. S. Irani is the
brother of A. S. Irani and he was managing and looking after
the restaurant of A. S. Irani at the airport. It would,
therefore, be a fair inference to make that the appellant
was well connected with A. S. Irani and from the manner in
which proceedings with a view to thwarting the attempt of
the 4th respondents to obtain the benefit of their contract,
have been adopted one after the other in different names, it
does appear that the appellant has filed the writ petition
at the instance of A. S. Irani with a view to helping him to
obtain the contract for the restaurant and the snack bars.
It is difficult to understand why the appellant should have
waited until 8th November, 1977 to file the writ petition
when the tender of the 4th respondents was accepted as far
hack as 19th April, 1977. The explanation given by the
appellant is that he was not aware of the acceptance of the
tender of the 4th respondents but that is a rather naive
explanation which cannot be easily accepted It is not
possible to believe that the appellant who was so well
connected with A. S. Irani and G. S. Irani did not know that
A. S. Irani had failed to obtain the contract for running
the restaurant and the snack bars and that this contract had
been awarded to the 4th respondents as a result of which A.
S. Irani was being pressed to close down his restaurant and
snack bars. We have grave doubts whether this writ petition
was commenced by the appellant bona fide
1058
with a view to protecting his own interest. Moreover, the
writ petition was filed by the appellant more than five
months after the acceptance of the tender of the 4th
respondents and during this period, the 4th respondents
incurred considerable expenditure aggregating to about Rs.
1,25,000/- in making arrangements for putting up the
restaurant and the snack bars and in fact set up the snack
bars and started running the same. It would now be most
inequitous to set aside the contracts of the 4th respondents
at the instance of the appellant. The position would have
been different if the appellant had filed the writ petition
immediately after the acceptance of the tender of the 4th
respondents but the appellant allowed a period of over five
months to elapse during which the 4th respondents altered
their position. We are, therefore, of the view that this is
not a fit case in which we should interfere and grant relief
to the appellant in the exercise of our discretion under
Article 136 read with Article 226 of the Constitution.
We accordingly dismiss the appeal and confirm the order
of the High Court rejecting the writ petition. But in the
circumstances of the case there will be no order as to costs
throughout.
P.B.R Appeal dismissed.
1059
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