Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
V.C. K. BUS SERVICE LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE REGIONAL TRANSPORT AUTHORITY, COIMBATORE
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/02/1957
BENCH:
ACT:
Road Transport-Permit for stage carriage-Rerewal-Whether a
continuation of the original Permit-Whether subject to
implied condition of validity of the original Permit-Motor
Vehicles Act, 1939 (IV Of 1939), ss. 57, 58.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was granted a permit for stage carriage by the
Regional Transport Authority under the provisions of the
Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, but on appeal to the appellate
authority, the Central Road Traffic Board, by the
unsuccessful applicants the order granting the permit was
set aside and the order of the Central Road Traffic Board
was approved by the Government in revision. The appellant,
thereupon, moved the High Court for a writ of certiorari to
quash the proceedings of the Central Road Traffic Board and
the Goverment. During the pendency of these proceedings
there was a stay of operation of the order setting aside the
grant of the permit to the Appellant, with the result that
be continued to run his buses notwithstanding the
cancellation of his permit. Before the expiry of the period
fixed in the original
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permit, he applied for and got a renewal of the permit from
the Regional Transport Authority under s. 58 of the Act.
The High Court finally dismissed the application for a writ
of certiorari and ’the question arose as to the validity of
the renewal of the permit in view of the High Court’s
decision. The matter was raised before the High Court once
again by proceedings under Art. 226 of the Constitution and
the High Court held that the renewal having been obtained on
the basis of a permit which had been subsequently cancelled,
it could not be regarded as a fresh permit, that when the
original permit was set aside, it must be taken to be non
est for all purposes, and I that the renewal must therefore
be held to be a nullity. The appellant appealed to the
Supreme Court.
Held:(1) Under the provisions of the Motor Vehicles Act,
1949 and the rules framed thereunder, a renewal is a
continuation of the original permit. When the original
permit was renewed in favour of the appellant it was subject
to the decision of the High Court in the proceedings under
Art. 226 of the Constitution which were then pending and,
therefore, when the order granting the original permit was
fin ally set aside the renewed permit became void.
Anjiah v. Regional Transport Officer, Guntur, 1956 Andhra
Law Times, 347, disapproved.
(2)When the appellant applied for a renewal of his permit
under s. 58 of the Act and not merely for a fresh permit the
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order of the Regional Transport Authority granting the
renewal must be held to have been made subject to the
implied condition that the right of the appellant to the
original permit is recognized by the High Court and that
accordingly, in the event that had happened, the renewed
permit ceased to, be effective.,.
Veerappa Pillai v. Raman & Raman Ltd., (1952) S.C.R. 583,
explained and distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals No&323 and 324
of 1956.
Appeal from the judgment and orders dated April 27, and July
13, 1956, of the Madras High Court in Writ Appeals Nos. 42
and 88 of 1956 arising out of the orders dated March 23, and
July 9, 1956, of the said High Court in Writ Petitions Nos.
333 and 564 of 1956.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, J. B. Dadachanji, S. N. Andley
and Rameshwar Nath, for the appellant.
Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India,, R. Gan. pathy Iyer
and R. Gopalkrishnan, for respondents Nos. 3 and 4.
665
1957. February 19. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
VENKATARAMA AYYAR J.-These are appeals against the judgment
of the High Court of Madras on a certificate given under
Art. 133 (1) (c) of the Constitution, and they raise a
question of some importance as to the true legal character
of a permit when it is renewed under the provisions of the
Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (IV of 1939) hereinafter referred
to as the Act.
In order to appreciate the contentions of the parties, it is
necessary to state the material facts leading up to the
present dispute. Towards the end of 1952, the appropriate
authorities under the Act decided to grant two additional
permits for stage carriages in the Ondipudur-Agricultural
College route in the town of Coimbatore in the State of
Madras,, and invited applications therefor under s. 57 of
the Act. There were as many as 39 applicants, and by his
order dated December 3, 1952, the Regional Transport
Authority granted one permit to applicant No. 24, the
Thondamuthur Trading Company Ltd., and another to applicant
No. 30, the V.C.K. Bus Service. There were appeals by some
of the unsuccessful applicants to the Central Road Traffic
Board, which by its order dated February 19, 1953, set aside
the order of the Regional Transport Authority and granted
the permits, one to Stanes Transports Ltd., and another to
Thirumalaiswami Goundar. Revisions were preferred against
this order by the aggrieved applicants under s. 64-A of the
Act, and by its order dated July 9, 1953, the Government
confirmed the grant of the permit to Stanes Transports
,Ltd., but set aside the permit given to Thirumalaiswami
Goundar, and granted it instead to Annamalai Bus Transport
Ltd.
Thereupon, applicants Nos. 24 and 30 moved the High Court
of Madras under Aft. 226 for a writ of certiorari to quash
the order of the Central Road Traffic Board dated February
19, 1953 and of the Government dated July 9, 1953; but the
applications were dismissed by Rajagopala Ayyangar J. on
March 8, 1954. Against the orders of dismissal, Writ
Appeals Nos. 31 and 32 of 1954 were preferred, and they were
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dismissed by Rajamannar C. J. and Panchapakesa Ayyar J. on
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March 21, 1956. It should be mentioned that the operation
of ’the order dated February 19, 1953 was stayed pending the
disposal of the revision under s. 64-A and the writ
proceedings in the High Court, with the result that both
Thondamuthur Trading Company Ltd. and V.C.K. Bus Service
which had been granted permits by the Regional Transport
Authority on December 3, 1952, continued to run their buses
notwithstanding cancellation of those permits on February
19, 1953. It should also be mentioned that in June 1954 the
business of the V.C.K. Bus Service which was the grantee of
one of the permits under the order of the Regional Transport
Authority dated December 3, 1952, was taken over by a
Company called the V.C.K. Bus Service Ltd., which is the
appellant before us, and by an order of the Regional
Transport Authority dated July 7, 1954, it was recognised as
the transferee of the permit granted to V.C.K. Bus Service.
To continue the narrative, the permit which was the subject-
matter of the litigation aforesaid was for a period of one
year and a half, and it expired on June 30, 1954. Before
its expiry, the appellant applied on April 15, 1954, for a
renewal thereof for a period of three years. This
application was duly notified under s.57, and objections to
the grant were preferred by both Stanes Transports Ltd., and
Annamalai Bus Transport Ltd. On September 5, 1954, the
Regional Transport Authority granted a permit to the
appellant for a period of one year from July 1, 1954 to June
30, 1955, obviously in the expectation that Writ Appeals
Nos. 31 and 32 of 1954 would by then have been decided. On
March 19, 1955,the appellant again applied for a renewal of
the permit, and that was also notified under s. 57, and no
objections having been filed to the grant thereof, the
Regional Transport Authority by his order dated June 23,
1955, renewed the permit for a period of three years from
July 1, 1955 to June 30, 1958. It is this permit that forms
the subject-matter of the present litigation.
It has been already stated that Writ Appeals Nos. 31 and 32
of 1954 were dismissed on March 21, 1956.
667
Apprehending that the Regional Transport Authority might, in
view of the judgment of the High Court, cancel the permit
which was renewed on June 23, 1955, the appellant filed Writ
Petition No. 333 of 1956 for a Writ of Prohibition
restraining the Regional Transport Authority from Cancelling
the permit, and that was dismissed by Rajagopala Ayyangar J.
on the ground that when the original permit was set aside,
the renewal thereof fell to the ground. The appellant filed
Writ Appeal No. 42 of 1956 against this order, and that was
heard by Rajamannar C. J. and Panchapakesa Ayyar J. who by
their judgment dated April 27, 1956, held, following a
previous decision of that Court in K. Muthuvadivelu v.
Regional Transport Officer(1) that the renewal having been
obtained on the basis of a permit which had been
subsequently cancelled, it could not be regarded as a fresh
permit, that when the original permit was set aside, it must
be taken to be non est for all purposes, and that the
renewal must therefore be held to be a nullity. In the
result, they dismissed the appeal, but granted a certificate
under Art. 133(1)(c), observing that the case raised a point
of general importance, which was stated by them in these
terms:
When an application for renewal of a permit is made and
granted and eventually it is held that the original permit
was itself wrongly granted, does the renewed permit subsist
for the period for which it was renewed, or does it
automatically cease to be in force when it is finally
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decided that the original permit was not granted validly ?
This matter now comes before us in Civil Appeal No, 323 of
1956.
After the High Court delivered its judgment in Writ Appeal
No. 42 of 1956 on April 27, 1956, the respondents herein,
viz., Stanes Transports Ltd., and Annamalai Bus Transport
Ltd., applied to the Regional Transport Authority to grant
them permits in accordance with the decisions of the High
Court, and on May 5, 1956, the Regional Transport Authority
cancelled the permit granted by him on June 23, 1955, in
favour
(1) A.I.R. 1956 Mad. 143.
86
668
of the appellant, and granted permits instead to the
respondents. Thereupon, the appellant filed Writ Petition
No. 554 of 1956 for a writ of certiorari to quash the order
dated May 5, 1956, on the grounds which had been put forward
in Writ Petition No. 333 of 1956 and Writ Appeal No. 42 of
1956. That petition was dismissed by Rajagopalan J. on July
9, 1956, and the Writ Appeal No. 88 of 1956 filed against
that order was dismissed by Rajamannar C. J. and Panchapa-
kesa Ayyar J. on July 13, 1956. Leave to appeal against
that judgment was also given under Art. 133 (1) (c), as the
subject-matter thereof was the same as that of Writ Appeal
No. 42 of 1956 in respect of which leave had already been
granted. Civil Appeal No. 324, of 1956 relates to this
matter. Thus, both the appeals relate to the same matter,
and raise the same point for determination.
Mr. A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, learned counsel who appeared in
support of the appeals, contends that the view taken by the
learned Judges of the High Court that when a permit is set
aside by higher authorities, it should be treated as wholly
non-existent, and that, in consequence, a renewal thereof
must be held to be void, is not sound, that on a correct
interpretation of ss. 57 and 58, a renewal is practically in
the nature of a new grant, that the permit which was granted
to the appellant for the period July 1, 1955 to June 30,
1958, though styled a renewal, was in substance a fresh
permit, and that the fact that the old permit was set aside
did not therefore affect the rights of the appellant under
this permit. He also argues that the Act and the rules
framed thereunder contain elaborate provisions as to when a
permit could be cancelled, forming in themselves a complete
code on the subject, that the cancellation of the original
permit is not one of the grounds on which a renewed permit
could be set aside, and that the order of the Regional
Transport Authority dated May 5, 1956, was therefore ultra
vires. The contention of the learned Solicitor-General for
the. respondents is that when a permit is renewed, the
renewal is, on a true construction of the provisions of the
Act, in substance as in name a continuation of the
669
previous permit, and that, in consequence, when the, grant
of a permit is set aside by a higher authority, the renewal
thereof must also stand automatically set aside, and that
further even if a renewed permit is not to be regarded as a
continuation of the original permit,, seeing that it is
granted on the basis of that permit it should be held to be
subject to an implied term that it should cease if the
original permit is cancelled. The two points that arise for
decision on these contentions are: (1) when a permit is
renewed, is it a continuation of the original permit, or is
it, in fact, a new one? and (2) if a renewed permit is not a
continuation of the original permit, is the grant of it
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subject to the implied condition that it is liable to be
cancelled, if the original permit is cancelled ?
On the first question, it is necessary to refer to certain
provisions of the Act material thereto. Section,57
prescribes the procedure to be followed in the grant of
stage carriage permits. Under sub-s. (2), applications
therefor have to be made not less than six weeks before the
date appointed by the Regional Transport Authority therefor.
Sub-section (3) requires that they should be: published in
the prescribed manner, and provision is made for
representations being made in connection therewith. When
any representation is so received, sub-s. (5) provides that
the person making it is to be given an. opportunity of being
heard thereon in person or by a, duly authorised
representative, and that the application for permit is to be
disposed of at a public hearing. Section 58 deals with
renewals, and is as follows:
(1) " A permit other than a temporary permit issued under
section 62 shall be effective without renewal for such
period, not less than three years and not more than five
years, as the Regional Transport Authority may in its
discretion specify in the permit:
Provided that in the case of a permit issued or renewed
within two years of the commencement of this Act, the permit
shall be effective without renewal for such period of less
than three years as the Provincial Government may prescribe.
670
(2) A permit may be renewed on an application made and
disposed of as if it were an application for a permit:
Provided that, other conditions being equal, an application
for renewal shall be given preference over new applications
for permits. "
The contention of the learned counsel for the appellant
based on s. 58 (2) is that under the Act an application for
renewal is to be dealt with exactly as an application for a
new permit, that it is to be notified under s. 57 and
representations have to be called for in connection herewith
and considered at a public hearing, that though the grant of
the previous permit furnishes a ground of preference, it is
subject to the limitation that the other conditions are
equal and is thus only one of several factors to be taken
into account, and that therefore when a renewal is actually
granted, it is on an independent consideration of the merits
and it cannot be distinguished from a fresh grant. It was
further argued that the proviso to s. 58(2) meant little,
because it was well established that the grant of a permit
was not a matter of right, and the authorities under the Act
would be acting within their powers if they refused an
application for renewal and granted a fresh permit to a new
applicant. It was also contended that though the statute
spoke of a renewal of a permit, that expression did not
accurately bring out the true position, because in legal
terminology, renewal imports that the transaction which is
renewed, as for example, a lease, is to operate for a
further period but on the same terms, but that when a permit
was renewed, it was open to the authorities to impose new
conditions, to alter the period during which it was to
operate and generally to modify its terms, and that
therefore the use of the word ,renewal " should not lead to
the. inference that it was the original permit that was
being continued.
There is force in these contentions, but there are other
provisions bearing on this question, and when they are
reviewed as a whole, it is abundantly clear that the
intention of the legislature was to treat a renewal as a
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continuation of the previous permit. To
671
start with, s. 58(1) enacts that a permit shall be effective
for the period specified therein, but this is qualified by
the words " without renewal ". Therefore, when there is a
renewal, the effective period is not the original period
specified, but the period up to which the renewal is
granted. That indicates that the life of a renewed permit
is one and continuous. The matter is placed beyond doubt
when we turn to the rules which have been framed under the
Act. Rule 184 (1) provides that when a renewal is granted,
it shall be endorsed on the permit itself, and Form No. 33,
which is prescribed
therefor is as follows:
" This permit is hereby renewed up to the day of....... 19
Thus, what is renewed is " this permit". In this
connection, reference must be made to the definition of "
permit " in s. 2(2) of the Act ’as " the document issued by
a Provincial or Regional Transport Authority Rule 1985 is
very material for the purpose of the present discussion, and
it runs as follows:
If an application for the renewal of a permit has been made
in accordance with these rules and the prescribed fee paid
by the prescribed date, the permit shall continue to be
effective until orders are passed on the application or
until the expiry of three months from the date of receipt of
the application whichever is earlier. If orders on the
application are not passed within three months from the date
of receipt of the application, the permit-holder shall be
entitled to have the permit renewed by the Transport
Authority for the period specified in the application or for
one year whichever is less and the Transport Authority shall
call upon the permit-holder to produce the registration
certificate or certificates and Part B or Parts A and B of
the permit, as the case may be, and endorse the renewal in
Parts A and B of the permit accordingly and return them to
the permit holder ".
Under this rule, when an application for renewal is made,
the permit already granted is to be in force ’until an order
is passed thereon, and what is more important, if no order
is passed within three months,
672
the permit ’becomes automatically renewed for the ,,period
mentioned in the rule. This goes a long way to support the
contention of the respondents that on the scheme of the Act,
renewal is a continuation of the original permit. It should
also be mentioned that the rules provide for different forms
for an application for fresh permit and one for renewal, and
the fee to be paid along with those applications is also
different. A reading of the relevant provisions of the Act
and of the rules leads indubitably to the conclusion that a
renewal is a continuation of the permit previously granted.
The fact that the grant of renewal is not a matter of
course, or that it is open to the authorities to impose
fresh conditions at the time of renewal does not, when the
permit is in fact renewed, alter its character as a renewal.
We shall now consider the authorities cited by learned
counsel for the appellant as supporting the view that a
renewal under the Act is in the same position as a fresh
permit. In Mahabir Motor Co. v. Bihar State(1), the point
for decision was whether an appeal lay under s. 64 (f)
against an order granting a renewal of a permit. The
contention before the Court was that the Act made a
distinction between the grant of a permit and a renewal
thereof, and that as s. 64 (f), provided only for an appeal
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against an order granting a permit, no appeal lay against an
order granting a renewal. In repelling this contention the
Court observed
"Both grant. and renewal stand more or less on the same
footing by reason of ss. 47, 57 and 58 of the Motor Vehicles
Act............
This observation has reference to the procedure to be
followed in the renewal of a permit and the right of appeal
given under a. 64 as part of that procedure. It has, no
-bearing on the character of a permit when it is renewed.
Another decision on which the appellant strongly relied is
Anjiah v. Regional Transport Officer, Guntur There, the,
facts were that an order of suspension had been passed for
breach of one of the
(1) [1556] I.L.R. 34 Patna 429.
(2) [1956] Andhra Law Times 347.
] 673
conditions of the permit. - The correctness of the order was
challenged before higher authorities, but without success.
Meantime, the period fixed in the permit had expired, and it
had been renewed. The question was whether the period of
suspension could be enforced against the renewed permit. It
was held by the Andhra High Court that it could not be,
because the renewal was, in essence, a new permit and not a
mere continuance of the old one. The reason for’ this
decision was thus stated in the judgment:
" There is no right of renewal as such and when a permit is
renewed, there is no right either, on the part of the
permit-holder to insist upon the continuance of the old
terms. It would be undesirable that there should be any
such restrictions upon the right of the authorities to grant
the permit to anybody they choose or subject to any
conditions that they think -it to be necessary to impose,
provided that they are acting all the time in the public
interest and subject to the provisions of the Motor Vehicles
Act and the. Rules made thereunder."
These considerations, though not without force, can. not, in
our opinion, outweigh the inference to be drawn from the
other provisions to which we have made reference and for the
reasons already given, we are unable to agree with this
decision.
In the view that we have taken that under the provisions of
the Act and the rules, a renewal is a continuation of the
original permit, there can be no doubt as to what the rights
of the appellant are. When the proprietor of V. C. K. Bus
Service was granted a permit by the Regional Transport
Authority on December 3, 1952, that grant was subject to the
result of the decision of the higher authorities. On
September 5, 1954, when the permit was renewed in favour of
the appellant, that was subject to the decision of the High
Court in Writ Appeal No. 32 of 1954, which was then pending.
When the renewed permit dated September 5, 1954, was again
renewed on June 23, 1955, that was likewise subject to the
result of the decision in Writ Appeal No. 32 of 1954. When
the High Court by its judgment dated March
674
21, 1956, passed in the said Writ Appeal upheld the
cancellation of the permit which had been granted by the
Regional Transport Authority on December 3, 1952 to V. C. K.
Bus Service, the permit renewed on June 23, 1955, became
ineffective at least as from that date. The Regional
Transport Authority was therefore right in treating it as
having become void, and granting by his order dated May 5,
1956, permits to the respondents.
The second question arises on the alternative contention
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advanced by the respondents that even if the renewal is to
be regarded, not as a continuation of the original permit
but as an independent grant, it must be held to have been
subject to an implied condition that if the original permit
is ultimately set aside, the renewal thereof should come to
an end. Mr. Sastri, learned counsel for the appellant,
disputes the correctness of this contention. He argues that
when there is a document embodying the terms’ of a contract,
it is not permissible to imply therein a condition, if that
will contradict or vary any terms contained in it, that to
read into the permit a condition that it is to cease if the
decision of the High Court went against the appellant,’
would be to modify the terms contained therein that it is to
be effective upto June 30, 1958, and that it could not
therefore be implied. He also relies on the following
observation of Lord Parker in P. A. Tamplin Steamship
Company Limited v. AngloMexican Petroleum Products Company
Limited (1) :
" This principle is one of contract law, depending on some
term or condition to be implied in the contract itself and
not on something entirely dehors the contract which brings
the contract to an end. It is, of course, impossible to
imply in a contract any term or condition inconsistent with
its express provisions, or with the intention of the parties
as gathered from those provisions."
It is undoubted law that when the terms of a contract or
grant are reduced to writing, no condition can be implied
therein, which will be inconsistent with its express terms.
But the contention of the respondents
(1) [1916] 2 A.C. 307, 422.
675
involves no conflict with this principle. They do not seek
to obtain any modification or alteration of the terms of the
permit, -leaving it to operate subject to such modification
or alteration. They want that the whole permit with all its
terms as to duration and otherwise should be held to have
become inoperative. What they are pleading is a condition
subsequent on the happening of which the permit will cease,
and to that situation the observation quoted above has no
application. Reference may be made in this connection to
the following observation occurring later in the speech of
Lord Parker in F. A. Tamplin Steamship Company Limited v.
Anglo-Mexican Petroleum Products Company, Limited (supra):
" Moreover, some conditions can be more readily implied than
others. Speaking generally, it seems to me easier to imply
a condition precedent defeating a contract before its
execution has commenced than a condition subsequent
defeating the contract when it is part performed."
Thus, there is no legal obstacle to implying a condition
that the renewal should stand cancelled if the right of the
appellant to the original permit was negatived by the High
Court.
That brings us on to the question of fact, whether on an
examination of the permit and of the circum. stances under
which it came to be granted, we can infer that it was the
intention of the Regional Transport Authority to renew the
permit subject to the result of the decision of the High
Court in the appeal which was then pending before it. The
permit granted to the V. C. K. Bus Service on December 3,
1952, had been cancelled on February 19, 1953, and it was
only by reason of the stay orders that the bus was permitted
to run. When the appellant applied for renewal on April 15,
1954, there was opposition to the grant thereof from both
the respondents herein, based on the decision of the
Government dated July 9, 1953, and it was in view of their
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objection that the Regional Transport Authority renewed the
permit for one year from July 1, 1954 to June 30, 1955. It
is true that
87
676
when the appellant applied again for renewal on March 19,
1955, the respondents did not raise objection thereto, but
as the appeals in the High Court were still pending, they
had good reason to believe that the renewal would not affect
whatever rights might be declared in their favour by the
High Court. As all the papers relating to the grant of the
original permit and the subsequent proceedings were part of
the record before the Regional Transport Authority when he
renewed the permit on June 23, 1955, it is impossible to
resist the conclusion that he really intended to renew the
permit only subject to the decision of the
High Court.
It is of the utmost importance in this connection to bear in
mind that the appellant applied not for a fresh permit but
for a renewal, and in sanctioning it, the Regional Transport
Authority expressly acted in exercise of his powers under
Rule 134-A read with s. 58 of the Act, and if he did not
expressly provide that it was subject to the decision of the
High Court, it must be because he must have considered that
that was implicit in the fact of its being only a renewal.
That that is how the appellant understood it is clear beyond
doubt from the proceedings taken by it immediately after the
High Court pronounced its judgment.
But it is argued for the appellant on the strength of the
decision in Veerappa Pillai v. Raman & Raman Ltd.(1) that
the mere knowledge on the part of the authorities that the
rights of the parties were under litigation is not a
sufficient ground to import a condition in the permit that
it is subject to the result of that litigation, when in its
terms it is unconditional. We do not read that decision as
authority for any such broad contention. There, the
question related to five permits, which had been originally
granted to one Balasubramania. Raman and Raman Ltd.
obtained a transfer of the relative buses, and applied to
the transport authorities for transfer of the permits to
itself. Then, Veerappa having subsequently obtained a
transfer of the same buses from Balasubramania,
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 583.
677
applied to have the permits transferred in his name. On
October 3, 1944, he also instituted a suit in the Sub-Court,
Kumbakonam, to establish his title to the buses against
Raman and Raman Ltd., and that was decreed in his favour on
May 2, 1946. Raman and Raman Ltd. appealed against this
decision to the Madras High Court, which by its judgment
dated September 2, 1949, reversed the decree of the Sub-
Court and held that it was entitled to the buses. While
these proceedings were going on, the transport authorities
suspended on March 28, 1944, the permits which had been
granted to Balasubramania and instead, they were issuing
temporary permits from time to time to Veerappa, who had
been appointed receiver in the suit in the Sub-Court,
Kumbakonam. On March 29, 1949, the Government decided to
discontinue the policy of granting temporary permits
indefinitely, and accordingly granted permanent permits, to
Veerappa. Then on October 14, 1949, Veerappa applied for
renewal of these permanent permits, and that was granted by
the Regional Transport Authority on January 3,1950. The
question was whether this order was bad on the ground that
it was inconsistent with the decision of the High Court that
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it was Raman and Raman Ltd., that had obtained a valid title
to the buses. This Court held that the ownership of the
buses was only one of the factors to be taken into account
in granting the permits, and that as the Regional Transport
Authority granted the renewal on an appreciation of all the
facts, his decision was not liable to be questioned in
proceedings under Art. 226. It should be noted that the
renewal which was granted on January 3, 1950, was of
permanent permits granted in pursuance of the, order of the
Government dated March 29, 1949, which had quite plainly
declared as a matter of policy that notwithstanding the
pendency of litigation between the parties, permanent
permits should be granted to Veerappa. There can be no
question of implying thereafter a condition that they were
subject to the decision of the Court. Moreover, the renewal
was granted on January 3, 1950, after the litigation had
ended on September 2, 1949, and any attack on that order
could only be by
678
way of appeal against it, and that had not been done, We are
of opinion that the decision in Veerappa Pillai v. Raman &
Raman Ltd. (1) is of no assistance to the appellant.
In the result, we affirm the decision of the High Court both
on the ground that the renewal dated June 23, 1955, is a
continuation of the permit granted on December 3, 1952, and
must fall to the ground when that stood finally set aside by
the judgment of the High Court in Writ Appeal No. 32 of 1954
dated March 21, 1956, and on the ground that it was an
implied condition of that renewal that it was to be subject
to the decision of the High Court in that appeal, and that
in the event which had happened, it had ceased to be
effective.
These appeals fail, and are dismissed with costs in Civil
Appeal No. 323 of 1956.
Appeals dismissed.