Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
B.N. SHANKARAPPA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UTHANUR SRINIVAS AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/01/1992
BENCH:
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
BENCH:
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
RAMASWAMY, K.
SAHAI, R.M. (J)
CITATION:
1992 AIR 836 1992 SCR (1) 286
1992 SCC (2) 61 JT 1992 (1) 389
1992 SCALE (1)213
ACT:
Karnataka Zila Parishads, Taluk Panchayats Samithis,
Mandal Panchayats and Nyaya Panchayats Act, 1983-Section
4(1), (2) read with Section 14 of the Karnataka General
Clauses Act, 1897-Deputy Commissioner-Powers under-Whether
he can exercise the power to specify the headquarter from
time to time-Location of headquarter of a Mandal-Discretion
of authority-Scope of-Interference by Court when discretion
exercised arbitrarily.
Karnataka Zila Parishads, Taluk Panchayat Samithis,
Mandal Panchayats and Nyaya Panchayats Act, 1983 Section
4(2)read with Section 14, the Karnataka General Clauses Act,
1897-Construction-Whether powers under exhaust once a
Mandal initially constituted and its headquarter specified.
HEADNOTE:
On 16.1.1986, the Deputy Commissioner issued a
notification constituting a Mandal under section 4 (1) of
the Karnataka Zila Parishads, Taluk Panchayat Samithis,
Mandal Panchayats and Nyaya Panchayats Act, 1983 and
located the headquarter of the Mandal at Mudiyannur. Later
on exercising powers under section 4 (3) of the Act he
changed the headquarter to Uthanpur.
On 14.12.1987 a writ petition (W.P.No. 7685/86) was
filed challenging the decision of the Deputy Commissioner.
The High Court dismissed the petition holding that on
passing a resolution my Mandal to change the headquarter
from the existing place to another place, the Deputy
Commissioner was to consider if he would like to exercise
power under section 4(2) of the Act.
The Mandal passed a fresh resolution and thereupon the
Deputy Commissioner issued a notification under section 4
(2) of the Act for change of headquarter and on 20.1.1988
the draft notification was published in the Gazette.
The respondents 1 to 10 filed a writ petition (W.P. No
1888/88)
287
before the High Court challenging the draft notification.
The writ petition was dismissed.
Considering the resolution and the objections to the
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notification, the Deputy Commissioner issued another
notification under section 4 (2) of the Act and the
headquarter of the Mandal was changed from Uthanpur to
Mudiyannur.
The respondents challenged the notification by filing
a revision application under section 4 (3) of the Act which
was dismissed by the Divisional Commissioner.
The respondents moved the High Court in W.P. No. 77 of
1989 challenging the order of the Deputy Commissioner.
The Single Judge of the High Court dismissed the
petition, against which an appeal was filed before the
Division Bench of the High Court.
The Division Bench allowed the appeal following an
earlier decision of the High Court in Writ Application No.
2564 of 1987 dated 28.5.1991.
The correctness of the decision of the Division Bench
of the High Court was challenged in this appeal by special
leave.
The appellant contended that once the power to specify
the headquarter was conferred on the Deputy Commissioner by
Section 4 (1) of the Act, it could be exercised from time to
time by virtue of section 14 of the Karnataka General
Clauses Act,1897; that the scheme of section 4 of the Act
should be construed with the aid of section 14 of the
General Clauses Act in such a manner as not to leave a
vacuum for the exercise of power for a change of
headquarter; that if the High Court’s view was approved,
there could be no power vested in any authority whatsoever
for changing or specifying the headquarter of the
reconstituted Mandal which vacuum might lead to avoidable
complications; and that once the legislature invested the
Deputy Commissioner with the power to specify the
headquarter under section 4 (1), subject to the modification
by the Commissioner under section 4 (3), the power to alter
the headquarter of the Mandal from time to time, if the
occasion so required, must be read into it.
288
The respondents submitted that while sub-section (2) of
Section 4 of the Act in terms empowered the Deputy
Commissioner to alter the headquarter of the Mandal because
the headquarter once specified under section 4(1) should
remain unaltered; that the act designedly did not confer any
power on any authority whatsoever to change the headquarter
once specified under section 4 (1).
Allowing the appeal, this Court,
HELD : 1.01 Section 4 (1) empowers the Deputy
Commissioner to do two things, namely (i) to declare an area
as a Mandal, and (ii) to specify its headquarter. [293 B]
1.02 The power conferred by sub-section (2) of Section
4 of the Karnataka Zila Parishads, Taluk Panchayat Samithis,
Mandal Panchayats and Nyaya Panchayats Act, 1983 can be
exercised where there is a change in the areas of the Mandal
either by addition or reduction in the area. Under clause
(c) of sub-section (2) of Section 4, the Deputy Commissioner
is also invested with the power to alter the name of any
Mandal. [293 D-E]
1.0 The scheme of sub-section (2) of Section 4 would
show that when there is any increase or decrease in the area
of any Mandal, the Deputy Commissioner may, after the
previous publication of the proposal by notification,
exercise that power and rename the Mandal, if so required.
[293 E]
1.04 If the situation so demands and there is
justification for altering the place of headquarter, it
would be open to the Deputy Commissioner to exercise power
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under section 4 (1) of the Act read with Section 14 of the
General Clauses Act to meet the situation. [294 C]
1.05 The word ‘also’ preceding the words ‘specify its
headquarter’ cannot be understood to convey that the power
once exercised would stand exhausted. Such a construction
sought to be placed by counsel for the respondent does not
accord with the language of the provision. It merely
conveys that when the Deputy Commissioner constitutes a
Mandal for the first time it will be necessary for him to
specify its headquarter also. [293 B-C]
1.06 The power to specify the headquarter conferred on
the Deputy Commissioner can be exercised from time to time
as occasion
289
requires by virtue of section 14 of the General Clauses Act.
[293 C-D]
1.07 The ultimate decision as to the place or location
of Mandal headquarter is left to the Government to decide
and conferment of discretion upon the concerned authority in
that behalf must necessarily leave the choice to the
discretion of the authority and it would not be proper for
the courts to interfere with the discretion so exercised.
This is not to say that the discretion can be exercised in
an arbitrary or whimsical manner without proper application
of mind or for ulterior or malafide purpose. If it is shown
that the discretion was so exercised it would certainly be
open to the courts to interfere with the discretion but not
otherwise. [293 H; 294 A-B]
2. The absence of the power in sub-section (2) of
Section 4 to specify the headquarter afresh does not
necessarily mean that once the initial constitution of the
Mandal takes place and the headquarter is specified, the
power is exhausted, notwithstanding section 14 of the
General Clauses Act. If such an interpretation is placed on
the scheme of section 4 of the Act neither the Deputy
Commissioner nor any other authority will thereafter be able
to alter and specify any other place as the Mandal’s
headquarter. Such a view would create a vacuum and even
when a genuine need for specifying any other headquarter
arises, the authorities will not be able to exercise
power for want of a specific provision in the Act and that
may lead to avoidable hardship and complications. It is,
therefore, essential that the provision of the Act be read
in a manner so as to ensure that such a vacuum does not
arise and the power is retained in the concerned authority
which can be exercised should a genuine need arise. [293 F-
H]
J.R. Raghupaty & Ors. v. State of A.P. & Ors., [1988] 4
SCC 364, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 378 of
1992.
From the Judgment dated 31.7.1991 of the Karnataka High
Court in Writ Appeal No. 1224 of 1990.
Santosh N. Hegde and P.Mahale for the Appellants.
A.K. Subbiah, Ranji Thomas, K.V. Mohan, M Veerappa and
K.H. Nobin Singh for the Respondents.
290
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
AHMADI, J. Special leave granted.
This appeal is directed against the judgment of the
High Court of Karnataka dated 31 st July, 1991, whereby the
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Division Bench allowed the Writ Appeal setting aside the
decision of the learned Single Judge and held, relying on
the judgment in Writ Appeal No. 2564 of 1987 decided on 28th
May, 1991, that Section 4 (2) of the Karnataka Zila
Parishads, Taluk, Panchayat Samithis, Mandal Panchayats and
Nyaya Panchayats Act, 1983 (hereinafter referred to as ‘the
Act’) does not confer any power in the Deputy Commissioner
to change the headquarter of any Mandal. It is this view
taken by the Division Bench of the High Court that is put in
issue in the present appeal. For the purpose of disposal of
this appeal we may notice a few relevant facts.
The Act came into force w.e.f. 14’th August, 1984.
Thereafter, on 16th January, 1986 a notification was issued
by the Deputy Commissioner in exercise of power conferred by
Section 4 (1) of the Act constituting a Mandal, named
Mudiyannur Mandal, and located its headquarter at
Mudiyannur. However, the Divisional Commissioner changed
the headquarter to Uthanpur while exercising power under
Section 4 (3) of the Act. Thereupon a writ petition was
filed on 14th December, 1987, being Writ Petition No.
7685/86, challenging the said decision of the Divisional
Commissioner. That Writ petition was dismissed by the High
Court observing: if the Mandal so desires it may pass a
resolution to change the headquarter from the existing place
to another place whereupon it will be open to the Deputy
Commissioner to consider if he would like to exercise power
under Section 4 (2) of the Act. Pursuant thereto a fresh
resolution was passed whereupon the Deputy Commissioner
issued a notification under Section 4 (2) of the Act for
change of headquarter which was published in the Government
Gazette of 20th January, 1988. On the issuance of the said
draft notification respondents Nos. 1 to 10 filed a writ
petition, being Writ Petition No. 1888/88, challenging the
said draft notification. That writ petition was also
dismissed by the High Court. The Deputy Commissioner after
considering the resolution of the Mandal and the objections
received in response to the draft notification from
respondents Nos 1 to 10 passed an order declaring Mudiyannur
as the headquarter of the Mandal. To give effect to his
decision, a notification under Section 4 (2) of the Act was
issued on 23rd July, 1988 whereby the headquarter was
changed from Uthanpur to Mudiyannur. Once again the
respondent Nos 1 to 10 challenged that notification by a
revision application filed under Section 4 (3)
291
of the Act. The Divisional Commissioner exercising power
under the said provision dismissed the revision application
whereupon a Writ Petition no 77 of 1989 was taken to the
High Court. A learned Single Judge of the High Court
dismissed the writ petition. An appeal was carried to the
Division Bench of the High Court. the Division Bench allowed
the appeal by the impugned judgment dated 31 st July, 1991
following an earlier decision in Writ Appeal No. 2564 of
1987 rendered on 28th May, 1991. It is the correctness of
this decision which we are called upon to examine.
Section 4 (1) as it stood before its amendment on 4th
October, 1985 empowered the Deputy Commissioner to declare
any area comprising a village or group of village having the
required population to be a Mandal for the purposes of the
Act. That sub-section did not carry a provision empowering
the Deputy Commissioner to specify the headquarter of the
Mandal. By the amendment brought about in that provision by
Act 3 of 1986 w.e.f. 4th October, 1985, this power was
specifically conferred on the Deputy Commissioner. The
amended Section 4 (1) reads as under :
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"(1) Subject to the general or special orders of
the Government, the Deputy Commissioner, if in his
opinion, it is expedient to declare any area
comprising a village or group of village having a
population of not less than eight thousand and not
more than twelve thousand to be a Mandal, may,
after previous publication, declare such area as a
Mandal for the purposes of this Act and also
specify its headquarter."
On a plain reading of this provision, it becomes
obvious that the Deputy Commissioner was empowered not only
to declare a village or group of villages as a Mandal but
also to specify its headquarter. We then come to sub-
section (2) which empowers the Deputy Commissioner, at the
request of the Mandal concerned, or otherwise, to increase
or decrease the area of any Mandal, by including within or
excluding from such Mandal any village or group of villages
or alter the name of any Mandal or declare that any area
shall cease to be a Mandal after previous publication of the
proposal by a notification in the Gazette. This sub-section
confers power on the Deputy Commissioner to increase or
diminish the area of any Mandal and to alter the name of any
such Mandal but it does not in so many words confer power to
specify the headquarter of such reconstituted Mandal. Sub-
section (3) of section 4 empowers the Commissioner either on
an application made within thirty days from the date of the
notification by an aggrieved party or in exercise of suo
moto power after giving a reasonable opportunity of being
heard to the applicant or the Mandals
292
concerned, revise the orders of the Deputy Commissioner
passed under sub-section (1) or sub-section (2), as the case
may be, and may also, if he considers necessary, modify it
as provided in the third proviso to subsection (1) Every
order so passed revising or modifying the order of the
Deputy Commissioner shall be published in the Official
Gazette. We are not concerned with the third proviso to sub-
section 4.
Sub-section (1) of Section 4, therefore, empowers the
Deputy Commissioner to declare any village or group of
villages as a Mandal and to specify its headquarter. After
the constitution of the Mandal and on the headquarter being
specified under this sub-section, if any change, is to be
effected in the area of the Mandal either by increasing
or reducing its size, the power has to be exercised under
sub-section (2) of Section 4 of the Act. That sub-section
also empowers the Deputy Commissioner to alter the name of
the Mandal. It was submitted by the counsels for the
respondents that while this sub-section in terms empowers
the Deputy Commissioner to alter the name of the Mandal, it
does not empower him to alter the headquarter of the Mandal
because the headquarter once specified under sub-section (1)
of Section 4 must remain unaltered since the Act designedly
does not confer any power on any authority whatsoever to
change the headquarter once specified under sub-section (1)
of Section 4. This submission was countered by the learned
counsel for the appellant by inviting our attention to
Section 14 of the Karnataka General Clauses Act, 1897
(hereinafter called ‘the General Clauses Act’. that
provision reads as under:
"Where by any Mysore or Karnataka Act made after
the commencement of this Act, any power is
conferred then that power may be exercised from
time to time as occasion requires."
Counsel for the appellant submitted that once the power
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to specify the headquarter is conferred on the Deputy
Commissioner by sub-section (1) of Section 4 of the Act it
can be exercised from time to time by virtue of the said
Section 14 if the occasion so requires. He, therefore
submitted that this Court should construe the scheme of
Section 4 of the Act with the aid of Section 14 in such a
manner as not to leave a vacuum for the exercise of power if
need arises for a change of headquarter. He submitted that
if, the view taken by the High Court is approved, a
situation may arise when even after a change takes place in
the size of the Mandal area there would be no power vested
in any authority whatsoever for changing of specifying the
headquarter of the reconstituted Mandal which vacuum may
lead to avoidable complications. He, therefore, submitted
that once the legislature has invested the Deputy
Commissioner with the power to
293
specify the headquarter under sub-section (1) of Section 4,
subject to the modification which the Commissioner may
choose to make under sub-section (3) of Section 4, the power
to alter the headquarter of a Mandal from time to time if
the occasion so requires must be read into it. We think
there is a considerable force in this submission.
As pointed out earlier, Section 4(1) empowers the
Deputy Commissioner to do two things, namely, (i) to declare
an area as a Mandal, and (ii) to specify its headquarter.
The word ‘also’ preceding the words ‘specify its
headquarter’ cannot be understood to convey that the power
once exercised would stand exhausted. Such a construction
sought to be placed by counsel for the respondent does not
accord with the language of the provision. It merely
conveys that when the Deputy Commissioner constitutes a
Mandal for the first time it will be necessary for him to
specify its headquarter also. This power to specify the
headquarter conferred on the Deputy Commissioner can be
exercised from time to time as occasion requires by virtue
of Section 14 of the General Clauses Act. The attention of
the High Court was not drawn to the provision in Section 14
when it disposed of the Writ Appeal No. 2564 of 1987 and
Writ Petition No 375 of 1989 on 28 th May, 1991. It is true
that the power conferred by sub-section (2) of Section 4 can
be exercised where there is a change in the area of the
Mandal either by addition or reduction in the area. Under
clause (c) of sub-section (2) of Section 4 the Deputy
Commissioner is also invested with the power to alter the
name of any Mandal. The scheme of subsection (2) would,
therefore, show that when there is any increase or decrease
in the area of any Mandal, the Deputy Commissioner may,
after the previous publication of the proposal by
notification, exercise that power and rename the Mandal, if
so required. The absence of the power in sub-section (2) of
section 4 to specify the headquarter afresh does not
necessarily mean that once the initial constitution of the
Mandal takes place and the headquarter is specified the
power is exhausted, notwithstanding section 14 of the
General Clauses Act. If such an interpretation is placed on
the scheme of section 4 of the Act neither the Deputy
Commissioner nor any other authority will thereafter be able
to alter and specify any other place as the Mandal’s
headquarter. Such a view would create a vacuum and even
when a genuine need for specifying any other headquarter
arises, the authorities will not be able to exercise power
for want of a specific provision in the Act and that may
lead to avoidable hardship and complications. It is,
therefore, essential that we read the provision of the Act
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in a manner so as to ensure that such a vacuum does not
arise and the power is retained in the concerned authority
which can be exercised should a genuine need arise. In J.R.
Raghupathy & Ors. v. State of A.P. others, [1988] 4 SCC 364
this Court observed that the ultimate decision as
294
to the place or location of Mandal headquarter is left to
the Government to decide and conferment of discretion upon
the concerned authority in that behalf must necessarily
leave the choice to the discretion of the said authority and
it would not be proper for the courts to interfere with the
discretion so exercised. This is not to say that the
discretion can be exercised in an arbitrary or whimsical
manner without proper application of mind or for ulterior or
malafide purpose. If it is shown that the discretion was so
exercised it would certainly be open to the Courts to
interfere with the discretion but not otherwise.
We are, therefore, of the opinion that if the situation
so demands and there is justification for altering the place
of headquarter, it would be open to the Deputy Commissioner
to exercise power under Section 4(1) of the Act read with
section 14 of the General Clauses Act to meet the situation.
We, therefore, allow this appeal, set aside the impugned
order of the Division Bench of the High court and restore
the order of the learned Single Judge directing that the
writ petition, which gave rise to the writ appeal, shall
stand dismissed. However, in the facts and circumstances of
the case there will be no order as to costs.
V.P.R. Appeal allowed.
295