Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GHAIO MALL & SONS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF DELHI & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/09/1958
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
SUBBARAO, K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 65 1959 SCR 1424
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1961 SC1762 (25)
R 1964 SC1823 (4,32)
RF 1967 SC1145 (16)
ACT:
Certiorari, Writ of-Rule issued on application-Duty of
inferior Courts and Tribunals-If must produce entire
records.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant firm, an unsuccessful applicant for a license
for vending foreign liquor in New Delhi for the year 954-
1955, moved the High Court under art. 226 of the
Constitution for a writ of certiorari quashing the order
granting the license to a rival applicant and impleaded the
Chief Minister, the Excise Commissioner, the Secretary and
the Under Secretary, Finance, of the State of Delhi, as it
then was, as parties to the application. Its case in
substance was that the applications made for the grant of
the licence were never placed before the Chief Commissioner
who alone was the competent authority to grant it under Ch.
5, r. i of the Delhi Liquor License Rules, 1935, framed
under S. 59 Of the Punjab Excise Act (Punj. 1 of 1914), as
extended to Delhi, and no order granting the license was
ever made by him. The said opposite parties respondents,
although repeatedly called upon by the High Court to do so,
did not produce the entire records and filed evasive
affidavits and eventually produced a letter written by the
Under Secretary, Finance, to the Excise Commissioner
intimating that the Chief Commissioner had made the order
for granting the license to the rival applicant and
maintained that the order had in fact been made by the Chief
Commissioner. The High Court, under a misapprehension of
fact and of the true nature and effect of that letter
written by the Under Secretary, Finance, to the Excise
Commissioner, held that the order had in fact been passed by
the Chief Commissioner. The production of the entire
records in the
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Supreme Court made it clear, and the respondents also
conceded, that the applications were never placed before the
Chief Commissioner, nor any order granting the said license
was ever made by him. What had happened was that upon an
order made by the Chief Minister on the file in accordance
with a note put up by the Under Secretary, Finance, the
latter wrote a letter to the Excise Commissioner in reply to
a previous one of his, that the license might be granted to
the said rival applicant. That letter, on which the High
Court had relied, was in the following terms,-
With reference to your letter No. 295/C/54 dated the 31st
August, 1954, on the above subject, I am directed to say
that the Chief Commissioner is pleased to approve under Rule
5. 1. of Delhi Excise Manual Vol. 11 the grant of L-2
license to Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj, New Delhi, in place
of the L-2 License surrendered by Messrs. Army & Navy
Stores, New Delhi. Necessary license may kindly be issued
to the party concerned under intimation to this Secretariate
".
There was nothing on the record to show that the Chief
Commissioner had ever concurred in the order made by the
Chief Minister on the file.
Held, that the attempt of the official respondents to by-
pass the Court must be strongly deprecated, and the order of
the High Court must be reversed.
When a superior Court issues a rule on an application for a
writ of certiorari, it is incumbent upon the inferior Court
or the quasi-judicial body, to whom the rule is addressed,
to produce the entire records along with the return so that
the superior Court may satisfy itself that the inferior
Court or the quasijudicial body has not exceeded its lawful
jurisdiction. Non-production of such records, as in the
instant case, must defeat the purpose which the writ has in
view.
Held, further, that in view of the undisputed practice that
such a license, once granted by the Chief Commissioner, was
almost automatically renewed by the Collector year to year,
it could not be said that the writ application and the
appeal had become infructuous on the expiry of the period of
the license in dispute and it was only proper that the
appeal should be heard on merits.
In the facts and circumstances of the case it was impossible
to hold that the letter of the Under Secretary embodied the
order of the Chief Commissioner or that the Court could not
be asked to go behind it. The letter was clearly a
communication of the sanction and could not be equated with
the sanction itself.
Although an Under Secretary was competent to authenticate an
order made by the Chief Commissioner, the letter in question
did not purport to be made in the name of the Chief Commis-
sioner and therefore the letter could not be treated as a
properly
1426
authenticated order to which the presumption raised by Art.
166 of the Constitution could properly attach.
Dattatreya Moreshwar Pangarkar v. The State of Bombay,
[1952] S.C.R. 6I2, held inapplicable.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 481 of 1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
December 12, 1955, of the Punjab High Court (Circuit Bench)
Delhi, in Civil Writ Application No. 11-D of 1955.
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Gurbachan Singh and R. S. Narula, for the appellant.
C.K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, H. J. Umrigar
and T. M. Sen, for respondents Nos. 1 to 4.
Dr. J. N. Banerjee and P. C. Agarwala, for respondent No.
5.
1958. September 30. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
DAS C. J.-The facts material for the purpose of disposing of
this appeal by special leave are shortly as follows: The
appellants, before us claim to have been dealers in foreign
liquor since 1922 and to have, before the partition of the
country, held licenses in forms L-1, L-2, L-10 and L-11 at
Amritsar, Sialkot and Multan. The appellants allege that in
1945 they had also secured a license in Form L-2 in respect
of some premises in Chawri Bazar, Delhi, but that the
operation of the said license had to be suspended on account
of the unsuitability of the Chawri Bazar premises. Then
came the communal riots in the wake of the partition of the
country and that license could not be renewed. ln 1951 the
appellants applied to the Chief Commissioner, Delhi, (Ex. 1)
for licenses both in Forms L-1 and L-2 in respect of
Karolbagh or at any place in Delhi. On May 17, 1951, the
Home Secretary to the Chief Commissioner by letter (Ex. 2)
conveyed to the appellants the sanction of the Chief
Commissioner to the grant to them of license in Form L-2 in
respect of Karolbagh, Delhi. This license has ever since
then been renewed from year to
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year. In 1954 a vacancy arose in respect of a license in
Form L-2 on account of the closure of the business of
Messrs. Army and Navy Stores of Regal Buildings, New Delhi,
which held such a license. Accordingly on January 21, 1954,
the appellants submitted an application (Ex. 4) to the
Deputy Commissioner for the grant of a foreign liquor
license in Form L-2 in the aforesaid vacancy. In that
application the appellants stated, inter alia, that they
were " prepared to operate it in such a part of Delhi as may
be determined by the authorities ". Not having received any
reply for nearly 3 months and apprehending that interested
persons were endeavouring to cause hindrance in the matter
of the granting of the license to them on the plea that the
appellants had no premises in Connaught Place, the
appellants, on March 11, 1954, wrote a letter (Ex. 5) to the
Chief Commissioner in which, after pointing out that
Karolbagh where they had their L-1 license was in New Delhi,
the appellants stated: " In any case, we have already made
it clear in our application which we made to the Deputy
Commissioner, Delhi on the 21st January, 1954, that we are
prepared to operate this license in any locality which the
authorities might deem proper ". This letter was
acknowledged by the Personal Assistant to the Chief
Commissioner who, on March 15, 1954, stated (Ex. 6) that the
" application No. Nil dated 18-3-1954 on the subject of
grant of foreign liquor license in Form L-2 " had been
forwarded to the Home Secretary, Delhi State, for disposal.
Exhibit 7 to the petition is an important document. It is a
letter dated May 21, 1954, addressed by the appellants to
the Excise and Taxation Commissioner stating that " with a
view to avoiding any possible objection as to locality etc.,
we have secured suitable premises also in the Connaught
Place area, New Delhi, in which area has occurred a vacancy
on account of the surrender of this license by Messrs. Army
and Navy Stores ". The letter concluded with the request
that early orders be passed oil their application. On July
30, 1954, the appellants wrote a long letter (Ex. 8) to the
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Chief Commissioner claiming justice in the matter of their
1428
application for the L-2 license. In the second paragraph of
that letter it was stated: ,It is now being acclaimed by the
party concerned and their friends that they have succeeded
in removing the only obstacle that stood in the way of their
getting the said L-2 license by so arranging matters that
our application has been kept back by the Excise
Commissioner and that only five or six other applications of
firms without much merit in them have been forwarded to you
in order that they might have a smooth sailing as against
those applicants ". The appellants prayed that the Excise
Commissioner might be directed to forward all records
concerning the case to the Chief Commissioner so that the
latter might be able to arrive at a just conclusion and they
asked for a hearing to explain their claim fully. A copy of
this letter appears to have been endorsed to the Excise
Commissioner on August 13, 1954, by the Under Secretary,
Finance. The Excise Commissioner then wrote a letter No.
295/C/54 dated August 31, 1954, to the Under Secretary,
Finance, a copy of which was produced by the learned
Solicitor General at the hearing before us. In this letter
the Excise Commissioner explained why the application of the
appellants was not considered by him to be a good and proper
one and stated that reasons why, according to him, the
applications of two , other applicants, including Messrs
Gainda Mall Hem Raj (respondent No. 5), should be given the
preference. In the penultimate paragraph of this letter of
explanation it was stated: " In the end it may also be added
that the applicant has no premises in New Delhi and as such
he had no claim. The license in Form L-2 is granted in
respect of certain premises." The conclusion was that "under
the circumstances there is no force in the application of
Messrs. Ghaio Mall and Sons." It is apparent that the
Excise Commissioner did not remember that the appellants
had, by their letter (Ex. 7) of May 21, 1954, addressed to
him, stated that they had secured suitable premises also in
the Connaught Place area, New Delhi. Be that as it may, on
September 11, 1954, the appellants wrote another letter (Ex.
9) to the Chief
1429
Commissioner pressing their claim. In this letter reference
was made to their letter to the Excise Commissioner of May
21, 1954, (Ex. 7) in which it had been stated that the
appellants had secured suitable premises in the Connaught
Place area in New Delhi. A copy of this letter was sent to
the same Under Secretary, Finance, to whom the Excise
Commissioner had written his letter of August 31, 1954,
alleging that the appellants had no premises in New Delhi.
Exhibit 9A is the postal acknowledgment by the Under
Secretary, Finance, of the letter containing the copy of the
appellants’ letter but it does not appear from the record
that the Under Secretary, Finance, thought it necessary to
remind the Excise Commissioner that the appellants were
maintaining that they had secured suitable premises in New
Delhi. This was followed by a letter (Ex. 10) from the
appellants to the Excise Commissioner intimating that an
application had been made to the Collector on September 11,
1954, for a change of their premises for L-1 license from
Karolbagh, New Delhi to H. 32 Connaught Circus, New Delhi.
Although this letter had been written in connection with the
change of L-1 license,, it certainly did specify that the
appellants had secured the premises H-32 Connaught Circus.
The personal Assistant to the Excise Commissioner replied
(Ex. 11) that the matter was under consideration. There was
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a reminder (Ex. 12) sent to the Excise Commissioner on
December 8, 1954, about the change of L-1 license from
Karolbagh to Connaught Circus. It appears from papers, for
the first time produced before us at the hearing of this
appeal, that on September 3, 1954, a note was put up by the
Under Secretary, Finance, before the Finance Secretary, Shri
S. K. Mazumdar. At the forefront of this note we find the
following statement: " The applicants (Messrs. Ghaio Mall
and Sons) have no premises in Connaught Circus. For these
reasons, if for no other, their claim has to be rejected."
The note concluded with the recommendation that, in case it
was decided that the vacancy should be filled, the recom-
mendation of the Excise Commissioner should be accepted,
that is to say, the L-2 license should go to
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Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj (Respondent No. 5). On
September 8, 1954, the Finance Secretary simply endorsed the
file to the Chief Minister who, on September 14, 1954,
recorded the following order on the file: " Commissioner’s
recommendation may be accepted ". There is nothing on the
record produced before us to indicate that the matter was
sent up to the Chief Commissioner or that his concurrence
was obtained under s. 36 of the Government of Part C States
Act (No. 49 of 1951). On December 14, 1954, the Under
Secretary, Finance, wrote to the Excise Commissioner a
letter which was for the first time produced at the hearing
before the High Court and to which detailed reference will
be made hereafter. On January 15, 1955, the appellants were
informed that the change applied for by them in respect of
their L-1 license had been allowed. The appellants were not
told anything about the rejection of their application for
L-2 license, but evidently they came to know that the L-2
license, for which a vacancy had arisen on account of the
closure of Messrs. Army and Navy Stores, had been granted
to Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj (respondent No. 5). On
December 24, 1954, the appellants wrote severally to the
Home Secretary (Ex. 14) Finance Secretary (Ex. 15) and the
Under Secretary, Finance (Ex. 16) asking for a copy of the
order or orders granting license to Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem
Raj and/or rejecting their own application for L-2 foreign
liquor license. Three postal acknowledgments (Exs. 16A,
16B, 16C) relating to those three letters are on the record.
The appellants got no reply from any of them.
Not having received any reply the appellants on December 21,
1954, moved the Punjab High Court (Circuit Bench) under Art.
226 for appropriate writs or orders, but as it was not then
quite clear whether the order granting the license to
Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj had actually been made, the
Circuit Bench summarily dismissed that writ application as
premature. There were proceedings taken by the appellants
to obtain leave to appeal first from this Court under Art.
136 which was adjourned sine die and then from the High
Court under Art. 133, but it is not necessary
1431
to go into further details of those proceedings. After the
appellants had definitely ascertained that the L-2 license
had been granted to Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Rai, the
appellants, instead of proceeding with their application for
leave to appeal to this Court, filed a fresh writ petition
in the High Court (Circuit Bench) out of which the present
appeal has arisen.
In the present writ petition the appellants have impleaded 7
respondents, namely, (1) The State of Delhi, (2) The Chief
Minister, Delhi, (3) -The Excise and Taxation Commissioner,
Delhi, (3 A) Secretary, Delhi State, (3 B) Under Secretary,
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Finance, (4) The Chief Commissioner, Delhi and (5) Messrs.
Gainda Mall Hem Raj. The principal ground-, urged by the
appellants in support of this petition are that the ap-
plications of the appellants and of the other applicants had
never been placed before the Chief Commissioner who, under
r. I of Ch. 5 of the Delhi Liquor License Rules, 1935,
framed under s. 59 of the Punjab Excise Act (Punjab I of
1914), as extended to Delhi, was the only competent
authority empowered to grant L-2 license for wholesale and
retail vend of foreign liquor to the public and that the
Chief Commissioner had never applied his mind to the
applications and did not in fact make any order and that
respondents Nos. 2 and 3 had purported to exercise
jurisdiction and power which were not vested in them by law
and that their decision, if any, had not received the con-
currence of the Chief Commissioner, as requiried by the
proviso to s. 36 of the Government of Part C States Act.
The appellants pray for the issue of appropriate writs,
orders or directions (a) quashing and setting aside the
order of granting L-2 license to respondent No. 5, (b)
directing the respondent No. 4 (the Chief Commissioner) to
hold proper enquiry regarding suitability of premises etc.,
to hear both the parties and to decide the application of
the petitioner before taking tip the application of the 5th
respondent. There is a prayer in the nature of a prayer for
further and other reliefs and there is the usual prayer for
costs.
182
1432
A Written statement verified by the affidavit of Shri.
S. K. Majumdar, the Finance Secretary, has been filed on
behalf of respondents I to 4. In paragraph 5 of that written
statement it has been averred that all the applications
including the appellants’ application were in fact
considered; but it is significant that it has not been
stated by whom the applications had been considered.
Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj have filed an affidavit only
stating that they had been informed that the Chief
Commissioner had sanctioned the grant of the license to
them. The appellants, with the leave of the High Court,
filed a consolidated affidavit setting out facts including
the fact that although they had written to the Home
Secretary, the Finance Secretary and the Under Secretary,
Finance, asking for a copy of the order granting the license
to Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj, no copy of the order or
even a reply to the letters had been received. In reply to
the consolidated fresh affidavit an affidavit affirmed by
the Finance Secretary (Shri S. K. Majumdar) has been filed.
In paragraph 13 of this affidavit it has been stated that,
since no appeal lies against the order of the Chief
Commissioner, the question of supplying a copy of the order
to the appellants does not arise. Statements of this kind
cannot but leave an impression in the mind of the Court that
the respondents were not squarely dealing with the case made
by the appellants, but were evading the production of the
order of the Chief Commissioner which it was obviously
insinuated not to have been made at all. In order to compel
the respondents to produce the original order, if any, the
appellants made an application to the High Court supported
by an affidavit. Paragraph 2 of the petition which was
quite precise reads thus:
" 2. That with reference to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the written
statement and paragraphs 10 and 11 of the affidavit of the
Finance Secretary it is submitted that the respondents have
not filed any proper return to the rule issued by the Court
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inasmuch as the original order sought to be quashed with
nothings etc., which led to those orders have been withheld
by the
1433
respondents. The respondents have not even stated that the
Chief Commissioner, Delhi, who is admittedly the only
competent authority for the grant of an L-2 license passed
any orders himself. The replies are evasive. It is not
stated who considered the application of the petitioner i.e.
whether it was a clerk who was doing the noting or whether
the Collector or the Finance Secretary or the Chief Minister
who did it. "
On this application the High Court on April 11, 1955, made
the following order:
Let the order rejecting the petitioners’ application be
brought to court by an officer or official of the department
concerned."
The Finance Secretary filed a reply paragraph 3 of which was
in the term-, following:
" 3. That I have carefully gone through the relevant papers.
The case of the petitioner was considered along with that of
other applicants and it was finally decided to issue the
license in favour of Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj. It was
not considered necessary to send an intimation of rejection
to all those who had not been granted the license in
question. There is therefore no specific order rejecting
the petitioner’s application as ordered to be produced by
the Hon’ble Court."
Although it was obvious what order of the Chief Commissioner
the appellants were insisting on being produced, the
respondents were prompt in taking advantage of the wording
of the High Court’s order directing the production of the
order rejecting the appellants’ application and stated that
there was no specific order rejecting the appellants’
application. This is nothing short of what may be called
swearing by the card. The deponent overlooks the fact that
the order granting the license to Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem
Raj was in effect tantamount to a rejection of the
appellants’ application. The appellants moved the High
Court again on August 8, 1955. After stating how the
respondents were evading the real issue, the appellants in
paragraph 5 of the petition categorically
1434
stated that their case was that the Chief Commissioner,
Delhi, the competent authority, had not passed any order
sanctioning the license in favour of Messrs. Gainda Mall
Hem Raj and prayed that the respondents be directed to file
the original record of the case including the actual
sanction for the grant of the license to Messrs. Gainda
Mall Hem Raj. On August 19, 1955, the Court ordered the
relevant records to be called for. The only thing the
respondents could, at long last, produce before the High
Court was the letter of the Under Secretary, Finance, to the
Excise Commissioner dated December 14, 1954, to which
reference has already been made.
Learned Solicitor-General appearing for respondents 1 to 4
pointed out that the order which is sought to be quashed was
the grant of L-2 license for the year 1954/1955 which has
long expired and suggested that the writ petition and
consequently the appeal had become infructuous. It appears
that the usual practice in such matters is that once a
license in Form L-2 is granted by the Chief Commissioner, it
is almost automatically renewed by the Collector from year
to year, unless, of course, the licensee is found guilty of
breach of any excise rule and that in such cases of renewal
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there arises no question of vacancy entitling any outside
competitor to apply for a license in Form L-2. That being
the position-and this is not in dispute-it is vitally
important for the appellants that we should consider the
validity of the grant of the L-2 licence for 1954/1955 to
Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj, for in case of our holding
that the order granting the same was a nullity on account of
its not having been made by the competent authority, the
vacancy caused by the closure of business by Messrs. Army
and Navy Stores will still remain to be filled up and the
appellants will yet have a chance of having their
application considered by the competent authority. We
accordingly proceeded to hear the appeal on merits.
The principal question urged before us, as before the High
Court, is whether the Chief Commissioner of Delhi made any
order under r. 1 of Ch. 5 of the Delhi
1435
Liquor License Rules, 1935. It is significant that although
the Chief Minister, the Excise Commissioner, the Secretary
of Delhi State, the Under Secretary, Finance, and the Chief
Commissioner have been impleaded in the present proceedings
as respondents Nos. 2, 3, 3A, 3B and 4 respectively and
although they or at least some of them could have deposed to
the material facts of their own personal knowledge, none of
them ventured to file an affidavit dealing with the
categorical statement of the appellants that no order had at
any time been made by the Chief Commissioner for granting
the L-2 license to Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj or rejecting
the appellants’ application. Instead of adopting the simple
and straight forward way these respondents have taken
recourse to putting up the Finance Secretary to give
obviously evasive replies which are wholly unconvincing. It
is needless to say that the adoption of such dubious devices
is not calculated to produce a favourable impression on the
mind of the court as to the good faith of the authorities
concerned in the matter. We must also point out that when a
superior court issues a rule on an application for
certiorari it is incumbent OD the inferior court or the
quasi-judicial body, to whom the rule is addressed, to
produce the entire records before the court along with its
return. The whole object of a writ of certiorari is to
bring up the records of the inferior court or other quasi-
judicial body for examination by the superior court so that
the latter may be satisfied that the inferior court or the
quasi-judicial body has not gone beyond its jurisdiction and
has exercised its jurisdiction within the limits fixed by
the law. Non-production of the records completely defeats
the purpose for which such writs are issued, as it did in
the present case before the High Court. We strongly
deprecate this attempt on the part of the official
respondents to bye-pass the court. We are bound to observe
that the facts appearing on the records before us disclose a
state of affairs which does not reflect any credit on the
administration of the erstwhile State of Delhi. We must,
however, say, in fairness to the learned Solicitor-General,
that he promptly produced
1436
the entire records before us during the hearing of this
appeal.
As already stated the principal question, on which arguments
have been addressed to us, is whether the Chief Commissioner
had made any order for granting the L-2 license to Messrs.
Gainda Mall Hem Raj. The High Court answered the question
in the affirmative on two grounds, namely, (1) that the
Finance Secretary had made an affidavit stating that the
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decision regarding the grant of the license to Messrs.
Gainda Mall Hem Raj had been taken by the Chief
Commissioner, and (2) that the learned Solicitor General
stated in specific terms that the matter had in fact been
decided by the Chief Commissioner. On the facts as they now
emerge it appears to us that the High Court was under some
misapprehension on both these points. We have already
summarised all the statements and affidavits affirmed by the
Finance Secretary and it is quite clear that the only thing
that he did not say was that the Chief Commissioner had
considered the applications or made any order. The learned
Solicitor General, with his usual fairness, also informed us
that except relying on the letter of December 14, 1954, lie
did not say that the Chief Commissioner had taken any
decision in the matter. This being the position we are free
to go into the matter and come to our own decision thereon.
The records, including the documents now produced before us,
do not show that the applications had ever been placed
before the Chief Commissioner. There is nothing in the
files showing any order or note on the subject made or
signed or initialled by the Chief Commissioner. What
transpires is that the Excise Commissioner (respondent No.
3) had by his letter dated August 31, 1954, recorded the
reasons why the appellants’ applications could not be
entertained, one of the reasons being that they had no
premises in the Connaught Place area in New Delhi, that a
note was then put up by the Under Secretary, Finance, on
September 3, 1954, suggesting that the appellants’
application should be rejected, if for nothing else, for
their not having any premises in New Delhi (which
1437
according to the appellants was not a correct statement in
view of their letters referred to above) and that the L-2
license should be granted to Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj,
that the Chief Minister on September 14, 1954, made an order
on the file accordingly and finally that the Under
Secretary, Finance, wrote the letter ’dated December 14,
1954, to the Excise Commissioner intimating that the Chief
Commissioner had been pleased to approve the grant of the
license to Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj. There is nothing
on the record to show that the concurrence with the order of
the Chief Minister was obtained from the Chief Commissioner.
The inexorable force of the aforesaid facts, now appearing
on the record, inevitably led the learned Solicitor General
to concede that, on the records as they are, it is not
possible for him to say that the Chief Commissioner had
actually made the order, but he contends that, in view -of
the letter of the Under Secretary, Finance, dated December
14, 1954, the fact that the Chief Commissioner had made the
order could not be questioned in any court. In other words
the learned Solicitor General submits that that letter
embodies the order of the Chief Commissioner and the court
cannot be asked to go behind it and enquire whether the
Chief Commissioner had in fact made the order.
In order to succeed in this contention the learned Solicitor
General has to satisfy us that this letter is the embodiment
of the Chief Commissioner’s order and that it has been duly
authenticated. On the second point he is clearly right, for
under a rule ’Made on March 17, 1952, by the then Chief
Commissioner, in exercise of powers conferred on him by s.
38(3) of the Government of Part C States Act (49 of 1951),
an Under Secretary is also a person competent to authen-
ticate an order or instrument of the Government of Delhi.
The only question that remains for us to consider is whether
the letter in question is the order of the Chief
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Commissioner. The letter on which the entire defence of the
respondents rests is expressed in the following words:
1438
"DELHI STATE SECRETARIAT,
DELHI STATE
No. F. 10(139)/54-G A & R Dated the
14th December, 54.
From
Shri M. L. Batra, M. A., P. C. S.,
Under Secretary Finance (Expenditure) to Government, Delhi
State.
To
Shri Dalip Singh, M. A., 1. R. S., Commissioner of Excise,
Delhi State,
Delhi.
Subject:-Grant of L-2 License.
Sir,
With reference to your letter No. 295/C/54 dated the 31st
August, 1954, on the above subject, I am directed to say
that the Chief Commissioner is pleased to approve under Rule
5. 1. of Delhi Excise Manual Vol. 11 the grant of L-2 ’
license to Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj, New Delhi, in place
of the L-2 License surrendered by Messrs. Army & Navy
Stores, New Delhi. Necessary License may kindly be issued
to the party concerned under intimation to this Secre-
tariate.
Yours faithfully,
(Sd.). M. L. Batra,
Under Secretary, Finance (Exp.)
to Government, Delhi State."
In the first place it is an inter-departmental com-
munication. In the second place it is written with
reference to an earlier communication made by the Excise
Commissioner, that is to say, ex facie, it purports to be a
reply to the latter’s letter of August 31, 1954. In the
third place the writer quite candidly states that he had
been " directed to say " something by whom, it is not
stated. This makes it quite clear that this document is not
the order of the Chief Commissioner but only purports to be
a communication at the direction of some unknown person-of
the order which
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the Chief Commissioner had made. Indeed in paragraph 7 of
the respondents’ statement filed in the High Court on
February 2,1955, this letter has been stated to have "
conveyed the sanction of the Chief Commissioner of the grant
of license to the 5th respondent ". A document which conveys
the sanction can hardly be equated with the sanction itself
Finally the document does not purport to have been authenti-
cated in the form in which authentication is usually made.
There is no statement at the end of the letter that it has
been written " by order of the Chief Commissioner ". For all
these reasons it is impossible to read this document as the
order of the Chief Commissioner.
Learned counsel for Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj relied on
our decision in Dattatreya Moreshwar Pangarkar v. The State
of Bombay (1). In that case there was ample evidence on the
record to prove that a decision had in fact been taken by
the appropriate authority and the infirmity in the form of
the authentication did not vitiate the order but only meant
that the presumption could not be availed of by the State.
That decision did not proceed on the correctness of the form
of authentication but on the fact of an order having in fact
been made by the appropriate authority and has thus no
application to the present case where it is conceded that
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the Chief Commissioner had not in fact made or concurred in
the making of an order granting the license to Messrs.
Gainda Mall Hem Raj.
In the view we have taken it is not necessary for us to
consider whether the action taken under the Excise Act and
the rules thereunder was a judicial or an executive action,
for even if it were of the latter category the letter of
December 14, 1954, cannot be treated as an order properly
authenticated to which the presumption raised by Art. 166 of
the Constitution will attach. For reasons stated above we
hold that there was no valid order granting the L-2 license
to Messrs. Gainda Mall Hem Raj and that in the eye of the
law the vacancy arising on the closure of the
(1) (1952) S.C.R. 612.
183
1440
business by Messrs. Army and Navy Stores still remains
unfilled. The applications of the appellants and other
applicants were for a grant of L-2 license for 1954/ 1955.
That year has gone past and accordingly in the changed
circumstances we direct the Chief Commissioner to fill up
the vacancy caused by the closure of the business by Messrs.
Army and Navy Stores by inviting applications from intending
licensees including the appellants and Messrs. Gainda Mall
Hem Raj and granting the same to the most suitable party.
We, therefore, accept this appeal, reverse the order of the
High Court and issue a mandamus to the effect aforesaid and
also direct the respondents Nos. 1 to 4 to pay the
appellants’ costs of this appeal and of the proceedings in
the High Court out of which this appeal has arisen. Messrs.
Gainda Mall Hem Raj are to bear their own costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.