Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M. DURAISWAMY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MURUGAN BUS SERVICE & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/04/1986
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
THAKKAR, M.P. (J)
CITATION:
1986 AIR 1980 1986 SCR (2) 68
1986 SCC Supl. 1 JT 1986 518
1986 SCALE (1)515
ACT:
Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, ss. 45, 57 and 63 read with
Rules 163-A, 163-B and 208 of Tamil Nadu Motor Vehicles
Rules 1940 - Inter-regional permit - Application for
variation of existing permit involving extension of
route/area lying in the jurisdiction of another RTA -
Whether to be made to RTA which granted permit or to RTA
which has jurisdiction over area in respect of which
extension is sought.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was the holder of an inter-regional
permit in respect of a motor vehicle plying on the town
service route No.1A from Erode Railway Station to
Tiruchengode. The major portion of the route mentioned in
the permit of the appellant was lying within the
jurisdiction of the Regional Transport Authority of Periyar
and the smaller portion lay within the District of Salem.
The appellant applied to the Regional Transport Authority of
the District of Periyar which had issued the aforesaid
permit for its variation involving, inter alia, conversion
of the town service into a mofussil service and extension of
route from Tiruchengode to Salem. If the route in respect of
which extension is sought is added then the major portion of
the total route would be within the District of Salem. The
Regional Transport Authority after notifying the application
for variation under section 57(3) of the Motor Vehicles Act,
1939 and considering the representations/objections thereto,
rejected the application on the ground that it was not
proper for it to grant the extension since the entire sector
in respect of which the extension was sought lay within
Salem District and that the said sector was well-served by
stage carriage services.
Aggrieved by the decision of the Regional Transport
Authority at Periyar, the appellant preferred an appeal
before the State Transport Appellate Tribunal. The Tribunal
allowed the appeal and granted the variation (including the
extension)
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applied for with slight modification. Thereupon, some of the
objectors to the original application for variation filed
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before the High Court civil revision petitions and writ
petition against the order of the Tribunal. The High Court
allowed the petitions holding that the Regional Transport
Authority, Periyar had no jurisdiction to entertain the
application for variation since the entire route in respect
of which extension was sought lay within the jurisdiction of
the Salem Regional Transport Authority and, therefore, the
proceedings commenced with the said application were liable
to be quashed. Hence this appeal by special leave.
Allowing the appeal on the question whether an
application for the variation of an existing permit
involving the extension of the route or the area specified
in the permit, where the portion of the route or area in
respect of which extension is sought lies entirely within
the jurisdiction of a Regional Transport Authority which had
not granted the permit, should be made to the Regional
Transport Authority which had granted the permit or to the
Regional Transport Authority within whose jurisdiction the
route or area in respect of which extension is sought lies,
^
HELD: 1. Section 45 of the Act does not apply to the
case of a variation of permit and that when a variation of a
permit is sought the application for the grant of such
variation should be made to the Regional Transport Authority
which has granted the permit even though the entire route or
area in respect of which extension is sought lies in another
region or a major portion of the entire route (including the
new route or area) lies within another region. On such
application being made it is the duty of the Regional
Transport Authority which has granted the permit to consider
whether the variation sought should be sanctioned in the
public interest or not. If that Regional Transport Authority
grants variation prayed for, then the concurrence of the
other Regional Transport Authority would have to be sought
in accordance with either section 63(1) of the Act or where
there are rules made corresponding to rules 163-A, 163-B and
208 of Tamil Nadu Motor Vehicles Rules, as far as may be, in
accordance with such rules. The decision of the High Court
is, therefore, liable to be reversed. [96 F-H; 97 A-B]
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1.(ii) The Judgment of the High Court is entirely based
on its decision on the question of jurisdiction of the
Regional Transport Authority of Periyar District to
entertain the application. Since there were other
contentions raised by the parties which have not been
considered by the High Court, the case is remanded to the
High Court to consider the other contentions raised in the
case. If the High Court finds it necessary to remand the
case either to the Tribunal or to the Regional Transport
Authority in the light of the submissions to be made before
it, it is open to the High Court to remand the case either
to the tribunal or to the Regional Transport Authority, as
the case may be. [97 B-D]
2.(i) Section 45(1) of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939
provides that every application for a permit shall be made
to the Regional Transport Authority of the region in which
it is proposed to use the vehicle or vehicles. The first
proviso to sub-s. (1) of s. 45 of the Act provides that if
it is proposed to use the vehicle or vehicles in two or more
regions lying within the same State, the application shall
be made to the Regional Transport Authority of the region in
which the major portion of the proposed route or area lies
and in case the portion of the proposed route or area in
each of the regions is approximately equal, to the Regional
Transport Authority of the region in which it is proposed to
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keep the vehicle or vehicles. Sub-s. (8) of s. 57 of the Act
(as amended by Tamil Nadu Act No. 3 of 1964) which deals
with the procedure to be followed by the holder of a permit
who seeks such variation, does not expressly prescribe the
Regional Transport Authority to which an application for the
variation of a permit has to be made where the route or area
in respect of which extension is sought lies outside the
jurisdiction of the Regional Transport Authority which has
granted the permit but within the jurisdiction of another
Regional Transport Authority. The said sub-section is silent
about it. It, however, provides that an application for the
variation of a permit which involves extension or
curtailment of the route or area specified in the permit
should be treated as an application for grant of a new
permit. In sub-s. 2 of s. 58 of the Act a similar language
is adopted. That sub-section provides that a permit may be
renewed on an application made and disposed of as if it were
an application for a permit. An application for renewal of a
permit and an application for variation of a
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permit have both to be treated as applications for a new
permit and in both the cases the procedure prescribed for
the grant of a new permit has to be followed. The said
procedure includes all the steps mentioned in sub-ss.
(3),(4), (5) and (7) of s. 57 of the Act. The application
should be advertised, representations and objections thereto
should be invited and the application should be considered
at a public hearing at which the applicant and the persons
making representations and objections thereto should be
given an opportunity of being heard either in person or by
duly authorised representatives. The question, however,
remains whether the words ’shall be treated as an
application for the grant of a new permit’ in sub-s. (8) of
s.57 of the Act should be read as meaning that the Regional
Transport Authority which can entertain an application for
variation is the Regional Transport Authority which can
entertain an application for a fresh permit in respect of a
stage carriage for the entire route including the portion in
respect of which extension is sought or that the application
for variation can be made to the Regional Transport
Authority which had granted the permit, but the procedure
prescribed under s. 57 of the Act for the grant of a permit
should be followed. [78 E-G; 85 F-H; 86 A-F]
2.(ii) Sub-section (1) of s. 63 of the Act, however,
provides that except as may be otherwise prescribed, a
permit granted by the Regional Transport Authority of any
one region shall not be valid in any other region, unless
the permit has been countersigned by the Regional Transport
Authority of that other region. Rules 163-A, 163-B and 208
of the Tamil Nadu Motor Vehicle Rules framed under the Act
provide for an alternative procedure to be followed when the
motor vehicle is to be operated in two or more regions
inside the State of Tamil Nadu as authorised by 5. 63(1) of
the Act. Rule 163-A says that the Regional Transport
Authority of any one region may, subject to the proviso to
s.45 of the Act, grant a permit to be valid in any other
region within the State without the countersignature of the
Regional Transport Authority of the other region or of each
of the other regions concerned and it shall as soon as
possible send copies of proceedings to the concerned
regions. The Regional Transport Authority granting a permit
under sub-rule (1) of Rule 163-A of Tamil Nadu Motor
Vehicles Rules is required before granting a permit in case
of a stage carriage permit to seek the concurrence of the
other
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Regional Transport Authority. Rule 163-B of Tamil Nadu Motor
Vehicles Rules provides that the provisions of Rule 163-A
may be applied to variation, extension and curtailment of
routes and to grant or refusal of endorsement as they apply
to the grant of a permit. It is significant that this rule
does not say that an application for variation would be
subject to the provisions of s.45 of the Act but the
provisions of Rule 163-A shall as far as may be applied to
variation of a permit. There is no express requirement in
this Rule to comply with the provisions of s.45 of the Act.
[94 H; 95 A-D]
2.(iii) The words in sub-s. (8) of s. 57 of the Act "An
application to vary the conditions of any permit... by the
variation, extension or curtailment of the route or the area
specified in the permit...shall be treated as an application
for the grant of a new permit" create a legal fiction of
limited character only for the purpose of making the
procedure prescribed in sub-s. (3) to (7) of s.57
applicable. A permit is a document issued by a certain
Regional Transport Authority authorising the use of a
transport vehicle in a particular way. That can be varied or
modified only by the authority issuing it or by an authority
exercising appellate or revisional jurisdiction over it and
not by another authority of equal power exercising
jurisdiction on another region. In the case of an inter-
regional route also a permit as mentioned earlier should be
issued first by the Regional Transport Authority having
territorial jurisdiction as provided in s. 45 of the Act. If
a part of the route mentioned in that permit lies outside
its region but within the jurisdiction of another Regional
Transport Authority, the other Regional Transport Authority
may either countersign the permit or may refuse to
countersign it under s. 63(1) of the Act. If the other
Regional Transport Authority countersigns the permit then on
the basis of the said permit it would be open to the holder
of the permit to run his vehicle along the portion of the
route lying within the other region. If the permit is not so
countersigned he would not be able to do so. But on the
permit being countersigned, the permit would not cease to be
the permit of the authority which issued it originally. To
’countersign’ means ’to sign opposite to, along side of or
in addition to another signature ’or’ to add one’s signature
to a document (already signed by another) for authentication
or confirmation’. It follows logically that when a variation
of
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the permit is sought the Regional Transport Authority which
issued the permit originally must be first approached and it
is only after it has accorded its sanction to the variation
prayed for, the counter-signature of the permit so varied
may be sought under s. 63(1) of the Act from the Regional
Transport Authority. It is always open to the Regional
Transport Authority within whose jurisdiction the portion of
the route or area in respect of which extension is sought
lies to refuse to countersign the permit even after an order
of variation has been passed by the authority which had
granted the permit originally. If it countersigns such a
permit, the grant of variation by the Regional Transport
Authority which has granted the permit would be effective,
otherwise not. At any rate there is opportunity for both the
Regional Transport Authorities to consider whether the
vehicle in respect of which the permit is given can be
allowed to move along the new route or area if the above
view is taken. Any other construction of the provisions of
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the Act would be contrary to the entire scheme of the Act.
[90 H; 91 A-H; 92 A-E]
2.(iv) Where totally a new route is sought to be
included by an application to vary the conditions of the
permit or the alteration of the route sought by such an
application is of such a drastic character that it becomes
substantially a new route, the application may be treated as
r an application for grant of a new permit and may be for
that reason rejected by the Regional Transport Authority
which originally granted it. But merely because in a given
case the entire new route or area which is to be included
lies within the jurisdiction of another Regional Transport
Authority or a major portion of the total route (including
the route in respect of which the extension is sought) lies
within the jurisdiction of another Regional Transport
Authority, lt cannot be said that an application for a new
permit has been made and the proviso of s.45 of the Act
would be attracted. Then the proceeding would not be a
proceeding for variation of the existing permit but would be
a proceeding for the grant of a new permit. [93 D-G]
Shiv Chand Amolak Chand v. Regional Transport Authority
JUDGMENT:
Delhi Administration v. State of Haryana & Ors. [1979]
1 S.C.R. 70, referred to.
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In the instant case, the variation that is sought
affects both the regions since one part of variation relates
to conversion of the town service into a mofussil service
and reduction of the number of trips within the Periyar
District and another part relates to extension and that
extension of the route in the Salem District cannot be
granted without reducing the numbers of trips within the
Periyar District. The Regional Transport Authority of
Periyar District should have naturally control over its
permit and its sanction should be first obtained before
seeking the countersignature of the Salem Regional Transport
Authority. If the Regional Transport Authority of Periyar
District comes to the conclusion that there is need for
doing so it may grant the variation sought for and the said
variation would have to be necessarily again countersigned
by the Salem Regional Transport Authority since the route
between Tiruchengode and Salem lies within the jurisdiction
of Salem Regional Transport Authority. Both the Regional
Transport Authorities would ultimately be required to concur
for the variation sought. But if the view expressed by the
High Court is accepted on the Salem Authority sanctioning
the variation sought for by the holder of the permit the
proceedings would come to an end and the Regional Transport
Authority of Periyar District would have no opportunity to
express its views at all. Since there would not be
publication of the application for variation within the
jurisdiction of the Periyar Regional Transport Authority,
the members of the public, the local authorities, the police
authorities etc. within its region would also have no
opportunity to express their views on the merits of the
case. [92 E-H; 93 A-C]
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1126 of
1986.
From the Judgment and Order dated 20th December, 1985
of the Madras High Court in C.R.P. Nos. 1773, 1774, 1775,
1926, 2040, 2047, 2159 and 2388 of 1985.
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S. Srinivasan for the Appellant.
Dr. Y.S. Chitale and A.T.M. Sampath for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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VENKATARAMTAH J. The appellant is the holder of a stage
carriage permit in respect of a motor vehicle bearing
No.TDL-7755 plying on the town service route No. 1.A from
Erode Railway Station to Tiruchengode via P.S. Park, Ex-
Clock Tower, Sathy Road, Bus Stand, K.N.K. Road,
Pallipalayam, S.P.B. Factory, S.P.B. Colony and Thokkavadi.
The existing route length is 23.7 Kms. At present the
appellant’s bus is performing 12 single trips between Erode
Railway Station and Tiruchengode and 8 single trips between
Erode Railway Station and S.P.B. Factory. The total
kilometerage per day comes to 358 Kms. The said permit had
been issued by the Regional Transport Authority of Periyar
District, Erode in the State of Tamil Nadu. He applied to
the Regional Transport Authority of the District of Periyar
which had issued the permit for its variation involving :
(1) conversion of the town service into a mofussil
service;
(2) curtailment of the sector from Erode Railway
Station to Erode Bus Stand via P.S. Park and Sathy
Road;
(3) curtailment of 10 single trips between Erode
Bus Stand and S.P.B. Factory;
(4) curtailment of 2 single trips between S.P.B.
Factory and Tiruchengode; and
(5) extension of route from Tiruchengode to Salem
via Mallasamudram, Attayampatti and Ariyanur.
It may be mentioned here that while Erode Railway
Station, P.S. Park and Bus Stand are in Periyar District,
Pallipalayam, S.P.B. Factory, S.P.B. Colony and Tiruchengode
are in Salem District of Tamil Nadu. The existing permit is,
therefore, an inter-regional permit. The entire route
between Tiruchengode and Salem in respect of which extension
of the permit was sought is also in Salem District. The
application for variation made by the appellant was duly
notified under section 57(3) of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939
(hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’) and
representations/objections thereto were invited. Thereafter
the Regional Transport
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Authority heard the appellant and others who had filed
objections and representations and passed a resolution on
June 1, 1984 rejecting the said application. It held inter
alia that the conversion of the town service into a mofussil
service and curtailment of 10 trips between Erode Bus Stand
and S.P.B. Factory and 2 trips between S.P.B. Factory and
Tiruchengode were not in the public interest. It also held
that the entire sector in respect of which the extension was
sought lay within Salem District that the said sector was
well-served by stage carriage services and that it was not
proper for it to grant the extension since the entire route
between Tiruchengode and Salem lay within the jurisdiction
of the Regional Transport Authority, Salem. On these grounds
the Regional Transport Authority of the District of Periyar
found that there was no ground for granting the variation
prayed for. Aggrieved by the resolution of the Regional
Transport Authority of the District of Periyar, the
appellant preferred an appeal before the State Transport
Appellate Tribunal, Madras (hereinafter referred to as ’the
Tribunal’). The Tribunal after hearing the parties allowed
the appeal and granted the variation (including the
extension) applied for with slight modification. The
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Tribunal directed that the appellant’s bus should perform
the following pattern of trips :
(1) two single trips from Erode Railway Station to
Salem;
(2) four single trips from Erode Bus Stand to
Salem; and
(3) four single trips from Erode Railway Station
to Tiruchengode.
It directed the Secretary of the Regional Transport
Authority, Periyar District at Erode to fix suitable timings
within six weeks from the date of the receipt of the order.
The appeal was accordingly disposed of on April 19, 1985. In
its proceedings dated 4.10.1985 the Secretary, Regional
Transport Authority, Periyar District, Erode fixed the
timings as directed by the Tribunal but since in the
meanwhile a stay order had been issued by the High Court in
some civil revision petitions and a writ petition filed by
some of the objectors, Lt directed that the timings fixed
would be given effect to as
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and when the order of stay was vacated. The revision
petitions and the writ petition filed by some of the
objectors against the order of the Tribunal which are
referred to above were disposed of by the High Court on
December 20, 1985 by allowing them. The High Court held that
the Regional Transport Authority, Periyar District at Erode
had no jurisdiction to entertain the application for
variation since the entire route in respect of which
extension was sought lay within the jurisdiction of the
Salem Regional Transport Authority and, therefore, the
proceedings commenced with the said application were liable
to be quashed. On the other contentions raised by the
petitioners before it, it expressed no opinion and left them
open. Aggrieved by the decision of the High Court the
appellant has preferred this appeal by special leave before
this Court under Article 136 of the Constitution.
The short question for decision in this case is whether
an application for the variation of an existing permit
involving the extension of the route or the area specified
in the permit, where the portion of the route or area in
respect of which extension is sought lies entirely within
the jurisdiction of a Regional Transport Authority which had
not granted the permit, should be made to the Regional
Transport Authority which had granted the permit or to the
Regional Transport Authority within whose jurisdiction the
route or area in respect of which extension is sought lies.
The answer to this question depends upon the construction of
some of the relevant provisions found in Chapter IV of the
Act. Section 42 of the Act provides that no owner of a
transport vehicle shall use or permit the use of the vehicle
in any public place, whether or not such vehicle is actually
carrying any passenger or goods, save in accordance with the
conditions of a permit granted or countersigned by a
Regional or State Transport Authority or the Inter-State
Transport Commission Constituted under section 63-A of the
Act, authorising the use of the vehicle in that place in the
manner in which the vehicle is being used. The expression
’permit’ is defined in sub-section (20) of section 2 of the
Act as the document issued by the Commission or a State or
Regional Transport Authority authorising the use of a
transport vehicle as a contract carriage, or stage carriage,
or authorising the owner as a private carrier or public
carrier to use such vehicle. We are concerned in this case
with a motor vehicle used as a stage
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carriage vehicle. Sub-section (29) of section 2 of the Act
defines a ’stage carriage’ as a motor vehicle carrying or
adapted to carry more than six persons excluding the driver
which carries passengers for hire or reward at separate
fares paid by or for individual passengers, either for the
whole journey or for stages of the journey. Section 45 of
the Act is the general provision governing the question
involved in this case. The material part of that section
reads thus :
"45. General provision as to applications for
permits - (1) Every application for a permit shall
be made to the Regional Transport Authority of the
region in which it is proposed to use the vehicle
or vehicles;
Provided that if it is proposed to use the vehicle
or vehicles in two or more regions lying within
the same State, the application shall be made to
the Regional Transport Authority of the region in
which the major portion of the proposed route or
area lies, and in case the portion of the proposed
route or area in each of the regions is
approximately equal, to the Regional Transport
Authority of the region in which it is proposed to
keep the vehicle or vehicles;
.........................................."
Sub-section (1) of section 45 of the Act provides that
every application for a permit shall be made to the Regional
Transport Authority of the region in which it is proposed to
use the vehicle or vehicles. The first proviso to sub-
section (1) of section 45 of the Act provides that if it is
proposed to use the vehicle or vehicles in two or more
regions lying within the same State, the application shall
be made to the Regional Transport Authority of the region in
which the major portion of the proposed route or area lies
and in case the portion of the proposed route or area in
each of the regions is approximately equal, to the Regional
Transport Authority of the region in which it is proposed to
keep the vehicle or vehicles. In the instant case the
appellant had obtained the permit for plying this stage
carriage from the Regional Transport Authority of Periyar
District, since the major portion of the route in respect of
which the said permit had
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been issued was lying within its jurisdiction. Sub-section
(1) of section 63 of the Act, however, provides that except
as may be otherwise prescribed, a permit granted by the
Regional Transport Authority of any one region shall not be
valid in any other region, unless the permit has been
countersigned by the Regional Transport Authority of that
other region.
The relevant portion of section 63 of the Act is set
out below :
"63. Validation of permits for use outside region
in which granted. - (1) Except as may be otherwise
prescribed, a permit granted by the Regional C
Transport Authority of any one region shall not be
valid in any other region, unless the permit has
been countersigned by the Regional Transport
Authority of that other region, and .........
(2) A Regional Transport Authority when
countersigning the permit may attach to the permit
any condition which it might have imposed if it
had granted the permit, and may likewise vary any
condition attached to the permit by the Authority
by which the permit was granted. E
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(3) The provisions of the Chapter relating to the
grant, revocation and suspension of permits shall
apply to the grant, revocation and suspension of
counter-signatures of permits.... "
Rules 163-A, 163-B and 208 of the Tamil Nadu Motor
Vehicles Rules framed under the Act provide for an
alternative procedure to be followed when the motor vehicle
is to be operated in two or more regions inside the State of
Tamil Nadu as authorised by section 63(1) of the Act. They
read thus :
"163-A: (1) The Regional Transport Authority of
any one region may, subject to the provisions of
section 45 of the Act, grant a permit to be valid
in any other region within the State without the
counter-signature of the Regional Transport
Authority of the other region or of each of the
other regions concerned and it shall as soon as
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possible, send copies or proceedings relating to
the issue of such permit to the concerned regions
:
Provided that no Regional Transport Authority
shall grant a permit on routes for which the State
Transport Authority as the sole Transport
Authority under rule 141 unless such power is
delegated by the State Transport Authority under
Rule 140-A.
(2) The Regional Transport Authority granting a
permit under sub-rule (1) shall, before granting a
permit -
(a) in case of a stage carriage permit obtain the
concurrence of the Regional Transport Authority
concerned,
(b) notify, under sub-section (3) of section 57 of
THE the Act, the whole of the route or area which
lies within the State and in respect of which an
application for the grant of a permit has been
received, by publishing it on the notice board of
the Regional Transport Authority of that other
region and shall hear the applicant or any other L
person making representations.
163-B. The provisions of rule 163-A shall, as far
as may be apply to variation, extension and
curtailment of routes and to grant and renewal of
endorsement as they apply to grant of permit.
208. (a) Upon application made in writing by the
holder of any permit, the Transport Authority may,
at any time, in its discretion, vary the permit or
any of the conditions thereof subject to the
provisions of sub-rule (b).
(b) If the application is for the variation of the
permit by the inclusion of an additional vehicle
or vehicles or if the grant of variation would
authorise transport facilities materially
different from those authorised by the original
permit the Transport Authority shall deal with the
application as if it were an application for a
permit.
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Provided that nothing contained in this rule shall
prevent the Transport Authority or its Secretary,
if authorised in this behalf, from summarily
rejecting an application for the variation of a
stage carriage permit so as to provide transport
facilities on a road which has been or is
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certified to be unfit for motor vehicular traffic
by an officer not below the rank of Divisional
Engineer of the Highways Department."
In the instant case it is not disputed that the major
portion of the route mentioned in the permit of the
appellant was lying within the jurisdiction of the Regional
Transport Authority or Periyar and the smaller portion lay
within the District of Salem. It is also not disputed that
if the route in respect of which extension is sought is
added then the major portion of the total route would be
within the District of Salem.
An application for a permit in respect of a service of
stage carriages or to use a particular motor vehicle as a
stage carriage has to be made in accordance with section 46
of the Act and the rules made thereunder. The application
should contain the following particulars, namely :
(i) the route or routes or the area or areas to
which the application relates ;
(ii) the number of vehicles it is proposed to
operate in relation to each route or area and the
type and seating capacity of each such vehicle;
(iii) the minimum and maximum number of daily
trips proposed to be provided in relation to each
route or area and the time table of the normal
trips ;
(iv) the number of vehicles intended to be kept in
reserve to maintain the service and to provide for
special occasions ;
(v) the arrangements intended to be made for the
housing and repair of the vehicles, for the
comfort and convenience of passengers and for the
storage and safe custody of luggage; and H
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(vi) such other matters as may be prescribed by
the rules framed under the Act.
When an application is made for a permit in respect of
a stage carriage service under section 45 of the Act the
Regional Transport Authority concerned has to follow the
procedure prescribed in section 57 of the Act. Sub-section
(3) of section 57 of the Act reads thus :
"57(3). On receipt of an application for a stage
carriage permit or a public carrier’s permit, the
Regional Transport Authority shall make the
application available for inspection at the office
of the Authority and shall publish the application
or the substance thereof In the prescribed manner
together with a notice of the date before which
representation in connection therewith may be
submitted and the date, not being less than thirty
days from such publication, on which, and the time
and place at which, the application and any re
presentations received will be considered."
Sub-section (4) of section 57 of the Act provides that
no representation in connection with an application referred
to in sub-section (3) thereof shall be considered by the
Regional Transport Authority unless it is made in writing
before the appointed date and unless a copy thereof is
furnished simultaneously to the applicant by the person
making such representation. When any representation such as
referred to in sub-section (3) thereof is made the Regional
Transport Authority is required by sub-section (5) thereof
to dispose of the application at a public hearing at which
the applicant and the person making the representation shall
have an opportunity of being heard either in person or by a
duly authorised representative. Section 47 of the Act
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requires a Regional Transport Authority to have regard while
considering an application for a stage carriage permit to
the following matters, namely :
(i) the interest of the public generally ;
(ii) the advantages to the public of the service
to be provided, including the saving of time
likely to
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be effected thereby and any convenience arising A
from journeys not being broken ;
(iii) the adequacy of other passenger transport
services operating or likely to operate in the
near future, whether by road or other means,
between the places to be served ; B
(iv) the benefit to any particular locality or
localities likely to be afforded by the service ;
(v) the operation by the applicant of other
transport services, including those in respect of
which applications from him for permits are
pending; and
(vi) the condition of the roads included in the
proposed route or area.
The Regional Transport Authority is also required to
take into consideration any representation made by persons
already providing transport facilities by any means along or
near the proposed route or area, or by any association
representing persons interested in the provision of road
transport facilities recognised by the State Government or
by any local authority or police authority within whose
jurisdiction any part of the proposed route or area lies.
Sub-section (3) of section 47 of the Act provides that a
Regional Transport Authority, may having regard to the
matters mentioned in section 47(1) limit the number of stage
carriages generally or of any specified type for which stage
carriage permits may be granted in the region or in any
specified area or on any specified route within the region.
Section 48 of the Act provides that subject to the
provisions of section 47 of the Act, a Regional Transport
Authority may, on an application made to it under section 46
of the Act, grant a stage carriage permit in accordance with
the application or with such notifications as it deems fit
or refuse to grant such a permit. It, however, provides that
no such permit shall be granted in respect of any route or
area not specified in the application. Sub-section (3) of
section 48 of the Act authorises the Regional Transport
Authority, if it decides to grant a stage carriage permit,
to grant it subject to any or
84
more of the conditions mentioned in clauses (i) to (xxiii)
in sub-section (3) of section 48 of the Act, one such
condition being the condition referred to in clause (xxi) of
sub-section (3) of section 48 of the Act which reads thus :
"(xxi) that the Regional Transport Authority may,
after giving notice of not less than one month -
(a) vary the conditions of the permit;
(b) attach to the permit further conditions ;
Provided that the conditions specified in
pursuance of clause (i) shall not be varied so as
to alter the distance covered by the original
route by more than 24 kilometers, and any
variation within such limits shall be made only
after the Regional Transport Authority is
satisfied that such variation will serve the
public convenience and that it is not expedient to
grant a separate permit in respect of the original
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route as so varied or any part thereof."
Clause (xxi) of section 48(3) of the Act refers to the
power of variation which the Regional Transport Authority
may exercise suo motu.
The duration and renewal of a stage carriage permit are
governed by section 58 of the Act. That section provides
that a stage carriage permit (other than a temporary permit
issued under section 62) shall be effective without renewal
for such period, not less than three years and not more than
five years, as the Regional Transport Authority may specify
in the permit. As provided in sub-section (2) of section 58
of the Act a permit may be renewed on an application made
and disposed of as if it were an application for a permit. A
renewal of a permit is in effect the continuation of the
original permit. Section 60 of the Act inter alia provides
that the transport authority which granted a permit may
cancel the permit or may suspend it for such period as it
thinks fit if the holder of the permit uses or causes or
allows a vehicle to be used in any manner not authorised by
the permit. The provisions contained in section 60 of the
Act apply to
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revocation and suspension of counter-signatures of permits
by virtue of sub-section (3) of section 63 of the Act.
Since a stage carriage permit is issued for the benefit
of the general public, it is obligatory that the holder of a
stage carriage permit should operate the stage carriage
vehicle in accordance with the conditions of the permit on
the route or area in question. If he wishes any alteration
in the route or area for which he has obtained a permit he
has to get his permit varied in accordance with law. Sub-
section (8) of section 57 of the Act (as amended by Tamil
Nadu Act No. 3 of 1964) which deals with the procedure to be
followed by the holder of a permit who seeks such variation,
reads thus :
"57(8). An application to vary the conditions of
any permit, other than 3 temporary permit, by the
inclusion of a new route or routes or a new area
or by the variation, extension or curtailment of
the route cr the area specified in the permit, or,
in the case of a stage carriage permit, by
increasing the number of trips above the specified
maximum or by altering the route covered by it or
in the case of a contract carriage permit or a
public carrier’s permit, by increasing the number
of vehicles covered by the permit, shall be
treated as an application for the grant of a new
permit."
(underlining by us)
The controversy involved in this case has arisen
primarily on account of the language used in sub-section (8)
of section 57 of the Act. It may be noted that sub-section
(8) of section 57 of the Act does not expressly prescribe
the Regional Transport Authority to which an application for
the variation of a permit has to be made where the route or
area in respect of which extension is sought lies outside
the jurisdiction of the Regional Transport Authority which
has granted the permit but within the jurisdiction of
another Regional Transport Authority. The said sub-section
is silent about it. It, however, provides that an
application for the variation of a permit which involves
extension or curtailment of the route or area specified in
the permit should be treated as an application for grant of
a new permit. In sub-section H
86
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(2) of section 58 of the Act a similar language is adopted.
That sub-section provides that a permit may be renewed on an
application made and disposed of as if it were an
application for a per it. In the case of a renewal of a
permit, however, there is no difficulty in determining the
Regional Transport Authority to which an application for
renewal is to be made. r It should be made to the Regional
Transport Authority which has granted the permit originally
and there is no room for any controversy in this case. An
application for renewal of a permit and an application for
variation of a permit have both to be treated as
applications for a new permit and in both the cases the
procedure prescribed for the grant of a new permit has to be
followed. As mentioned earlier the said procedure includes
all the steps mentioned in sub-sections (3), (4), (5) and
(7) of section 57 of the Act. The application should be
advertised, representations and objections thereto should be
invited and the application should be considered at a public
hearing at which the applicant and the persons making
representations and objections should be given an
opportunity of being heard either in person or by duly
authorised representatives. The question, however, remains
whether the words ’shall be treated as an application for
the grant of a new permit’ in sub-section (8) of section 57
of the Act should be read as meaning that the Regional
Transport Authority which can entertain an application for
variation is the Regional Transport Authority which can
entertain an application for a fresh permit in respect of a
stage carriage for the entire route including the portion in
respect of which extension is sought or that the application
for variation can be made to the Regional Transport
authority which had granted the permit, but the procedure
prescribed under section 57 of the Act for the grant of a
permit should be followed.
The High Court has taken the view in this case that
where the entire proposed route or area in respect of which
extension is sought lies outside the jurisdiction of the
Regional Transport Authority which has granted the primary
permit or where the major portion of the total route
(including the route in respect of which extension is
sought) is outside it, the application for variation of a
permit must be made to that Regional Transport Authority
within whose jurisdiction the entire route or area in
respect of which extension is sought is lying or the major
portion of the total route
87
(including the route or area in respect of which extension
is sought) is lying, irrespective of the fact that the
permit whose variation is sought is issued by a different
authority. The relevant portion of the judgment of the High
Court is set out below :
"13. In the case of a new permit, if it is
proposed to use the vehicle in two or more regions
lying within the same State, if the major portion
of (?) a particular Regional Transport Authority,
he alone will be the authority to grant the
permit. May be, here, we are concerned with a case
of variation and not the grant of a new permit.
For the grant of a I new permit, the Regional
Transport Authority within whose region the major
portion of the proposed route does not lie, cannot
assume jurisdiction to grant the permit. A
fortiori we have to take it that he cannot usurp
jurisdiction to consider the question of variation
where the major portion of the proposed varied
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route lies within the region of another Regional
Transport Authority. Otherwise what cannot be
achieved or done while granting a new permit can
be achieved or done under the guise of a
variation. This is not permissible. This is the
incongruity which must be avoided and it is only
in this sense, it is consistent with the scheme of
the statutory provisions and with the concept of
variation itself, to adhere to the limitations or
conditions set out in section 45(1) first proviso
even in the case of a variation or extension on
the facts of the present case. Hence variation in
such a contingency will be a mis- conception and
certainly, jurisdiction cannot have foundation on
such a misconception. In such a contingency the
very question of granting a variation will stand
excluded. It need not necessarily be a question of
altering the distance covered by the original
route by more than any prescribed length. Equally
so, it is not a question of considering the
generality of the power of variation by referring
to rule 208.
14. It is a question of construing the scope of
the
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jurisdiction of an authority to grant variation.
We need not trouble ourselves with the provision
of section 57(8) of the Act when it speaks about
the inclusion of a new route or routes while
varying the conditions of a permit other than a
temporary permit. A new route or routes may get
included by varying the conditions of any permit.
But the question is, "When the new route or routes
completely fall outside the region of the Regional
Transport Authority who is granting the permit or
varying the permit, can he assume jurisdiction to
indulge in such powers?" With regard to the grant
of a new permit, there could not be any ambiguity
in view of the express provisions of the statute.
The same interdict must govern the question of
variation also. Rule 163-A has not altered the
position. Countersignature after or concurrence
before the grant from the other authority has
nothing to do with the primary jurisdiction to
consider the very grant which has been clearly set
in section 45(1) first proviso. At the risk of
repetition, it must be pointed out, rule 163A is
subject to the provisions of section 45 and by the
force of rule 163B read with rule 163A, the
implies cations of section 45(1) first proviso
will necessarily govern even the question of
variation. Hence under the guise of variation the
Regional Transport Authority who granted the
permit cannot indulge in variation or extension so
as to annex to the original permit a new route or
routes the major portion of which or the totality
of which lies outside his region."
Section 45 of the Act deals with the territorial
jurisdiction of a Regional Transport Authority. As far as
their powers and responsibilities are concerned, all
Regional Transport Authorities have the same powers and
responsibilities under the Act. Any order passed by a
Regional Transport Authority either granting a permit or
refusing to grant the permit is appealable under section 64
of the Act to the State Transport Appellate Tribunal. Any
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person aggrieved by any variation of the conditions attached
to a permit may also prefer an appeal against the order of a
Regional Transport
89
Authority to the Tribunal. Thus the Tribunal has the power
to control the actions of every Regional Transport Authority
within the State. Sub-section (8) of section 57 of the Act
provides for the procedure to be followed in connection with
a variation, extension or curtailment of the route or the
area specified in the permit. It also states that an
application seeking such variation, extension or curtailment
should be treated as an application for the grant of a new
permit, and the effect of this clause has been explained by
this Court in Shiv Chand Amolak Chand v. Regional Transport
Authority Anr., [1984] 1 S.C.R. 288 at pages 297 to 300
thus:
"There can be little doubt that under terms of
subsection (8) of section 57, this application of
the appellants was liable to be ’treated as an
application for the grant of a new permit.’ But
the question is : for what purpose and what of the
provisions of the Act could be said to be
attracted to this application by reason of the
requirement that it should be treated as an
application for the grant of a new permit. The
argument of the respondents was that no
application for grant of a new permit can be
entertained by the Regional Transport Authority
under section 48, unless the number of stage
carriages for which permits may be granted for the
particular route is first determined- ed by the
Regional Transport Authority under sub-section (3)
of section 47, and, therefore, the consequence of
treating the application of the appellants for
extension of the route as an application for grant
of a new permit was that no extension could be
granted by the Regional F Transport Authority
unless the requirement of section 47 sub-section
(3) was first complied with and the number of
stage carriages for which permits may be granted
on the extended route was determined under that
provision. But we do not think this argument is
well-founded.
.................................................
But we do not think that the prescription in sub-
section (8) of section 57 that an application for
varying the condition of a permit by extension
90
of the route shall be treated as an application
for grant of a new permit has the effect of
equating such an application with an application
for grant of a new per it for all purposes so as
to attract the applicability of sub-section (3) of
section 47. Section 57 deals with the procedure in
applying for and granting permits and sub-sections
(3) to (7) lay down the procedure which must be
followed in considering and deciding, inter alia,
an application for grant of a stage carriage
permit. Sub-section (8) follows upon sub-sections
(3) to (7) and is part of the same section which
has a definite object and scheme of providing the
procedure for considering and granting an
application and, therefore, when it provides that
an application to vary the conditions of a permit
by the inclusion of new route or routes or new
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area or by increasing the number of trips above
the specified maximum or by altering the route
covered by it shall be treated as an application
for grant of a new stage carriage permit it is
obviously intended to incorporate and make
applicable the procedure set out in the preceding
Sub-sections (3) to 7 to such an application. The
context in which sub-section (8) occurs and its
juxtaposition with-subsections (3) to (7) in
section 57 clearly indicate that what is sought to
be made applicable to an application referred to
in subsection (8) by treating it as an application
for grant of a new permit, is the procedure set
out in sub-sections (3) to (7) of section 57 and
nothing more.... "
(underlining by us)
This Court ultimately in the above case came to the
conclusion that an application for variation of a permit by
the inclusion of a new route could be considered without
following the procedure prescribed under sub-section (3) of
section 47 of the Act which was otherwise a mandatory
requirement in the case of an application for a permit in
respect of a route or a specified area within a region made
for the first time. The words in sub-section (8) of section
57 of the Act "An application to vary the conditions of any
91
permit....by the variation, extension or curtailment of the
route or the area specified in the permit.... shall be
treated as an application for the grant of a new permit"
create a legal fiction of limited character only for the
purpose of making the procedure prescribed in sub-sections
(3) to (7) of section 57 applicable. A permit is a document
issued by a certain Regional Transport Authority authorising
the use of a transport vehicle in a particular way and in
this case it is issued for the purpose of operating a stage
carriage by a transport authority. That can be varied or
modified only by the authority issuing it or by an authority
exercising appellate or revisional jurisdiction over it and
not by another authority of equal power exercising
jurisdiction on another region. In the case of an inter-
regional route also a permit as mentioned earlier should be
issued first by the Regional Transport Authority having
territorial jurisdiction as provided in section 45 of the
Act. If a part of the route mentioned in that permit lies
outside its region but within the jurisdiction of another
Regional Transport Authority, the other Regional Transport
Authority may either countersign the permit or may refuse to
countersign it under section 63(1) of the Act. If the other
Regional Transport Authority countersigns the permit then on
the basis of the said permit it would be open to the holder
of the permit to run his vehicle along the portion of the
route lying within the other region. If the permit is not so
countersigned he would not be able to do so. But on the
permit being countersigned, the permit would not cease to be
the permit of the authority which issued it originally. To
’countersign’ means ’to sign opposite to, along side of or
in addition to another signature ’or’ to add one’s signature
to a document (already signed by another) for authentication
or confirmation’. It follows logically that when a variation
of the permit is sought the Regional Transport Authority
which issued the permit originally must be first approached
and it is only after it has accorded its sanction to the
variation prayed for, the counter-signature of the permit so
varied may be sought under section 63(1) of the Act from the
other Regional Transport Authority. It is always open to the
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Regional Transport Authority within whose jurisdiction the
portion of the route or area in respect of which extension
is sought lies to refuse to countersign the permit even
after an order of variation has been passed by the authority
which had granted the permit originally. If it
92
countersigns such a permit, the grant of variation by the
Regional Transport Authority which has granted the permit
would be effective, otherwise not. At any rate there is
opportunity for both the Regional Transport Authorities to
consider whether the vehicle in respect of which the permit
is given can be allowed to move along the new route or area
if the above view is taken. On the other hand, if the view
taken by the High Court is accepted, it would be enough if
an application is made for sanctioning variation of the
permit by the inclusion of a new route or area in the permit
to the Regional Transport Authority within whose
jurisdiction the new route or area lies and if that
authority sanctions such variation it would be unnecessary
to seek the approval of the Regional Transport Authority
which had granted the permit originally to such variation
because there is no provision which requires the holder of
the permit to approach the original, authority at all
corresponding to section 63(1) of the Act which compels him
to approach the original authority after seeking the
approval of the Regional Transport Authority within whose
jurisdiction the new route or area is situated. The
construction of the provisions of the Act in this way would
be contrary to the entire scheme of the Act. To illustrate
the above point let us take the facts of this very case. The
Regional Transport Authority of Periyar District had granted
the permit originally taking into consideration the needs of
the people along the route between Erode Railway Station and
Tiruchengode and it had also fixed the number of trips to be
made on the different sectors of the same route within its
region. If an application for variation for the said permit
is made to that authority it would be open to it to consider
in the light of the needs of the people of the locality
whether it is in the public interest to grant extension
beyond Tiruchengode upto Salem or not after curtailing the
number of trips on certain sectors. If the Regional
Transport Authority of Periyar District comes to the
conclusion that there is need for doing so it may grant the
variation sought for and the said variation would have to be
necessarily again countersigned by the Salem Regional
Transport Authority since the route between Tiruchengode and
Salem lies within the jurisdiction of Salem Regional
Transport Authority. Both the Regional Transport Authorities
would ultimately be required to concur for the variation
sought. But if the view expressed by the High Court is
accepted on the
93
Salem Authority sanctioning the variation sought for by the
holder of the permit the proceedings would come to an end
and the Regional Transport Authority of Periyar District
would have no opportunity to express its views at all. Since
there would not be publication of the application for
variation within the jurisdiction of the Periyar Regional
Transport Authority, the members of the public, the local
authorities, the police authorities etc. within its region
would also have no opportunity to express their views on the
merits of the case. It may happen in a given case that
people for whose benefit the route was opened and the permit
was given originally may be denied the transport facilities
altogether by virtue of the variation of the permit being
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sanctioned by another Regional Transport Authority without
their knowledge. Virtually the order of the Salem Regional
Transport Authority granting variation would amount to the
grant of a fresh permit altogether and not the variation of
a permit granted originally by Periyar Regional Transport
Authority. In an appropriate case, as observed in Shiv Chand
Amolak Chand’s case (supra) that where totally a new route
is sought to be included by an application to vary the
conditions of the permit or the alteration of the route
sought by such an application is of such a drastic character
that it becomes substantially a new route, the application
may be treated as an application for grant of a new permit
and may be for that reason rejected by the Regional
Transport Authority which originally granted it. But merely
because in a given case the entire new route or area which
is to be included lies within the jurisdiction of another
Regional Transport Authority or a major portion of the total
route (including the route in respect of which the extension
is sought) lies within the jurisdiction of another Regional
Transport Authority, it cannot be said that an application
for a new permit has been made and the proviso of section 45
of the Act would be attracted. Then the proceeding would not
be a proceeding for variation of the existing permit but
would be a proceeding for the grant of a new permit. If it
is an application for a fresh permit in respect of the same
bus, then the question would be different as observed by
this Court in Delhi Administration v. State of Haryana &
Ors., [1979] 1 S.C.R. 70. In that case Haryana Roadways held
inter-State permits to operate stage carriages between Delhi
and Karnal. These permits had been countersigned by Delhi
Administration. Haryana Roadways then obtained fresh permits
94
to ply the same stage carriages from Karnal to Chandigarh
from the Regional Transport Authority at Karnal. It was
contended that it amounted to variation of the original
inter-State permit and without the concurrence of Delhi
Administration the stage carriages could not be operated
from Delhi to Chandigarh with the aid of the fresh permits
referred to above. This Court negatived it by observing at
pages 77 & 78 thus :
"5. We also find no force in the plea that the
plying of vehicles by the Haryana Roadways beyond
the inter-State route under valid permits issued
by the competent authority would amount to an
’extension’ of the route such as is prohibited by
the Act. Reliance in support of the plea was
placed on sub-s. (8) of s. 57 of the Act which
lays down:
..............................................
As pointed out by the High Court, the language of
the sub-section applies only to a case where the
permit-holder applies for the variation of the
conditions of his permit by inclusion of a new
route or routes or a new area or by increasing the
number of services above the specified maximum. In
the case before us this situation does not arise
at all inasmuch as the Haryana Roadways has not
applied for the variation of any permit in any way
and has, on the other hand, taken and exploited
quite another permit for an entirely different
route from another competent authority. Apart from
sub-sec. (8) above mentioned, we have not been
referred to any provision of the Act in support of
the plea under consideration which, therefore,
fails."
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But in the present case, the application is not for a
fresh permit, but for the variation of an existing permit.
The High Court tried to distinguish the decision in Shiv
Chand Amolak Chand’s case (supra) by observing that in the
State of Madhya Pradesh from which the said case arose there
might not have been rules corresponding to rules 163-A, 163-
B and 208 of the Tamil Nadu Motor Vehicles Rules. In our
view the presence of such rules would not make any
difference at all. These Rules provide for a procedure
alternative to what is prescribed by section 63(1) of the
Act. Rule 163-A says that
95
the Regional Transport Authority of any one region may,
subject to the proviso to section 45 of the Act, grant a
permit to be valid in any other region within the State
without the counter-signature of the Regional Transport
Authority of the other region or of each of the other
regions concerned and it shall as soon as possible send
copies of proceedings to the concerned regions. The Regional
Transport Authority granting a permit under sub-rule (1) of
rule 163-A of Tamil Nadu Motor Vehicles Rules is required
before granting a permit in case of a stage carriage permit
to seek the concurrence of the other Regional Transport
Authority. Rule 163-B of Tamil Nadu Motor Vehicles Rules
provides that the provisions of rule 163-A may be applied to
variation, extension and curtailment of routes and to grant
or refusal of endorsement as they apply to the grant of a
permit. It is significant that this rule does not say that
an application for variation would be subject to the
provisions of section 45 of the Act but the provisions of
rule 163-A shall as far as may be applied to variation of a
permit. There is no express requirement in this rule to
comply with the provisions of section 45 of the Act. In any
event it is difficult to accept the view of the High Court
that when the new route or routes in respect of which
variation is sought completely falls outside the region of
the Regional Transport Authority which has granted the
permit or where the major portion of the total route lies
outside its jurisdiction its power to grant variation stands
excluded. This view is directly contrary to the express
provision contained in section 57(8) of the Act which
authorises every Regional Transport Authority to grant the
variation of a permit by the inclusion of a new route. The
incongruities that may arise from the view expressed by the
High Court would become more obvious when we take some
illustrations for consideration. Take the case of an inter-
regional route which is 70 kilometres in length out of which
a portion measuring 50 kilometres lies within region ’A’ and
remaining portion measuring 20 kilometres in region ’B’ and
the permit is granted by the Regional Transport Authority
having jurisdiction over region ’A’. Let us assume that the
holder of the permit applies for an extension of the route
by 10 kilometres which entirely lies in the region ’B’. In
this case, if the view of the High Court is to be accepted
as correct, the application for the variation of the permit
granted by the Regional Transport Authority having
96
jurisdiction over region ’A’ would have to be made to the
Regional Transport Authority having jurisdiction over region
’B’, even though an application for a fresh permit to ply a
stage carriage on the entire route can be made to the
Regional Transport Authority of region ’A’ as the major
portion of the route would still be in region ’A’. Secondly
in a case like the one before us the variation that is
sought affects both the regions since one part of variation
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relates to conversion of the town service into a mofussil
service and reduction of the number of trips within the
Periyar District and another part relates to extension and
that extension of the route in the Salem District cannot be
granted without reducing the numbers of trips within the
Periyar District. In this case the Regional Transport
Authority of Periyar District should have naturally control
over its permit and its sanction should be first obtained
before seeking the counter-signature of the Salem Regional
Transport Authority. Let us assume that by the application
the holder of a permit seeks the variation of his permit by
the curtailment of a portion of the route which entirely
lies within the jurisdiction of the Regional Transport
Authority which has not granted the permit but only
countersigned the permit. If the view of the High Court is
to be accepted even in such a case the application for grant
of variation by curtailment may have to be made to the other
Regional Transport Authority and not to the Regional
Transport Authority which has granted the permit since the
portion in respect of which curtailment is sought lies
exclusively within the jurisdiction of that authority. More
than all, the permit granted by one authority cannot be
allowed to be modified by another. In view of these
considerations we hold that section 45 of the Act does not
apply to the case of a variation of a permit and that when a
variation of a permit is sought the application for the
grant of such variation should be made to the Regional
Transport Authority which has granted the permit even though
the entire route or area in respect of which extension is
sought lies in another region or a major portion of the
entire route (including the new route or area) lies within
another region. On such application being made it is the
duty of the Regional Transport Authority which has granted
the permit to consider whether the variation sought should
be sanctioned in the public interest or not. If that
Regional Transport Authority grants variation prayed for
then the 11 concurrence of the other Regional Transport
Authority would
97
have to be sought in accordance with either section 63(1) of
the Act or where there are rules made corresponding to rules
163-A, 163-B and 208 of Tamil Nadu Motorl Vehicles Rules, as
far as may be in accordance with such rules. The decision of
the High Court is, therefore, liable to be reversed.
It is seen that the judgment of the High Court is
entirely based on its decision on the question of
jurisdiction of the Regional Transport Authority of Periyar
District to entertain the application. We are informed that
there were other contentions raised by the parties which
have not been considered by the High Court. We, therefore,
set aside the Judgment of the High Court and remand the case
to the High Court to consider the other contentions raised
in the case. If the High Court finds it necessary to remand
the case either to the Tribunal or to the Regional Transport
Authority in the light of the submissions to be made before
it, it is open to the High Court to remand the case either
to the Tribunal or to the Regional Transport Authority, as
the case may be.
The appeal is accordingly allowed. There will be no
order as to costs.
M.L.A. Appeal allowed.
98