Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. NANDRAM HUNATRAM, CALCUTTA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/03/1966
BENCH:
ACT:
Mines and Minerals-Failure to fulfil condition of lease and
endangering colliery-Government if can determine lease-
Revision Procedure for passing order-Mineral Concession
Rules, 1960.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant-firm held mining lease of a colliery on the
condition to continue the work, without voluntary
intermission, in a skillful and workman-like manner. The
partners fell out amongst, themselves, the work of the
colliery stopped, wages of the labourers were not paid, the
essential services stopped working, and the colliery began
to get flooded. The State Government stepped in and made a
promise to the essential workmen that their wages would be
paid and this saved the colliery. The State Government gave
a notice asking the firm to remedy the defect within sixty
days failing which it would take over the colliery. As the
firm did nothing to remove the defects and did not request
for extension of time, the State Government took over the
colliery and terminated the lease. The firm filed a
revision before the Central Government. The Central Govern-
ment asked for the comments of the State Government and
invited the firm to make its own comment upon the reply of
the State Government. Taking the entire matter into
consideration, the Central Government rejected the revision.
In appeal to this Court, the firm contended that the action
by the State Government was arbitrary and highhanded and
that the Central Government did not give a hearing to the
firm and also did not give any reasons in its order
dismissing the revision.
HELD:The action of the State Government far from being arbi-
trary or capricious was not only right but proper. This$
was hardly a case in which any act-ion other than rejecting
the application for revision was called for and a detailed
order was really not required because after all the Central
Government was merely approving the action taken in the case
by the State Government, which stood completely vindicated.
[108 B-C]
The Mineral Concession Rules make it incumbent on the
Central Government to obtain the comments of the State
Government upon the application for revision and cast a duty
on the Central Government to afford an opportunity to the
applicant to make representations in respect of the comments
of the State Government. This procedure was correctly
followed and the Central Government thus had a detailed
discussion of the pros and cons of the case before it. [107
G].
Harinagar Sugar Mills Ltd. v. Shyam Sundar Jhunjhunwala, [
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1962] 2 S.C.R. 339, Madhya Pradesh Industries Ltd. v. Union
of India. [1966] J.S.C.R. 466 and Aluminium Corporation of
India Ltd. v. Union of India and Ors., C.A. No. 635/64,
dated 22-1965] referred to.
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The firm did not fulfil its obligations under the lease and,
whatever the reason, it was guilty of voluntary intermission
in the working of the colliery and of endangering it by
neglect. This entitled the State Government to step in and
determine the lease under the terms of the lease and the
provisions of the Mineral Concession Rules. [107 C-D].
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 257 of 1964.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 19, 1963 of the Government of India, Ministry of
Mines and Fuel, New Delhi on an application for review under
rule 54 of the Mineral Concession Rules 1960.
S. N. Andley, Rameshwar Nath, P. L. Vohra and Mahinder
Narain, for the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General, R. Ganapathy lyer and
B. R. G. K. Achar, for respondent No. 1.
R. N. Sachthey, for respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidayatullah, J. The appellant Messrs. Nandram Hunatram of
Calcutta, a firm consisting of four partners including one
Kishan Lal Aggarwal, held a mining lease for coal in respect
of Handidhua Colliery for a period of 30 years commencing on
April 6, 1959. Under Part VII of the lease, which contained
the covenants of the lessee, the firm had undertaken to
commence mining operations within one year from the date of
the execution of the lease and then to continue the work of
searching and winning minerals without voluntary
intermission in a skillful and workman-like-manner. The
firm had appointed one M. L. Goel as the Manager and Kishan
Lal Aggarwal as the occupier of the colliery. It appears
(and in fact it is not denied) that the partners fell out
among themselves and as none of them was willing to spend
money on the colliery, work deteriorated and came to a
standstill in May 1962. Goel reported to the State
Government that the wages of the labourers had not been paid
for weeks, that work had stopped at the colliery and that
even the essential services were not being maintained owing
to non-payment of wages. He wrote to the firm and
Government early in the first week of May, bringing to their
notice that the colliery was in danger of being flooded if
the essential services stopped working. On May 9, 1962 the
essential services stopped working as their wages had not
been paid for several weeks. The colliery began to get
flooded when the pumps stopped and it was apprehended that
within the next few hours the pumps would be drowned and the
colliery lost. Government, however, stepped in and made a
promise to the essential workmen that their wages would be
paid and this saved the colliery. On May 14, the Chief
Inspector of Mines was informed by Kishan Lal Aggarwal that
he was restrained by the other
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Partners of the firm from making payment for running
expenses of the colliery and that he was not in a position
to perform his duties as an occupier. He accordingly
resigned his office. Goel also resigned and on May 16, 1962
the Sub divisional Officer, Talchar informed Government that
the situation had become very alarming and that some action
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was absolutely necessary. Government thereupon gave a
notice on May 19, 1962 asking the firm to remedy the defect
within sixty days of the receipt of the notice failing which
Government threatened to take over the colliery from the
firm. As the firm did nothing to remove the defects and did
not request for extension of time, Government took over the
colliery and terminated the lease.
The firm thereupon filed an application for revision before
the Central Government under Rule 54 of the Mineral
Concession Rules 1960. The Central Government asked for the
comments of the State Government on the application and
invited the firm to make its own comments upon the reply of
the State Government. Taking the entire matter into
consideration the Central Government by order, February 19,
1963, rejected the application for revision. The present
appeal is against the order of the Central Government by
special leave of this Court.
It was admitted in the application for revision and it is
not denied before us that the partners were quarrelling
among themselves and the work at the colliery had therefore
stopped. It is admitted that the wages of the labourers
were not paid for about five weeks before Government sent
its notice on May 19, 1,962. It is further admitted that
the essential services had also stopped working and that but
for the timely action of the Government, the colliery would
have been flooded in a matter of hours and probably rendered
unworkable till dewatered. With this background in mind we
have to consider the objections of the firm to the order of
the Central Government in the first instance and of the
State Government in the final analysis.
Clause (3) of Part VII of the lease is one of the covenants
by the lessee and under it the lessee undertook to continue
work, without voluntary intermission, in a skilful and
workman-like-manner. Under cls. (i) to (x) of Rule 41 of
the Mineral Concession Rules, 1949 and under Rule 27(5) of
the Mineral Concession Rules, 1960 power is conferred on the
State Government to require the lessee by notice to remove a
breach within 60 days of the receipt of notice and in
default to determine the lease and forfeit the whole or part
of the security in deposit. Under Rule 27(1)(f) the lessee
is also required to conduct operations in a proper, skilful
and workmanlike-manner. It is abvious that there was a
breach by the lessee of the covenants and the Mineral
Concession Rules when the firm stopped working the colliery.
Even if the firm did not order the stoppage of the work at
the colliery it is clear from the complaints
107
of Goel and Kishan Lal Aggarwal that no payment was being
made to the labourers and they stopped work. On record
there are many telegrams and letters sent by the Workers’
Association to Government complaining of the failure of the
firm to pay their wages for weeks. It is thus clear that
action was absolutely necessary to save the colliery from
being ruined. It is contended, however, that the wages were
paid in full on the 17th of July but that obviously cannot
do away with voluntary intermission which had already taken
place for a few weeks. The firm in its representation to
the Central Government said that it had plans to raise as
much as 240,000 tons of coal per year but their performance
shows that in April, 1962 they had raised less than 2,000
tons and nothing in May, June and July. In these
circumstances, there is no merit whatever in the submission
of the firm that the action by the State Government was
arbitrary and high-handed. It is plain that the firm did
not fulfil its obligations under the lease and, whatever the
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reason, it was guilty of voluntary intermission in the
working of the colliery and of endangering it by neglect.
This entitled the State Government to step in and determine
the lease under the terms of the lease and the provisions of
the Mineral Concession Rules.
It is, however, argued before us that the Central Government
did not give a hearing to the firm and also did not give any
reasons in its order dismissing the application for
revision. Reliance is placed upon two recent decisions of
this Court which, following the earlier decision reported in
Harinagar Sugar Mills Ltd. v. Shyam Sundar Jhunjhunwala(1)
have laid down that Government should give reasons when it
performs quasi-judicial functions such as hearin- appeals
and revisions. The two cases are Madhya Pradesh Industries
Ltd. v. Union of India and Ors.(2) and Aluminium Corporation
of India Ltd. v. Union of India and Ors(3) In Harinagar
Sugar Mills(1) the order was reversed on the ground that
reasons for the decision should have appeared. In the
Aluminium case there was dispute as to how much scrap was
remelted and Government gave its decision on a report
received behind the back of the aggrieved party again
without stating why a part of the assessee’s case was
rejected. In the Madhya Pradesh Industries case it was
pointed out that an order affirming an earlier decision need
not fail because it does not repeat the same reasons over
again.
The Mineral Concession Rules make it incumbent on the
Central Government to obtain the comments of the State
Government upon the application for revision and cast a duty
on the Central Government to afford an opportunity to the
applicant to make representations in respect of the comments
of the State Government. This procedure was correctly
followed and the Central Government thus had a detailed
discussion of the pros and cons of the case before it. The
facts in the case were quite clear and spoke
(1) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 339, (2) [1966] 1 S.C.R, 466.
(3) C.A.-No.635 of 1964 decided on September 23,1965.
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for themselves. The belated attempt to pay the back wages
of the workmen did not undo the voluntary intermission for a
significantly long period and did not wipe off the
dereliction on the part of the firm by which the existence
of the colliery was gravely endangered. The documents on the
record quite clearly establish that the colliery was being
flooded as the essential services had stopped functioning
and but for the timely intervention of the State Government
the colliery would have been lost. In these circumstances,
it is quite clear that the action of the State Government
was not only right but proper and this is hardly a case in
which any action other than rejecting the application for
revision was called for and a detailed order was really not
required because after all the Central Government was merely
approving of the action taken in the case by the State
Government, which stood completely vindicated. The order of
the Central Government is clearly sustainable on the ma-
terial and it is not said that anything has been withheld
from us. The action of the State Government far from being
arbitrary or capricious was perhaps the only one to take and
all that the Central Government has done is to approve of
it.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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