Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1159-1170 of 2004
PETITIONER:
VISHNU DUTT & ORS.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 15/12/2005
BENCH:
ASHOK BHAN & C.K. THAKKER
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1172 OF 2004
C.K. THAKKER, J.
All these appeals have been filed against the orders
passed by the Division Bench of High Court of Rajasthan
in the D.B. Civil Special Appeal No. 662 of 2001 and
cognate matters by which the Division Bench dismissed
all appeals and confirmed the common order passed by
the learned single Judge in various Writ Petitions.
The litigation has a chequered history. By a
Reciprocal Transport Agreement dated 5th/8th February,
1968 (hereinafter referred to as ’1968 Agreement’)
entered into between the State of Rajasthan and the
State of Haryana, Hanumangarh - Dabbwali via Sangaria
inter-State route opened to traffic with a view to
encourage movement of transport vehicles on such
routes and to regulate and control their operation. The
agreement stipulated that four return trips and eight
single services will be allowed to buses belonged to State
of Rajasthan and 13 permits will be granted. In
accordance with the said agreement, the Rajasthan State
Road Transport Corporation (’RSRTC’ for short) was
granted 13 stage carriage permits. On February 29,
1996, the Regional Transport Authority, Bikaner (’RTA’
for short) granted additional stage carriage permits to
private vehicle operators including the respondents in
the present appeals. There was a clear stipulation on the
permits that they were granted beyond the ceiling fixed
under 1968 Agreement.
On July 14, 1997, the State of Rajasthan and the
State of Haryana entered into a fresh inter-State
agreement (hereinafter referred to as ’1997 Agreement’)
in supersession of 1968 Agreement for 13 permits with
16 single trips. Clause 4 (iv) clarified that all previous
stage carriage permits which were counter signed by
either State before the coming into force of 1997
Agreement shall remain in force till the valid period of
such permits. According to the appellants, under 1997
Agreement, the route was made open exclusively for
private operators. It was also their case that under 1968
Agreement, only RSRTC was granted permits which was
within the scope and ceiling fixed by that Agreement and
the respondents had no right to ply vehicles.
After coming into force of 1997 Agreement, several
applications were made by private vehicle operators for
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grant of permits. RTA, however, vide its orders dated
April 25, 1998 and November 18, 1998 declined to grant
permit to any applicant under Section 88 of the Motor
Vehicles Act, 1988 on the ground that there was no
vacancy in existence for the grant of such permits. Being
aggrieved by the above orders passed by RTA, appeals
were filed before the State Transport Appellate Tribunal,
Rajasthan, Jaipur (’STAT’ for short) by the persons whose
applications were rejected. The main appeal was Appeal
No. 398 of 1998 titled Sohanlal v. RTA. STAT, vide its
order dated July 24, 1999 set aside the order passed by
RTA and remitted the matter to RTA with a direction to
reconsider all the applications under 1997 Agreement for
grant of 13 permits with 16 trips. Against the order
passed by STAT, RSRTC filed a Writ Petition in the High
Court of Rajasthan. A Writ Petition was also filed by
Sohanlal. The learned single Judge of the High Court
passed an interim order on September 9, 1999 and
stayed further proceedings before RTA consequent to the
order of remand made by STAT directing RTA to
reconsider applications and to pass orders in accordance
with law. It is, however, the case of the appellants that
the order of interim relief granted by a single Judge of
the High Court on September 9, 1999 was not
communicated immediately to RTA and RTA was not
made aware of any such interim order passed by the
High Court. Accordingly, on September 16, 1999, RTA
held a meeting in which appellants as well as
respondents participated and the parties were heard. By
an order dated November 2, 1999, RTA, considering the
case of the appellants on merits, was pleased to grant 11
permits to them and the remaining two permits were
granted in favour of other persons. According to the
appellants, they were not made parties in the
proceedings before the High Court in the writ petitions
and they were not aware of interim order dated
September 9, 1999. It was also asserted by the
appellants that neither RSRTC nor Sohanlal produced
the order of the High Court before RTA on September 16,
1999 when the hearing took place, nor on November 2,
1999 when the order was passed in favour of appellants
granting permits in their favour. According to the
appellants, therefore, the order dated November 2, 1999
was legal, valid, proper and in accordance with law. It is
the case of the appellants, that the interim order of the
High Court was communicated to RTA only on November
13, 1999 but by that time, the order dated November 2,
1999 had already been passed by RTA. In view of the
final order passed by RTA, RSRTC filed an application in
the writ petition pending in the High Court seeking
amendment of the petition, challenging the legality of the
order dated November 2, 1999 by which RTA had granted
11 permits in favour of the appellants. The said
application was made on November 29, 1999. The High
Court granted the application on December 13, 1999 and
vacated interim relief which was granted on September 9,
1999 in the light of the order dated November 2, 1999
passed by RTA but fixed the matter for final hearing. On
December 24, 1999, the competent authority
countersigned the permits in favour of the appellants
taking into account the fact that interim relief had been
vacated by the High Court. The matter was then heard by
the learned single Judge on January 27, 2000. During
the course of hearing, it was noticed by the learned
single Judge that as against 13 permits under 1997
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Agreement, 50 vehicles were plying on Hanumangarh -
Dabawali via Sangaria inter-State route as on January
27, 2000 on the basis of the permits granted by RTA,
which were outside the scope of the ceiling fixed by inter-
State agreement. Under the circumstances, the learned
single Judge directed the Secretary, RTA to give exact
figures and details about the permits granted within the
quota and outside the ceiling fixed by 1968 Agreement as
well as 1997 Agreement. The RTA submitted two
separate Schedules marked ’A’ and ’B’. In Schedule ’A’,
the names of the persons who were granted permits
outside the scope and ceiling fixed by 1968 Agreement
was filed. In Schedule ’B’, the names of persons who
were granted permits within the scope and ceiling fixed
by 1997 Agreement were mentioned. In the light of the
query raised by the Court and information supplied by
RTA, the High Court finally disposed of the petitions on
Feburary 14, 2000, inter alia, observing as under:
"In the facts and circumstances of the case, it
is desirable that the learned State Transport
Appellate Tribunal be requested to examine
the whole issue afresh and determine who are
13 permit-holders who have valid permits for
the aforesaid inter-State route under the
reciprocal agreement and who should be
allowed to ply vehicles on the said inter-State
route under such valid permits".
(emphasis supplied)
The Court noted that "with the consent of learned
counsel for the parties", the case was remitted to STAT
with the request to dispose of the matter expeditiously,
preferably within three months, keeping in view the
decision of this Court in Ashwani Kumar v. Regional
Transport Authority, Bikaner, (1999) 8 SCC 364 and the
decision of the High Court of Rajasthan in M/s
Zamindara Motor Transport Co-operative Society v.
Regional Transport Authority, (1999) 2 RLW 1329. Till
the matter was to be decided by STAT, Jaipur, RTA,
Bikaner was restrained from granting any temporary or
permanent permit on the route in question to any
person. In pursuance of the order passed by the learned
single Judge, STAT issued notices to all 50 permit
holders. After hearing them, STAT, by an order dated
May 29, 2000, held that 13 permits issued in favour of
RSRTC were within the ceiling fixed by 1968 Agreement.
Those permits, however, were not countersigned by the
State of Haryana and hence they could not be said to be
valid permits. When 1997 Agreement came into force,
permits granted under 1968 Agreement in favour of
RSRTC were considered, but since the earlier permits
were not valid, the new permits also could not be said to
be valid permits and were not saved under Clause 4(iv) of
1997 Agreement. So far as the permits granted in favour
of respondents were concerned, according to STAT, they
were countersigned by the State of Haryana but those
permits were outside the ceiling fixed by 1968 Agreement
and, therefore, those permits also could not be said to be
valid in the light of the ratio laid down in Ashwani Kumar
as also M/s Zamindara Motor Transport Co-operative
Society.
As to order dated November 2, 1999 passed by RTA
granting permits in favour of the appellants, STAT held
that the said order was in violation of interim order dated
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September 9, 1999 passed by the High Court in writ
petitions. STAT noted that the interim order was vacated
by the High Court on December 13, 1999 keeping in view
the order passed by RTA on November 2, 1999 but such
vacation would not make order dated 2nd November,
1999 valid and would not cure the defect as the writ
petition was finally allowed by the High Court. According
to STAT, when the order dated July 24, 1999 passed by
STAT remanding the matter to RTA was set aside by the
High Court, no order could have been passed by RTA
considering the applications and granting permits in
pursuance of the order passed by STAT since that order
was quashed by the High Court. No party, hence, could
get benefit of an order dated November 2, 1999. The
appellants, therefore, could not claim the benefit under
the said order. STAT, therefore, by an order dated May
29, 2000, again remanded the matter to RTA directing it
to consider the applications which were decided on
November 2, 1999. A direction was also issued to RTA
not to consider any application filed prior to July, 1997
i.e. before coming into force of 1997 Agreement.
The order dated May 29, 2000 passed by STAT was
challenged by RSRTC by filing a writ petition. The
learned single Judge, however, held that a finding had
been recorded by STAT that the permits granted in
favour of RSRTC had never been countersigned by the
State of Haryana and hence RSRTC had no right to ply
its vehicle on the said route. So far as 1997 agreement
was concerned, permits were to be granted to private
vehicle operators and hence, RSRTC had no right to
claim any permit under the said agreement. The Court
accordingly dismissed the petition filed by RSRTC.
The order dated May 29, 2000 passed by STAT was
also challenged by the appellants as well as by
respondents by filing writ petitions. The learned single
Judge heard the parties and disposed of all writ petitions
by a common order. The learned single Judge, inter alia,
held as under:
1. Permits granted on November 2, 1999 in
favour of the appellants cannot be said to
be legal and valid.
2. 11 permits granted in favour of private
operators (respondents herein) on February
29, 1996 had never been challenged on any
ground whatsoever before any forum and it
was only because an order was passed by
learned single Judge on February 14, 2000
in the light of the fact that as against 13
operators, 50 vehicles were plying, STAT
was directed to find out as to who those 13
persons were who held legal permits and
had right to ply vehicles.
3. As the respondents-private vehicle
operators were holding valid permits,
which were countersigned by the State of
Haryana, their permits were legal and
valid.
4. Mere stipulation in the permits that they
were over and above the ceiling under the
Agreement would not disentitle private
operators from continuing operation as the
said provision had to be read in accordance
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with the agreement. Once it was held that
13 permits granted in favour of RSRTC
were not countersigned, they could not be
said to be legal permits under 1968
Agreement and hence they were required to
be excluded.
5. In view of exclusion of 13 permits issued in
favour of RSRTC, permits issued in favour
of respondents-private operators, counter-
signed by the State of Haryana, must be
treated as legal.
6. The respondents were permit-holders and
plying their vehicles since March 16, 1963
and they could not be thrown out on any
technical ground.
Resultantly, writ petitions filed by appellants came
to be dismissed and the writ petitions filed by
respondents were allowed.
Two batch of original side appeals were filed by the
appellants being aggrieved by the order passed by the
learned single Judge. In one set of appeals, it was
contended that the learned single Judge had committed
an error of law in dismissing the writ petitions filed by
the appellants as after considering the applications filed
by the appellants in accordance with 1997 Agreement,
their cases were considered by the RTA and permits were
granted in their favour. The order which was passed on
November 2, 1999 without any knowledge as to interim
order passed by a single Judge of the High Court was
legal and valid and could not have been invalidated by
the learned single Judge. Their appeals were, therefore,
required to be allowed.
Regarding writ petitions filed by respondents, it
was contended by the appellants before the Division
Bench that admittedly they were holding permits over
and above the ceiling fixed by 1968 Agreement. An
express stipulation was made in the Agreement that they
were in excess of quota under the said Agreement. It was
submitted that it was the case of RSRTC that 13 permits
were granted in favour of Corporation and as under 1968
Agreement only 13 permits could be granted, even if it is
held that those permits were not as per the Agreement,
the respondents could not claim benefit of the fact-
situation that the permits, in favour of RSRTC were held
illegal, they must get the benefit and permits issued in
their favour should be held legal. The learned single
Judge, therefore, was in error in granting relief in favour
of the respondents.
The Division Bench considered the question in
detail and held that the learned single Judge was right in
dismissing the writ petitions filed by the appellants-
petitioners and also in allowing the petitions filed by the
respondents (petitioners before the High Court). The
Division Bench observed that since RTA was not aware
of interim order dated September 9, 1999 passed by the
learned single Judge in the writ petition, consideration of
applications of the appellants on September 16, 1999
and grant of permits on November 2, 1999 might not be
treated as an order passed by RTA in disobedience of
interim order passed by the learned single Judge of the
High Court. But the fact remained that the order of STAT
remanding the matter to RTA and the direction to
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reconsider the applications of all applicants on merits
was finally quashed and set aside by the High Court.
Hence, the order passed by RTA could not be said to be
valid in the eye of law and, hence, could not operate or
be implemented. The appellants, therefore, could not
base their claim on the said order. The order passed by
the learned single Judge dismissing the petitions of the
appellants-petitioners, therefore, could not be held
contrary to law and accordingly their appeals were liable
to be dismissed.
As far as the petitions of the respondents and grant
of relief in their favour, which was objected by the
appellants, the Division Bench observed that the learned
single Judge was right in allowing their petitions. The
Bench noted that under 1968 Agreement, only 13
permits could be granted. As per the Agreement, the
permits could be said to be valid and effective only if they
were countersigned by either State. Though it was the
case of RSRTC that 13 permits were granted to the
Corporation, admittedly, they were not countersigned by
the State of Haryana. The said permits, therefore, rightly
held to be not as per the Agreement. Obviously,
therefore, 13 permits which were issued in favour of
respondents and countersigned by the State of Haryana
must be held legal and valid irrespective of mentioning of
the fact in the permits that they were in excess of quota.
Once it was held that permits granted in favour of
RSRTC were not in accordance with agreement, permits
issued to respondents countersigned by the State of
Haryana must be held valid. If it is so, the learned single
Judge was right in granting the relief in favour of
respondents, ruled the Division Bench. In view of the
said findings, the Division Bench disposed of all Appeals.
Being aggrieved by the said orders, the appellants
have approached this Court. Notices were issued by this
Court on November 18, 2002 and after hearing the
parties, leave was granted. The matters have been placed
before us for final hearing.
We have heard learned counsel for the parties.
Two questions, which were raised before the
learned single Judge as well as before the Division Bench
of the High Court, were raised before us by the learned
counsel for the appellants. Firstly, it was contended that
in pursuance of inter-State Agreement of 1997 entered
into between the State of Haryana and State of
Rajasthan, applications were invited from private
operators and the appellants submitted applications. In
accordance with the Agreement, applications of the
appellants were considered by the RTA, Bikaner along
with other applications and permits were granted in their
favour which were duly countersigned by the State of
Haryana. Those permits, therefore, were legal and valid
and could not have been declared illegal. The High Court
ought to have granted relief to the appellants rejecting
the contention of RSRTC and of the respondents. Since
the High Court did not grant relief in favour of the
appellants, the orders deserve to be quashed and set
aside.
Secondly, it was submitted that the High Court was
in error in granting relief to the respondents. Under 1968
inter-State Agreement, only 13 permits could have been
granted. Admittedly, those 13 permits under the
Agreement were granted in favour of RSRTC. The said
fact was neither disputed before the authorities, nor
before the High Court. It is true that 11 permits were
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granted to private operators-respondents herein, and
they were countersigned by the State of Haryana, but it
was expressly stipulated in those permits that they were
in excess of quota and hence no right would flow from
those permits. Hence, even if it is held that 13 permits
issued in favour of RSRTC were not legal and valid, since
they were not countersigned by the State of Haryana,
private operators-respondents could not get the benefit
as their permits were in excess of quota under the
Agreement. The High Court was, therefore, in error in
granting relief in their favour. It was, therefore,
submitted by the learned counsel for the appellants that
the orders require interference by declaring the permits
issued in favour of respondents as illegal and by
granting relief in their favour declaring the permits
issued by RTA, Bikaner in their favour and
countersigned by the State of Haryana as legal and valid.
The learned counsel for the contesting
respondents, on the other hand, submitted that the High
Court was right in dismissing the writ petitions filed by
the appellants and allowing the writ petitions of the
respondents and in granting benefit in their favour.
According to the counsel, under 1968 Agreement, 13
permits could be granted. They were required to be
countersigned by the State of Haryana. True it is that 13
permits were granted by RTA, Bikaner to RSRTC, but
admittedly they were not countersigned by the State of
Haryana. On the other hand, permits granted to
respondents were countersigned by the State of
Haryana. Therefore, only those permits were legal and
valid and could be said to be ’under the Agreement’. A
statement to the effect that permits granted in favour of
respondents were in excess of quota, therefore, had no
relevance. Once it is held that permits issued in favour of
RSRTC were not valid, other permits issued in favour of
respondents and countersigned by the State of
Rajasthan, must necessarily be treated as valid and in
accordance with the terms of the Agreement. The High
Court was, therefore, justified in granting relief to the
respondents.
The learned counsel for the State of Rajasthan also
supported the respondents and submitted that the
orders passed by the High Court are legal and proper
and no interference is called for.
Having heard the learned counsel for the parties, in
our opinion, the orders of the High Court are legal, valid,
proper and do not deserve interference by this Court
under Article 136 of the Constitution.
As is clear from the facts enumerated hereinabove,
under 1968 Agreement, 13 permits were granted in
favour of RSRTC, but as has been rightly held by the
High Court, those permits could not be termed valid
permits inasmuch as they were not countersigned by the
State of Haryana. Since 13 inter-State permits could be
granted under 1968 Agreement, the High Court was
justified in taking into account permits granted in favour
of respondents which were countersigned by the State of
Rajasthan. To us, the High Court was right in observing
that the fact that in those permits, it was stated that
they were in excess of quota under 1968 Agreement, was
of no consequence since those permits were not in
excess of quota if invalid permits issued in favour of
RSRTC were to be excluded and ignored. It is settled law
that inter-State permits must be countersigned by the
other State. In this connection, the High Court relied on
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Ashwani Kumar wherein this Court expressly held that
reciprocal agreement is a condition precedent for grant of
permits and if such agreement provides for
countersignature of the other State, obviously that
condition has to be fulfilled. Reference was also made to
T.N.R. Reddy v. Mysore State Transport Authority, (1970)
1 SCC 541 : AIR 1971 SC 1662. The High Court was,
therefore, fully justified in granting relief to the
respondents and no grievance can be raised by the
appellants against such relief granted to the
respondents.
Regarding permits granted in favour of the
appellants and countersigned by the State of Haryana, it
is clear that the same was issued by RTA in accordance
with the direction issued by STAT vide its order dated
July 24, 1999. By the said order, STAT quashed the
orders passed by RTA on April 25, 1998 and November
18, 1998 and directed RTA to reconsider the applications
submitted by various private parties. But it has come on
record that the order of STAT was challenged by RSRTC
as also by other parties in the High Court of Rajasthan
by filing writ petitions. The learned single Judge, not
only entertained writ petitions, but even granted
prohibitory interim orders on September 9, 1999 and
RTA was restrained from considering the applications as
directed by STAT. It is true that the said interim order
had not been communicated immediately to RTA and
RTA was not made aware of the interim order passed by
the learned single Judge. Though it was stated by the
learned counsel for the respondents that the interim
order was passed by the learned single Judge in
presence of the learned counsel appearing for RTA and
as such RTA must be deemed to be aware of the interim
order and the learned single Judge has also taken into
account the said fact, we may not enter into larger
question since in our opinion, the Division Bench was
right in observing that even if it is held that RTA was not
aware of interim order passed by the learned single
Judge and hence it could consider the applications
submitted by the appellants and other applicants, when
the petitions were allowed and the order of STAT
remitting the matter to RTA for reconsideration was
quashed and set aside, the action taken by RTA had no
effect in the eye of law. On STAT direction being set
aside, there could not be said to be an order of
reconsideration of applications by RTA. Hence, an order
granting applications and issuing permits in favour of
the appellants had no legal effect whatsoever and the
appellants cannot derive any benefit under the said
order of November 2, 1999.
In this connection, we may refer to a decision of
this Court in Mulraj v. Murti Raghunathji Maharaj, (1967)
3 SCR 84: AIR 1967 SC 1386. In that case, execution
proceedings were pending in the Executing Court. Stay
was granted against execution by the appellate Court
but the said order was not communicated to the
Executing Court. A question which came up for
consideration before this Court was whether further
proceedings before the Executing Court, after the order
was passed by the appellate Court, staying the execution
had any sanctity in law? This Court, after drawing the
distinction between ’stay’ and ’injunction’, observed:
"An order of stay in an execution matter is
in our opinion in the nature of a prohibitory
order and is addressed to the court that is
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carrying out execution. It is not of the
same nature as an order allowing an appeal
and quashing execution proceedings. That
kind of order takes effect immediately it is
passed, for such an order takes away the
very jurisdiction of the court executing the
decree as there is nothing left to execute
thereafter. But a mere order of stay of
execution does not take away the jurisdiction
of the court. All that it does is to prohibit
the court from proceeding with the execution
further, and the court unless it knows of the
order cannot be expected to carry it out.
Therefore, till the order comes to the
knowledge of the court its jurisdiction to
carry on execution is not affected by a stay
order which must in the very nature of
things be treated to be a prohibitory order
directing the executing court which
continues to have jurisdiction to stay its hand
till further orders. It is clear that as
soon as a stay order is withdrawn, the
executing court is entitled to carry on
execution and there is no question of fresh
conferment of jurisdiction by the fact that
the stay order has been withdrawn. The
jurisdiction of the court is there all along.
The only effect of the stay order is to prohibit
the executing court from proceeding further
and that can only take effect when the
executing court has knowledge of the order.
The executing court may have knowledge of
the order on the order being communicated
to it by the court passing the stay order or
the executing court may be informed of the
order by one party or the other with an
affidavit in support of the information or in
any other way. As soon therefore as the
executing court has come to know of the order
either by communication from the court
passing the stay order or by an affidavit from
one party or the other or in any other way the
executing court cannot proceed further and if
it does so it acts illegally. There can be no
doubt that no action for contempt can be
taken against an executing court, if it
carries on execution in ignorance of the
order of stay and this shows the necessity of
the knowledge of the executing court before
its jurisdiction can be affected by the order.
In effect therefore a stay order is more or less
in the same position as an order of injunction
with one difference. An order of injunction is
generally issued to a party and it is forbidden
from doing certain acts. It is well-settled that
in such a case the party must have
knowledge of the injunction order before it
could be penalized for disobeying it. Further
it is equally well-settled that the injunction
order not being addressed to the court, if
the court proceeds in contravention of the
injunction order, the proceedings are not a
nullity. In the case of a stay order, as it is
addressed to the court and prohibits it
from proceeding further, as soon as the court
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has knowledge of the order it is bound to
obey it and if it does not, it acts illegally, and
all proceedings taken after the knowledge of
the order would be a nullity. That in our
opinion is the only difference between, an
order of injunction to a party and an order of
stay to a court. In both cases knowledge of
the party concerned or of the court is
necessary before the prohibition takes effect.
Take the case where a stay order has been
passed but it is never brought to the notice of
the court, and the court carries in proceedings
ignorance thereof. It can hardly be said that
the court has lost jurisdiction because of
some order of which has no knowledge.
This to our mind clearly follows from the
words of O. XLI R. 5 of the Code of Civil
Procedure which clearly lays down that mere
filling of an appeal does not operate as stay of
proceedings in execution, but the appellate
court has the power stay of execution.
Obviously when the appellate court orders the
stay of execution the order can have affect
only when it is made known to the executing
court. We cannot agree that an order staying
execution is similar to an order allowing an
appeal and quashing execution proceedings.
In the case where the execution proceeding is
quashed, the order takes effect in immediately
and there is nothing left to execute. But
where a stay order is passed, execution still
stands and can go on unless the court
executing the decree has knowledge of the
stay order. It is only when the executing
court has knowledge of the stay order that
the court must stay its hands and anything it
does thereafter would be a nullity so long as
the stay order is in force".
The Court then stated;
"Though the court which is carrying on
execution is not deprived of the jurisdiction
the moment a stay order is passed, even
though it has no knowledge of it, this does not
mean that when the court gets knowledge of
it is powerless to undo any possible injustice
that might have been caused to the party in
whose favour the stay order was passed
during the period till the court has
knowledge of the stay order. We are of opinion
that section 151 of the Code of Civil
Procedure would always be available to the
court executing the decree, for in such a case,
when the stay order is brought to its notice it
can always act under Section 151, and set
aside steps taken between the time the stay
order was passed and the time it was brought
to its notice, if that is necessary in the ends of
justice and the party concerned asks it to do
so. Though, therefore, the court executing
the decree cannot in our opinion be deprived
of its jurisdiction to carry on execution till it
has knowledge of the stay order, the court
has the power in our view to set aside the
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proceedings taken between the time when the
stay order was passed and the time when it
was brought to its notice, if it is asked to do
so and it considers that it is necessary in
the interests of justice that the interim
proceedings should be set aside"
An interesting question came up for consideration
before this Court in Nawabkhan Abbaskhan v. State of
Gujarat (1974) 2 SCC 121 : AIR 1974 SC 1471. In that
case, an externment order was passed against N on
September 5, 1967 under the Bombay Police Act, 1951.
In contravention of the said order, N entered the
forbidden area on September 17, 1967 and was,
therefore, prosecuted. During the pendency of the
criminal proceedings, however, the externment order
passed against N was challenged in the High Court
under Article 226 of the Constitution and was set aside
on July 16, 1968. Taking note of the said fact, the trial
Court acquitted N but an appeal filed by the State
against the order of acquittal came to be allowed by the
High Court holding that when the contravention took
place in September, 1967, the order was very much
operative and hence N was liable for committing breach
of that order. He was, therefore, convicted by the High
Court. N approached this Court.
Allowing the appeal and reversing the decision of
the High Court, this Court held that once the externment
order was declared illegal, it was of no effect, and N
could never be held guilty of flouting such order.
Rubinstein was quoted by the Court who stated;
"How does the validity or nullity of the
decision affect the rights and liabilities of
the persons concerned? Can the persons
affected by an illegal act ignore and disregard
it with impunity? What are the remedies
available to the aggrieved parties? When will
the courts recognize a right to compensation
for damage occasioned by an illegal act ?
All these questions revert to the one basic
issue; has the act concerned ever had an
existence or is it merely a nullity ?
Voidable acts are those that, can be
invalidated in certain proceedings; these
proceedings are, especially formulated for the
purpose of directly challenging such
acts...... On the other hand, when an act is
not merely voidable but void, it is a nullity
and can be disregarded and impeached in any
proceedings, before any court or tribunal and
whenever it is relied upon. In other words, it
is subject to ’collateral attack’."
Kelson’s pure theory of law was also considered
who stated that when a Court holds an act as nullity, it
is not merely a declaration of nullity, "it is true
annulment, an annulment with retroactive force".
Though, no final opinion was expressed on wide
ranging problems in public law of illegal orders and
violations thereof by citizens, the Court ruled that in the
facts and circumstances of the case, when the order of
externment was held illegal by a competent Court on the
ground that it was passed in violation of the principles of
natural justice, it was of no effect. The Court quashed
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the order\027not killed it then but performed the formal
obsequies of the order which had died at birth. "The legal
result is that the accused was never guilty of flouting an
order which never legally existed". (emphasis supplied)
In the instant case, admittedly, the order passed by
STAT was finally set aside by the High Court in writ
petitions. Therefore, even if the contention of the learned
counsel for the appellants is held to be well founded that
RTA, Bikaner was not made aware of interim order
passed by the learned single Judge and hence it could
consider the applications and pass appropriate orders
thereon, since the order of STAT remitting the matter to
RTA was finally quashed and set aside, all consequential
actions must be held illegal and of no effect. In our
opinion, the High Court was perfectly right and wholly
justified in ignoring the directions issued by STAT and
grant of permits by RTA in favour of the appellants.
For the foregoing reasons, all the appeals deserve
to be dismissed and they are accordingly dismissed. In
the facts and circumstances of the case, however, there
shall be no order as to costs.