Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHRIRAM JHUNJHUNWALA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BOMBAY AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/05/1961
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
KAPUR, J.L.
SUBBARAO, K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 670 1962 SCR Supl. (2) 733
CITATOR INFO :
D 1967 SC1244 (12)
ACT:
Mining lease-Union Government’s order modifying State
Government’s order-If can be quashed by the High Court.
HEADNOTE:
The State Government granted mining licence to the appellant
over an area of 83.18 acres as prayed for by him but the
Union Government modified the order and directed that
licence for 32 acres out of the whole area could not be
granted and the licence should be restricted to the rest of
the area. The licence for 32 acres was subsequently granted
to Respondent No. 3. The appellant then filed an application
under Art. 226 of the Constitution for quashing the order of
the Union Government granting licence for 32 acres to
Respondent No. 3 and for issuing directions that licence for
that area be granted to him. The High Court dismissed the
petition: On appeal by special leave.
Held, that the order of the Union Government could not be
quashed by the High Court as it did not exercise territorial
jurisdiction over the Union Government and the direction
prayed for could not be granted till the order of the Union
Government was set aside.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 236 of 1959.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 24, 1956, of the former Nagpur High Court, in Misc.
Petition No. 232 of 1954.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, G. J. Ghate and Naunit Lal, for
the appellant.
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India, P.K.
Chatterjee and P.M. Sen, for respondents Nos. 1 and 2.
B. P. Maheshwari, for respondent No 3. 1961. May 4. The
Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RAGHUBAR - DAYAL, J.-This appeal, by special leave, is
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against the order of the High Court
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of Judicature at Nagpur, dismissing the petition of the
appellant under Art. 226 of the Constitution.
On August 9, 1950, the appellant applied to the State
Government, Madhya Pradesh, for the grant of a prospecting
licence for manganese ore over an area of 83-1 8 acres,
comprising khasra No. 1 of mouza Seoni Bhondki. The State
Government granted the prospecting licence for this area on
June 18, 1951 and’ intimated that the prospecting licence
form which was pending approval by the Union Government,
would be executed in due course.
On April 21, 1951, respondent No. 3 applied for the grant of
mining lease over 32 acres out of the aforesaid area of 83-
18 acres. On October 20, 1951, the State Government
informed him that area bad been already granted to the
appellant under prospecting licence, and it was not
available to him.
On November 26, 1951, respondent No. 3 applied for review to
the Union Government under r. 57 of the Mineral Concession
Rules, 1949.
On September 5, 1952, the Union Government wrote to the
State Government that its order regarding the grant of
prospecting licence to the appellant over an area of 83-18
acres should be modified to the extent that the area granted
under the prospecting licence be restricted to the virgin
area of 51.18 acres, as the area of 32 acres had been
previously held under a mining lease by Messrs Akbar Ali
Munwar Ali and had not by then been thrown open for regrant.
It was further directed by the Union Government, that area
of 32 acres be thrown open for re-grant. In consequence of
this direction by the Union Government, the State Government
modified its order dated June 18, 1951, granting the pros-
pecting licence to the appellant ’and restricted that
licence to the virgin area of 51-18 acres only.
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Thereafter, some time in April 1953, applications were
invited for the grant of mining lease with respect to the
area of 32 acres. The appellant submitted an application
for the grant of the mining for 83-18 acres. The
respondent No. 3 (lid not file any fresh application. On
April 30, 1954, the Government granted a mining lease for
manganese ore over an area of’ 51.18 acres and did not grant
the lease for the area of 32 acres, stating in its letter to
the Deputy Commissioner that area had been granted to res-
pondent No. 3 tinder mining lease, as directed by the Union
Government, under r. 57 of the Mineral Concession Rules.
Sometime thereafter, on May 17, 1954, the appellant filed
the petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution in the High
Court, praying for the quashing of the order of the Union
Government, respondent No. 2. Granting 32 acres of area in
dispute to respondent No. 3, by the issue of a writ of
certiorari and also for the issue of direction that the
appellant was entitled to the mining lease in respect of
that area.
The High Court dismissed this petition, holding that in
order to-give the relief prayed for it was essential that
the order of’ the Union Government quashed and, as the High
Court could not reach it, it would be incongruous to direct
the State Government to ignore the order of the Union
Government. It is against this order that this appeal has
been filed.
This appeal has no force. The prayer in the writ petition
was for the quashing of the order of the Union Government
granting 32 acres of area in dispute, to respondent No. 3,
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by issue of a writ of certiorari and for the issue of a
direction that the, applicant was entitled to a mining lease
in respect of the said area of 32 acres. The order of the
Union Government could not
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be quashed by the High Court of Bombay, as it did not
exercise territorial jurisdiction over the Union Government.
The High Court could not issue the directions prayed for
even if it could issue such a direction till the order of
the Union Government granting the mining lease of 32 acres
to respondent No. 3 was set aside.
In this view of the matter, it is unnecessary to consider
the points urged for the appellant that the order of the
Union Government was not an order within its jurisdiction
inasmuch as it passed it without issuing notice to the
appellant or affording him an opportunity to be heard on the
review application filed by respondent No. 3. The question,
in this form, was not raised before the High Court and if it
had been raised, it would not have been within the
jurisdiction of the High Court to interfere with it.
It has also been urged that the Union Government had no
jurisdiction to pass the order dated April 7, 1954, under r.
57 of the Rules when, in fact, no application for- review by
respondent No. 3 was pending before it, as the review appli-
cation filed by respondent No. 3 on November 26, 1951, had
been disposed of by the Union Government on September 5,
1952. The review application, however, Was not in fact
finally disposed of by the letter from the Union Government
to the State Government, dated September 5, 1952. That
letter asked the State Government to reduce the area of the
prospecting licence granted to the appellant to 51.18 acres
and to throw open for re-grant the remaining area of 32
acres. The letter convened no order of the Union Government
about the way in which the Union Government was disposing of
the review application. It is clear from the several
letters on record that the Union Government never treated
the review proceedings before it to have been disposed of.
Respondent No. 3 was informed by those letters
737
that the matter was under consideration. It is therefore
not correct to say that there was no review application
pending with the Union Government on April 7, 1954, when it
passed the order cancelling the orders of the State
Government dated October 20, 1951, and directing the State
Government to grant a mining lease for manganese ore over an
area of 32 acres to respondent No. 3, provided he was
otherwise eligible.
The State Government, as urged for the appellant, has the
power, under the Rules, to grant the mining lease. But its
granting such a lease is subject to the orders on a review
by the Union Government. Its order is final, subject to the
order of the Union Government. When the’ Union Government
directed the grant of the mining lease for an area of 32
acres to respondent No. 3, the State Government had to order
such grant, in accordance with the directions of the Union
Government. In fact, at that stage, the State Government
only effectuates the order of the Union Government. It
carries out that order which remains the final order. The
contention that the effective order is ultimately of the
State Government and therefore can be quashed by the High
Court is not open to the appellant.
The appeal has therefore no force and is hereby dismissed
with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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