Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHIV CHAND AMOLAK CHAND
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
REGIONAL TRANSPORT AUTHORITY & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT07/10/1983
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
MISRA, R.B. (J)
CITATION:
1984 AIR 9 1984 SCR (1) 288
1983 SCC (4) 433 1983 SCALE (2)611
CITATOR INFO :
R 1984 SC 790 (16)
RF 1986 SC1980 (18,19,27)
ACT:
Motor Vehicles Act, 1939-Section 47(3) and 57(8) scope
of-Whether Section 47(3) of the Act will be applicable when
an application is made by a holder of a permit for extension
of the route specified in the permit.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants held stage carriage permit granted to
them by the Regional Transport Authority for the route
Dabra-Karera Via Lodi Mato-extended upto Gwalior. On 22-6-
1978, this route for which the permit was held by the
appellants was modified, at their own request, by deleting
the portion of the route from Karera to Shivpuri. By a
notification dated 4-8-1978 certain routes were nationalised
under Scheme No. 11-M which came into effect from 25-9-1978,
including deletion of the portion of the route from Shivpuri
to Satanwara, with the result the permit of the appellants
remained operative only for the remaining portion of the
route namely, Satanwara-Gwalior Via Dabra. Effective from
19-12-1978, the State Government issued another Notification
making modifications in the route schemes. Since this
modification permitted plying of stage carriages by private
operators even on a portion of a nationalised route
connecting a district headquarters and not more than 20 KMs
in length, the appellants made an application to the
Regional Transport Authority-for restoring the portion of
the route from Shivpuri to Satanwara on the ground that
Shivpuri was a district headquarter and the portion of the
route from Shivpuri and Satanwara was less than 20 KMs. The
Regional Transport Authority rejected the said application
on the ground that the Notification dated 18-12-1978 did not
have any retrospective effect and therefore, the appellants
were not entitled to automatic restoration of the portion of
the route from Shivpuri to Satanwara.
The appellants thereupon filed an application in the
prescribed form for extension of the route specified in
their permit from Satanwara to Shivpuri. The said
application was rejected after hearing the objections on two
grounds, namely (i) the specific order of the State Govt.
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Curtailing the Satanwara-Shivpuri portion of the applicants’
permit, while approving Scheme 11-M cannot be treated as
having been amended by the General Amendment to the Scheme,
and (ii) no extension of the route could be granted without
following the procedure laid down in Section 47(3) of the
Act. This order of the Regional Transport Authority was
challenged by the appellants in a writ petition filed in the
High Court of Madhya Pradesh. The High Court rejected the
petition holding that by reason of the express language of
Sub-Section (8) of Section 57, an application for extension
of the route specified in an existing permit was tantamount
to an application for grant of a new permit and hence
289
it was subject to the provisions of Section 47(3) and it
could not be considered without following the procedure
prescribed by Section 47(3). Hence the appeal after
obtaining special leave of the Court.
Allowing the appeal, the Court
HELD: 1.1 The application made by the appellants for
extension of the route specified in their permit from
Satanwara to Shivpuri could be considered by the Regional
Transport Authority without following the procedure
prescribed under Sub-Section (3) of Section 47. [297 E-H]
1.2 However, under the terms of Sub-Section (8) of
Section 57 this application of the appellants was liable to
be treated as an application for the grant of a new permit,
since in effect and substance, it was an application for
varying the condition of the permit by extending the route
from Shivpuri to Satanwara. But the question is for what
purpose ? [297 G-H]
2.1 Having regard to the several decisions of the
Supreme Court and particularly the decision in Mohd. Ibrahim
v. State Transport Appellate, Tribunal, Madras, [1971] 1
S.C.R. 474, the law is well settled that an application for
grant of a new permit cannot be entertained by the Regional
Transport Authority under Section 48, unless the limit of
the number of stage-carriages for which permits may be
granted is first determined under section 47(3). There are
two independent steps required to be taken in connection
with the grant of a permit, the first being the
determination by the Regional Transport Authority under
Section 47(3) of the number of stage-carriages for which
permits may be granted and the second being that "thereafter
applications for stage carriage permits can be entertained"
and, therefore, it would mean that before an application for
grant of a permit can be entertained by the Regional
Transport Authority, there should be a determination under
Section 47(3). Therefore, if an application for varying the
condition of a permit by extension of the route specified in
the permit were equated wholly with an application for grant
of a new permit and the permit for the extended route were
to be regarded as a new permit, the procedure prescribed in
Section 47(3) would have to be followed and the number of
stage carriages for which permits may be granted on the
extended route would have to be determined before the
application could be entertained by the Regional Transport
Authority.
[298 C-E; 299 E-F]
2.2 But, the prescription in Sub Section (8) of Section
57 that an application for varying the condition of a permit
by extension of the route shall be treated as an application
for grant of a new permit has not the effect of equating of
such an application with an application for grant of a new
permit for all purposes so as to attract the applicability
of Sub Section (3) of Section 47. [299 F-G]
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3.1 Section 57 deals with the procedure in applying for
and granting permits and Sub Sections (3) to (7) lays down
the procedure which must be followed in considering and
deciding, inter-alia, an application for grant of a stage-
carriage permit. Sub Section (8) follows upon Sub Sections
(3) to (7)
290
and is a part of the same Section which has a definite
object and Scheme of providing the procedure for considering
and granting an application and therefore, when it provides
that an application to vary the conditions of a permit by
the inclusion of new route or routes or new area or by
increasing the number of trips above the specified maximum
or by altering the route covered by it shall be treated as
an application for grant of a new stage carriage permit, it
is obviously intended to incorporate and make applicable the
procedure set out in the preceding Sub Sections (3) to (7)
to such an application. The context in which Sub-Section (8)
occurs and its juxtaposition with Sub Section (3) to (7) in
Section 58 clearly indicate that what is sought to be made
applicable to an application referred to in Sub Section (8)
by treating it as an application for grant of a new permit
is the procedure set out in Sub Section (3) to (7) of
Section 58 and nothing more.
[299 G-H; 300 A-C]
3.2 The requirement spelt out in Sub Section (3) of
Section 47 that the number of stage carriages for which
permits may be granted on any particular route must be first
determined before an application for grant of a stage
carriage permit can be entertained by the Regional Transport
Authority under Section 48, is obviously not a part of the
procedure for considering an application for grant of a
permit; it is a condition precedent before an application
for grant of a permit can be considered and granted. This
condition cannot be said to have been incorporated by
reference under Sub Section (8) of Section 57. An
application to vary the conditions of a permit as set out in
Sub Section (8) of Section 57 is undoubtedly to be treated
as an application for grant of a new permit, but that is
only for the purpose of applying the procedure set out in
Sub Sections (3) to (7) of Section 57. It is not an
application for a new permit and if it is granted, the
permit for the extended route does not become a new permit
in the hands of the applicant. It is the same permit which
now after granting of the application covers the extended
route. [300 C-F]
3.3 Where a totally new route is sought to be included
by an application to vary the conditions of a permit or the
alteration of the route sought by such an application is of
such a drastic character that it becomes substantially a new
route, the application, though in form an application to
vary the conditions of the permit, would in effect and
substance, be an application for grant of a new permit and
in such a case, a view may conceivably be taken with some
degree of plausibility that the number of stage-carriages
for which permits may be granted on such new route should
first be determined under Sub Section (3) of Section 47
before the application to vary the conditions of the permit
can be entertained. [300 F-H]
An applicant for a permit on a route which is not
merely technically, but in truth and reality a different
route, distinct from the original route, may not be
permitted to defeat the provision, enacted in Sub Section
(3) of Section 47, by labelling his application as one for
varying the conditions of the permit and in such a case, the
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procedure set out in Section 47 (3) may have to be complied
with before the Regional Transport Authority can consider
and grant the application. [300 H; 301 A]
291
But where an application merely seeks a short extension
of the route specified in the permit, as in the present
case, it would not be appropriate to say that it is an
application for grant of a new permit, though technically
the extended route may not be regarded as the same as the
original route and where such is the case, it would not be
necessary to comply with the procedure set out in Sub
Section (3) of Section 47 of the Motor Vehicles Act. [301 B-
C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 3787 of
1983.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 19th March, 1971 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court
in Misc. Petition No. 565 of 1980.
S.Q. Hassan, S.K. Mehta, P.N. Puri and M.K. Dua for the
Appellant.
Rameshwar Nath for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J. This appeal by special leave raises a
short but interesting question of law relating to the
interpretation of certain provisions of the Motor Vehicles
Act 1939 (hereinafter referred to as the Act). The question
is whether section 47 sub-section (3) of the Act is
attracted when an application is made by the holder of a
permit for extension of the route for which the permit has
been granted to him. In order to appreciate the question, it
is necessary to state a few facts giving rise to the appeal.
The appellants are a partnership firm and at all
material times they held a stage carriage permit granted to
them by the Regional Transport Authority for the route
Dabra-Karera via Lodi Mata extended upto Gwalior. It appears
that on 22nd June 1978 this route for which the permit was
held by the appellants was modified at the request of the
appellants and the portion of the route from Karera to
Shivpuri was deleted. Thereafter by a Notification dated 4th
August 1978 certain routes were nationalised under Scheme
No. 11-M which came into force with effect from 25th
September 1978 and under clause 7 (b) of this Scheme, the
portion of the route from Shivpuri to Satanwara was deleted
and the permit of the appellants remained operative only for
the remaining portion of the route, namely, Satanwara-
Gwalior via Dabra. This state of affairs conti-
292
nued from 25th September 1978 until 18th December 1978 when
the State Government by a Notification issued in exercise of
the powers conferred under sub-section (2) of section 68 F
of the Act made the following modifications in the various
schemes approved by it under section 68 D sub-section (2),
including Scheme No. 11-M:
"Notwithstanding anything contained in this
Scheme, the private operators may be permitted to ply
stage carriages for hire or reward subject to the
following conditions, namely:
(1) Whereas the notified route connects a district
Head-quarter, the portion thereof covered by the
permit shall not exceed 20 kilometers and in other
cases it shall not exceed 10 kilometers.
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(2) The private operators shall ply the stage carriage
over the distance, other than the distance of the
notified route, which shall not be less than twice
the distance of the notified route covered by the
permit;
(3) The private operators shall not pick-up or set-
down passengers on the notified route.
Since this modification permitted plying of stage carriages
by private operators even on portion of a nationalised route
connecting a district head-quarter and not more than 20 kms.
in length, the appellants made an application to the
Regional Transport Authority for restoring the portion of
the route from Shivpuri to Satanwara on the ground that
Shivpuri was a district head-quarter and the portion of the
route between Shivpuri and Satanwara was less than 20
kilometers. The Regional Transport Authority however took
the view and in our opinion rightly, that the modification
made by the State Government in Scheme No. 11-M under the
Notification dated 18th December 1978 did not have any
retrospective effect and the appellants were therefore not
entitled to automatic restoration of the portion of the
route from Shivpuri to Satanwara and in this view, the
Regional Transport Authority rejected the application of the
appellants.
The appellants thereupon filed a regular application in
the prescribed form for extension of the route specified in
their permit
293
from Satanwara to Shivpuri. The application was published in
the Gazette on 11th April 1980 and on coming to know about
it, M.P. State Road Transport Corporation which is the 2nd
respondent before us filed its objections against the grant
of such extension. The application together with the
objections was heard by the Regional Transport Authority and
by an order dated 11th September 1980 the Regional Transport
Authority rejected the application on two grounds. The first
ground was that "the specific order of the State Government
curtailing the Satanwara-Shivpuri portion of applicant’s
permit while approving Scheme No. 11-M cannot be treated as
having been amended by the general amendment made to the
scheme" and the other was that no extension of the route
could be granted without following the procedure laid down
in Section 47 sub-section (3) of the Act.
This order made by the Regional Transport Authority was
challenged by the appellants in a writ petition filed in the
High Court of Madhya Pradesh. There were two grounds of
challenge urged on behalf of the appellants in support of
the writ petition but we are concerned in this appeal with
only one ground and hence we need not refer to the other
ground and burden our judgment with a discussion of that
ground. The ground which was seriously pressed before the
High Court and repeated before us was that Section 47 sub-
section (3) has no application where what is sought by an
applicant is not the grant of a new permit on a specified
route under section 48 but merely an extension of the route
under an existing permit under sub-section (8) of section 57
and the order made by the Regional Transport Authority
rejecting the application of the appellants on the ground of
non-compliance with sub-Section (3) of section 47 was
therefore plainly wrong. The appellants sought to support
this ground by relying on the decision of the Madhya Pradesh
High Court in Dewan Chand v. State Transport Authority. But
the learned Judge who heard the writ petition observed that
the decision in Dewan Chand’s case (supra) was contrary to
the view taken by this Court in R. Obliswamy Naidu v.
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Regional State Transport Appellate Tribunal and Delhi
Transport Undertaking v. Zamindar Motor Transport Company
and held that by reason of the express language of sub-
section (8) of section 57 an application for
294
extension of the route specified in an existing permit was
tantamount to an application for grant of a new permit and
hence it was subject to the provisions of section 47 sub-
section (3) and it could not be considered without following
the procedure prescribed by sub-section (3) of section 47.
The learned Judge on this view rejected the writ petition of
the appellants. The appellants thereupon preferred the
present appeal with special leave obtained from this Court.
The only question which arises for consideration in
this appeal is as whether section 47 sub-section (3) is
attracted when an application is made by a holder of a
permit for extension of the route specified in the permit.
The determination of this question depends upon a true
interpretation of some of the relevant provisions of the
Act. Section 2 is the definition section and clause (28A) of
this section defines route to mean "a line of travel which
specifies the high-way which may be traversed by a motor
vehicle between one terminus and another". Chapter IV is the
only material chapter for our purpose and as its heading
shows, it deals with control of transport vehicles. Section
42 provides that no owner of a transport vehicle shall use
or permit the use of the vehicle in any public place save in
accordance with the conditions of a permit granted or
countersigned by a Regional or State Transport Authority or
the Commission authorising the use of the vehicle in that
place in the manner in which the vehicle is being used.
Section 43 confers certain powers on the State Government to
issue directions to the State Transport Authority and
section 44 provides for the constitution of State Transport
Authority and Regional Transport Authorities for each State.
Section 45 specifies the authority to which an application
for a permit must be made and what particulars an
application for a permit shall contain is prescribed in
section 46. Section 47 sub-section (1) lays down what
matters shall be taken into account by the Regional
Transport Authority in considering an application for a
stage carriage permit and various other provisions regarding
reservation of certain percentage of stage carriage permits
for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and persons
belonging to economically weaker sections of the community
are made in sub-section (1A) to sub-section (1H) of section
47. Then follows sub-section (3) of section 47 which is in
the following terms:
"47 (3). A Regional Transport Authority may,
having regard to the matters mentioned in sub-section
(1) limit the number of stage carriages generally or of
any specified
295
type for which stage carriage permits may be granted in
the region or in any specified area or on any specified
route within the region."
Section 48 sub section (1) provides that, subject to the
provisions of section 47, a Regional Transport Authority
may, on an application made to it under section 46, grant a
stage carriage permit in accordance with the application or
with such modifications as it deems fit or refuse to grant
such a permit, provided that no such permission shall be
granted in respect of any route or area not specified in the
application. Sub-section (3) of section 48 empowers the
Regional Transport Authority while granting a stage carriage
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permit to attach to the permit any one or more of the
conditions set out in that sub-section. One of the
conditions which may be attached to the permit is that set
out in clause (xxi) and it reads as follows:
"48(xxi): that the Regional Transport Authority
may, after giving notice of not less than one month-
(a) vary the conditions of the permit;
(b) attach to the permit further conditions;
Provided that the conditions specified in
pursuance of clause (i) shall not be varied so as to
alter the distance covered by the original route by
more than 24 kilometres, and any variation within such
limits shall be made only after the Regional Transport
Authority is satisfied that such variation will serve
the public convenience and that it is not expedient to
grant a separate permit in respect of the original
route as so varied or any part thereof."
Sections 49 to 51 deal with an application for grant of
contract carriage permit while sections 52 and 53 deal with
an application for grant of private carrier’s permit. We are
not concerned with these provisions and hence we need not
refer to them. So also we are not concerned with sections 54
to 56 which deal with application for public carrier’s
permit. Section 57 is however an important section and in
its various provisions it lays down the procedure in
applying for and granting permits. Sub-section (2) of
section 57
296
prescribes the time within which an application for a stage
carriage permit should be made and sub-Sections (3) to (7)
lay down the procedure which must be followed by the
Regional Transport Authority while dealing with an
application for a stage carriage permit made before it. Sub-
section (8) of section 57 is the material provision which
calls for interpretation and it runs as follows:
"57 (8): An application to vary the conditions of
any permit, other than a temporary permit, by the
inclusion of a new route or routes or a new area or,
in, the case of a stage carriage permit, by increasing
the (number of trips above the specified maximum or by
altering the route covered by it) or in the case of a
contract carriage permit or a public carrier’s permit,
by increasing the number of vehicles covered by the
permit, shall be treated as an application for the
grant of a new permit."
The argument of the respondents on these provisions was, and
this argument found favour with the High Court, that an
application for extension of the route specified in a permit
is nothing but an application to vary the conditions of the
permit by altering the route covered by it and it is
therefore required by sub-section (8) of section 57 to be
treated as an application for grant of a new permit and
hence, by reason of section 48, the grant of such an
application for extension must be held to be subject to the
provisions of section 47 sub-section (3) and no such
extension can be granted without following the procedure
prescribed by sub-section (3) of section 47. The validity of
this argument was assailed before us on behalf of the
appellants and it was contended that the fulfilment of the
condition set out in sub-section (3) of section 47 was not a
part of the procedure for consideration of an application
for extension of the route specified in a permit and when
sub-section (8) of section 57 provided that such an
application shall be treated as an application for grant of
a new permit, what was sought to be incorporated was merely
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the procedure set out in sub-section (3) to (7) of Section
57 and not pre-condition for consideration of such an
application set out in sub-section (3) of Section (47). This
contention, it was submitted on behalf of the appellants,
was supported by Clause (xxi) of sub-section (3) of Section
48, because if the condition set out in that clause is
attached to a permit, the Regional Transport Authority can
suo motu extend the route specified in the permit upto a
distance of
297
24 k.ms. for serving the public convenience, without being
subject to the provisions of sub-section (3) of Section 47
and if the Regional Transport can do so suo motu without
being required to follow the procedure of sub-section (3) of
Section 47, there is no reason why the Regional Transport
Authority should not be entitled to do so on an application
for extension made by the holder of the permit. These were
the rival arguments urged on behalf of the parties and we
shall now proceed to consider them.
The permit held by the appellants in the present case,
after the deletion of the portion of the route from Shivpuri
to Satanwara was operative only for the remaining portion of
the route namely, Satanwara-Gwalior via Dabra and in view of
the modification made in Scheme No. 11-M by the notification
issued by the State Government under section 68F sub-section
(2) on 18th December, 1978, the appellants applied for
extension of the route from Satanwara to Shivpuri, a
distance less than 20 kilometers. The question it whether
this application could be considered by the Regional
Transport Authority without first determining under section
47 sub-section (3) the number of stage carriages for which
permits may be granted for the route Shivpuri-Satanwara-
Gwalior via Dabra, because if the extension applied for were
granted, that would be the route for which the permit would
be operative. Now, it is clear that it was a condition of
the permit, after the deletion of the portion of the route
from Shivpuri to Satanwara, that the appellants shall use
their vehicle or vehicles only on the route Satanwara-
Gwalior via Dabra. The application of the appellants for
extension of this route by including the portion from
Shivpuri to Satanwara was, therefore, in effect and
substance, an application for varying this condition of the
permit by extending the route and it clearly fell within the
terms of sub-section (8) of section 57. So far there was no
dispute between the parties, but at this point the agreement
between the parties ended and a controversy arose as to what
was the consequence and effect of the applicability of sub-
section (8) of section 57 to this application made by the
appellants. There can be little doubt that under terms of
sub-section (8) of section 57, this application of the
appellants was liable to be "treated as an application for
the grant of a new permit". But the question is: for what
purpose and which of the provisions of the Act could be said
to be attracted to this application by reason of the
requirement that it should be treated as an application for
the grant a new permit. The argument of the respondents was
that no application for grant of a new permit can be
entertained by the Regional Transport Authority under
section 48, unless the number of stage carriages
298
for which permits may be granted for the particular route is
first determined by the Regional Transport Authority under
sub-section (3) of section 47, and, therefore, the
consequence of treating the application of the appellants
for extension of the route as an application for grant of a
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new permit was that no extension could be granted by the
Regional Transport Authority unless the requirement of
section 47 sub-section (3) was first complied with and the
number of stage carriages for which permits may be granted
on the extended route was determined under that provision.
But we do not think this argument is well-founded.
It is undoubtedly true that having regard to the
several decisions of this Court and particularly, the
decision in Mohd. Ibrahim v. State Transport Appellate
Tribunal, Madras, the law must now be taken to be well-
settled that an application for grant of a new permit cannot
be entertained by the Regional Transport Authority under
section 48, unless the limit of the number of stage
carriages for which permits may be granted is first
determined under section 47 sub-section (3). There are two
independent steps required to be taken in connection with
the grant of a permit, the first being the determination by
the Regional Transport Authority under section 47 sub-
section (3) of the number of stage carriages for which
permits may be granted and the second being that "thereafter
applications for stage carriage permits can be entertained"
and, therefore, it would mean that before an application for
grant of a permit can be entertained by the Regional
Transport Authority, there would be a determination under
section 47 subsection (3). Ray, J., as he then was speaking
on behalf of the Court observed in Ibrahim’s case (supra):
"In our opinion, the provisions of the Act in
regard to stage carriage permits have the following
consequences. If the Regional Transport Authority were
to appoint a date for the receipt of applications for
the grant of stage carriage permits, the Regional
Transport Authority should fix the limit of the number
of permits which might be granted and then notify the
same under section 57 (2) of the Act. If, on the other
hand, applications were sent by persons suo motu for
the grant of permit the applications would have to be
published and the representations would have to be
asked for. The proviso of
299
section 57 (3) of the Act furnishes the answer that if
the grant of any permit in accordance with the
application would have the effect of increasing the
number of permits beyond the limit fixed under section
47 (3) of the Act, the Regional Transport Authority
might summarily refuse the application without
following the procedure laid down in section 57 of the
Act. In other cases, the proper stage for fixing the
limit under section 47 (3) of the Act would be after
applications are received and before the same would be
published under section 57 (3) of the Act asking for
representations. If however the Regional Transport
Authority would not increase or modify the number of
permits which already exist, the grant of an
application would mean transgressing the limit fixed,
and procedure laid down in section 57 (3) of the Act
need not than be followed. On the other hand, if the
Regional Transport Authority on receipt of applications
would decide upon the limit of permits and the grant
thereof would be with-in the limit prescribed then the
procedure laid down in section 57 (3) of the Act would
be followed."
There can, therefore, be no doubt that if an application for
varying the condition of a permit by extension of the route
specified in the permit were equated wholly with an
application for grant of a new permit and the permit for the
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extended route were to be regarded as a new permit, the
procedure prescribed in section 47 sub-section (3) would
have to be followed and the number of stage carriages for
which permits may be granted on the extended route would
have to be determined before the application could be
entertained by the Regional Transport Authority. But we do
not think that the prescription in sub-section (8) of
section 57 that an application for varying the condition of
a permit by extension of the route shall be treated as an
application for grant of a new permit has effect of equating
such an application with an application for grant of a new
permit for all purposes so as to attract the applicability
of sub-section (3) of section 47. Section 57 deals with the
procedure in applying for and granting permits and sub-
section (3) to (7) lay down the procedure which must be
followed in considering and deciding, inter alia, an
application for grant of a stage carriage permit. Sub-
section (8) follows upon sub-section (3) to (7) and is part
of the same section which has a definite object and scheme
of providing the procedure for considering and granting an
application and therefore, when it
300
provides that an application to vary the conditions of a
permit by the inclusion of new route or routes or new area
or by increasing the number of trips above the specified
maximum or by altering the route covered by it shall be
treated as an application for grant of a new stage carriage
permit it is obviously intended to incorporate and make
applicable the procedure set out in the preceding sub-
section (3) to (7) to such an application. The context in
which sub-section (8) occurs and its juxtaposition with sub-
section (3) to (7) in section 58 clearly indicate that what
is sought to be made applicable to an application referred
to in sub-section (8) by treating it as an application for
grant of a new permit, is the procedure set out in sub-
section (3) to (7) of section 58 and nothing more. The
requirement spelt out in sub-section (3) of section 47 that
the number of stage carriages for which permits may be
granted on any particular route must be first determined
before an application for grant of a stage carriage permit
can be entertained by the Regional Transport Authority under
section 48, is obviously not a part of the procedure for
considering an application for grant of a permit; it is a
condition precedent before an application for grant of a
permit can be considered and granted. This condition
precedent cannot be said to have been incorporated by
reference under sub-section (8) of section 57. An
application to vary the conditions of a permit as set out is
undoubtedly to be treated as an application for grant of a
new permit, but that is only for the purpose of applying the
procedure set out in sub-section (3) to (7) of that section.
It is not an application for a new permit and if it is
granted, the permit for the extended route does not become a
new permit in the hands of the applicant. It is the same
permit which now, after the granting of the application,
covers the extended route. It may be possible to say that
where a totally new route is sought to be included by an
application to vary the conditions of a permit or the
alteration of the route sought by such an application is of
such a drastic character that it becomes substantially a new
route, the application, though in form an application to
vary the conditions of the permit, would in effect a and
substance, be an application for grant of a new permit and
in such a case, a view may conceivably be taken with some
degree of plausibility that the number of stage carriages
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for which permits may be granted on such new route should
first be determined under section 47 sub-section (3) before
the application to vary the conditions of the permit can be
entertained. An applicant for a permit on a route which is
not merely technically, but in truth and reality a different
route, distinct from the original route, may not be
permitted to defeat the provision enacted in section 47 sub-
section (3) by
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labelling his application as one for varying the conditions
of the permit and in such a case, the procedure set out in
section 47 sub-section (3) may have to be complied with
before the Regional Transport Authority can consider and
grant the application. But where an application merely seeks
a short extension of the route specified in the permit as in
the present case, it would not be appropriate to say that it
is an application for grant of a new permit, though
technically the extended route may not be regarded as the
same as the original route and where such is the case, it
would not be necessary to comply with the procedure set out
in sub-section (3) of Section 47.
We are, therefore, of the view that the High Court was
in error in holding that the application made by the
appellants for extension of the route specified in their
permit from Satanwara to Shivpuri could not be considered by
the Regional Transport Authority with out following the
procedure prescribed under sub-section (3) of Section 47. We
accordingly allow the appeal, set aside the judgment of the
High Court as also the order made by the Regional Transport
Authority and remit the case back to the Regional Transport
Authority for considering the application of the appellants
in accordance with law in the light of the observations
contained in this judgment. There will be no order as to
costs of the appeal.
S.R. Appeal allowed.
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