Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SYED YAKOOB
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
K.S. RADHAKRISHNAN & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/10/1963
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SUBBARAO, K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
SHAH, J.C.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1964 AIR 477 1964 SCR (5) 64
CITATOR INFO :
R 1965 SC 111 (15)
R 1969 SC 966 (5)
F 1971 SC1902 (20)
F 1975 SC2151 (23)
RF 1976 SC 232 (10)
R 1983 SC1102 (6)
F 1984 SC1447 (3)
ACT:
Certiorari--Grounds of issue--Stage carriage permit--
-Tribunal’s finding that applicant had no workshop at
terminii---Absence reasons. If error of law apparent of the
face of the Record---Writ jurisdiction of High
Court--Constitution of India, Art. 226---Motor vehicle Act,
1939(4 of 1939), s 47.
HEADNOTE:
The State Transport Authority issued a notification under
the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, calling for applications for
the grant of two stage carriage permits for the route Madras
to Chidambaram. A large number of applications were
received. The authority granted the first permit to one of
the applicants and for the second it decided to call for
fresh applications. The appellant, as also a number of
other applicants, appealed to the State Transport Appellate
Tribunal. The Tribunal confirmed the grant of the first
permit and as regards the second it allowed the appeal of
the appellant and directed that it should be granted to him.
Respondent No. 1 moved the High Court under Art.226 of the
Constitution for the issue of a writ of certiorari and the
single Judge who heard the matter held that the Appellate
Tribunal had overlooked relevant considerations, and allowed
irrelevant considerations to prevail and so made the Rule
absolute. A Letters Patent appeal was preferred by the
appellant. The Division Bench affirmed the order of the
single Judge on the ground that the Appellate Tribunal had
overlooked material considerations in favour of the
respondent No. 1 and dismissed the appeal The appellant
came to this Court by special leave and it was contended on
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his behalf that in issuing the writ of certiorari the High
Court exceeded its jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the
Constitution.
Held: (per Gajendragadkar, Wanchoo, Shah and Dayal
JJ.). The contention raised on behalf of the appellant was
well founded and must prevail.
A writ of certiorari is issued for correcting errors of
jurisdiction committed by courts or tribunals, in cases
where they exceed their jurisdiction or fail to exercise it
or exercise it illegally or improperly, i.e. where an order
is passed without hearing the party sought to be affected by
it or where the procedure adopted is opposed to principles
of natural justice.
The jurisdiction to issue a writ of certiorari is a
supervisory one and in exercising it, the court is not
entitled to act as a court of appeal. That necessarily
means that the findings of fact arrived at by the inferior
court or tribunal arc binding.
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An error of law apparent on the face of the record can,
however, be corrected by a writ of certiorari, but not an
error of fact however grave it may appear to be.
A writ of certiorari can also be issued if it is shown
that in recording a finding of fact, admissible and material
evidence has, not been admitted, or inadmissible evidence
affecting the impugned finding has been admitted. A finding
of fact based on no evidence would also be an error of law
and as Such amenable to such a writ.
But a finding of fact cannot be challenged in such a
proceeding on the ground that the relevant and material
evidence was insufficient to sustain the finding. Adequacy
or sufficiency of evidence or an inference of fact to be
drawn from the evidence or finding of fact are entirely
within the jurisdiction of the Tribunal.
Hari Vishnu Kamath v. Syed Ahmed Ishaque, [1955] 1
S.C.R. 1104, Nagendra Nath Bora v. The Commissioner of Hills
Division and Appeals, Assam, [1958] S.C.R. 1240 and
Kaushalya Devi v. Bachittar Singh, A.I.R. 1960 S.C. 1168,
relied on.
It is neither possible nor desirable to define or
describe all cases of errors which can be said to be errors
of law apparent on the face of the record. Whether or not
an error is such an error would depend on the facts and
circumstances of each case and the nature and scope of the
law misconstrued or contravened.
It was not open to a party on the authority of the
decision of this Court in K.M. Shanmugam v.S.R.V.S. (P)
Ltd., to come to the High Court under Art. 226 to have all
questions of fact reconsidered so as to invoke the plea of
’public interest’ under s. 47 of the Motor Vehicles Act.
K. M. Shamnugam v. S.R.V.S. (P) Ltd., 1 [1964] 1 S.C.R.
809, held inapplicable.
In the present case the controversy centered round the
fact whether the respondent No. 1 had a workshop at
Chidambaram, one of the two terminii of the route and that
the tribunal had failed to duly consider some evidence in
that connection. That argument was an argument related to
appreciation of evidence and as such was outside the purview
of a proceeding for a writ of certiorari. The High Court
was therefore, in error in issuing the writ of certiorari.
In issuing a writ and in making it absolute, care should
be taken to draw the order accurately.
Unless allegations are made against them, the State
Transport Authority or the Appellate Tribunal should not be
represented through lawyers. Their position in ordinary
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cases is just the same as that of courts and other
tribunals.
Per Subba Rao J.--Where the tribunal ignores or fails
to investigate a material circumstance germane to a question
of public
1 SCI/64--5
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interest under s. 47 of the Act put forward by a claimant
for permit and gives a finding against him, that finding is
vitiated by an error of law apparent on the face of the
record and is liable to be quashed by a writ of certiorari.
and the Appellate Tribunal failed to consider the specific
claim of the respondent 1 as to the existence of his
workshop at Chidambaram and was, therefore, right in setting
aside their orders. The High Court could not be said to
have exceeded its jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the
Constitution.
This was a clear case where the Tribunal made a finding
that was based on no evidence and was contrary to the
specific claim made before it. Since the first respondent
had secured the highest number of marks, this claim, if
substantiated, would tilt the balance in his favour. This
Court would not interfere in such a matter in the exercise
of its extraordinary jurisdiction under Art. 136 of the
Constitution to set aside the High Court’s order.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 593 of
1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated December 19, 1962, of the Madras High Court in Writ
Appeal No. 157 of 1961.
M.C. Setalvad, and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the appellant.
G.S. Pathak, O.C. Mathur, J.B. Dadachanji and Ravinder
Narain, for respondent No. 1.
Ranganadham Chetty and A.V. Rangant, respondents Nos. 2
and 3.
The Judgment of P.B. Gajendragadkar, K.N. Wanchoo, J.C.
Shah, Ragubar Dayal JJ. was delivered by Gajendragadkar J.
Subba Rao J. delivered a dissenting opinion.
GAJENDRAGADKAR J.---The short question which this appeal
raises for our decision relates to the limits of the
jurisdiction of the High Court in issuing a writ of
certiorari while dealing with. orders passed by the
appropriate authorities granting or refusing to grant
permits under the provisions of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939
(hereinafter called ’the Act’).
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The State Transport Authority, Madras, (hereinafter
referred to as Authority)issued a notification on the 4th
July, 1956, under section 57(2) of the Act calling for
applications for the grant of two stage carriage permits to
run as an express service on the route Madras to
Chidambaram. 107 applications were received in response to
the said notification; some of these were rejected as time-
barred or otherwise defective, and the others which were in
order were examined by the Authority.
On the 8th May, 1957, the Authority found that
Provincial Transport (Private) Ltd., Madras, was the most
suitable amongst the applicants and granted one permit to
it. As regards the second permit, the Authority held that
none of the other applicants was suitable, and so, it
refused to grant the said permit to anyone of them:it
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decided to call for applications afresh under s. 57(2) of
the Act.
Against this order, appeals were preferred by 18
claimants for permits before the State Transport Appellate
Tribunal (hereinafter called "the Appellate Tribunal);
amongst them was the appellant Syed Yakoob and respondent
No. 1 K.S. Radhakrishnan. The Appellate Tribunal confirmed
the grant of the first permit to the Provincial Transport
(Pvt.) Ltd: and so Car as the second permit was concerned,
it allowed the appeal preferred by the appellant and
directed that the said second permit should be issued to
him; respondent No. 1’s claim for the said permit was
accordingly rejected. This order was passed on the 7th
July, 1958.
The validity of this order was challenged by respondent
No. 1 by his writ petition No. 44 of 1959 11led in the High
Court of Madras. Srinivasan J., who heard the writ petition
held that th e Tribunal had overlooked material
considerations in deciding the question of the grant of the
second permit and allowed considerations not germane to the
question to vitiate its order. That is why the rule issued
on the writ petition filed by respondent No. 1 was made
absolute.
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This order was challenged by the appellant before a
Division Bench of the said High Court by an appeal preferred
under Clause 15 of the Letters Patent. The Division Bench
has held that the order passed by Srinivasan J. could be
sustained on the ground that the Appellate Tribunal had
overlooked material considerations in favour of respondent
No. 1, and so, ’it has affirmed the decision of the learned
single Judge on that ground alone. In regard to the finding
of the learned single Judge that an. irrelevant
consideration had vitiated the finding of the Appellate
Tribunal, the Division Bench held that the consideration in
question was not irrelevant, and so, it differed from the
view taken by Srinivasan J. In the result, the appeal
preferred by the appellant before the Division Bench was
dismissed. It is against this order that the appellant has
come to this Court by special leave and to his appeal he has
impleaded respondent No. 1 and has added the Authority and
the Appellate Tribunal as respondents 2 and 3 Mr. Setalvad
for the appellant contends that in issuing a writ of
certiorari in respect of the impugned order passed by the
Appellate. Tribunal, the High Court has clearly exceeded its
jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the Constitution. In our
opinion. this contention is well-founded and must be
accepted.
The question about the limits of the jurisdiction of High
Courts in issuing a writ of certiorari under Art. 226 has
been frequently considered by this Court and the true legal
position in that behalf is no longer in doubt. A writ of
certiorari can be issued for correcting errors of
jurisdiction committed by inferior courts or tribunals;
these are cases where orders are passed by inferior courts
or tribunals without jurisdiction, or in excess of it, or as
a result of failure to exercise jurisdictions. A writ can
similarly be issued where in exercise of jurisdiction
conferred on it, the Court or Tribunal acts illegally or
improperly, as for instance, it decides a question without
giving an opportunity to be heard to the party affected by
the order, or where the procedure adopted in dealing with
the
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dispute is opposed to principles of natural justice. There
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is, however, no doubt that the jurisdiction to issue a writ
of certiorari is a supervisory jurisdiction and the Court
exercising it is not entitled to act as an appellate Court.
This limitation necessarily means that findings of fact
reached by the inferior Court or Tribunal as a result of the
appreciation of evidence cannot be reopened or questioned in
writ proceedings. An error of law which is apparent on the
face of the record can be corrected by a writ, but not an
error of tact, however grave it may appear to be. In regard
to a finding of fact recorded by the Tribunal, a writ of
certiorari can be issued if it is shown that in recording
the said finding, the. Tribunal had. erroneously refused to
admit admissible and material evidence, or had erroneously
admitted inadmissible evidence which has influenced the
impugned finding. Similarly, if a finding of fact is based
on no evidence, that would be regarded as an error of law
which can be corrected by a writ of certiorari. In dealing
with this category of cases, however, we must always bear in
mind that a finding of fact recorded by the Tribunal cannot
be challenged in proceedings for a writ of certiorari on the
ground that the relevant and material evidence adduced
before the Tribunal was’ insufficient or inadequate to
sustain the impugned finding. The adequacy or sufficiency
of evidence led on a point and the inference of fact to be
drawn from the said finding are within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Tribunal, and the said points cannot be
agitated before a writ court. It is within these limits that
the jurisdiction conferred on the High Courts under Art. 226
to issue a writ of certiorari can be legitimately exercised
(vide Hari Vishnu Kamath v. Syed Ahmed Ishaque(1),
Nagendra Nath Bora v. The Commissioner of Hills Division and
Appeals, Assam(2), and Kaushalya Devi v. Bachittar Singh(3).
It is, of course, not easy to define or adequately
describe what an error of law apparent on the face of
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1104. (2) [1958] S.C.R. 1240.
(3) A.I.R. 1960 S.C. 1168.
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the record means. What can be corrected by a writ has to be
an error of law; but it must be such an error of law as can
be regarded as one which is apparent on the face of the
record. Where it is manliest or clear that the conclusion
of law recorded by an inferior Court or Tribunal is based on
an obvious mis-interpretation of the relevant statutory
provision, or sometimes in ignorance of it, or may be, even
in disregard of it, or is expressly rounded on reasons which
are wrong in law, the said conclusion can be corrected by a
writ of certiorari. In all these cases, the impugned
conclusion should be so plainly inconsistent with the
relevant statutory provision that no difficulty is
experienced by the High Court in holding that the said error
of law is apparent on the face of the record. It may also
be that in some cases. the impugned error of law may not be
obvious or patent on the face of the record as such and the
Court may need an argument to discover the said error; but
there can be no doubt that what can be corrected by a writ
of certiorari is an error of law and the said error must, on
the whole, be of such a character as would satisfy the test
that it is an error of law apparent on the face of the
record. If a statutory provision is reasonably capable of
two constructions and one construction has been adopted by
the inferior Court or Tribunal, its conclusion may not
necessarily or always be open to correction by a writ of
certiorari. In our opinion, it is neither possible nor
desirable to attempt either to define or to describe
adequately all cases of errors which can be appropriately
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described as errors of law apparent on the face of the
record. Whether or not an impugned error is an error of law
and an error of law which is apparent on the face of the
record, must always depend upon the facts and circumstances
of each case and upon the nature and scope of the legal
provision which is alleged to have been misconstrued or
contravened.
In the present case, the question raised by the
appellant presents no difficulty whatever. The point which
was raised before the High Court by respondent
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No. 1 lies within a very narrow compass; it is a very short
and simple question of fact. It appears that in dealing
with the rival claims of the appellant and respondent No. 1
for the second permit on the route in question, the
Appellate Tribunal was ultimately influenced by the fact
that the appellant had a workshop at Madras which is one
terminus of the route in question, whereas respondent No. 1
had a workshop and a place of business only at Cuddalore
which is an intermediate station on the route and did not
possess a workshop at either of the terminii of the route;
the other terminus being Chidambaram. In fact, that appears
to be the effect of the finding made by the Authority also.
Respondent No. 1 urged before the High Court that in coming
to the conclusion that he had no workshop at Chidambaram,
the Appellate Tribunal had failed to consider material
evidence adduced by him. It is on this narrow ground that a
writ has been issued in favour of respondent No. 1. Mr.
Setalvad contends that the question as to whether respondent
No. 1 had a workshop at Chidambaram is a pure question of
fact and the High Court had no jurisdiction to interfere
with the finding recorded by the Appellate Tribunal and seek
to correct it by issuing a writ of certiorari. In this
connection, he relies on the fact that both the Authority
and the Appellate Tribunal have, in substance, found that
respondent No. 1 had no workshop at either of the two
terminii on the route and the fact that no reasons have
been given in support of the said finding would not justify
the interference of the High Court in its jurisdiction under
Art. 226. It may be conceded that it would have been
better if the Appellate Tribunal had indicated why it
rejected the case of respondent No. 1 in regard to his
alleged workshop at Chadambaram, but we do not think that
the failure of the Appellate Tribunal to give a reason in
that behalf, or to refer specifically to the evidence
adduced by respondent No.1, would, by itself, constitute
such an error in its decision as to justify the issue of a
writ of certiorari under Art. 226. In this connection, we
ought to add that it has not been suggested by
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respondent No. 1 that in dealing with his claim for a
permit, admissible evidence which he wanted to adduce had
been excluded by the Tribunal from the record;the argument
that some evidence was not duly considered by the Tribunal,
would normally pertain to the realm of the appreciation of
evidence and would, as such, be outside the purview of an
enquiry in proceedings for a writ of certiorari under Art.
226.
It appears that when respondent No. 1 applied for the
permit, he sent a letter dated 11th July, 1956, in which he
had stated that he had a workshop at Chidambaram and that he
was running it in order to maintain the service efficiently
and without any breakdown whatsoever. The argument is that
this letter has not been challenged by any party to the
proceedings and has been completely ignored by the Authority
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and the Appellate Tribunal when they reached the conclusion
that respondent No. 1 did not possess a workshop at
Chidambaram. As we have already pointed out, neither the
Authority nor the Appellate Tribunal has given reasons in
support of the findings of fact recorded by it; but the said
fact alone does not, in our opinion, justify the conclusion
of the High Court that the letter in question had not been
considered by the said Authorities, and so, the High Court
was not right in issuing a writ of certiorari on that basis
alone.
But apart from this aspect of the matter, the record
shows that the assertion of respondent No. 1 that he had a
workshop at Chidambaram was contradicted by one of the
claimants for a permit and is entirely inconsistent with the
reports submitted to the Authority and the Appellate
Tribunal by the department. D. Kanniah Pillai, one of the
applicants for the permit, had specifically averred in his
application that the other applicants amongst whom
respondent No. 1 was included, were all for away from the
Headquarters having no workshop at Chidambaram. Thus, it
would not be right to assume that the claim made by
respondent No. 1 that he had a workshop at Chidambaram was
not disputed by any other competitor.
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What is more significant, however, is the evidence supplied
by the report made by the Regional Transport Officer, South
Arcot. This report is made under different columns. Column
4 speaks about the possession of workshop or repair or
maintenance facilities and its location. The report is made
in respect of each one of the applicants. In regard to
respondent No. 1 under column 4, the report shows that he
was maintaining a workshop as per Government Order at
Cuddalore, and column 5 speaks about the location of his
residence or place of business as Cuddalore. A similar
report has been submitted about the appellant and that shows
that the appellant had workshop facilities at Madras and
that he had a residence and place of business at the
terminus.
When the present dispute went before the Appellate
Tribunal, a fresh report appears to have been called for,
and this report which has been made by the Secretary, State
Transport Authority, also shows that respondent No. 1 had a
workshop at Cuddalore on the route, whereas the appellant
had a workshop at Madras. It would thus be clear that on
the question as to whether respondent No. 1 had a workshop
at Chidambaram, there was his own assertion stating that he
had such a workshop. and there were the two reports made by
the Transport Officers which contradicted the said
assertion; the said assertion was also challenged by one of
the applicants." On this state of the record, it was, we
think, not permissible to the High Court to consider these
questions of fact and to hold that the finding recorded by
the Appellate Tribunal was a finding without any evidence.
To say that material considerations were ignored by the
Appellate Tribunal in holding that respondent No. 1 did not
own a workshop a.t Chidambaram would be plainly unreasonable
when it is remembered that the evidence disclosed a sharp
conflict between the versions of the parties, and the
version of respondent No. 1 was inconsistent with the
reports made by the Transport Officers which must have been
treated as more reliable by the Appellate Tribunal. There
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can be little doubt that if respondent No. 1 had owned a
workshop at Chidambaram, it would have been mentioned in
col. 4, because the said column is obviously intended to
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indicate all places where the claimant owns a workshop and
possesses repair facilities.
It appears that before Srinivasan J. the appellant’s
learned counsel conceded that the allegation made by
respondent No. 1 that he owned a workshop at Chidambaram had
not been challenged before the Transport Authorities, and
naturally Srinivasan J. was considerably impressed by the
said concession; but as the Division Bench which heard the
Letters Patent Appeal has pointed out, the said concession
was not correctly made; in fact, the record distinctly shows
that the claim made by respondent No. 1 was challenged by
one of the applicants for permit and was plainly
inconsistent with the reports to which we have just
referred. Therefore, the concession on which Srinivasan J.,
relied has been properly left out of account by the Division
Bench in dealing with the appeal. The Division Bench
thought that apart from the said concession, it did appear
that the Appellate Tribunal had overlooked the claim made
by respondent No. 1 in his letter of the 11 th July, 1956.
As we have already indicated, we find it difficult to
sustain this finding. In our opinion, apart from the fact
that the plea raised by respondent No. 1 could not be
validly raised under Art. 226, even on the merits the said
plea is not well-founded. The question on which respondent
No. 1 sought for the intervention of the High Court under
Art. 226 was a simple question of fact, and we are satisfied
that on that question of fact, the Appellate Tribunal was
justified in coming to the conclusion that the claim made by
respondent No. 1 about the existence of a workshop at
Chidambaram was not well-founded; but even if the said
finding did not appear to the High Court to be satisfactory,
that would be no reason for issuing a writ under Art. 226.
There was evidence in support of the finding of the
Appellate Tribunal and it is not a
75
case where the finding is based on no evidence at all. We
ought also to add that though the Division Bench was
satisfied that the concession on which Srinivasan J.,
substantially acted had been wrongly made before him, its
attention does not appear to have been drawn to the reports
made by the Transport Officers to which we have just
referred. We have no doubt that if the Division Bench had
taken into account those reports, it would have hesitated to
confirm the finding made by Srinivasan J.
It appears that Srinivasan J., was inclined to take the
view that the decision of the Appellate Tribunal was
vitiated by the fact that it took into account certain
irrelevant considerations. The Division Bench has held that
the said considerations cannot be said to be irrelevant.
These considerations centre round the question as to whether
preference should be given to an applicant for permit who
has his headquarters at the terminus as against another who
has only a branch office at the said terminus. The practice
usually followed by the Tribunals under the Act appears to
be to give one mark under col. 3 to the applicant who has
his headquarters at the terminus and give only 1/2 mark to
an applicant who has only a branch office at the terminus.
Having held that the consideration on which marks are thus
allotted cannot be said to be irrelevant, the Division Bench
has indicated that the policy underlying the said practice
may be open to doubt. In our opinion, it would have been
better if the Division Bench had not expressed any opinion
on this aspect of the matter, particularly when it came to
the conclusion that the said matter was primarily for the
decision of the Appellate Tribunal.
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Mr. Pathak for respondent No. 1 has relied on a recent
decision of this Court in K.M. Shanmugam v. The S.R.V.S. (P)
Ltd.(1) in support of his contention that the error
committed by the Appellate Tribunal really amounted to a
contravention of s. 47 of the Act. He argues that the
Appellate Tribunal was
(1) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 809.
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under an obligation, in considering the question about the
grant of a permit, to take into account the interests of
public generally under s. 47(a) and inasmuch as the
Appellate Tribunal has ignored the fact that ’respondent No.
1 owns a workshop at Chidambaram and thereby has refused his
application for a permit, the interests of the,public
generally have been sacrificed. This argument prima facie
appears to be far-fetched and fanciful; but Mr. Pathak urges
that the observations made by this Court in the case of K.M.
Shanmugum are in his favour. In our opinion, the said
decision does not lend any assistance to Mr. Pathak’s
contention. In that case, this Court was satisfied that
"the Tribunal made a clear error of law inasmuch as it held
that in the case of the first respondent, as it had a branch
at Kumbakonam, its other branch at Manmargudi should be
ignored." The judgment shows that this Court took the view
that it was obviously an untenable proposition to hold that
even if a company has a well-equipped office on a route in
respect of which a permit is applied for, it shall be
ignored if the company has some other branch somewhere
unconnected with that route, and it was observed that was
precisely what the Appellate Tribunal had held and that,
according to the Court, clearly was an error apparent on the
face of the record. It is in that connection that this Court
referred to the mandatory provisions of s. 47. We do not
think that this decision can be legitimately pressed into
service by Mr. Pathak in the present case. It is only after
it is proved that respondent No. 1 had a workshop at
Chidambaram that any subsequent question about the
interests of the public generally can possibly arise. If,
as in the present case, the Appellate Tribunal has held that
respondent No. 1 did not own a workshop at Chidambaram, no
consideration of public interests can arise at all, and it
is with this question that the present writ proceedings are
concerned. We ought to add that the decision in the case of
K.M. Shanmugam cannot justify a party whose application for
permit has been rejected by the authorities under the Act,
to move the High
77
Court under Art. 226 and invite it to consider all questions
of fact on the plea that the decision on the said questions
of fact may assist him to invoke the provisions of s. 47.
That clearly is not the effect of the said decision.
Mr. Pathak has also urged that even if we come to the
conclusion that the High Court was not competent to issue a
writ in the present proceedings, having regard to the nature
of the questions raised before it by respondent No. 1, we
should not reverse the decision of the High Court under Art.
136 of the Constitution. The jurisdiction of this Court
under Art. 136, though very wide, is exercised by the Court
in its discretion, says Mr. Pathak, and he contends that
where the order under appeal furthers the ends of justice,
we should not reverse the said order on technical grounds.
We are not impressed by this plea. It may be conceded that
in a proper case this Court may refuse to exercise its
jurisdiction under Art. 136 where the interests of justice
patently indicate the desirability of adopting such a
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course; but we do not see how a plea of such a kind can be
entertained where it is clearly shown that the impugned
orders passed by the High. Court are without jurisdiction.
If Mr. Pathak’s argument were to be accepted, in a majority
of cases if the High Court interfered with questions of fact
in issuing writs of certiorari against the decisions of
special Tribunals, it may always be urged that what the High
Courts have done is in the interests of justice and this
Court should not interfere with the decisions of the High
Courts. In the circumstances of the present case, we do not
see how considerations of justice can really arise. The
Tribunals of fact have found that respondent No. 1 does not
own a workshop at Chidambaram and having regard to the other
relevant circumstances which the Tribunals have considered,
the fact that he does not own a workshop at Chidambaram has
ultimately proved decisive against respondent No. 1 and in
favour of the appellant. If that be so, a decision based on
facts found by the
78
Tribunal cannot be reopened on the plausible plea that a
further enquiry should be made because that would be just.
If findings of fact were allowed to be disturbed by High
Courts in such writ proceedings, that may lead to an
interminable search for correct findings and would virtually
convert the High Courts into Appellate Courts competent to
deal with questions of fact. That is why we think, in
entertaining petitions for writs of certiorari, it is
necessary to remember that findings of fact recorded by
special Tribunals which have been clothed with jurisdiction
to deal with them, should be treated as final between the
parties, unless, of course, it is shown that the impugned
finding is based on no evidence. Therefore, we do not
think the plea made by Mr. Pathak that in the interests of
justice we should refrain from setting aside the order under
appeal, can be upheld.
There is one more point to which reference must be made.
It appears that in the writ petition filed by respondent No.
1 he claimed that the orders passed by the Authority and the
Appellate Tribunal should be set aside, and a rule was
issued in terms of the prayer made in the said petition.
Ultimately, the said rule has been made absolute. It is
obvious that in the writ petition, respondent No. 1 did not
challenge the grant of the permit to the’ Provincial
Transport (Pvt.) Ltd., but unfortunately, having regard to
the prayer made by respondent No. 1 in his writ petition,
the orders ultimately passed in the said proceedings ,may,
if technically construed, mean that the orders of the
Authority as well as the Appellate Tribunal have been set
aside and that clearly was not and could not have been the
intention of the High Court in issuing the writ. It would,
we think, be better if in issuing a writ on a writ petition
and in making it absolute in case the writ petition
succeeds, care is taken to draw the order more accurately.
The result is, the appeal is allowed, the order passed
by the High Court is set aside and the writ
79
petition filed by respondent No. 1 is dismissed; Respondent
1 to pay the cost of the appellant in this Court.
Mr. Ranganathan Cherry who appears for respondents 2 and
3 has asked for his costs. We do not think this request can
be accepted. It may be that in such proceedings, the
Authority and the Appellate Tribunal are proper and
necessary parties, but unless allegations are made against
them which need a reply from them, it is not usual for the
authorities to be represented by lawyers in Court. In
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ordinary cases, their position is like that of courts or
other Tribunals against whose decisions writ proceedings are
filed; they are not interested in the merits of the dispute
in any sense, and so, their representation by lawyers in
such proceedings is wholly unnecessary and even
inappropriate. That is why we direct that respondents 2 and
3 should bear their own costs.
SUBBA RAO J.--I have had the advantage of perusing the
judgment of my learned brother, Gajendragadkar J. I cannot
agree. The facts lie in a small compass and they are as
follows:The State Transport Authority, Madras, called for
applications for the grant of two stage carriage permits on
the route Madras to Chidambaram. 107 applications were
received by the said Authority. The appellant and the first
respondent are two of the said applicants. The State
Transport Authority gave one of the permits to the
Provincial Transport (Private) Limited, Madras: we are not
concerned with this permit. As regards the second permit,
the said Authority found none of the applicants suitable
and, therefore, refused to grant the same to any one of them
and directed fresh applications to be called for. Against
the said order, the appellant, first respondent and others
preferred appeals to the State Transport Appellate Tribunal.
The appellant herein was respondent 16 and respondent herein
was appellant 7 before the said Appellate Tribunal. The
first respondent secured the highest total marks, viz.,
71/2-, under columns 1 to 5 under the scheme of marking
sanctioned by the State Government. The appellant got only
41/2 marks. Ignoring the highest total of
80
marks secured by the first respondent, the Appellate
Tribunal rejected his claim on the ground that he had his
workshop and place of business en route at Cuddalore and not
at either of the terminii of the route. Excluding the first
respondent, the Appellate Tribunal, for the reasons
mentioned in the order, preferred the appellant in a
competition between him and appellant 14 before the
Tribunal. The main ground of preference was that the
appellant had got his workshop in the headquarters at
Madras. In file result, the Appellate Tribunal rejected the
application of the first respondent and gave the permit to
the appellant. The first respondent filed a writ petition
under Art. 226 of the Constitution in the High Court
Judicature at Madras for the issue of a writ of certiorari
for quashing the order of the said Tribunal. The said
petition was heard by Srinivasan J., and he quashed the
order of the Appellate Tribunal mainly on the ground that
the Tribunal did not take into consideration a material and
relevant circumstance to the enquiry before it, namely, that
the petitioner had the necessary repair and maintenance
facilities at Chidambaram, one of the terminii of the route
in question. In that view the learned Judge quashed the
order of the Appellate Tribunal. On Letters Patent Appeal,
a Division Bench of the High Court, consisting of
Ramachandra Iyer C.J., and Venkataraman J., held that the
learned Judge should not have given a finding on the
question whether the first respondent had the above said
facilities at Chidambaram, but agreed with him that the
Appellate Tribunal had overlooked the claim made by the
first respondent to the effect that he had such facilities
at Chidambaram. Hence the appeal.
Mr. Setalvad, learned counsel appearing for the
appellant, contended that the Appellate Tribunal had held on
the material placed before it that the, first respondent had
no such facilities at the terminal and that, therefore, the
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High Court had n0 jurisdiction to interfere with the finding
of fact arrived at by the Appellate Tribunal.
81
Mr. Pathak, learned counsel for the first respondent,
argued that though the first respondent clearly stated in
his letter dated July 11, 1956, to the Transport Authority
that he had such facilities, the State Transport Authority
as well as the State Transport Appellate Tribunal had
ignored that material circumstance which was germane to the
question of public interest under s. 47 of the Motor
Vehicles Act, 1939, and, therefore, the High Court had
rightly quashed that order under Art. 226 of the
Constitution and directed the Tribunal to dispose of the
appeal on merits. Alternatively he contended that though
there might be some material for the Appellate Tribunal to
come to the conclusion that the first respondent had no such
facilities, three learned Judges of the High Court, on the
admissions made and the material placed before them, have
held that the Tribunal did not decide that question and that
they only gave a further opportunity to the Appellate
Tribunal to decide the appeal on merits and that in the
circumstances it is not a fit case for this Court to
interfere under Art. 136 of the Constitution.
The first respondent has a fundamental right to carry on
business in transport. The Motor Vehicles Act is a law
imposing reasonable restrictions in public interests on such
right. Under s. 47 of the said Act the Regional Transport
Authority shall in considering an application for a stage
carriage permit, have regard, inter alia, to the interests
of the public generally. The fact that the first respondent
has a separate workshop or at any rate has the necessary
repair and maintenance facilities at one of the terminii of
the route, viz., at Chidambaram, is certainly a
consideration germane to the question of public interest.
Indeed, the scheme of marking system suggested by the
Government also recognizes the importance of such facilities
at either of the terminii of the route. If the first
respondent had placed before the authorities concerned the
said circumstance in support of his claim for a permit and
if that was ignored or not investigated into by the said
authorities, the High Court would certainly
1 SCI/64--5
82
have jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the Constitution to
quash the order of the authorities and direct them to
ascertain whether the claim of the first respondent was
true, and if it was true, to take that into consideration
before issuing the permit to one or other of the claimants
before them. In such an event the High Court would not be
interfering with the finding fact arrived at by the
Appellate Tribunal based on the material placed before it,
but would only be quashing the order on the ground that an
important and material circumstance was ignored or not
investigated into by the Tribunal. If a Tribunal ignores or
fails to investigate a material circumstance put
forward by a claimant and gives a finding against him, the
said finding can certainly be said to be vitiated by an
error of law apparent on the face of the record.
In the present case, the State Transport Authority was
considering the competing claims of 107. persons for two
permits. The said Authority gave its decision on May 8,
1957. The first respondent filed his application for a
permit on July 11, 1956. On the same day he addressed a
letter to the said Authority to the following effect:
"Chidambaram is one of the terminii
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of this proposed route. A separate office
and workshop are located at Chidambaram in
order to maintain the service efficiently and
without any breakdown or whatsoever."
None of the innumerable applicants in his
application denied specifically the c|aim of
the first respondent that he had a separate
office and workshop at Chidambaram. This fact
was conceded before Srinivasan J., though the
learned judge put the concession somewhat
higher than was actually made. Nor did the
learned counsel for the appellant go back on
the limited concession before the Division
Bench. But one Kanniah Pillai, who was
applicant No. 43-D), stated in his application
thus:
"The applicant Nos. 43, 57, 69, 78 and 81 are
residents of Chidambaram but No. 57 is a fleet
83
owner. Nos. 69 and 78 have no workshop. No.
81 is a new entrant. The rest all are far
away from the headquarters having no workshop
at Chidambaram."
Except this vague and implied denial by Kanniah Pillai,
there is nothing on the record to suggest that any other
applicant denied the claim of the first respondent. The
fact remains that the appellant did not at any stage of the
proceedings refute the claim of the first respondent.
With this background let me first look at the order of
the State Transport Authority,. The said Authority has
ignored the said letter of the first respondent claiming to
have a workshop at Chidambaram, but it stated in an omnibus
clause that the first respondent and some of the other
applicants were residents either in the middle or off the
route and they were not so well situated as an applicant who
had facilities at one end of the route with all the
necessary facilities. It may be stated that this is an
implied finding against the first respondent, but the
complaint of the first respondent is that it is made in
utter disregard of his claim. So too, the Appellate
Tribunal observed in its order disposing of the 18 appeals
before it that the first respondent, who had secured the
highest number of marks, including those column 1 of the
mark list, ’had his workshop and place of business en route
at Cuddalore and not at either of the terminii of the route.
This observation was also made in utter disregard of the
claim made by the first respondent that he had a workshop
Chidambaram, one of the terminii of the route, and though
the other applicants, except one, had not denied the said
fact. The High Court, therefore, found on the material
placed before it that the said Authority as well as the
Tribunal had failed to consider the specific claim made by
the. first respondent in regard to his work.shop at
Chidambaram and, therefore, rightly set aside the order of
the Appellate Tribunal so that the Appellate Tribunal might
consider the claim made by the first respondent. I
84
do not see any flaw in the reasoning of the High Court. Nor
can I say that it has exceeded its jurisdiction under Art.
226 of the Constitution.
But, Mr. Setalvad. contended that there was material
before the Tribunal and that the Tribunal gave its finding
on the basis of that material. He relied upon an extract
from the report of the Regional Transport Authority, South
Arcot, dated January 31, 1957. That was a report sent by
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the said Authority to the State Transport Authority.
Against the name of the first respondent in column 4 under
the heading "possession of workshop or repair or maintenance
facilities and its location" it is stated, "maintaining a
workshop at per G.O. at Cuddalore". Again in the report
sent by the State Transport Authority to the State Transport
Appellate Tribunal, against the name of the first respondent
in column 8 under the heading "Place of residence or
principal place of business and the nearest distance" the
entry is "Cuddalore-on the route". This information given
by the Transport Authority is presumably gathered from the
earlier report of the. Regional Transport Authority.
Reliance is placed upon a letter dated January 10, 1957,
written by the first respondent to the Secretary, State
Transport Authority, in support of the contention that even
the first respondent, though on July 111, 1956, he claimed
to have had a workshop at Chidambaram, did not mention it
therein. But a perusal of that letter shows that he did
mention that he had the sector and terminal qualifications.
Basing the argument on the said documents, it was contended
that there was material on which the Appellate Tribunal
could have come to the finding which it did, viz., that the
first respondent had no workshop at either of the terminii
of the route. Firstly, these documents were not expressly
relied upon by the Tribunal for holding that the first
respondent had no workshop at Chidambaram. Secondly, these
documents were not relied upon by the appellant either
before Srinivasan J., or before the Division Bench to the
effect that the Appellate Tribunal gave a finding on the
basis of the
85
said material. Thirdly, one of the said documents, viz.,
the letter of the first respondent, does not support the
contention. The other two reports did not say that the
first respondent had no workshop at Chidambaram. The
officers who made the report did not make any enquiry as
regards the fact whether the first respondent had a workshop
at Chidambaram on the basis of the claim made by him. There
is, therefore, absolutely no evidence to controvert the
first respondent’s claim and that is the reason why the
appellant did not place the said documents before the High
Court in support of his contention that there was material
before the State Transport Authority and the State Transport
Appellate Tribunal for holding that the first respondent had
no workshop at Chidambaram. A perusal of the two orders
shows that presumably in view of the innumerable
applications, the specific claim of the first respondent was
completely missed by the Transport Authority and the
Appellate Tribunal. This is, therefore, a clear case of a
finding made by the Tribunal without any evidence to support
it and by ignoring a specific claim made before it. I am,
therefore, of opinion that the High Court rightly set aside
the order of the Appellate Tribunal.
The next question is whether this is a fit case for
interference under Art. 136 of the Constitution in exercise
of this Court’s extraordinary jurisdiction thereunder.
Srinivasan J., and, on appeal, the Division Bench on the
basis of the material placed and the concession made before
them, came to the conclusion that the Appellate Tribunal had
ignored the specific claim set up by the first respondent.
The first respondent had secured the highest number of
marks. His claim, if substantiated, would certainly tilt
the balance in his favour. The material placed before us
was not relied upon by the appellant before the High Court.
The High Court gave a further opportunity to the Appellate
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Tribunal to consider the claim of the first respondent.
Though the High Court quashed the order of the Tribunal, the
observation in the judgment clearly shows that the Tribunal
86
could reconsider the matter. Indeed, learned counsel for
the first respondent conceded that fact. The appellant
would have every opportunity to establish that the first
respondent has no workshop at Chidambaram. Instead of
following the straight course, he is trying to shut out
further enquiry to arrive at the truth. In the
circumstances I am of the view that this is not a case which
calls for the exercise of this Court’s extraordinary
jurisdiction to set aside the order of the High Court.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with
costs of the first respondent.
ORDER BY COURT
In accordance with the opinion of the majority the
appeal is allowed and the Writ Petition filed by Respondent
No. 1 is dismissed. Respondent No. 1 to pay the costs of
the appellant in this Court. Respondents 2 and 3 to bear
their own costs.