Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7308-7309 of 2005
PETITIONER:
M/s Tashi Delek Gaming Solutions Ltd. & Anr.
RESPONDENT:
State of Karnataka & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/12/2005
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & P.P. Naolekar
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
[Arising out of S.L.P. (Civil) Nos.6898-6899 of 2005]
W I T H
CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 7310-7312 OF 2005
[Arising out of S.L.P. (Civil) Nos.7744-7746 of 2005]
S.B. SINHA , J :
Leave granted.
Introduction :
Scope and ambit of Article 131 of the Constitution of India is in
question in these appeals, which arise out of a common judgment and order
dated 16.03.2005 passed by a Division Bench of the Karnataka High Court
in Writ Appeal Nos.5516-5117 of 2004 and Writ Appeal Nos.29-31 of 2005,
whereby and whereunder the appeals preferred by the Appellants herein
were dismissed.
Background facts
It is not in dispute that the States of Sikkim and Meghalaya
commenced online lotteries, inter alia, in the State of Karnataka. It is,
however, otherwise a lottery playing State. In exercise of its power
conferred upon it under Section 5 of the Lotteries (Regulation) Act, 1998
(for short, ’the Act’) a declaration was made that the State of Karnataka
shall be free zone from online and internet lotteries. By reason of the said
notification sale of all computerized and online lottery tickets marketed and
operated through vending machines, terminals, electronic machines and
through internet in the State of Karnataka became prohibited with immediate
effect.
Writ Proceedings :
The States of Sikkim and Meghalaya together with its agents filed
writ petitions before the Karnataka High Court, challenging the legality
and/or validity of the said notification, inter alia, on the ground that the State
of Karnataka, having itself been organizing lotteries, could not have imposed
the said ban having regard to the decision of this Court in M/s B.R.
Enterprises etc. v. State of U.P. & Ors. etc. [(1999) 9 SCC 700].
The contention of the State of Karnataka, on the other hand, was that
online lotteries had nothing to do with the conventional lotteries and as the
State of Karnataka has put an embargo on online lotteries without any
discrimination, B.R. Enterprises (supra) cannot be said to have any
application.
A preliminary objection was taken on behalf of the State that as the
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dispute involved in the writ petitions related to two State Governments, the
writ petitions were not maintainable, in view of the constitutional bar under
Article 131 of the Constitution of India. The said contention was upheld by
a learned Single Judge of the High Court holding, inter alia, that the agents
of the State of Sikkim and State of Meghalaya had no locus standi to
maintain the writ petitions in view of the fact that they did not have any
independent right in that behalf. The agents of the State of Sikkim preferred
an intra-court appeal thereagainst The State of Meghalaya and its agents
thereafter also preferred writ appeals.
Contentions of the writ petitioners :
The contention of the Appellants herein being agents and distributors
of the State of Sikkim is as under :
Section 4(c) of the Act permits the State Governments to sell tickets
either itself or through distributors or selling agents and in terms thereof the
First Appellant M/s Tashi Delek Gaming Solutions Ltd, was appointed by
the State of Sikkim as an agent for sale of online lotteries. The Second
Appellant, Pan India Network Infravest Pvt. Ltd., is a distributor of the First
Appellant.
It was contended that the Appellants herein have invested a huge
amount of 300 crores for setting up the online lotteries network
infrastructure and 861 retail outlets therefor. They have been paying sales
tax and other taxes running into crores of rupees to the Respondent-State and
have entered into diverse third party arrangements with distributors and
retailers. It was contended that by reason of the impugned notification, their
investments made in this behalf would go totally waste and they would be
seriously prejudiced as they have borrowed funds from banks and financial
institutions on which interest is mounting manifold.
The State of Meghalaya and its agent, M/s Best & Co. in their writ
petition, inter alia, contended :
"The petitioner State for the purposes of sale of the
online and internet lotteries appointed Petitioner No. 2 &
3 as its agent/sub agent to sell the said internet and online
lotteries in various States. Accordingly, the agent
appointed other persons, retailers etc. for the purposes of
establishing computerized retail outlets in the State of
Karnataka. At present there are 1000 number of retail
outlets of the Petitioner State in the State of Karnataka
and more than 30000 number of persons are dependent
on the said business. The Petitioner No.2 and its agents
have spent more than Rs.100 crores for the establishment
of the network of retail computer lottery outlet. The sale
from computerized online and internet lotteries in the
State of Karnataka was presently approximately Rs.90
lacs per day."
Submissions :
Mr. Soli J. Sorabjee, the learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf
of the Appellants, relying inter alia upon the decisions of this Court in State
of Bihar v. Union of India [(1970) 1 SCC 67], State of Rajasthan & Ors. etc.
v. Union of India & Ors. [(1977) 3 SCC 592], State of Karnataka v. Union
of India & Anr. [(1977) 4 SCC 608] and Union of India v. State of
Rajasthan [(1984) 4 SCC 238], at the outset submitted that the principles laid
down therein clearly demonstrate inapplicability of Article 131 of the
Constitution of India where along with the State Governments private parties
are also added as Petitioners or Respondents. The Appellants, it was urged,
being statutory agents of the States were persons aggrieved by the impugned
action of the State of Karnataka in their own right and, thus, the writ petition
filed by them with the State Governments were maintainable and, in that
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view of the matter, the findings of the Division Bench to the effect that the
Appellants could not enforce or vindicate their rights under the contract of
agency with the State of Sikkim is erroneous.
Our attention, in this behalf, was drawn to Section 7(3) of the Act to
show that the Act contains a penal provision. In terms of the notification
issued by the State of Karnataka, if the Appellants herein continue to sell
online lottery tickets, the same would attract the penal provision contained in
Section 7(3) of the Act and in that view of the matter, it cannot be said that
the Appellants have no legal right to enforce and/or they are otherwise not
aggrieved by the notification issued by the State of Karnataka enabling them
to maintain a writ application.
It was submitted that in view of a decision of this Court in Ghulam
Qadir v. Special Tribunal & Ors. [(2002) 1 SCC 33], the Appellants herein
being not merely strangers had a right to maintain the writ application.
Mr. K.K. Venugopal, the learned Senior Counsel, supplemented the
submissions of Mr. Sorabjee contending that as the Appellants are agents
coupled with interest, they could sue or be sued in their own names.
Mr. Sanjay R. Hegde, the learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
State of Karnataka, on the other hand, submitted that for the purpose of
determining the maintainability of the writ petition, it was necessary to
determine the nature of rights of the agents of the State. It was argued that
the State Governments having exercised their executive power to carry on
business in lotteries, the activities prohibited by the State of Karnataka being
a matter between two States could be adjudicated upon by this Court alone
as the dispute related to the legal character involving two different States.
Mr. Hegde urged that Article 131 of the Constitution, in view of the
doctrine of federalism should receive wide and expansive definition and in
this case as one State asserts that it had the right to carry on business in
another State, which had been denied, the essential nature of dispute must be
held to have occurred between two States.
Issue :
The short question which arises for consideration is as to whether the
writ petitions filed by the Appellants herein were maintainable.
The Act :
The Parliament of India in terms of Entry 40 List 1 of the Seventh
Schedule of the Constitution of India enacted Lotteries (Regulation) Act,
1998. ’Lottery’ has been defined in Section 2(b) of the Act to mean :
"2(b) "lottery" means a scheme, in whatever form and by
whatever name called, for distribution of prizes by lot or
chance to those persons participating in the chances of a
prize by purchasing tickets."
Sections 3 and 4 of the said Act lay down the conditions subject to
which the State Governments could organize, conduct or promote lotteries.
By reason of Section 4 of the Act, distributors and selling agents are said to
have been given statutory status. Section 6 thereof confers power of
prohibition expressly on the Central Government.
Section 5 of the Act reads as follows :
"5. Prohibition of sale of tickets in a State.-A State
Government may, within the State, prohibit the sale of
tickets of a lottery organized, conducted or promoted by
every other State."
Sub-sections (3) of Section 7 of the Act provides for penal provision
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in the following terms :
"(3) If any person acts as an agent or promoter or
trader in any lottery organized, conducted or promoted in
contravention of the provisions of this Act, or sells,
distributes or purchases the ticket of such lottery, he shall
be punishable with rigorous imprisonment for a term
which may extend to two years or with fine or with
both."
Article 131 \026 Scope and Ambit :
Article 131 of the Constitution of India postulates that this Court to
the exclusion of any other court shall have original jurisdiction in any
dispute between the Government of India and one or more States; or
between the Government of India and any State or States on one side and
one or more other States on the other; or between two or more States. We in
this case are not concerned with the proviso to the said Article. The said
Article would be attracted where adjudication is necessary in relation to a
legal right of one State or the Union of India vis-‘-vis other States, as the
case may be. Indisputably, the expression ’legal right’ has received liberal
interpretation by this Court from time to time. However, it is now well-
settled by various decisions of this Court that this Article will not be
applicable where citizens or private bodies are parties either jointly or in the
alternative with the State or the Government of India. The enlarged
definition of ’State’ under Article 12 would not extend to Article 131 of the
Constitution. It is also not in dispute that even a statutory corporation is not
a state within the meaning of the said provision.
Locus of the Appellants :
The Appellants herein were appointed as agents of the State, which
were governed by contract, in terms whereof, they had invested a huge
amount. If the statements made in the writ petitions to which we have
adverted to hereinbefore are correct, in the event the impugned notification
is implemented, the Appellants would not only loose a huge amount of
money which they have invested but also would be liable to pay
compensation to a large number of work force appointed by them in view of
the fact that they would have to close their business. The Appellants are the
agents coupled with interest. Such agencies are contemplated under the laws
of contract. The Act also postulates that in the event an agent violates the
notification issued by the State, he would face the penal consequences laid
down therein. The notification has the force of law. In the aforementioned
backdrop, the question which arises for consideration is as to whether the
Appellants herein had any independent right to question the validity of the
said notification.
The learned Single Judge, as noticed hereinbefore, held that they did
not have any such right. On the other hand, the Division Bench was of the
opinion :
"\005May be, the appellants also got adversely affected
with the prohibition imposed by the State of Karnataka
but it is only incidental because they are the agents of the
State of Sikkim and can have their rights only through
their principal\005."
We cannot subscribe to the said view.
’Agent’ has been defined in Section 182 of the Indian Contract Act,
1872, to mean a person employed to do any act for another or to represent
another in dealings with third persons. The person for whom such act is
done, or who is so represented, is called the ’principal’. Section 185 of the
Contract Act postulates that no consideration is necessary to create an
agency. The authority of an agent may be express or implied in terms of
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Section 186 thereof. Section 202 of the Contract Act provides that where
the agent has himself an interest in the property which forms the subject-
matter of the agency, the agency cannot, in the absence of an express
contract, be terminated to the prejudice of such interest. The right of an
agent to sue or be sued in its own name, is governed by Section 230 of the
Contract Act, which reads as under :
"230. Agent cannot personally enforce, nor be
bound by, contracts on behalf of principle.- In the
absence of any contract to that effect an agent cannot
personally enforce contracts entered into by him on
behalf of his principal, nor is he personally bound by
them."
The second part of the said provision does not envisage a situation
where the right of an agent is protected in terms of Section 202 of the
Contract Act. We have noticed hereinbefore that Section 4(c) of the Act
envisages appointment of agents, which empowers the State Government to
sell the tickets either itself or through distributors or selling agents. Such
distributors or selling agents may also be companies or body corporates.
Section 7(3) of the Act, as noticed hereinbefore, provides for a penal
consequence. If any person acts as an agent or promoter or trader in any
lottery, he may be subjected to punishment if he sells, distributes or
purchases tickets of such lottery in contravention of the provisions of the
said Act, which may include any notification issued under Section 5 of the
Act.
Right to Sue :
An agent coupled with interest has a right to sue. He may in certain
situations be sued as regard his own liabilities independent of his principal.
The right of an agent having interest to sue or be sued in its own name
came up for consideration before the Madras High Court in Subrahmania
Pattar v. Narayanan Nayar [ILR 24 Mad 130] wherein it was held :
"It was argued before us that by the document in
question the plaintiff became an agent with interest, and
that he, therefore, had a right to sue in his own name and
Williams v. Millington; Robinson v. Rutter; Gray v.
Pearson; and other cases and text-books were cited in
support of this proposition, and Pestanji Mancharji
Wadia v. Matchett; was also cited as a further authority
for the same proposition. The proposition as stated is in
our judgment too wide. In Williams v. Millington; and
Robinson v. Rutter; the agents who were held entitled to
sue were agents who had made the contract with the
defendant as auctioneers, and it was held that, though
they had contracted as agents having an interest, they
were entitled to sue in their own names. In Gray v.
Pearso the plaintiff’s suit was dismissed. There, there
was no contract entered into between the plaintiff and the
defendant. The plaintiff was merely the manager for
others and the words used by Willes, J., in his judgment,
to which our attention was called, do not assist the
plaintiff’s contention. He says the proper person to bring
the action is the person whose right has been violated.
Though there are certain exceptions to the general rule,
for instance, in the case of agents, auctioneers or factors,
these exceptions are in truth more apparent than real, &c.
The real proposition of law, which these and other cases
establish, is that where an agent enters into a contract as
such, if he has interest in the contract, he may sue in his
own name."
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Yet again in Mallhu v. Megh Raj [AIR 1920 Lah. 196], it was held :
"The only point calling for consideration in this
application for revision is whether the plaintiff is
debarred under S. 230, Contract Act from maintaining
the suit. It is true that part of the wheat belonged to one
Khem Lal and was sold by the plaintiff as Khem Lal’s
agent, but the other part was the plaintiff’s own wheat, so
that he had an interest in the contract, and the law is that
when an agent enters into a contract, he may sue thereon
in his own name if he has an interest in the contract."
The question again came up for consideration before the Bombay
High Court in Coorla Spinning & Weaving Mills v. Vallabhdas (AIR 1925
Bom. 547], wherein it was opined :
"It was next argued on behalf of the defendants that the
suit was defective and must have been dismissed unless
and until the Mill Company was added. In other words,
that the Mill Company were necessary and not merely
proper parties. The plaintiffs, on the other hand,
contended that the selling agents had here a beneficial
interest in the completion of the contract, and could
accordingly sue in respect of it. This rule extends in
England to auctioneers and factors, and is thus expressed
in Bowstead on Agency, 7th Edn., p. 431:-
"An agent may sue in his own name on
contracts made by him on behalf of his principal in
the following case, namely\005.(b) where, as in the
case of factors and auctioneers, he has a special
property in or lien upon, the subject-matter of the
contract, or has a beneficial interest in the
completion thereof,"
The Sind Court had also an occasion to consider the said question in
R.P. Kharas v. Bawanji Narsi [AIR 1926 Sind 6], wherein the law was stated
in the following terms :
"The case of an agent who has an interest in the
contract made by him as such is not within the rule. He
is the person to sue, and he is liable to be sued on the
contract. An auctioneer or factor being in possession of
his employer’s goods having a lien on them for his
charges and advances is in this position. An auctioneer
may be sued for non-delivery of the goods sold and he
may sue the buyer for the price."
In Durga Prasad Manna Lal v. Cawnpore Flour Mills [AIR 1929 Oudh
417], upon referring to the provisions of the Indian Contract Act, it was held:
"The three cases mentioned in this section in
which a contract to that effect may be presumed are by
no means exhaustive. Thus there can be no difficulty in
presuming such a contract in a case in which the agent
has an interest in the transaction. Apart from this the
position of an agent in such a case is virtually that of a
principal to the extent of the interest, which he has in the
contract. This rule is based upon general principles and
not on any technicalities peculiar to the English Law. It
has been followed in the Indian Courts as well."
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The Lahore High Court had also the occasion to deal with the said
question in Firm Hardayal Mal Mohri Lal v. Kishan Gopal Jhanji [AIR 1938
Lah 673], wherein Tek Chand, J. opined :
"These documents therefore do not affect the
matter. This is clearly a case of an "agency coupled with
interest" and therefore the ordinary rule laid down in
S.230 is inapplicable. It is settled law in England and as
observed by Pollock and Mulla in their Commentary on
the Indian Contract Act (Edn.6) page 638 :
The like rule is laid down by Indian Courts that
where an agent enters into a contract as such if he has an
interest in the contract he may sue in his own name. This
is not a real exception to the rule laid down at the
beginning of the Section, the agent being in such a case
virtually a principal to the extent of his interest in the
contract."
In Subodh Gopal Bose v. Province of Bihar [AIR 1950 Patna 222] a
Division Bench of the Patna High Court considered the question, and upon
noticing a large number of decisions, laid down law in the following terms :
"There is another aspect of the case which has a
more direct bearing on this question. In the suit the main
relief which the appellant has claimed (as disclosed by
the plaint) is a declaration that the appellant is entitled to
quarry lime stone and manufacture lime from the Murli
hill As a mere local agent of the lessee company, the
appellant has no such right of suit. An agent who has
some interest in the property \026 may be a qualified interest
\026 can maintain an action to protect that interest (see
Whittingham v. Bloxham,(1831) 172 E.R. 841: (4 Car. &
P. 597). In Smith’s Leading Cases, Vol. II, p. 395 (12th
Edn.) the following statement of the law is made:
"But it is not merely in cases where the
agent has contracted in his own name for an
unnamed principal that he has a right, at law, to
sue upon the contract, when he has made a contract
in the subject-matter of which he has a special
property, he may, even though he contracted for an
avowed principal, sue in his own name."
Legal Right :
If by a statutory provision the right of an agent to carry on his
business is affected, he may, in our considered opinion, in his own right
maintain an action. The question came up for consideration before this
Court in Calcutta Gas Company (Proprietary) Ltd. v. State of West Bengal
and Others [AIR 1962 SC 1044 = 1962 Supp. (3) SCR 1]. Therein a
question arose as to whether the petitioner therein who had a right to manage
the Oriental Gas Company for a period of 20 years and to receive
remuneration for the same could question the vires of the law whereby the
said Oriental Gas Company was taken over as a result whereof, his right to
continue in the business was affected. It was held that the Petitioner
Company had such a right, stating :
"\005It is not necessary in this case to decide whether
under the said agreement the appellant was constituted as
agent or managing agent or a servant of Oriental Gas
Company. Whatever may be its character, by reason of
Section 4 of the impugned Act, it was deprived of certain
legal rights it possessed under the agreement. Under the
agreement, the appellant had the right to manage Oriental
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Gas Company for a period of 20 years and to receive
remuneration for the same. But under Section 4 of the
impugned Act, it was deprived of that right for a period
of five years. There was certainly a legal right accruing to
the appellant under the agreement and that was abridged,
if not destroyed, by the impugned Act. It is, therefore,
impossible to say that the legal right of the appellant was
not infringed by the provisions of the impugned Act. In
the circumstances, as the appellant’s personal right to
manage the Company and to receive remuneration
therefor had been infringed by the provisions of the
statute, it had locus standi to file the petition under
Article 226 of the Constitution."
Once it is held, in view of the aforementioned pronouncement that the
Appellants had legal rights to challenge the validity or otherwise of the said
notification issued by the State of Karnataka, there cannot be any doubt
whatsoever that they would have independent rights to maintain the writ
application.
We may consider the question from another angle.
If the agent was to be prosecuted for violation of the term of the
notification, he could challenge the validity thereof. A fortiori, a quia timet
application would also be maintainable. A person must be held to have
access to justice if his right in any manner whether to carry on business or
threat to his liberty is infringed. Access to justice is a human right.
In Dwarka Prasad Agarwal (D) By LRs. v. B.D. Agarwal and Others
[(2003) 6 SCC 230], this Court opined:
"\005A party cannot be made to suffer adversely
either indirectly or directly by reason of an order
passed by any court of law which is not binding on
him. The very basis upon which a judicial process
can be resorted to is reasonableness and fairness in
a trial. Under our Constitution as also the
international treaties and conventions, the right to
get a fair trial is a basic fundamental/human right.
Any procedure which comes in the way of a party
in getting a fair trial would be violative of Article
14 of the Constitution of India. Right to a fair trial
by an independent and impartial Tribunal is part of
Article 6(1) of the European Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms, 1950 [See Clark (Procurator Fiscal,
Kirkcaldy) v. Kelly]\005"
The High Court, therefore, was not correct in holding that they had no
personal right to enforce despite the fact that they would suffer injuries or
would otherwise be prejudiced by the notification issued by the State of
Karnataka. It would, therefore, not be correct to contend that they could
enforce their rights only through their principal and not independently. The
Appellants had a legal right to carry on business. Such a right having been
impugned by reason of the impugned notification, a writ petition at their
instance was maintainable.
Locus Standi :
If the Appellants herein had a legal right, they could seek redressal for
violation thereof before an appropriate forum. The locus standi to maintain
a writ application even otherwise has received liberal interpretation.
In Ghulam Qadir v. Special Tribunal [(2002) 1 SCC 33], this Court
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observed :
"38. There is no dispute regarding the legal
proposition that the rights under Article 226 of the
Constitution of India can be enforced only by an
aggrieved person except in the case where the writ
prayed for is for habeas corpus or quo warranto. Another
exception in the general rule is the filing of a writ petition
in public interest. The existence of the legal right of the
petitioner which is alleged to have been violated is the
foundation for invoking the jurisdiction of the High
Court under the aforesaid article. The orthodox rule of
interpretation regarding the locus standi of a person to
reach the court has undergone a sea change with the
development of constitutional law in our country and the
constitutional courts have been adopting a liberal
approach in dealing with the cases or dislodging the
claim of a litigant merely on hypertechnical grounds. If a
person approaching the court can satisfy that the
impugned action is likely to adversely affect his right
which is shown to be having source in some statutory
provision, the petition filed by such a person cannot be
rejected on the ground of his not having the locus standi.
In other words, if the person is found to be not merely a
stranger having no right whatsoever to any post or
property, he cannot be non-suited on the ground of his
not having the locus standi."
The Appellants were not mere strangers.
Maintainability of the suit before this Court :
For determining the question as regard maintainability of the suit
before this Court, it is necessary to consider as to whether the appellants
herein whether independently or together with their principals could
maintain a suit. In view of a large number of decisions of this Court,
evidently, they could not.
Even the States of Sikkim and Meghalaya filed suits against the State
of Karnataka in this Court, the independent right of the Appellants herein to
maintain independent action before the appropriate forum could not have
been taken away.
In State of Bihar v. Union of India and Another [(1970) 1 SCC 67], a
Constitution Bench of this Court while deciding a case wherein the State of
Bihar had not only sued the Union of India but also Hindustan Steel Ltd. in
regard to negligence or deliberate action of servants of both the defendants
therein the matter of short delivery of iron and steel material ordered by the
State in connection with the construction work of Gandak Project, this Court
held that such a suit shall not be maintainable, opining :
"Although Article 131 does not define the scope of
the disputes which this Court may be called upon to
determine in the same way as Section 204 of the
Government of India Act, and we do not find it necessary
to do so this much is certain that the legal right which is
the subject of dispute must arise in the context of the
constitution and the Federalism it sets up. However,
there can be no doubt that so far as the parties to the
dispute are concerned, the framers of the Constitution did
intend that they could only be the constituent units of the
Union of India and the Government of India itself
arrayed on one side or the other either singly or jointly
with another unit or the Government of India."
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This Court further observed :
"Apart from these special provisions a dispute
which falls within the ambit of Article 131 can only be
determined in the forum mentioned therein, namely, the
Supreme Court of India, provided there has not been
impleaded in any said ’dispute any private party, be it a
citizen or a firm or a corporation along with a State either
jointly or in the alternative. A dispute in which such a
private party is involved must be brought before a court,
other than this court having jurisdiction over the matter."
In State of Rajasthan and Others v. Union of India and Others [(1977)
3 SCC 592], this Court opined : :
"\005The Article provides in so many terms in clauses (a),
(b) and (c) that the dispute must be between the
Government of India and one or more States, or between
the Government of India and any other State or States on
one side and one or more other States on the other, or
between two or more States. It does not contemplate any
private party being arrayed as a disputant on one side or
the other. The parties to the dispute must fall within one
or the other category specified in clauses (a), (b) and (c).
In State of Karnataka v. Union of India [(1977) 4 SCC 608], this
Court observed :
" It has to be remembered that Article 131 is traceable
to Section 204 of the Government of India Act. The
jurisdiction conferred by it thus originated in what was
part of the federal structure set up by the Government of
India Act, 1935. It is a remnant of the federalism found in
that Act. It should, therefore, be widely and generously
interpreted for that reason too so as to advance the
intended remedy. It can be invoked, in my opinion,
whenever a State and other States or the Union differ on
a question of interpretation of the Constitution so that a
decision of it will affect the scope or exercise of
governmental powers which are attributes of a State. It
makes no difference to the maintainability of the action if
the powers of the State, which are Executive, Legislative,
and Judicial, are exercised through particular individuals
as they necessarily must be. It is true that a criminal act
committed by a Minister is no part of his official duties.
But, if any of the organs of the State claim exclusive
power to take cognizance of it, the State, as such,
becomes interested in the dispute about the legal
competence or extent of powers of one of its organs
which may emerge."
Yet again in Union of India v. State of Rajasthan [(1984) 4 SCC 238],
it was observed :
"On a careful consideration of the whole matter in the
light of the decisions of this Court referred to above, we
feel that Article 131 of the Constitution is attracted only
when a dispute arises between or amongst the States and
the Union in the context of the constitutional relationship
that exists between them and the powers, rights, duties,
immunities, liabilities, disabilities etc. flowing therefrom.
Any dispute which may arise between a State in the
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capacity of an employer in a factory, a manufacturer of
goods subject to excise duty, a holder of a permit to run a
stage carriage, a trader or businessman carrying on
business not incidental to the ordinary functions of
Government, a consumer of railway services etc. like any
other private party on the one hand and the Union of
India on the other cannot be construed as a dispute
arising between the State and the Union in discharge of
their respective executive powers attracting Article 131
of the Constitution. It could never have been the intention
of the framers of the Constitution that any ordinary
dispute of this nature would have to be decided
exclusively by the Supreme Court. It is well to remember
that the constitutional proposals of the Sapru Committee
advocated the strengthening of the position of the Federal
Court in India and widening its jurisdiction on the
original side so that the Federal Court could act as an
interpreter and guardian of the Constitution and as a
tribunal for the determination of the disputes between the
constituent units of the Federation. The Joint Committee
on Indian Constitutional Reforms was also of opinion
that the object of conferring exclusive original
jurisdiction on the Federal Court was that the disputes of
the kind specified between the Federation and the
Provinces as the constituent units of the Federation
should not be left to be decided by courts of law of a
particular unit but be adjudicated upon only by the
highest tribunal in the land which would be beyond the
influence of any one constituent unit. The Special
Committee consisting of Sriyuts S. Varadachariar, Alladi
Krishnaswami Ayyar, B.L. Mitter, K.M. Munshi and
B.N. Rau appointed by the Constituent Assembly to
consider and report on the constitution and powers of the
Supreme Court suggested "that the Supreme Court, like
the Federal Court under the 1935 Constitution, would be
the best available forum for the adjudication of all
disputes between the Union and a unit and between one
unit and another and proposed that the court should have
an exclusive original jurisdiction in such disputes". (Vide
The Framing of India’s Constitution\027A Study by Shri B.
Shiva Rao at p. 483). Considered in the light of the
foregoing the conclusion becomes inevitable that
disputes of the nature involved in this case could not
have been in the contemplation of the framers of the
Constitution when they adopted Article 131 of the
Constitution."
Conclusion :
The Division Bench of the High Court accepted the position that the
Appellants herein are statutory agents but it evidently failed to take into
consideration the status of the Appellants vis-‘-vis their contractual rights
and obligations with their principal coupled with their individual rights to
maintain their writ petitions in proper perspective. It is no doubt true that
had the State of Sikkim or the State of Meghalaya intended to sue the State
of Karnataka independently; in terms of Article 131 of the Constitution of
India the only forum where the dispute between them could have been
resolved is this Court alone but when such a lis is brought by the State
jointly with their agents who had also independent cause of action and had a
legal right to maintain writ application questioning the legality and/or
validity of the said notification issued by the State, a suit in terms of Article
131 of the Constitution of India would not have been maintainable.
The Appellants herein were not busy bodies. They had an interest in
the subject-matter of the writ petition. They were, thus, not merely strangers
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having no right whatsoever in the matter.
It has not been contended, nor could it be contended that the
Appellants are mere smoke screens of the States of Sikkim and Meghalaya.
In absence of such a plea and in view of the fact that the Appellants here not
been held to be mere strangers without having any legal right, we are of the
opinion that the writ petitions were maintainable. The impugned judgment,
therefore, cannot be sustained, which is set aside accordingly.
The appeals are allowed.
Keeping in view the fact that the Appellants are out of business, the
High Court is requested to consider the desirability of disposing of the writ
petitions as expeditiously as possible and preferably within a period of two
months from the date of communication of this order. The Chief Justice of
the High Court, having regard to the importance of the question, may also
consider the desirability of getting the matter heard out and disposed of by a
Division Bench.
The Appellants are entitled to costs throughout. Counsel fee assessed
at Rs.25,000/- in each appeal.