Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAHINDRA & MAHINDRA LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/01/1979
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
SINGH, JASWANT
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1979 AIR 798 1979 SCR (2)1038
1979 SCC (2) 529
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1989 SC 222 (3)
RF 1989 SC 516 (49)
E 1992 SC2214 (7)
ACT:
Monopolies & Restrictive Trade Practices Act, 1969-S.
13(2) and 55-Scope of-Nature of order passed under s. 13(2).
Monopolies & Restrictive Trade Practices Commission-If
should give reasons for its order even in ex-parte orders.
Registrar of Restrictive Trade Agreements-Obligations
under the Act when presenting an application alleging
restrictive trade practices in an agreement.
Interpretation of statutes-Reference and incorporation
of one enactment in another-Distinction between-Substantial
question of law-Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
Section 10(a) (iii) of the Monopolies and Restrictive
Trade Practices Act, 1969 empowers the Monopolies and
Restrictive Trade Practices Commission to enquire into any
restrictive trade practices upon an application made to it
by the Registrar of Restrictive Trade Agreements. Section
13(2) provides that "any order made by the Commission may be
amended or revoked at any time in the manner in which it was
made." Section 55 provides that any person aggrieved by an
order made by the Central Government or the Commission under
s. 13 or s. 37 may prefer an appeal to the Supreme Court on
one or more of the grounds specified in s. 100, Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908.
On the date on which the Act came into force s. 100
C.P.C. specified three grounds on which a second appeal
could lie to the High Court one of them being that the
decision appealed against was contrary to law. By an
amendment made in 1976 s.100 was substituted by a new
section which provides that a second appeal shall lie to the
High Court only if the High Court is satisfied that the case
involves a substantial question of law.
The appellant, who was a manufacturer of jeep motor
vehicles, their spare parts and accessories, submitted for
registration to the Registrar of Restrictive Trade
Agreements, standard distributorship agreements entered into
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by it with its distributors. After registering the
agreements, in his application to the Commission, the
Registrar alleged that certain clauses in the agreement
related to restrictive trade practices and that some of them
were prejudicial to public interest.
The appellant, in reply to the Commission’s notice,
stated that it did not wish to be heard in the proceedings
before the Commission, pointing out at the same time that
there was nothing in the impugned clauses of the agreement
which could be said to constitute restrictive trade
practices the reasons whereof had already been explained in
its reply.
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The Registrar filed before the Commission an affidavit
in support of his application but that too did not contain
any further or additional material than what was set out in
his application. No other evidence, oral or documentary, was
produced by him before the Commission in support of the
allegation that the agreement constituted a restrictive
trade practice.
By its order dated May 14, 1976 the Commission declared
certain clauses of the appellant’s distributorship agreement
to be void. While correspondence was going on between the
Registrar and the appellant on the submission of a revised
distributorship agreement, this Court in Tata Engineering &
Locomotive Co. Ltd. v. Registrar of Restrictive Trade
Practices, [1977] 2 SCR 685 gave its interpretation on the
relevant provisions of the Act. Thereupon the appellant made
an application to the Commission pointing out that it did
not contest the enquiry proceedings under s. 37 in the first
instance because the Commission’s decision in the Telco case
was directly applicable; but now that that decision had been
reversed by the Supreme Court in appeal, its order dated May
14, 1976 needed amendment/modification. An application under
s. 13 (2) read with regulation 85 was accordingly made for
revocation, amendment or modification of the Commission’s
order of May 14, 1976. The Commission rejected this
application by an order dated 28th February 1978.
In its appeal under s. 55 of the Act impugning the
Commission’s order dated 28th February 1978 the appellant
contended that (1) the Registrar’s application alleging
restrictive trade practices did not set out any facts
showing how the appellant’s trade practices were restrictive
in nature and that the Registrar’s application not having
been made in accordance with the law laid down by this Court
in Telco case the impugned order of the Commission was
liable to be revoked or modified under s. 13(2); (2) the
order did not give any reasons for its decision and so was
vitiated; and (3) the order was a continuing order because
it required the appellant not merely to cease but also
desist from the restrictive trade practices set out in the
order and was, therefore required to be continually
justifiable and since it was, contrary to the law laid down
in Telco case it was liable to be revoked or amended; in any
event the decision of this Court being subsequent to the
making of the Commission’s order, there was enough
justification for revoking or modifying the order under s.
13(2) of the Act.
The respondent, on the other hand, contended that (1)
on an application of the rule of interpretation enacted in
s. 8(1) or the General Clauses Act, reference in s. 55 to s.
100 C.P.C. must be construed as a reference to the new s.
100, C.P.C. and so construed an appeal to the Supreme Court
would lie only if the case involved "a substantial question
of law" and not otherwise and since in this case no such
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question was involved, the appeal was not maintainable; (2)
s. 13(2) could not be used by the appellant as a substitute
for s. 55; and (3) by reason of its subsequent conduct in
acquiescing in the Commission’s order and unconditionally
accepting it, the appellant was precluded from raising any
contention against its validity in appeal to this Court.
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD: The appeal is maintainable under s. 55 of the
Act. [1064 C] 1(a) On a proper interpretation of s. 55 it
must be held that the grounds speci-
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fied in the then existing s. 100 CPC were incorporated in s.
55 and the substitution of the new s. 100 did not affect or
restrict the grounds as incorporated in s. 55. In any event,
the present appeal raises substantial questions of law, and
so is maintainable. [1064 C]
(b) There is a distinction between a mere reference to
or citation of one statute in another and an incorporation.
Where there is a mere reference to or citation of one
enactment in another without incorporation, s. 8(1) of the
General Clause Act applies and the repeal and re-enactment
of the provision referred to or cited has the effect set out
in that section and the reference to the provision repealed
is required to be construed as reference to the provision as
re-enacted. But where a provision of one statute is
incorporated in another, the repeal or amendment of the
former does not affect the latter. The effect of
incorporation is as if the provision incorporated were
written out in the incorporting statute and were part of it.
Once the incorporation is made, the provision incorporated
becomes an integral part of the statute in which it is
transposed and thereafter there is no need to refer to the
statute from which the incorporation is made and any
subsequent amendment made in it has no effect on the
incorporating statute. [1060 C-G]
Collector of Customs, Madras, v. Nathella Sampathu
Chetty & Anr., [1962] 3 SCR 786; New Central Jute Mills Co.
Ltd. v. The Assistant Collector of Central Excise, Allahabad
JUDGMENT:
63 at 69; Council v. Hindustan Co-operative Insurance
Society Ltd., 58 I.A. 259, Ramswarup v. Munshi & Ors. [1963]
3 SCR 858; Bolani Ores Ltd. v. State of Orissa, [1975] 2 SCR
138; referred to.
(c) Section 55 is an instance of legislation by
incorporation and not legislation by reference. In enacting
s. 55 the legislature did not want to confer an unlimited
right of appeal but wanted to restrict it. It found that the
grounds set out in the then existing s. 100 CPC were
appropriate for restricting the right of appeal and hence
incorporated them in s.55. The legislature could never have
intended to limit the right of appeal to any ground or
grounds which might from time to time find place in s. 100
without knowing what those grounds were. [1063 B-D]
(d) Secondly, the Act is a self-contained code and it
is not possible to believe that the legislature could have
made the right of appeal under such a code dependent on the
viscititudes of a section in another statute. [1063 F]
(e) That apart, an indissoluble link between s. 55 and
s. 100, CPC would lead to a startling result. If, for
example, s. 100 were repealed, s. 55 would be reduced to
futility and the right of appeal under the Act would be
wholly gone. It would be absurd to place on the language of
s. 55 an interpretation which might in a given situation
result in denial of the right of appeal altogether and thus
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defeat the plain object and purpose of the section. [1063 H]
(f) Even assuming that the right of appeal under s.55
is restricted to the ground specified in the new s. 100 CPC
the present appeal would still be maintainable because it
involves a substantial question of law relating to the
interpretation of s. 13(2) of the Act. [1064 D]
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(g) The test for determining whether a question of law
raised in an appeal is a substantial question of law is to
see whether it is of general public importance or whether it
directly or substantially affects the rights of parties and
if so whether it is an open question in the sense that it is
not finally settled by this Court or by the Privy Council or
by the Federal Court or is not free from difficulty or call
for discussion of alternative views. [1064 E]
Sir Chunilal V. Mehta & Sons Ltd. v. The Century
Spinning and Manufacturing Co. Ltd., [1962] Supp. 3 SCR 549;
referred to.
In the present case the appeal clearly involves a
substantial question of law within the meaning of the Act,
because the interpretation of s. 13(2) directly and
substantially affects the rights of the parties and is not
finally settled by this Court.
2(a) The words "in the manner in which it was made-’
occurring in s. 13(2) have no bearing on the content or the
scope and ambit of the power but merely indicate the
procedure to be followed by the Commission in amending or
revoking an order made by it. [1064 H]
(b) The power conferred under s. 13(2) is of the widest
amplitude and in this respect it is unlike s. 22 of the
English Act. This power is intended to ensure that the order
passed is and continues to be in conformity with the
requirements of the Act, and the trade practice condemned by
the order is really and truly a restrictive trade practices
and it must therefore, be construed in a wide sense so as to
effectuate the object and purpose of the grant of the power.
[1065 B]
(c) The powers under s. 13(2) and s. 55 are distinct
and independent powers and one cannot be read as subject to
the other. The scope and applicability of s. 13(2) is not
cut down by the provision for appeal under s. 55. It is
perhaps because the right of appeal given under s. 55 is
limited to a question of law that a wide and unfettered
power is conferred on the Commission to amend or revoke an
order in appropriate cases. [1066 A]
(d) The conferment of such wide and unusual power under
s. 13(2) was necessary to ensure that an erroneous order is
capable of being corrected. An order made under s. 37 or
under any other provision of the Act may affect not only the
parties before the Commission but also others such as the
whole net-work of distributors or dealers who were not
before the Commission. It may also affect the entire trade
in the product. There may be some Facts or circumstances
having a crucial bearing on the determination of the enquiry
which, if taken into account, may result in a different
order being made or some fact or circumstance may arise
which may expose the invalidity of the order or render it
bad. There may be a material change in the relevant
circumstances subsequent to the making of the order.
Therefore, by its very nature. the order of the Commission
is transient or pro-tempore and must be liable to be altered
or revoked according as there is material change in the
relevant economic facts and circumstance. [1366 B-E]
(e) But howsoever large may be the power under s.
13(2), it cannot be construed to be so wide as to permit a
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rehearing on the same material without anything more with a
view to showing that the order was wrong on facts. [1067]
1042
(f) When Regulation 85 says that the provisions of s.
114 and O. XLVII, r. 1 CPC shall as far as may, be applied
to the proceedings under s. 13(2) it cannot be read to mean
that an application under s. 13(2) can be maintained only on
the grounds set out in s. 114 and O. XLVII r. 1. This
regulation does not in any manner limit the width and
amplitude of the power under s. 13(2). A good part of it is
procedural in nature and has nothing to do with the grounds
on which an application under s. 13(2) may be maintained.
The words "as far as may" occurring in its last part do not
indicate that an application under s. 13(2) can be
maintained only on the grounds set out in s. 114 and O.
XLVII, r. 1, CPC. All that they indicate is that the
provisions of s. 114 and O. XLVII, r. 1 are to be invoked
only to the extent applicable, and if in a given case they
are not applicable they may be ignored; but that does not
mean that the power conferred under s. 13 (2) would not be
exercisable in such a case. The reference to the provisions
of s. 114 and O. XLVII, r. 1 does not limit the grounds on
which an application may be made under s. 13(2). Clearly,
therefore, even if a case does not fall within s. 114 and O.
XLVII, r. 1, the Commission would have power in an
appropriate case to amend or revoke an order made by it in
the exercise of its power under s. 13(2). [1067 E-H]
3(a) The power of the Commission under s. 13(2) was
exercisable in the present case and the order dated 14th May
1976 was liable to be revoked. [1077 B]
(b) The submission of the distributorship agreement for
registration under s. 33 cannot be construed as admission on
the appellant’s part that the clauses in the agreement
constituted restrictive trade practices. The appellant had
possibly submitted the agreement for registration on the
erroneous view (which was also the view of the Commission in
the Telco case) that the moment an agreement contains a
trade practice falling within any of the clauses of s. 33(1)
the trade practice must, irrespective of whether it falls
within the definition of s. 2(o) or not, be regarded as a
restrictive trade practice and the agreement must be
registered. The question whether a particular trade practice
is restrictive or not is essentially a question of law based
on the application of the definition in s. 2(o) to the facts
of a given case and no admission on a question of law can
ever be used, in evidence against the make of the admission.
Therefore, even assuming that there was an admission in
submitting the agreement for registration it could not be
used as evidence against the appellant in the enquiry under
s. 37. [1075 C-G]
(c) There was nothing in the conduct of the appellant
which would amount to acquiescence or raise an estoppel
against it. The appellant did not at any time, accept the
impugned order knowing that it was erroneous. There can be
no acquiescence without knowledge of the right to repudiate
or challenge. [1068 H]
(d) Neither did the failure of the appellant to prefer
an appeal amount to acquiescence on its part because an
application under s. 13(2), which is An alternative and a
more effective remedy, was available to it. [1069 G]
(e) The fact that the appellant did not implement the
impugned order by entering into revised distributorship
agreements with its distributors also showed that there was
no acquiescence on its part so far as the order dated 14th
May 1976 was concerned. [1070 C]
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(f) Estoppel can arise only if a party to a proceeding
had altered his position on the faith of a representation or
promise made by another. In the instant case there is
nothing to show that the Registrar had altered his position
on the basis of the application for extension of time made
by the appellant. [1107 D]
4(a). The order of the Commission was bad because it
was based on no material and, could not possibly have been
made by the Commission. [1076 A-B]
(b) The definition of restrictive trade practice in the
Act is, to some extent, based on the rule of reason evolved
by American courts while interpreting a similar provision in
the Sherman Act. The rule of reason normally requires
ascertainment of facts or features peculiar to the
particular business, its condition before and after the
restraint was imposed, the nature of the restraint and its
effect, actual or probable, the history of the restraint and
the evil believed to exist, the reason for adopting the
particular restraint and the purpose sought to be attained.
It is only on a consideration of these factors that it can
be decided whether a particular act, contract or agreement
imposing the restraint is unduly restrictive of competition
so as to constitute restraint of trade. Certain restraint of
trade are unreasonable per se because of their pernicious
effect on competition and lack of any redeeming virtue; they
are conclusively presumed to be unreasonable and, therefore,
illegal without elaborate enquiry as to the precise harm
they have caused or the business execuse for their use. In
such cases illegality does not depend on a showing of the
unreasonableness of the practice and it is unnecessary to
have a trial to show the nature, extent and degree of its
market effect. [1074 A, B; 1075 A-B]
(c) It is now settled law that every trade practice
which is in restraint of trade is not necessarily
restrictive trade practice. If a trade practice merely
regulates and thereby promotes competition it would not fall
within the definition even if it is to some extent in
restraint of trade. Therefore, the question whether a trade
practice is a restrictive trade practice or not has the
decided not on any theoretical or a priori reasoning. but by
inquirie whether it has or may have the effect of preventing
distorting or restricting competition. The peculiar facts
and features of the trade would be very much relevant in
determining this question. [1072 H]
(d) In the Telco case this Court laid down that an
application by the Registrar under s. 10(a) (iii) must
contain facts which in his opinion constitute restrictive
trade practice and show or establish as to how the alleged
clauses constitute restrictive trade practice in the context
of the facts. But even if the application does not set out
any facts or features showing how the trade practices
complained of by the Registrar are restrictive practices,
the Registrar can still, at the hearing of the enquiry, in
the absence of any demand for particulars being made by the
opposite party produce material before the Commission
disclosing facts or features which go to establish the
restrictive nature of the trade practice complained of and
if that is done, the defect in the application would not be
of much consequence. [1070 G-H]
In the instant case the burden of producing the
necessary material that the impugned trade practices had the
actual or probable effect of diminishing or destroying
competition and were therefore restrictive trade practices
was on the Registrar who made on application before the
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Commission. No material
1044
beyond reproducing the impugned clauses of the agreement and
the words of the relevant sections having been produced, the
application of the Registrar was contrary to the law laid
down by this Court. Therefore, the Commission had no basis
for making its order dated 14th May 1976.
(e) The argument that the trade practices referred to
in the offending clauses were per se restrictive trade
practices and in any event, even if any supporting material
was necessary, it was to be found in the admission of the
appellant contained in its letter submitting the
distributorship agreement for registration was without any
force.
5(a). When the issue before the court is whether a
practice trade practice set out in an agreement has or may
have the effect of preventing, distorting or restricting
competition so as to constitute a restrictive trade
practice, it is the actual or probable effect of the trade
practice which has to be judged and there is no question of
contradicting, varying, adding to or substracting from the
terms of the agreement by admitting extraneous evidence. The
various factors stated earlier are required to be taken into
account only for the purpose of determining the actual or
probable effect of the trade practice referred to in the
particular clause. In such a case it is not right to shut
out oral evidence to determine the actual or probable effect
of the trade practice. [1078 D-E]
(b) It is not s. 33(1) which invalidates a clause in an
agreement relating to a trade practice but it is the
restrictive nature of the trade practice as set out in s.
2(o) which makes it void. [1079 E]
(c) When a question of restrictive trade practice
arises in relation to a clause in an agreement it is the
trade practice in the clause that has to be examined for
determining its actual or probable effect on competition. A
clause in an agreement may proprio vigore impose a
restraint. Where such restraint produces or is reasonably
likely to produce the prohibited statutory effect it would
clearly constitute a restrictive trade practice and the
clause would be bad. [1108 D-E]
Tata Engineering & Locomotive Co. Ltd., Bombay,, v. The
Registrar of the Restrictive Trade Agreement New Delhi,
[1977] 2 SCR 685, applied.
Observations in Hindustan Lever Ltd. v. M.R.T.P. [1977]
3 SCR 455; disapproved.
(d) In a case where a clause in agreement does not by-
itself impose any restraint but empowers the manufacturer or
supplier to take some action which may be restrictive of
competition, the mere possibility of action being taken,
which may be restrictive of competition, would not in all
cases affect the legality of the clause. What is required to
be considered for determining the legality of the clause is
whether there is a real probability that the presence of the
clause itself would be likely to restrict competition. This
is basically a question of market effect and cannot be
determined by adopting a doctrainaire approach. Each case
would have to be examined on its own facts from a business
and commonsense point of view. It cannot, therefore, be said
that in every case where the clause is theoretically capable
of being so utilised as to unjustifiably restrict
competition it would constitute a restrictive trade
practice. [1081 E-H]
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6(a). The order dated 14th May 1976 was clearly
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vitiated by an error of law apparent on the face of the
record inasmuch as it contained only the final and operative
order without giving any reasons in support of it. [1083 E]
(b) The two conditions precedent before the Commission
can pass a cease and desist order are (i) it must be found
that the trade practice complained of is a restrictive trade
practice and (ii) where such a finding is reached the
Commission must be satisfied that none of the "gateways"
pleaded in answer to the complaint exists. [1082 D-E]
(c) In the instant case the appellant did not appear
before the Commission and no ’gateways" were pleaded and
therefore the question of the Commission arriving at a
satisfaction in regard to "gateways" did not arise.
Nonetheless the Commission was required to be satisfied that
the trade practices complained of were restrictive trade
practices. The order dated 14th May 1976 did not contain any
discussion showing that the Commission had reached the
requisite satisfaction. It gave merely bald directions
without any reasons. The ex-parte character of the order did
not absolve the Commission from the obligation to give
reasons in support of the order because the appellant would
have been entitled to prefer an appeal even against on
ex-parte order and in the absence of reasons, the appellant
would not be in a position to attack the order in appeal. It
is well established that every quasi-judicial order must be
supported by reasons. [1082 E-H]
N.M. Desai v. Textiles Ltd., C.A. 245 of 1970, dec. On
17th Dec., 1975; Simons Engineering Co. v. Union of India,
[1976] Supp. SCR 489; followed.
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 860 of
1978.
From the Judgment and Order dated 28-2-1978 of the
Monopolies and Restrictive Trade Practices Commission in
R.T.P. Enquiry No. 91 of 1975.
Ashok H. Desai, B.H. Wani, Ravinder Narain, Talat
Ansari, A.N. Haksar and Shri Narain for the Appellant.
Soli J. Sorabjee, Addl. Sol. Genl., R.B. Datar and
Girish Chandra for Respondent No. 2.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J.-This appeal under section 55 of the
Monopolies and Restrictive Trade Practices Act, 1969
(hereinafter referred to as the Act) raises interesting
questions of law relating to the interpretation and
application of certain provisions of the Act. The facts
giving rise to the appeal are for the most part undisputed
and they may be briefly stated as follows:
The appellant is a public limited company engaged in
manufacture and sale of jeep motor vehicles and their Spare
parts and accessories. Since 1947 the appellant was
marketing and distri-
1046
buting jeep motor vehicles and it had set up a large and
complex net work of dealers, who were described as
distributors, for marketing and after sale service of such
vehicles. In or about 1956 the appellant started
manufacturing its own jeep motor vehicles and since then it
has been manufacturing such vehicles and distributing and
marketing the same through its net work of distributors. The
appellant has appointed these distributors for marketing and
sale of jeep motor vehicles on certain terms and conditions
contained in a standard distributorship agreement. The
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material clauses of this agreement read as follows:
"Section (3): TERRITORY OF DISTRIBUTOR:-‘ The
Company grants to Distributor the non-exclusive
privilege (except as hereinafter provided) of selling
at re tail and the right (except hereinafter provided)
to appoint in writing by forms of agreements approved
by the Company, Dealers to sell at retail the products
enumerated in Section 2 of this agreement, within the
following territory and also demarcated in the map
attached hereto and which forms a part of this
agreement.
Distributor accepts the above retail setting
privileges and agrees to develop with diligence the
sales of sale products in said territory in accordance
with this agreement and undertakes to achieve the
quantum of sales in the territory as may be fixed by
the Company from time to time.
Section (4): LIMITATIONS ON TERRITORIAL RIGHTS:-
(i) Distributor agrees not to solicit outside of the
territory described in Section 3-the purchase of any
products.
Section (6): PRICE AND PAYMENT :-Distributor will
pay for products the Company’s established Distributor
net prices in effect on date on despatch. Price lists
will be furnished to Distributor by the Company, but
the Company reserves the right to change prices at any
time without notice.
Section (11): PRICE CHANGES :-If the Company
reduces its published suggested retail list price, for
any current model of ’Jeep’ motor vehicles, the company
will
1047
make an allowance to Distributor as hereinafter
provided. The allowance shall be made in respect of new
and unused ’Jeep’ Motor Vehicles of the then current
model in respect of which the price change has been
made which ‘have been purchased by Distributor from the
Company within a period of 30 (thirty) days prior to
the effective date of such decrease in suggested list
price, and which distributor shall have in his unsold
stock on such effective date. The allowance shall be
equal to the difference between the net amount paid to
the Company for such ’Jeep’ Motor Vehicle (less all
allowance thereto granted), and the net amount which
would have been paid had such ’Jeep’ motor vehicles
been purchased at the reduced price. No allowance, how
ever, shall be made unless there is a reduction in the
RETAIL list price and increases in discounts, bonuses
and the like shall in no event be considered as a
reduction in price.
Section (17): CARE OF OWNER AND CUSTOMER RELATIONS :-
Distributor agrees-
(a) To refrain from selling or offering for sale
any competing product. The Company shall be
the sole judge as to whether a product is
competing or not"
The appellant by its letter dated 27th January, 1971
submitted to the Registrar of Restrictive Trade Agreement
(hereinafter referred to as the Registrar) certified copies
of agreements entered into by the appellant with the
Distributors for registration, since in the opinion of the
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appellant, they were registrable under the provisions of Ch.
V of the Act. The appellant also submitted to the Registrar
along with its letter dated 19th May, 1972 four copies of
the standard distributorship agreement for registration in
terms of cl. (ii) of Rule 12 of the Monopolies Restrictive
Trade Practices Rules, 1970 (hereinafter referred to as the
Rules) and the standard distributorship agreement was
registered by the Registrar under section 35 of the Act.
On 17th December, 1975 the Registrar made an
application to 11 the Monopolies and Restrictive Trade
Practices Commission (hereinafter referred to as the
Commission) under section 10(a) (iii) of
1048
the Act pointing out to the Commission that the standard
distributorship agreement entered into by the appellant with
the distributors was filed by the appellant for registration
in the office of the Registrar and the same had been duly
registered under section 35 of the Act. The Registrar drew
the attention of the Commission to clauses (3), (4), (5),
(6), (11), (13), (14), (17) and (20) of the standard
distributorship agreement and claimed that the provisions
contained in these clauses related "to restrictive trade
practices relating to imposing restrictions on persons and
classes of persons to whom goods are sold and from whom
goods are bought tie-up sales/full-line forcing; exclusive
dealing; granting or allowing concessions; discounts, over-
riding commission, etc. in connection with or by reason of
dealings; resale price maintenance; and allocation of
area/market for disposal of products covered under the
agreement, respectively attracting clauses (a), (b), (c),
(e), (f) and (g) of section 33(1) and/or section 2(o) of the
Act" and that these restrictive trade practices had and
might have the effect of preventing, distorting and
restricting competition and tended to bring about
monopolisation of prices and conditions of delivery and to
affect the flow of supplies in the market relating to goods
covered under the standard distributorship agreement in such
manner as to impose on the consumers unjustified costs and
restrictions and the same were prejudicial to public
interest. The Registrar prayed on the basis of these
allegations that the Commission be pleased to inquire into
the restrictive trade practices indulged in by the
appellant, under section 37 of the Act and pass such orders
as it might deem fit and proper. The Commission, on receipt
of this application, decided, in exercise of the powers
conferred upon it under sections 10(a) and 37 of the Act, to
hold inquiry into the restrictive trade practices complained
of by the Registrar and issued notice dated 2nd January,
1976 under Regulation 53 of the Monopolies and Restrictive
Trade Practices Commission Regulations, 1974 (hereinafter
referred to as the Regulations) to the appellant that if the
appellant wished to be heard in the proceedings before the
Commission, it should comply with the requirements of
Regulations 65 and 67 failing which the Commission would
proceed with the inquiry in the absence of respondent. The
appellant, by its letter dated 3rd February, 1976,
acknowledged receipt of the notice and intimated to the
Commission that it did not wish to be heard in the
proceedings before the Commission but put forward its
submissions in regard to the restrictive trade practices
alleged by the Registrar in his application. The appellant
pointed out that the clauses of the standard
distributionship agreement complained of by the Registrar
did not constitute restrictive trade practices for the
reasons explained in the letter
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1049
and requested the Deputy Secretary to place their
submissions before the Commission at the enquiry to be held
by it. The letter was purported to be submitted in terms of
Regulations 36(3), but the reference to this Regulation was
obviously under some misapprehension because this Regulation
occurred in Chapter V which provided the procedure for
reference under Chapter III and IV and it had no application
in case of an inquiry under section 37 of the Act. The Joint
Secretary (Legal) of the Commission pointed out to the
appellant by his letter dated 11th February, 1976 that if
the appellant wished to be heard in the proceedings, the
appellant should comply with the requirements of Regulations
65 and 67 and it is only if the appellant did so, that it
could file a reply in answer to the application of the
Registrar and moreover, the reply had to be properly drawn
and duly verified and declared as provided in those
Regulations. The Joint Secretary. (Legal) made it clear that
in view of this legal position obtaining under Regulations
65 and 67, it was not possible to take note of contents of
the letter addressed by the appellant setting out the
explanation for the various clauses impugned in the
application of the Registrar. Though this position, in law
was specifically pointed out by the Joint Secretary (Legal)
on behalf of the Commission, the appellant did not comply
with the procedure set out in Regulations 65 and 67 with the
result that the Commission decided to proceed exparte
against the appellant. The Registrar filed an affidavit of
the Assistant Registrar dated 10th May, 1976 in support of
the allegations contained in the application but this
affidavit surprisingly did not contain any further or other
material than that set out in the application. No other
evidence, oral or documentary, was produced by the Registrar
and the Commission proceeded to decide the issues arising in
the enquiry on the basis of the application supported by
the affidavit of the Assistant Registrar. The Commission,
after going through the application and the affidavit of the
Assistant Registrar and hearing the Registrar, made an order
dated 14th May, 1976, the operative part of which was in the
following terms:
"(1) The Respondent is hereby restrained and
prohibited by any agreement with any distributor to
restrict by any method the persons or classes or
persons to whom the goods are sold whether such person
be retail purchaser or a dealer.
(2) The Respondent is hereby restrained and
prohibited from restricting in any manner, any
purchaser whether a dealer or otherwise in the course
of its trade from acquir-
1050
ing or otherwise dealing in any goods other than those
of the Respondent or the goods of any other person.
(3) The Respondent is hereby restrained and
prohibited from selling any goods to any distributor,
dealer or other wise on the condition that the prices
to be charged on resale by the purchaser shall be the
prices stipulated by the respondent unless it is
clearly stated that prices lower than those prices may
be charged. The Respondent is hereby directed that in
all future price lists it must state on the cover or on
the front page that the prices if any indicated therein
as resale prices are maximum prices and that the prices
lower than those price may be charged.
(4) The Respondent is hereby restrained and
prohibited from allocating any area or market to any
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distributor or dealer for the disposal of the Respondent’s
goods. (5) The Respondent is hereby restrained and
prohibited from preventing any distributor from appointing
any dealer of its own choice on such terms and conditions as
may be mutually agreed upon between distributors and dealers
in cases where the Respondent does not undertake any
obligation, liability or responsibility in respect of the
dealers.
(6) The clauses in the agreements relating to the
above restrictive trade practices are hereby declared
to be void. The practices arising therefore, shall be
discontinued and shall not be repeated. (7) The
Respondent shall within 3 months from the date of
service of this order on it make and file an affidavit
before the Commission setting out the manner in which
this order has been given effect to. A copy of the said
affidavit shall simultaneously be furnished to the
Registrar.
(8) There will be no order as to costs."
Since the appellant was required to file an affidavit
of compliance within three months as directed by cl. (7) of
the Order, the appellant filed an affidavit dated 10th
September, 1976 stating that the appellant had fully
implemented in practice the directions contained in
Paragraphs (1) and (5) of the Order and refrained from
enforcing against the distributors any of the clauses which
had been declared void by the Commission. The appellant also
pointed out that a draft of a
1051
new distributorship agreement was being finalised by the
appellant with a view to giving effect to the "restrictions
and prohibitions" contained in the Order. The Registrar
filed an affidavit of the Deputy Registrar dated 27th
September, 1976 seeking particulars from the appellant
showing how the appellant had implemented the directions
contained in the Order. The appellant by its reply dated
11th November, 1976 pointed out that since the date of
receipt of the Order, the appellant had not given effect to
the trade practices covered by paragraphs (1) to (5) of the
Order nor required any of the distributors to abide by the
clauses of the standard distributorship agreement relating
to those trade practices and on the contrary, intimated to
the distributors that the old distributorship agreement
would have to be substituted by a new revised agreement. The
appellant submitted that since the clauses of the standard
distributorship agreement declared void by the Commission
were not enforceable in law by the appellant, it did not
make any difference whether or not they were deleted from
the existing distributorship agreement and in view of the
fact that a new revised agreement was being prepared which
would comply with the directions contained in the Order, it
was not necessary, to effect any amendments in the existing
distributorship agreement. It seems that there was a hearing
before the Commission on this issue as regards compliance
with the directions contained in the Order and the draft of
the revised distributorship agreement prepared by the
appellant was considered and pursuant to the suggestion made
by the Commission, the appellant agreed to amend two clauses
in the draft and the Commission by its Order dated 7th
December, 1976 directed that the revised distributorship
agreement should be filed by the appellant by 31st March,
1977.
Now, it appears that subsequent to the Order of the
Commission dated 7th December, 1976 an important decision
was given by this Court in Tata Engineering & Locomotive Co.
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Ltd., Bombay v. The Registrar of the Restrictive Trade
Agreement, New Delhi(’) relating to the interpretation of
some of the relevant provisions of the Act bearing on
restrictive trade practices. This decision was given in all
appeal preferred by Tata Engineering Locomotive Co. Ltd.
(herein- after referred to as the Telco against an order
made by the Commission in an enquiry under section 37 and it
reversed the view taken by the Commission in several
important respects. Though this decision was given on 21st
January, 1977, it was not fully reported until March 1977
and on reading it, the appellant felt that the order of the
Commission dated 14th May, 1976 required reconsideration, as
it was
1052
contrary to the law laid down in this decision. The
appellant accordingly made an application to the Commission
on 31st March. 1977 where, besides asking for extension of
time for filing a copy of the revised distributorship
agreement on the ground that the dealers were spread out all
over India and it would take considerable time for execution
of the revised distributorship agreement by them, the
appellant pointed out that it had not contested the enquiry
proceedings under section 37 in the first instance because
the decision given by the Commission in the Telco case was
directly applicable, but since that decision of the
Commission was reversed by this Court in appeal, the
appellant was advised to move a suitable application for
amendment and/or modification of the Order dated 14th May,
1976 and that was also an additional reason why the time for
filing the revised distributorship agreement should be
extended, so that the revised distributorship agreement
could be in accordance with the directions, if any. which
might be given by the Commission on the proposed
application. The Commission acceded to the request contained
in this application and extended the time for filing the
revised distributorship agreement upto 4th June, 1977.
The appellant thereafter made an application dated 30th
May, 1977 under section 13(2) of the Act read with
Regulation 85 for revocation, amendment or modification of
the Order of the Commission dated 14th May, 1976. The
appellant set out in this application various facts and
features relating to its trade of manufacture and sale of
Jeep motor vehicles and their spare parts and accessories
and enumerated a number of grounds on which the order of the
Commission dated 14th May, 1976 deserved to be revised,
revoked, amended or otherwise modified. The application was
opposed by the Registrar by filing a reply dated. 17th
August, 1977. The parties were thereafter heard by the
Commission on 26th August, 1977 and pursuant to the
directions given by the Commission. affidavits of documents
were filed and evidence was recorded on both sides. It
appears that in the course of the evidence the appellant
came to know that in November 1977 Hindustan Motors Ltd. had
introduced in the 6 market diesel trekker which was clearly
a competing vehicle and the appellant thereupon applied to
the Commission on 30th January. 1978 for amendment of the
application by adding a plea that the fact that since
November 1977 Hindustan Motor Ltd. had started manufacturing
and selling diesel trekker which was a highly competitive
product was another material change in the relevant
circumstances which justified the revocation, amendment or
modification of the Order dated 14th May, 1976. This
application for amendment was opposed by the Registrar on
the ground that it was made at a very
1053
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late stage of the proceeding. The Commission did not pass
any order on this application for amendment and kept it
pending and proceeded to dispose of the main application by
an Order dated 28th February, 1978 by which it rejected the
main application with costs and added a short order On the
same day stating that in view of the order on the main
application, there would be no order on the application for
amendment. The appellant thereupon preferred the present
appeal in this Court under section 55 challenging the
validity of the order made by the Commission rejecting the
application of the appellant.
Before we set out the rival contentions of the parties
in the appeal, it would be convenient at this state to refer
to the relevant provisions of the Act and the Regulations.
Section 2 is the definition section and clause (u) of this
section defines ’trade practice’ to mean "any practice
relating to the carrying on of any trade, and includes-(i)
anything done by any person which controls or affects the
price charged by, or the method of trading of, any trader or
any class of traders (ii) a single or isolated action of any
person in relation to any trade". ’Restrictive trade
practice’ is defiled in section 2, clause (o) to mean "a
grade practice which has, or may have, the effect of
preventing distorting or restricting, competition in any
manner and in particular,-(i) which tends to obstruct the
flow of capital or resources into the stream of production,
or (ii) which tends to bring about manipulation of prices,
or conditions of delivery or to affect the flow of supplies
in. the market relating to goods or services in such manner
as to impose on the consumers unjustified costs or
restrictions." Section 5, subsection (1) provides for the
establishment of the Commission which is to consist of a
Chairman and not less than two and not more than eight other
members to be appointed by the Central Government and sub-
section (2) of section 5 lays down that the Chairman shall
be a person who is or has been or is qualified to be a judge
of the Supreme Court or of a High Court. It is obvious from
these two sub-sections of section 5 that the Legislature
clearly contemplated that the Commission must have a
Chairman who would provide the judicial element and there
must be at least two other members who would provide
expertise in subjects like economics, law, commerce.
accountancy, industry, public affairs or administration. so
that there could be a really high-powered expert commission
competent and adequate to deal with the various problems
which come before it. It, however, appears that the Central
Government paid scant regard to this‘ legislative
requirement and though the office of Chairman fell vacant as
far back as 9th August, 1976, it failed to make appointment
of Chairman until
1054
24th February, 1978. Of the two other members of the
Commission one had already resigned earlier and his vacancy
was also not filled with the result that the Commission
continued with only one member for a period of about 18
months. This was a most unfortunate state of affairs, for it
betrayed total lack of concern for the proper constitution
and functioning of the Commission and complete neglect of
its statutory obligation by the Central Government. We fail
to see any reason why the Central Government could not make
the necessary appointments and properly constitute the
Commission in accordance with the requirements of the Act.
It is difficult to believe that legal and judicial talent in
the country had become so impoverished that the Central
Government could not find a suitable person to fill the
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vacancy of Chairman for a year and a half. Moreover it must
be remembered that the appointments, after all, have to be
made from whatever legal and judicial talent is available
and the situation is not going to improve by waiting for a
year or two: a new star is not going to appear in the legal
firmament within such a short time and the appointments
cannot be held up indefinitely. Indeed, it is highly
undesirable that important quasi-judicial or administrative
posts should remain vacant for long periods of time, because
apart from impairing the efficiency of the functioning of
the statutory authority of the administration. inexplicable
delay may shake the confidence of the public in the
integrity of the appointments when made. Turning back to the
provisions of the Act, we find that section 10(a) (iii)
empowers the Commission to inquire into any restrictive
trade practice upon an application made to it by the
Registrar. The powers of the Commission while holding an
enquiry under the Act are enumerated in section 12 and
section 13, sub-section (2) provides that "any order made by
the Commission may be amended or revoked at any time in the
manner in which it was made". Then follow sections 14 to 19
which deal inter alia with the procedure to be followed by
the Commission. We are not concerned with Sections 20 to 32
which occur in Chapters III and IV because they deal with
topics other than restrictive trade practices. Chapter V
relates to registration of agreements relating to
restrictive trade practices and it consists of sections 33
to 36 of which only sections 33 and 35 are material. Sub-
section (1) of section 33 provides that any agreement
relating to a restrictive trade practice falling within one
or more of the categories specified there shall be subject
to registration in accordance with the provisions of Ch. V
and proceeds to enumerate the categories of restrictive
trade practices covered by that provision and section 35
lays down the time within which an agreement falling within
section 33, sub-section (1) shall be registered and the
procedure to be followed for effectuating such registration.
Sections 37
1055
and 38 are the next important sections and they occur in Ch.
V headed A "control of certain restrictive trade practices".
Sub-section (1) of section 37 provides that "the Commission
may inquire into any restrictive trade practice, whether the
agreement, if any, relating thereto has been registered
under section 35 or not, which may come before it for
inquiry and, if after such inquiry it is of opinion that the
practice is prejudicial to the public interest, the
Commission may, by order, direct that-(a) the practice shall
be discontinued or shall not be repeated, (b) the agreement
relating there to shall be void in respect of such
restrictive trade practice or shall stand modified in
respect thereof in such manner as may be specified in the
order". Section 38, sub-section (1) enacts that for the
purposes of any proceedings before the Commission under
section 37, a restrictive trade practice shall be deemed to
be prejudicial to the public interest unless the Commission
is satisfied of any one or more of the circumstances set out
in that subsection and is further satisfied, after balancing
the competing considerations, that the restriction is not
unreasonable. These circumstances specified in sub-section
(1) of section 38 render a trade practice permissible even
though it is restrictive and provide what have been
picturesquely described in the English law as "gateways" out
of the prohibition of restrictive trade practices. Section
55 is the next relevant section and it provides that any
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person aggrieved by any order made by the Central Government
under Ch. III or Ch. IV or as the case may be, of the
Commission under section 13 or section 37 may, within 60
days from the date of the order, prefer an appeal to the
Supreme Court on "one or more of the grounds specified in
section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure 1908". This is
the section under which the present appeal has been
preferred by the appellant. The last section to which we
must refer is section 66 which confers power on the
Commission to make Regulations for the efficient performance
of its functions under the Act. The Commission has, in
exercise of the power conferred by this section, made the
Regulations of which three arc material. namely, Regulations
65, 67 and 85. These Regulations, in so far as material,
read as follows
"Section 65: APPEARANCE OF PARTIES : Every
respondent who wishes to be heard in the proceedings
shall within 14 days of the service upon him of the
copy of the notice of enquiry, enter an appearance in
the office of the Commission by delivering to the
Secretary six copies of a memorandum stating that the
respondent wishes to be heard in the proceedings and
containing the name of his advocate having an office in
Delhi or New Delhi and duly authorised to accept
service of processes and the Secretary
1056
shall send one copy of the memorandum to the Registrar
in case where proceedings are initiated under sub-
clause (iii) of clause (a) of section 10, and in all
other cases to the Director of Investigation."
"Section 67: REPLY TO THE NOTICE: Every
respondent who has entered an appearance shall within
four weeks of his entering appearance deliver to the
Secretary a reply to the notice (5 copies) which shall
include:-
(a) particulars of each of the provisions of
section 38 of Act on which he intends to rely; and
(b) particulars of the facts and matters alleged
by him to entitle him to rely on such provisions."
"Section 85: AMENDMENT OR REVOCATION OF ORDER
ETC.: An application under sub-section (2) of section
13 of the Act for amendment-or revocation of any order
made by the Commission in any proceedings shall be
supported by evidence on affidavit of the material
change in the relevant circumstances or any other fact
or circumstances on which the applicant relies. Unless
the Commission otherwise directs notice of the
application together with copies of the affidavits in
support thereof, shall be served on every party who
appeared at the hearing of the previous proceedings and
every such party shall be entitled to be heard on the
application and the provisions of section 114 and Order
XLVII of the Code of Civil Procedure, ’908 (5 of 1908),
shall as far as may, be applied to these proceedings."
It is against the background of these provisions of the
Act and the Regulations that we have to determine the
question arising for consideration in the appeal.
The contention of the appellant in support of the
appeal was that the Order dated 14th May, 1976 suffered from
various infirmities and was liable to be revoked or in any
event modified under section 13(2) of the Act. It was said
that the application of the Registrar on which the Order
dated 14th May, 1976 was made did not set out any facts or
features showing how the trade practices referred to in the
application were restrictive of competition so as to
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constitute restrictive trade practices and merely contained
a bald recital of the impugned clause and mechanical
reproduction of the language of the relevant
1057
sections without anything more. The application of the
Registrar was thus not in accordance with the law laid down
in the decision of this Court in the Telco case and no order
could be made upon it by the Commission. It was also urged
that there was no material placed before the Commission by
the Registrar on the basis of which the Commission could
possibly come to the conclusion that the trade practices
referred to in the application were restrictive trade
practices. Even if the Commission was justified in
proceeding exparte against the appellant, the highest that
could be assumed in favour of the Registrar was that the
facts set out in the application and the supporting
affidavit of the Assistant Registrar would be deemed to be
admitted, but, apart from the impugned clauses, no other
facts were set out either in the application or in the
affidavit of the Assistant Registrar and there was
accordingly no evidence on which the order dated 14th May,
1976 could be made by the Commission. It was also contended
that the Order dated 14th May, 1976 did not set out any
facts peculiar to the trade of the appellant or the
conditions before and after the imposition of the restraint
or the actual or probable effect of the restraint nor did it
indicate as to how the trade practices referred to in the
impugned clauses constituted restrictive trade practices; it
was a non-speaking order which did not give any reasons at
all for holding that the trade practices complained of were
restrictive trade practices and hence it was vitiated by a
legal infirmity. The appellant further urged that the Order
dated 14th May, 1976 was a continuing order as it required
the appellant not merely to cease but also to desist from
the restrictive trade practices set out in the order and it
was, therefore, required to be continually justifiable and
since the facts and features of the trade set out in the
application of the appellant clearly established that the
trade practices referred to in the impugned clauses did not
constitute restrictive trade practices, the Order dated 14th
May, 1976 was not justified and in any event could not be
continued and it was accordingly liable to be revoked or
amended under section 13(2). It was submitted that in any
event the Order dated 14th May, l 976 was contrary to the
law declared by this Court in the Telco case and since the
decision in the Telco case was a fact or circumstance
subsequent to the making of the Order, it justified the
invocation of the power under section 13(2) for revoking or
modifying the Order. Lastly, it was contended that in any
view of the matter there was a material change in the
relevant circumstances subsequent to the making of the Order
dated 14th May, 1976 in that Hindustan Motor Ltd. started
manufacturing and marketing competing utility vehicles since
June 1976 and this was sufficient to warrant reconsideration
of the Order under section 13 (2) . The respondents raised a
preliminary
1058
objection against the maintainability of the appeal on the
ground that under section 55 read with the newly substituted
section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, an appeal
could lie to this Court only on a substantial question of
law and since the contentions raised on behalf of the
appellant did not raise any substantial question of law, the
appeal was not maintainable. The respondents also urged that
on a proper construction of section 13(2) read with
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Regulation 85, the Commission could revoke or amend the
Order dated 14th May, 1976 only if there was a material
change in the relevant circumstances since the making of the
Order or any of the grounds specified in Order XLVlI rule 1
of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 was available to
the appellant. The second and third grounds specified in
Order XLVII, rule 1 obviously did not exist in the present
case and the claim of the appellant for exercise of the
power under section 13(2) could, if at all, rest only on the
first ground, namely error of law apparent on the face of
the record. But, said the respondents, there was no error of
law apparent on the face of the record so far as the Order
dated 14th May, 1976 was concerned, nor was there any
material change in the relevant circumstances subsequent to
the making of the order and hence section 13(2) was not
attracted. The respondents contended that what the appellant
was seeking to achieve by the application under section
13(2) was reconsideration of the Order dated 14th May, 1976
which was clearly impermissible, since section 13(2)
could not be used as a substitute, for section 55 and that
too, without the restrictive condition of that section. It
was also urged on behalf of the respondents that, in any
event the appellant was precluded from challenging the Order
dated 14th May, 1976 by an application under Section 13(2)
by reason of its subsequent conduct in acquiescing in the
Order and unconditionally accepting the same. The appellant
clearly waived the defects or infirmities if any in the
Order dated 14th May, 1976 and was precluded from raising
any contention against the validity of that Order. The
respondents disputed validity of the contentions raised on
behalf of the appellant and urged that in any event even if
any of these defects or infirmities were present, they did
not render the Order void as being without jurisdiction and
hence the validity of the Order could not be challenged in
the collateral proceedings under section 13(2). The
respondents also contended that in any view of the matter
the Order dated 14th May, 1976 was justified inasmuch as the
trade practices complained of by the Registrar were
restrictive trade practices. These were the rival
contentions
1059
urged on behalf of the parties and we shall now proceed to
examine
The first question that arises for consideration in the
preliminary objection of the respondents is as to what is
the true scope and admit of an appeal under section 55. That
section provides inter alia that any person aggrieved by an
order made by the Commission under section 13 may prefer an
appeal to this Court on "one or more of the grounds
specified in section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908". Now at the date when section 55 was enacted, namely,
27th December, 1969, being the date of coming into force of
the Act, section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure
specified three grounds on which a second appeal could be
brought to the High Court and one of these grounds was that
the decision appealed against was contrary to law. It was
sufficient under section 100 as it stood then that there
should be a question of law in order to attract the
jurisdiction of the High Court in second appeal and,
therefore, if the reference in section 55 were to the
grounds set out in the then existing section 100, there can
be no doubt that an appeal would lie to this Court under
section 55 on a question of law. But subsequent to the
enactment of section 55 section 100 of the Code of Civil
Procedure was substituted by a new section by section 37 of
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the Code of Civil Procedure (Amendment) Act, 1976 with
effect from 1st February, 1977 and the new section 100
provided that a second appeal shall lie to the High Court
only if the High Court is satisfied that the case involves a
substantial question of law. The three grounds on which a
second appeal could lie under the former section 100 were
abrogated and in their place only one ground was substituted
which was a highly stringent ground, namely, that there
should be a substantial question of law. This was the new
section 100 which was in force on the date when the present
appeal was preferred by the appellant and the argument of
the respondents was that the maintainability of the appeal
was, therefore, required to be judged by reference to the
ground specified in the new section 100 and the appeal could
be entertained only if there was a substantial question of
law. The respondents leaned heavily on section 8(1) of the
General Clauses Act, 1897 which provides:
"8(1) Where this Act, or any Central Act or
Regulation made after the commencement of this Act,
repeals and re-enacts, with or without modification,
any provision of a former enactment, then references in
any other enactment or in any instrument to the
provision so repealed shall, un-
1060
less a different intention appears, be construed as
references to the provision so re-enacted."
and contended that the substitution of the new section 100
amounted to repeal and re-enactment of the former section
100 and, therefore, on an application of the rule of
interpretation enacted in section 8(1), the reference in
section 55 to section 100 must be construed as reference to
the new section 100 and the appeal could be maintained only
on the ground specified in the new section 100, that is, on
a substantial question of law. We do not think this
contention is well founded. It ignores the distinction
between a mere reference to or citation of one statute in
another and an incorporation which in effect means bodily
lefting a provision of one enactment and making it a part of
another. Where there is mere reference to or citation of one
enactment in another without incorporation, section 8(1)
applies and the repeal and re-enactment of the provision
referred to or cited has the effect set out in that section
and the reference to the provision repealed is required to
be construed as reference to the provision as re-enacted.
Such was the case in the Collector of Customs, Madras v.
Nathella Sampathu Chetty & Anr. and the New Central Jute
Mills Co. Ltd. v. The Assistant Collector of Central Excise,
Allahabad & Ors. But where a provision of one statute is
incorporated in another, the repeal or amendment of the
former does not affect the latter. The effect of
incorporation is as if the provision were written out in the
incorporating statute and were a part of it. Legislation by
incorporation is a common legislative device employed by the
legislature, where the legislature for convenience of
drafting incorporates provisions from an existing statute by
reference to that statute instead of setting out for itself
at length the provisions which it desires to adopt. Once the
incorporation is made, the provision incorporated becomes an
integral part of the statute in which it is transposed and
thereafter there is no need to refer to the statute from
which the incorporation is made and any subsequent amendment
made in it has no effect on the incorporating statute. Lord
Esher, M.R., while dealing with legislation in incorporation
in In re. Wood’s Estate (1886) 31 Ch.D. 607 pointed out at
page 615:
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"If a subsequent Act brings into itself by
reference some of the clauses of a former Act, the
legal effect of that, as has often been held, is to
write those sections into the new Act.
1061
just as if they had been actually written in it with
the pen, or printed in it, and, the moment you have
those clauses in the later Act, you have no occasion to
refer to the former Act at all."
Lord Justice Brett, also observed to the same effect in
Clark v. Bradlaugh (1881) 8 Q.B.D. 63 at 69 :
"..... there is a rule of construction that, where
a statute is incorporated by reference into a second
statute, the repeal of the first statute by a third
statute does no affect the second."
This was the rule applied by the Judicial Committee of the
Privy Council in Secretary of State for India in Council v.
Hindustan Cooperative Insurance Society Ltd. The Judicial
Committee pointed out in this case that the provisions of
the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 having been incorporated in
the Calcutta Improvement Trust Act, 1911 and become an
integral part of it, the subsequent amendment of the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 by the addition of sub-section (2) in
section 26 had no effect on the Calcutta Land Improvement
Trust Act, 1911 and could not be read into it. Sir George
Lowndes delivering the opinion of the Judicial Committee
observed at page 267 :
"In this country it is accepted that where a
statute is incorporated by reference into a second
statute, the repeal of the first statute does not
affect the second: see the cases collected in Craies on
Statute Law, 3rd edn. pp. 349, 350.
x x x x
x x x The independent existence of the
two Acts is, therefore, recognized; despite the death
of the parent Act, its offspring survives in the
incorporating Act. x x x
It seems to be no less logical to hold that where
certain provisions from an existing Act have been
incorporated into a subsequent Act, no addition to the
former Act, which is not expressly made applicable to
the subsequent Act, can be deemed to be incorporated in
it, at all events if it is possible for the subsequent
Act to function effectually without the addition."
So also in Ramswarup v. Munshi & Ors., it was held by this
Court that since the definition of "agricultural land’ in
the Punjab Alienation of Land Act, 1900 was bodily
incorporated in the Punjab
1062
Pre-emption Act, 1913, the repeal of the former Act had no
effect on the continued operation of the latter. Rajagopala
Ayyangar, J., speaking for the Court observed at pages 868-
869 of the Report:
"Where the provisions of an Act are incorporated
by reference in a later Act the repeal of the earlier
Act has, in general, no effect upon the construction or
effect of the Act in which its provisions have been
incorporated.
x x x x
In the circumstances, therefore, the repeal of the
Punjab Alienation of Land Act of 1900 has no effect on
the continued operation of the Pre-emption Act and the
expression ’agricultural land’ in the latter Act has to
be read as if the definition in the Alienation of Land
Act had been bodily transposed into it."
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The decision of this Court in Bolani Ores Ltd. v. State of
Orissa also proceeded on the same principle. There the
question arose in regard to the interpretation of section
2(c) of the Bihar and Orissa Motor Vehicles Taxation Act,
1930 (hereinafter referred to as the Taxation Act). This
section when enacted adopted the definition of ’motor
vehicle’ contained in section 2(18) of the Motor Vehicles
Act, 1939. Subsequently, section 2(18) was amended by Act
100 of 1956 but no corresponding amendment was made in the
definition contained in section 2(c) Or the Taxation Act.
The argument advanced before the Court was that the
definition in section 2(c) of the Taxation Act was not a
definition by incorporation but only a definition by
reference and the meaning of ’motor vehicle’ in section 2(c)
must, therefore, be taken to be the same as defined from
time to time in section 2(18) of the Motor Vehicles Act,
1939. This argument was negatived by the Court and it was
held that this was a case of incorporation and not reference
and the definition in section 2 (18) of the Motor Vehicles
Act, 1939 as then existing was incorporation in section 2(c)
of the Taxation Act and neither repeal of the Motor Vehicles
Act, 1939 nor any amendment in it would affect the
definition of ’motor vehicle’ in section 2(c) of the
Taxation Act. It is, therefore, clear that if there is mere
reference to a provision of one statute in another without
incorporation, then, unless a different intention clearly
appears, section 8(1) would apply and the reference would be
construed as a reference to the provision as may be in force
from time to time in the former statute. But if a provision
of one statute is incorporated in another, any subsequent
amendment in the former
1063
statute or even its total repeal would not effect the
provision as incorporated in the latter statute. The
question is to which category the present case belongs.
We have no doubt that section 55 is all instance of
legislation by incorporation and not legislation by
reference. Section 55 provides for an appeal to this Court
on "one or more or the grounds specified in section 100". It
is obvious that the legislature did not want to confer an
unlimited right of appeal, but wanted to restrict it and
turning to section 100, it found that the grounds there set
out were appropriate for restricting the right of appeal and
hence it incorporated then in Section 55. The right of
appeal was clearly intended to be limited to the grounds set
out in the existing section 100. Those were the grounds
which were before the Legislature and to which the
Legislature could have applied its mind and it is reasonable
to assume that it was with reference to those specific and
known grounds that the legislature intended to restrict the
right of appeal. The Legislature could never have intended
to limit the right of appeal to any ground or grounds which
might from time to time find place in section 100 without
knowing what those grounds were. The grounds specified in
section 100 might be changed from time to time having regard
to the legislative policy relating to second appeals and it
is difficult to see any valid reason why the Legislature
should have thought it necessary that these changes should
also be reflected in section 55 which deals with the right
of appeal in a totally different context. We fail to
appreciate what relevance the legislative policy in regard
to second appeals has to the right of appeal under section
55 so that section 55 should be inseparably linked or yoked
to section 100 and whatever changes take place in section
100 must be automatically read into section 55. It must be
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remembered that the Act is a self-contained Code dealing
with monopolies and restrictive trade practices and it is
not possible to believe that the Legislature could have made
the right of appeal under such a code dependent on the
vicissitudes through which a section in another statute
might pass from time to time. The scope and ambit of the
appeal could not have been intended to fluctuate or vary
with every change in the grounds set out in section 100.
Apart from the absence of any rational justification for
doing so, such an indissolubleing of section 55 with section
100 could conceivably lead to a rather absurd and starting
result. Take for example a situation where section 100 might
be repealed altogether by the Legislature a situation which
cannot be regarded as wholly unthinkable. It the
construction contended for on behalf of the respondents were
accepted.
1064
section 55 would in such a case be reduced to futility and
the right of appeal would be wholly gone, because then there
would be no grounds on which an appeal could lie. Could such
a consequence ever have been contemplated by the
Legislature? The Legislature clearly intended that there
should be a right of appeal, though on limited grounds, and
it would be absurd to place on the language of section 55 an
interpretation which might, in a given situation, result in
denial of the right of appeal altogether and thus defeat the
plain object and purpose of the section. We must, therefore,
hold that on a proper interpretation the grounds specified
in the then existing section 100 were incorporated in
section 55 and the substitution of the new section 100 did
not affect or restrict the grounds as incorporated and since
the present appeal admittedly raises questions of law, it is
clearly maintainable under section 55. We may point out that
even if the right of appeal under section 55 were restricted
to the ground specified in the new section 100, the present
appeal would still be maintainable, since it involves a
substantial question of law relating to the interpretation
of section 13(2). What should be the test for determining
whether a question of law raised in an appeal is substantial
has been laid down by this Court in Sir Chunilal V. Mehta
and Sons Ltd. v. The Century Spinning and Manufacturing Co.
Ltd. and it has been held that the proper test would be
whether the "question of law is of general public importance
or whether it directly or substantially affects the rights
of the parties, and if so, whether it is either an open
question in the sense that it is not finally settled by this
Court or by the Privy Council or by the Federal Court or is
not free from difficulty or calls for discussion of
alternative views". The question of interpretation of
section 13(2) which arises in the present appeal, directly
and substantially affects the rights of the parties and it
is an open question in the sense that it is not finally
settled by this Court and it is, therefore, clearly a
substantial question of law within the meaning of this test.
We must, therefore, reject the preliminary objection raised
on behalf of the respondents against the maintainability of
the present appeal.
That takes us to a consideration of the merits of the
appeal and the first question that arises on the merits is
as to the true scope and magnitude of the curial power
conferred on the Commission under section 13(2). That
section provides that "any order made by the Commission may
be amended or revoked at any time in the manner in which it
was made". The words "in the manner in which it was made"
merely indicate the procedure to be followed by the
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Commission
1065
in amending or revoking an order. They have no bearing on
the content of the power granted under section 13(2) or on
its scope and ambit. That has to be determined on an
interpretation of section 13(2) in the light of the context
or setting in which it occurs and having regard to the
object and purpose of its enactment. Now, one thing is clear
that the power conferred under section 13(2) is a corrective
or rectificatory power and it is conferred in terms of
widest amplitude. There are no fetters placed by the
Legislature to inhibit the width and amplitude of the power
and in this respect it is unlike section 22 of the English
Restrictive Trade Practices Act, 1956 which limits the power
of the Court under that section to discharge a previous
order made by it by providing in terms clear and explicit
that leave to make an application for discharging the
previous order shall not be granted except on prima facie
evidence of material change in the relevant circumstances.
This provision is markedly absent in section 13(2) and not
express limitation is placed on the power conferred under
that section. It is left to the discretion of the Commission
whether the power should be exercised in a given case and if
so, to what extent. But it must be remembered that this
discretion being a judicial or in any event a quasi judicial
discretion, cannot be ’arbitrary, vague or fanciful’, it
must be guided by relevant considerations. It is not
possible to enumerate exhaustively, the various relevant
considerations which may legitimately weigh with the
Commission in exercising its discretion, nor would it be
prudent or wise to do so, since the teeming multiplicity of
circumstances and situations which may arise from time to
time in this kalisdozoopic world cannot be cast in any
definite or rigid mould or be imprisoned in any straight
jacket formula. Every case of an application under section
13(2) would have to be decided on its own distinctive facts
and the Commission would have to find whether it is a proper
case in which, having regard to the relevant consideration,
the order made by it should be amended or revoked. The fact
that an appeal lies against the order under section 55 but
has not been preferred, would be no ground for refusing to
exercise the power under section 13(2). The power conferred
on the Commission under section 13(2) is an independent
power which has nothing to do with the appellate power under
section 55. It is not correct to say that the power under
section 13(2) cannot be exercised to correct an order which
could have been set right in appeal under section 55. The
argument of the respondents that, if such a view is taken,
it would permit section 13(2) to be used as a substitute for
section 55 and that too, without its restrictive condition
has no force and does not appeal to us. There is no question
of using section 13(2) as a substitute for section 55.
1066
Both are distinct and independent powers and one cannot be
read as subject to the other. The scope and applicability of
section 13(2) is not cut down by the provision for appeal
under section 55. It is perhaps because the right of appeal
given under section 55 is limited to a question of law that
a wide and unfettered power is conferred on the Commission
to amend or revoke an order in appropriate cases. An order
under section 37 or for the matter of that, under any other
provision of the Act, is not an order made in a mere
interparties proceeding having effect limited only to the
parties to the proceeding. Not only in its radiating
potencies, but also by its express terms, it affects other
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parties such as the whole network of distributors or dealers
who are not before the Commission. It also affects the
entire trade in the product including consumers, dealers and
manufacturers in the same line. The provisions of the Act
are infected with public interest and considerations of
public interest permeate every proceeding under the Act.
Hence it is necessary to ensure that if, by reason of in
attitude or negligence of a party to the proceeding or on
account of any other reason, an erroneous order has been
made, it should be possible to correct it, lest it may,
instead of promoting competition, produce an anti-
competitive effect or may turn out to be prejudicial to
public interest. It is also possible that there may be some
fact or circumstance which may not have been brought to the
attention of the Commission, though having a crucial bearing
on the determination of the inquiry, and which, if taken
into account, may result in a different order being made, or
some fact or circumstance may arise which may expose the
invalidity of the order or render it bad and in such cases
too, some provision has to be made for correcting or
rectifying the order. So also, there may be a material
change in the relevant circumstances subsequent to the
making of the order which may affect the essential reasoning
on which the order is based and this too may necessitate a
reconsideration of the order. After all, an order under
section 37 is made in a given constellation of economic
facts and circumstances and if that constellation undergoes
material challenge, the order would have to be reviewed in
the light of the changed economic situation. No order under
section 37 can be immutable. It is by its very nature
transient or pro-tempore and must be liable to be altered or
revoked according as there is material change in the
relevant economic facts and circumstances. It is obviously
for this reason that such a wide and unusual power is
conferred on the Commission under section 13(2) to mend or
revoke an order at any time. It is a curial power intended
to ensure that the Order passed by the Commission is and
continues to be in confirmity with the requirements of the
Act and the trade practice condemned by the order is really
and truly a restric-
1067
tive trade practice and it must, therefore, be construed in
a wide sense so as to effectuate to the object and purpose
of the grant of the power. But howsoever large may be the
amplitude of this power, it must be pointed out that it
cannot be construed to be so wide as to permit rehearing on
the same material without anything more, with a view to
sowing that the order is wrong on facts. This is the only
limitation we would read in section 13(2). Outside of that,
the power of the Commission is large and ample and the
Commission may, in the exercise of such power, amend or
revoke an order in an appropriate case.
The respondents relied strongly on Regulation 85 but we
fail to see how that Regulation assists the respondents in
limiting the width and amplitude of the power under section
13(2). Regulation 85 does not say that an application under
section 13(2) shall be entertained only on certain specific
grounds. It is true that it is open to a statutory authority
to lay down broad parameters for the exercise of the power
conferred upon it, so long as those parameters are not based
on arbitrary or irrational considerations and do not exclude
altogether scope for exercise of residuary discretion in
exceptional cases. But we do not think that even broad
parameters for exercise of the power under section 13(2) are
laid down in Regulation 85. That Regulation is in two parts.
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The first part provides that an application under section
]3(2) "shall be supported by evidence on affidavit of the
material change in the relevant circumstances or any other
fact or circumstances on which the applicant relies." This
is a procedural provision which prescribes that if the
applicant relies on any material change in the relevant
circumstances or 011 any other facts or circumstances in
support of the application, he must produce the necessary
evidence in proof of the same by affidavits. This provision
merely lays down a rule of procedure and it has nothing to
do with the grounds on which an application under section
13(2) may be maintained and it is difficult to see how it
can be pressed into service on behalf of the respondents.
The second part states that unless the Commission otherwise
directs "notice of the application together with copies of
the affidavits in support thereof shall be served on every
party who appeared at the hearing of the previous
proceedings and every such party shall be entitled to be
heard on the application and the provisions of section 114
and Order XLVII rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908
shall as far as may, be applied to these proceedings". This
part first deals with the question as to which parties shall
be served with the notice of the application and who shall
be entitled to appear at the hearing of the application.
This is purely
1068
procedural in nature and does not throw any light on the
issue before us. But this part then proceeds to add that the
provisions of section 114 and Order XLVII rule 1 shall, as
far as may, be applied to the proceedings in the
application. Can this provision be read to mean that an
application under section 13(2) can be maintained only on
the grounds set out in section 114 and Order XLVII, rule 1?
The answer must obviously be in the negative. The words "as
far as may" occurring in this provision are very
significant. They indicate that the provisions of section
114 and Order XLVII, rule 1 are to be invoked only to the
extent they are applicable and if, in a given case. they are
not applicable, they may be ignored but that does not mean
that the power conferred under section 13(2) would not be
exercisable in such a case. The reference to the provisions
of section 114 and Order XLVII, rule 1 does not limit the
grounds on which an application may be made under section
13(2). In fact, the respondents themselves conceded that the
grounds set out in section 114 and Order XLVII, rule 1 were
not the only grounds available in an application under
section 13(2) and that the application could be maintained
on other grounds such as material change in the relevant
circumstances. It is, therefore, clear to our mind that even
if a case does not fall within section 114 and Order XLVII,
rule 1, the Commission would have power, in an appropriate
case, to amend or revoke an order made by it. If, for
example, a strong case is made out showing that an order
made under section 37 is plainly erroneous in law or that
some vital fact or feature which would tilt the decision the
other way has escaped the attention of the Commission in
making the order or that the appellant was prevented by
sufficient cause from appearing at the hearing of the
inquiry resulting in the order being passed exparte, the
Commission would be entitled to interfere in the exercise of
its power under section 13(2). These examples given by us
are merely illustrative and they serve to show that
Regulation 85 does not in any manner limit the power under
section 13(2).
Before we proceed to consider whether any case has been
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made out by the appellant for the exercise of the power
under section 13(2), we may briefly dispose of the
contention of the respondents based on acquiescence and
estoppel. The argument of the respondents was that the
appellant, by his subsequent conduct, acquiesced in the
making of the Order dated 14th May, 1976 and was, in any
event, estopped from challenging the same. We find it
difficult to appreciate this argument. We do not see
anything in the conduct of the appellant which would amount
to acquiescence or raise any estoppel against it. It is
obvious that the appellant did not wish to be heard in the
proceeding before
1069
the Commission because the decision of the Commission in the
Telco case held the field at that time and it was directly
against the appellant. Otherwise, there is no reason why the
appellant should not have entered an appearance under
Regulation 65 and filed a proper reply as provided in
Regulation 67 and appeared at the hearing of the inquiry to
oppose the application of the Registrar. The appellant did
make its submissions in writing by its letter dated 3rd
February, 1976, but since the appellant did not enter an
appearance as required by Regulation 65, it was precluded
from filing a reply under Regulation 67 and the Commission
was legally justified in refusing to look at the submissions
contained in the letter of the appellant, though we may
observe that it would have been more consonant with justice
if the Commission had, instead of adopting a technical and
legalistic approach, considered the submissions of the
appellant before making the Order dated 14th May, ’976. Be
that as it may, the Commission declined to consider he
submissions of the appellant and proceeded to make the order
dated 14th May, 1976 exparte in the absence of the
appellant. Now, once the order dated 14th May, 1976 was
made, it was the bounden duty of the appellant to obey it,
until it might be set aside in an appropriate proceeding.
the appellant, therefore, stated preparing a draft of the
revised distributorship agreement in conformity with the
terms of the O-der dated 14th May, 1976 and since the
preparation of the draft was likely to take some time, the
appellant applied for extension of time which was granted
upto 31st March, 1977. However, before the extended date was
due to expiry, this Court reversed the decision of The
Commission in the Telco case and as soon as this new fact or
circumstance came to its knowledge, the appellant made an
application dated 31st March, 1977 stating that in view of
the decision given by this Court in the Telco case, the
applicant was advised to move a suitable application for
amendment and/or modification of the Order dated 14th May,
1976 and the time for filing the revised distributorship
agreement should, therefore, be further extended and on this
application, the Commission granted further extension of
time upto 4th June, 1977. It is difficult to see how any
acquiescence or estoppel could be spelt out from this
conduct of the appellant. It is true that the appellant did
not prefer an appeal against the Order dated 14th May, 1976,
but he application under section 13(2) being an alternative
and perhaps a more effective remedy available to it, the
failure of the appellant to prefer an appeal can not be
construed as acquiescence on its part. The appellant
undoubtedly asked for extension of time from the Commission
for the purpose of implementing the Order dated 14th May, H;
1976 but that also cannot amount to acquiescence, because
until the decision of the Commission in the Telco case was
reversed in appeal
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1070
by this Court, the appellant had no reason to believe that
the Order dated 14th May, 1976 was erroneous and as soon as
the appellant came to know about the decision of this Court
reversing the view taken by the Commission, the appellant
immediately pointed out to the Commission that it was moving
an application for amendment or revocation of the Order
dated 14th May, 1976 under section 13(2). The appellant did
not at any time accept the Order dated 14th May, 1976
knowing that it was erroneous and it is elementary that
there can be no acquiescence without knowledge of the right
to repudiate or challenge. Moreover, it may be noted that
the appellant did not, right upto the time it made the
application under section 13(2), implement the Order dated
14th May, 1976 by entering into revised distributorship
agreement with the distributors. There was, therefore, no
acquiescence on the part of the appellant so far as the
Order dated 14th May, 1976 is concerned. Nor could there be
any estoppel against the appellant precluding it from
challenging the Order by an application under section 13(2),
for estoppel can arise only if a party to a proceeding has
altered his position on the faith of a representation or
promise made by another and here there is nothing to show
that the Registrar had altered his position on the basis of
the application for extension of time made by the appellant.
Both the contentions, one based on acquiescence and the
other on estoppel, must, therefore, be rejected.
That takes us straight to the consideration of the
question whether the appellant has made out any case for the
exercise of the power of the Commission under section 13(2).
The first ground canvassed by the appellant was that the
application on which the Order dated 14th May, 1976 was made
was not in accordance with law inasmuch as it did not set
out any facts or features which would show that the trade
practices complained of by the Registrar were restrictive
trade practices. Now, it is true, as laid down by this Court
in the Telco case, that an application by the Registrar
under section 10(a) (iii) "must contain facts which, in the
Registrar’s opinion, constitute restrictive trade practice"
and it is not sufficient to make "mere references to clauses
of the agreement and bald allegations that the clauses
constitute restrictive trade practice". The application must
set out facts or features "to show or establish as to how
the alleged clauses constitute restrictive trade practice in
the context of facts". The application of the Registrar in
the present case was, therefore, clearly contrary to the law
laid down by this Court in the Telco case. but on that
account alone it cannot be said that the Order dated 14th
May, 1976 was vitiated by a legal infirmity. Even if the
application did
1071
not set out any facts or features showing how the trade
practices complained of by the Registrar were restrictive
trade practices, the Registrar could still at the hearing of
the inquiry, in the absence of any demand for particulars
being made by the appellant, produce material before the
Commission disclosing facts or features which would go to
establish the restrictive nature of the trade practices com
plained of by him and if the Registrar did so, the defect in
the application would not be of much consequence. But
unfortunately in the present case the only material produced
by the Registrar was the affidavit of the Assistant
Registrar which did nothing more than just reproduce the
impugned clauses of the distributorship agreement and the
words of the relevant sections of the Act. There was no
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material at all produced by the Registrar before the
Commission which would show how, having regard to the facts
or features of the trade of the appellant, the trade
practices set out in the offending clauses of the
distributorship agreement were restrictive trade practices.
The Order dated 14th May, 1976 was, therefore, in the
submission of the appellant, based on no material at all and
was accordingly vitiated by an error of law. The
respondents, however, contended that it was not necessary to
produce any material before the Commission in support of the
claim of the Registrar, because the trade practices referred
to in the offending clauses were per se restrictive trade
practices and in any event, even if any supporting material
was necessary, it was to be found in the admission of the
appellant contained in its letter submitting the
distributorship agreement for registration under section 33.
We do not think there is any force in this contention of the
respondents and the Order dated 14th May, 1976 must be held
to be bad on the ground that it was based on no material and
could not possibly have been made by the Commission.
It is now settled law as a result of the decision of
this Court in the Telco case that every trade practice which
is in restraint of trade is not necessarily a restrictive
trade practice. The definition of restrictive trade practice
given in section 2(o) is a pragmatic and result oriented
definition. It defines ’restrictive trade practice’ to mean
a trade practice which has or may have the effected of
preventing, distorting or restricting competition in any
manner and in clauses (i) and (ii) particularises two
specific instances of trade practices which fall within the
category of restrictive trade practice. It is clear from the
definition that it is only where a trade practice has the
effect, actual or probable, of restricting, lessening or
destroying competition that it is liable to be regarded as a
restrictive trade practice. If a trade practice merely
regulates and thereby promotes competition, it would not
fall
1072
within the definition of restrictive trade practice, even
though it may be, to some extent, in restraint of trade.
Whenever, therefore, a question arises before the Commission
or the Court as to whether a certain trade practice is
restrictive or not, it has to be decided not on any
theoretical or a priori reasoning, but by inquiring whether
the trade practice has or may have the effect of preventing,
distorting or restricting competition. This inquiry
obviously cannot be in vacuo but it must append on the
existing constellation of economic facts and circumstances
relating to the particular trade. The peculiar facts and
features of the trade would, be very much relevant in
determining whether a particular trade practice has the
actual or probable effect of diminishing or preventing
competition and in the absence of any material showing these
facts or features, it is difficult to see how a decision can
be reached by the Commission that the particular trade
practice is a restrictive trade practice
It is true that on the subject of restrictive trade
practices, the law in the United States has to be approached
with great caution, but it is interesting to note that the
definition of "restrictive trade practice" in our Act echoes
to some extent the ’rule of reason’ evolved by the American
Courts while interpreting section 1 of the Sherman Act. That
section provides that "every contract, combination in the
form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of
trade or commerce is hereby declared to be illegal" and
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literally applied,, it would outlaw every conceivable
contract which could be made concerning trade or commerce or
the subjects of such commerce. The Supreme Court of United
States, therefore, read a ’rule of reason’ in this section
in the leading decision in Standard Oil Company v. United
States. It was held by the Court as a ’rule of reason’ that
the term "restraint of trade" means that it meant at common
law and in the law of the United States when the Sherman Act
was passed and it covered only those acts or contracts or
agreements or combinations which prejudice public interest
by unduly restricting competition or unduly obstructing the
due course of trade or which injuriously restrain trade
either because of their inherent nature of effect or because
of their evident purpose. Vide also United States v.
American Tobacco Co. It was pointed out that the ’rule of
reason’ does not freeze the meaning of "restraint of trade"
to what it meant at the date when the Sherman Act was passed
and it prohibits not only those acts deemed to be undue
restraints of trade at common law but also those acts which
new times and economic conditions make unreasonable. This
’rule
1073
of reason’ evolved by the Supreme Court in the Standard Oil
Company’s case and the American Tobacco Co’s case has
governed the application of section 1 of the Sherman Act
since then and though it does not furnish an absolute and
unvarying standard and has been applied, sometimes more
broadly and some times more narrowly, to the different
problems coming before the courts at different times, it has
held the field and, as pointed out by Mr. Justice Reed in
the United States v. E.I. Du Pont, the Supreme Court has not
receded from its position on this rule. The ’rule of reason’
has, to quote again the words of the same learned Judge
"given a workable content to anti-trust legislation". Mr.
Justice Brandeis applied the ’rule of reason’ in Board of
Trade v. United States for holding that a rule prohibiting
offers to purchase during the period between the close of
the call and the opening of the session on the next business
day for sales of wheat, corn, oats or rye at a price other
than at the closing bid, was not in "restraint of trade"
within the meaning of section 1 of the Sherman Act. The
learned Judge pointed out in a passage which has become
classical:
"Every agreement concerning trade, every
regulation of trade, restrains. To bind, to restrain,
is of their very essence. The true test of legality is
whether the restraint imposed is such as merely
regulates and perhaps thereby promotes competition, or
whether it is such as may suppress or even destroy
competition. To determine that question the court must
ordinarily consider the facts peculiar to the business
to which the, restraint is applied; its condition
before and after the restraint was imposed the nature
of the restraint, and its effect, actual or probable.
The history of the restraint the evil believed to
exist, the reason for adopting the particular remedy,
the purpose or end sought to be attained, are all
relevant facts. This is not because a good intention
will save an otherwise objectionable regulation, or the
reverse; but because knowledge of intent may help the
court to interpret facts and to predict consequences."
It will thus be seen that the ’rule of reason’ normally
requires an ascertainment of the facts or features peculiar
to the particular business; its condition before and after
the restraint was imposed; the nature of the restraint and
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its effect, actual or probable; the history of the restraint
and the evil believed to exist, the reason for adopting the
particular restraint and the purpose or end sought to be
attained and it is only on a consideration of these factors
that it can be decided whether a particular act, contract or
agreement, impos-
1074
ing the restraint is unduly restrictive of competition so as
to constitute ’restraint of trade’. The language of the
definition of "restrictive trade practice" in our Act
suggests, that in enacting the definition, our legislature
drew upon the concept and rationale underlying the ’rule of
reason’. That is why this Court pointed out in the Telco
case in words almost bodily lifted from the judgment of Mr.
Justice Brandeis:
"The decision whether trade practice is
restrictive or not has to be arrived at by applying the
rule of reason and not on that doctrine that any
restriction as to area or price will per se be a
restrictive trade practice. Every trade agreement
restrains or binds persons or places or prices. The
question is whether the restraint is such as regulates
and thereby promotes competition or whether it is such
as may suppress or even destroy competition. To
determine this question three matters are to be
considered. First, what facts are peculiar to the
business to which the restraint is applied. Second,
what was the condition before and after the restraint
is imposed. Third, what is the nature of the restraint
and what is its actual and probable effect."
These various facts and features set out in the
Judgment of Mr. Justice Brandeis and reiterated in the
decision of this Court in the Telco case would, therefore,
have to be considered before a decision can be reached
whether a particular trade practice is restrictive or not.
It is possible that a trade practice which may prevent or
diminish competition in a given constellation of economic
facts and circumstances may, in a different constellation of
economic facts and circumstances, be found to promote
competition. It cannot be said that every restraint imposed
by a trade practice necessarily prevents, distorts or
restricts competition and is, therefore, a restrictive trade
practice. Whether it is so or not would depend upon the
various considerations to which we have just referred. Of
course, it must be pointed out that there may be trade
practices which are such that by their inherent nature and
inevitable effect they necessarily impair competition and in
case of such trade practices, it would not be necessary to
consider any other facts or circumstances, for they would be
per se restrictive trade practices. Such would be the
position in case of those trade practices which of necessity
produce the prohibited effect in such an overwhelming
proportion of cases that minute inquiry in every instance
would be wasteful of judicial and administrative resources.
Even in the United States a similar doctrine of per se
illegality has been evolved in the interpretation of section
1 of the Sherman Act and it has been held that certain
restraints of trade are
1075
unreasonable per se and "because of their pernicious effect
on competition and lack of any redeeming virtue" they are
"conclusively presumed to be unreasonable, and, therefore;
illegal without elaborate inquiry as to the precise harm
they have caused or the business excuse for their use". In
such cases "illegality does not depend on a showing of the
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unreasonableness of the practice and it is unnecessary to
have a trial to show the nature, extent and degree of its
market effect." Vide American Jurisprudence 2d. volume 54,
p. 687, Art. 32. We are concerned in the present appeal with
clauses of the distributorship agreement imposing
restriction as to territory, area or market and providing
for exclusive dealership and according to the decision of
this Court in the Telco case, such trade practices are not
per se restrictive trade practices. Whether such trade
practices constitute restrictive trade practices or not in a
given case would depend on the particular facts and features
of the trade and other relevant considerations discussed
above which would show the actual or probable effect of such
trade practices on competition. It was, therefore,
absolutely necessary to produce the necessary material
before tho Commission to show that the impugned trade
practices had the actual or probable effect of diminishing
or destroying competition and were therefore, restrictive
trade practices. The burden was clearly on the Registrar for
it was the Registrar who wanted the Commission to strike
down these trade practices as restrictive. The Registrar,
however, did Dot produce any material at all before the
Commission and the Order dated 14th May, 1976 had no basis
at all on which it could be sustained.
There is no doubt that the appellant by its letter
dated 19th May, 1972 submitted the distributorship agreement
to the Registrar for registration under section 33, but we
do not see how this act of the appellant or the letter
forwarding the distributorship agreement for registration
can be construed as admission on the part of the appellant
that the trade practices referred to in the offending
clauses of the distributorship agreement constituted
restrictive trade practices. In the first place, the
question whether a trade practice is restrictive trade
practice or not is essentially a question of law based on
the application of the definition in section 2(o) to the
facts of a given case and no admission on a question of law
can ever be used in evidence against the maker of the
admission. Therefore, even if there was any admission
involved in submitting the distributorship agreement for
registration, it could not be used as evidence against the
appellant in the inquiry under section 37. Moreover, we do
not think that in submitting the distributorship agreement
for registration, the appellant
1076
made an admission that any particular clause of the
distributorship agreement constituted restrictive trade
practices. There is nothing in the letter of the appellant
to show which were the particular clauses of the
distributorship agreement regarded by the appellant as
restrictive trade practices on the basis of which it made
the application for registration. It is possible that the
appellant might have taken the same view which the
Commission did in the Telco case, namely, that the moment an
agreement contains a trade practice falling within any of
the clauses of section 33(1), the trade practice must
irrespective of whether it falls within the definition in
section 2(o) or not, be regarded as a restrictive trade
practice and the agreement must be registered and on that
view, the appellant might have submitted the distributorship
agreement for registration. The submission of the
distributorship agreement for registration cannot,
therefore, possibly be construed as admission on the part of
the appellant that the particular clauses of the
distributorship agreement faulted by the Commission
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constituted restrictive trade practices. There was,
accordingly, no admission of the appellant on which the
Commission could rely for the purpose of making the Order
dated 14th May, 1976.
We must, in the circumstances, hold that, since there
was no mate rial at all on the basis of which the Commission
could find that the grade practices referred in the
offending clauses of the distributorship agreement were
restrictive trade practices, the Order dated 14th May, 1976
was contrary to law. This clearly attracted the exercise of
the power of the Commission under section 13(2). The
decision of this Court in the Telco case exposed the
invalidity of the Order dated 14th May, 1976 and showed that
it was bad as being based on no material whatsoever. When
the commission passed the Order dated 14th May 1976, the
decision of the Commission in the Telco case held the field
and according to that decision, any trade practice which
fall within one of the clauses of section 33(1) would be a
restrictive trade practice and that is perhaps the reason
why the Registrar did not produce any material before the
Commission and even though there was no material before it,
the Commission proceeded to invalidate the trade practices
referred to in the offending clauses as restrictive trade
practices, since they fell within one or the other clauses
of section 33(1). But this view was reversed in appeal and
it was held by this Court that a trade practice which does
not fall within the definition in section 2(o) can not
become restrictive trade practice merely because it is
covered by one or the other of the clauses of section 33(1):
what section 33(1) requires as the condition for
registration is that the agreement must
1077
relate to a trade practice which is restrictive trade
practice within the meaning of section 2(o) and such
restrictive trade practice must additionally fall within one
or more of the categories specified in that section. It was
because of this decision in the Telco case that the
necessity for production of material to show that the trade
practices complained of were restrictive trade practices
became evident and it came to be realised that the Order
dated 14th May, 1976 was bad. The conclusion is, therefore,
inescapable that the power of the Commission under section
13(2) was exerciseable in the present case and the Order
dated 14th May, 1976 was liable to be revoked.
Before we part with this aspect of the case, we must
refer to other decision of this Court which was relied upon
on behalf of the respondents and that is the decision in
Hindustan Lever Ltd. v. M.R.T.P. The Judgment in this case
was delivered by Beg, C.J., speaking on behalf of himself
and Gupta, J. and though Beg, C.J., was also a party to the
judgment in the Telco case, this judgment seem to strike a
slightly different note and hence it is necessary to examine
it in some detail. Two clauses of the Redistribution
Stockists’ Agreement were assailed in this case as
constituting restrictive trade practices. One was clause 5
which in its last portion provided that the redistribution
stockists shall purchase and accept from the Company such
stock as the Company shall at its discretion send to the
redistribution stockist for fulfilling its obligations under
the agreement and the other was Clause which imposed a
restriction as to area or market by providing that the
redistribution stockist shall not rebook or in any way
convey transport or despatch parts of stocks of the products
received by him outside the town for which he was appointed
redistribution stockist. The Commission held, following the
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view taken by it earlier in the Telco case, that the last
part of clause 5 as well as clause 9 constituted restrictive
trade practices and declared them void. This view was
affirmed by Beg, C.J., in the appeal preferred by Hindustan
Lever Ltd. We are not concerned with the merits of the
question whether the last part of clause 5 and clause 9 were
on the facts of that case rightly held to be restrictive
trade practices, but certain observations made by the
learned Chief Justice in that judgment call for
consideration, since they seem to be inconsistent with what
was laid down by a Bench of three Judges of this Court in
the Telco Case.
In the first place, the learned Chief Justice
distinguished the judgment in the Telco case by observing
that the agreement in that case could not be understood
without reference to the actual facts to which
1078
it was sought to be applied and extraneous evidence in
regard to those facts for explaining "the nature of the
special agreement for restricting or distribution of areas"
was, therefore, admissible under section 92, clause 6 of the
Evidence Act, but in the Hindustan Lever case the meaning of
the impugned clauses was plain and certain and the principle
of Section 92, clause 6 was clearly inapplicable to led in
extraneous evidence and hence no oral evidence could be led
to deduce their meaning or vary it in view of the provisions
of sections 91 and 92. It was on this view that the learned
Chief Justice held that oral evidence for the purpose of
showing that the trade practices in the impugned clauses
were not restrictive was shut out and all that was necessary
for the court to do was to interpret the impugned clauses.
Now, this view taken by the learned Chief Justice does not
and we say so with the utmost respect appear to be correct.
We do not see how sections 91 and 92 of the Evidence Act
come into the picture at all when we are considering whether
a particular trade practice set out in an agreement has or
may have the effect of preventing, distorting or restricting
competition so as to constitute a restrictive trade
practice. It is the actual or probable effect of the trade
practice which has to be judged in the light of the various
considerations adverted to by us and there is no question of
contradicting, varying, adding to or subtracting from the
terms of the agreement by admitting any extraneous evidence.
The meaning of the particular clause of the agreement is not
sought to be altered or varied by reference to the various
factors which we have discussed above, but these factors are
required to be taken into account only for the purpose of
determining the actual or probable effect of the trade
practice referred to in the particular clause. The reliance
placed by the learned Chief Justice on sections 91 and 92
was, therefore, quite inappropriate and unjustified and we
do not think that the learned Chief Justice was right in
shutting out oral evidence to determine the actual or
probable effect of the trade practices impugned in the case
before him. It may be pointed out that the decision in the
Telco case did not proceed on an application of the
principle embodied in section 92, clause (6) of the Evidence
Act and with the greatest respect, the learned Chief Justice
was in error in distinguishing that decision on the ground
that extraneous evidence was considered in that case in view
of the principle underlying section 92, clause 6, while in
the case before him that principle was not applicable and
hence extraneous evidence was not admissible. The learned
Chief Justice was bound by the ratio of the decision in the
Telco case
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Secondly, the learned Chief Justice seemed to take the
view in his judgment at page 465 of the Report that if a
clause in an agreement
1079
relates to a trade practice which infringes any of the
clauses of section 33(1), it would be bad and it would be
unnecessary to inquire whether the trade practice falls
within the definition of ’restrictive trade practice’ in
section 2(o). There were two places in the judgment where
the learned Chief Justice used expressions indicating this
view. He said at one place: "The last part of clause (5)-
would be struck by section 33(1) (b)", and at another place
"inasmuch as clauses (5)-expressly gives the stockist the
discretion to sell at lower than maximum retail prices
stipulated, the agreement was not struck by section 33(1)
(b)". This view is plainly and again we say 60 with the
greatest respect, contrary to the law laid down by a Bench
of three Judges of this Court in the Telco case. We have
already pointed out that, according to the decision in the
Telco case, a trade practice does not become a restrictive
trade practice merely because it falls within one or the
other clause of section 33(1), but it must also satisfy the
definition of ’restrictive trade practice’ contained in
section 2(o) and it is only then that the agreement relating
to it would require to be registered under section 33(1). It
is with the greatest respect to the learned Chief Justice,
not correct to say that a particular clause in an agreement
is struck by one or the other clause of section 33(1). It is
not section 33(1) which invalidates a clause in an agreement
relating to a trade practice, but it is the restrictive
nature of the trade practice as set out in section 2(o)
which makes it void The view taken by the learned Chief
Justice on this point can- not, therefore, be accepted.
Lastly, the learned Chief Justice held that the
introduction of a clause in an agreement itself constitutes
a trade practice and if such clause confers power which can
be used so as to unjustifiably restrict trade it would
constitute a restrictive trade practice. The learned Chief
Justice pointed out that the definition of trade practice is
wide enough to include any practice relating to the carrying
on of any trade and observed that "it cannot be argued that
the introduction of the clauses complained of does not
amount to an action which relates to the carrying on of a
trade. If the result of that action or what could reasonably
flow from it is to restrict trade in the manner indicated,
it will, undoubtedly, be struck by the provisions of the
Act". The interpretation placed by the learned Chief Justice
was that if a clause in an agreement is capable of being
used to prevent, distort or restrict competition in any
manner, it would be liable to be struck down as a
restrictive trade practice, regardless of what is actually
done under it, for it is not the action taken under a
clause, but the clause itself which permits action to be
taken which is unduly restrictive of competition,
1080
that is material for determining whether there is a
restrictive trade practice. The learned Chief Justice
emphasised that if a clause in an agreement confers power to
act in a manner which would unduly restrict trade, the
clause would be illegal and it would be no answer to say
that the clause is in fact being implemented in a lawful
manner. This view taken by the learned Chief Justice cannot,
with the utmost respect, be accepted as wholly correct.
It is true that a clause in an agreement may embody a
trade practice and such trade practice may have the actual
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or probable effect of restricting, lessening or destroying
competition and hence it may constitute a restrictive trade
practice and the clause may be voided, but it is difficult
to see how the introduction of such a clause in the
agreement, as distinguished from the trade practice embodied
in the clause itself, can be a restrictive trade practice.
It is not the introduction of such a clause, but the trade
practice embodied in the clause, which has or is reasonably
likely to have the prescribed anti-competitive effect.
Therefore, whenever a question of restrictive trade practice
arises in relation to a clause in an agreement it is the
trade practice embodied in the clause that has to be
examined for the purpose of determining its actual or
probable effect on competition. Now a clause in an agreement
may proprio vigore on its own terms, impose a restraint such
as allocating a territory, area or market to a dealer or
prohibiting a dealer from using machinery or selling goods
of any other manufacturer or supplier or requiring the
dealer to purchase whatever machinery or goods in the
particular line of business are needed by him from the
manufacturer or supplier entering into the agreement. Where
such restraint produces or is reasonably likely to produce
the prohibited statutory effect-and that would depend on the
various considerations referred to by us earlier-it would
clearly constitute a restrictive trade practice and tho
clause would be bad. In such a case it would be no answer to
say that the clause is not being enforced by the
manufacturer or supplier. The very presence of the clause
would have a restraining influence on the dealer, for the
dealer would be expected to carry out his obligations under
the clause and he would not know that the clause is not
going to be enforced against him. This is precisely what was
pointed out by Mr. Justice Day in United Shoe Machinery
Corporation v. United States where the question was whether
the restrictive-use, exclusive-use and additional-machinery
clauses in certain lease agreements of shoe-machinery were
struck by the provisions of section 3 of the Clayton Act:
"The power to enforce them", that is, the impugned clauses
"is omnipresent and their
1081
restraining influence constantly operates upon competitors
and lessees. The fact that the lessor, in many instances,
forbore to enforce these provisions, does not make them any
less agreements within the condemnation of the Clayton Act".
There would be no difficulty in such a case in applying the
definition of restrictive trade practice, in accordance with
the law laid down in the Telco case as explained by us in
this judgment.
Then there may be a clause which may be perfectly
innocent and innocuous such as a clause providing that the
dealer will carry out all directions given by the
manufacturer or supplier from time to time. Such a broad and
general clause cannot be faulted as restrictive of
competition, for it cannot he assumed that the manufacturer
or supplier will abuse the power conferred by the clause by
giving directions unduly restricting trade. So much indeed
was conceded by the learned Additional Solicitor General
appearing on behalf of the respondents. But a genuine
difficulty may arise where a clause in an agreement does not
by itself impose any restraint but empowers the manufacturer
or supplier to take some action which may be restrictive of
competition. Ordinarily, in such a case, it may not be
possible to say that the mere presence of such a clause,
apart from any action which may be taken under it, has or
may have the prohibited anti-competitive effect. The
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manufacturer or supplier may take action under the clause or
he may not, and even if he takes action, it may be in
conformity with the provisions of the Act and may not be
restrictive of competition. The mere possibilities of action
being taken which may be restrictive of competition would
not in all cases effect the legality on the clause. In fact,
a consistent course of conduct adopted by the manufacturer
or supplier in acting under The clause in a lawful manner
may tend to show that The clause is not reasonably likely to
produce the prohibited statutory effect. What is required to
be considered for determining The legality of the clause is
hot mere theoretical possibility that the clause may be
utilised for taking action which is restrictive of
competition, for it does not necessarily follow from the
existence of such possibility that actual or probable effect
of the clause would be anti-competitive. The material
question to consider is whether there is a real probability
that the presence of the clause itself would be likely to
restrict competition. This is basically a question of market
effect and it cannot be determined by adopting a doctrinaire
approach. There can be no hard and fast rule and each case
would have to be examined on its own facts from a business
and commonsense point of view for the purpose Or determining
whether the clause has the actual or probable effect of
unduly, restricting come petition. We cannot accept the
proposition that in every case where
1082
the clause is theoretically capable of being so utilised as
to unjustifiably restrict competition, it would constitute a
restrictive trade practice.
There is also another infirmity invalidating the Order
dated 14th May, 1976. We have already pointed out and that
is clear from the n decision of this Court in the Telco case
that in an inquiry under s. 37 the Commission has first to
be satisfied that the trade practice com plained of in the
application is a restrictive trade practice within the
meaning of that expression as defined in section 2(o) and it
is by after the Commission is so satisfied, that it can
proceed to consider whether any of the ’gateways’ provided
in section 38(1) exists so that the trade practice, though
found restrictive, is deemed not to be prejudicial to the
public interest and if no such ’gateways’ are established,
then only it can proceed to make an order directing that the
trade practice complained of shall be discontinued or shall
not be repeated There are thus two conditions precedent
which must be satisfied before a cease and desist order can
be made by the Commission in regard to any trade practice
complained of before it. One is that the Commission must
find that the trade practice complained of is a restrictive
trade practice and the other is that where such finding is
reached, the Commission must further be satisfied that none
of the gateways pleaded in answer to the complaint exists.
Here in the present case the appellant did not appear at the
hearing of the inquiry and no ’gateways? were pleaded by it
in the manner provided in the Regulations and hence the
question of the Commission arriving at a satisfaction in
regard to the ’gateways’ did not arise. But the Commission
was certainly required to be satisfied that the trade
practices complained of by the Registrar were restrictive
trade practices before it could validity make a cease and
desist order. The Order dated 14th May, 1976 did not contain
any discussion or recital showing that the Commission had
reached the requisite satisfaction in regard to the
offending trade practices. But we can legitimately presume
that the Commission must have applied its mind to the
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offending causes of the distributorship agreement and come
to the conclusion that the trade practices refereed to in
those clauses were restrictive trade practices before it
made the Order dated 14th May, 1976. There is in fact
inherent evidence to show that the Commission did apply its
mind to the clauses impugned in the application of the
Registrar, because it struck down only a few out of those
clauses and did not invalidate the rest. This circumstance
clearly shows that the Commission considered with reference
to each impugned clause whether it related to restrictive
trade practice and made the Order dated 14th May, 1976 only
in respect of those
1083
clauses where it was satisfied that the trade practices were
restrictive. The charge that the Order dated 14th May, 1976
suffered from non-application of mind on the part of the
Commission cannot, therefore, be sustained. But the Order
dated 14th May, 1976 was clearly bad inasmuch as it did not
disclose the reasons which weighed with the Commission in
directing the appellant to cease and desist from the trade
practices set out in the order. The Order dated 14th May,
1976 was a non-speaking order. It consisted merely of bald
directions given by the Commission and did not set out any
reasons whatsoever why the Commission had decided to issue
those directions. It had a sphynx-like face, which goes ill
with the judicial process. It is true that the Order dated
14th May, 1976 was an exparte order, but the exparte
character of the order did not absolve the Commission from
the obligation to give reasons in support of the order. Even
though the Order dated 14th May, 1976 was exparte, the
appellant would have been entitled to prefer an appeal
against it under section 55 and it is difficult to see how
the appellant could have possibly attacked the order in the
appeal when the order did not disclose the reasons on 1
which it was based. It is now settled law that where an
authority makes an order in exercise of a quasi judicial
function, it must record its reasons in support of the order
it makes. Every quasi judicial order must be supported by
reasons. That is the minimal requirement of law laid down by
a long line of decisions of this Court ending with N. M.
Desai v. Textiles Ltd. and Simens Engineering Co. v. Union
of India. The Order dated 14th May, 1976 was, therefore,
clearly vitiated by an error of law apparent on the face of
the record inasmuch as it contained only the final and
operative order made by the Commission and did not record
any reasons whatsoever in support of is and the appellant
was, in the circumstances, entitled to claim what the Order
should be revoked by the Commission
This view taken by us renders it unnecessary to
consider whether there was any material change in the
relevant circumstances justifying invocation of the power
under section 13(2) and hence we do not purpose to deal with
the same. The Commission has devoted a part of the order
impugned in the present appeal to a consideration of this
question and taken the view that there was no material
change in the relevant circumstances subsequent to the
making of the Order dated 14th May, 1976. We do not wish to
express any opinion on the correctness of this view taken by
the Commission, since we are setting aside the impugned
order made by the Commission and also revoking
1084
the Order dated 14th May, 1976 and sending the matter back
so that the application of the Registrar under section 10(a)
(iii) may be disposed of afresh.
We accordingly allow the appeal, set aside the order of
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the Com mission rejecting the application of the appellant
under section 13(2), revoke the Order dated 14th May, 1976
and remit the case to the Commission so that the Commission
may dispose of the application of the Registrar under
section 10(a) (iii) in the light of the observations
contained in this judgment. The Commission will give an
opportunity to the appellant to file a proper reply in
conformity with the requirements of the Regulations and
after taking such relevant evidence as may be produced by
both parties, proceed to dispose Of the application of the
Registrar on merits in accordance with law. There will be no
order as to costs of the appeal.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed.
1085