Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3268-3270 of 2005
PETITIONER:
BHAGWAN DASS & ANR.
RESPONDENT:
KAMAL ABROL & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/05/2005
BENCH:
CJI G.P. Mathur, P.P. Naolekar
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
(Arising out of SLP) Nos.1920-1922 of 2003)
P.P. NAOLEKAR, J.
Leave granted.
These three appeals have been preferred against the common
order and final judgment dated 21.8.2002 passed by the High Court
of Himachal Pradesh in Regular Second Appeal Nos. 13/97 14/97
and 103/97. The appeals arise on the following facts.
That respondent no.3, Hindustan Petroleum Corporation, is a
Government of India Undertaking and respondent no.2 is the Oil
Selection Board. The respondent nos. 2 and 3 and the Union of
India had intended to open a retail outlet for the distribution of
Liquid Petroleum Gas (LPG) in Kangra town of the State of
Himachal Pradesh and for that purpose it had invited applications
for allotment of dealership/distributorship for LPG through notice
published in the newspaper on 14.8.85. The notice of inviting
dealership/distributorship rights provided for certain eligibility
criteria, which the applicant should possess. The criteria provided
that the applicant should be an unemployed graduate, resident of
Kangra district, family income not more that Rs.24000/-, having no
close relatives as a dealer or distributor of any oil company and the
applicant also should not be a partner or having dealership or
distributorship agency in any petroleum corporation company.
The appellants viz., Bhagwan Dass and Ashok Kumar applied
jointly as partners along with other applicants. Respondent no.1
Smt. Kamal Abrol and respondent no.5 Shri Abhay Singh had also
applied for the said dealership/distributorship rights. There were
other applicants also along with these applicants. The Oil
Selection Board called the appellants and respondent nos. 1 and 5
for interview as their applications were found prima facie falling
within the criteria laid down for selection. The interviewing
Selection Board recommended their names to the Hindustan
Petroleum Corporation Limited in form of a merit list that
consisted of respondent no. 1, respondent no. 5 and the appellants
in the order of merit. Respondent no.3, Hindustan Petroleum
Corporation (HPCL), had issued letter of intent to respondent no.1
and she was directed to complete certain formalities to make the
allotment in her favour. Aggrieved by the said decision of the
Corporation, the appellants filed a writ petition before the Punjab
and Haryana High Court challenging the allotment. The writ
petition was disposed of by the learned single Judge on the point
that the remedy does not lie under Article 226 of the Constitution
and the appropriate remedy would be to approach the Civil Court.
Pursuant thereto, a civil suit was filed by the appellants impleading
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all the present respondents as party defendants, claiming relief that
the decree for declaration be issued that selection of respondent
nos. 1 and 5 by respondent nos. 2, 3 and 4 is wrong, illegal, null
and void and is liable to be set aside and, therefore, letter of intent
dated 3.3.88 for allotment of LPG dealership/distributorship of
HPCL issued in favour of respondent no.1 is wrong, illegal, null
and void and does not confer any right, title and interest upon
respondent no.1 for allotment of dealership/distributorship of LPG
at Kangra. The appellants had claimed further relief in form of a
mandatory injunction seeking direction to respondent nos. 2, 3 and
4 to allot the LPG dealership/distributorship at Kangra to the
appellants. After trial the civil suit filed by the appellants was
partly allowed. The trial court gave decree of declaration that
respondent nos. 1 and 5 could not be allotted the dealership of LPG
at Kangra as they didn’t fulfill the required eligibility criteria. It
was held that the respondent no.1 was not a resident of the Kangra
Distt. and hence did not fulfill the mandatory requirement.
However, the trial court dismissed the suit claiming mandatory
injunction for giving distributorship of LPG to the appellant.
Aggrieved by the judgment and decree of the trial court,
cross appeals were filed by both the appellants and the respondent
no.1. Respondent no.5 was also a party in appeal along with other
respondents. Upholding the order of the trial Court, the selection
of respondent nos. 1 and 5 was declared illegal, null and void. The
appellate court further gave mandatory injunction in favour of the
appellants and directed the Corporation to allot the LPG dealership
at Kangra town to the appellants. While confirming the judgment
and decree of the trial Court, the court had held that respondent
no.1 not being the resident of Kangra Distt., does not fulfill the
eligibility criteria and thus is not entitled for dealership. The net
result of the judgment and decree of the First appeal court was that
respondent nos. 1 and 5 were held not eligible for the
dealership/distributorship rights whereas the appellants were held
entitled to allotment of the dealership/distributorship in Kangra
Distt., they being the only candidate remaining for the selection of
distributorship right.
Aggrieved by the order of the First appellate court, 3 appeals
were preferred, two by Kamal Abrol and the third one by HPCL
before the High Court. The High Court had framed various
questions of law and had held the question of territorial jurisdiction
in favour of the appellants. On the matter of mandatory injunction
granted by the First appellate court, it has been held by the High
Court that there was no contract between the respondents and the
appellants to allot the dealership and, therefore, there is no
question of specific performance of contract or enforcement
thereof. It is further held that the Corporation was under no
obligation to accept the recommendation of respondent no. 2,
therefore, no mandate can be issued by the Court to that effect as it
is the administrative discretion and set aside the decision of the
First appellate court on that issue. What we find from the
pleadings of respondent nos. 2 and 3 is that there is some sort of
admission on the binding nature of the recommendations made by
the Oil selection Board but as will be presently shown, we do not
propose to deal with the findings in these appeals. The High Court
has held that the requirement of the applicants being the
"residents" of Kangra Distt. is mandatory in nature. However, the
residential requirement cannot be held to be that of permanent
nature. The High Court has recorded specific findings that since
the term ’residents’ include both temporary and permanent
residence (except a short or casual stay), the respondent no.1
cannot be held not a resident of Distt. Kangra. Admittedly,
respondent no.1 is married to her husband who owns a land and
ancestral property in Kangra. Therefore, in view of the fact that the
husband of respondent no.1 is the resident of Kangra she will be
deemed to be the resident of the said district since her marriage. In
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other words, the High Court’s finding is that the husband of
Respondent no.1 having some ancestral and other personal
property at district Kangra and she being married to him shall be
held to be the resident of district Kangra and is eligible for
allotment of LPG dealership.
The question for consideration here is whether the eligibility
criterion of being the resident of Kangra district has to be
construed to be a permanent or de facto residence or temporary or
de jure residence.
The word ’resident’ is in common usage and many
definitions were attributed to it in different decisions.
Nevertheless, it is difficult to give an exact definition for the term
is flexible, elastic and somewhat ambiguous. The meaning of the
word ’ resident’ in itself creates certain doubts. It does not have
any technical meaning and no fixed meaning, would be applicable
in all the facts and circumstances. It is used in various senses and
has received various interpretations by the Courts. Generally, the
construction of the term is governed by the connection in which it
is used and it is dependent on the context of the subject matter, and
the object, the purpose or result designed to be accompanied by its
use, and the meaning has to be adduced from the facts and
circumstances taken together in each particular case. The word
’resident’ as defined in Oxford Dictionary is " to dwell
permanently or for considerable time, to have one’s stay or usual
abode, to live in or at a particular place". Similarly, the
Webster’s Dictionary has defined it as " to dwell permanently and
for any length of time" and words like dwelling place or abode are
held to be synonymous. From the above it can be seen that the term
’residence’ makes it clear that the word ’residents’ includes two
types which are: 1) a permanent residence and 2) a temporary
residence. First type of residence form all the permanent dwelling
which means that the person has settled down at a particular place
permanently and regularly for some purpose. The second type
refers to a situation that the person is not residing at a place forever
but residing at a place for a temporary period or not for a
considerable length of time. This is also referred to a temporary
living in a place. Hence, in one place the word ’residence’ is
interpreted in the strict sense to include only permanent living at a
place which may be referred to a domicile and in the second place
the word is interpreted flexible sense to show a temporary or
tentative residence.
The concept of residence has obtained varied judicial
opinions and responses. To start with, in the case of Sarat
Chandra Basu v. Bijoy Chand Mahatab Maharajadhiraj
Bahadur of Burdwan, AIR 1937 PC 46, the Privy Council while
dealing with the word ’resides’ as it occurs in Section 33 of the
Registration Act, 1908 has observed that:
"the expression resides as used in Section
33 is not defined in the statute, but there is
no reason for assuming that it contemplates
only permanent residence and excludes
temporary residence"
The decision of the Privy Council was quoted with approval
and followed by the Supreme Court in the case of Sri Sri Sri
Kishore Chandra Singh v. Babu Ganesh Prasad Bhagat and
Ors, AIR 1954 SC 316. The Supreme Court later on in the
decision Mst. Jagir Kaur and another v. Jaswant Singh AIR
1963 SC 150 has defined the word ’resides’ in the following
manner:
"a person resides in a place if through
choice make it his abode permanently or
even temporarily"
In the same decision the Supreme Court pointed out that the
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question of residence is a mixed question of law and fact. Hence
this being the mixed question of law and fact has to be decided
keeping in mind the facts and circumstances of each case. The
meaning of the word ’residence’ would in ultimate analysis depend
upon the context and the purpose of a particular statute. In another
decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Jeewanti Pandey v.
Kishan Chandra Pandey, AIR 1982 SC 3 while construing
Section 19(ii) of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 the Supreme Court
said: (Para 12)
"In ordinary sense ’residence’ is more or
less of a permanent character. The
expression ’resides’ means to make an
abode for a considerable time; to dwell
permanently or for a length of time to have a
fixed home or abode. Where there is such
fixed home or such home at one place, his
legal and actual residence is the same and
cannot be said to reside at any other place
where he had gone on a casual or temporary
visit. But if he has not established home, his
actual and physical habitation is the place
where he actually or personally resides."
The court has further said in paragraph 13 that it is plain in
the context of clause (ii) of Section 19 of the Act, that the word
’resides’ meant actual place of residence and not a legal or
constructive residence. It clearly does not indicate the place of
origin. The words residence is flexible and has many shades of
meaning but it must take its colour and content from the context in
which it appears and it cannot be read in isolation. By this
decision another dimension was added to the concept of residence
in the form of concept of de facto residence and the concept of de
jure residence. The Supreme Court in this case has clearly
distinguished between the concept of actual residence or de facto
residence and legal residence or de j
ure residence. The actual residence means the place where
the person is residing actually at a given point of time. On the
other hand concept of de jure residence or the legal residence
means the place at which the person is residing in law. The latter
form of residence may or may not be the actual residence or the
place where the person actually stays or reside. A person holding
property or land in a particular place or city or having some
ancestral roots to the city may be a resident of that particular place
in the legal sense, but his actual residence will be the place where
he is presently residing and coupled with the fact of animus
manedi or an intention to stay for a considerable period. The
concept of de facto and de jure residence can also be understood
by the following example. If a person suppose has the residency
certificate of a place say ’A’, but actually for his living he stays at
the place ’B’. Then de jure he can be said to be the resident of
place ’A’ but de facto he is the resident of the place ’B’.
In U.O.I. v. Dudh Nath Mishra and Ors., AIR 2000 SC 525
Division Bench of this Court has held that the word ’resides’ has to
be interpreted in the context of the purpose of the statute in which
the words ’resides’ is used. The word resident is read with word
ordinarily hence making the phrase ’ordinarily resident’. It is clear
that the person, before he can be said to be ordinarily residing at a
particular place has to have an intention to stay at that place for a
considerable length of time and it would not include a visit of a
short or casual presence at that place.
From the aforesaid analysis it is apparent that the word
’residence’ is generally understood as referring to a person in
connection with the place where he lives, and may be defined as
one who resides in a place or one who dwells in a place for a
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considerable period of time as distinguished from one who merely
works in a certain locality or comes casually for a visit and the
place of work or the place of casual visit are different from the
place of ’residence’. There are two classifications of the meaning
of the word ’residence’. First is in the form of permanent and
temporary residence and the second classification is based on de
facto and de jure residence. The de facto concept of residence can
also be understood clearly by the meaning of the word ’residence’
as given in the Black Law Dictionary, 8th Edition. It is given that
the word residence means bodily presence as an inhabitant in a
given place. Thus de facto residence is also to be understood as the
place where one regularly resides as different to the places where
he is connected to by mere ancestral connections or political
connections or connection by marriage.
In the present case, the necessary eligibility criterion requires
the applicant to be a resident of Kangra district. The advertisement
inviting the applications has not defined the same and hence it
would be necessary to see the intention of the framers of the
eligibility criteria to understand the true meaning or the sense for
which the word ’resident’ is used or as to why the criteria of
resident is put as an eligibility criteria for allotment of LPG. In the
present case the intention of the framers appears to be to provide
employment or source of earning for the residents of the Kangra
district in the form of LPG dealership/distributorship. The
eligibility criterion requires the person to be a resident of Kangra
district only in the actual sense and not in any other sense. What is
required to fulfill the eligibility criteria of the residence is that the
person should be a de facto residence and not to have the mere
connection with the place on account of her husband having some
personal and ancestral property in Kangra. There is no finding
recorded by the Court that the husband of Respondent No.1 is
permanently residing at Kangra or has permanent abode in Kangra.
From the finding arrived at by the High Court it can be said that
her husband having ancestral property in Kangra is a visitor to that
place and occasionally resides there for a few days. Respondent
No.1 prima facie appears to be a permanent resident of Mandi,
since her name appears in the voter’s list of Mandi and that she has
been drawing her ration from Mandi as per the case set up by the
appellants. It is further clear that the intention of providing
employment and source of earning to the residents of the place
would be fulfilled only if the person is actually living in Kangra
and not by his/her remote connection to the place. It may also be
seen that another eligibility criteria is that the person should not be
a partner or having any dealership or distributorship agency in any
petroleum company and, therefore, the dealership/distributorship
has to be allotted to the person who does not hold any other
dealership/distributorship agency of any other petroleum company.
This term indicates that the corporation wants that the dealership at
a particular place have to be handled by that person, which would
necessarily require the personal presence of that person at the place
of business. The notice of intent issued to the respondent no.1 on
March 3, 1988 further clarifies this requirement when it says that
the dealer is to be a full time working dealer which necessitates the
permanent residence at a place for which the dealership license is
given. When the agency requires full time working dealer it would
be only possible if the person actually resides in Kangra district
and not working through agent or servants engaged for the said
purpose. This further indicates that the dealer is required to be a de
facto resident of the place from where the dealership license is to
be issued and it is not permissible to have casual connection or
temporary residence at that place.
For the aforesaid reasons we are of the view that the High
Court has committed an error in construing the term ’resident of
Kangra District’ does not require a person to be a permanent
resident of that place and his casual connection to the district
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would fulfill the necessary mandatory criteria provided in the ad.
notice. As the approach of the High Court in deciding the second
appeal against the appellant was based on its interpretation of the
criterion of residence and as we have taken a different view of the
matter, we set aside the judgment and decree passed by the High
Court and remand the matter back to the Court for fresh
consideration of the appeals in the light of interpretation given by
us to the term ’resident of Kangra’. The appeals are disposed of
accordingly with no order as to costs.