Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF U.P. & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HINDUSTAN ALUMINIUM CORPN. LTD. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/04/1979
BENCH:
SHINGAL, P.N.
BENCH:
SHINGAL, P.N.
DESAI, D.A.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 1459 1979 SCR (3) 709
1979 SCC (3) 229
CITATOR INFO :
R 1981 SC 711 (10)
RF 1988 SC1737 (30)
R 1989 SC 788 (32)
ACT:
Electricity Act (9 of 1910), s. 2(h) & Electricity
(Supply) Act 1948 (64 of 1948) S. 2(b)-State Electricity
Board if a licensee.
Electricity Act 1910 (9 of 1910), S. 22-B (as inserted
in 1959)-Scope and object of-Order under section-Factors to
be taken into consideration & Electricity (Supply) Act 1948
(54 of 1948), S. 26 Proviso 2-Scope of.
U.P. Electricity (Regulation of Supply, Distribution,
Consumption and Use) Order 1977- Cl. 6(a) (i) Proviso-
Validity of.
Words & Phrases-’Regulation’, ’restriction’,
’prohibition’-Distinction between.
HEADNOTE:
At the time of granting licence to the company for the
establishment of a new Aluminium factory the Government of
India obtained the consent of the Government of U.P. To make
available to the company in bulk cheap electricity from the
Rihand Hydro-Electric Scheme. An agreement was entered into
between the Company and the State Government for the bulk
supply of electricity on a firm, continuous and
uninterrupted basis at 1.99 odd paise per unit for a period
of 25 years.
The company set up and commissioned its aluminium plant
at Renukoot in April, 1962. It was granted a further licence
for the expansion of its installed capacity. As the State
was unable to meet the extra requirement of energy, sanction
under s. 28 of the Electricity Act 1910 was granted to the
Company, at its request, on November 12, 1964, to set up a
generating station at Renusagar, near Renukoot. It set up
two generating units of 67.5 mw each. The first unit started
generating power in 1967 and the other in 1968.
In the meantime, permission was granted to increase the
Company’s installed capacity from 40,000 metric tonnes to
60,000 metric tonnes. The Company thought of setting up a
plant for the production of 60,000 metric tonnes of
aluminium in the State of Gujarat. But the Government of
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U.P. entered into negotiations with the Company and in its
letter dated November 20, 1968, it stated that there could
be no difficulty in meeting the interim requirements of
energy for 2 to 3 years from the U.P. State Electricity
Board and also for arranging for parallel running of their
new power stations. The Company was granted sanction to
expand the Renu Sagar Generation by 250 mw, and after
negotiations with the State Government it was agreed that
the U.P.S.E.B. would meet the additional energy under a
phased programme. The U.P.S.E.B. stated in its letter dated
September 2, 1972, that the supply would be without
prejudice to the power of the State Government to control
the
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distribution and consumption of energy under s. 22B of the
Act. The additional energy was not made available to the
Company during 1972-75 although the rate was substantially
increased with retrospective effect.
An agreement was however entered into between the
Company and the U.P.S.E.B. on November 30, 1976, in
supersession of the earlier agreements, and it was
stipulated that it would be read and construed in all
respects in conformity with the provisions of the
Electricity (Supply) Act, 1948 and its rules and the
regulations and the amendments thereto.
The State Government took a decision in December 1976
to reconnect some agricultural pumping sets which had been
disconnected and this placed an additional load on the grid
system of the State. On the note of the UPSEB that there was
acute shortage of energy, and its suggestion for the
imposition of some restrictions, the U.P. Electricity
(Regulation of Distribution and Consumption) order 1977, was
issued by the Government on April 7, 1977. Under cl. 6(a)(i)
of the Order, the Company could draw energy only to the
extent of 50 per cent of its monthly consumption.
As the shortage of energy became more acute the
Secretary of the Power Department sent a note to the
Governor dated May 3, 1977 stating that there was a large
gap between demand and availability of energy and that
overriding public interest, particularly the need to
maintain food supply, required that units which were heavy
consumers of energy should be subjected to further cut in
the consumption of energy. It was particularly pointed out
that as the Company was itself generating energy at
Renusagar, it will have more than 50 per cent of energy even
if the Board’s supply was completely withdrawn. The Governor
approved that proposal on June 1, 1977. A proviso was
inserted in cl. 6(a) (i) of the U.P. Electricity (Regulation
of Distribution and Consumption) Order, 1977 in June 2, 1977
according to which an industrial consumer having its own
source of generation of energy from which it obtained 50 per
cent or more of its consumption would suffer a cut of 100
per cent in the energy supplied by the UPSEB. The company
was given time to bring about the total cut.
Fresh elections were held to the State Legislature
Assembly, and the new Cabinet was sworn in on June 23, 1977.
It decided to reduce the supply of energy to the company to
zero, in pursuance of the amendment dated June 2, 1977 and
called for a fresh note on the position regarding the
generation and distribution of energy. The Chairman of the
UPSEB prepared a note on August 26, 1977, in which he
pointed out the shortage of energy, including substantial
fall in the generation of thermal energy, and in the
"import" of energy. The State Government made an order on
September 19, 1977 called the U.P. Electricity (Regulation
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of Supply Distribution, Consumption and Use) Order, 1977.
That order was made for maintaining the supply and
securing equitable distribution of electrical energy, and to
provide for regulating the supply, distribution, consumption
and use thereof. Clause 6 of the order which provided for
compulsory cut in consumption of energy and demand, affected
the company.
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The clause provided as follows:
"6(a)(i): In respect of electrical energy consumed by
all large and heavy power industrial consumers receiving
power at 33 kv. and above excepting fertilizers, from the
U.P.S.E.B. a cut of 50 per cent in their monthly consumption
of electricity both in respect of energy and demand shall be
exercised:
Provided that where any such industrial consumer has
his own source of generation of energy which alone enables
him to obtain 50 per cent or more of his total consumption,
then a cut of 100 per cent in the energy supplied by the
UPSEB shall be exercised."
Being aggrieved by the compulsory cut imposed by the
Government the company filed its third writ petition against
the order. The company’s earlier writ petitions were
dismissed as withdrawn.
The High Court took the view:-
(a) that it was the statutory obligation of the UPSEB
to supply electrical energy to a consumer and held that the
Pipri Bus Bar was a "distributing Main" under s.2(o) and was
an electricity supply line as defined in s.2(f) of the Act;
(b) s. 22B of the Act did not confer power on the State
Governments to cut off supply of energy to existing
consumers or to issue an order that certain preferences will
be followed in supplying energy, (c) though the company
deserved the writ, it could not be said that UPSEB had
deliberately under utilised its generation capacity, and
held the first proviso to Clause 6(a)(i) of the order ultra
vires, quashed it and directed the UPSEB to supply
electrical energy to the company in accordance with law,
without taking into consideration, the provisions of the
said proviso.
Appeals were filed in this Court by the State and the
Company, the State being aggrieved because the High Court
had interfered with the U.P. Electricity (Regulation of
Supply, Distribution, Consumption and Use) Order, 1977 dated
September 19, 1977 made under s. 22B of the Electricity
Supply Act, 1910 and the Company felt aggrieved on the
ground that the High Court had not granted all the reliefs
which it had claimed in its petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution.
In the appeals it was contended:
(a) Only the energy which was generated by the Board
could be the subject-matter of an order under s. 22B of the
Act and it was not permissible for the State to take into
account the energy generated by the Company for its own use.
(b) Sub-s. (1) of s. 22B of the Act was confined to a
licensee and would not be applicable to the energy supplied
by a sanction-holder under s. 28.
(c) The only permissible preference was that under
s.22A in favour of an establishment mentioned in it and the
preference shown to individual consumers was illegal.
(d) The validity of the Order, which was by way of
subordinate legislation, was open to judicial scrutiny; the
subjective satisfaction of the State Government in making it
was open to challenge in a court of law, the order suffered
from the vice of malice in law; it had been made in the
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colourable exercise of
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the power under s. 22B of the Act simply to compel the
company to agree to the payment of a higher rate for the
supply of energy to it. While making the order the State
Government failed to take into consideration the facts that
the production of aluminium was of considerable importance
to the national economy and that the Board was capable of
generating more energy but was not doing so. The issue of
the Order was really a colourable exercise of the State
Government’s power under s. 22B of the Act as power was
supplied indiscriminately to new consumers after imposing a
cut on the Company’s consumption of energy.
(e) The Board had deliberately reduced its thermal
generation.
^
HELD: 1. The High Court erred in taking the view that
the Pipri Bus Bar, which was composed of a set of conductors
which were made up of thick aluminium core steel reinforced
cables, was a ’distributing main’ under s. 2(e) of the Act
and was an electric supply line as defined in s. 2(f) and
that cl. VI of the Schedule to the Act would be fully
applicable to the Board in so far as its obligation to the
Company was concerned. In view of the second proviso of s.
26 of the Act of 1948, the provisions of cl. VI of the
Schedule to the Act could apply to the U.P.S.E.B. in respect
of that area only where distribution mains had been laid by
the Board and the supply of energy through any of them had
commenced. [724B-F]
The High Court, therefore, erred in taking the view
that the Board was bound by the term of cl. VI of the
Schedule to the Act to supply energy to the Company within
one month of the making of a requisition or within such
longer period as the Electrical Inspector might allow. But
even if the Board was under an obligation to supply energy
to every person, the fact nevertheless remained that the
State Government had the over-riding power to provide, by
order made under s. 22B of the Act, for regulating the
supply, distribution, consumption or use thereof. Sub-s. (2)
of that section categorically states that, without prejudice
to the generality of the power under sub-s. (1), the order
may direct the Board not to comply with any contract,
agreement or requisition for the supply of energy. [725B-D]
2. Sub-s. (1) of s. 28 of the Act in terms refers to
and deals with, engaging by a non-licensee, in the business
of supplying energy to the "public". It was, therefore,
futile to contend that what was generated by the Renusagar
Power Company was not meant for supply to the public, but
was the Company’s own energy. It is true that generation
became, in the circumstances, the "captive" generation for
the use of the Company, but that was far from saying that,
in the eye of law, it was not energy meant for supply to the
public or that it was not amenable to control under s. 22B.
It was therefore also liable to equitable distribution by an
order under s. 22B of the Act. [725G-726A]
3. The expression "energy" had been defined by cl. (g)
of s. 2 of the Act to mean electrical energy, generated,
transmitted or supplied for any purpose or used for any
purpose except the transmission of a message. It was
therefore a pervading definition and there was no reason why
energy generated and supplied under s. 28 of the Act should
not fall within its sweep. [726B-C]
4. Though the use of the article "the" in sub-s. (2)
was not quite appropriate, there was no justification for
the argument that section 22B was applicable only to
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licensees and not to a sanction holder under s. 28. [727C]
713
5. What s. 22B of the Act authorised the State
Government to do, was to make an order providing for
’regulating" the supply, distribution, consumption or use of
energy. [727D]
6. A distinction between ’regulation’ and ’restriction’
or ’prohibition’ had always been drawn. ’Regulation’
promotes the freedom or the facility which is required to be
regulated in the interest of all concerned, whereas
’prohibition’ obstructs or shuts off, or denies it to those
to whom it is applied. The High Court went wrong in thinking
that the order had the effect of prohibiting the supply of
energy to the Company, which was an ’exciting consumer’.
[727G-728C]
Municipal Corporation of the City of Toronto v. Virgo,
1896 AC 88; Attorney General for Ontario v. Attorney-General
for the Dominion and the Distillers and Brewers’ Association
of Ontario, 1896 AC 348; Birmingham and Midland Motor
Omnibus Co. Ltd. v. Worcestershire County Council, [1967] 1
WLR 409. Tarr v. Tarr. [1972] 2 WLR 1068; The Automobile
Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd. v. The State of Rajasthan & Ors.,
[1963] 1 SCR 491; State of Mysore v. H. Sanjeeviah, [1967] 2
SCR 361; Fatehchand Himmatlal & Ors. v. State of Maharashtra
etc. [1977] 2 SCR 828 at p. 851.
7. What had been ordered was no more than a cut of 50
per cent in the monthly consumption of electricity and not a
total prohibition of consumption of energy. That was a step
in the direction of regulating the consumption of energy,
and not a total prohibition as envisaged in the proviso to
cl. 6(a) (i) of the Order. [728E]
8. The proviso operates in a special or particular
field and for a particular purpose where it was considered
necessary for regulating the supply etc., of the energy in
the interest of the other consumers, for s. 22B was mean to
maintain the supply and secure the equitable distribution of
energy to all concerned. The High Court did not properly
appreciate that aspect of the matter. [728F]
9. Large and heavy industrial consumers of the category
in cl. 6(a)(i) are a class by themselves and it is hardly
permissible for them to complain that the small preference
shown to agriculturists in supplying energy for their water
pumps or tube-wells, or in energising State tube-wells,
supplying water to them, or the supply of energy to small
scale industries had really created a privileged class of
consumers or brought into existence any such concept of
priorities as to run counter to or defeat the objective of
bringing about the equitable distribution of energy by an
order under s. 22B. The High Court had no real justification
for recording an adverse finding against the State on the
question of the so-called preference or priorities. [729G-H,
730B]
10. There was no doubt that the State Government formed
its opinion about the necessity and expediency of making the
Order for the purpose of maintaining the supply and securing
the equitable distribution of energy at a time when that was
called for and this Court cannot sit as a Court of appeal to
examine any and every argument in an attempt to show that
the opinion of the State Government was vitiated for one
fanciful reason or the other. [731 G-H]
11. Although the U.P. Electricity (Regulation of
Supply, Distribution, Consumption and Use) Order, 1977, had
been made on the ground that the State Government was of the
opinion that it was necessary and expedient for main-
714
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taining the supply and securing the equitable distribution
of electrical energy, to provide for regulating the supply,
distribution, consumption and use thereof, it did not deal
with all those matters in detail. In fact it may well be
said to be an order relating essentially to compulsory cut
in the consumption of energy. But that cannot detract from
the basic fact that the order had the sanction of s. 22B of
the Act and subserved the main purpose thereof. Therefore
its validity was not open to challenge as a piece of
subordinate legislation. [732G-733B]
12. Malice in law is another aspect of the doctrine of
ultra vires. An offending Act can be condemned simply, for
the reason that it is unauthorised. Bad faith has often been
treated as interchangeable with unreasonableness and taking
a decision on extraneous considerations. In that sense, it
is not really a distinct ground of invalidity. It is well
settled that if a discretionary power has been exercised for
an ’unauthorised purpose’ that is enough to invite the
Court’s review. [733-D]
Roncarelli v. Duplessis, [1959] SCR 121 p. 141 (Canada
Law Reports); referred to.
In the instant case, the Company had not been able to
establish malice in law, merely because of what the Chief
Secretary said in his press statement dated July 8, 1977, or
what the Minister informed the Assemble. It may well be that
the new State Government was dissatisfied with the new
agreement which had been entered into at the instance of the
political party which was then in power, but it could not be
said that the new Minister’s desire to examining the
validity or propriety of that agreement arose out of any
extraneous or improper consideration so as to amount to
malice in law. [734H-735A]
13. Although the High Court arrived at the conclusion
that the company deserved the writ which it granted, it did
not find it possible to hold that the UPSEB, had
deliberately under utilised its generation capacity. That
was a finding of fact which did not call for interference.
[736E]
14. As long as the dominant motive was proper and
reasonable, and was not sullied by a mere pretext, the Order
based on it would be valid when it was well within the due
scope and policy of the Act and was an honest attempt to
deal with the situation for which the power to make the
order had been granted by the Act. There was thus no
justification for the argument that there was malice in law
on the part of the State Government in making the order.
[736G, F]
15. That distribution can be said to be "equitable"
which is "just and right under all the circumstances of the
particular case". The High Court had recorded a finding that
there was shortage in the generation of energy when the
order was made. The fact remains that the demand for energy
was far in excess of the supply from all sources available
to the UPSEB. It had also been well established that a
situation had arisen when it became necessary to obtain an
order from the State Government about the course of action
to be adopted by the Board. Self-contained notes were
therefore drawn up in March, 1977 and on May 24, 1977. June
28, 1977 and August 26, 1977, which were quite detailed and
objective and led to the making of the Order. The Order was
a genuine attempt to secure equitable distribution of
energy. It was true that the Company was the worst sufferer
under cl. 6 (a)(i) of the Order, but then it was also the
greatest consumer. [737C-F]
715
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16. From the Chief Secretary’s letter dated November
20, 1968 it appeared that the State Government had assured
the Company that it would meet the interim requirement of
the Company for 2 or 3 years from the UPSEB and facilitate
the parallel running of the Company’s new power station in
addition to the station which had been set up at Renusagar.
But the State was not a party to the agreement dated
November 30, 1976 for the supply of additional 30mw. because
the agreement was made between the Company and the UPSEB. It
was expressly stated in that agreement that it would be
subject to the provisions of the Electricity Acts of 1910
and 1948 and the rules and regulations thereunder, including
the amendments thereto. Care was also taken to provide that
the UPSEB shall not be responsible for damages or
diminutions in the supply of energy according to the orders
issued by the State Government. A similar provision was made
in the earlier agreement of 1959. In the Board’s letter to
the Company dated September 2, 1972 reference was
specifically made to the State Government’s power to
"control the distribution and consumption of energy under s.
22B of the Indian Electricity Act, 1910." [739A-D]
17. Decisions in the matter of restrictions to be
imposed on the consumption of energy on account of acute
shortage of energy in the State, were taken by the different
State Governments, including the Governor’s Advisors, and it
cannot be said that the cuts were imposed suddenly, or
without due regard to the company’s difficulties in reducing
its consumption of energy in the manner directed by the
order. It cannot therefore, be said that the State wantonly
disregarded its contractual obligation to the company.
[739E-F]
18. Sub-section (2) of s. 22B of the Act specifically
provided that it was permissible for the State Government to
direct by the order that the UPSEB shall not comply with the
provisions inter alia of any contract made by it. A
direction to that effect was expressly made in cl. 11 of the
Order, and so it is not permissible for the company to
complain on that account. [739G]
19. Craics on Statute Law (7th Edn.) pages 357-58 has
mentioned six different classes of enactments which are
considered as having ceased to be in force. These six have
been mentioned as the enactments which are selected for
inclusion in the Statute Law Revision Acts of England as
having ceased to be in force otherwise than by express
repeal, or having by lapse of time or otherwise become
unnecessary. [740G, 741D]
The question is whether the order could be said to have
"spent" itself or become "obsolete". Whether a piece of
legislation has spent itself or exhausted in operation by
the accomplishment of the purpose for which it was passed,
or whether the state of things contemplated by the enactment
has ceased to exist are essentially questions of fact for
the legislature to examine, and no vested right exists in a
citizen to ask for a declaration that the law has been
impliedly repealed on any such ground. [741E-F]
20. The power to legislate is both positive in the
sense of making a law, and negative in the sense of
repealing a law or making it imperative. In either case it
is the power of the legislature, and should lie where it
belongs. In an extreme and a clear case, no doubt, an
antiquated law may be said to have become obsolete-the more
so if it is a penal law and has become incapable of user by
a drastic change in the circumstances. But the judge of the
change should be the legislature, and courts are not
expected to undertake
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that duty unless that becomes unavoidable and the
circumstances are so apparent as to lead to one and only one
conclusion. This is equally so in regard to the delegated or
subordinate legislation. [741G-742A]
Elwood Hamilton v. Kentucky Distilleries & Warehouse
Co., 64 L.ed. 194; Chastleton Corporation v. A. Leftwich
Sinclair, 68 L.ed. 841; Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis
Railway v. Herbert S. Walters, 79 L.ed. 949; The Union of
India v. Ram Kanwar & Ors., [1962] 3 SCR 313; referred to.
The Petition of the Earl of Antrim & 11 Other Irish
Peers, [1967] AC 691; distinguished.
21. The High Court found three facts (i) the shortage
in the reservoirs for generation of hydel energy had ceased,
(ii) further supply of energy was available from newly
commissioned units, and (iii) fresh power connection had
been given by the UPSEB, but lost sight of the important
fact that it was all along the case of the State that hydel
energy was only one-third of the total generation, and that
generation of thermal energy which met two third of the
total requirement had declined for reasons beyond the
control of U.P.S.E.B. The High court did not therefore
undertake a careful examination of the facts, and took some
new connections into consideration without attempting to
examine their magnitude and effect on the overall generation
and availability of energy from all the sources. The High
Court therefore erred in taking the view that the
continuance of the Order was no longer justified. Even so,
the High Court abstained from striking down the whole of the
Order and merely declared that the provision of the first
proviso to cl. 6(a) (i) was ultra vires, and quashed it.
[743C-F]
22. Even though the proviso is valid and has wrongly
been quashed by the High Court, it is not necessary to
restore it in view of the statement of the Solicitor
General, so that it shall not be deemed to form part of cl.
6(a)(i) of the Order. But it there is deterioration in the
generation of energy again, or there are other sufficient
reasons, within the purview of s. 22B of the Act to reinsert
the proviso, in the present or modified form, it would be
permissible for the State Government to do so accordingly to
the law. [743G-H, 744C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 921/78
and 425/79
Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 27-4-1978 of the Allahabad High Court in Writ Petition
No. 3732/77.
M. V. Goswami for the Appellant (In CA 921/78)
S. S. Ray, D. Gupta, Shiv Dayal, N. R. Khaitan, U. K.
Khaitan and G. Mitra for the Respondent in CA 921/78 and
Appellant in CA 425/79.
S. N. Kacker, Sol. Genl. of India, G. C. Dwivedi, S. C.
Bhudhwar, S. Markendaya and K. Madan Mohan Reddy for U. P.
State Electricity Board (Appellant No. 2 in CA 921/78).
717
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SHINGHAL J.-These appeals by special leave arise from
the judgment of the Allahabad High Court dated April 27,
1978. While Civil Appeal No. 921 of 1978 has been filed by
the State of Uttar Pradesh, the U.P. State Electricity Board
and the Executive Engineer of the Rihand Power Station,
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hereinafter collectively referred to as the State, Civil
Appeal No. 425 of 1979 has been filed by the Hindustan
Aluminium Corporation Ltd., its Vice President and Chief
Accountant, hereinafter referred to as the Company. We have
heard the two appeals together and will dispose them of by a
common judgment.
The controversy relates to the supply of electrical
energy (for short "energy") for the production of aluminium,
which is the most modern of the common metals. Unlike the
other common industrial metals like iron, copper, zinc and
lead, pure aluminium is not produced by the direct smelting
of its ores. The metal is now produced by the modern
electrolytic method under the influence of direct current.
It takes about 10 kilo watt-hours of electricity to produce
a pound of aluminium, and the supply of cheap electric power
is therefore an essential requisite or raw material for its
production. The metal has many advantages and uses and has
gained such importance that it is an essential commodity
under the Essential Commodities Act and its production is
one of the scheduled industries under the Industries
(Development and Regulation) Act. While the State feels
aggrieved because the High Court has interfered with the
Uttar Pradesh Electricity (Regulation of Supply,
Distribution, Consumption and Use) Order, 1977, dated
September 19, 1977, hereinafter referred to as the Order,
which it made under section 22B of the Electricity Act,
1910, (for short the Act), the Company’s grievance is that
the High Court has not granted all the reliefs which it had
claimed in its petition under article 226 of the
Constitution. The Court’s record is much too voluminous, but
it appears to us that the appeals can be adequately disposed
of on the basis of the important averments in the lists of
dates drawn up by counsel for the parties about which there
is no dispute before us.
When the question of establishing a new aluminium
factory arose for consideration by the Government of India,
it took into consideration the consent of the Government of
Uttar Pradesh to make energy available for the factory from
the Rihand Hydro-electric Scheme which was expected to go
into operation by the end of 1960, and granted an industrial
licence to the Company on September 26, 1959, for the
manufacture of 20,000 metric tonnes of aluminium ingots per
year at Rihand. An agreement was also entered into between
the State of
718
Uttar Pradesh and the Company on October 29,1959 for the
supply of 55 m w of power on a firm, continuous and
uninterrupted basis at a rate of 1.997717 paise per unit for
a period of 25 years from the date of commencement of the
supply.
The Company set up and commissioned its aluminium plant
at Renukoot (near Rihand Dam) with an installed capacity of
20,000 metric tonnes per annum in April 1962. It was granted
a further licence for the expansion of its installed
capacity by 40,000 metric tonnes per annum. As the State was
unable to meet the extra requirement of energy, sanction
under section 28 of the Act was granted to the Company, at
its request, on November 12, 1964, to set up a generating
station at Renusagar, near Renukoot, through its subsidiary
the Renusagar Power Company Ltd. It had two generating units
of 67.5 m w each. The first unit started generating power in
1967 and the other in 1968. The 40,000 metric tonnes
expansion unit was commissioned in 1968. In the meantime the
Company was granted a licence in December 1966 for effecting
a further expansion of 60,000 metric tonnes per annum in its
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installed capacity for the production of aluminium.
The Company thought of setting up the plant for the
production of 60,000 metric tonnes of aluminium in Gujarat
State as it was informed by the Gujarat State Electricity
Board that it would be able to meet the requirement of
energy there at a rate of Rs. 320/- per kilowatt year, which
was much higher than the rate at which it was receiving
energy from U.P. State Electricity Board (U.P.S.E.B.). The
Government of U.P. held negotiations with the Company, and
it was decided that the Company would produce the additional
60,000 metric tonnes of aluminium also in Uttar Pradesh. The
Chief Secretary to the government of U.P. wrote a detailed
letter to the Company on November 20, 1968, in which the
position regarding the supply of energy was stated as
follows,-
"Regarding the power plant, I can see no difficulty in
meeting the interim requirements for 2 to 3 years from
the U.P. State Electricity Board, nor do I see any
difficulty in arranging for parallel running of your
new power station, with the U.P. State Electricity
Board."
The Company then addressed a letter to the State
Government on September 26, 1969 stating the position
regarding the supply and generation of increased energy for
the expansion of aluminum production as follows,-
"5(a) The Scheme of power supply for our expansion by
UPSEB is interlinked with the question of expansion of
719
Our Renusagar power plant and its parallel operation
with your system. The application for the expansion of
our Renusagar Power Plant has already been submitted to
your office, a copy of which is enclosed herewith for
your ready reference. The necessary permission for the
same is requested as early as possible.
(b) The emergency assistance under parallel
operation would be required for about 100 m w and the
terms and conditions for the same would have to be
decided simultaneously with the permission for
expansion of our Power Plant."
It may be mentioned that the Company was granted sanction to
expand Renusagar generation by 250 m w.
In 1972 the Company expanded its installed capacity for
the production of aluminium by 35,000 metric tonnes per
year. On its part, the U.P.S.E.B. sanctioned 110 m w
additional energy under a phased programme to be compelled
by June 1, 1975. It was clearly stated in the letter of the
U.P.S.E.B. dated September 2, 1972, that the supply would be
without prejudice to the power of the State Government to
control the distribution and consumption of energy under
section 22B of the Act. Reference in the letter was made to
the acute shortage of power because of scanty rainfall in
the catchment area.
It so happened that additional energy was not made
available to the Company during 1972-75 although the rate
was substantially increased (to 11 paise instead of 1.997717
paise) with retrospective effect from June 30, 1975, under
the new aluminium policy of the Government of India. An
agreement was however entered into between the Company and
the U.P.S.E.B. on November 30, 1976 for the supply of 85 m w
of energy on a continuous basis, for a period of 5 years, in
supersession of the earlier agreements, and it was
stipulated that it would be read and construed in all
respects in conformity with the provisions of the Act, the
Electricity (Supply) Act, 1948, and the rules and the
regulations and the amendments thereto The Company received
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that supply and was even promised an additional supply of 35
m w over a phased period from July 1977, but did not get it.
The Company was all the same able to raise its production of
aluminium to 95,000 metric tonnes by April 7, 1977, because
of the supply of 85 m w of energy.
In the meantime, the State Government took a decision
by the end of December 1976 to reconnect some 70,000 pumping
sets which had
720
been disconnected for non-payment of the electricity dues.
That placed an additional load of about 400 m w on the grid
system of the State. The Chairman of U.P.S.E.B. submitted a
note on the power situation which was likely to obtain from
April to July 1977. He pointed out that there was acute
shortage of energy and suggested the imposition of some
restrictions upto the end of July 1977 by when the demand
for agriculture was expected to decrease and the Rihand and
Matatila reservoirs would be filled up. That was proposed to
meet the needs of agriculture and related industries and to
meet the industrial demand to the extent possible. One of
the proposals was for a 50 per cent cut in the demand of the
Company and some other industrial units including Kanoria
Chemicals and Industries Ltd. That note came up for
consideration in the State Cabinet on April 1, 1977, and was
partially approved. The U.P. Electricity (Regulation of
Distribution and Consumption) Order, 1977, was therefore
issued on April 7, 1977. Under clause 6(a) (i) of the Order,
the Company could draw energy only to the extent of 42.5 m w
i.e. 50 per cent of its monthly consumption; but it was
allowed to draw 55 m w for the time being.
Uttar Pradesh came under the President’s rule on April
30, 1977, and the Company was allowed to draw 55 m w until
further orders. It is the case of the State that the
shortage of energy became more acute in the third week of
May. The Company, in the meantime, filed its first writ
petition [No. 1790(c) of 1977] on receipt of a letter of the
Executive Engineer (O.&M.), Rihand, that the power supply to
the Company should be cut off completely with immediate
effect. The writ petition was dismissed on May 20, 1977,
because of a subsequent letter by the Government requiring
the U.P.S.E.B. to continue the supply of 42.5 m w energy
instead of 55 m w in accordance with the aforesaid Order of
April 7, 1977.
The Secretary of the Power Department of the State
government sent a note to the Governor on May 24, 1977,
proposing some additional cuts in the supply of energy.
Decision thereon was deferred until information was obtained
from other States in regard to availability of energy to
aluminium plants. A fresh note was thereafter prepared for
orders. In that note dated May 31, 1977, it was stated that
there was a large gap between demand and availability of
energy and that was creating a serious imbalance requiring
load shedding on a large scale, and that had given rise to
discontent in all sectors of the economy and, in particular,
in the rural sector. It was also pointed out that overriding
public interest, particularly the need to maintain
721
food supply and the industrial production, required that
units which were heavy consumers of energy should be
subjected to further cut in the consumption of energy. It
was particularly pointed out that as the Company was itself
generating energy at Renusagar, it will have more than 50
per cent of energy even if the Board’s supply of 42.5 m w
was completely withdrawn, and that will service some 8500
pumping sets. It was, all the same, stated that the Company
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would continue to have 60 m w from the U.P.S.E.B. as stand
by supply as in the past. The Governor approved that
proposal on June 1, 1977. A proviso was, inter alia,
inserted in clause 6(a)(i) of the U.P. Electricity
(Regulation of Distribution and Consumption) Order, 1977, on
June 2, 1977, according to which the industrial consumer
which had its own source of generation of energy from which
it obtained 50 per cent or more of its total consumption
would suffer a cut of 100 per cent in the energy supplied by
the U.P.S.E.B. The Company was accordingly given time to
bring about the total cut.
In the meantime, the Company filed its second writ
petition [No. 2160(c) of 1977] along with an application for
stay. The High Court admitted the writ petition, but
rejected the application for stay. The Company then moved
this Court for special leave. The Hon’ble Vacation Judge
made an observation that the matter may be discussed by the
parties concerned, and the State agreed to give 20 m w of
energy to the Company for the time being.
Fresh elections were held to the State Legislative
Assembly, and the new Cabinet was sworn in on June 23, 1977.
It decided to reduce the supply of energy to the Company to
zero, in pursuance of the amendment dated June 2, 1977, and
called for a fresh note on the position regarding the
generation and distribution of energy. The Executive
Engineer, Rihand, accordingly asked the Company to reduce
the consumption to zero.
A detailed note was prepared by the Secretary concerned
on June 28, 1977, and it came up for consideration in the
Cabinet on June 30, 1977, but no decision was taken and the
note was kept pending. It appears that the Chairman of the
U.P.S.E.B. prepared a note on August 26, 1977, in which he
pointed out the shortage of energy, including a substantial
fall in the generation of thermal energy and in the "import"
of energy. It appears that the Minister concerned made some
statements in regard to the generation of energy in the
State and the position of the Company, but we shall refer to
them later when we deal with the allegation regarding malice
in law. It will be sufficient to say that the State
Government made the Order
722
on September 19, 1977, called the Uttar Pradesh Electricity
(Regulation of Supply, Distribution, Consumption and Use)
Order, 1977. It has undergone some amendments, but learned
counsel are in agreement that they have no bearing on the
controversy before us.
The Company filed its third writ petition (No. 3732 of
1977), against the Order, on September 26, 1977. It was
admitted the same day and the earlier writ petition (No.
2160 of 1977) was dismissed as withdrawn. The High Court
directed the Company to make an application under clause 10
of the Order, for exemption, but it was rejected all
December 9, 1977 when made. The High Court ultimately heard
and decided the writ petition by the impugned judgment dated
April 27, 1978 against which these appeals by special leave
have been directed as aforesaid. This Court made an order on
May 4, 1978 for the supply of 20 m w of energy to the
Company as a purely interim arrangement. That was raised to
35 m w by an order dated August 29, 1978, and the State is
now supplying 42.5 m w to the Company as an interim
arrangement.
These basic facts are not in dispute before us. We
shall examine the arguments of the learned counsel for the
parties with reference to them, after taking into
consideration the other well settled facts on which reliance
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has been placed by learned counsel, and with due regard to
the relevant averments of the parties.
The High Court has recorded a number of findings. We
shall have occasion to refer to those of the findings which
have been challenged before us. It may be sufficient to say
here that the High Court has worded the operative part of
its judgment as follows,-
"In view of the aforesaid discussion the
provisions of the first proviso to clause VI (a)(i) of
the Uttar Pradesh Electricity (Regulation of Supply,
Distribution, Consumption and Use) Order, 1977 dated
September 19, 1977 are declared ultra vires and are
quashed. The U. P. State Electricity Board is directed
to supply electrical energy to the petitioner in
accordance with law without taking into consideration
the provisions of the said proviso".
In order to examine the findings of the High Court
about the invalidity of the proviso to clause 6(a) (i) of
the order, it will be convenient to examine the relevant
findings of the High Court on the various points of law.
The High Court has taken the view that it is the
statutory obligation of the U.P.S.E.B. because of the
obligation of a licensee under
723
sections 18 and 26 of the Electricity (Supply) Act, 1948 to
supply electrical energy to a consumer. Reference in this
connection has also been made to clause VI of the Schedule
to the Act.
Clause (h) of section 2 of the Act defines a "Licensee"
to mean any person licensed under Part II to supply energy.
Section 26 of the Act of 1948 provides, inter alia, that,
subject to the provisions of that Act, the Electricity Board
shall in respect of the whole State, have all the powers and
obligations of a licensee under the Indian Electricity Act,
1910, and the Act of 1948 "shall be deemed to be the licence
of the Board" for purposes of the Act (of 1910). The first
proviso to the section excludes the application of some
sections, including section 22, of the Act, and the second
proviso states that the provisions of clause VI of the
Schedule to the Act shall apply to the Board in respect of
that area only where distribution mains have been laid by
the Board and the supply of the energy through any of them
has commenced.
While, therefore, the U.P.S.E.B. is a licensee under
the Act, it will be sufficient, for purpose of the
controversy before us, to say that section 22 of the Act is
not applicable to it, and clause VI of the Schedule is
applicable to it subject to the restriction contained in the
second proviso to section 26 of the Act of 1948. So even
though the Board is a licensee, the obligation under section
22 of the Act to supply energy to every person within the
area of its supply is not fastened on it.
The provisions of the Schedule to the Act are deemed to
be incorporated in, and to form part of, every licence
granted under Part II. Clause VI of that Schedule states
that where after distributing mains have been laid down and
the supply of energy through them has commenced, a
requisition is made by the owner or occupier of any premises
situate within the area of supply requiring the licensee to
supply energy for such premises, the licensee shall make the
supply and shall continue to do so in accordance with the
requisition. But, as has been pointed out, the second
proviso to section 26 of the Act of 1948 places a
restriction on that obligation for it says that the
provisions of clause VI shall apply to the Board in respect
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of that area only "where distribution mains have been laid
by the Board and the supply of energy through any of them
has commenced".
Clause (i) of section 2 of the Act defines a "main" to
mean any electric supply-line through which energy is or is
intended to be, supplied to the public. A "distribution
mail" has been defined by clause (e) of the same section to
mean the portion of any main with which a service line is,
or is intended to be, immediately connected. We
724
have also gone through the definitions of "electric supply-
line" and "service-line". They leave no doubt that a
"distributing main" is different from an electric supply-
line, for to it a service-line is immediately connected.
The High Court has stated that the Company gets its
supply from the Pipri Bus Bar, which is composed of a set of
conductors which are made up of thick aluminium core steel
reinforced cables, and has taken the view that the Pipri Bus
Bar is a "distributing main" under section 2(e) of the Act
and is an electric supply-line as defined in section 2(f) so
that clause VI of the Schedule to the Act would be fully
applicable to the Board in so far as its obligation to the
Company is concerned.
But as has been stated in the second proviso of section
26 of the Act of 1948, the provisions of clause VI of the
Schedule to the Act could apply to the U.P.S.E.B. in respect
of that area where distribution mains had been "laid by the
Board". It was therefore a question of fact whether that was
so, and had to be examined on the basis of the averments of
the parties to that effect. It is however not disputed
before us that the Company did not plead that distributing
mains had been laid by the Board for supply of energy to the
Company, or to any one else, from the Pipri Sub-station. The
State had therefore no occasion to controvert any such
allegation. This has in fact been admitted to be so by Mr.
Ray in his arguments, and the High Court went wrong in
recording a finding of fact against the State without any
basis for it in the pleadings. We have also gone through
section 18 of the Act of 1948 to which reference has been
made in the judgment of the High Court, but it is also of no
avail to the Company. The section makes a mention of the
general duties of the Board, but it does not make it
obligatory for it to supply energy to every person
irrespective of its practical difficulties.
The High Court has in fact quoted extensively from its
earlier judgment in Civil Miscellaneous Writ Petition No.
618 of 1972 to which one of the two Judges was a party. It
is not disputed, however, that when an appeal was taken
against that judgment, the writ petition was itself
withdrawn and was dismissed, so that judgment of the High
Court may not be said to have subsisted thereafter, and need
not have formed the basis of the finding of the High Court
against the Board in regard to its duty to supply the energy
asked for by the Company-the more so when the decision on
the point should have turned on the facts pleaded and
established on the record.
725
Mr. Ray for the Company has however invited our
attention to a decision of the Rajasthan High Court in firm
Sadul Cotton Ginning and Pressing Factory v. Rajasthan State
Electricity Board.(1) But that was a different case where it
was not pleaded by the Electricity Board that clause VI of
the Schedule to the Act was not applicable to it as the
distributing mains had not been laid by it. The High Court
therefore erred in taking the view in the present case that
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the Board was bound by the terms of clause VI of the
Schedule to the Act to supply energy to the Company within
one month of the making of the requisition or within such
longer period as the Electrical Inspector may allow. But
even if it were assumed that the Board was under an
obligation to supply energy to every person, the fact
nonetheless remains that the State Government had the
overriding power to provide, by order made under section 22B
of the Act, for regulating the supply, distribution,
consumption or use thereof. In fact sub-section (2) of that
section categorically states that, without prejudice to the
generality of the power under sub-section (1), the order,
may direct the Board not to comply with any contract,
agreement or requisition for the supply of energy etc. The
High Court erred in taking a contrary view.
It has next been argued that only the energy which was
generated by the Board could be the subject-matter of an
order under section 22B of the Act and it was not
permissible for the State to take into account the energy
generated by the Company for its own use.
It may be recalled that the Company applied for the
grant of sanction under section 28(1) of the Act to generate
120 m w of energy for the additional production of
aluminium. That was allowed and a notification was issued on
November 12, 1964, granting sanction to the Renusagar Power
Company Limited (a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company)
to engage in the business of supplying energy to the
Company. It has two generating units and 135 m w power is
being generated by the Renusagar Station for the exclusive
use of the Company, and it is this energy for which it has
been argued that it cannot be the subject-matter of an order
under section 22B.
But sub-section (1) of section 28 of the Act in terms
refers to, and deals with, engaging by a non-licensee, in
the business of supplying energy to the "public". It is
therefore futile to contend that what was generated by the
Renusagar Power Company was not meant for supply to the
public but was the Company’s own energy. It is true that
that generation became, in the circumstances, the "captive"
generation for the use of the Company, but that is far from
saying that, in
726
the eye of law, it was not energy meant for supply to the
public or that it was not amenable to control under section
22B. It must therefore be held that it was not amenable to
control under section 22B. It must therefore be held that it
was also liable to equitable distribution by an order under
section 22B of the Act.
The expression "energy" has been defined by clause (g)
of section 2 of the Act as follows,-
"(g) "energy" means electrical energy-
(i) generated, transmitted or supplied for any
purpose, or
(ii) used for any purpose except the transmission of a
message".
It is therefore a pervading definition, and there is no
reason why energy generated and supplied under section 28 of
the Act should not fall within its sweep.
We are mindful of the fact that while section 22B of
the Act occurs in Part II, the aforesaid section 28 is in
Part III, but that will not really take the supply of energy
under section 28 out of the control of section 22B. Part II
deals with "supply of energy" by licensee, while Part III
deals with "supply, transmission and use of energy by non-
licensees". But when it was thought necessary to vest the
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State Government with the power to give directions to
licensees (under section 22A), and to control the
distribution and consumption of energy (under section 22B),
it became necessary to insert sections 22A and 22B by Act 32
of 1959. The Legislature therefore inserted both the
sections in Part II which occurred earlier than Part III,
and under the broad fabric "Supply of Energy". As is
obvious, insertion of sections 22A and 22B would not have
been appropriate in Part III, and the Legislature cannot be
blamed if it preferred the inclusion of the two sections
together in Part II rather than in the residuary Part IV.
Moreover it is by now well settled that the true meaning of
a provision of law should be determined on the basis of what
it provides by its clear language, and with due regard to
the scheme of the law as a whole, and not merely by the
place it finds in the formation of its Parts or Chapters.
An ancillary argument has been advanced that if sub-
section (1) of section 22B of the Act is read with due
regard to sub-section (2), it will appear that, like sub-
section (2), sub-section (1) is also confined to a licensee
and will not be applicable to the energy supplied by a
sanction-holder under section 28. Our attention in this
connection has been invited to the use of the article "the"
in sub-section (2) while stating that the order made under
sub-section (1) may direct
727
"the licensee’ not to comply with the matters stated in
clauses (i) to (iii). The argument is untenable for two
reasons. Firstly, subsection(1) of section 22B refers to the
State Government’s power to control the distribution of
energy as a whole and not merely the energy generated by a
licensee, and there is no rule of construction by which the
restricted scope of sub-section (2), which deals only with
the licensees should govern the scope of sub-section (1) and
confine it to licensees. Secondly, the purpose of sub-
section (2) is to provide exceptions of the nature which are
peculiar to licensees and are necessary to save them from
the statutory obligations mentioned in the three clauses of
the sub-section. It appears that the use of he article "the"
in sub-section (2) is not quite appropriate, but we have no
doubt that there is no justification for the argument that
section 22B is applicable only to licensees and not to a
sanction holder under section 28.
What section 22B of the Act authorises the State
Government to do, is to make an order providing for
"regulating" the supply, distribution, consumption or use of
energy, and it has been held by the High Court that the
section does not confer the power to prohibit the supply of
energy to any consumer. The High Court has gone on to hold
that Parliament did not confer on the State Governments the
power to cut off supply to existing consumers. Mr. Ray has
supported the view of the High Court and has invited our
attention to the decisions in Municipal Corporation of the
City of Toronto v. Virgo,(1) Attorney General for Ontario v.
Attorney-General for the Dominion and the Distillers and
Brewers’ Association of Ontario,(2) Birmingham and Midland
Motor Omnibus Co. Ltd. v. Worcestershire County Council(3),
Tarr v. Tarr(4), The Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd.
v. The State of Rajasthan and others(5) and State of Mysore
v. H. Sanjeeviah(6). As against that the learned Solicitor
General has placed reliance on the view taken in Fatechand
Himmatlal and others v. State of Maharashtra etc.(7) that
’regulation’, if the situation is necessitous, may reach the
limit of prohibition.
It appears that a distinction between ’regulation’ and
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’restriction’ or ’prohibition’ has always been drawn, ever
since Municipal Corpora-
728
tion of the City of Toronto v. Virgo (supra). ’Regulation’
promotes the freedom or the facility which is required to be
regulated in the interest of all concerned, whereas
’prohibition’ obstructs or shuts off, or denies it to those
to whom it is applied. The Oxford English Dictionary does
not define "regulate" to include prohibition so that if it
had been the intention to prohibit the supply, distribution,
consumption or use of energy, the Legislature would not have
contented itself with the use of the word "regulating"
without using the word "prohibiting" or some such word, to
bring out that effect.
But where the High Court went wrong was in thinking
that the Order had the effect of prohibiting the supply of
energy to the Company, which was an "existing consumer". The
proviso to clause 6(a) (i) of the Order to which exception
has been taken, states as follows,-
"Provided that where any such industrial consumer
has his [own source of generation of energy which alone
enables him to obtain] 50 per cent or more of his total
consumption, then a cut of 100 per cent in the energy
supplied by the Uttar Pradesh State Electricity Board
shall be exercised."
What has therefore been ordered is no more than a cut
of 50 per cent in the monthly consumption of electricity and
not a total prohibition of consumption of energy. That is a
step in the direction of regulating the consumption of
energy as far as it goes, and it is overridden with the
further regulation contained in the proviso in the case of
an industrial consumer having its own source of generation
of energy "which alone" enabled him to obtain 50 per cent or
more of his total consumption so as to ensure even to him a
consumption of 50 per cent of energy and not a total
prohibition. The proviso therefore operates in a special or
particular field and for a particular purpose where it is
considered necessary for regulating the supply etc. of the
energy in the interest of the other consumers, for section
22B is meant to maintain the supply and secure the equitable
distribution of energy to all concerned. We are constrained
to say that the High Court did not properly appreciate this
aspect of the matter.
The High Court has gone on to hold that no power was
vested in the State Government under section 22B of the Act
to issue an order that certain preferences will be followed
in supplying energy. The High Court has found it established
that after power supply was totally "disconnected" by the
Board to the Company, "power supply connections were given
to the agricultural sector and agro-based industries." This
appears to be the High Court’s finding in regard to the
argument that the Order was bad as it was not permissible to
adjust the priorities
729
by an order under section 22B. Learned counsel for the
Company have argued that the only permissible preference was
that under section 22A in favour of an establishment
mentioned in it and that the preference shown to individual
consumers was illegal.
Now so far as clause 6(a) (i) of the Order is
concerned, it does not, by itself, provide for any
preferences or priorities, beyond excluding "fertilizers"
from the cut of 50 per cent on all large and heavy
industrial power consumers receiving power at 33 k v and
more. Clause 7 of the Order deals with "exemptions", and
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"fertilizers manufacturing establishments" have been
included there amongst the consumers to whom the cut
referred to in clause 6 of the Order shall not be
applicable. It has not been argued before us that it was not
permissible for the State Government to provide for
exemptions in an order under section 22B, and we have not
been referred to any such data or material on the basis of
which it may be possible to examine whether the exemptions
in question were in derogation of the concept of
"maintaining and securing the equitable distribution of
energy" under section 22B.
It may be that the State Government was of the opinion
that supply of energy to the agricultural sector and agro-
based industries was more necessary and would benefit the
state more substantially than the supply made to heavy
industrial consumers, but merely because any such preference
has been entertained by the State Government, it cannot be
said that it necessarily runs counter to the concept of
equitable distribution of energy stated in section 22B. In
fact counsel for the Company have repeatedly urged before us
that the cut of 50 per cent referred to in clause 6(a) (i)
was meant to deprive only a few consumers of energy, and
that the cut of 100 per cent under the proviso operated
exclusively against the Company. And it has to be
appreciated that clause 6(a) (i) deals only with large and
heavy industrial power consumers receiving power at 33 kv
and above, and it is hardly permissible for such a heavy
consumer as the Company to complain of any preference that
may have been shown to small consumers in the field of
agriculture, or agro-based or other small industries. The
fact remains that large and heavy industrial consumers of
the category mentioned in clause 6(a) (i) are a class by
themselves and it is hardly permissible for them to complain
that the small preference shown to agriculturists in
supplying energy for their water pumps or tube-well, or in
energising State tube-wells supplying water to them, or the
supply of energy to small scale industries has really
created a privileged class of consumers or brought into
existence any such concept of priorities as to run counter
to or defeat the objective of bringing about the equitable
distribution of energy by an order
730
under section 22B. No glaring instance of any preference has
been brought to our notice so as to raise in us a desire to
examine the question whether it was necessary or proper for
the State Government to provide guidelines for the small
preferences shown by it to the aforesaid consumers. In fact
it has been admitted in the written arguments which have
been filed and received in Court that, in the present case,
the company is "not sure as to what exactly has happened".
In such a situation, we are not persuaded that the High
Court had any real justification for recording an adverse
finding against the State on the question of the so-called
preferences or priorities. Learned counsel for the Company
were not able to refer us to any plea in the writ petition
about illegal priorities or preferences. Nor could they
refer to a plea that any preference or priority shown by the
State was the very antithesis of the concept of equitable
distribution which, for the purpose of maintaining the
supply of energy, was the very object of the Order. If any
such plea had been taken, it would have been permissible for
the State to take any defence that may have been open to
them. But merely because the word preference or priority has
been used by the State for the purpose of comparing the
grantees of energy in preference to the Company, or as a
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matter of priority over the consumption of energy by a giant
consumer like the Company, it will not be fair and
reasonable for us to hold that the State has established a
class of privileged consumers, and to set aside the grant of
energy to them in their absence and without examining the
facts and circumstances of their respective cases. The
purpose of the Order is to maintain the supply of energy and
to secure its equitable distribution. One such method was to
conserve energy by virtue of the provisions of clause 6(a)
(i). If that has been done according to law; and if the
resultant saving of energy is frittered away by showing
unlawful preferences or creating unlawful priorities by
other orders of an administrative nature, there is nothing
to prevent the aggrieved party, including the Company, from
challenging it according to the law, in an appropriate
proceeding, if so advised. But any such grievance cannot be
examined in these proceedings for the Order has the avowed
object of bringing about equitable distribution of the
conserved energy in an honest and forthright manner and
there is nothing on the record for us to hold otherwise.
It has next been argued that the validity of the Order,
which is by way of a piece of subordinate legislation, is
open to judicial scrutiny and that the subjective
satisfaction of the State Government in making it is open to
challenge in a court of law.
It will be enough for us to say that subordinate
legislation is by now a well-recognised form of legislation
for practical reasons. The modern
731
administrative machinery is quite complex and it is often
found difficult to pass complicated legislative measures
through the full parliamentary procedure and on a permanent
or durable basis. Even a carefully drafted Act may not work
well in actual practice. It may also be that the exact means
of achieving the object of an Act may not be adequately
comprehended all at once, and it may be useful to provide
for some elasticity in the actual working of a law. That can
best be done by leaving some of the details to subordinate
legislation. That is why some legislative powers are
delegated to executive authorities, subject of course to the
purpose and the scheme of the parent Act, the constant vigil
of the Parliament or the State Legislature, and the Judicial
control. These are reliable safeguards and with their easy
availability, it is no surprise that subordinate legislation
is now so voluminous that it may well be said to have
dwarfed the parent.
The grounds of challenging the validity of subordinate
legislation are well known. The challenge may be on the
ground that the power to make the law could not have been
exercised in the circumstances which were prevailing at the
time when it was made, or that a condition precedent to the
making of the legislation did not exist, or that the
authority which made the order was not competent to do so,
or that the order was not made according to the procedure
prescribed by law, or that its provisions were outside the
scope of the enabling power in the parent Act or were
otherwise violative of its provisions or of any other
existing statute. As it happens, none of these grounds or
circumstances has been shown to exist in the present case.
The High Court has taken the view that the Company was
unable to establish as a fact that there was no shortage in
the generation of energy at the time when the order was made
under section 22B. It is no body’s case that the State
Government was not competent to make the order, or that it
did not comply with any procedural requirement of the Act in
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making the order, or that its provisions (or any of them)
are outside the scope of the enabling power or are violative
of the provisions of any other law. We have examined some of
the points of law on which the High Court has found some
provisions of the order to be invalid, and we have given our
reasons for taking a different view. We have no doubt that
the State Government formed its opinion about the necessity
and expediency of making the order for the purposes of
maintaining the supply and securing the equitable
distribution of energy at a time when that was called for,
and this Court cannot sit as a court of appeal to examine
any and every argument in an attempt to show that the
opinion of the State Government was vitiated for one
fanciful reason or the other. It has to be appreciated that
the question whether the reasons which led to the
732
making of the order were sufficient, was essentially for the
State Government to consider.
The validity of the order has been challenged on the
ground that it suffers from the vice of malice in law. But
that is a point by itself and we shall examine it
separately.
It will thus appear that the above arguments which have
been advanced against the validity of clause 6(a) (i) of the
order are not justified. The whole of the clause reads as
follows,-
"6(a) (i) In respect of electrical energy consumed
by all large and heavy power industrial consumers
receiving power at 33 kv and above, excepting
fertilizers, from the U.P. State Electricity Board a
cut of 50 per cent in their monthly consumption of
electricity both in respect of energy and demand shall
be exercised:
Provided that where any such industrial consumer has
his own source of generation of energy which alone enables
him to obtain 50 per cent or more of his total consumption,
then a cut of 100 per cent in the energy supplied by the
Uttar Pradesh State electricity Board shall be exercised."
It thus deals with the consumption of energy by all
(excepting fertilizers) large and heavy industrial power
consumers receiving power from the U.P.S.E.B. at 33 kv and
above. It imposes a cut of 50 per cent in their monthly
consumption of energy. Then it adds the provision that where
such an industrial consumer has his own source for the
generation of energy which by itself gives him 50 per cent
or more of his total consumption of energy (provided for in
the main clause), then it will not receive any energy from
the U.P.S.E.B. as the cut in its supply will then be 100 per
cent. The clause therefore subserves the purpose of section
22B for, in a period of scarcity or insufficiency of the
supply, it will have the effect of regulating the same and
thereby securing the equitable distribution thereof.
It is true that although the order has been made on the
ground that the State Government is of opinion that it is
necessary and expedient for maintaining the supply and
securing the equitable distribution of electrical energy, to
provide for regulating the supply, distribution, consumption
and use thereof, and has been called the Uttar Pradesh
Electricity (Regulation of Supply, Distribution, Consumption
and Use) order 1977, it does not deal with all those matters
in details. In fact it may well be said to be an order
relating essentially to compulsory cut in the consumption of
energy. But that cannot detract from the basic fact
733
that the order has the sanction of section 22B of the Act
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and subserves the main purpose thereof, even though there
may be justification for the criticism that it does not go
far enough in its regulative enterprise in the expansive
field set out for it in the preamble. At any rate, it cannot
be said to be beyond the scope and the ambit of that
section, and its validity is not really open to challenge as
a piece of subordinate legislation.
It has however been strenuously argued on behalf of the
Company that the order should be struck down on the ground
of malice in law on the part of the State Government. That
no doubt is another aspect of the doctrine of ultra vires,
for an offending Act can be condemned simply for the reason
that it is unauthorised. Bad faith has often been treated as
interchangeable with unreasonableness and taking a decision
on extraneous considerations. In that sense, it is not
really a distinct ground of invalidity. It is well settled
that if a discretionary power has been exercised for an
"unauthorised purpose", that is enough to invite the Court’s
review, for as has been said quite widely but properly by
Rand J. in Roncarelli v. Duplessis,(1) malice is "acting for
a reason and purpose knowingly foreign to the
administration." But the question is whether this has been
Proved to be so in the present case.
Mr. Ray has argued on behalf of the Company that the
order is malafide, and has been made in the colourable
exercise of the power under section 22B of the Act simply to
compel the Company to agree to the payment of a higher rate
for the supply of energy to it. He has tried to establish
his argument on the basis of the statement of the Chief
Secretary of the State Government dated July 8, 1977 and
some statements of the Minister concerned. We shall examine
them separately.
What the Chief Secretary said in his press statement
dated July 8, 1977, was that the State Government had
reduced the supply of power to the Company from 85 m w to 10
m w and that it had been decided to almost double the rate
for the supply of the power which was being given to the
Company. It will be remembered that by virtue of the
amendment which was made to the U.P. Electricity (Regulation
of distribution and consumption) order on June 2, 1977, the
Company was required to reduce its consumption of the
Board’s energy to zero, but it was, nonetheless, allowed to
draw 30 m w for some time. That led to further directions
for the reduction of consumption, and ultimately an order
was made on June 29, 1977 for disconnecting the supply. A
representative of the Company met the Minister concerned and
explained the Com-
734
pany’s difficulties. He asked for permission to draw at
least 10 m w to keep the pots warm. The Minister agreed to
that request, but only against the standby agreement for the
demand of 60 m w. A letter to that effect was sent to the
Company on June 30, 1977. As under the standby agreement,
energy was to be supplied at the rate of 24 paise per unit,
instead of 11 paise, the Chief Secretary merely stated the
factual position on July 8, 1977. At any rate there is
nothing to show that the plea of scarcity of energy was
merely a ruse to charge a higher rate from the Company.
Mr. Ray has invited our attention to the statements of
the Minister concerned dated July 18, 1977, July 28, 1977,
September 14, 1977, August 29, 1978 and his reply to the
Company dated October 18, 1978, to show that the State
Government was not satisfied with the contractual rate for
the supply of energy as it was below the cost of generation,
and wanted to review and rescind the agreement altogether.
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We have gone through the record of the proceedings of the
Legislative Assembly and we find that what the Minister said
there was essentially correct that 10 m w energy was being
supplied to the Company under the standby agreement. It was
in that content that the Minister informed the Assembly that
the charges for the said standby supply came to 26-28 paise
per unit. The learned Solicitor General has taken us through
the relevant record to show that the Minister did not really
want to harm the Company unnecessarily, and if he stated
further that he was never approached personally by the
Company, or in a proper manner, or that the relief to the
Company would be considered depending on how it contacted
him for that purpose, the Minister simply wanted to state
the facts and to convey his resentment against the attempt
to influence him politically, or through any Minister of the
Central Government.
The State has in fact filed a chart with its
supplementary counter-affidavit about the supply of energy
to the Company from February 1973 to April 7, 1977. It shows
that during the period February 1973 to August 7, 1975 the
Company received energy from 27.50 m w to 1.25 m w. It was
only after the declaration of emergency on June 26, 1975
that the Company received some 55 m w of energy, and then a
fresh agreement was made soon after on November 30, 1976 to
supply 85 m w of energy. But even before that date, for a
sufficiently long period, the Company got far more energy
than what it was entitled to. We are therefore not satisfied
that the Company has been able to establish malice in law
merely because of what the Chief Secretary or the Minister
stated here and there. It may well be that the new State
Government was dissatisfied with the new agreement which had
been
735
entered into at the instance of the political party which
was then in power, but it cannot be said that the new
Minister’s desire to examine the validity or propriety of
that agreement arose out of any extraneous or improper
consideration so as to amount to malice in law.
Our attention has also been invited in this connection
to certain statements on behalf of the State Government and
the Board that energy was available in abundance, and it has
been urged that even so the Company was denied its supply in
spite of the agreements and the assurances of the State
Government to the contrary. That is a point relating to the
contractual rights of the Company and we shall come to it in
a while.
Then it has been argued that even though the State
Government professed in its affidavit that the cut in the
consumption of energy by the Company could not be restored
because of the desire to provide more energy for
agricultural purposes, that was not really so and that any
such attempt was in the nature of an extraneous
consideration which vitiated the implementation of the
Order. Reference in this connection has been made to the
Company’s averments in the supplementary affidavit that the
load on account of agriculture and irrigation had declined,
and there was in fact no diversion of energy to agriculture.
In order to examine the point, we directed the State to
prepare a statement for the entire period from January 1977
to December 1978. The Order was made on September 19, 1977,
and the statement shows that consumption of energy for
agricultural and irrigation purposes increased appreciably
thereafter, and there is no justification for the argument
to the contrary.
Another "extraneous" factor which is said to have been
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taken into consideration by the State Government in making
the Order is said to be its view that the major portion of
the aluminium produced by the Company was being consumed
outside the State. A similar objection was raised before the
High Court on the basis of an averment in the counter-
affidavit of the State. The High Court has, however,
recorded the finding that it would be "unsafe" to uphold
that contention, and we see no reason to take a different
view.
The other factors to which reference has been made as
extraneous factors which vitiated the Order are said to be
consideration of the facts that the Company had failed to
expand its generating capacity, the financial loss suffered
by the U.P.S.E.B. and the non-payment of the coal surcharge
by the Company. But there is nothing on the record to show
that these factors were taken into consideration at the time
of making the Order. It may be that those or somewhat
similar facts were mentioned
736
at one time or the other in answer to the complaint of the
Company, or in justification of what the State Government
had done, by way of defence, but that cannot justify the
argument that they formed the basis for the making of the
Order.
It has also been argued that while making the Order the
State Government failed to take into consideration the facts
that the production of aluminium was of considerable
importance to the national economy and that the Board was
capable of generating more energy but was not doing so.
Reference has also been made to the new aluminium policy
which the Central Government announced on July 15, 1975, and
to the benefits which the U.P.S.E.B. was deriving from the
aluminium products manufactured by the Company. But the
argument is untenable because there is nothing to show that
these factors were not taken into consideration while making
the Order, and an inference that they were ignored cannot be
drawn against the State merely because the Company was not
permitted to consume all the energy it wanted and there was
a fall in the production of aluminium because of the
restriction imposed by the Order. It may be that the
U.P.S.E.B. was capable of generating more energy, or that it
was not running efficiently and had not succeeded in
reaching its target of ideal generation. But here again it
will be enough to say that although the High Court arrived
at the conclusion that the Company deserved the writ which
it granted, it did not find it possible to hold that the
U.P.S.E.B. had deliberately under utilised its generation
capacity. That is a finding of fact which does not call for
interference by us.
There is thus no justification for the argument that
there was malice in law on the part of the State Government
in making the Order. It may be that the State gave an
impression, after the Order had been made, that it had some
spectacular effect on the fortune of the Company, or that it
had brought about such efficiency as to ensure supply of
energy to new entrepreneurs. It may also be that in doing so
the State over-stated its resources of energy in order to
open up a State which had not been able to develop its
industrial resources satisfactorily, but what has to be
examined in such cases is the true and the dominant purpose
behind the Order. And as long as the dominant motive is
proper and reasonable, and is not sullied by a mere pretext,
the Order based on it will be valid when it is well within
the true scope and policy of the Act and is an honest
attempt to deal with the situation for which the power to
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make the Order had been granted by the Act.
It has however been further argued by Mr. Ray that the
Order is invalid as it does not subserve the purpose of
section 22B of the Act inasmuch as it does not secure the
"equitable distribution" of energy.
737
Reference has been made to Jowitt’s Dictionary of English
Law, where "equitable" has been stated to mean "that which
is fair", and to Corpus Juris Secundum to show that
equitable is that which is done "fairly, justly and
impartially". Our attention has been invited to the facts
and circumstances which led to the establishment of the
Company in the State of Uttar Pradesh and the agreement with
and the assurances which were given to the Company. Our
attention has also been invited to the new connections which
were given by the U.P.S.E.B. to the other consumers while
denying the contractual supply of energy to the Company.
It cannot be doubted that only that distribution can be
said to be "equitable" which is "just and right under all
the circumstances of the particular case" (The Century
Dictionary). It will be remembered that the High Court has
recorded a finding that there was shortage in the generation
of energy when the Order was made. A great deal of
statistical data has been laid before us and Mr. Gupta has
tried to make full use of it on behalf of the Company. But
the fact remains that the demand for energy was far in
excess of the supply from all the sources available to the
U.P.S.E.B. It has also been well established that a
situation had arisen when it became necessary to obtain an
order from the State Government about the course of action
to be adopted by the Board. Self-contained notes were
therefore drawn up in March 1977, and on May 24, 1977, June
28, 1977 and August 26, 1977. We have gone through the notes
and they are quite detailed and objective. We have made a
mention of the developments which took place because of
those notes, including the making of the Order. We have no
doubt that it was made because a situation had arisen when
regulation of the supply, distribution, consumption and use
of energy had become necessary, and the Order was a genuine
attempt to secure equitable distribution of energy. It is
true that the Company was the worst sufferer under clause
6(a)(i) of the Order, but then it was also the greatest
consumer.
The basis for the making of the Order was the necessity
or expediency for maintaining the supply and securing the
equitable distribution of energy by means of an order
providing for the regulation of the supply, distribution,
consumption and use of energy. It has been argued by Mr. Ray
that as power was supplied indiscriminately to new consumers
after imposing a cut on the Company’s consumption of energy,
the issue of the Order was really a colourable exercise of
the State Government’s power under section 22B of the Act.
Our attention in this connection has been invited to the
averments in the affidavits which have been filed on behalf
of the Company and to a
738
list of new connections filed as Annexure to the
supplementary rejoinder affidavit of Suresh Chandra, Special
Officer of the Company. Reference has also been made to a
list of new connections filed in the High Court on March 6,
1978. Learned Solicitor General has however pointed out that
even if all the new connections were to become effective
within a period of two years, their incidence would be no
more than 4 per cent of the total connected load as the real
impact on the system would merely be an additional load of
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only 18 m.w. It has also been pointed out that while there
was an increase of 9 per cent in the installed capacity of
the U.P.S.E.B. for the generation of energy, the increase in
the connected load was not more than 2 per cent. We have
been informed that the percentage increase in the connected
load had declined from 10 in 1974-75 to 2 in 1977-78, which
showed that great care was being taken in incurring extra
liability. The State has also filed a list of those
applicants to whom new connections were sanctioned, but were
not actually released, making a total of some 23 mw.
It has been urged on behalf of the Company that the
Board had deliberately reduced its thermal generation. It
has been pointed out that while there was a substantial
increase in hydro-electrical generation, the performance in
the thermal field was highly unsatisfactory. The State has
supplied the necessary information which shows that the fall
in thermal generation was due to the initial troubles of new
plants, the poor performance of the plants, and the
breakdown at Harduaganj. We have been informed that the
performance of the U.P.S.E.B. was better than the Boards in
the other States. We have also been told that the
proposition that there was deliberate under-capacity
operation of thermal machines is technically unsound because
of the operating constraints in running the large thermal
machines at loads lower than the rated capacity. We have
made a reference to the finding of the High Court against
the Company in this respect.
Another aspect of the controversy before us relates to
the contractual liability of the State to supply the energy
which it had assured to the Company. It has been pointed out
that under the agreement dated October 29, 1959, the State
was bound to supply 55 m w of energy upto 1987 and then an
agreement was entered into on November 30, 1976, to supply
additional 30 m w, making a total of 85 m w for a period of
5 years. It has therefore been argued that instead of
fulfilling its obligation under the agreements and the other
assurances which were given by the State from time to time,
the State took resort to the provisions of section 22B to
get out of its obligation and the making of the impugned
Order was really a colourable exercise of that statutory
power.
739
We find from the counter-affidavit of the State
(October, 1977) that, as would appear from the Chief
Secretary’s letter dated November 20, 1968, what the State
Government had assured the Company was to meet the interim
requirement of the Company for 2 or 3 years from the
U.P.S.E.B. and to facilitate the parallel running of the
Company’s new power station, in addition to the station
which had been set up at Renusagar. It is also not without
significance that the State was not a party to the agreement
dated November 30, 1976, for the supply of additional 30
m.w., because that agreement was made between the Company
and the U.P.S.E.B. It was in fact expressly stated in that
agreement that it would be subject to the provisions of the
Electricity Acts of 1910 and 1948 and the rules and
regulations, including the amendments thereto. Care was also
taken to provide that the U.P.S.E.B. shall not be
responsible for damages or diminutions in the supply of
energy according to the orders issued by the State
Government, A similar provision was made in the earlier
agreement of 1959. Reference was in fact specifically made
in the Board’s letter to the Company dated September 2,
1972, to the State Government’s power to "control the
distribution and consumption of energy under section 22B of
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the Indian Electricity Act, 1910".
We have made a reference to the manner and the stages
in which the State Government took decisions for the
restrictions to be imposed on the consumption of energy with
due regard to the detailed factual notes which were
submitted for its orders on account of the acute shortage of
energy in the State. Decisions in the matter were taken by
the different State Governments, including the Governors’
Advisors, and it cannot be said that the cuts were imposed
suddenly, or without due regard to the Company’s
difficulties in reducing its consumption of energy in the
manner directed by the Order. We are therefore unable to
take the view that the State wantonly disregarded its
contractual obligations to the Company. But even if the
Company had some cause of grievance on that account, that
may well be said to be unavoidable, in the situation which
had arisen when the Order was made on September 19, 1977. It
has to be appreciated that subsection (2) of section 22B of
the Act specifically provided that it was permissible for
the State Government to direct by the Order that the
U.P.S.E.B. shall not comply with the provision, inter alia,
of any contract made by it. A direction to that effect was
expressly made in clause 11 of the Order, and it is not
permissible for the Company to complain on that account.
It is not disputed that the consumers which were hit by
the provisions of clause 6(a) (i) of the Order were the
Company, the Kanoria
740
Chemicals and Industries Ltd., the Indian Railways, the
Indian Explosives Ltd., and the Fertiliser Corporation of
India. The last three of these have been exempted from the
rigour of the Order. As regards the Kanoria Chemicals and
Industries Ltd., the State has stated in its reply that it
was manufacturing Benzena Chloride and BHC which are used
for agricultural purposes and for purifying drinking water.
They were entitled to 50 per cent of their consumption, and
the State allowed them exemption to the extent of 3 m w
making it permissible for them to consume 12.5 m.w. It
cannot therefore be said that the continued supply of energy
to Kanoria Chemicals was proof of any hostility on the part
of the State in so far as the Company was concerned. It may
also be that, as has been argued on behalf of the Company,
some other restrictions which were initially imposed on some
other consumers under the Order were withdrawn, so that it
is the Company which is the main sufferer under the Order.
Even so, it is not reasonable to take the view that the
Order was not justified when it was made, and it cannot be
held to be invalid merely because the Company is the main
sufferer under it. It is not its case that the Order was
discriminatory and should be struck down under article 14 of
the Constitution. As has been stated the High Court has in
fact found that the Company was "unable to establish as a
fact that there was no shortage in the generation of
electricity when the impugned Order was made under section
22B of the Act of 1910."
The Order was therefore justified and was a valid Order
when it was made on September 19, 1977. The question is
whether there is force in the argument that it has ceased to
be in force and stood impliedly repealed because of the
change in the circumstances which brought it into existence.
The High Court has recorded a finding in this connection in
favour of the Company.
Craies on Statute Law, seventh edition, has mentioned
six different classes of enactments at pages 357-8 which are
considered as having ceased to be in force,-
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"1. Expired-that is, enactments which having been
originally limited to endure only for a specified
period by a distinct provision, have not been
either perpetuated or kept in force by
continuance, or which have merely had for their
object the continuance of previous temporary
enactments for periods now gone by effluxion of
time;
2. Spent-that is, enactments spent or exhausted in
operation by the accomplishment of the purposes
for which they were passed, either at the moment
of their first
741
taking effect or on the happening of some event or
on the doing of some act authorised or required;
3. Repealed in general terms-that is, repealed by the
operation of an enactment expressed only in
general terms as distinguished from an enactment
specifying the Acts on which it is to operate;
4. Virtually repealed-where an earlier enactment is
inconsistent with, or is rendered nugatory by, a
later one;
5. Superseded-where a later enactment effects the
same purposes as an earlier one by repetition of
its terms or otherwise;
6. Obsolete-where the state of things contemplated by
the enactment has ceased to exist, or the
enactment is of such a nature as to be no longer
capable of being put in force, regard being had to
the alteration of political or social
circumstances."
These six have been mentioned as the enactments which are
selected for inclusion in the Statute Law Revision Acts of
England as having ceased to be in force otherwise than by
express repeal, or having by lapse of time or otherwise
become unnecessary. It is quite an exhaustive list and the
question is whether the Order could be said to have "spent"
itself or become "obsolete", for the other four categories
are inapplicable to the present case. But whether a piece of
legislation has spent itself or exhausted in operation by
the accomplishment of the purpose for which it was passed,
or whether the state of things contemplated by the enactment
has ceased to exist, are essentially questions of fact for
the Legislature to examine, and no vested right exists in a
citizen to ask for a declaration that the law has been
impliedly repealed on any such ground.
It has to be appreciated that the power to legislate is
both positive in the sense of making a law, and negative in
the sense of repealing a law or making it inoperative. In
either case, it is a power of the Legislature, and should
lie where it belongs. Any other view will be hazardous and
may well be said to be an encroachment on the legislative
field. In an extreme and a clear case, no doubt, an
antiquated law may be said to have become obsolete-the more
so if it is a penal law and has become incapable of user by
a drastic change in the circumstances. But the judge of the
change should be the Legislature, and courts are not
expected to undertake that duty unless that becomes
unavoidable and the circumstances are so apparent
742
as to lead to one and only one conclusion. This is equally
so in regard to the delegated or subordinate legislation.
We have gone through the cases reported in Elwood
Hamilton v. Kentucky Distilleries & Warehouse Co.,(1)
Chastleton Corporation v. A. Leftwich Sinclair(2) and
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Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway v. Herbert S.
Walters(3) on which reliance has been placed by Mr. Ray, but
they are of no real help to the Company. Thus in Elwood
Hamilton(1) it has been held that it requires "a clear case"
to justify a court in declaring that a Federal Statute
adopted to increase war efficiency has ceased to be valid,
on the theory that the war emergency has passed and the
power of Congress no longer exists. In Chastleton
Corporation(2) it has been held that courts would pronounce
on the continued operation of law upon facts which they
"judicially know." We have also gone through Nashville(3)
case where the view has been taken that a statute valid when
enacted may become invalid by change in the conditions to
which it is applied. We have gone through The petition of
the Earl of Antrim and Eleven other Irish Peers(4) also
where a declaration was asked for by some Irish Peers that
the peerage of Ireland had in accordance with the provisions
of the Union with Ireland Act, 1800, the right to be
represented by 28 Lords temporal of Ireland for life. Their
petition was rejected because the provisions of the Act of
1800 had ceased to be effective on the passing of the Irish
Free State (Agreement) Act, 1922. That was therefore quite a
different case. Mr. Ray has placed reliance on Pannalal
Lahoti v. State of Hyderabad,(5) but what has been held
there is that a temporary legislation cannot be allowed to
outlast the war emergency which "brought it forth". In The
Union of India v. Ram Kanwar and others(6) it was held that
as the building in question was being used for a purpose
other than that for which it was originally requisitioned
under the law, it was liable to be de-requisitioned. The
question is whether any such situation has been found to be
established in the present case ?
Now what the High Court has found in this respect is as
follows,-
"This Court finds that circumstances have
materially changed since the impugned order was made.
The shortage in reservoir from which water is drawn for
the generation of
743
Hydro-electricity has ceased and further supplies of
electrical energy are available from newly commissioned
units. The respondents admit that fresh power
connections have been given. In these circumstances,
the continuance of the impugned order is no longer
justified and consequently, the order must be held to
have outlived the purpose for which it was made and, as
such, it must be held to be no longer valid.’
It has thus found three facts: (i) the shortage in the
reservoir(s) for generation of hydel energy had ceased, (ii)
further supply of energy was available from newly
commissioned units, and (iii) fresh power connections had
been given by the U.P.S.E.B. But what was lost sight of was
the important fact that it was all along the case of the
State that hydel energy was only one-third of the total
generation, and that generation of thermal energy which met
two-third of the total requirement had declined for reasons
beyond the control of U.P.S.E.B. The High Court did not
therefore undertake a careful examination of the facts, and
took some new connections into consideration without
attempting to examine their magnitude and effect on the over
all generation and availability of energy from all the
sources. The State has filed a detailed affidavit dated
October 12, 1978, where it has been stated that the
U.P.S.E.B. was at best capable of generating electrical
energy to the "tune of 10,185 m u," whereas the total
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requirement of the State for 1978-79 was 13,866 m u so that
there was a gap of 393 m u. The High Court therefore erred
in taking the view that the continuance of the order was no
longer justified.
Even so, the High Court abstained from striking down
the whole of the Order and merely declared that the
provisions of the first proviso to clause 6(a) (i) was ultra
vires, and quashed it.
We have given our reasons for taking the view that the
whole of clause 6(a) (i) of the order, including the
proviso, is valid, and the question remains whether we
should restore the quashed proviso. The answer to the
question is simple. The learned Solicitor General has made a
statement at the Bar that at present, or in the near future,
there is no difficulty in supplying 42.5 m w energy to the
Company, and that the Company is getting that much energy
already. He has been frank enough to say that this will be
so even if the proviso is restored by this Court. He has
stated that the State Government has been reviewing the
position from time to time, and has given the
744
assurance that it will continue to do so in future. He has
also stated that although the application of the Company for
grant of exemption under clause 10 of the Order had been
rejected on December 9, 1977, there is nothing to prevent
the Company from making a fresh application if it thinks
that there is a real and substantial improvement in the
generation of energy in the State. The fact therefore
remains that, as things stand at present, the proviso, which
admittedly applies only to the Company, is of no practical
use for the time being. So even though it is valid and has
wrongly been quashed by the High Court, we do not think it
necessary to restore it, so that it shall not be deemed to
form part of clause 6(a) (i) of the Order. But if there is
deterioration in the generation of energy again, or there
are other sufficient reasons within the purview of section
22B of the Act to reinsert the proviso, in the present or
modified form, it will be permissible for the State
Government to do so according to the law.
In the result, while C.A. No. 921 of 1978 is allowed to
the extent mentioned above, C.A. No. 425 of 1979 fails and
is dismissed. In the circumstances of the case, the parties
shall pay and bear their own costs in both the appeals.
N.V.K. C.A. 921/78 allowed.
C.A. 425/79 dismissed.
745