Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAM KRISHNA VERMA ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P. AND ORS. ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT31/03/1992
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
KASLIWAL, N.M. (J)
CITATION:
1992 AIR 1888 1992 SCR (2) 378
1992 SCC (2) 620 JT 1992 (2) 545
1992 SCALE (1)762
ACT:
Motor Vehicles Act 1939 :
Sections 68-C, 68-D and 68-F Motor Vehicles Act, 1988-
Sections 80 and 98-Grant of permit to private operators on
nationalised routes-Draft scheme published under old Act-
Private operators obtaining permits under new Act for routes
covered by the scheme-Grant of permit to any other operator
for the routes covered by the scheme-Whether illegal and
without jurisdiction-Whether corridor protection
permissible.
Constitution of India 1950 :
Article 136, 141, 142 and 226 Court should neutralise
any undeserved and unfair advantage gained by party invoking
its jurisdiction.
Precedents-Practice and Procedure-Supreme Court two
Judge bench not to over rule decision of three judge bench.
Administrative Law.
Natural Justice-Principle of right to hearing-
Forfeiture of-When party obtains undue advantage by
protracting proceedings and nullifying objective.
HEADNOTE:
To nationalise the Saharanpur - Shahdara - Delhi route
a draft scheme dated 26 th February, 1959 was published, and
the approved scheme published on September 29, 1959 was
quashed by the high Court by judgments dated October 31,
1961 and February 7, 1962 as against 50 operators and being
upheld against other 50 operators. The State Govt. was
permitted to given fresh hearing to the 50 objectors, on the
basis of the original proposal which was upheld in Jeewan
Nath Bahl & Ors. v. State of U.P.
Out of the 50 operators some filed successive suits and
obtained
379
injuction from different courts scuttling the hearing and
keeping it pending for well over 25 years.
A writ petition was filed in this Court assailing, that
the delay in approving the scheme amounts to an abuse of
process of law, and that public interest thereby suffered,
and the Court held in Shri Chand etc. v. Govt. of U.P. &
Ors., [1985] Suppl. 2 SCR 688 that the delay of 26 years in
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disposing of the objections resulted in violation of
Articles 14 and 19(1)(g) of the Constitution, and
accordingly quashed the draft scheme dated February 26,
1959. The Government was directed to frame the scheme
afresh, if necessary.
Pursuant thereto the U.P. State Road Corporation
published the draft scheme on February 13, 1986. While it
was pending the Motor Vehicles Act 59 of 1988 came into
force with effect from July 1, 1989. Bulandshahr to Delhi
route was also nationalised in the approved scheme published
in the State Gazette dated September 27, 1986.
After the 1988 Act came into force, the respondents
applied for and were granted permits for Saharanpur to
Ghaziabad via Shahdara routes etc.
The appellants filed the writ petitions in the High
Court and the same were dismissed by judgment dated July 23,
1990. The draft scheme published in 1986 was held by the
hearing authority to have been lapsed by operation of
Section 100(4) of the Act.
In the writ petition filed by the S.T.U. the High Court
by its judgment dated March 16, 1990 held that the draft
scheme stood lapsed within one year from the date of the
publication of the draft scheme, and accordingly upheld the
order of the hearing authority. S.L.P. No. 6300/91 was
filed against this judgment.
Special Leave Petition Nos. 9701/90, 9702/90 and
2083/91 were filed against the High Court’s judgment
dismissing the writ petitions in which grant of permits
under Section 80 of the Motor Vehicles Act on the
Muzaffarnagar - Chausana; Ghaziabad to Shahdra. Saharanpur
to Ghaziabad covered and partly overlapping nationalised
routes were questioned.
On the questions : (1) what is the effect of Shri Chand
etc. v. Govt.
380
of U.P. over Jeevan Nath Bahl & Ors. v. State of U.P. and
(2) whether the draft scheme dated February 13, 1986 stood
lapsed under Section 100(4) of the Act.
Granting special leave and allowing the appeals the
Court,
Held : 1(a) Consistent law laid down by this Court is
that draft scheme under Section 68-C and approved under
Section 68-D of Chapter IVA of the Repealed Act (Chapter VI
of the Act), is a law and it has overriding effect over
Chapter IV of the repealed Act (Chapter V of the Act). It
operates against everyone unless it is modified. It
excludes private operators from the area or route or a
portion thereof covered under the scheme except to the
extent excluded under that scheme itself. The right of
private operators to apply for and to obtain permits under
Chapter IV of the repealed Act (Chapter V of the Act) has
been frozen and prohibited. [389B-C]
(b) The nationalisation of Saharanpur - Shahdara -
Delhi route approved and published on September 29, 1959
became final and to that extent it cannot be said to have
been quashed by this Court in Sri Chand’s case. The
approved scheme is law operating against everyone except 50
objectors/operators and the writ issued by this Court cannot
have the effect of annuling the law. What was quashed and
issue of fresh draft scheme pursuant thereto, relate to only
of original draft scheme operative against 50
objectors/operators and no more. Even no principle, the
decision of a Bench of two Judges cannot have the effect of
overruling the decision of a Bench of three Judges. The
fresh draft scheme under Section 68-C dated February 13,
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1986 must, therefore, be construed to be only in relation to
50 existing operators as per the directions that ultimately
emerged in Jeevan Nath Bahl’s case. [389D-E]
Mysore State Road Transport Corporation. v. Mysore
Transport Appellate Tribunal, [1975] 1 SCR 615; Adarsh
Travels Bus Service v. State of U.P. & Ors., [1985] Suppl. 3
SCR 661; H.C. Narayanappa & Ors. v. State of Mysore & Ors.,
[1960] 3 SCR 742; Nehru Motor Transport Co-op. Soc. & Ors.
V. State of Rajasthan & Ors.,[1964] 1 SCR 220 and S. Abdul
Khader Saheb v. Mysore Revenue Appellate Tribunal & Ors.,
[1973] 1 SCC 357, referred to.
2(a) On harmonious construction of ss.217(2)(e) and
100(4) of the Act, the draft scheme published under s. 68-C
of the Repealed Act would
381
stand lapsed only if it is not approved within one year from
the date when the Act came into force i.e. with effect from
July 1, 1989 by which date it was pending before the hearing
authority and one year had not expired. The hearing
authority, therefore, wrongly concluded that the draft
scheme stood lapsed. The High Court also equally committed
illegality following its earlier view which stood overruled
by this court in Krishana Kumar’s case. The view of the
High Court and the hearing authority is therefore clearly
illegal. [389H-390B]
Krishna Kumar v. State of Rajasthan & Ors., [1991] 4
SCC 258, referred to.
(b) The nationalisation of Saharanpur - Shahdara -
Delhi route by publication of the approved scheme on
September 29, 1959 is operating to the total exclusion of
every private operator except U.P. State Road Transport
Corporation and 50 operators including the appellants whose
objection were upheld by the High Court in the first
instance and merged in the judgment of this Court in Jeevan
Nath Bahl’s case. [390C]
(c) Under Section 80 of the Act no private operator has
right to apply for and obtain permits to ply the stage
carriages on the approved or notified route/routes or areas
or portion thereof. The grant of permits to the private
operators on the respective routes or part, or portion
thereof to provide transport service is therefore clearly
illegal and without jurisdiction. [390E]
Mithlesh Garg & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors., [1992] 1
SCC 168, referred to.
(d) By operation of Section 98 of the Act, Chapter VI
overrides Chapter V and other law and shall have effect
notwithstanding anything inconsistent therewith contained
in Chapter V or any other law for the time being inforce or
any instrument having effect by virtue of such law. The
result is that even under the Act existing scheme under the
repealed Act or made under Chapter VI of the Act shall have
over-riding effect on Chapter V notwithstanding any right
given to private operators in Chapter V of the Act. No
corridor protection to private operators is permissible.
[390G-391A]
(e) The 50 operators including the appellants/private
operators have been running their stage carriage by blatant
abuse of the process of the
382
court by delaying the hearing as directed in Jeevan Nath
Bahl’s case and the High Court earlier thereto. As a fact,
on the expiry of the initial period of grant after September
29, 1959 they lost the right to obtain renewal or to ply
their vehicles, as this court declared the scheme to be
operative. However, by sheer abuse of the process of law
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they are continuing to ply their vehicles pending hearing of
the objections. [391D]
(f) While exercising its jurisdiction this Court would
do complete justice and neutralise the unfair advantage
gained by the 50 operators including the appellant in
dragging the litigation to run the stage carriages on the
approved route on area or portion thereof and forfeited
their right to hearing of the objections filed by them to
the draft scheme dated February 26, 1959. [391F]
(g) Moreover, since this court in Jeevan Nath Bahl’s
case upheld the approved scheme and held to be operative the
hearing of objections would be a procedural formality with
no tangible result. Therefore, the objection outlived their
purpose. They are, therefore, not entitled to any hearing
before the hearing authority. [391G-H]
Grindlays Bank Ltd. v. Income Tax Officer & Ors.,
[1980] 2 SCC 191, referred to.
3. The grant of permits to all the respondents/private
operators and respondents Nos. 7 to 28 in S.L.P. No. 9701/90
under Section 80 of the Act or any others on the respective
routes, parts or portions of the nationalised routes of
February 13, 1986 draft scheme are quashed. The hearing
authority shall lodge the objections of the 50 operators
including the appellants in the appeals. The competent
authority shall approve the drafts scheme of 1986 within a
period of 30 days and publish the approved scheme in the
gazette. The permits granted to the 50 operators or any
others shall stand cancelled from that date, if not having
expired in the meanwhile. No permits shall be renewed.
Action should be taken by respondents 3 to 4 in S.L.P. No.
9701/90 to see that all the permits granted to the 50
operators including the appellants are seized and cancelled.
The U.P. State Transport Corporation shall obtain the
required additional permits, if need be, and put the stage
carriages on the routes to provide transport service to the
travelling public immediately on publication of the approved
draft scheme in the State Gazette. [392A-D]
383
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 1198,
1199, 1200 & 1201 of 1992.
From the Judgment and Orders dated 2.5.1990, 16.3.1990 &
5.10.1990 of the Allahabad High Court in W.P. NO. 212/90.
C.M.W.P. No. 7735/89 C.M.W.P. No. 15865/86 and C.M.W.P. No
nil of 1990.
Raja Ram Aggarwal, H.N. Salve, V.J. Francis, B.B. Singh
Gaurav Jain, N.K. Goel, Ms. Abha Jain, Raju Ramachandran and
Sunil Kr. Jain for the Appellants.
B.S. Chauhan and Mrs. Rani Chhabra for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
K. RAMASWAMY, J. Special leave granted.
These four cases have behind chequered history of the
draft scheme dated February 26, 1959 published under Sec.
68-C of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, for short ‘the
repealed Act’ was kept hanging for 25 to 35 years. The
draft scheme dated 26th February, 1959 was published to
nationalised Saharanpur - Shahdara - Delhi route. The
approved scheme published on September 29, 1959 was quashed
by the Allahabad High Court by judgments dated October 31,
1961 and February 7, 1962 as against 50 operators and was
upheld against other 50 operators. It was further held that
the State Govt. was at liberty to give fresh hearing to the
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50 objectors on the basis of the original proposal which was
upheld by this court in Jeewan Nath Bahl & Ors. v. State of
U.P., (C.A. No 1616 of 1968 dated April 3, 1968), observing
thus :
"The effect of the order passed by the High Court
in the two groups of writ petitions was clearly
that the scheme in its essence was not affected,
but it was directed that it was not liable to be
enforced against the 32 petitioners who applied to
the High Court in the first round of petitions and
against 18 petitioners in the second group of
petitions. If that be the true effect of the
order there is in our judgment, a scheme in
existence which must have the statutory operation
contemplated by Section 68-F on the Motor Vehicles
Act."
The record discloses that out of 50 operators some of
them filed
384
successive suits and obtined injuction from different courts
scuttling the hearing and kept pending for well over 25
years. Shri Chand and Others filed Writ Petition No. 11744
of 1985, etc. in this court assailing that the delay in
approving the scheme amounts to abuse of process of law and
public interest thereby suffered. By judgment in Shri
Chand, etc. v. Govt. of U.P. & Ors., [1985] Suppl. 2 SCR
688, this court held that the delay of 26 years in disposing
of the objections resulted in violation of Acts. 14 and
15(1)(g) of the Constitution. The drafts scheme dated
February 26, 1959 was accordingly quashed. It directed the
Govt. to frame the scheme afresh, if necessary, Pursuant
thereto the U.P. State Road Corporation Published the draft
scheme on February 13, 1986. While it was pending the motor
Vehicles Act 59 of 1988, for short ‘the Act’ came into
force with affect from July 1, 1989. Bulandshahr to Delhi
route was also nationalised in the approved scheme published
in the State Gazette dated September 27, 1956.
After the Act came into force, the respondents applied
for and were granted permits for Saharanpur to Ghaziabad via
Shahdara routes etc. The appellants filed the writ
petitions in the High Court of Allahabad at Lucknow
questioning the validity thereto which was dismissed by
judgment dated July 23, 1990. The draft scheme published in
1986 was held by the hearing authority to have been lapsed
by operation of Sec.100(4) of the Act. In the Writ petition
filed by the S.T.U. the High Court by its judgment dated
March 16, 1990 held that the draft scheme stood lapsed
within one year from the date of the publication of the
draft scheme and accordingly upheld the order of the hearing
authority against which the appeal (S.L.P. No. 6300/91) wad
filed. Special Leave petition Nos. 9701/90, 9702/90 and
2083/91 arise against the High Court’s Judgment dismissing
the writ petitions in which grant of permits under s.80 of
the Act on the Muzaffarnagar - Chausana; Ghaziabad to
Shahdara; Saharanpur to Ghaziabad covered and partly
overlapping nationalised routed were questioned. Thus these
appeals by special leave.
In Jeevan Nath Bahl’s case (C.A. No. 1616/68), this
court held that the scheme was not affected and the true
effect of the orders passed by the High Court in respect of
50 operators was deduced thus, "in our judgment a scheme is
in existence which must have the statutory operation
contemplated by Sec. 68-F of the Motor Vehicles Act......"
It was further held that the judgment of the High court "was
only intended to prohibit the enforcement of the scheme
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against two groups of petitioners, who had
385
approached the High Court challenging the validity of the
orders sanctioning the scheme". The result is that the
scheme would operate as against every other person other
than the fifty operators and the S.T.U. has the exclusive
right to ply its vehicles on the notified route. 50
operators not only continuted to ply there vehicles till
expiry of their permits but managed to ply till date.
In Mysore State Road Transport Corporation v. Mysore
State Transport Appellate Tribunal, [1975] 1 SCR 615, this
court held thus:
"Any route or area either wholly or partly can be
taken over by a State Undertaking under any scheme
published, approved and notified under the
provisions of Ch. IV-A of the Act inserted by Sec.
62 of Act 100 of 1956. If, therefore, the scheme
prohibits private transport owners to operate on
the notified area or route or any portion
therefore, the Regional Transport Authority cannot
either renew the permit of such private owners or
give any fresh permit in respect of a route which
overlaps the notified route. In considering the
question whether when one party has monopoly over a
route, a licence can be granted to any other party
over any part of that route, the distinction
between ’route" and "highway" is not at all
relevant. Where a private transport owner makes an
application to operate on a route which overlaps
even a portion of the notified route, then that
application has to be considered only in the light
of the scheme as notified. If any conditions are
placed then those conditions have to be fulfilled
and if there is a total prohibition then the
application must be rejected. There is no
justification for holding that the integrity of the
notified scheme is not affected if the overlapping
is under five miles or because a condition has been
stipulated in the permit that the operation will
not pick up or set down any passengers on the
overlapped route."
In Adarsh Travels Bus Service v. State of U.P. & Ors.
[1985 Suppl. 3 SCR 661, this court held thus:
"Where a route is nationalised under Chap IV-A of
the Act, a private operator with a permit to ply a
stage carriage permit over another route but which
has a common overlapping sector
386
with the nationalised route cannot ply his vehicle
over that part of the overlapping common Sector,
even if with corridor restrictions, that is, he
does not pick up or drop passengers on the
overlapping part of the route.
While the provisions of Chapter IV-A are devised to
override the provisions of Chapter IV and it is
expressly so enacted, the provisions of Chapter IV-
A are clear an complete regarding the manner and
effect the "take over" of the operation of a road
transport service by the State Transport
Undertaking in relation to any area or route or
portion thereof. While on the one hand, the
paramount consideration is the public interest, the
interest of the existing operators are sufficiently
well-taken care of and slight inconvenient
inevitable are sought to be reduced to a minimum.
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A perusal of s. 68-C, s. 68-D(3) and S.68-FF in the
light of the definition of the expression ‘route’
in S.2(28A) appears to make it manifestly clear
that once a scheme is published under S. 68-D in
relation to any area or route or portion thereof,
whether to the exclusion, complete or partial of
other persons or otherwise, no person other than
the State Transport Undertaking may operate on the
notified or national route except as provided in
the scheme itself. A necessary consequence of
these provisions is that no private operator can
operate his vehicle on any part of portion of a
notified area or notified route unless authorised
so to do by the terms of the scheme itself. He may
not operate on any part or portion of the notified
route or area on the mere ground that the permit as
originally granted to him covered the notified
route or area. The private operator cannot take
the plea of inconvenience of the public. If indeed
there is any need for protecting the travelling
public from inconvenience the State Transport
Undertaking and the Government will make a
sufficient provision in the scheme itself to avoid
inconvenience being caused to the travelling
public."
The contention of Shri Harish Salve, the learned Senior
counsel for contesting respondents, is that the scheme of
nationalisation relates to "any area, route or portion
thereof". In Shri Chand’s case this court quashed the
387
draft scheme dated February 26, 1959 taking over the
Saharanpur-Shahdara-Delhi route. The fresh draft scheme
dated February 13, 1986 to nationalise Saharanpur-Shahdara-
Delhi route stood lapsed by operation of s. 100(4) read with
s.217(2)(e) of the Act. Therefore, the grant of permits to
the respondents is valid in law. In Shri Chand’s case this
court quashed the draft scheme dated February 26, 1959 as it
was an abuse of the process of law to keep draft scheme
pending for well over 26 years creating monopoly in favour
of the 50 existing operators who compete with the state.
The review petition filed by the U.P. Govt. in Shri Chand’s
case was rejected by this court. The result is that there
is no scheme on Saharanpur to Delhi route. The High Court
thereby was justified in dismissing the write petitions.
In H.C. Narayanappa & Ors. v. State of Mysore & Ors.,
[1960] 3 SCR 742 the Constitution Bench held that the scheme
framed under s. 68-C of the repealed Act is law within the
meaning of Arts.13 and 19(6) of the Constitution. It
excludes the private operators from notified routes or
areas. It immunes from the attack that it impinges the
fundamental rights guaranteed under Art. 19(1)(g). It also
could not be challenged as discriminatory. In Nehru Motor
Transport Co-op. Society & Ors. v. State of Rajasthan &
Ors., [1964] 1 SCR 220, another Constitution Bench held that
the Act 4 of 1939 (repealed Act) does not provide for review
of an approval once given though it may be entitled to
correct any clerical mistakes or inadvartent slips that may
have crept in the order. It was also held that once a
scheme was finally approved and published in the gazette, it
is final and the approval of the scheme was as a whole. In
Jeevan Nath Bahl’s case a Bench of three Judges of this
court held that the effect of the order passed by the high
Court in the first instanace was that the scheme in
existence must have statutory operation contemplated by
s.68-F of the Motor Vehicles Act and that the order of the
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High Court intended to prohibit the enforcement of the
scheme against two groups of the petitioners in the High
Court, namely then existing 50 operators who challenged the
scheme. It is seen that Bulandshahr or Delhi route was
nationalised by publication of the approved scheme in the
gazette on October 6, 1956 and the approval of Saharanpur-
Shahdara-Delhi route on September 29,1959 became final.
Therefore, the routes or areas therein stood nationalised to
the complete exclusion of the private operators except to
the extent under the scheme therein i.e. the 50 operators
against whome it was held not to be operative till their
objections are heard and decided by
388
the hearing authority.
In Mysore State Road Transport Corporation’s case, this
court per majority held that where a part of the Highway to
be used by private Transport owners traverse on a line on
the same highway on the notified route, then that
application has to be considered only in the light of scheme
as notiofied. If any conditions are placed then those
conditions have to be fulfilled and if there is a total
prohibition then the application must be rejected. If there
is a total prohibition then the application must be
rejected. If there is a prohibition to operate on any
notified route or routes, no licence can be granted to any
private operators, whose route traversed or overlapped in
part or whole of that notified route. The inter-section of
the notified routes must amount to traverse or overlapping
the routes because the prohibition must apply to the whole
or part of the route on the highway on the same line or the
route and inter-section cannot be said to be traversing the
same line. In S. Abdul Khader Saheb v. Mysore Revenue
Appellate Tribunal & Ors., [1973] 1 SCC 357, this court
approved the view of the Karnataka High Court that, when
once on a route or a portion of the route there has been
total exclusion of the operation of the stage carraige
services by operators other than the State Transport
Undertaking, by virtue of a clause in an approved scheme the
authorities granting permit under Chapter IV of the Motor
Vehicles Act should refrain from granting the permit
contrary to the scheme. In Adarash Travels’s case this
court by a Constitution Bench held that there is a total
prohibition of private operators from plying the state
carriages on the whole or part of the notified routes, even
though there is partial overlapping on the said route or
routes. The operation of the Road Transport Service by the
State Road Transport Undertaking in relation to that area or
route or portion thereof is total and complete prohibition
of the operation of the Road Transport Service by private
operators. The operation of the Road Transport Service by
the State Undertaking in relation to that area or route or a
portion thereof overrides the provisions of Chapter IV of
the Repealed Act 4, 1939. This court also rejected the
contention of the operators that on the nationalised
approved routes or overlapped route the private operator is
entitled to ply the stage carriages without picking up or
setting down any passengers on the common sector. This
court also negatived as lacking substance of the contention
that complete exclusion of private operators from common
sector would be violative of Art. 14 and that it would be
ultra vires of s. 68-D. This court approved the majority
view in M/s State Road Transport Corporation’s case and
Abdul Khader Shaheb’s case.
389
It is unfortunate that Jeevan Nath Bahl’s case was not
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brought to the notice of the two Judges Bench when Shri
Chand’s case was decided. Despite it being pointed out in
the Review Petition, the same was dismissed. The question
is what is the effect of the decision in Sri Chand’s case
over Jeevan Nath Bahl’s case. Consistent law laid down by
this court is that draft scheme under s. 68-C and approved
under s.68-D of Chapter IVA of the Repealed Act (Chapter VI
of the Act), is a law and it has overriding effect over
Chapter IV of the repealed Act (Chapter V of the Act). It
operates against everyone unless it is modified. It
excludes private operators from the area or route or a
portion thereof covered under the scheme except to the
extent excluded under that scheme itself. The right of
private operators to apply for and to obtain permits under
Chapter IV of the repealed Act (Chapter V of the Act) has
been frozen and prohibited. The result that emerges
therefrom it that the nationalisation of Saharanpur -
Shahdara - Delhi route approved and published on September
29, 1959 became final and to that extent it cannot be said
to have been quashed by this court in Sri Chand’s case. The
approved scheme is law operating against everyone except 50
objectors/operators and the writ issued by this court cannot
have the effect of annuling the law. What was quashed and
issue of fresh draft scheme pursuant thereto, relate to only
of original draft scheme operative against 50
objectors/operators and no more. Even on principle, the
decision of a Bench of two Judges cannot have the effect of
overruling the decision of a Bench of three Judges. The
fresh draft scheme under s.68-C dated February 13,1986 must,
therefore, be construed to be only in relation to 50
existing operators as per the directions ultimately emerged
in Jeevan Nath Bahl’s case.
The next question is whether the draft scheme dated
Feb. 13, 1986 stood lapsed under S. 100(4) of the Act. The
High Court relied on its earlier judgment and held that by
operation of sub-sec. 4 of s.100 of the Act the draft
scheme stood lapsed from one year of the date of its
publication. In Krishan Kumar v. State of Rajasthan &
Ors., [1991] 4 SCC 258 this court considered the effect of
s. 100(4) read with s. 217(2)(e) of the Act and held that
the rigour of one year period provided under s. 100(4) would
apply to the draft scheme published under s.100(1) of the
Act and it would not apply to the scheme framed under s. 68-
C and pending as on the date of the commencement of the Act.
On harmonious construction of ss.217(2)(e) and 100(4) of the
Act, the draft scheme published under s.68-C of the Repealed
Act would stand lapsed only if it is not approved within
390
one year from the date when the Act came into force i.e.
with effect from July 1, 1989 by which date it was pending
before the hearing authority and one year had not expired.
The hearing authority, therefore, wrongly concluded that the
draft scheme stood lapsed. The High Court also equally
committed illegality following its earlier view which now
stood overruled by this court in Krishan Kumar’s case.
Accordingly it must be held that the view of the High Court
and the hearing authority is clearly illegal.
The result of the above discussion will lead to the
following conclusions :
The nationalisation of Saharanpur - Shahdara - Delhi
route by publication of the approved scheme on September 29,
1959 is operating to the total exclusion of every private
operator except U.P. State Road Transport Corporation and 50
operators including the appellants herein whose objections
were upheld by the High Court in the first instance and
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merged in the judgment of this court in Jeevan Nath Bahl’s
case. Equally of Bulandshar to Delhi route. Under s. 80 of
the Act no private operator has right to apply for and
obtain permits to ply the stage carriages on the approved or
notified route/routes or areas or portion thereof. The
grant of permit to all the respondents 7 to 285 private
operators in C.A. 1198/92 S.L.P. No 9701/90) or any others
under s.80 of the Act on the respective routes or part, or
portion thereof to provide transport service is clearly
illegal and without jurisdiction.
It is true as contended by Shri Salve that in Mithilesh
Garg & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors., [1992] 1 SCC 168, this
court held that the liberal policy of grant of permits under
s.80 of the Act is directed to eliminate corruption and
favouritism in the process of granting permits, eliminate
monopoly of few persons and making operation on a particular
route economically viable and encourage healthy competition
to bring about efficiency in the trade. But the free ply is
confined to grant of permits under Chapter V of the Act. By
operation of s.98 of the Act, Chapter VI overrides Chapter V
and other law and shall have effect notwithstanding anything
inconsistent therewith contained in Chapter V or any other
law for the time result is that even under the Act the
existing scheme under the repealed Act or made under Chapter
VI of the Act shall have over-riding effect on Chapter V
notwithstanding any right given to private operators in
Chapter
391
V of the Act. No corridor protection to private operators
is permissible.
Accordingly we hold that the approved scheme dated
September 29, 1959 on Saharanpur - Shahdara - Delhi route
shall continue to be valid scheme under the Act. The U.P.
State Road Transport Corporation alone shall have the
exclusive right to ply their stage carriages on the said
route and Bulandshahr - Delhi route/areas or portions
thereof. By operation of the orders passed by the Allahabad
High Court which merged in Jeevan Nath Bahl’s case,
protection was given only to 50 private operators including
the appellants herein to be heard of their objections. The
fresh draft scheme dated February 13, 1986 had not been
lapsed and would continue to be in operation. It would be
confined only to 50 operators.
The 50 operators including the appellants/private
operators have been running their stage carriages by blatant
abuse of the process of the court by delaying the hearing as
directed in Jeevan Nath Bahl’s case and the High Court
earlier thereto. As a fact, on the expiry of the initial
period of grant after Sept. 29, 1959 they lost the right to
obtain renewal or to ply their vehicles, as this court
declared the scheme to be operative. However, by sheer
abuse of the process of law they are continuing to ply their
vehicles pending hearing of the objections. This Court in
Grindlays Bank Ltd. v. Income-tax Officer & Ors., [1990] 2
SCC 191, held that the High Court while exercising its power
under Art. 226 the interest of justice requires that any
undeserved or unfair advantage gained by a party invoking
the jurisdiction of the court must be neutralised. It was
further held that the institution of the litigation by it
should not be permitted to confer an unfair advantage on
the party responsible for it. In the light of that law and
in view of the power under Art. 142(1) of the Constitution
this court, while exercising its jurisdiction would do
complete justice and neutralise the unfair advantage gained
by the 50 operators including the appellants in dragging the
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litigation to run the stage carriages on the approved route
or area or protion thereof and forfeited their right to
hearing of the objections filed by them to the draft scheme
dated Feb. 26, 1959. Moreover, since this court in Jeevan
Nath Bahl’s case upheld the approved scheme and held to be
operative, the hearing of their objections would be a
procedural formality with no tangible result. Therefore,
the objections outlived their purpose. They are, therefore,
not entitled to any hearing before the hearing authority.
392
The appeals are accordingly allowed. The grant of
permits to all the respondents/private operators and
respondents Nos. 7 to 285 in C.A. No. 1198/92 (S.L.P. No.
9701/90) under s.80 of the Act or any others on the
respective routes, parts or portions of the nationalised
routes on Feb. 13, 1986 draft scheme ar quashed. The
hearing authority shall lodge the objections of the 50
operators including the appellants herein. The competent
authority shall approve the draft scheme of 1986 within a
period of 30 days from the date of receipt of the judgment;
and publish the approved scheme in the gazette. The permits
granted to the 50 operators or any other shall stand
cancelled from that date, if not having expired in the
meanwhile. No permits shall be renewed. Appropriate action
should be taken by respondents 3 to 4 in CA No. 1198/92
(S.L.P. No. 9701/90) to see that all the permits, granted to
the 50 operators including the appellants are seized and
cancelled. The U.P. State Transport Corporation shall
obtain required additional permits, if need be, and put the
stage carriages on the routes to provide transport service
to the travelling public immediately on publication of the
approved draft scheme in the State Gazette. The Appeal
arising out of S.L.P. No. 2083/91 is allowed with costs
throughout against respondents Nos. 4 to 13. The appeals
arising out S.L.P. Nos. 6300/91, 9701/90 and 9702/90 are
allowed without costs.
N.V.K. Appeals allowed.
393