Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE SAMARTH TRANSPORT CO. (P) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE REGIONAL TRANSPORT AUTHORITY,NAGPUR AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
08/09/1960
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
KAPUR, J.L.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 93 1961 SCR (1) 631
CITATOR INFO :
R 1962 SC1135 (6)
RF 1963 SC 640 (12)
RF 1971 SC1662 (13)
ACT:
Motor Vehicles-Application for renewal of stage carriage
permits-Approval of Scheme of nationalisation by
Government--Application refused months after expiry of
Permits-Order, if without jurisdiction--Disposal, if must be
made within reasonable time-Duty of Regional Transport
Authority-Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (IV of 1939), as amended
by Act 100 of 1956, ss. 57, 58, 62, 68F.
HEADNOTE:
As the petitioner’s stage carriage permits were to expire on
December 31, 1959, it made applications for a renewal of
them
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on August 24, 1959. on December 29, 1959, temporary permits
were granted to the petitioner for one month and thereafter
for another, made available up to March 31, 196o. The
matter was adjourned from time to time and ultimately on
April 28, 196o, the petitioner’s applications were rejected
on the ground that a scheme of nationalisation including the
petitioner’s routes had in the meantime been approved by the
Government on April 20, 196o. The petitioner applied under
Art. 32 of the Constitution for a writ quashing the said
order and the scheme, on the ground that the Regional
Transport Authority was actuated by mala fides and its real
purpose in granting the adjournments was to enable the
Government to approve of the scheme, and for a direction
that the petitioner’s applications for renewal might be
disposed of according to law as on the date when they were
filed.
Held, that the petition must fail.
The Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, does not prescribe any time
limit for the disposal of an application for renewal of
permits and it cannot be said that the Regional Transport
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Authority in the instant case acted without jurisdiction in
rejecting the applications even though months had elapsed
after the permits had expired and notwithstanding that s. 62
permitted the issue of no more than one temporary permit.
Even so, the relevant provisions of the Act indicate that an
application for renewal of a permit has to be disposed of
ordinarily before the expiry of the permits or within a
reasonable time thereafter. It was, therefore, open to the
petitioner, if it was aggrieved by the delay, to ask for a
mandamus directing the Authority to dispose of its
applications within a reasonable time.
Although s. 68F(1) of the Act applies only where the State
Transport Undertaking applies for a permit in pursuance of
an approved scheme, s. 68F(2) is not conditioned by any such
limitation and the word ’entertain used by it does not refer
to an application filed for the renewal of a permit after
the approval of the scheme. That word does not connote any
time but describes the scope and duty under that clause and
only means that the Authority cannot dispose of an
application on merits but can reject it as not maintainable
either at the time it is filed or thereafter.
Statutory bodies are in duty bound to act promptly and
efficiently and discharge their functions fairly and without
bias even where the Government is interested. The conduct
of the Regional Transport Authority, in the instant case, in
granting adjournments, not for the reasons they purported to
be but to enable the Government to approve of the scheme,
must be disapproved.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 67/1960.
Petition under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for
enforcement of fundamental rights.
633
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and B. B. L. Iyengar, for the
petitioners.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, R. Ganapathy
Iyer and R. H. Dhebar, for the respondents.
1960. September 8. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by A SUBBA RAO J.-This is a petition under Art. 32 of the
Constitution to quash the order of the first respondent
dated April 28, 1960, and the scheme dated April 20, 1960,
and to direct the first respondent to deal with the
application of the petitioner for renewal of its permit in
accordance with law.
The petitioner was doing business of motor transport in
Bombay State for over 20 years. It had four permanent stage
carriage permits granted some years ago and renewed from
time to time to ply buses on the following routes:
(i) Yeotmal-Umerkhed... 2 return trips.
(ii) Yeotmal-Pusad... 4 return trips.
The term of the latest permits expired on December 31,
1959. About four months prior to the expiry of the permits
the petitioner applied on August 24, 1959, for the renewal
of the permits under s. 58(2) of the Motor Vehicles Act,
1939 (Act IV of 1939), (hereinafter called the Act). On
October 29, 1959, the State Transport Department published
its proposed scheme for the nationalization of the road
transport services in respect of an area which included the
routes of the petitioner. On November 9, 1959, the
petitioner wrote a letter to the Secretary, the Regional
Transport Authority, Nagpur, asking him why its application
for renewal of the stage carriage permits had not been
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published as required by s. 57 of the Act. It also
expressed its apprehension that the application was not
published by the Regional Transport Authority with a view to
assist the State Transport Department in ousting it from the
said routes and that the Authority was creating a situation
in order to force the petitioner to accept temporary permits
under s. 62(d) of the Act-. The Secretary, the Regional
Transport
634
Authority, by his letter dated November 11, 1959, replied to
the effect that the application for renewal had been
published on November 8, 1959, and that the said application
would be considered before the expiry date and that no
question of issuing temporary permits would arise. On
November 19, 1959, the Assistant Manager of the State
Transport Department on behalf of the State Transport
Department filed applications before the Regional Transport
Authority for issue of permits to it in respect of the said
two routes among others. It was mentioned therein that as
per the notification published in the Bombay Government
Gazette dated October 29, 1959, the Provincial Transport
Services proposed to take over the aforesaid routes from
January 1, 1960. The Provincial Transport Services also
filed objections against the renewal of the permits in
favour of the petitioner. On December 10, 1959, the said
applications were published in the Gazette and it was
notified therein that representations, if any, should be
submitted on or before December 15, 1959, and that the said
objections along with the applications for permits would be
considered in a meeting to be held by the Regional Transport
Authority in the month of December, 1959, at Nagpur or at a
later date which may be notified in due course. On December
21, 1959, the Secretary of the Regional Transport Authority
intimated to the petitioner that in the meeting of the
Regional Transport Authority scheduled to be held on
December 31, 1959, it would not be possible to consider its
applications for renewal due to " heavy agenda ". It was
also suggested to it to apply for the grant of temporary
permits pending renewal in good time so that they could be
issued before the due date. The petitioner on the same date
replied to that letter wherein it pointed out that " the
heavy agenda mentioned in your letter is, we hold, a design
to cover your attempt to ad Vance the cause of the
Provincial Transport Services, (U. G. O.), Nagpur ".
Without prejudice to its rights the petitioner applied for
temporary permits as directed by the Authority On December
29, 1959, temporary permits were issued for one month from
January 1,
635
1960, and thereafter they were extended for another month
and made available upto March 31, 1960. The ,next meeting
of the Regional Transport Authority scheduled to be held on
February 5, 1960, was adjourned to February 24, 1960, and on
January 22, 1960, the Chief Minister of Bombay issued
notices to the petitioner and others that objections to the
proposed scheme would be heard on February 24, 1960; but on
the said date the applications were not disposed of on the
ground that the matter was sub judice in the High Court of
Bombay. On March 17, 1960, the Provincial Transport
Services filed a fresh application before the Regional
Transport Authority under Ch. IVA of the Act for the grant
of permits for plying buses on the routes mentioned therein.
It was also brought to the notice of the Regional Transport
Authority that the Provincial Transport Services desired to
operate tile routes in question from May 1, 1960, or any
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other date as may be fixed by the Regional Transport
Authority. Presumably, the second application was filed as
the earlier application was filed not under Ch. IV but
Under Ch. IVA of the Act on the basis of the proposed
scheme. On March 31, 1960, the Regional Transport Authority
met again, but the applications for renewal of permits filed
by the petitioner were not taken up for consideration. It
is suggested that as 30 days had not expired from the date
of the filing of the applications by the Provincial
Transport Services the petitioner’s applications could not
be-taken up for consideration. On April 14, 1960, the Chief
Minister of Bombay heard the objections and on April 19,
1960, the scheme with modifications was duly approved by the
Government and published on April 20, 1960. The approved
scheme covered only the routes in respect of which only tem-
porary permits were issued and excluded the routes in regard
to which pucca permits were issued. The approved scheme
included the petitioner’s routes. On April 20, 1960, the
applications were again adjourned to April 29,1960. On
April 26, 1960, the petitioner moved this Court under Art.32
of the Constitution and on April 28, 1960, the petition was
dismissed as premature.
636
On the same day even though the Regional Transport Authority
was informed that this Court was moved by the petitioner its
renewal applications were rejected on the ground that the
scheme was approved by the Government. The present petition
was filed on April 29, 1960, for the aforesaid reliefs.
The main contention of learned counsel, Mr. A. V. Viswanatha
Sastri, for the petitioner, is that the Regional Transport
Authority was actuated by mala fides in the disposal of the
applications for renewal of the permits, and that though
under the provisions of the Act it had no alternative but to
renew the permits of the petitioner it adjourned the matter
from time to time with an evil design to enable the
Government to approve the scheme. In that situation, he
contends, the proper course is to set aside the order of the
Regional Transport Authority and direct it to dispose of the
petitioner’s applications for renewal of permits as on the
date when they were filed.
To appreciate this argument it is necessary to notice some
of the relevant provisions of the Act. Under s. 58 of the
Act, " A stage carriage permit or a contract carriage
permit......... 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 specify in
the permit ". Clause (2) provides for the renewal of permits
on application made and disposed of as if it were an
application for a permit. Section 57 prescribes the
procedure in the matter of the disposal of applications for
permits. Section 57 (1) enables the filing of an
application for a permit at any time, and clause (2) of that
section says that such an application shall be made not less
than six weeks before the date on which it is desired that
the permit shall take effect, and, under cl. (3) thereof, on
receipt of such an application for permit the Regional
Transport Authority shall publish the application in the
prescribed manner calling for representations to be made on
a date not being less than 30 days from the date of
publication. After hearing the said objections and
representations, the applications will be disposed of in
accordance with the provisions of
637
the Act. Section 62 enables the Regional Transport
Authority to grant permits without following the procedure
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prescribed under s. 57 to be effective for a limited period
not in any case to exceed four months, to authorize the use
of a transport vehicle temporarily pending decision on an
application for the renewal of a permit. The second proviso
to that section states that a temporary permit under the
said section shall, in no case, be granted more than once in
respect of any route or area specified in an application for
the renewal of a permit during the pendency of such
application for renewal. Section 68F enables the State
Transport Undertaking, in pursuance of an approved scheme,
to apply in the manner specified in Ch. IV for a stage
carriage permit in respect of a notified route and on such
an application the Regional Transport Authority shall issue
such a permit to the said Undertaking notwithstanding
anything contained to the contrary in Ch. IV. Under cl.
(2) of that section, for the purpose of giving effect to the
approved scheme in respect of a notified area or notified
route, the Regional Transport Authority may by order refuse
to entertain any application for the renewal of any other
permit, to cancel any existing permit or to modify the terms
of any existing permit. Section 68G prescribes the
principles and method of determining compensation in respect
of the permits cancelled or modified.
The foregoing provisions, so far relevant to the present
enquiry, may be summarized thus: An operator of a stage
carriage may apply for renewal of his permit not less than
60 days before the date of its expiry; the said application
will be disposed of as if it were an application for a
permit and he will be given preferential treatment, the
other conditions being equal; the Act does not prescribe any
outer limit for disposal of the application for renewal of a
permit, for its disposal would depend upon the applications
filed by others and the time required for complying with the
conditions laid down in s. 57; but the requirement that the
application shall be filed not less than 60 days before the
date of the expiry, the injunction that pending an
application for
638
renewal of a permit, temporary permit shall not be given
more than once and the time limit of four months for a
temporary permit fixed in s. 62 indicate that, though there
is no statutory prohibition, the application is expected to
be disposed of ordinarily before the term of the, permit
expired or, in case of unavoidable delay, within a
reasonable time thereafter; after a scheme has been
approved, if the State Transport Undertaking applies for a
permit, the Regional Transport Authority shall issue the
permit to it and for the purpose of giving effect to the
approved scheme the said Authority is authorized to refuse
to entertain an application for renewal of any other permit
or cancel or modify any existing permit; if the Regional
Transport Authority cancels or modifies a permit,
compensation is, payable to the operator affected.
In the present case the permits expired on December 31,
1959. The petitioner filed applications for renewal on
August 24, 1959, and they were rejected on the ground that
there was an approved scheme on April 28, 1960. On December
29, 1959, temporary permits were granted for one month and
after the expiry of those permits, another set of temporary
permits was issued for another month ending with March 31,
1960. It is true that under the second proviso to s. 62
temporary permits could not have been granted more than
once, but a transgression of that provision by the Regional
Transport Authority does not affect the question raised. As
the provisions of the Act do not prescribe any time limit
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for the disposal of an application for renewal of permits,
we cannot hold that the Regional Transport Authority acted
without jurisdiction in rejecting the applications some
months after the date of the expiry of the terms of the
permits. If there was any inordinate delay in the disposal
of an application, it was open to the affected party to ask
for a mandamus to direct the appropriate Authority to
dispose of the petition within a reasonable time. But no
such step was taken by the petitioner, though it filed a
writ petition in the High Court for other reliefs.
639
The next question is whether the Regional Transport
Authority exceeded its power in rejecting the applications.
In this context it will be convenient to read the relevant
portions of s. 68F, which read:
Section 68F: "(1) Where, in pursuance of an approved scheme,
any State transport undertaking applies............... for a
stage carriage permit the Regional Transport Authority shall
issue such permit to the State transport
undertaking................ (2) For the purpose of giving
effect to the approved scheme in respect of a notified area
or notified route, the Regional Transport Authority may, by
order,-
(a) refuse to entertain any application for the renewal of
any other permit."
Learned counsel for the petitioner contends that s. 68F
applies only when an application for permit is made by a
State Transport Undertaking in pursuance of an approved
scheme and that in the present case as the application was
filed by the State Transport Undertaking before the scheme
was approved, the provisions of the section were not
attracted. It is true that under s. 68F the Regional
Transport Authority is bound to issue a permit to a State
Transport Undertaking only’ if it applies in pursuance of an
approved scheme. That is why in the present proceedings the
Authority did not issue any permit to the State Transport
Undertaking; but sub-s. (2) of s. 68F is not conditioned by
any such limitation. The Regional Transport Authority is
authorized for the purpose of giving effect to an approved
scheme to refuse to entertain an application for renewal of
any other permit. This power does not depend upon the
presentation of an application by the State Transport
Undertaking for a permit. This power is exercisable when it
is brought to the notice of the Authority that there is an
approved scheme and, to give effect to it, the application
for renewal cannot be entertained. By the time the
application for renewal came to be disposed of, admittedly
the scheme had been approved by the Government of Bombay and
the routes in question were included in the said scheme.
Therefore$
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640
the Authority was within its rights not to entertain the
applications filed by the petitioner. It is contended that
the word " entertain " refers to an application filed for
the renewal of a permit after the scheme was approved and
that the said provision has no relevance to an application
for renewal made before that date. The word " entertain "
may mean " to receive on file or keep on file ", and in that
sense the Authority may refuse to keep an application on its
file by
1. rejecting it either at the time it is filed or
thereafter. It does not connote any time but only describes
the scope of the duty under that clause. It can only mean
that the Authority cannot dispose of the application on
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merits but can reject it as not maintainable. Any other
meaning given to this word leads to an anomalous position,
for even if the approval of a scheme had been brought to the
notice of the Regional Transport Authority, it would have to
order the renewal of the permit and thereafter it would have
to cancel the permit, presumably, on an application filed by
the State Transport Undertaking. We do not think that the
legislature used the word " entertain " to bring about that
result. A wider meaning of the word " entertain " would
enable the smooth working of the provisions of the section
and we have no reason to accept the narrower meaning
suggested by the learned counsel. We, therefore, hold that
the Regional Transport Authority had power under s. 68F(2)
of the Act in the circumstances of the case to reject the
applications filed by the petitioner.
The next contention of the learned counsel is that the
scheme suffers from the vice of discrimination inasmuch as,
though it excluded the petitioner from operating on the
route between Yeotmal and Umerkhed, it allowed others to ply
their buses on that route on their way from Akola to
Umerkhed or Amravati to Umerkhed. There is no basis for
this argument in the affidavit filed by the petitioner is
support of the writ petition. We do not think that we are
justified in allowing the petitioner to raise the plea for
the first time before us. We do not, therefore, allow it to
do so.
641
Lastly it is argued that the Chief Minister confirmed the
scheme on extraneous considerations not covered by s. 68C of
the Act. In paragraph 24 of his order the Chief Minister
observed, " On merits, it is quite clear to me that having
regard to the resources of the P. T. S. and the amenities
that it provides to the public, it is in the public interest
that the scheme submitted by the P. T. S., Nagpur, should be
approved ". Under s. 68C the question that arose for
consideration before the Chief Minister was whether the
transport services should be run by the State Transport
Under. taking to the exclusion of the petitioner and whether
it was necessary to do so in public interest to provide an
efficient, adequate, economical and properly co-ordinated
road transport service. The Chief Minister found on the
material placed before him that it was necessary in the
public interest that the scheme submitted by the Provincial
Transport Services should be approved. In support of his
conclusion, he took into consideration that the Provincial
Transport Services were in possession of sufficient
resources and were in a better position to provide amenities
to the public and therefore in public interest they should
be given preference over the private operators of buses. We
cannot say that the Chief Minister took any extraneous
circumstances into consideration in coming to that
conclusion.
The record in this case is not indicative of promptitude or
efficiency in the matter of discharge of the statutory
functions by the Regional Transport Authority. The various
dates, the reasons given for putting off the disposal of the
petitions for renewal from time to time and the timing and
the manner of the final disposal are such as may
legitimately give rise to the allegation that the Regional
Transport Authority was not, to say the least, fair and
impartial in the discharge of its duties. A statutory
tribunal is expected to discharge its functions fairly and
without bias even in a case where the interests of the
Government are involved. Considering the facts and
circumstances of this case, we cannot say that the complaint
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of the petitioner that the adjournments were not for the
642
reasons mentioned in the orders but were only to give time
to enable the Government to approve the scheme, may not be
wholly unjustified.
In the circumstances, though we are dismissing the
application, we are not awarding any costs to the
respondents.
Petition dismissed.