Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAHABIR AUTO STORES & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
INDIAN OIL CORPORATION & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT06/03/1990
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (CJ)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (CJ)
RAY, B.C. (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 1031 1990 SCR (1) 818
1990 SCC (3) 752 JT 1990 (1) 363
1990 SCALE (1)410
CITATOR INFO :
F 1991 SC 537 (32,48)
D 1991 SC 818 (18)
ACT:
Constitution of India 1950--Article 14, 32, 226 and 298
--State organ--Action of entering or not entering into
contracts with individual parties--Whether can be questioned
in writ jurisdiction.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant-firm had been carrying on the business of
distribution and sale of all kinds of lubricants received
from the respondent, a statutory corporation, since 1965. It
is the case of the appellant that it acted as Lube distribu-
tor of the respondent corporation and that it had been given
the Customer No. during the course of business. The appel-
lant claimed that from Feb. 1965 to 27th May, 1983, it had
received and uplifted the supply of lubricants/goods each
year and the total quantity, of lubricants/goods thus lifted
had gone upto the extent of 1,11,34854 litres or kgs. The
respondent suddenly stopped the supply of lubricants to the
appellant-firm on 27.5.1983. The appellant-firm made several
representations to the respondent against the aforesaid
action of the respondent but to no use. The appellant there-
upon filed a writ petition in the High Court praying for a
writ of mandamns directing the respondent to desist from
denying or discontinuing the supply of lubricants and there-
by save the appellant from being ousted from the business;
claim for damages from the date the supply was discontinued
was also made.
Before the High Court, it was inter alia contended by
the appellant that the correspondent that passed between the
appellant and respondent and the invoices issued during the
long years of business would show that the respondent always
treated the appellant as its agent and distributor; sudden
stoppage of supply violated the principles of natural jus-
tice. It therefore sought the specific performance of the
alleged contract. The respondent on the other hand ques-
tioned the maintainability of the petition as according to
it the respondent was not ’State’ within the meaning of
Art. 12 of the Constitution. It further averred that there
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was no concluded contract by the respondent with the appel-
lant and that the work continued under an adhoc arrangement;
that the policies of the respondent were governed by the
guidelines/directions issued to it from time to time by the
Ministry of
819
Petroleum whereunder it was no longer possible to give
further supplies to the appellant firm.
After considering the rival contentions advanced by the
parties the High Court, dismissed the writ petition. The
appellant has filed this appeal with special leave.
Allowing and disposing of the appeal with directions, this
Court,
HELD: Every action of the State or of an instrumentality
of the State in exercise of its executive power, must be
informed by reason. In appropriate cases, actions uninformed
by reason may be questioned as arbitrary in proceedings
under Article 226 or Article 32 of the Constitution. [826D]
The respondent-company Indian Oil Corporation is an
organ of the ’State’ or an ’instrumentality of the State’ as
contemplated under Article 12 of the Constitution. [826F]
The State acts in its executive power under Article 298
of the Constitution in entering or not entering in contracts
with individual parties. Article 14 of the Constitution
would be applicable to those exercises of power. Therefore,
the action of the State organ under Article 14 can be
checked. [826F]
Rule of reason and rule against arbitrariness and dis-
crimination, rules of fair play and natural justice are part
of the rule of law applicable in situation or action by
State instrumentality in dealing with citizens in a situa-
tion like as in the instant case. Even though the rights of
the citizens are in the nature of contractual rights, the
manner, the method and motive of a decision of entering or
not entering into a contract, are subject to judicial review
on the touchstone of relevance, and reasonableness, fair
play natural justice, equality and non-discrimination in the
type of the transactions and nature of the dealing as in the
instant case. [827E-F]
The dichotomy between rights and remedies cannot be
obliterated by any straight jacket formule. It has to be
examined in each particular case. [829D]
Decision of the State/Public authority under Article 298
of the Constitution, is an administrative decision and can
be impeached on the ground that the decision is arbitrary or
violative of Article 14 of the
820
Constitution or on any of the grounds available in public
law field. It appears to us that in respect of Corporation
like Indian Oil Corporation when without informing the
parties concerned, as in the case of the appellant firm on
alleged change of policy and on that basis action to seek to
bring to an end the course of transaction over 18 years
involving large amounts of money is not fair action, espe-
cially in view of the monopolistic nature of the power of
the respondent in this field. [829F-G]
E.P. Royappa v. State of Tamil Nadu and Anr., [1974] 4
SCC 3; Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India and Anr., [1978] 1
SCC 248; Ajay Nasia and Ors. v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi and
Ors., [1981] 1 SCC 722; A.D. Shetty v. International Airport
Authority of India and Ors., [1979] 3 SCC 1 and Dwarkadas
Mariatia and Ors. v. Board of Trustees of the Port of Bom-
bay, [1989] 3 SCC 293, referred to.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1350 of
1990.
From the Judgment and Order dated 9.2. 1989 of Delhi
High Court in C.W. No. 1904 of 1983.
Dr. L.M. Singhvi, Dr. A.M. Singvi and D. Bhandari (N.P.)
for the Appellants.
Harish N. Salve, Mrs. P. Shroff and S.A. Shroff for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, CJ. Having heard counsel for the
parties and having considered the facts, circumstances and
the contentions involved herein, we grant special leave and
dispose of the appeal by judgment herein.
This appeal arises out of the judgment and order of the
High Court of Delhi dated 9th February, 1989. Appellant No.
1 is a partnership firm. The other four appellants are the
partners of the said firm. The respondent is a company
incorporated under the Indian Companies Act, 1956 and hav-
ing, inter alia, one of its regional offices at Janpath, New
Delhi. The appellants sought in the Writ Petition filed
under Article 226 of the Constitution before the High Court
a writ of mandamus against the respondent directing it to
desist from denying or
821
discontinuing the supply of all kinds of lubricants to the
appellant No. 1 and from ousting, black-listing, coercing or
pressurising the appellant No. 1 from the business of deal-
ing with all kinds of lubricants supplied by the respondent
company to have and to continue to supply all kinds of
lubricants to the appellant firm as was done in the past and
for the maintenance of status quo existing on the 27th May,
1953 and for payment of necessary damages for the period
from 28th May, 1983 till the date of the filing of the writ
petition before the High Court or till the decision of the
writ petition.
The appellant No. 1, herein referred to as the firm, is
a partnership firm duly registered with the Registrar of
Firms, Delhi. The said firm had been carrying on the distri-
bution and sale of all kinds of lubricants and was regis-
tered under Sales Tax Act vide Registration no. 1636 dated
22nd October, 195 1 and has a goodwill of its own, according
to the said appellants, in the entire region of Northern
India with expertise and knowledge in the distribution and
sale of all kinds of lubricants. The appellants contend that
in the past 32 years the appellant firm had acquired a very
good reputation and has earned enviable goodwill in the
trade.
As stated hereinbefore, the respondent company is a
statutory body incorporated under the Indian Companies Act,
1956 and have been dealing throughout with the appellant
firm since 1965 when the firm became, according to the
appellants, its distributor. The appellants claim that the
said firm had been appointed as Lube Distributor and the
appellant firm have been given the Permanent Customer Code
No. 63-01-3115-1022-9-X, according to the appellant. The
appellants contend that this was done in due course. It is
the further case of the appellants that the lubricants were
released by the respondent company to the said appellant
firm on 25th January, 1965 by Invoice No. 146668 and there-
after the firm had promoted the sales of the products of the
company successfully inasmuch as from February, 1965 to 27th
May, 1983 and the firm had received and uplifted the supply
of lubricants/goods each year and the total quantity of
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lubricants/goods such lifted had gone up to the extent of 1,
11,34,854 litres or kgs. The appellants claimed that the
said firm is one of the respondent company’s Lube Distribu-
tor in Northern India. It was the case of the appellants
before the High Court and also before this Court that the
said firm had been carrying on business as the Lube distrib-
utor of the respondent company and had been selling all
kinds of lubricants. The appellants contend that the re-
spondent company had recognised the appellant firm during
all this period as authorised dealer and a distributor and
an agent.
822
It was the case of the appellants before the High Court
and they had tried to demonstrate with reference to the
various documents, annexures etc. filed by them that the
firm had been always carrying business as Lube Distributor
of the Company, and has been selling all kinds of lubri-
cants. The appellants further contended that the Company had
recognised the firm during all this period as authorised
dealer, distributor and agent. Certain letters were written
by the company directing various customers to contact the
firm as an authorised Lube Distributor. This contention was
stated before the High Court as well as before us. It iS
stated that annexures A-2 to A- 14 were copies of letters
written by the company directing various customers to con-
tact the firm as an authorised Lube Distributor. Annexure
A-15 is an advertisement issued in a specially published
souvenir on the occasion of All India Highway Motor Rally
held in 1972 sponsored by the Company in which the firm was
referred to as the Company’s authorised Lube Distributor.
Annexures A- 16 to A-35 are copies of the letters written by
the Company to the appellants in relation to the dealing of
the appellants as Lube Distributor. There are several other
documents on which reliance was placed on behalf of the
appellants. The firm was treated as authorised dealer and
agent of the respondentcompany. It was contended that there
was a change of policy by the respondent company, and cer-
tain documents of the year 1972 were relied upon to indicate
that the supply of lubricants was stopped to those Associa-
tions and Dealers to whom ad hoc supplies were given, who
were merely re-sellers, traders and who did not have written
contracts with the Company. That was the case of the appel-
lant’s firm. However, the appellants asserted, that the
supply was continued to the appellant firm being a dealer
and distributor of the Company. Reliance was placed on
Annexures P-28 to P-34 which are the Product Indent-cum-
Delivery Orders for various periods issued by the Company to
the firm. It is stated that in the said Product Indent-
cumDelivery Order there was a note indicating "For Condi-
tions of Supply Please Turnover ..... ". However, in the
copies filed with the rejoinder affidavit, there are no
terms on the reverse side of the Product Indent-cum-Delivery
Order. Although the firm has been receiving continuous
supply of lubricants from the Company, it was suddenly
stopped on 27th May, 1983 by the Company, and it was con-
tended that such an action of the Company will have the
effect of black-listing the firm and is arbitrary and
against the principles of natural justice besides being hit
by the doctrine of promissory estoppel. The appellant firm,
it was contended, had made representations against the
aforesaid action of the respondent company but to no use. In
that background the reliefs mentioned here-in-before were
sought from the High Court
823
in the application filed under article 226 of the Constitu-
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tion.
The respondent-company had raised various objections to
the maintainability of the Writ Petition, namely, inter
alia, that the Company was not State within the meaning of
Article 12 of the Constitution as the Company is registered
under the Companies Act, 1956, the Writ Petition was not
maintainable as no writ to enforce alleged supply, according
to the respondent company, was maintainable and the appro-
priate remedy for the appellants was to claim damages for
breach of contract or relief for specific performance of
contract, if any. It was submitted, further, that the firm
had not any contract and was seeking to rely on an irregular
course of conduct and on an ad hoc arrangement which the
company cannot perpetuate in view of the prevailing guide-
lines and/or directions received from the Ministry of Energy
in the Department of Petroleum. Where in fact there was an
actual written agreement the Company’s contractual relation-
ship with its distributors was also capable of termination
forthwith and was only subject to the normal contractual
laws and decisions in the realm of contract could not be the
subject matter of proceedings under article 226 of the
Constitution, it was submitted. The appellants case, it was
urged by the responde it-company, was at much lower footing.
The Company however deaied that the firm had even been
black-listed and it had never acted in a mala fide, or
capricious or arbitrary manner or on any extraneous, or
oblique or irrelevant consideration. There was no commit-
ment, it was suggested, to supply a fixed quantity regular-
ly, made to the appellant firm at any stage.
It appears that the procedure adopted for the supply of
lube oil products was that the party requiring supply would
write a letter to the Company ’whereupon the Divisional
Office through the Lube section would process the same and
would intimate as to how much supply was possible. Thereupon
the requisition slip would be processed and a delivery
challan/order would be made out. The conditions of the
Proluct Indent-cum-Delivery Order, inter alia, categorically
provided that "IOC also reserves the right to cancel your
order without any intimation or assigning any reason". It
further provided that "IOC took no responsibility of des-
patches/releases of stocks shall be on the basis of avail-
ability of stocks." There was no other contract in the facts
and circumstances of the case, it was urged. The letters
making the requisitions, the Product Indent-cum-Delivery
Orders, the Delivery Challans as also the payment are the
only documents constituting the dealing or transactions
between the parties. The Company had categorically reserved
its right to refuse and/or cancel the orders with-
824
out any intimation or assigning any reason and it was per-
fectly within its fight to discontinue the said arrangement.
Several obligations have been provided under the arrangement
including, inter alia, price controls, minimum off-take of
stocks, safeguards against contamination, fight to the
inspection and/or unrestricted access, right of account etc.
It was asserted’ that even under the contractual transaction
as entered into with the Associated Trading Company, the
respondent company had fight of termination forthwith for
any reason whatsoever and the Company’s fight to terminate
was not lettered by the doctrine of reasonableness or doc-
trine of natural justice and rights of hearing etc. as
sought to be put forward on behalf of the appellants. It is,
therefore, suggested that what was not even contractually
recognised should not be artifically given higher status, in
the facts and circumstances of the case, as the appellants
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were seeking to invoke the fight flowing from an utter
irregularity specially when the company had been made publi-
cally accountable especially when the Company does not act
unless through a written contract as also when only autho-
rised.
It was further the case of the respondent that the
company was subjected to distribution policies and guide-
lines of the Department of Petroleum in the Ministry of
Energy, Government of India. They are also bound by the
directives to the effect that lubricants are to be sold only
to consumers, to those parties who will not sell directly or
indirectly to foreign oil companies and no sale should take
place to old agents or distributor of foreign oil companies.
All sales of lubricants must take place to actual consumers
or to such small parties who will sell actually to consumers
and not to foreign oil company. Besides this, the Ministry
of Energy by the letter beating reference No. P-17011/7/82-
SUP dated 21st December, 1982 under policy number 201 had
communicated to all oil companies that no new distributor
was to be appointed for distribution of lubricating oils and
there is a ban on such appointments. In the facts and the
circumstances of the case the Company was, thus, according
to the respondent, prevented by the
directive/instruction/guidelines of the Ministry of Energy
to appoint new dealers and distributors or to formalise any
agreement constituting the dealership or distributorship. In
fact, right since 1972, 24 parties who had ad hoc arrange-
ment of supply of lube oils were discontinued, according to
the respondent. There was no assurance, whatsoever, nor any
promise nor any contract or nor any prescribed schedule to
supply any quantity of lubricants, as alleged, to the appel-
lant or to anybody else. It was further asserted in the
present case that in view of the ban imposed, no fresh
distributors could be appointed nor the oil companies empow-
ered to regularise and contract afresh for
825
dealers/distributors in lubricant oils. It was further the
case of the respondent that the customer code number is
given to authorised distributors/dealers only. The position
was explained that the mode and manner of computerisation of
accounts set out in Annexure P-25 and the allotment of
customer code number is only for the purpose of identifica-
tion and not for any other purpose nor to designate the firm
as an authorised Lube distributor. The Company had denied
that the Code 01 was allotted only to dealers/agents as
alleged. The Code 01 was applicable to all re-sellers, where
a further sale is a necessary concommitment of the first
sale. Certain particulars were given how 01 is given and it
was stated in the case of four parties the partnership was
terminated because of the new policy.
The High Court after exhaustively dealing with the rival
contentions came to the conclusion that viewed from diverse
angles, the appellants had sought the specific performance
of certain alleged contract. It was also held that the said
alleged contract was neither precise, nor definite nor
certain nor was capable of being made certain. It was not
certain, in this case, as to how much goods were required
and for how long were these required and at what considera-
tion, these were all uncertain and vague, it was submitted.
It was held by the High Court that for a Writ of mandamus
the appellants should have a legal right to enforce the
performance of alleged duty by the respondent and since no
right was shown to exist by the appellants for selling the
continuous supply of the lubricants whatsoever indefinitely
for future and no corresponding legal duty was imposed on
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the respondent to supply, the Writ of mandamus was not
maintainable. In those circumstances the Writ Application
was dismissed as not maintainable.
Aggrieved thereby the appellants have come up to this
Court, as mentioned hereinbefore.
We have heard learned counsel Dr. L.M. Singhvi as well
as Mr. Salve exhaustively. Further affidavits were filed and
documents produced before us. It was sought to be urged by
Dr. Singhvi that the respondent was an instrumentality of
State and as such the question involved was whether an
instrumentality of State can suddenly, arbitrarily, unrea-
sonably, without any relevant factors and without any notice
and determination or proceeding stop supplies of products
which, according to him, had been supplied more than-1 crore
11 lacs litres/kg of product continuously and uninterrupted-
ly over a period of more than 18 years. Dr. Singhvi suggest-
ed that the respondent IOC is an instrumentality of State
under Article 12 of the Constitution. From
826
the nature of the business carried on by the appellants, it
was manifest to us that the supply of the lubricants of the
type with which the respondent had a monopoly, could be
carried on by the appellants only as the supplier from the
reSpondent.That business was not possible otherwise. The
respondent had monopoly in that respect. This aspect is
important. The respondent firm was supplying from 1965 to
1983 large quantities of lubricant oil and from 1983 onwards
till 1989 supplies were continued on the interim order of
the High Court of Delhi. Supplies were stopped suddenly on
27th May, 1983. There is no dispute that no intimation was
given, no notice was given, no query or clarification sought
for and there was no adjudication as such. It was held that
the appellant firm was not entitled to supply, the stoppage
of supply in May 1983 was, therefore, bad. The appellant
further contended that the case of the respondent-company
IOC was never made known or revealed prior to the Counter
Affidavit in the High Court of the appellants. The conten-
tion urged on behalf of the appellants was that this is
patent violation of all canons of natural justice, fair play
and reasonableness. It is submitted that natural justice and
reasonableness of the procedure are enshrined under Article
14 of the Constitution.
It is well settled that every action of the State or an
instrumentality of the State in exercise of its executive
power, must be informed by reason. In appropriate cases,
actions uninformed by reason may be questioned as arbitrary
in proceedings under Article 226 or Article 32 of the Con-
stitution. Reliance in this connection may be placed on the
observations of this Court in M/s Radha Krishna Agarwal &
Ors. v. State of Bihar & Ors., [1977] 3 SCC 457.1t appears
to us, at the outset, that in the facts and circumstances of
the case, the respondent-company IOC is an organ of the
State or an instrumentality of the State as contemplated
under Article 12 of the Constitution. The State acts in its
executive power under Article 298 of the Constitution in
entering or not entering in contracts with individual par-
ties. Article 14 of the Constitution would be applicable to
those exercises of power. Therefore, the action of State
organ under Article 14 can be checked. See M/s Radha Krishna
Agarwal v. State of Bihar, (supra) at p. 462, but Article 14
of the Constitution cannot and has not been construed as a
charter for judicial review of State action after the con-
tract has been entered into, to call upon the State to
account for its actions in its manifold activities by stat-
ing reasons for such actions. In a situation of this nature
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certain activities of the respondent company which consti-
tuted State under Article 12 of the Constitution may be in
certain circumstances subject to Article 14 of the Constitu-
tion in entering or not entering into contracts and must be
reasonable and taken
827
only upon lawful and relevant consideration, it depends upon
facts and circumstances of a particular transaction whether
heating is necessary and reasons have to be stated. In case
any right conferred on the citizens which is sought to be
interfered, such action is subject to Article 14 of the
Constitution, and must be reasonable and can be taken only
upon lawful and relevant grounds of public interest. Where
there is arbitrariness in State action of this type of
entering or not entering into contracts, Article 14 springs
up and judicial review strikes such an action down. Every
action of the State executive authority must be subject to
rule of law and must be informed by reason. So, whatever be
the activity of the public authority, in such monopoly or
semi-monopoly dealings, it should meet the test of Article
14 of the Constitution. If a Governmental action even in the
matters of entering or not entering into contracts, fails to
satisfy the test of reasonableness, the same would be unrea-
sonable. In this connection reference may be made to E.P.
Royappa v. State of Tamil Nadu & Anr., [1974] 4 SCC 3;
Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India & Anr., [1976] 1 SCC 248;
Ajay Hasia & Ors. v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi & Ors., [1981]
1 SCC 722; R.D. Shetry v. International Airport Authority of
India & Ors., [1979] 3 SCC 1 and also Dwarkadas Marlaria and
sons v. Board of Trustees of the Port of Bombay, [1989] 3
SCC 293. It appears to us that rule of reason and rule
against arbitrariness and discrimination, rules of fair play
and natural justice are part of the rule of law applicable
in situation or action by State instrumentality in dealing
with citizens in a situation like the present one. Even
though the rights of the citizens are in the nature of
contractual rights, the manner, the method and motive of a
decision of entering or not entering into a contract, are
subject to judicial review on the touchstone of relevance
and reasonableness, fair play, natural justice, equality and
non-discrimination in the type of the transactions and
nature of the dealing as in the present case.
The existence of the power of judicial review however
depends upon the nature and right involved in the facts and
circumstances of the particular case. It is well settled
that there can be "malice in law". Existence of such "malice
in law" is part of the critical apparatus of a particular
action in administrative law. Indeed "malice in law" is part
the dimension of the rule of relevance and reason as
well as the rule of fair play in action.
It was submitted that the respondent had continuously,
uninterruptedly, consistently and repeatedly dealt with the
appellant and recognised the appellant, and had treated it
as a dealer. On that
828
basis the appellants and his family had acted for 19 years.
To substantiate these assertions, certain documents and
samples were referred to by the appellants. Our attention
was drawn to large number of invoices, cash memos and to the
customer code No. 013115 allotted to the appellant. It was
submitted that the prefix 01 applied only to dealers, dis-
tributors etc. The defence of the respondent was the absence
of written contract which was the standard form and not
appointment letters. The appellant contended that the appel-
lants were selling IOC products without written contract. It
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was further asserted that the IOC has sought to change its
stand and say that it does not deal with person without
contract but according to the appellants, has issued letters
of appointment to some of them and these persons, according
to the appellants, sell lubes. It was submitted that this
change of stand was an afterthought. It was further stated
that letters, in some cases, cannot lead to an exclusion of
all others to whom letters of appointment had not been
issued. It is submitted that in the fairness IOC could have
and should have issued such letter of appointment to appel-
lant No. 1 also and should have considered the case of the
appellant-firm. It was submitted that IOC has always treated
lube and non lube products on the same basis, without dis-
tinction. This distinction which was sought to be urged
before us, it was submitted, was an after thought and not
justified. The appellant contended that the IOC’s purported
reliance upon the guidelines, was not justified. Further-
more, the guidelines were not mandatory or binding. These
use directory words like "may". More importantly, these
exclude all those who are part of the existing network and
apply for fresh appointment of new distributors. The appel-
lant was part of the existing network and was not to be
inducted as a new distributor and the appellant-firm falls
within the existing network and has always been so treated
continuously and uninterruptedly from 1965 to 1983, it was
the case of the appellants. It was contended that the appel-
lant-firm was entitled to relief, inter alia, on grounds of
promissory estoppels, unreasonable and arbitrary exclusion,
and discriminatory treatment under Article 14 of the Consti-
tution.
Mr. Salve on behalf of the appellants sought to urge
that the appellant firm had never been appointed as a Lube
Distributor. There is no letter of intent, letter of ap-
pointment, much less letter at all. Ad-hoc supplies of Lube
products alone had been made to the appellant from 1965
onwards. The procedure adopted for the supply of lube
products was that the appellant would write a letter to the
company whereupon the Divisional Office, Lube Section would
process the same. The policy decision in December, 1982
indicated that no new
829
Distributor for Lube products would be appointed and no new
products would be distributed either through the existing
net-work, of existing Lube Distributors or to authorised
dealers of other products such as, petrol, SKO, LDO and HSD.
It was submitted that as a result of the policy it was not
the appellant alone to whom the supplies were discontinued.
There was similar discontinuance of supplies to 24 other
parties whose names were given in the counter affidavit.
Mr. Salve submitted that in private law field there was
no scope for applying the doctrine of arbitrariness or mala
fides. The validity of the action of the parties have to be
tested, it was urged on behalf of the respondent, on the
basis of "right" and not "power". A plea of
arbitrariness/mala fides as being so gross cannot shift a
matter tailing in private law field to public law field.
According to Mr. Salve to permit the same would result in
anomalous situation that whenever State is involved it would
always be public law field, this would mean all redress
against the State would fall in the Writ Jurisdiction and
not in suits before Civil Courts.
We are of the opinion that in all such cases whether
public law or private law rights are involved, depends upon
the facts and circumstances of the case. The dichotomy
between rights and remedies cannot be obliterated by any
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straight jacket formula. It has to be examined in each
particular case. Mr. Salve sought to urge that there are
certain cases under Article 14 of arbitrary exercise of such
"power" and not cases of exercise of a "right" arising
either under a contract or under a Statute. We are of the
opinion that that would depend upon the factual matrix.
Having considered the facts and circumstances of the
case and the nature of the contentions and the dealings
between the parties and in view of the present state of law,
we are of the opinion that decision of the State/public
authority under Article 298 of the Constitution, is an
administrative decision and can be impeached on the ground
that the decision is arbitrary or violative of Article 14 of
the Constitution of India on any of the grounds available in
public law field. It appears to us that in respect of Corpo-
ration like IOC when without informing the parties con-
cerned, as in the case of the appellant firm herein on
alleged change of policy and on that basis action to seek to
bring to an end the course of transaction over 18 years
involving large amounts of money is not fair action, espe-
cially in view of the monopolistic nature of the power of
the respondent in this field. Therefore, it is necessary to
reiterate that even in the field of public law, the relevant
persons
830
concerned or to be affected, should be taken into confi-
dence. Whether and in what circumstances that confidence
should be taken into consideration cannot be laid down on
any straight jacket basis. It depends on the nature of the
fight involved and nature of the power sought to be exer-
cised in a particular situation. It is true that there is
discrimination between power and fight but whether the State
or the instrumentality of a State has the right to functign
in public field or private field is a matter which,in our
opinion, depends upon the facts and circumstances of the
situation, but such exercise Of power cannot be dealt with
by the State or the instrumentality of the State without
informing and taking into confidence, the party whose fights
and powers affected or sought to be affected, into confi-
dence. In such situations most often people feel aggrieved
by exclusion of knowledge if not being taken into confi-
dence.
Such transaction should continue as an administrative
decision with the organ of the State. It may be contractual
or statutory but in a situation of transaction between the
parties for nearly two decades, such procedure should be
followed which will be reasonable, fair and just, that is,
the process which normally be accepted to be followed by an
organ of the State and that process must be conscious and
all those affected should be taken into confidence.
Having regard to the nature of the transaction, we are
of the opinion that it would be appropriate to state that in
cases where the instrumentality of the state enters the
contractual field, it should be governed by the incidence of
the contract. It is true that it may not be necessary to
give reasons but, in our opinion, in the field of this
nature fairness must be there to the parties concerned, and
having regard to the large number or the long period and the
nature of the dealings between the parties, the appellant
should have been taken into confidence. Equality and fair-
ness at least demands this much from an instrumentality of
the State dealing with a right of the State not to treat the
contract as subsisting. We must, however, evolve such proc-
ess which will work.
Therefore, we direct that the case of the respondent be
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put to the appellants, and let the respondent authorities
consider afresh the submissions made by the appellant firm,
namely, that the existing arrangement amounts to a contract
by which the distributorship was continued in case of the
appellant firm without any formal contract and further that
the new policy of the Government introduced in December,
1982 would not cover the appellant firm and as such the
831
appellant should continue. It will be sufficient, having
regard to the nature of the claims, for the respondent
authority to consider this aspect after taking the appellant
firm into confidence on this aspect. Nothing further need be
stated or required to be done and we give no ’directions as
to whether reasons should be recorded or hereinafter should
be given. In the facts and circumstances, it is not neces-
sary to give oral hearing or record the reasons as such for
the decision. The decision should be based on fair play,
equity and consideration by an institution like IOC. It must
act fairly.
We direct accordingly that the present arrangement to
continue until the respondent company gives the considera-
tion on the lines indicated above and makes the decision.
It is not our decision which is important but a decision
on the above basis should be arrived at which should be
fair, just and reasonable--and consistent with good govern-
ment--which will be arrived at fairly and should be taken
after taking the persons concerned whose rights/obligations
are affected, into confidence. Fairness in such action
should be perceptible, if not transparent.
The Judgment and the Order of the High Court are, there-
fore, set aside and the direction and order as aforesaid are
substituted and the application made to the High Court is
disposed of on the aforesaid terms. In the facts and circum-
stances of the case, there will be no order as to costs.
Y. Lal Appeal al-
lowed.
832