Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KHAZAN SINGH ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/12/1973
BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CITATION:
1974 AIR 669 1974 SCR (2) 562
1974 SCC 295
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1975 SC 40 (3)
D 1977 SC1170 (5)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Motor Vehicles Act, s. 68D-
Nationalisation of inter-State bus routes--Whether State
Government could approve the Scheme-Whether approval of a
scheme amounts to legislation-Art. 298-Whether envisages the
carrying on of trade and business within any territorial
limit only.
HEADNOTE:
In accordance with a reciprocal arrangement arrived at
between the Governments of U.P. and Rajasthan certain bus
routes between these two States had been nationalised.
Under the proposed scheme, approved under s. 68D of the
Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (4 of 1939) which was duly approved
by the Central Government under the proviso to sub-s.3 of s.
68D, no person other than the State Transport Undertaking
was permitted to provide any road transport services on the
routes or portions thereof and permits which had already
been granted to private operators were cancelled. The High
Court held that the impugned schemes and notifications were
valid in Law.
In appeal to this Court it was contended (i) that a State
Government cannot approve a Scheme for inter-State route
under s. 68D of the Act as the power of the State Government
can only operate within its own territory; (ii) that as a
State Government cannot make law for areas outside its
territorial limits, the scheme approved by it in respect of
inter-State routes is unconstitutional and (iii) that in
approving a scheme a State Government exercises executive
power which cannot operate in areas beyond the territorial
limits of the State.
Dismissing the appeals,
HELD : The contention runs counter to the plain language of
the proviso to subs. (3) of s. 68D. In the face of the
proviso it is difficult to hold that the U.P. Government was
not competent to approve and publish the impugned scheme.
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The proviso manifestly contemplates that the State
Government can, in accordance with the procedure laid down
in Ch. IVA of the Act, approve a scheme relating to an
inter-State route and publish the same. In the instant case
the previous approval of the Central Government was
admittedly obtained in respect of the two different States.
[568B-E]
(b) If the approval of the State Government was to be
accorded in respect of that portion of inter-State route
which was within is own territory, there would have been no
necessity to obtain the prior approval of the Central
Government. The necessity of obtaining prior approval of
the Central Government arises because the scheme envisages
nationalisation of transport service not only for that part
of the inter-State which is within the territorial limits of
the State Government approving the scheme but also for the
remaining part of the route which is outside the said
territorial limits. Inter-State route would normally cover
the entire route and not merely the portion of the route
which is within the territorial limits of the State.
Government which accords approval. [568G-H]
(ii) The State Government in approving a scheme does not
legislate in the sense the legislature of a State makes law
under art. 245 of the constitution for the whole or any part
of the State. The limitation on the power of a State
Legislature to make laws for the whole or any part of the
State and not for areas outside the territorial limits of
the State cannot be invoked for the purpose of placing a
restriction on the power conferred upon the State Government
by Parliamentary legislation to approve a scheme relating to
an inter-State route, [569 C-D]
(iii) The executive power of the Union and each State
under Art. 298 of the Constitution extends to the carrying
on of any trade or business. There is nothing in art. 298
to show that the trade or business carried on by a State
must
563
be restricted to the area within its territorial limits.
The article envisages the carrying on of trade and business
by a State without any territorial limitations. A scheme
approved by the State Government under sub-s. (3) of s. 68D
effectuates the object of State monopoly in the matter of
transport service. Such a scheme does not entail
encroachment by one State Government upon the executive
sphere of another State Government. In the instant case
there is no question of encroachment upon the executive
domain of one-State Government by another because the whole
thing is being done by the two Governments acting in
concert. (569F-G)
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 1737 to
1745 of 1972.
From the Judgment and order dated the 9th December 1971 of
the Allahabad High Court at Allahabad in Special Appeals
Nos.661 662, 665, 666, 668, 681, 682, 684 of 1968.
And
Civil Appeals Nos. 1870 & 1871 of 1972
From the Judgment and Order dated the 9th December, 1971 of
the Allahabad High Court at Allahabad in Special Appeals
Nos. 675 and 676 of 1968.
B. Sen, D. N. Misra, J. B. Dadachanji, O.C Mathur and
Ravinder Narain, for the appellants (in C. A. Nos. 1737 to
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1745)
B. D. Sharma, for the appellant (in C. A. No. 1870-71)
Niren De, Attorney General of India, and O. P. Rana, for the
respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KHANNA, J.-The validity of schemes approved by the Uttar
Pradesh Government under section 68D of the Motor Vehicles
Act, 1939 (Act 4 of 1939) (hereinafter referred to as the
Act) for inter-State routes as a result of which private
operators including those who had been granted permits by
Regional Transport Authorities of Rajasthan were excluded
from those routes has been called in question in civil
appeals No. 1737-1745 of 1972 and civil appeals No. 1870
and 1871 of 1972 which have been filed on certificate
against the common judgment of the Allahabad High Court.
This judgment would dispose of all the appeals. It would be
necessary to reproduce only the facts of the case giving
rise to civil appeal No. 1738, for the counsel for the
parties are agreed that the decision in that appeal would
also govern the other appeals as the question of law
involved in all these appeals is identical.
On June 14, 1960 a letter was sent by the Deputy Secretary
to the Government of Rajasthan to the Secretary to the
Government of Uttar Pradesh in reply to an earlier letter
received from the Transport Commission Uttar Pradesh
conveying approval of the Rajasthan Government for the
nationalisation of the undermentioned routes for the
operation of services by the State transport undertakings of
both States in accordance with the reciprocal arrangement
arrived at between the two States:
1. Bharatpur-Agra
2. Bharatpur-Mathura
564
3. Alwar-Mathura
4. Mathura-Kama Kosi via Goverdhan
5. Agra-Dholpur
We are in the present appeals concerned with four of the
routes, i.e. the routes mentioned above other than
Bharatpur-Mathura route. Appeal No. 1738 of 1972 relates to
Dholpur-Agra route. It may be mentioned that Dholpur,
Bharatpur, Alwar and Kama Kosi are situated in Rajasthan,
while Agra and Mathura are situated in Uttar’ Pradesh.
Notification dated December 4, 1961 was published in the
U.P. Gazette dated December 9, 1961 by the Uttar Pradesh
Government under section 68C of the Act in respect of
proposed scheme for providing State road transport passenger
services on inter-State Agra-Dholpur route. According to
the propose scheme, no persons other than the State
transport undertaking would be permitted to provide any road
transport services on the route or portions thereof. The
scheme also visualised the cancellation of the permits which
had been granted to the private operators, including the
appellants. Objections were invited with regard to the
proposed Scheme from persons affected by the scheme. No
objections were, however, filed against the aforesaid scheme
and the same was approved under section 68D(2) of the Act by
the Joint Judicial Secretary to the Government of Uttar
Pradesh, who was the hearing authority, as per order dated
July 30, 1962. The Central Government conveyed its approval
to the scheme under the proviso to sub-section (3) of
section 68D of the Act as per letter dated February 6, 1963.
Notification dated February 20, 1963 was published by the
Uttar Pradesh Government in the official Gazette dated March
16, 1963 for the publication of the approved scheme under
sub-section (3) of section 68D of the Act. Clauses 1, 2, 4
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and 8 of the scheme read as under:
"1. The State Road Transport passenger
services’ shall commence to operate from April
1, 1963 or thereafter.
2. State Road Transport passenger services
shall be provided on the Inter-State route
Agra Dholpur of Agra Region.
4. No persons other than the State
Transport Undertakings will be permitted to
provide any Road Transport Services on this
route or portions thereof specified in Clause
(2) above.
8. The number of private Transport Vehicles
on the route or portion thereof specified in
clause (2) above shall be reduced to nil."
It was also provided in the scheme that the permits of the
private operators would stand cancelled. Provision was made
for compensation for the premature cancellation of the
permits of the private operators. No compensation was,
however, to be paid when a permit for an alternative route
or area in lieu thereof was offered by the Regional
Transport Authority and accepted by the holder of the
permit. By
565
notification dated April 9, 1963 the permits in favour of
the private operators, including the appellants, issued by
the Regional Transport Authority, Jaipur and countersigned
by’ the Regional Transport Authority, Agra were cancelled
under sub-section (2) of section 68F of the Act.
The appellants, who are bus operators of Rajasthan, and some
others thereupon filed petitions under articles 226 and 227
of the Constitution to challenge the validity of the above
notifications. The learned single Judge who heard the writ
petitions came to the conclusion that a State could not by
taking unilateral action provide transport services for a
territory outside the limits of its own territory. The
learned Judge was of the view that in framing the scheme the
State transport undertaking performed executive function of
the State. View was expressed that one State could not
cancel permits held by the bus operators of another State.
Finding was also given that effective notice had not been
given to the bus operators of. Rajasthan as the
notifications were published in the Gazette of Uttar Pradesh
only. The writ petitions were accordingly allowed and the
impugned notifications were quashed by the learned single
Judge.
On appeal the Division Bench of the High Court held that
when an undertaking proposes a scheme and the same is
approved by the State Government, the undertaking and the
State Government really perform the functions of the Central
Government under clause (2) of article 258 of the
Constitution. Regarding the cancellation of the permits,
the Division Bench observed :-
"The Bus Operators of Uttar Pradesh held
permits granted by the Transport authorities
of Uttar Pradesh. They could, however, not
legally ply their vehicles on hire in
Rajasthan beyond the limits of Uttar Pradesh
without first having their permits
countersigned by the transport authorities of
Rajasthan. What really happened was that when
the Schemes were finalised, the permits of the
operators of Uttar Pradesh were cancelled by
the transport authorities of Uttar Pradesh and
the counter-signatures made by the Transport
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authorities of Rajasthan Were cancelled by
those transport authorities. Similarly, the
permits held by those operators of Rajasthan
were cancelled by the Transport authorities of
Rajasthan and the counter-signatures on those
permits made by the transport authorities of
Uttar Pradesh were cancelled by these
transport authorities. We, therefore, find no
substance in this argument advanced on behalf
of the respondents."
The High Court repelled the contention advanced on behalf of
the appellants that they had no knowledge of the proposed
schemes. It was observed that the. relevant provisions for
publication of the schemes were complied with and that
notices were put up on the notice boards of the State
transport authorities of Uttar Pradesh as well as of Rajas-
than. The Division Bench accordingly allowed the appeals
filed by
566
the State and held that the impugned schemes and
notifications Were valid in law. The Division Bench while
allowing the appeals observed:
"In consequence, we allow these appeals, set
aside the order of the learned Single Judge
and hold that the impugned Schemes and
notifications are valid in law. The learned
Single Judge has said in his judgment that
individual petitions had raised some
additional and separate grounds for
questioning their exclusion from certain
routes. He, however, felt that it was not
necessary to consider individual cases of
petitioners as all the writ petitions could be
decided on general grounds common to all the
petitions emerging from admitted facts. The
individual grounds must now be considered by
the learned Single Judge. He, however, is no
longer available in this Court and the papers
of these cases will be laid before the Hon’ble
the Chief Justice for nominating a Bench."
The correctness of the view taken by the Division Bench has
been assailed in these appeals. Before dealing with the
contentions advanced, we may refer to the relevant
provisions of the Act as they existed at the relevant time.
Chapter IVA was inserted in the Act by the Motor Vehicles
(Amendment) Act, 1956 (Act 100 of 1956). The said chapter
came into force with effect from February 16, 1957 and
consisted at the relevant time of sections 68A to 681.
Section 68A contains definitions. According to clause (b)
of that section, "State transport undertaking" means any
undertaking providing road transport service, where such
undertaking is carried on by,-(i) the Central Government or
a State Government; (ii) any Road Transport Corporation
established under section 3 of the Road Transport Corpora-
tions Act, 1950; (iii) the Delhi Road Transport Authority
established under section 3 of the Delhi Road Transport
Authority Act, 1950; (iv) any municipality or any
corporation or company owned or controlled by the State
Government. Section 68B provides that the provisions of
Chapter IVA and the rules and orders made thereunder shall
have effect notwithstanding anything inconsistent therewith
contained in Chapter IV of this Act or in any other law for
the time being in force or in any instrument having effect
by virtue of any such law. Sections 68C and 68D at the
relevant time read as under :
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"68C. Where any State transport undertaking
is of opinion that for the purpose of
providing an efficient, adequate, economical
and properly coordinated road transport
service, it is necessary in the public
interest that road transport services in
general or any particular class of such
service in relation to any area or route or
portion thereof should be run and operated by
the State transport undertaking, whether to
the exclusion, complete or partial, of other
persons or otherwise, the State transport
undertaking may prepare a scheme giving
particulars of the nature of the services
proposed to be rendered, the area or route
proposed to be covered and such other
particulars respecting thereto as may be
prescribed, and shall cause every such scheme
to be published in the Official Gazette and
also in
567
such other manner as the State Government may
direct.
68D. ( 1) Any person affected by the scheme
published under section 68C may, within thirty
days from the date of the publication of the
scheme in the Official Gazette, file
objections thereto before the State
Government.
(2) The State Government may, after
considering the objections and after giving an
opportunity to the objector or his
representatives and the representatives of the
State transport undertaking to be heard in the
matter, if they so desire, approve or modify
the scheme.
(3) The Scheme as approved or modified under
subsection (2) shall then be published in the
Official Gazette by the State Government and
the same shall thereupon become final and
shall be called the approved scheme and the
area or route to which it relates shall be
called the notified area or notified route:
Provided that no such scheme which relates to
any inter-State route shall be deemed to be an
approved scheme unless it has been published
in the Official Gazette with the previous
approval of the Central Government."
Chapter IVA incorporates special provisions relating to
State transport undertakings. The provisions of this
chapter and the rules and orders made thereunder have in
view of section 68B an overriding, effect and would prevail
even though they are inconsistent with anything contained in
Chapter IV of the Act or any other law for the time being in
force or any instrument having effect by virtue of any law.
Section 68C enables a State transport undertaking, as
defined in section 68A of the Act, to prepare a scheme for
nationalisation of transport service, with the particulars
mentioned in the section, in case the State transport
undertaking is of the opinion that for the purpose of
providing an efficient, adequate, economical and properly
coordinated road transport service, it is necessary in the
public interest that road transport services in general or
in any particular class, of such service should be run and
operated by the State transport undertaking to the
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exclusion, complete or partial, of other persons or
otherwise. It is also provided that such a scheme shall be
published in the Official Gazette and also in such other
manner as may be directed by the State Government. Section
68D enables the persons. Jr affected by the scheme to file
objections within thirty days from the date of the
publication of the proposed scheme in the Official Gazette
before the State Government. The State Government has
thereafter to consider the objections after giving an
opportunity to the objector or his representatives and the
representatives of the State transport undertaking to be
heard in the matter. Power is given to the State Government
to either approve the scheme or modify the same. The scheme
as approved or modified is then published in the Official
Gazette by the State Government and thereupon the scheme
becomes. final. The approved scheme then operates for the
area or the route to-
568
which it relates. It is also provided that if a scheme
relates to an interState route, the game shall not be deemed
to be an approved scheme unless, it has been published in
the Official Gazette with the previous approval of the
Central Government’.
It has been argued on behalf of the appellants that a State
Government cannot approve a scheme for inter-State route
under section 68D of the Act as the powers of the State
Government can operate within its own territory and cannot
operate in an area beyond the territorial limits of the
State. This contention, in our opinion, cannot be accepted
as it runs counter to the plain language of the proviso to
sub-section (2) of section 68D of the Act. According to the
proviso, no scheme which relates to an inter-State route
shall be deemed to be an approved scheme unless it has been
published in the Official Gazette with the previous approval
of the Central Government. The proviso manifestly
contemplates that the State Government can in accordance
with the procedure laid down in Chapter IVA of the Act
approve a scheme relating to an inter-State route and
publish the same. The only limitation on the power of the
State Government in this respect is that it should before
publishing the scheme obtain the prior approval of the
Central Government. Such previous approval of the Central
Government was admittedly obtained in respect of the inter-
State route with which we are concerned, as per letter dated
February 19, 1963. An inter-State route is one of which
one of the termini falls in one State and the other in
another State. Agra-Dholpur route is admitted an inter-
State route as the termini of the route are situated in
two different States. In the face of the proviso to sub-
section (3) of section 68D of the Act, we find it difficult
to accede to the submission that the Uttar Pradesh
Government was not competent to approve and publish the
impugned scheme relating to Agra-Dholpur route.
There is no force in the contention advanced on behalf of
the appellant that approval of the State Government for a
scheme relating to an inter-State route can only be in
respect of that portion of the route which is within its own
territory and not in respect of the entire inter-State
route. If the approval of the State Government was to be
accorded in respect of that portion of inter-State route
which was within its own territory, there would have been no
necessity to obtain the prior approval of the Central
Government. A State Government is competent to approve a
scheme for nationalisation of transport service on a route
within its own territory if it complies with the other
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necessary formalities prescribed by law. There is in such
an event no necessity to obtain any approval of the Central
Government. The necessity of obtaining prior approval of
the Central Government arises because the scheme envisages
nationalisation of transport service not only for that part
of the inter-State route which is within the territorial
limits of the State Government approving the scheme but also
for the remaining part of the route which is. outside the
said territorial limits. Inter-State route would normally
cover the entire route and not merely the portion of the,
route which is within the territorial limits of the State
Government which accords approval.
569
It has then been argued by the learned counsel for the
appellants that when a State Government approves a scheme,
it makes law and as a State Government cannot make law for
areas outside its territorial limits, the scheme approved by
the State Government in respect of an inter-State route is
unconstitutional. This argument, in our opinion, is
fallacious and untenable. A scheme approved by a State
Government is undoubtedly law as defined in clause (3) of
article 13 of the Constitution, according to which unless
the context otherwise requires, "law" includes any
Ordinance, order, bye-law, rule, regulation, notification,
custom or usage having in the territory of India the force
of law. The above definition of "law" is for the purpose of
article 13 in the context of laws violative of fundamental
rights contained in Part III of the Constitution. The State
Government in approving a scheme does not legislate in the
sense the legislature of a State makes law under article 245
of the Constitution for the whole or any part of the State.
The limitation on the power of a State Legislature to make
laws for the whole or any part of the State and not for
areas outside the territorial limits of the State cannot be
invoked for the purpose of placing a restriction on the
power confined upon the State Government by Parliamentary
legislation to approve a scheme relating to an inter-State
route.
Contention has also been advanced by the learned counsel for
the appellants that the State Government in approving a
scheme exercises executive power. Such executive power,
according to the contention, cannot operate in areas beyond
the territorial limits of the State. In this connection, we
find that the Motor Vehicles Act was enacted by the Central
Legislature. Chapter IVA of the Act containing the sections
with which we are concerned was inserted in the Act by the
Union Parliament. The State Government in approving a
scheme in respect of an inter-State route under sub-section
(3) of section 68D of the Act exercises a statutory power
which has been vested in it by a law made by the Parliament.
The said law related to the creation of a State monopoly in
the matter of transport service. The executive power of the
Union and each State under article 298 of the Constitution
extends, inter alia, to the carrying on of any trade or
business. There is nothing in article 298 to show that the
trade or business carried on by a State must be restricted
to the area within its territorial limits. On the contrary,
the article envisages the carrying on of the trade and
business by a State without any territorial limitations.
The only restriction on the executive power of the State in
this respect is contained in clause (b ) of the proviso to
that article. According to that clause, the executive power
of the State shall, in so far as such trade or business is
not one with respect to which the State Legislature may make
laws, be subject to legislation by Parliament. Entry 35 in
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List III of Seventh Schedule to the Constitution relates to
mechically propelled vehicles including the principles on
which taxes on such vehicles are to be levied. Under, entry
21 in List III of the Seventh Schedule, the Parliament can
make laws for commercial and industrial monopolies. The
expression "commercial and industrial monopolies".
570
as held by this Court in the case of H.C. Narayanappa and
Ors. v. The State of Mysore and Ors. (1) is wide enough to
include grant or creation of commercial or industrial
monopolies to the State and citizens as well as control of
monopolies. , Dealing with the question of State monopoly in
the matter of transport service as envisaged by Chapter IVA
of the Act, Shah J. speaking for the Court observed in the
above mentioned case
"The amplitude of the powers under the entry
in the concurrent list expressly dealing with
commercial and industrial monopolies cannot be
presumed to be restricted by the generality of
the expression trade and commerce in the State
list. If the argument of the petitioners and
the intervener that legislation relating to
monopoly in respect of trade and industry is
within the exclusive competence of the State
be accepted, the Union Parliament cannot
legislate to create monopolies in the Union
Government in respect of any commercial or
trading venture even though power to carry on
any trade or business under a monopoly is
reserved to the Union by the combined
operation of Art. 298, and the law which is
protected from the attack that it infringes
the fundamental freedom to carry on business
by Art. 19(6). We are therefore of the view
that Chapter IVA could competently be enacted
by the Parliament under entry No. 21 read with
entry No. 35 of the Concurrent List".
A scheme approved by the State Government under sub-section
(3) of section 68D of the Act effectuates the object of
State monopoly in the matter of transport service. Such a
scheme, in our opinion, does not entail encroachment by one
State Government upon the executive sphere of another State
Government. The action taken by the Uttar Pradesh
Government in furtherance of the objective of a State
monopoly in accordance with the statute made by Parliament
cannot, in our opinion, be struck down on the ground of
encroachment upon the executive power of the Rajasthan
Government. In any cast, there is no question of
encroachment upon the executive domain of the State of
Rajasthan in the present case as the whole thing is being
done by the Uttar Pradesh Government with the concurrence of
the Government of Rajasthan and the two Governments are
acting in concert.
In view of the above, it is not necessary to go into the
question as to whether the validity of the action of the
Uttar Pradesh Government in according approval to the scheme
can be sustained under clause (2) of article 258 of the
Constitution.
The appellants have not challenged the constitutional
validity of the proviso to sub-section (3) of section 68D of
the Act. It has, however, been urged on their behalf that
the proviso should be construed in such a manner so as not
to contravene the articles of the Constitution. In our
opinion, the construction which we have placed upon the
aforesaid proviso entails no contravention of the articles
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of the Constitution.
(1) [1960] 3 S.C.P. 742.
571
We may not deal with some of the cases which have been cited
on behalf of the appellants. The case of King Emperor v.
Sibnath Banerji and Ors. (1) related to the validity of Rule
26 of the Defence of India Rules framed under the Defence of
India Act, 1939. The Rule was held to be valid. It was
also held that it was not necessary for the Governor to be
personally satisfied before an order under the above Rule
could be made. Dealing with the term "executive", the
Judicial Committee held that it includes both a decision as
to action and the carrying out of such a decision. Their
Lordships further expressed disagreement with the view which
sought narrow reading of sections 49(2) and 124(2) of the
Government of India Act, 1935. The case of In re The Delhi
Laws Act, 1912 (2) related to the delegation of legislative
power and the ’difference between delegation of legislative
power and conditional legislation. Gullapalli Nageswara Rao
and Ors. v. Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation
and Anr. (3) dealt with the procedure to be followed for
nationalising transport service. None of the above cited
cases, in our opinion, are of any real assistance to the
appellants because the question involved in these appeals is
materially different.
There is no force in these appeals. The same are
accordingly dismissed with costs. One hearing fee.
P. B. R. Appeal dismissed.
(1) 72 I.A. 241.
(3) [1959] 1 Sapp. S.C.R. 319.
(2) [1951] S.C.R. 747.
572