Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
U.P. STATE ROADWAYS TRANSPORT CORP.,LUCKNOW THROUGH ITS GENE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ANWAR AHMED & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/09/1996
BENCH:
K. RAMASWAMY, G.B. PATTANAIK
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
Delay condoned.
Leave granted.
We have heard learned counsel for the parties.
This case has a chequered history of its own. For over
three decades, the scheme was not allowed to be finalised,
but ultimately by the judgment of this Court in Ram Krishna
Verma vs. State of U.P. & Ors. [(1992) 2 SCC 620], the
scheme was finalised and published in the Gazette. Two
unsuccessful attempts were made subsequently to reopen the
issue and thwart the scheme but remained unsuccessful. This
is a third occasion. This time a device was employed to
carve out a route from two nationalised routes, viz.,
Bulandshaher to Delhi and Shahdara to Saharanpur. They are
now sought to be interjected with temporary permits to be
obtained on the carved out route Ghaziabad to Saharanpur.
Thereby they sought to entrench upon frozen field through
back-door process of forcing the appellant to obtain all
permits as per the scheme, lest the temporary permits should
be given to them by the State Transport Authority or
Regional Transport Authority, as the case may be.
The High Court of Allahabad by order dated June 2, 1995
directed the Regional Transport Authority to consider the
grant of temporary permits for the Ghaziabad to Saharanpur
route and, in the meanwhile, liberty was given to the
appellant-Corporation to lift the permit granted for the
route. When the proceedings were taken out before the State
Transport Authority to grant permits that necessitated
filing of the writ petition. By the impugned order dated
November 17, 1995 of the High Court in the contempt
proceedings and also orders dated January 10, 1996 and
January 16,1996, temporary permits were directed to be taken
by the respondents. Thus, these appeals by special leave.
In view of the settled legal position that once the
scheme has been approved and notified, right to ply stage
carriages by private operators on the notified area, routes
or portions thereof is totally frozen. Therefore, they have
no right to claim any grant of stage carriage, temporary or
contact carriage permits thereunder on the said notified
area, routes or portions thereof except to the extent saved
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by the scheme with restrictions imposed thereunder. Shri
Harish N. Salve, learned senior counsel, sought to rely upon
proviso to Section 104 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 (for
short, the ’Act’) to justify the orders which provides as
under:
"104. Restriction on grant of
permits in respect of a notified
area or notified route. -- Where a
scheme has beenpublished under sub-
section(3) of Section 100 in
respect of any notified area or
notified route, the State Transport
Authority or the Regional Transport
Authority, as the case may be,
shall not grant any permit except
in accordance with the provisions
of the scheme:
Provided that where no application
for a permit has been made by the
State transport undertaking in
respect of anynotified area or
notified route in pursuance of an
approved scheme, the State
Transport Authority or the Regional
Transport Authority, as the case
may be, may grant temporary permits
to any person in respect of such
notified area or notified route
subject to the condition that such
permits shall cease to be effective
on the issue of a permit to the
State transport undertaking in
respect of that area or route."
It would, therefore, be seen that where the scheme has
been published under sub-section (3) of Section 100 in
respect of any notified area or notified route, the State
Transport Authority or the Regional Transport Authority, as
the case may be, shall not grant any permit except in
accordance with the provisions of the scheme. Thus, the
appellant-Corporation has the exclusive right or monopoly to
ply their stage carriages and obtain the required permit as
per the scheme. The proviso gives only a limited breath of
life, namely, until the Corporation puts the vehicles on the
notified routes as per the scheme, temporary permits may be
granted to private operators. Thereby, it would be clear
that temporary inconvenience to travelling public is sought
to be averted till the permits are taken and vehicles are
put on the route by the appellant. Therefore, the temporary
permits will have only limited breath of life. Private
operators are attempting to wear the mask of inconvenience
to travelling public to infigurate into forbidden notified
area, route or portion thereof to sabotage the scheme. The
permits were taken by the appellant and the vehicles are put
on the route in terms of the scheme. Therefore, the
direction given by the High Court at the pain of contempt is
obviously illegal. It is stated by Shri V.R. Reddy,
Additional solicitor General , on instruction that the
appellant is prepared to take all the permits required on
the routes.
But the crucial question is: whether a new route can be
introduced by fusing two notified routes and temporary
permits sought to be obtained on carved out route? This
device is obviously impermissible to enter into frozen area
or route or portion thereof through back-door. The scheme is
law by itself until it is varied according to law no private
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operator has any right to camouflage any devise to obtain
temporary permits. Under these circumstances, action taken
by the respondents to obtain temporary permits is obviously
ultra vires and authorities have no jurisdiction to grant
such permits. The altered or modified routes are contrary to
the approved scheme, since they have been occupied by two
notified routes and to be operated as per the scheme.
Under these circumstances, the appeals are accordingly
allowed but, in the circumstances, without costs.