Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
C. V. K. RAO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DENTU BHASKARA RAO
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/05/1964
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1965 AIR 93 1964 SCR (8) 156
ACT:
Representation of the People Act (XLIII of 1951), s. 7(d)-
Scope of"In the course of trade or business", Meaning of-
Mining leaseRight of Government to pre-emption of minerals-
If a contract for supply of goods by lessee.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent obtained a mining lease from the State
Government. Clause 21 of the lease reserved to the
Government the right to prior purchase of the minerals
raised by the lessee. While the lease was subsisting, the,
respondent stood for election to the state Legislative
Assembly and was elected. The appellant, his closest
competitor, challenged the election by an election petition
on the ground, inter alia, that the respondent was
disqualified under section 7(d) of the Representation of
People Act (XLIII of 1951), because he had a contract with
the Government for supply of goods.
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HELD:the petition must be dismissed.
The disqualification which results from the section is
conditioned by three circumstances. First, there must be a
subsisting contract between the appropriate Government and
the candidate. Then the contract must be in the course of
the trade or business of the candidate and, finally it must
be inter alia for the supply of goods to such Government.
Held in the case that as the mining lease was subsisting,
the contract if any, was also subsisting. Further that the
mining lease, if it was a contract, was in the course of the
business of the respondent. It was not necessary that a
course of business based upon other transactions must have
first existed before the offending contract could be said to
be in the course of business. The contract itself could be
the start of the business. Held therefore that the mining
lease was not a contract to supply goods to the Government.
There was only a right in the Government to pre-empt the
minerals and lessee could not begin delivery to the
Government until Government served a notice on him stating
the quantity preempted and the time within which the supply
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should be made. This was only a reservation of a right of
pre-emption which did not amount to a contract for the
supply of goods which could be said to subsist between the
parties.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal -No. 1072 of
1963.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 10. 1963 of
the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Special Appeal No. 52 of
1962.
K. R. Chaudhuri, for the appellant.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and T. V. R. Tatachari, for
the respondent.
May 4, 1964. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
HIDAYATULLAH J.-The respondent Dentu Bhaskara Rao was
returned to the Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly from
Kakinada constituency at the last general election. The
appellant C. V. K. Rao was his closest competitor. There
were two other candidates but they obtained very few votes
and they have not shown any further interest. The appellant
filed an election petition to question the election of the
respondent on many grounds: one such ground was that the
respondent was disqualified
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under s. 7 (d) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951
(43 of 1951). The respondent had obtained a mining lease
from the State of Andhra Pradesh on April 13, 1960, though
on the date he filed his nomination paper he had not begun
operations under that lease. The appellant took objection
to the nomination of the respondent on the ground that he
held a contract from the Andhra Pradesh Government within
the prohibition of s. 7(d) of the Act, but the Returning
Officer over-ruled his objection. The Election Tribunal
later held that he was disqualified under s. 7(d) of Act 43
of 1951 and declared the election void. On appeal, the High
Court of Andhra Pradesh reversed the decision and the
present appeal has been filed on a certificate granted by
the High Court.
Section 7(d) reads as follows:--
"7. A person shall be disqualified for being chosen as, and
for being, a member of either House of Parliament or the
Legislative Assembly or Legislative Council of a State-
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d) if there subsists a contract entered into in the course
of his trade or business by him with the appropriate
Goverment for the supply of goods to, or for the execution
of any works undertaken by, that Government;"
The mining lease was in the standard form and after setting
out the consideration for the lease, it described in Parts I
to III, the area of the lease, the description of the area,
liberties, powers and privileges to be exercised and enjoyed
by the lessee and the restrictions and conditions as to
their exercise. In Part IV it described the liberties,
powers and privileges reserved to the State Government and
in Parts V and VI the rents and royalties reserved by the
lease and certain other provisions relating to them. Part
VII then dealt with the covenants of the lessee in respect
of payment
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of rents, royalties, taxes etc. One such covenant was in
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clause 21 and was headed "Right of Pre-emption" and it
conferred on the State Government a right of pre-emption of
the minerals lying in or upon the land demised or elsewhere
under the control of the lessee. That clause was
interpreted by the Tribunal as a contract entered in the
course of’ trade or business by the respondent with the
State
Government for the supply of goods to that Government.
The High Court held that there was no such contract.
The disqualification which results from s. 7(d) is condi-
tioned by a number of circumstances. First, there must be a
subsisting contract (this is to say in actual existence)
between the appropriate Government and the candidate. Then
the contract must be in the Course of the trade or business
of the candidate and, finally, it must be inter alia for the
supply of goods to such Government The appropriate
Government according to the definition of the expression is
the Government of Andhra Pradesh. Tile High Court in
reaching its conclusion interpreted cl. 21 of Part VII of
the lease and held that the mining lease was not a contract,
that clause 21 did not amount to a contract and that cl. 21
even if a contract was not a contract for the supply of
goods to the Government. This conclusion is assailed by the
appellant. It is convenient. to quote the clause at this
stage:
"21. (a) The State Government shall from time to time and at
all times during the said term have the right (to be
exercised by notice in writing to the lessee) of pre-emption
of the said minerals (and all products thereof) lying in or
upon the said lands hereby demised or elsewhere under the
control of the lessee and the lessee shall with all
possible, expedition deliver all minerals of products or
minerals purchased by the State Government under the power
conferred by this provision in the quantities, at the times
in the manner and at the plate specified-in the notice
exercising the said right.
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(b) Should the right to pre-emption conferred by this
present provision be exercised and a vessel chartered to
carry the minerals or products thereof procured on behalf of
the State Government or the Central Government be detained
on demurrage at the port of loading the lessee shall pay the
amount due for demurrage according to the terms of the
charter party of such vessel unless the State Government
shall be satisfied that the delay is due to causes beyond
the control of the lessee.
(c) The price to be Paid for all minerals or products of
minerals taken in pre-emption by the State Government in
exercise of the right hereby conferred shall be the fair
market price prevailing at the time of pre-emption provided
that in order to assist in arriving at the said fair market
price the lessee shall, if so required, furnish to the State
Government for the confidential information of the
Government
particulars of quantities, descriptions and prices of the
said minerals or products for carriage of the same and shall
produce to such officer or officers as may be directed by
the State Government original or authenticated copies of
contracts and charter parties entered into for the sale of
freightage of such minerals or products.
(d)
Mr. K. R. Chaudhury contended that under this clause there
was a standing contract for the supply of goods and all that
Government had to do was to send a notice to the respondent
-and he was compelled to supply the goods to Government. He
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pointed out that from the time the lease was granted
Government was asking the respondent to commence operations
to raise the minerals but the respondent avoided working the
mine probably to save himself from the disqualification.
According to Mr. Chaudhury, it mattered not whether the mine
was worked or not, but
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what mattered was that there was a subsisting contract for
the supply of mineral, to the appropriate Government. Mr.
A. Vishwanatha Sastri, in reply, contended that the mining
lease could not be regarded as a contract and further that
it was not in the course of’ the trade or business of the
respondent, and finally that, in any event, it was not a
contract for the supply of goods. That it was in the course
of business of the respondent almost goes without saying.
It is not necessary, as Mr. Sastri suggested, that a course
of business based upon other transactions must first exist
before the offending contract can be said to be in the
course of business. That contract may itself be the start
of the
business and the words ’in the course of the business’ would
still be apt. As the mining lease was subsisting, the con-
tract, if any there be, was also subsisting and there is no
doubt on that aspect of the matter. The question is whether
the provisions of cl. 21 bring about a contract for the
supply of goods. This question can be broken into two which
are: (a) whether cl. 21 can be regarded as a contract and
(b) whether it can be regarded as a contract for supply of
goods. Clause 21 is invariably inserted in every mining
lease. It reserves to the Government the right to the
minerals which vest in Government but which are allowed to
be raised by the lessee holding the lease. The lease is, in
one sense, a contract between the Government and the lessee
because there is consideration on both sides and an offer
and acceptance. There are obligations created by it. some
of which are contractual even though some may be regarded as
arising from the conditions of the -rant. The mining lease
without cl. 21 cannot possibly be described as a contract
for the supply of goods. Without that clause there would
neither be a mention of goods nor of their supply. If the
lease is to be read as satisfying the disqualification in s.
7(d), cl. 21 alone can satisfy it. Clause 21 speaks of a
right of the Government to pre-empt the minerals and all
products thereof lying in or around the land demised or
elsewhere under the control of the lessee. There is,
however, no concluded contract in respect of any goods
because it hardly needs to be said that relying upon this
clause the lessee cannot begin delivery of the ore to the
Government. He can do so only if the Government
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serves a notice on him stating the quantity pre-empted and
the time within which the supply is to be made. The clause,
however, does not make it obligatory on Government to pre-
empt any quantity of mineral or at all. There is no
obligation to buy nor is there any compulsion on the part of
the lessee to sell unless asked. In these circumstances,
the clause does no more than to keep intact a right of the
Government to obtain the minerals or their products as and
when Government requires in preference to others. Till
Government makes up its mind and serves a notice there is no
obligation to make any deliveries and even though the word
’,subsists’ is a word of wide import, it cannot be said that
a contract for the sale of goods subsists because a contract
requires an offer and its acceptance and is not a mere
reservation of a right.
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Taking the most liberal view of the matter it is clear that
cl. 21 did not bring into being a contract for the supply of
goods. AR that it did was to reserve to the Government the
right to prior purchase of the minerals raised by the
respondent. The reservation of such rights does not amount
to a contract for the supply of goods which can be said to
subsist between the parties. The High Court was, therefore,
right in reversing the decision of the Election Tribunal.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.