Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MUNICIPAL BOARD, PUSHKAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE TRANSPORT AUTHORITY,RAJASTHAN AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/11/1962
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1965 AIR 458 1963 SCR (2) 273
CITATOR INFO :
R 1973 SC2420 (4)
E 1975 SC2085 (7)
RF 1987 SC1059 (17)
F 1987 SC1339 (6)
ACT:
Motor Vehicles-order of Regional Transport Authority
shifting bus stand-Revision-Limitation-Motor Vehicles Act,
1939 (4 of 1939), ss. 64A, 68, 76, 91(2)-Rajasthan Motor
Vehicles Rules, 1955, r. 134-Constitution of India, Art.
142.
HEADNOTE:
The Municipal Board of Pushkar passed a resolution on May
24, 1948, for the shifting of the bus stand on the sacred
lake to another site near the Police Station where it
resolved to construct a passenger shed and provide other
facilities for the pilgrims. The Regional Transport
Authority by a resolution dated December 3/4, 1959, accepted
the suggestion and issued a public notification to that
effect on June 28, 1960. Long before the notification, two
residents of Pushkar moved the State Transport Authority
under s. 64A of the Motor Vehicles Act for revision of the
decision of the Regional Transport Authority dated December
3/4, 1959, changing the bus stand but that application was
rejected on February 18, 1960. Another petition for the
revision of the same orders under the same section was moved
by certain bus operators on April 13, 1960. The State
Transport Authority on January 6, 1961, allowed that
application, reversed the decision of the Regional ’Trans-
port Authority of December 31, 1959, and directed that the
old bus stand should continue. The Municipal Board moved
the High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution against
this order of State Transport Authority. The High Court
rejected the application. The Board appealed to this Court
by special leave. Its case was that the order of the
Regional Transport Authority changing the bus stand was made
under s. 76 of the, Motor Vehicles Act and, therefore, was
not open to revision, that the revision application was
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barred by limitation and that the first revision application
having been rejected the second did not lie inasmuch as on
the rejection of the first, the Regional Transport
Authority’s order ceased to exist having merged in the State
Transport Authority’s order,
374
Held (per curiam), that it was well settled that equitable
considerations have no place in interpreting provision of
limitation and their strict grammatical meaning has to be
adhered to. The expression "date of the order" in the first
proviso to s. 64A of the Act, therefore, could not mean the
date of the knowledge of the order.
Per Gajendragadkar, Wanchoo, Das Gupta and Ayyangar, JJ. The
order of the Regional Transport Authority fixing the new bus
stand and discontinuing the old was one made not under s. 76
of the Act, which had no application, but under r. 134 of
the Rajasthan Motor Vehicles Rules, 1955, made in exercise
of the powers conferred by s. 68 (2) (r) the Motor Vehicles
Act. The order was, therefore, open to revision tinder
s. 64A by the State Transport Authority.
T.B. Ibrahim v. Regional Transport Authority, Tanjore,
[1953] S.C.R. 290, applied.
Section 76 had nothing to do with the fixation or alteration
of a bus stand. Although the word bus stand’ had not been
defined in the Act, it was clear that a bus stand meant a
place where bus services commenced or terminated. Section
76, properly construed, dealt with the determination of
parking places referred to by s. 91(2)(e) of the Act. The
fixation of bus stands was within s. 68(2)(r) of the Act and
the power to issue the necessary notification was implied in
that clause.
Nagendranath v. Suresh, A.I.R. (1 932) P.C. 165, General
Accident Fire and Life, Assurance Corporation Ltd, v.
Janmohomed Abdul Rahim, A.I.R. 1941 P.C. 6 and Boota Mal v.
Union of India, [1963] 1 S.C.R. 70, referred to.
In the instant case the effective order fixing the new bus
stand was made not by the declaration of intention in the
resolution of December 3/4, 1959, but by the publication of
the notification on June 28, 1960, and the impugned
application for revision under s. 64A of the Act having been
made before that date, no question of limitation could
arise.
There was no scope for the application of the principle of
merger in the present case since the State Transport
Authority’s order rejecting the first revision application
had been made before the effective and lawful order fixing
the new bus stand was made by the notification.
Collector of Customs, Calcutta v. East India Commercial Co.
Ltd. [1963] 3 S.C.R. 338 and Madan Gopal Bungta v. Secretary
to the Government of Orissa[1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R. 906,
distinguished.
375
Since the notice obligatory under the second proviso to s.
64A was not admittedly (riven by the State Transport Autho-
rity before it passed its order dated January 6, 1961, this
Court should, in the ends of justice, exercise its powers
under Art. 142 of the Constitution and send the matter back
to the revisional authority for disposal according to law.
Per Sarkar,J.-The State Transport Authority’s order of
January 6, 1961 was patently erroneous and should have been
set aside as it was passed under s. 64A on an application
made set aside an order of the Regional Transport Authority,
passed on December 3, 4, 1939, after the period of 30 days
prescribed for such application under that section had
expired.
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Assuming that the Regional Transport Authority’s order which
could be set aside under s. 64A was the one made on June 28,
1960. The State Transport Authority’s order of .January 6,
1961, would still be patently wrong for it set aside not
that order but the order of December 3/4, 1959, which the
State Transport Authority had no power tinder s. 64A to set
aside.
The State Transport Authority had no power suo motu to treat
the application to set aside the order of December 3/4,
1959, as an application to set aside the order of June 28,
1960. It had never been moved to do so nor had it in fact
suo motu treated the application as one to set aside the
order of June 28, 1960, for it expressly set aside only the
Regional Transport Authority’s order of December 3/4, 1959.
The High Court was in error in holding that as the
Notification of June 28, 1960, contained the order which
could be set aside Linder s. 64A, the application under that
section which had been made before that date was not beyond
time, for it omitted to notice that that application asked
nothing concerning that order.
The application for setting aside the order of December 3/4,
1959, could not by amendment be turned into an application
to set aside an order of June 28, 1960, after thirty days
from the last mentioned day had expired.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 332 of 1962.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
August 31, 1961, of the Rajasthan High Court in D.B. Civil
Writ No. 76 of 1961’
376
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney General of India, N.C.
Chatterjee, L. L.Sharma, M. K. Ramamurthi, R. K. Garg,
S. C. Agarwal and D. P. Singh, for the appellant.
P. D. Menon, for respondents Nos. 1 and 7.
C. K. Daphtay, Solicitor General of India,
Rameshwar Nath, S. N.Andley and P.L.Vohra, for the
respondents Nos. 2-(6).
1962. November 21. The judgment of Gajendragadkar,
Wanchoo, Das Gupta and Ayyangar, JJ., was delivered by Das
Gupta, J. Sarkar, J., delivered a separate judgment.
DAS GUPTA, J.-At Pushkar in Rajasthan exists a tank which
has long been considered one of the holiest places of the
Hindus and a well known place of pilgrimage. By. the east
of the lake runs a road approximately north to south. The
Ghats for getting into the lake are situated contiguous west
of this road. Several Dharmshalas and at least one
Gurudwara have been established by the side of this road not
far from the lake. A temple of Hanumanji stands east of the
road, a short distance from the southern edge of the lake.
Another temple close to the road is the temple of Rangji.
This is situated very near the Ghats and to the east of the
road. There is also a temple of Brahamaji further away
towards the north but on this very road a little away from
where the road further north cast from the edge of the lake
meets, another Road Ganera Deedwana Nagar. Towards the
south of the Dharamashalas the road goes on to Ajmer. The
police station of Pushkar is situated at some distance from
the Pushkar lake. The police station stands on a road which
goes on towards Ganera Deedwana Nagar to the north; and on
the south joins the road
377
to Ajmer, Thus the road running north to south by the side
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of the police station and the road running by the east of
the Ghats of the lake meet a short distance north of the
police station and a greater distance towards the south. In
this way the two roads form a somewhat irregular figure
almost like a triangle. The pilgrims use this road in
coming to the lake and for this purpose can avail of a
number of motor transport services. The dispute which is
the subjectmatter of the present appeal is as regards the
location of the bus stand at Pushkar, for these numerous
motor transport services.
For many years the bus stand was located by the side of the
road which runs cast of the lake, a little away to the north
of Hanumanji’s temple and very near the, Dharamiashalas. On
MAy 24, 1948, the Municipal Board of Pushkar passed a
resolution that the Bus stand should be shifted to another
site by the side of the road which passes by the police
station. By the same resolution it was resolved to
construct a passenger shed, pivaoo, baths, latrines, urinals
and other facilities for the convenience of the passengers
at the new bus stand as proposed. The Regional Transport
Authority in its meeting held on December 3 & 4, 1959,
considered this proposal and passed a resolution in the
following words .-
"The Bus stand for Pushkar will be the plot of
land at the junction of the Hallows Road with
Ganera Road near the Police Station and
Kalkaji’s Temple. The present bus stand on
the northern Patri between Hanumangarhi Temple
and Bralimannandji’s Baghichi will cease to be
a bus stand and will be a bus stop only. The
buses will not pass through the city. They
will go back from the bus stop to the new bus
stand. The Municipal Board will provide the
necessary facilities. The buses will shift to
378
the new bus stand after such facilities are
provided."
It was not however until June 28, 1960, that a public
notification was issued in pursuance of the resolution. On
that date a notification was issued notifying the public of
the resolution of the Regional Transport Authority fixing
the new stand for buses at Pushkar and discontinuing the old
stand but directing that it will be used as a bus stop. The
notification further stated that the buses shall not pass
through the city but will proceed to the new stand back from
the bus stop and that except the above-mentioned bus stand
no other place shall be used as a bus stand in Pushkar. It
was after this notification was issued, that the new
arrangement came into force.
Long before this notification was made, two residents of
Pushkar, Jai Narain and Madan Mohan moved before the State
Transport Authority an application for revision of’ the
decision of the Regional Transport Authority changing the
bus stand. This application purported to be under s. 64A of
the Motor Vehicles Act. It was heard by the State Transport
Authority on February 18, 1960, and was rejected the same
day. On April 13, 1960, five bus operators of the Ajmer
Pushkar route moved a fresh application for revision under
s. 64A of the Motor Vehicles Act against the Regional
Transport Authority’s decision to change the stand. This
application was decided by an order dated January 6, 1961.
The State Transport Authority rejected the preliminary
objection raised by the respondent’s counsel that no
revision lay against the Regional Transport Authority’s
order and also the objection that the matter in dispute had
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already been heard and decided on February 18, 1960 and the
State Transport Authority had no right to review its own
order. It also rejected the contention that the revision
petition was barred by limitation. Coming to the merits of
the case the State Transport Authority was of
379
opinion that the proposed new bus stand was likely to be a
source of inconvenience to women pilgrims and children and
that the old bus stand should be retained from the point of
view of both public utility and convenience. Accordingly,
the State Transport Authority allowed the application for
revision and reversed the decision of the Regional Transport
Authority and directed that the old bus stand should
continue to be recognised as the official bus stand for the
Pushkar town.
Against this order of the State Transport Authority the
Municipal Board of Pushkar moved the High Court of Rajasthan
under Art. 226 of the Constitution and prayed for
appropriate writs or directions, setting aside the State
Transport Authority’s order of January 6, 1961. The main
grounds on which this relief was sought were : (1) that the
order of the Regional Transport Authority had been made
under s. 76 of the Motor Vehicles Act and was therefore not
liable to revision; (2) that, in any case, the application
was barred by limitation; and (3) that the State Transport
Authority having already rejected one application in
revision against the Regional Transport Authority’s order
changing the bus stand could not entertain another
application on absolutely the same grounds. The High Court
came to the conclusion that there was no substance in any of
these contentions and rejected the application.
It is against this decision of the High Court that the
present appeal has been filed by the Municipal Board,
Pushkar, with special leave.
In support of the appeal the learned Attorney-General has
contended that the High. Court’s decision on all these
three points was incorrect. He has reiterated before us
that the order of the Regional Transport Authority changing
the bus stand must be held to have been made under s. 76 of
the Motor Vehicles Act and therefore not liable
380
to revision, that the application for revision wits barred
by limitation and thirdly, that in any case, the first
revision application having been rejected, a second revision
application did not lie inasmuch as on the rejection of the
first revision application the Regional Transport
Authority’s order had ceased to exist having merged in the
State Transport Authority’s order.
The first question that arises for decision therefore is
whether the Regional Transport Authority’s order has been
made under s. 76 of the Motor Vehicles Act or, as urged on
behalf of the respondents, it was made under s. 68 of the
Act. Section 76, it has to be noticed, is in Chapter VI of
the Motor Vehicles Act which deals with the control of
traffic. Section 68 is in Chapter TV which deals with the,
control of transport vehicles. Section 76 gives power to
the State Government or any authority authorised in this
behalf by the State Government "to determine places at which
motor vehicles may stand either indefinitely or for a
specified period of time" and also to determine the places
at which public service vehicles may stop for a longer time
than is necessary for the taking up and setting down of
passengers. According to the learned Attorney General it is
under this power to determine a place at which motor
vehicles may stand indefinitely or for a specified period of
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time that the location of a bus stand is and can be
determined by the State Government or any other authority
authorised by it in this behalf.
The rival contention on behalf of the respondent is that the
determination of places at which motor vehicles may stand
either indefinitely or for a specified period of time means
the determination of parking place while the determination
of places at which public service vehicles may stop for a
longer time than is necessary for the taking up and setting
381
down of passengers, contained in the latter portion of s. 76
means the determination of halting stations. Neither of
these, it is urged, has anything to do with the provision of
a bus stand. A bus stand, it is argued on behalf of the
respondents, means the place where a bus service either
commences or terminates. This according to the learned
Solicitor-General, who appeared for the respondents, has to
be done under a rule made under s. 68(2) (r) of the Act,
giving power to the Regional Transport Authority to fix bus
stands. Section 68 empowers the State Government to make
rules for the purpose of carrying into effect the provisions
of Chapter IV. The second subsection provides that without
prejudice to the generality of the power just mentioned
rules under this section may be made with respect to all or
any of the matters mentioned in the clause set out in the
sub-section. Of these cl. (r) is in these words:--
Section 68 (2) (r).
" prohibiting the picking up and setting down
of passengers by stage or contract carriages
at specified places or in specified areas or
at places other than duly notified stands or
halting places and requiring the driver of a
stage carriage to stop and remain stationary
for a reasonable time when so required by a
passenger desiring to board or alight from the
vehicle at a notified halting place."
In order to make an effective rule under this clause under
s. 68(2), it is said, it is first necessary to have duly
notified stands. This clause contemplates, it is urged,
that a rule has to first provide for the notification of
certain stands for transport vehicles and, secondly, for
prohibiting the picking up and setting down of passengers by
stage or contract carriages inter alia at places other than
the stands which have been duly notified. The learned
Solicitor--General has further urged that the question
whether
382
the fixation or alteration of bus stands can be made under
s. 76 or s. 68 of the Act is no longer res integra and must
be taken to have been decided in favour of his contention in
T. B. Ibrahim v. Regional Transport Authority, Tanjore. (1)
There is, in our opinion, force in this argument T. B.
Ibrahim, the appellant in that case, had a bus stand at a
site belonging to himself. On February 21, 1950, the
Regional Transport Authority, Tanjore declared that bus
stand as unsuitable and with effect from April 1, 1950,
altered the starting and terminal points by means of two
resolutions purporting to have been passed under s. 76 of
the Motor Vehicles Act. When the validity of these
resolutions was challenged before the Madras High Court by a
petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution the High Court
held that s. 76 did not authorise the respondent to close
the previous bus stand and quashed the orders. On November
10, 1950, the Regional Transport Authority of Tanjore, after
hearing the appellant Ibrahim and the Municipality passed a
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resolution that for good and proper reasons, viz., the
convenience of the travelling public the Transport Authority
had resolved to alter the starting places and termini of all
public service vehicles, other than motor cabs, arriving at
and proceeding from Tanjore from the existing buts stand to
another area of the town. Against this resolution a fresh
petition under Art. 226 was filed in the High Court but the
petition was dismissed. Against the High Court’s order,
Ibrahim appealed to this Court by special leave and it is
the judgment in that appeal which has been reported in
[1953] S. C. le. 290.
The impugned resolution was passed by the Transport
Authority under Rule 268 of the Madras Motor Vehicles Rules,
as amended. The amended Rule was in these words :-
268. In the case of public service vehicles
(other than motor cabs) the transport
authority
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 290.
383
may after consultation with such other
authority as it may consider desirable and
after notice to the parties affected, fix or
alter from time to time for good and proper
reasons, the starting places and termini
between which such vehicles shall be permitted
to be used within its jurisdiction. A list of
such places shall be supplied by such
authority to every holder of a permit for such
vehicles at the time of grant of or renewal of
permits.
When such places have been fixed every such
vehicle shall start only from such places".
The very first ground that was urged in support of the
second writ petition in the High Court was that Rule 268, as
amended, was beyond the rulemaking power conferred by s.
68(2)(r) of the Motor Vehicles Act. This contention was
rejected by the High Court and was repeated before this
Court and was rejected by this Court also. After setting
out the material portion of s. 68, the Court pointed out
that the purpose of Chapter IV was described by the
compendious expression "control of transport vehicles", and
the Provincial Government was invested with plenary powers
to make rules for carrying out that purpose and then
observed :-
"Keeping in view the purpose underlying the
Chapter we are not prepared to hold that the
fixing or alteration of bus-stands is foreign
to that purpose."
Dealing with the contention that s. 68(2)(r) does not confer
the power upon the transport authority to direct the fixing
or the alteration of a bus stand and therefore Rule 268 of
the rules framed under that section was ultra vires, the
Court observed thus :
"We are not prepared to accede to this
contention. Sub-section 2(r) clearly contem-
plates three definite situations. It
prohibits the
384
picking up or setting down of passengers (i)
at specified places, (ii) in specified areas,
and (iii) at places other than duly notified
stands or halting places."
"If the power to make rules in regard to these
matters is given to the Government, then it
follows that a specified place may be prohi-
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bited from being used for picking Upon setting
down passengers. This will inevitably result
in the closing of that specified place for the
purpose of picking up or setting down of
passengers. Similarly a specified area may be
excluded for the same purpose. The expression
"duty notified stands" is not defined in th‘
Act, but it is reasonable to presume that a
duly notified stand must be one which is
notified by the Transport Authority and by
none other. There is no warrant for the
presumption that it must be notified by the
Municipality."
The Court then discussed certain provisions of the Madras
District Municipalities Act and said that these provisions
did not affect the power of the Transport Authority to
locate traffic control and that if Rule 268 was within the
rule-making authority, it followed that it could riot be
challenged as being void because it was riot consistent with
some general law. The discussion on this point was con-
cluded in these words :-
"Section 68, sub-section (2)(r) involves both
a general prohibition that the , stand will
cease to exist as well as a particular
prohibition, namely, that passengers shall
riot be picked up or set down at a specified
point. The order passed by the Transport
Authority properly construed falls within the
ambit of section 68 sub-section 2(r). Rule
268 under which the order impeached was passed
is a rule framed
385
under the plenary rule-making power referred
to in section 68, sub-section (1). Sub-sec-
tion (2) (za) says that a rule may be made
with respect to any other matter which is to
be or may be prescribed. This shows the
existence of residuary power vested in the
rule-making authority. It follows therefore
that Rule 268 is within the scope of the
powers conferred under section 68 of the Act."
We have deliberately made these extensive quotations from
the previous judgment of this Court because they clearly
show, as nothing else can, that the Court had to consider in
that case the question whether s.68(2) (r) did confer upon
the Transport Authority the power to direct fixing or
alteration of a bus stand and answered the question in the
affirmative. Ibrahim’s case is thus a clear and direct
authority for the proposition that under s. 68(2)(r) of the
Motor Vehicles Act the State Government has power to frame
rules empowering the Regional Transport Authority to fix or
alter bus-stands. The notification of June 28, 1960,
mentions Rule 134 of the Rajasthan Motor Vehicles Rules,
1955, as the source of the power under which the new bus
stand was fixed, the old bus stand was discontinued and it
was ordered that no other place except the new bus stand
should be used as a bus stand at Pushkar. The material
portion of Rule 134 reads thus:--
"A Regional Transport Authority by
notification in the Rajasthan Gazette, or by
the erection of traffic signs which are
permitted for-the purpose under subsection (1)
of section 75 of the Act.. or both, may, in
respect of the taking up or setting down of
passengers or both, by public service vehicles
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or by any specified class of public service
vehicles......................
386
within the limits of any municipality, or
within such other limits as may be specified
in the notification, certain specified stands
or halting places only shall be so used."
This rule clearly empowers the fixation or
alteration of bus stands.
In framing the Rajasthan Motor Vehicles Rules, 1951, of
which Rule 134 form part the Rajasthan Government mentioned
the numerous sections which give the Government the power to
frame rules as. the "authority under which the rules were
being made, viz., ss. 21, 41, 65, 68, 70, 71, (2), 73, 74,
75, 77, 80, 86, (2), 88, 90 and 91 of the Motor Vehicles
Act, 1939. In view of this Court’s decision in Ibrahim’s
Case (1) it will be proper to hold that Rule 13,4 ,was made
in exercise of the powers under s. 68. Accordingly, the
order of the Regional Transport Authority fixing the new bus
stand and discontinuing the old should be held to have been
made under a rule made under s. 68 and thus liable to
revision under s. 64 A.
The learned Attorney-General stressed the fact that in
lbrahim’s case this Court did not in so many words say that
such an order. fixing or altering a bus stand cannot be made
under s. 76 of the Act and contended that that case is no
authority for holding that the order was not made under s.
76. Assuming for the sake of argument that that was so and
that the order could also be made under s. 76 that would not
affect or weaken the authority of Ibrahim’s Case in so far
as it decided that a rule empowering the Transport Authority
to fix or alter bus stands can be made under s. 68 (2) (r)
of the Act. In that position there will be no escape from
the conclusion that the Regional Transport Authority’s
order in the present case would be liable to revision under
s 64 A.
(1) [1953] S.C.R, 290.
387
It appears clear to us however that Ibrahim’s case is also
authority for the proposition that an order fixing or
altering a bus stand cannot be made under s. 76. From the
summary of ’what was discussed and decided in that case as
has been given above, it appears that the Division Bench of
the Madras High Court gave a categorical decision in the
earlier writ petition that s. 76 did not authorise the
Transport Authority to close the bus stand. It appears to
us clear that this view was approved by this Court. Indeed,
the reasoning which this Court adopted for deciding that s.
68 (2) (r) of the Act contemplates the fixation or
alteration of a bus stand would become considerably weakened
and would not have been accepted by this Court if it thought
that s. 76 itself authorised the Transport Authority to fix
or close a bus stand.
We may make it clear that even if this binding authority in
lbrahim’s Case had not been present we would have had no
hesitation in holding that the fixation or alteration of a
bus stand is made under a rule made under s. 68 of the Motor
Vehicles Act and cannot be made under s. 76. In our
opinion, Chapter VI which deals with the question of
"’Control of traffic" in general has nothing to do with the
fixation or alteration of bus stands. Section 76 has no
doubt used the words "’places at which motor vehicles may
stand" and the learned Attorney--General tried to persuade
us that this includes the fixation of what is known as bus
stands. While the word "bus stand" has not been defined in
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the Act, we have no hesitation in accepting the contention
of the respondents that a bus stand means a place where bus
services commence or terminate. It is the place where the
buses stand for commencing its transport service or where
they stand after terminating their service, that is
popularly known as a bus-stand. We do not think the words
"places at which the motor vehicles may stand either
indefinitely
388
or for a specified period of time" can be reasonably
interpreted to include a bus stand in the above sense. When
it is remembered that Chapter VI in which s. 76 occurs, is
intended to deal with the control of ,traffic it becomes
clear that the determination of places at which the Motor
Vehicles may stand either indefinitely or for a specified
period of time means the "determination of parking places"
while the determination of places at which public vehicles
may stop for a longer time than is necessary for the taking
up and setting down of passengers means "halting stations
for public service vehicles". It is well worth noticing
that while the determination of such places for stoppage, in
the latter portion of the section can be in respect of
public service vehicles only the determination of places of
standing in the first part of the section is in respect of
motor vehicles in general.
All things considered, it appears to us clear that s. 76 has
nothing to do with the provision for bus stands. Section 91
(2) (e) which empowers the State Government to make rules
for "the maintenance and management of parking places and
stands" does not refer, in our opinion, to bus stands but to
"’stands" for motor vehicles which are in the nature of
parking places determined under s. 76.
It is equally clear to us that the "control of transport
vehicles" with which Chapter IV purports to deal should
reasonably be expected to contain provisions for fixation of
places where the transport vehicles may commence their
journey or terminate their journey, that is, the fixation of
bus stands. When therefore we find in s. 68 (2),(r) the
specific clause about "prohibiting the picking up and
setting down of passengers............ at places other than
duly notified stands," it is reasonable to think that the
word "stand" was used there to mean "bus stands" in the
sense of places where services
389
terminate or commence. The scheme of the sub-section
clearly shows that bus stands have first to be notified and
regulatory orders can, and have to be issued thereafter. In
the nature of things, the power to issue the necessary
notification is implied in the provision.
The conclusion that necessarily follows from this is that
the State Government has been given authority under this
clause to make rules for the fixation of bus-stands by duly
notifying the same. Rule 134 in so far as it empowers the
Regional Transport Authority to fix or alter bus stands is
thus a rule made under the rule-making authority under s.
68. Even apart from the authority of lbrahim’s Case (1)
therefore we are of opinion that the order of the Regional
Transport Authority was made in pursuance of powers
conferred on it by a rule made under s. 68 (2) (r) of the
Motor Vehicles Act and therefore liable to revision under s.
64A.
This brings us to the question of limitation. Section 64 A
provides that State Transport Authority shall not entertain
any application from a person aggrieved by an order of the
Regional Transport Authority unless the application is made
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within 30 days from the date of the order. According to the
appellant, the impugned order was made by the Regional
Transport Authority on December 4, 1959, and consequently
the application for revision made by the respondents on
April 13, 1960, was barred. It was suggested that in fact
the respondents who moved the revision application on April
13, 1960, were aware of the order made by the Regional
Transport Authority on December 4, 1959; but assuming that
they had no such knowledge, the question of knowledge, it
was urged, was totally irrelevant. The section has provided
that no application shall bib entertained unless it is made
within 30 days from the date of
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 290.
390
the order and the courts cannot read it as within 30 days
from the date of the knowledge of the order. In this
connection the learned Attorney-General has drawn our
attention to the decisions of the Privy Council in
Nagendranath v. Suresh, (1) and General Accident Fire & Life
Assurance Corporation Limited v. Jarmohomnad Abdul Rahim (2)
where it has been emphasised that in interpreting the
provisions of limitation, "’equitable considerations are out
of place, and the strict grammatical meaning of the words is
the only safe guide." There can be no doubt that this
principle has always been acted upon by the courts. This
principle has recently been re-affirmed by this Court in
Boota Mal.v. The Union of India (3).
We agree therefore that the words "-date of the order"
should not be read ""as from the date of knowledge of the
order" in the absence of clear indication to that effect.
In this connection the learned Attorney-General has drawn
our attention to several sections of the Motor Vehicles Act
to show that where the legislature in prescribing the period
of limitation intended that time should run from some other
date than the date when the order was made clear indication
of such intention was given. Thus s. 13 in providing for an
appeal from an order made refusing or revoking a driving
licence says that an aggrieved person may appeal "within 30
days of the service on him of the order". Section 15 which
provides for an appeal from an order of the licencing
authority disqualifying a person from holding a driving
licence lays down that an aggrieved person may appeal
"’within 30 days of the receipt of the order". Section 16
which provides for an appeal against certain orders of the
Regional Transport Authority says that the aggrieved person
may appeal "within 30 days of the receipt of intimation of
such order". Section 35 which is another section providing
for appeal says that the
(1) A.I.R. (1932) P.C. 165 (2) A.I.R. (1941) P. C. 6,
(3) [1963] 1 S.C.R. 70.
391
appeal may be made "within 30 days of the date of receipt of
notice of the order".
There is considerable force therefore in the argument that
if the legislature had intended that an application for
revision under s. 64A may be made within 30 days from the
date of intimation or knowledge of the order to the
aggrieved person it would have said so; and in the absence
of any such thing the court is bound to hold that the
application will be barred unless made within 30 days from
the date of the order by which. the person is aggrieved.
This still leaves open for investigation the problem as to
what. is the date of the order. According to the appellant
the date when the Regional Transport Authority passed the
resolution is the date of the order. Against this it is
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urged on behalf of the bus operators that it is the date
when that resolution was brought into effect by the
publication of the notification which should be considered
to be the date of the order. In our opinion, the
respondents’ contention should be accepted. For, it is a
fallacy to think that the date when the Regional Transport
Authority passed the resolution was the date on which the
fixation of the new-bus-stand or the discontinuance of the
old bus stand was ordered. It has to be remembered in this
connection that Rule 134 itself contemplates that the
fixation or alteration of bus stands would be made by a
notification. It is only on such notification that a
notified bus stand comes into existence. So long as the
notification is not made there is in law no effective
fixation of a new bus stand or discontinuance of the old bus
stand.
The matter may be considered from another aspect. Section
64A provides for an application for revision by a person
aggrieved by an order. It is the making of the order which
gives rise to the grievance. In this case it is the
fixation of the new bus stand and the discontinuance of the
old bus stand by which the bus operators claim to have been
aggrieved,
392
It is easy to see that there is no real cause for grievance
till such fixation and discontinuance of ’bus stands have
been made by a notified order. In other words, the order
has not been "made" till the notification has been
published. Before that it is only an intention to make an
order that has been expressed. That this distinction
between the making of an order fixing or discontinuing a bus
stand and the expression of an intention to make such. an
order was present in the mind of the Regional Transport
Authority is abundantly clear from the language used by it.
The resolution that Was Passed on December 4, 1959-which
according to the appellant was the date on which the
impugned order was made-says :-
"The bus stand for Pushkar will be the plot of
land at the junction of the Hallows Road with
Ganera Road near the Police Station and
;
Kalkaji’s Temple. The present bus’ stand on
the northern Patri between Hanumangarhi Temple
and Brahamanandji’s Baghichi will cease to be
a bus stand and will be a bus stop, only. The
buses will not pass through the city;. They
will go back from the bus stop to the new
stand. The Municipal Board will provide the,
necessary facilities. The buses will shift to
the new stand after such facilities are
provided."
The Transport Authority did not follow this up on that date
by a formal order. It is reasonable therefore to consider
the passing of the, resolution as the preliminary stage of
the making of the order and the notification by which it was
published as the final making of the order.
Our conclusion therefore is that-the order; fixing a new bus
stand at Pushkar and discontinuing the old bus stand was in
effect made not on December 4. 1959, but on June 28, 1960,
when. the notification about the fixation of a new bus stand
was published,
393
It is this order, made on June 28, 1960, that was liable to
revision and as the application for revision was made before
that date--in anticipation of the notification the plea of
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limitation raised on behalf of the appellant was rightly
rejected by the Regional Transport Authority.
There remains for consideration the last contention raised
on behalf of the appellant that inasmuch as the State
Transport Authority rejected by its order dated February 18,
1960, the first application, for revision of the Regional
Transport Authority’s order fixing. or altering the bus
stand, the Regional Transport Authority’s order merged in
the order of the State Transport Authority, the second
application for revision was incompetent.
In Collector of Customs’ Calcutta v. The, East India
Commercial Co. Ltd., Calcutta, (1)this Court held that where
once an order of original authority is taken in appeal to
the appellate authority it is the order of the latter
authority which is the operative order after the appeal is
disposed of-whether the appellate authority reverses the
order under appeal or modifies that order or merely
dismisses the appeal and thus confirms the order without any
modification. In Madan Gopal Rungta v. Secretary to the
Govt. of (2) Orissa this Court applied this principle of
merger to orders passed by way of review and an order of the
Central Government in effect rejecting the application of
the appellant for the grant of a mining lease to him and
confirming the rejection of the application of the appellant
by the Orissa Government was held not amenable to the
jurisdiction of the High Court of Orissa under Art. 226 of
the Constitution in view of the fact that the Central
Government was not located within the territories subject to
the jurisdiction of the Orissa High Court on the ground that
the Central Government’s order rejecting the review petition
and in effect rejecting the application of the appellant for
grant of a mining lease was the
(1) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 338.
(2) [1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R. 906,
394
operative order. It has been urged. on the authority of
these cases that the principle of merger should be applied
to the cases of revision also where the revising authority
reverses the order or modifies it or merely dismisses the
revision application thereby confirming the order.
In our opinion, there is no scope for the application of the
principle of merger to the facts of the present case. As we
have pointed out above the order fixing a new bus stand and
discontinuing the old bus stand was in effect, and in law,
made not on December 4, 1959, but on June 28, 1960. The
position therefore was that neither on the date when the
first application for revision was made nor when the State
Transport Authority disposed of that application, had any
order of the Regional Transport Authority fixing the new bus
stand and discontinuing the old bus stand, come into
existence.
The question of merger could only arise if the revision was
of an order that had come into existence. If even though an
application for revision was made before the notification
but the State Transport Authority had considered and
disposed of the matter after the notification was made it
would be possible and indeed reasonable to say that the
application for revision should be deemed, at the time when
the State Transport Authority, dealt with the matter, to be
one for this completed order and the order of the Regional
Transport Authority merged in the revising authority’s
order. As, however, the revising authority’s order was also
made before the notification had been published there was no
operative order even by the State Transport Authority’s
order made on February 18, 1960. The contention. that the
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second revision was incompetent, must therefore be rejected.
Two points which emerged during arguments at the Bar however
require consideration. The first
395
is that the application which the respondents busoperators
made on April 13, 1960, was also not for a revision of a
complete order. As it was only this application for
revision which has been dealt with by the State Transport
Authority by its order of January 6, 1961, the question
arises whether that fact itself makes the order of the State
Transport Authority bad and entitles the appellant to a
direction quashing this order. It has to be noticed that
the position in law that there was no complete order of
fixation of a new bus stand and alteration of the old bus
stand at Pushkar till the notification was made on June 28,
1960, was not present in the minds of either the applicants
or the appellant, Municipal, Board, which appeared to oppose
the application or even the State Transport Authority. It
was not the appellant’s case in the writ petition that the
State Transport Authority’s order of January 6, 1961, should
be quashed, because it purported to revise an order which
had no existence in the eye of law. On a consideration of
all the circumstances, we do not think that the appellant
can now claim an order for quashing the State Transport
Authority’s decision on this ground. In our opinion, it
would be proper, in the special circumstances of the case,
to hold that the State Transport Authority could,
immediately after June 28, 1960, when the order was
completed by the notification treat the application for
revision made on April 13, 1960, pending before it on the
date of the notification, as an application for revision of
the order as completed by the notification, and that, in
substance, the order of January 6, 1961, was an order
revising-not the decision of the Regional Transport
Authority’s order of December 4, 1959, but the Regional
Transport Authority’s order fixing a new bus stand at
Pushkar, as completed by the notification of June 28, 1960.
The other point which was brought to our notice during the
arguments at the Bar is that
396
the order of the State Transport Authority dated January 6,
1961, was made without compliance with the second proviso to
s. 64 A. That proviso is in these words:
"Provided further that the State Transport
Authority shall not pass an order under this
section prejudicial to any person without
giving him a reasonable opportunity of being
heard."
This appears to us to make it necessary that before making
any revisional order under s. 64A the State Transport
Authority has to see that a person likely to be affected by
that revisional order receives notice of the matter and is
given a reasonable opportunity to be heard. The requirement
of this proviso was admittedly not complied with before the
State Transport Authority made the order on January 6, 1961,
in the present case. If the High Court’s attention had been
drawn to this failure on the part of the State Transport
Authority to comply with this statutory requirement, we have
no doubt that the High Court would have felt compelled to
quash the revisional order made.
Now, that we find that this statutory requirement was not
complied with before the revisional order was made, we do
not think it will be proper for us to ignore this infirmity
in the order. It is true that the learned Attorney-General
contended that as soon as the Court accepts the plea that
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the revisional order challenged by the appellant by their
writ petition is invalid for the reason that the appellate
authority did not comply with the provisions of S. 64A, the
writ petition ought to be allowed and no opportunity can or
should be given to the said authority to reconsider the
matter. We are not impressed by this argument. We are
satisfied that in the circumstances of this case, we ought
to exercise our powers under Art. 142 of the Constitution
and
397
send the matter back to the revisional authority to be dealt
with in accordance with law, because there is no doubt that
by adopting this course full justice will be done between
the parties..
Accordingly, we allow the appeal and quash the State
Transport Authority’s order made on January 6, 1961, and
direct that the application for revision of the Regional
Transport Authority’s order as notified on June, 28, 1961,
be disposed of by the State Transport Authority in
accordance with law after giving public notice of the matter
and thereafter giving every person concerned in the matter
who wishes to be heard a reasonable opportunity of being
heard. In the circumstances of the case, we order that the
parties will bear their own costs.
SARKAR,J--I have come to the conclusion that this appeal
should be allowed.
The appellant is the Municipal Board of Pushkar in the State
of Rajasthan. It passed a resolution sometime in 1958 that
the bus stand near the Pushkar lake should be shifted to
what it considered a more suitable place. Now the power to
fix bus stands was given to the Regional Transport
Authorities by r. 134 of the Rules framed by the Rajasthan
Government under the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939. That rule
provides as follows :
Rule 134. ""A Regional Transport Authority,
by notifications in the Rajasthan Gazette, or
by the erection of traffic signs which are
permitted for the purpose under sub section
(1) of section 75 of the Act, or both, may, in
respect of the taking up or setting down of
passengers or both, by public service vehicles
or by any specified class of public service
vehicles
(i) conditionally or unconditionally pro-
hibit the use of any specified place or of
398
any place of a specified nature or class, or
(ii) require that within the limits of any
municipality or within such other limits as
may be specified in the notification, certain
specified stands or halting places only shall
be so used:
"
The appellant Municipality moved the Regional Transport
Authority, Jaipur, for making an order shifting the bus
stand to the place suggested by it. On December 3/4, 1959,
the Regional Transport Authority passed a resolution
accepting the appellant Municipality’s proposal and
providing that the bus stand would be shifted to the place
suggested by the appellant Municipality and the old bus
stand would cease to be used as such but would only be used
as a bus stop. The resolution further provided that the
appellant Municipality would provide certain facilities and
the new bus stand would start functioning after the
facilities had been provided.
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Now s. 64A of the Motor Vehicles Act provides as follows:
S. 64A. "The State Transport Authority
may, either on its own motion or on an
application made to it, call for the record of
any case in which an order has been made by a
Regional Transport Authority and in which no
appeal lies, and if it appears to the State
Transport Authority that the order made by the
Regional Transport Authority is improper or,
illegal, the State Transport Authority may
pass such order in relation to the case as it
deems fit :
Provided that the State Transport Authority
shall not entertain any application from a
399
person aggrieved by an order of a Regional
Transport Authority, unless the application is
made within thirty days from the date of the
order
Certain bus operators of Pushkar who are respondents in this
appeal and whom I will refer to as the respondents, applied
to the State Transport Authority on April 13, 1960, under s.
64A to quash the resolution of the Regional Transport
Authority of December 3/4, 1959. While this application was
pending disposal by the State Transport Authority, the
Regional Transport Authority issued a notification dated
June 28, 1960, finally declaring and notifying to the public
the fixing of the new bus stand. This notification was
published in the RajasthanGazette of July 14, 1960. It
appears that there wasthis delay in issuing the
notification of the Regional Transport Authority’s
notification of December 3/4, 1959, because in the meantime
two other persons had moved the State Transport Authority
under s. 64A to quash that resolution and also because the
facilities which the appellant Municipality had beed
directed to provide had not till then been arranged for.
That earlier petition under s. 64A was dismissed by the
State Transport Authority on February 18, 1960, and
thereafter the facilities required had been provided by the
appellant Municipality. It is after all this that the
notification of June 28, 1960, had been issued. The respon-
dent’s petition under s. 64A was allowed by the State
Transport Authority by an order made on January 6, 1961. By
that order the State Transport Authority directed that "the
decision passed by the R. T. A. dated 3/4 December 1959 and
upheld by the STA on 18. 2. 1960 be set aside and cancelled
and the old Bus stand shall continue to be recognised as
Official Bus stand for the Pushkar Town."
400
On February 10, 1961, the appellant Municipality filed a
petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution in the High
Court of Rajasthan for a writ quashing the order of the
State Transport Authority of January 6, 1961. This petition
was dismissed by the High Court. The appellant has now
appealed to this Court against the decision of the High
Court.
There were various points taken in support of this appeal,
but I think that one of them must succeed and I propose in
this judgment to discuss that point only. It was said on
behalf of the appellant Municipality that there was an error
apparent on the face of the record because the respondents’
petition to the State Transport Authority under s.. 64A had
been filed after the period of thirty days limited for that
purpose by the proviso to that section. It was contended on
behalf of the respondents that this was not so for under s.
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64 A the period of thirty days had to be counted not from
the date of the order-in this case the resolution of
December 3/4, 1959-but from the date when the respondents
had the knowledge. of that order. It was contended that if
the period was counted from such date, then the petition was
within time.
I do not think that under s. 64 A the period of thirty days
has to be counted from the date that the party wishing to
move under that section comes to have knowledge of the
’order sought to be set aside. My learned brother Das
Gupta, J., has in the judgment just delivered by him
discussed this question and with his view on that point I am
in entire agreement. It is unnecessary for me to discuss
this question further. Therefore, it would appear that the
respondents’ petition under s. 64A to set aside the order of
December 3/4, 1959, was out of time and should have been
dismissed. The State Transport Authority’s decision that it
was not out of time because the period of thirty days has to
be counted from the date of the knowledge of the order was
401
patently erroneous and therefore the appellant should have
been held entitled to the writ by the High Court of
Rajasthan.
But it was then said that the date of the order of the
Regional Transport Authority was not december 3/4, 1959, but
June 28, 1960.’ This was presumably put on the ground that
the order could and r. 134, earlier set out, be made by
notification and in this case the notification was made on
June 28, 1960. Under that rule a bus stand could be fixed
by the erection of traffic signs also but I will leave this
method out of consideration as it was not followed in this
case. I have some doubt whether the contention that the
order mentioned in s. 64 A, is for the purpose of the
present case, the order contained in the notification, is
’right, but I will assume that to be so.
If the Regional Transport Authority’s order was made, only
on June 28, 1960, as the respondents contend, then their
application under s. 644 was not barred by limitation for in
fact it was made before that date. But that gives the
respondents no advantage. They had by their petition under
s. 64A asked that the Regional Transport Authority’s order
of December 3/4, 1959, be quashed. Now, on the respondents
own argument, that order was not an order under s. 64 A at
all and could not be set aside under that section.
Therefore, again the order of the State Transport Authority
setting aside the Regional Transport Authority’s resolution
of December 3/4 1959, was incompetent on the face of it.
That resolution was exhypothesi not art order liable to be
revised under s. 64A. The State Transport Authority’s order
of January 6, 1961, was even off this basis patently
erroneous and without jurisdiction and so liable to be set
aside,. by a writ.
Then it was said that it was in the power of ,the State
Transport Authority to treat the petition
402
under s. 64A filed on April 13,1960, and pending on June
28, 1960, the date of the notification, as an application to
set aside the order contained in that notification.
Now I do not think the State Transport Authority suo motu
could do so. It is for thepetitioner to decide what
relief he would ask in his application under s. 64A.
The State Transport Authority could not against the wish
of the petitioner alter his prayer. Here therespondents
never asked, that their application under s.64A should be
treated as an application to set aside the order
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contained in theNotification of June 28, 1960. However
that may be, even if the State Transport Authority could
treat the petition of April 13, 1960, as asking, for
quashing of the Regional Transport Authority’s order of June
28, 60, it did not in fact do so. This is evident from the
State Transport Authority’s order of January 6, 1961, where
in considering the question of limitation it proceeds on the
basis that the period of thirty days provided in s. 64A is
to be counted , from the date of The knowledge of the.order
which would be insensible if it had treated the petition as
one to set aside the order of June 28, 1960. Nowhere in its
judgment, of January 6, 1961, does the State Transport
Authority refer to the notification of june 28, 1960. In
the operative part of its order which I have earlier set
out. it expressly set aside and cancelled the Regional
Transport Authorities resolution of December 3/4, 1959, and
it is only as consequential thereto that it stated that
"’the old Bus stand shall continue." Even in their affidavit
in opposition to the petition under Art. 226 the respondents
themselves did, not make the case that the State Transport
Authority had treated their application under s. 64A as ;In
application to set aside the order contained in the
notification of June 28 1960. In that affidavit they
Stated, that the revision filed by; the respondents before
the S.T.A. was within the prescribed time as the same was
filed within about a week of ’the respondents knowledge of
the R.T.A.’s
403
order." They clearly even then proceeded on the basis that
their application under s. 64A had been an application to
set aside the resolution of December 3/4, 1959,. No doubt
the High Court did not accept the view that the period of
thirty days provided by s. 64A has to be counted from the
date of the knowledge of the order sought to be impugned.
It said that it was the notification which was the source of
the respondents’ grievance and, therefore, their petition
under S., 64A was, not out of time. The High Court wholly
omitted. to notice that the petition asked nothing
concerning the notification of June 28, 1960.
Therefore, it seems to me that it is to no purpose to
consider whether the State Transport Authority could treat
the respondents petition under s. 64A as having been filed
on or after June 28, 1960, to cancel the order contained in
the notification of that date. In fact, it did not do so.
It was neither for the High Court nor it is for this Court
now to amend the application under s. 64A and treat it as one for sett
ing aside the Regional Transport Authority’s
order contained in the notification of June 28, 1960. That
application was never before either of these Courts. If the
respondents. themselves had made an application for such a
amendment, then the application would have been dismissed if
on its date, thirty days from the date of the notification
had passed. Now on the dates when the State Transport
Authority and the High Court passed their orders, the period
of thirty days so counted had passed. On those dates the
respondents could not successfully ask for an amendment of
their application under s. 64A. It, therefore, seems to me
that if the order of the Regional Transport Authority is to
be taken as having been, made, on June 28, 1960, then the
respondents’ petition under s. 64A was incompetent
because it sought anorder for setting aside the
Regional Transport Authority’s resolution of December
3/4, 1959
404
and under s. 64A that order could not be effected at All.
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in. my view, the appellant municipality was clearly entitled
to a writ quashing "I order of the; State Transport
Authority of January 6, 1961.
I would, therefore; allow the appeal with cost.
By COURT By majority judgment the appeals are allowed and
the matter sent back for disposal in accordance with law.
Parties to bear their own Costs.