Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAICHAND AMULAKH SHAH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/10/1963
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 1268 1964 SCR (5) 148
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1973 SC1281 (8)
ACT:
Indian Railway Act, 1890, s. 26--Construction of--Suit
for refund of Wharfage and demurrage charges--If barred--"
Wharfage" and "demurrage" meaning of--If terminals.
HEADNOTE:
Suits were filed against the Union of India representing
the Western Railway for the refund of amounts collected by
the Western Railway as wharfage and demurrage charges from
the appellants. It was alleged in the plaint that Railway
notifications and rules under which the Railway had charged
the wharfage at two annas to four annas per maund per day
were illegal and ultra rites and that in any view the
railway had no power under the rules to collect charges from
appellant-firm for the "free time" under the head of
wharfage charges. The respondent pleaded that Civil Court
had no jurisdiction to entertain the suits and that rules
were not ultra rites and money was not collected against the
rules. Suits were dismissed by the trial court on the
ground that they were barred under s. 26 of the Indian
Railways Act. Revisions were also dismissed by the High
Court. The appellants came to this Court by Special Leave.
Accepting the appeals,
Held, that s. 26 of the Indian Railways Act is not a bar
to the maintainability of a suit for the refund of what fage
or demurrage charged in excess. The bar under s. 26 is not
comprehensive. It is limited by the opening words "Except as
provided in the Act" in the section. Two conditions must be
complied with before applying s. 26. The railway
administration should have done an act or omitted to do an
act in contravention of the provisions of Chapter V of the
Indian Railways Act and the Act should provide a remedy in
respect of that act or omission. In the present case, the
Act does not provide for any remedy for an aggrieved party
to approach the Tribunal appointed under s. 34 of the Act
for the refund of the amount collected in excess by the
Railway Administration by way of wharfage or demurrage.
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The Tribunal has no jurisdiction to decide whether the rules
empowering the administration to collect wharfage or
demurrage charges are ultra vires or the amounts collected
are in excess of what is leviable under the rules.
Wharfage and demurrage are charges in respect of goods
unloaded from wagons and kept at the station and also in
respect of the goods kept on a platform of the station,
beyond the free time allowed for clearance under the rules.
The said charges
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can certainly be described as charges in respect of the
station and are terminals within the meaning of the
definition of the term in the Act.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 149
to 154 of 1959.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order
dated February 25, 1958 of the former Bombay High Court at
Rajkot in Civil Revision Applications Nos. 46, 49,55, 57, 58
and 59 of 1958.
S.P. Sinha, Shahzadi Mohiuddin and M.L Khowaja, for the
appellants.
N.S. Bindra and R.N. Sachthey, for the respondents.
October 21, 1963. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SUBBA RAO J.--These six appeals filed by special leave
raise a common question, namely whether the suits flied
against the Western Railway for the refund of amounts
collected from the appellant firm as wharfage or demurrage
would lie in a Civil Court.
Civil Appeals Nos. 152 and 153 of 1959 arise out of the
suits filed for the recovery of the amounts collected from
the appellant-firm by way of demurrage and the other appeals
are filed for the recovery of amounts collected from the
said firm by way of wharfage charges. It would be enough if
we gave the particulars of the claim in one of the suits,
for it was stated at the Bar that the claims for refund were
similar in all the other suits. Excepting the plaint in
Civil Suit No. 109 of 1957, the other plaints are not placed
before us. We are, therefore, proceeding on the assumption
that the relevant allegations in all the plaints are
similar, particularly as the assertion of learned counsel
for the appellants to the said effect was not questioned by
learned counsel for the respondent.
Civil Suit No. 109 of 1957 was filed by the appellants
in Civil Appeal No. 149 of 1959 for recovery of a sum of Rs.
295 from the Union of India representing the Western
Railway. The appellants are
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a firm doing business in Surendranagar. The said firm
received a consignment of 125 bags of rice booked -from
Belanganj to Surendranagar railway station. At the time of
effecting delivery of the said consignment, the Station
Master at Surendranagar recovered a sum of Rs. 275-7-O from
the appellant-firm as wharfage charges. It is alleged in
the plaint that the railway notifications and rules under
which the railway had charged the wharfage at two annas to
four annas per maund per day were illegal and ultra vires
and that in any view the railway had no power under the
rules to collect charges from the appellantfirm under the
said rules for the "free time" under the head of wharfage
charges. On those allegations the suit was filed for the
refund of the amount collected by the said railway. The
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defendant denied either that the rules were ultra vires or
that it collected the amount contrary to the rules. It
pleaded that the civil court had no jurisdiction to
entertain the suit. Similar suits were filed in respect of
other amounts and similar contentions were raised. The
learned Civil Judge dismissed all the suits on the ground
that they were barred under s. 26 of the Indian Railways
Act, 1890 (Act IX of 1890), hereinafter called the Act. The
said firm in all the suits preferred revisions against the
judgment of the Civil Judge to the High Court of Bombay at
Rajkot. The High Court agreed with the view of the Civil
Judge and dismissed the revisions. Hence the appeals.
The only question raised before us is whether s. 26 of
the Act is a bar against the maintainability of the said
suits in a civil court for refund of the said amounts
collected from the appellant-firm by way of wharfage and
demurrage charges.
To appreciate the contentions of the parties it is
necessary to notice the relevant sections of the Act. At the
outset it may be mentioned that in the present appeals the
amounts were collected between the years 1953 and 1955 and,
therefore, we will be ignoring the later amendments made in
the Act for the purpose of the present enquiry.
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Section 3(14) "terminals" includes
charges in respect of stations, sidings,
wharves, depots, warehouses, cranes and other
similar matters, and of any services rendered
thereat."
Section 26. "Except as provided in this
Act, no suit shall be instituted or proceeding
taken for anything done or any omission made
by a railway administration in violation or
contravention of any provision of this Chapter
(Ch. V)."
Section 32. "The Central Government may,
by general or special order, fix the rates of
terminal and other charges for the whole or
any part of a railway, and prescribe the
conditions in which such rates will apply.
Section 34. (1) There shall be a
Tribunal called the Railway Rates Tribunal,
for the purpose of discharging the functions
hereinafter specified in this Chapter.
Section 41. (i) Any complaint that a
railway administration--
(c) is levying charges (other than
standardised terminal charges) which are
unreasonable,
may be made to the Tribunal, and the Tribunal
shall bear and decide any such complaint in
accordance with the provisions of this
Chapter.
Section 45. Nothing in this Chapter
shall confer jurisdiction on the Tribunal in
respect of scales of charges levied by a
railway administration for the carriage of
passengers and their luggage, parcels,
military traffic and traffic in railway
materials and stores, and demurrage charges,
except on a reference made to the Tribunal by
the Central Government.
Section 46A. The decision of the
Tribunal shall be by a majority of the members
sitting and shall be final.
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Provided that where a single member of the Tribunal has
heard and decided any matter, he may, ,in his discretion,
give leave to any party to appeal to the Full Bench; and if
an appeal is filed in pursuance of such leave, the decision
of the Full Bench or of a majority of the members thereof,
as the case may be, shall be final.
Section 46B. The Tribunal may transmit
any order made by it to a Civil Court having
local jurisdiction and such Civil Court shall
execute the order as if it were a decree.
Section 46C. In this Chapter, unless
there is anything repugnant in the subject or
context,--
(d) "demurrage" means the charge levied
after the expiry of the free time allowed for
loading or unloading a wagon.
The scheme of the said provisions is clear. The Central
Government fixes the rates of terminal and other charges for
the whole or a part of a railway. If a railway
administration levies charges other than the standardised
terminal charges which are unreasonable, an aggrieved party
may file a complaint against the administration before the
Railway Rates Tribunal. The decision of the Tribunal is
final. In regard to ’demurrage charges mentioned in s. 45
of the Act, the Tribunal has no jurisdiction to entertain a
claim in respect thereof, except by a reference made to the
Tribunal by the Central Government. Section 26 bars the
jurisdiction of ordinary civil courts to entertain a suit or
a proceeding for anything done or any omission made by the
railway administration in violation or contravention of any
of the provisions of Chapter V. In regard to such
violation, an aggrieved party can only proceed in the manner
provided by the Act.
The short question, therefore, is whether the said
claims for refund are covered by the bar imposed by s. 26 of
the act. As s. 26 bars the jurisdiction of civil courts, its
provisions must be strictly construed. The bar is in respect
of anything done or an omission
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made by the railway administration in violation or
contravention of any provisions of Chapter V of the Act. If
the opening words "Except as provided in this Act" in s. 26
of the Act are ignored, the bar appears to be comprehensive,
for it may take in its sweep any dereliction of duty by the
railway administration in respect of matters covered by the
provisions of the said chapter. But such an intention to
give a blanket licence to the railway administration to
contravene the provisions of Chapter V of the Act shall not
be attributed to the Legislature unless the section is very
clear to that effect. The opening words "Except as provided
in this Act" limit the operation of the bar. It can
reasonably be interpreted to mean that the bar of a suit is
limited to matters in respect whereof the Act has provided a
remedy. So construed, before we apply the provisions of s.
26 of the Act, two conditions shall be complied with,
namely, (i) the railway administration shall have done an
act or omitted to do an act in contravention of the
provisions of Ch. V and (ii) the Act has provided a remedy
in respect of that act or omission. It was argued that the
charges levied by the railway administration under the heads
of "wharfage" and "demurrage" are "terminals" in regard
whereof rules were framed by the Government under s. 32 of
the Act, that the complaint of the appellants was that the
rates were collected in excess of those prescribed under the
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rules and that, therefore, s. 26 bars a suit for recovery of
the same.
The first question, therefore, is whether wharfage and
demurrage charges are "terminals". "Terminals" has been
defined by s. 3(14) of the Act to include charges in respect
of stations, sidings, wharves, depots, warehouses, cranes
and other similar matters, and of any services rendered
thereat. Under s.32 of the Act the Central Government may,
by general or special order, fix the rates of terminal and
other charges for the whole or any part of a railway, and
prescribe the conditions in which such rates will apply. In
order to find out whether wharfage and
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demurrage charges come under the definition of "terminals",
it is necessary to ascertain the meaning of the words
"wharfage" and "demurrage" as understood by the Act and the
rules made thereunder. There is no definition of
"wharfage". in the Act. But s. 46C(d) defines demurrage to
mean the charge levied after the expiry of the free time
allowed for loading or unloading a wagon. But the rules,
presumably made under the Act, give a clear idea of the
meaning of these words. The relevant rule is r. 85 and it
reads:
"The actual wharfage and demurrage
rules locally in force on different railways
are published in each Railway’s Tariffs and
may be ascertained on application at stations.
The following wharfage and demurrage rules were in force
on the B.B. & C.I. Railway, which is now named as the
Western Railway. Clauses (A) and (B) thereof give the rates
of wharfage and demurrage and clause (C) defines "demurrage"
and "wharfage". Clause (C) reads:
(i) When wagons required to be unloaded by
consignees are not unloaded within the free
time of six day-tight hours, after being
placed in position for unloading, demurrage as
per clause (B) (ii) above will be charged for
such time above six daylight hours, as the
goods remain in the wagon, and wharfage at
the rate notified as applicable at the station
will be charged if the goods are not removed
from the railway premises by the end of the
day following that on which they are
unloaded."
(ii) When wagons requiring to be unloaded
by consignees are unloaded within the free
time of six daylight hours, after being placed
in position for unloading, wharfage at the
rate notified as applicable at the station
will be charged if the goods are not removed
from the railway premises by
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the end of the day following that on which the
free time of six daylight hours, expires.
Demurrage is therefore a charge levied on the goods not
unloaded from the wagons within the free time of six
daylight hours and wharfage is the charge levied on goods
not removed from the railway premises after the expiry of
the free time allowed for that purpose, Indeed s. 46C(d) of
the Act, which was inserted by Act 65 of 1945, has
practically adopted the definition of the word "demurrage"
given in the said rule. Wharfage and demurrage are,
therefore, charges levied in respect of goods retained in
the wagons or in the railway premises beyond the free time
allowed for clearance under the rules.
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The question is whether such charges are "terminals" as
defined in the Act. The expression "terminal charges" was
defined for the first time in the Indian Railways Act, 1890.
It was taken from the definition in s. 55 of the English
Railway and Canal Traffic Act, 1888. Terminal charges are
of two categories: (1) charges for services, and (2)
charges for accommodation and appliances which facilitate
business. The "service terminals" comprise of remuneration
for the handling of goods at the terminal station i.e.,
where the railway employees are engaged in weighing,
loading, unloading, etc. As distinguished from this
"service terminals" there are "station terminals" which
are charges for providing accommodation incidental to the
business of a carrier, such as "working charges, repairs,
renewals, insurance of station buildings, sidings, sheds,
platforms, warehouses, cranes, hydraulic power, fixed
appliances etc." Both demurrage and wharfage would fall
within the head of "station terminals", because they are
charges levied for the use either of the wagon or of the
platform or goods-shed after the transit or conveyance is
complete and is not incidental to the conveyance as such.
Charges levied in respect of stations are included in the
definition of "terminals" under the Act. As the wharfage
and demurrage are charges in respect of goods unloaded from
wagons and kept at the
156
station, and also in respect of goods kept on platforms of
the station, the said charges could certainly be described
as charges in respect of the station. If so, it follows
that the said charges are "terminals" within the meaning of
the definition of the said expression in the Act.
Let us now see whether any remedy is provided by the Act
for an aggrieved party to ask for a refund of the charges
collected on the ground mentioned in the plaint. The
Tribunal constituted under s. 34 of the Act has jurisdiction
to decide whether the charges levied by the railway
administration other than the standardised terminal charges
were unreasonable. The Act does not provide for any remedy
for an aggrieved party to approach the Tribunal for a refund
of the amount collected by the railway administration by way
of wharf age or demurrage on the ground that the rules
empowering the said administration to do so are ultra vires
or that the amounts so collected are in excess of wharfage
or demurrage leviable under the rules. If the impugned
charges are standardised terminal charges, the dispute in
regard thereto fails outside s. 41 of the Act. If they are
charges other than the standardised terminal charges, the
jurisdiction of the Tribunal is confined only to the
question of its reasonableness. It has no jurisdiction to
decide whether the rules empowering the railway
administration to levy a particular charge are ultra vires
or whether the railway administration collected amounts in
excess of the charges which it can legally levy under a
rule. If so, it is clear that no provision has been made
under the Act giving a remedy to an aggrieved party to ask
for a refund of amounts, such as those alleged to have been
collected from the appellants. Section 26, therefore,
cannot be a bar against the maintainability of the suits
filed by the appellants.
We do not propose to express our view in this case, as
it has not been argued before us, whether the demurrage
charges in question fell within the meaning of the
expression "demurrage charges" in
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s. 45 of the Act and, if so, whether the jurisdiction of the
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Tribunal could only be invoked in the manner prescribed
thereunder.
For the foregoing reasons we hold that both the High
Court and the trial Court went wrong in dismissing the suits
on the ground that s. 26 of the Act was a bar against their
maintainability. We, therefore, set aside the judgment of
the High Court as well as that of the trial Court and remand
the suits to the trial Court for disposal in accordance with
law. We should not be understood to have expressed any
opinion on the other questions raised in the suits. The
respondent will pay the costs of the appellants here.
The costs of the courts below will abide the result.
Suits remanded.