Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3654 of 1993
PETITIONER:
U.P. STATE ELECTRICITY BOARD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE BANARAS ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CO. LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/05/2000
BENCH:
S. SAGHIR AHMAD, Y.K. SABHARWAL, & S.N. VARIAVA.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E NT
S. N. Variava, J.
L...I...T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
1. This Civil Appeal is against the Judgment dated 17th
September 1987 delivered by a Division Bench of the Calcutta
High Court. By this Judgment the Division Bench dismissed
the Appeal filed by the Appellant against a Judgment of a
learned single Judge of the Calcutta High Court which upheld
the challenge of the 1st Respondent to Ordinances and
Amendment Act set out hereinafter.
2. Briefly stated the facts are as follows: On 6th
February, 1925 the Government of Uttar Pradesh granted to
one M/s Martin & Co. a licence for supply of electric
energy. This licence was subsequently transferred to the
1st Respondent. One of the terms of the licence was that at
the end of the licence period the Government had a right to
purchase the undertaking. The licence was for a period of
50 years. The 50 years period would thus end on 5th
February, 1975. On February 1, 1974 the Appellant served a
notice on the 1st Respondent, under Section 6(1) of the
Indian Electricity Act, 1910 (hereinafter called the said
Act). By this the Appellants called upon the 1st Respondent
to sell the undertaking to the Appellant on the expiry of
the period of 50 years from the commencement of the licence,
i.e., at 12 O’clock in the night between the 5th and 6th
February, 1975.
3. On February 4, 1975, Indian Electricity (U.P.
Amendment and Validation) Ordinance No. 7 of 1975 was
passed. This Ordinance amended certain provisions of the
Indian Electricity Act. Subsequently this Ordinance was
replaced by an Act namely Indian Electricity (U.P.
Amendment and Validation) Act, 1976. The Ordinance and the
Act amended amongst others Sections 6 and 7-A of the Indian
Electricity Act.
4. At this stage it is necessary to see what the
unamended Sections 6 and 7-A provided for. They read as
follows:
"6. Purchase of undertakings. - (1) Where licence has
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been granted to any person, not being a local authority, the
State Electricity Board shall, -
(a) in the case of a licence granted before the
commencement of the Indian Electricity (Amendment) Act, 1959
(32 of 1959), on the expiration of each such period as is
specified in the licence; and
(b) in the case of a licence granted on or after the
commencement of the said Act, on the expiration of such
period not exceeding thirty years and of every such
subsequent period, not exceeding twenty years, as shall be
specified in this behalf in the licence; have the option of
purchasing the undertaking and such option shall be
exercised by the State Electricity Board serving upon the
licensee a notice in writing of not less than one year
requiring the licensee to sell the undertaking to it at the
expiry of the relevant period referred to in this sub-
section.
(2) Where a State Electricity Board has not been
constituted, or if constituted, does not elect to purchase
the undertaking, the State Government shall have the like
option to be exercised in the like manner of purchasing the
undertaking.
(3) Where neither the State Electricity Board nor the
State Government elects to purchase the undertaking, any
local authority constituted for an area within which the
whole of the area of supply is included shall have the like
option to be exercised in the like manner of purchasing the
undertaking.
(4) If the State Electricity Board intends to exercise
the option of purchasing the undertaking under this section,
it shall send an intimation in writing of such intention to
the State Government at least eighteen months before the
expiry of the relevant period referred to in sub-section (1)
and if no such intimation as aforesaid is received by the
State Government the State Electricity Board shall be deemed
to have elected not to purchase the undertaking.
(5) If the State Government intends to exercise the
option of purchasing the undertaking under this section, it
shall send an intimation in writing of such intention to the
local authority, if any, referred to in sub- section (3) at
least fifteen months before the expiry of the relevant
period referred to in sub-section (1) and if no such
intimation as aforesaid is received by the local authority,
the State Government shall be deemed to have elected not to
purchase the undertaking.
(6) Where a notice exercising the option of purchasing
the undertaking has been served upon the licensee under this
section, the licensee shall deliver the undertaking to the
State Electricity Board, the State Government or the local
authority, as the case may be, on the expiration of the
relevant period referred to in sub-section (1) pending the
determination and payment of the purchase price.
(7) Where an undertaking is purchased under this
section, the purchaser shall pay to the licensee the
purchase price determined in accordance with the provisions
of sub-section (4) of Section 7-A."
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5. Thus, under Section 6(1) a notice in writing of not
less than one year was to be given and the purchase price
was to be determined in accordance with the provisions of
sub-section (4) of Section 7-A.
6. Section 7-A, as it originally stood, read as
follows: "7-A Determination of purchase price.- (1) Where
an undertaking of a licensee, not being a local authority,
is sold under sub-section (1) of Section 5, the purchase
price of the undertaking shall be the market value of the
undertaking at the time of purchase or where the undertaking
has been delivered before the purchase under sub- section
(3) of that section, at the time of the delivery of the
undertaking and if there is any difference or dispute
regarding such purchase price, the same shall be determined
by arbitration.
(2) The market value of an undertaking for the purpose
of sub- section (1) shall be deemed to be the value of all
lands, buildings, works, materials and plant of the licensee
suitable to, and used by him, for the purpose of the
undertaking, other than; (i) a generating station declared
by the licence not to form part of the undertaking for the
purpose of purchase, and (ii) service lines or other capital
works or any part thereof which have been constructed at the
expense of consumers, due regard being had to be nature and
condition for the time being of such land, buildings, works,
materials and plant and the state of repair thereof and to
the circumstance that they are in such position as to be
ready for immediate working and to the suitability of the
same for the purpose of the undertaking, but without any
addition in respect of compulsory purchase or of goodwill or
of any profits which may be or might have been made from the
undertaking or of any similar consideration.
(3) Where an undertaking of a licensee, being a local
authority, is sold under sub-section (1) of Section 5,
purchase price of the undertaking shall be such as the State
Government, having regard to the market value of the
undertaking at the date of delivery of the undertaking, may
determine.
(4) Where an undertaking of a licensee is purchased
under Section 6, the purchase price shall be the value
thereof as determined in accordance with the provisions of
sub-sections (1) and (2): Provided that there shall be
added to such value percentage, if any not exceeding twenty
per centum of that value as may be specified in the licence
on account of compulsory purchase."
7. Section 7 is also relevant. It reads as follows:
"7. Vesting of the undertaking in the purchaser.- Where
an undertaking is sold under Section 5 or Section 6, then
upon the completion of the sale or on the date on which the
undertaking is delivered to the intending purchaser under
sub-section (3) of Section 5 or under sub-section (6) of
Section 6, as the case may be, whichever is earlier -
(i) the undertaking shall vest in the purchaser or the
intending purchaser, as the case may be, free from any debt,
mortgage or similar obligation of the licensee or attaching
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to the undertaking: Provided that any such debt, mortgage
or similar obligation shall attach to the purchase money in
substitution for the undertaking;
(ii) the rights, powers, authorities, duties and
obligations of the licensee under his licence shall stand
transferred to the purchaser and such purchaser shall be
deemed to be the licensee: Provided that where the
undertaking is sold or delivered to a State Electricity
Board or the State Government, the licence shall cease to
have further operation."
8. By the above mentioned Ordinance and the Act, the
amendment which was carried out was that instead of purchase
price being the market value, it was now provided that the
amount payable for the undertaking would be the book value
of the undertaking. Thus, instead of computing the market
value, there had to be computation of the book value.
9. It must be mentioned that the above mentioned
Ordinances and Amendment Act were part of the policy of
nationalisation of electric companies by the Union of India.
Similar amendments were made by many States. Electric
companies, all over India, were sought to be so purchased.
Like the 1st Respondent, a number of other Electric
Companies challenged the constitutional validity of the
amending Act/Ordinance. The challenge was, inter alia, on
the ground that the rights under Article 19(1)(f) and
Article 31(2) were being violated. It was also claimed that
the Amending Act/Ordinance was invalid as it had no
reasonable direct nexus to the principles under Article
39(b) of the Constitution. It was also claimed that, in
effect and substance, the law was not one for acquisition of
electrical undertakings but was one to acquire a chose in
action and to extinguish rights, which had accrued in the
Electric Companies, to get the market price. It was
contended that the right to get compensation accrued on the
day the notice was given. It was contended that what was
being acquired was the difference between the market price
which the State was obliged to pay and the book value to
which the liability was now sought to be limited. It was
claimed that as the Act was merely a clock which the law was
made to wear to undo the obligations arising out of intended
statutory rule Article 31(c) was not attracted. It was also
claimed that in any case, every provision of a statute was
not entitled to protection of Article 31(c) but only those
which are necessary for giving effect to the principles in
Article 39(b) and accordingly the provision in the impugned
law in relation to the determination of the amount do not
attract Article 31(c). In all the matters it was claimed
that the purchase price should be the market value.
10. A Constitution Bench of this Court in the case of
Tinsukhia Electric Supply Co. Ltd. v. State of Assam,
reported in (1989) 3 SCC 709, upheld the validity of the
Act/Ordinance. This Court held that the Act had nexus with
the principles in Article 39(b) and was therefore protected
by Article 31(c). It was held that the Act was not a piece
of colourable legislation. It was held that electric energy
generated and distributed was a "material source of the
community" for the purpose and within the meaning of Article
39(b). It was held that the idea of distribution of natural
resources in Article 39(b) envisages nationalisation. It
was held that on an examination of the scheme of the
impugned law the inescapable conclusion was that the
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legislature measure was one of nationalisation of the
undertaking and this law was eligible for and entitled to
protection of Article 31(c). It was held that it was not
possible to divorce the economic consideration or component
from the scheme of nationalisation with which the former are
inextricably integrated. It was held that the financial
costs of a scheme lies at its very heart and cannot be
isolated. It was held that with the provisions relating to
vestiture of the undertaking in the State and those
pertaining to the quantification of the amount are integral
and unseparable parts of the integral scheme of
nationalisation and do not admit of being considered as
distinct provisions independent of each other. It was held
that the provisions for payment of amount to the
undertaking, by reducing the market value to book value,
formed an integral part of the nationalisation scheme and
that economic consideration for nationalisation was not
justiciable. It was held that what was being acquired was
the material resources of the community. The contention
that immediately upon giving of the notice the rights got
crystallised was negatived. It was held that the exercise
of the option did not affect licensee’s right to carry on
business. It was held that the licensee’s rights would be
affected only when the undertaking was actually taken over.
Similar view was taken in the cases of Maharashtra State
Electricity Board v. Thana Electric Supply Co. & Ors.,
reported in (1989) 3 SCC 616, and Vellore Electric
Corporation Ltd. v. State of Tamil Nadu, reported in
(1989) 4 SCC 138.
11. This case is entirely covered by the above
mentioned judgments. Dr. Singhvi fairly conceded that this
case would be covered by the above mentioned Judgments.
12. In this view of the matter, the Appeal is allowed.
The Judgments of the Division Bench dated 17th September
1987 as well as the learned single Judge dated 4th April
1984 are set aside. The Writ Petition filed by the 1st
Respondent stands dismissed. There shall be no order as to
costs.