Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAMA SUGAR INDUSTRIES LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/12/1973
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1745 1974 SCC (1) 534
ACT:
Andhra Pradesh Sugarcane (Regulation of Supply and Purchase)
Act, 1951--Sec. 21(3)(b)-Government’s discretion to grant
exemption from payment of Purchase Tax.
Administrative discretion-Whether Government had fettered
its discretion by laying down a policy of confining the
benefit of exemption to Cooperative Sugar Factories.
HEADNOTE:
Section 20(3) (b) of the Act lays down that the Government
may, by notification, exempt from the payment of tax any
factory which in the opinion of the Government, has
substantially expanded to the extent of such expansion for a
period not exceeding two years from the date of completion
of the expansion. The Andhra Pradesh Government took a
policy decision to grant exemption from payment of purchase
tax to new and expanded sugar factories in the cooperative
sector only due to present financial position of the
Government. In pursuance of the said policy, the exemption
was granted for one year from the payment of tax to the
cooperative societies of growers of sugarcane. The benefit
of the exemption was refused to the appellant and other
joint stock companies running the sugar factories. On
behalf of the appellant it was contended that the Government
could not by laying down a policy to exempt only cooperative
sugar factories fetter their hands from examining the merits
of each individual case. It was also contended that the
policy behind sec. 21(3) being to encourage new sugar facto-
ries or expanded factories the Government could not refuse
to consider all except one class, that is, the cooperative
sugar factories, for the purpose of granting exemption. It
was further urged that new sugar factories aid expanded
sugar factories all fall into one class and there is nothing
particular or special about cooperative sugar factories
justifying their treatment as a special class deserving a
special treatment. The State of Andhra Pradesh contended
that it had full discretion to decide the policy in granting
the exemption and that cooperative sugar factories
consisting of cane growers is a distinct category justifying
their treatment as a class separate from other sugar
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factories. On facts it was asserted by the State that the
exemption was granted only to new cooperative sugar
factories and that too only for one year. It was also
asserted that the case of the appellants was individually
considered and rejected on merits.
Dismissing the appeal and writ petitions, the majority of
the Court,
HELD:Per A. N. Ray, C.J., H. R. Khanna and A.
Alagiriswami, JJ (1) The purpose of the Act is to encourage
new sugar factories and expanded sugar factories. But how
that power is to be exercised will have to be decided by
taking into consideration all the relevant factors relating
to the sugar industry. It is well known that there is a
difference in the sycrose content in the cane produced in
different areas. At one period the industry may be in a
very prosperous condition and might not need the exemption.
It may also be that factories in a particular area are in
need of this concession but not factories in another area.
We are therefore of opinion that it would be open to the
State Government to grant exemption to new factories only
but not the expanded factories, to grant the exemption for
one year instead of three years or two years as contemplated
under the Section, to grant the exemption to factories in
one area but not to factories in another area, to grant the
exemption during a particular period but not during another
period. [791 H-792 C]
(II)The cooperative sugar factories consisting of sugarcane
growers fall under a distinct category different from other
categories and the Government is justified in treating the
cooperative sugar factories as a distinct class for the pur-
poses of the protection and concessions, considering their
contribution to the sizable sugar industry now built up in
this country. [792 C-D]
788
(III)There is no reason to reject the statement on
behalf of the State of Andhra Pradesh that they had
considered the request of the appellant as well as of the
petitioners on their merits and that the exemption had been
granted only to new cooperative factories for the short
period of one year only. [793C-D]
R.v. Port of London Authority, (1919) 1 KB 176 at 184)
Padfield v. Min. of Agriculture etc. (1968 1 All ER 694)
British Oxygen v. Minister of Technology (1970 3 All ER 165)
and Observations in Halsbury"s Laws of England (4th edition,
Vol. 1, para 33 at P. 35) cited with approval.
Per minority (Mathew and Bhagwati, JJ.) :,Picking out
cooperative societies of sugarcane growers for favoured
treatment to the exclusion of other new or substantially
expanded industries is wholly unrelated to the object of the
exempting provision and the policy or rule adopted by the
State Government is legally not relevant to the exercise of
the power of granting exemption. Considering the object of
sub-section (b) of Sec. 21 (3), there is no distinction
between a factory established by a cooperative society
consisting of sugarcane growers or a company or a firm whose
share holders and partners are sugarcane growers. The
classification made by the policy or rule must not be
arbitrary but must have a rational relation to the object of
the exempting provision. The Government, by making the
policy decision, had shut its ears to the merits of the
individual applications, That the exemption is granted to
few cooperative factories and for a short time are not
relevant considerations. [802 C-E]
R.v. Torquay Lisensing (1951) 2 K.B. 784, Observations of
S. A. de Smith in 15 Modern Law Review, 73, and observations
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of H.W.R. Wade in Administrative Law 3rd edition pages 66-67
cited with approval in addition to the references made by
the majority decision.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No.
1453 of 1969.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 29th November, 1968 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court at
Hyderabad in Writ Appeal No. 345 of 1968 and
Writ Petitions Nos. 183, 249 & 240 of 1971 & 3, 105 & 134 of
1972.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution for enforcement of
Fundamental rights.
S.V. Gupte and G. Narayana Rao, for the appellant (in
(’.A. 1453/69).
Niren De, Attorney General of India and P. Parameshwara Rao,
for the respondent (In C.A. 1453/69).
Y. S. Chitale, K. P. Choudhry, K. Rajendra Choudhry and
Veena Talwar, for the petitioner (In W.P. 183/71).
K. Srinivasamurthy and Naunit Lal, for the petitioner (in
W.Ps. 249, 250/71 and 3 and 105/72).
A. Subba Rao, for the petitioner (in W.P. 134/72).
P. Ram Reddy and P. Parameswara Rao, for the respondents
(in all W.Ps.)
The Judgment of A. N. Ray,, C.J., H. R. Khanna and A.
Alagiriswami, JJ. was delivered by Alagiriswami, J. K. K.
Mathew, J. gave a dissenting Opinion on behalf of P. N.
Bhagwati J. and himself.
ALAGIRISWAMI, J. The appeal and the writ petitions raise the
question of interpretation of section 21(3) of the Andhra
Pradesh Sugar-
789
cane (Regulation of Supply and Purchase) Art, 1961.The
appellant and the petitioners are sugar factories in the
State of Andhra Pradesh. They applied under the provisions
of section21(3) for exemption from the tax payable
under sub-section (1) of that section on the ground that
they, having substantially expanded, were entitled, to the
extent of such expansion, to exemption from the payment of
tax. The Government of Andhra Pradesh having refused that
request these writ petitions have been filed before this
Court contending that the decision denying them exemption is
contrary to section 21(3) which does not countenance any
classification and that the classification adopted is based
on no nexus to the object of the Act. The appeal is against
the decision of the Andhra Pradesh High Court dismissing a
writ petition filed for similar relief.
Two contentions, one regarding promissory estoppel and
another regarding the exemption given to Sarvaraya Sugars
Ltd was not pressed before this Court. Though in the
beginning it was urged that the grant of exemption under the
section was obligatory, later the only contention, raised
was that the application of each of the factories should
have been considered on its merits and the State should not
have fettered its discretion by laying down a policy of
granting exemption only to co-operative sugar factories and
that the policy had no nexus to the object of the Act.
Section 21 reads as follows
"21. (1) The Government may, by notification,
levy a tax at such rate not exceeding five
rupees per metric tonne as may be prescribed
on the purchase of cane required for use,
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consumption or sale in a factory’
(2)The Government may, by notification, remit
in whole or in part such tax in respect of
cane used or intended to be used in a factory
for any purpose specified in such
notification.
(3)The Government may, by notification,
exempt from the payment of tax under this
section--
(a)any new factory for a period not
exceeding three years from the date on which
it commences crushing of cane;
(b)any factory which, in the opinion of the
Government, has substantially expanded, to the
extent of such expansion, for a period not
exceeding two years from the date of
completion of the expansion.
(4)The tax payable under sub-section (1)
shall be levied and collected from the
occupier of the factory in such manner and by
such authority as may be prescribed.
(5) Arrears of tax shall carry interest at the
rate of nine per cent per annum.
(6)If the tax under this section together
with the interest, if any, due thereon, is not
paid by the occupier of
790
a factory within the prescribed time, it shall
be recoverable from him as an arrear of land
revenue."
In its judgment in Andhra Sugars Ltd. v. A.P.
State (1968 1 SCR 505) this Court upheld the
constitutional validity of section 21(3) and
made the following observations :
"It was next argued that the power under s.
21(3) to exempt new factories and factories
which in the opinion of the Government have
substantially expanded was discriminatory and
violative of Art. 14. We are unable to accept
this contention. The establishment of new
factories and the expansion of the existing
factories need encouragement and incentives.
The exemption in favour of new and expanding
factories is based on legitimate legislative
policy. The question whether the exemption
should be granted to any factory, and if so,
for what period and the question whether any
factory has substantially expanded and it so,
the extent of such expansion have to be
decided with reference to the facts of each
individual case. Obviously, it is not
possible for the State legislature to examine
the merits of individual cases and the
function was properly delegated to the State
Government. The legislature was not obliged
to prescribe a more rigid standard for the
guidance of the Government. We hold that s.
21 does not violative Art. 14."
Though, as we have stated, it was sought to be
urged originally that under the provisions of
this section it was obligatory on the part of
the Government to grant exemption, it was
later argued based on the above observations
that the question whether the exemption should
be granted to any factory and if so for what
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period and the question whether any factory
has substantially expanded and if so the
extent of such expansion, has to be decided
with reference to the facts of each individual
case. It was also further argued that the
Government could not by laying down a policy
to exempt only co-operative sugar factories
fetter their hands from examining the merits
of each individual case. Reliance was placed
on the observations in S.A. de Smith’s
Judicial Review of Administrative Action (2nd
Edn.) where at page 294 it is observed :
"A tribunal entrusted with a discretion must
not, by the adoption of a general rule of
policy, disable itself from exercising its
discretion in individual cases.
But the rule that it formulates must not be
based on considerations extraneous to those
contemplated by the enabling Act; otherwise it
has exercised its discretion invalidly by
taking irrelevant considerations into account.
Again, a factor that may properly be taken
into account in exercising a discretion may
become an unlawful fetter upon discretion if
it is elevated to the status of a general rule
that results in the pursuit of consistency at
the expense of the merits of individual cases.
A fortiori, the authority
791
must not predetermine the issue,’ as by
resolving to refuse all applications or all
applications of a certain class or all
applications except those of a certain class
and then proceeding to refuse an application
before it in pursuance of such a
resolution..."
It was contended that the policy behind section 21(3) being
to encourage new sugar factories or expanded sugar factories
the Government could not refuse to consider all except one
class i.e. the cooperative sugar factories for the purpose
of granting exemption. It was further urged that new sugar
factories and expanded sugar factories all fall into one
class and there is nothing particular or special about co-
operative sugar factories justifying their treatment as a
special class deserving a special treatment. It was also
urged that the only discretion which the Government had was
in deciding whether a factory had substantially expanded or
not and in no other respect.
On behalf of the State of Andhra Pradesh, however, it was
stated that only new co-operative sugar factories have been
granted exemption and that too only for one year as against
the period of three years contemplated by the Act in the
case of new factories and no expanded factory even a
cooperative sugar factory. has been granted any exemption.
It was contended that the discretion has been given to the
State to decide which factory or which class of factories
should be granted at all and if so for what period. That
the discretion is to be exercised by taking into
consideration the state of the Industry and the Financial
position of any sugar factory during any particular period
and in any particular area. that it is open to the State to
take into account all relevant considerations and decide
which class of factories should be granted exemption, and
that the co-operative sugar factories consisting of cane
growers is a distinct category justifying their treatment
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as a class separate from other sugar factories.
In view of the abandonment at a later stage of the
contention that it was obligatory on the part of the
Government to grant the exemption contemplated under
section 21(3) to every new factory or expanded factory for
the period mentioned in the section it is unnecessary to
consider whether the word "may" found in that section
should be interpreted to mean "shall"except to indicate
that the policy behind the whole of section 21 does not
indicate- that it is obligatory on this part of the’ State
to grant exemption. Quits clearly the discretion has been
left to the State to decide whether any particular factory
should be granted exemption or not. This is what this court
stated in its earlier decision. In deciding this question
it is open to a Government to take into consideration the
state of the industry at any particular period. At one
period the industry may be in a very prosperous condition
and might not need this concession. It may also be that
factories in a particular area are in need of this
concession but not factories in another area. How a Dower
vested in an authority is to he exercised has not to be
decided by taking into consideration the whole of the
background of the Act and the purpose behind it. The
purpose of the Act is. of course, to encourage new sugar
factories
792
and expanded sugar factories. But how that power is to be
exercised will have to be decided by taking into
consideration all the relevant factors relating to the sugar
industry. It is well known that there is a difference in
the sucrose content in the cane produced in different areas.
The quantity of sugarcane produced per acre varies from 60
tons per acre in Maharashtra to 40 tons in Tamilnadu and far
less in Uttar Pradesh. These facts are available in any
standard literature and official publications on the
subject. The varying fortunes of the sugar industry at
various periods are too wellknown to need emphasis. We are,
therefore, of opinion that it would be open to the, State
Government to grant exemption to new factories only but not
the expanded factories, to grant the exemption for one year
instead of the three years or two years as contemplated
under the section, to grant the exemption to factories in
one area but not to factories in another area, to grant the
exemption during a particular period but not during another
period,
We are also of opinion that co-operative, sugar factories
consisting of sugarcane growers fall under a distinct
category different from other categories. Sugarcane growers
have been the object of particular consideration and care of
the legislature. This country which was at one time a big
importer of sugar has built up a sizeable sugar industry by
a policy of protection given to the sugarcane growers and
sugar industry. The figures we have given above have been
one of the factors in fixing the price of sugarcane so that
even a sugarcane, grower in U. P. might get a reasonable
return on his produce. We are of opinion, therefore, that
the Government are justified in treating the sugar factories
consisting of sugarcane growers as a distinct category. In
this connection we should mention that the appellant in
Civil Appeal No. 1453 of 1969 urged before this Court that
out of its 1280 shares 1247 shares were held by canegrowers.
But this was not urged in the petition before the High Court
nor had the State an opportunity of meeting such a
contention. It is therefore, not possible for us at this
stage to go into the question whether that appellant has
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been discriminated against.
The only question that arises is whether the Government
would be justified in refusing to consider the question of
exemption to all factories other than cooperative sugar
factories. In its counter affidavit the State of Andhra
Pradesh has stated that application of each one of the
petitioners was considered on its merits and it was refused.
On the other hand the petitioners referred to the letter
(Annex.III) written by the Government of Andhra Pradesh to
the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 1453 of 1969 which reads
"I am to invite reference to your letter cited
and to stated that the Government have given
careful consideration to your request for
exemption from payment of purchase tax to the
extent of expansion for two crushing seasons
in respect of Bobbili and Seethanagaram Units.
The present Policy of the Government is to
grant exemption from payment of purchase tax
to new and expanded sugar factories in the Co-
operative Sector only. Besides Bobbili and
Seethana-
793
gram Sugar Factories, there are a few other
sugar factories in the private sector which
have also embarked on expansion programmes.
Any concession given in one case will be a
precedent for others and it cannot be denied
to others who will naturally apply for a
similar concession. The present financial
position of the Government does not permit
them to be generous. In the circumstances,
the Government very much regret that it is not
possible for them to accede to your request."
and urged that the Government could not have
examined the request of each of the factories
on their merits. But it is to be noticed that
that letter itself shows that the Government
have given careful consideration to the
appellant’s request. It also shows that the
present policy of the Government is not a
policy for all times. We have, therefore, no
reason not to accept the statement on behalf
of the State of Andhra Pradesh that they have
considered the request of the appellant as
well as the petitioners on their merits. The,
fact that after such examination they have
laid down a policy of exempting only sugarcane
growers’ factories cannot show that they have
fettered their discretion,, in any way. As we
have already mentioned, even in the case of
co-operative sugar factories the exemption is
granted only to new factories and that too
only for one year.
As regards the power of a statutory authority
vested with a discretion, de Smith also points
out
"but its statutory discretion may be wide
enough to justify the adoption of a rule not
to award any costs save in exceptional
circumstances, as distinct from a rule never
to award any costs at all........ although it
is not obliged to consider every application
before it with a fully open mind, it must at
least kep its mind ajar."
In R. v. Port of London Authority (1919 1 KB
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176 at 184) Bankes L.J. stated the relevant
principle in the following words
"There are oil the one hand cases where a
tribunal in the honest exercise of its
discretion has adopted a policy, and, without
refusing to hear an applicant, intimates to
him what its policy is, and that after hearing
him it will in accordance with its policy
decide against him, unless there is something
exceptional in his case if the policy has been
adopted for reasons which the tribunal may
legitimately entertain, no objection could be
taken to such a course. On the other hand
there are cases where a tribunal has passed a
rule, or come to a determination, not to hear
any application of a particular character by
whomsoever made. There is a wide distinction
to be drawn between these two classes.’
The present cases come under the earlier part and not the
latter, The case in Rex v, London County Council (1918 1 KB
68) is distinguishable on the facts of the case. The policy
behind the Act
794
there under consideration was obviously to permit sale, of
any article or distribution of bills or like things and in
deciding that no permission would be granted at all the
London County Council was rightly held not to have properly
exercised the discretion vested in it. In the decision in
Padfield v. Min. of Agriculture etc. (1968 1 All ER 694) the
refusal of the, Minister to exercise the power vested in him
was considered as frustrating the object of the statute
which conferred the discretion and that is why a direction
was issued to the Minister to consider the appellants’
complaint according to law. We have already discussed the
background and the purpose of the Act under consideration
and are unable to hold that in refusing to grant exemption
in these cases the State of Andhra Pradesh was acting so as
to frustrate the purpose of the Act.
In a recent case, British Oxygen v. Minister of Technology
(1970 3 All ER 165) the whole question has been discussed at
length after referring to the decisions in R. v. Port of
London Authority (1919 1 KB 176) and Padfield v. Minister of
Agriculture ( 1968 1 AR ER 694). The House of Lords was in
that case considering the provisions of the Industrial
Development Act 1966. The Act provided for the Board of
Trade making to any person a grant towards approved. capital
expenditure incurred by that person in providing new machi-
nery or plant for carrying on a qualifying industrial
process in the course of the business. After stating that
the Board was intended to have a discretion and after
examining the provisions of the Act the House of Lords came
to the conclusion that the Board was not bound to pay grants
to all who are eligible nor did the provisions give any
right to any person to get a grant. After quoting the pas-
sage from the decision in R. v. Port of London Authority,
already referred to, Lord Reid went on to state :
"But the circumstances in which discretions
are exercised vary enormously and that passage
cannot be applied literally in every case.
The general rule is that anyone who has to
exercise a statutory discretion must not ’shut
(his) cars to the application (to quote from
Bankes LJ). I do not think that there is any
great difference between a policy and a rule.
There may be cases where an officer or
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authority ought to listen to a substantial
argument reasonably presented urging a change
of policy. What the authority must not do is
to refuse to listen at all. But a Ministry or
large authority may have had to deal already
with a multitude of similar applications and
then they will almost certainly have evolved a
policy so precise that it could well be called
a rule. There can be no objection to that
provided the authority is always willing to
listen to anyone with something new to say-of
course I do not mean to say that there need be
an oral hearing. In the present case the
Minister’s officers have carefully considered
all that the appellants have had to say and I
’have no doubt that they will continue to do
so. The Minister might at any time change
’his mind and therefore I think that the
appellants are entitled to have a decision
whether these cylinders are eligible for
grant."
795
Viscount Dilhorne again after referring to the
passage in R. v. Port of London Authority,
said
"Bankes LJ clearly meant that in the latter
case there is a refusal to exercise the
discretion entrusted to the authority or
tribunal but the distinction between a policy
decision and a rule may not be easy to draw..
In this case it was not challenged that it was
within the power of the Board to adopt a
policy not to make a grant in respect of such
an item. That policy might equally well be
described-as a rule. It was both
reasonable and right that the Board should.
make known to those interested the-policy that
it was going. to follow. By doing so
fruitless applications involving expense and
expenditure of time might be avoided. The
Board says that it has not refused to consider
any application. It considered the
appellants’. In these circumstancesit is
not necessary to decide in this case whether,
if it had refused to consider an application
on the ground that it related to an item
costing less than pound 25, it would have
acted wrongly.
I must confess that I feel some doubt whether
the words used by Bankes LJ in the passage
cited above am really applicable to a case of
this kind. It seems somewhat pointless and a
waste of time that the Board should have to
consider applications which are bound as a
result of its policy decision to fail.
Representations could of course be made that
the policy should be changed."
It is, therefore, clear that it is open to the
Government to adopt a policy not to make a
grant at all or to make a grant only to a
certain class and not to a certain other
class, though such a decision must be based on
considerations relevant to the subject matter
on hand. Such I consideration is found in
this case. Halsbury (Vol. I. 4th Edn., para
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33 at page 35) puts the matter succinctly thus
"A public body endowed with a statutory
discretion may legitimately adopt general
rules or principles of policy to guide itself
as to the manner of exercising its own discre-
tion in individual cases, provided that such
rules or principles are legally relevant to
the exercise of its powers, consistent with
the purpose of the enabling legislation and
not arbitrary or capricious. Nevertheless, it
must not disable itself from exercising a
genuine discretion in a particular case
directly involving individual interests, hence
it must be prepared to consider making an
exception to the general rule if the
circumstances of the case warrant special
treatment. These propositions, evolved mainly
in the context of licensing and other
regulatory powers, have been applied to other
situations, for example, the award of
discretionary
796
investment grants and the allocation of pupils
to different classes of schools. The
amplitude of a discretionary power may,
however, be so wide that the competent
authority may
be impliedly entitled to adopt a fixed rule
never to exercise its discretion in favour of
a particular class of person; and such a power
may be expressly conferred by statute."
We are satisfied that in this case the State
of Andhra Pradesh has properly exercised the
discretion conferred on it by the statute.
The appeal and the writ petitions are
dismissed-with costs, one set.
MATHEW, J.The short question for
consideration in these writ petitions and the
Civil Appeal is whether the Government of
Andhra Pradesh was rightin dismissing the
applications filed by the writ petitioners and
the appellant claiming benefit of exemption
from payment of the tax as provided in s.
21(3)(b) of the Andhra Pradesh Sugarcane
(Regulation of Supply and Purchase) Act, 1951,
hereinafter called the Act for the reason that
the Government has taken a policy decision to
confine the benefit of the exemption to sugar
factories in the cooperative sector.
The material provisions of S. 21 of the Act
are as follows
"21(1) The Government may, by notification,
levy a tax at such rate not exceeding five
rupees per metric tonne as may be prescribed
on the purchase of cane required for use,
consumption or sale in a factory.
(2)The Government may, by notification,
remit in whole or in part such tax in respect
of cane used or intended to be used in a
factory for any purpose specified in such
notification.
(3)The Government may, by notification,
exempt from the payment of tax under this
section-
(a) any new factory for a period not
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exceeding three years from the date on which
it commences crushing of cane;
(b) any factory which, in the opinion of the
Government, has substantially expanded, to the
extent of such expansion, for a period not
exceeding two years from the date of
completion of the expansion."
It was contended that looking at the scheme of s. 21 the
word may’ occurring in sub-section (3) thereof should be
read as ’shall’
797
as otherwise the sub-section will be unconstitutional in
that it does not provide guideline for the exercise of the
discretion to grant or refuse the exemption when all
applicants fulfil the conditions specified in clause (b) of
the sub-section. The argument was that since no guidelines
are furnished by the legislature for choosing between two
factories fulfilling the conditions specified in clause (b),
the subsection must be read as mandatory, namely, that it
imposes an obligation upon the Government, by notification
to exempt from payment of the tax all factories which, in
the opinion of the Government, have substantially expanded,
to the extent of such expansion, for a period not exceeding
two years from the date of the completion of the expansion.
We do not think that there is any merit in the contention.
Clause (b) of sub-section (3) only says that if any factory
"in the opinion of the Government, has substantially
expanded", the Government may exempt it from the payment of
tax to the extent of such expansion for a period not
exceeding two years from the date of completion of the
expansion. So, if in the opinion of the Government, a
factory has substantially expanded, it is open to the
Government in its- discretion to exempt that factory from
payment of tax to the extent of such expansion and that for
a period not exceeding two years from the date of the
completion of the expansion. We are unable to read the
section as imposing a mandatory obligation upon the
Government to grant the exemption even if all the conditions
specified in clause (b) of subsection (3) are satisfied.
There is nothing in the context which compels us to read the
word ’may’ as ’shall’ and it seems to us clear that the
Government was intended to have a discretion. But how was
the Government intended to operate or exercise the
discretion ? Does the Act as a whole or the provision in
question in particular indicate any policy which the
Government has to follow ? The legislature has, no doubt,
clearly laid down the conditions of eligibility for the
exemption and it has clearly given to the Government a
discretion so that the Government is not bound to grant the
exemption to a factory which is eligible to the exemption.
But the discretion must not so unreasonably be exercised as
to show that there cannot have been any real or genuine
exercise of it. The general rule is that inybody exercising
a statutory discretion should not, in the words of Bankes
L.J. in R. v. P.L.A. ex.p. Kynoch Ltd.(1) "shut his ears to
the application".
The question, therefore, is whether the Government shut its
ears and fettered its discretion when it said that it will
confine the benefit of the exemption provided in clause (b)
of sub-section (3) only to factories established in
cooperative sector.
(1) [19191 1 K.B. 176, at 184.
798
It was submitted that there is nothing in the provisions of
subsection (3)(b) to indicate that the Government could
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confine the benefit of the exemption only to new and
expanded sugar factories in the cooperative sector
fulfilling the conditions therein special and if the
Government chose to fetter the exercise of its discretion by
a self-imposed rule or policy by confining the benefit of
the exemption only to new and expanded sugar factories
established or owned by cooperative societies, no discretion
was exercised by Government in disposing of the individual
applications and that, at any rate, considerations foreign
to the exercise of the discretion had entered into its
exercise.
It is therefore to be seen whether the policy decision of
the Government to limit the benefit of the exemption to
sugar factories owned or established by cooperative
societies of sugar cane growers is derivable from the sub-
section or from any other provision of the Act or could be
gleaned even from its preamble. The question to be asked
and answered are : Has the policy decision any nexus with
the object of the provision in question or is it based on
considerations which arc irrelevant to the purpose and
object of the Act ? Is there anything in the provisions of
the Act from which, it is possible to infer that file
legislature could have contemplated that the benefit of the
exemption provided by sub-section(3) (6) should be confined
only to factories owned by cooperative societies consisting
of sugar cane growers ?
It appears to us that the object of s. 21 (3) (b) is to give
incentive to sugar factories which are new and which have
expanded. it might he that the factories. situate in one
area may require greater consideration at one time then
factories situate in other areas. We will assume that
cooperative sugar factories consisting only of sugar cane
growers stand on- a different footing and form a class by
themselves or for that matter a distinct category. But what
follows? Can the Government evolve a policy confining the
benefit of the exemption to that category alone and exclude
others however deserving they might be from the point of
view of the object of the provision for the legislative
bounty ?
The letter of the Government (Annexure III) reading as under
leaves no doubt in our mind that the Government could not
have considered the applications of the writ petitioners and
the appellant on their merits :
"Annexure III
S.A. Guadar, I.A.S. Hyderabad Special Secretary to Govt.
Dated 6th Jan. 1968.
Food & Agriculture Department
D.O. letter No. 3960/Agri. 111/67-1.
Dear Rajah Saheb,
Sub : Purchase tax on sugarcane-Exemption from payment of
purchase tax to the extent of expansion-regarding,.
799
Ref : Your letter No. 54/66-67 dt. 6-2-1967 addressed to
the Director of Agriculture.
I am to invite reference to your letter cited and to state
that the Government have given careful consideration to your
request for exemption from payment of purchase tax to the
extent of explanation for two crushing seasons in respect of
Bobbili and Seethanagaram Units. The present policy of the
Government is to grant exemption from payment of purchase
tax to new and expanded sugar factories in the Co-operative
Sector only. Besides Bobbili and Seethanagaram Sugar
Factories, there are a few other sugar factories in the
private sector which have also embarked on expansion
programmes. Any concession given in one case will be a
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precedent for others and it cannot be denied to others who
will naturally apply for a similar concession. The present
financial position of the Government does not permit them to
be generous. In the circumstances, the Government very much
regret that it is not possible for them to accede-- to
request.
With regards,
Yours sincerely,
sd.
S. A. Quader
To : Rajah of Bobbili,
The Palace, Bobbili,
Srikakulam District."
We think that by the policy decision the Government had pre-
cluded itself from considering the applications of the
petitioners and the, appellant on their merits. In fact.
the Government. by making the policy decision, had shut its
cars to the merits of the individual applications. We see
no merit in the contention of Andhra Pradesh Government that
it considered the applications for exemption filed by the
writ petitioners and the appellant on their merits as, by
its policy decision, it had precluded itself from doing so.
What are not very much concerned with the question that only
a few of the cooperative societies have been granted the
exemption or that the exemption to them has been limited to
a period of one year. We are here really concerned with a
principle and that is whether the Government was justified
in evolving a policy of its own which has no relevance to
the purpose of the provision in question or the object of
the Act, as gatherable from the other provisions. We could
have understood the Government making a policy decision to
confine the benefit of the exemption to factories
established by cooperative societies of sugar-cane growers,
if that policy decision had any warrant in the directive
principles of the Constitution as direc-
11-L748 Sup. CI/74
800
tive principles are fundamental in the governance of the
country and are binding on all organs of the State. There
is no provision in the Chapter on Directive Principles which
would warrant the particular predilection now shown by
Government to the factories established in the co-operative
sector. Whence then did the Government draw its inspiration
for the policy ? We should not be understood as saving that
sugar-cane factories established by cooperative societies of
sugar-cane, growers do not deserve encouragement or that
they should not be granted exemption from payment of tax.
All that we say is that the wholesale exclusion of-other
factories established, say by a firm consisting of sugar-
cane growers, or a company of which ’sugar--cane growers are
the shareholders, is riot warranted by anything in the
provisions of s. 21(3). How could we assume in the light of
the language of s. 21(3)(b) that the legislature intended
that new factories owned by cooperative societies consisting
of cane growers alone should be the object of the
legislative bounty ? What is the, relevant distinction
between a factory established by a co-operative society
consisting of sugarcane growers and a factory established by
a sugar-cane grower or a firm consisting of sugar-cane
growers for the purpose of the subsection? The object of
the sub-section, as we said, is to give incentive to new and
expanded factories with the ultimate object of increasing
the production of sugar. Whether a factory is established
or owned by a co-operative society consisting of sugar-cane
growers or by a company of which sugar-cane growers are the
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shareholders or established by an individual who is a sugar-
cane grower or a firm consisting of sugar-cane growers would
make no difference in this respect. They all stand on the
same footing so far as their claim to the legislative bounty
is concerned.
We do not also say that it is illegal for the Government to
adopt a general line of policy and adhere to it. But the
policy it adopts must comfort with and be reconcilable with
the provisions of the Act and must have some relevance to
its object.
Generally speaking. an authority entrusted with a discretion
must not by adopting a rule or policy, disable itself from
exercising its discretion in individual cases. There is no,
objection in its formulating a rule or policy But the rule
it frames or the policy it adopts must lotbe based on
considerations extraneous to those contemplated or envisaged
by the enabling Act. It "must not predetermine the issue,
as by resolving to refuse all applications or all appli-
cations of a certain class or all applications except those
of a certain class" (see S.A. de Smith, "Judicial Review of
Administrative Action", 2nd ed., p. 295).
In R. V. Torouay Licensing, JJ., ex. p. Brockman(1), Lord
Goddard C.J. said :
"The justices cannot make a rule to be applied
in every case without hearing it. They may
lay’ down for them-
(1) [1951] 2 K. B. 784.
801
selves a general rule but are bound to
consider whether it is applicable to any
particular case."
In other words, although they have a duty
genuinely to exercise a discretion by
considering each individual case on its
merits, the due discharge ’of this duty is
compatible with the adoption of a general
policy in relation to a class of cases. But
"one qualification must be added : the policy
of the justices must be reconcilable with the
policy of the Act from which they derive their
powers it must not be an irrelevant
consideration that they are impliedly
precluded from taking into account" (see S. A.
de Smith. Note : "Policy and Discretion in
Licensing Functions(1). It is this
qualification which has got to be remembered
when an authority frames a rule or adopts a
general policy for the exercise of its
discretion. This is further clear from the
passage from Halsbury’s Laws of England quoted
with approval in the majority judgment(2) :
"A public body endowed with a statutory
discretion may legitimately adopt general
rules or principles of policy to guide itself
as to the manner of exercising its own discre-
tion in individual cases provided that such
rules or principles are legally relevant to
the exercise of its powers, consistent with
the purpose of the enabling legislation and
not arbitrary or capricious. Nevertheless, it
must not disable itself from exercising a
genuine discretion in a particular case
directly involving individual interests; hence
it must be prepared to consider making an
exception to the general rule if the
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circumstances of the case warrant special
treatment."
In British Oxygen Co. Ltd. v. Ministry of Technology(3)
the question was whether the Industrial Development Act,
1966, which provided at the relevant time that the Board of
Trade may make to any person a grant towards approved
capital expenditure incurred by that person in providing new
machinery or plant for carrying on a qualifying industrial
process in the course of business, authorised the Board of
Trade to frame a policy decision to refuse subsidies in
respect of any item costing less than pound 25. The House
of Lords held that the Board may decline to make a grant
towards bulk capital expenditure an the individual cylinders
on the sole ground that each cylinder cost less than pound
25, because the discretion conferred was unqualified and the
Minister was accordingly not precluded from making such a
rule or policy provided that he did not refuse to listen to
an application for the exercise of his discretion. After
referring to this decision, H. W. R. Wade has said(4)
(1) 15 Modern Law Review 73.
(2) Vol. I. 4th ed., para 33 at p. 35.
(3) [1970] 3 All E.R. 165.
(4) See "Administrative Law". 3rd ed., pp. (6-67,
802
"But however firm its policy may be, nothing
can absolve a public authority from the duty
of forming its judgment on the facts of each
case, if that is what the statute intended. A
tribunal which has to exercise discretion must
therefore be careful not to treat itself as
bound by its own previous decisions. Unlike a
court of law, it, must not pursue consistency
at the expense of the merits of individual
cases’ (see Merchandise Transport Ltd. vB.T.C.
(1962) 2 Q.B. 173)".
To sum up, the policy of rule adopted by the State
Government to guide itself in the exercise of its discretion
must have some’ relevance to the object of s. 21(3) which is
to provide incentive to the establishment of new industries
and substantial expansion of existing industries with a view
to increasing production of sugar. The classification made
by the policy or rule must not be arbitrary but must have
rational relation to the object of the exempting provision.
That appears to be absent in the present case. Here, from
the point of view of the object of the exempting provision,
co-operative societies of sugar-cane growers and other new
or substantially expanded industries stand on the same
footing and there can be no justification for specially
favoring the former class of industries by confining the
benefit of exemption to them and leaving out of the
exemption the latter class of industries. Picking out co-
operative societies of sugarcane growers for favored
treatment, to the exclusion of other new or substantially
expanded industries, is wholly unrelated to the object of
the exempting Provision and the policy or rule adopted by
the State Government is not legally relevant to the exercise
of the Power of granting exemption.
We would, therefore, quash Annexure III and issue a mandamus
to the Government of Andhra Pradesh in each of those writ
petitions and the Civil Appeal to consider the applications
of the writ petitioners and the appellant on merits and pass
the proper order in each case without taking into account
the policy decision contained in Annexure III. We would
allow the writ petitions and the Civil Appeal without any
order as to’ costs.
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ORDER
In accordance with the majority judgment of the Court, the
Court dismissed the appeal and the Writ petitions with
costs, one set.
S.B.W. Appeal and Petitions dismissed.
803