Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SRI RAMA VILAS SERVICE (P) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
C. CHANDRASEKARAN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
09/12/1963
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1965 AIR 107 1964 SCR (5) 869
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1968 SC1461 (4,7)
RF 1975 SC 818 (6)
F 1975 SC1867 (2)
F 1978 SC 949 (5)
ACT:
Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (4 of 1939) s. 47(1) (a) and
Constitution of India, Art. 226.-Consideration in granting
permit Meaning of Public interest-If writ of certiorari can
be issued on questions of fact.
HEADNOTE:
The Regional Transport Authority granted one stage carriage
permit to the appellant. On appeal, the State Transport
Appel-
870
late Tribunal took the view that the appellant was a
monopolist over a distance of 18 miles which was a part of
the route in question and so, it rejected the application
for a permit made by the appellant and granted the permit to
respondent no. 1 over the route in question. It is against
this order of the Appellate Tribunal that the appellant
preferred a writ petition before the High Court. The single
Judge, who heard the writ petition, quashed the order of the
Appellate Tribunal. This order was challenged by respondent
no. 1 by preferring an appeal under the Letters Patent
before a Division Bench of the said High Court. The
Division Bench affirmed the order of the Appellate Tribunal
and set aside the order of the single Judge on the ground
that the single Judge was not justified in issuing a writ of
certiorari under Art. 226 of the Constitution of India.
Hence this appeal.
Held: (i) In granting a permit, the appropriate authorities
under the Motor Vehicles Act are required to consider the
interests of the public generally under s. 47(1)(a) of the
Act. In dealing with this aspect of the matter, it would
not be irrelevant for the appropriate authority to hold that
if any applicant is or would be in the position of a
monopolist if a permit was granted to him, he would be
liable to neglect the interests of the public and may not be
very keen on taking all steps to keep his service in good
and efficient order. Therefore, it cannot be said that in
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taking into account the fact that the appellant was a
monopolist on a part of the route, the Appellate Tribunal
has been influenced by any irrelevant fact.
R.K. Ayyaswami Gounder v. M/s. Sundambigai Motor Service,
Dharampura. C.A. No. 198 of 1962 decided on 17th September,
1962 relied on.
(ii) It is true that the administrative directions issued by
the Government under s. 43(a) have no force of statutory
rules and are, therefore, not binding; but that does not
mean that the consideration that the granting of a monopoly
to a bus-operator may be prejudicial to public interest,
becomes irrelevant only because it has been included or is
implied in the administrative instructions. The said
consideration has to be taken into account not because it
has been included in the administrative instructions, but
because, by itself, it is a relevant consideration under s.
47(1) (a) of the Act.
M/s. Raman & Raman Ltd. v. The State of Madras, [1959]
Suppl. 2 S.C.R. 227, relied on.
(iii) In dealing with the applications under Art. 226 in
cases of this kind, it is necessary to bear in mind that the
High Court is not exercising the jurisdiction of an
Appellate court in the matter. In entertaining writ
petitions, the High Court must not lose sight of the fact
that decisions of questions of fact under the Motor Vehicles
Act have been left to the appropriate authorities which
871
have been constituted into quasi judicial Tribunals in that
behalf, and so, decisions rendered by them on all questions
of fact should not be interfered with under the special
jurisdiction conferred on the High Courts under Art. 226,
unless the well recognised tests in that behalf are
satisfied. If the order passed by the Appellate Tribunal
which is challenged in writ proceedings suffers from
infirmities which would justify the issue of a writ under
the well recognised principles laid down by judicial
decisions in that behalf, the High Court should and ought to
interfere but the writs of certiorari should not be issued
merely on the ground that all relevant reasons have not been
set out in the judgment of the Appellate Tribunal or that
the High Court would have taken a different view on the
evidence adduced in the proceedings.
(iv) There can be little doubt that if a decision of a
quasi-. judicial Tribunal is challenged before the High
Court under Art. 226 and it is shown that the said decision
is based on irrelevant considerations or on considerations
which are invalid in law, a writ will undoubtedly be issued
under Art. 226. But the order passed by the Appellate
Tribunal in the case does not suffer from any such
infirmity. In the present case, the Division Bench was
right in holding that the Single Judge should not have
issued a writ in favour of the appellant.
R.v. Agricultural Land Tribunal for the Eastern Province of
England, Ex parte Grant, relied on.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1015 of
1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
September 26, 1963, of the Madras High Court in Writ Appeal
No. 20 of 1962.
G.S. Pathak, K.K. Venugopal and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the
appellant.
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M.C. Setalvad, J.B. Dadachanji, O.C. Mathur and Ravinder
Narain, for the respondent No. 1.
December 9, 1963. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
GAJENDRAGADKAR J.-This appeal has been brought to this Court
by special leave and it has been filed against the decision
of the Division Bench of the Madras High Court by which the
order passed by a learned single Judge of the said High
Court directing the issue of a writ of certiorari in favour
of the appellant Sri Rama Vilas Service (P) Ltd.
872
has been reversed. It appears that the Regional Transport
Authority, Thanjavur called for applications for the grant
of one stage carriage permit between Mannargudi and
Nagapattinam. The distance between these two places is 34
miles. Four applicants applied for a permit on this route.
They were the appellant, Raman & Raman (P) Ltd., Balasu-
brahmanya Udayar, and respondent No. 1 C. Chandrasekaran.
The Regional Transport Authority considered the merits of
these four applicants and assigned them marks as a result of
which a permit was granted to the appellant on the ground
that it got the highest number of marks.
This order was challenged by the three applicants whose
applications for permit had been rejected by the Regional
Transport Authority. The State Transport Appellate
Tribunal, Madras (hereinafter called the ’Appellate
Tribunal’) considered the merits of the four applicants for
itself, assigned them marks and ultimately came to the
conclusion that the appellant was not entitled to a permit.
The judgment of the Appellate Tribunal shows that though as
a result of the marks assigned by it to the respective
applicants, the appellant and Raman and Raman (P) Ltd.
secured 4 marks each and the two other competitors 31/2 and
3 1/4 marks respectively, the Appellate Tribunal took the
view that the appellant was a monopolist over a distance of
18 miles which was a part of the route in question, whereas
Raman & Raman (P) Ltd. had a near monopoly or predominant
influence over the remaining part of the distance which was
16 miles, and so, it rejected the application for a permit
made by the appellant and Raman & Raman (P) Ltd. and granted
the permit to respondent No. 1 over the route in question.
It is against this order of the Appellate Tribunal that the
appellant preferred a writ petition before the Madras High
Court (No. 25 of 1959). Srinivasan J. who heard the writ
petition came to the conclusion that the Appellate Tribunal
had signally failed to consider the relevant evidence, and
so, this order needed to be corrected
873
by a writ of certiorari. Accordingly, a writ of certiorari
was ordered to be issued as prayed for by the appellant.
This order was challenged by respondent No.1 by preferring
on appeal under the Letters Patent before a Division Bench
of the said High Court. The Division Bench has taken the
view that having regard to the reasons given by the
Appellate Tribunal in support of its conclusion that the
appellant was not entitled to a permit, Srinivasan J. was
not justified in issuing a writ of certiorari under Art. 226
of the Constitution. In the result, the order passed by
Srinivasan J. was reversed and the writ petition filed by
the appellant was dismissed. It is against this order that
the appellant has come to this Court in appeal. Respondents
2 and 3 are State Transport Appellate Tribunal, and the
Regional Transport Authority respectively and they have been
impleaded because the order passed by respondent No. 2 was
questioned in the writ proceedings and is the subject-matter
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of the present appeal.
It is common ground that over a distance of 18 miles in the
first sector of the route in question, the appellant runs
seven buses and no other bus runs on that sector of the
route, so that in respect of this sector, the appellant is a
monopolist. It is also common ground that over the second
sector of the route consisting of 16 miles Raman & Raman (P)
Ltd. runs nine buses, whereas two buses are run by two other
permit-holders; and that means that Raman & Raman (P) Ltd.
can be described as a near monopolist on that part of the
route. It is in the light of these two admitted facts that
the Appellate Tribunal took the view that the monopolist and
the near monopolist should not be given permits, because
granting them permits would not be in the interests of the
public. That is how respondent No.1 came to be given a
permit by the Appellate Tribunal.
Before dealing with the points raised by Mr. Pathak in this
Court on behalf of the appellant, it is necessary to
indicate briefly the findings recorded
874
by Srinivasan J. and the Division Bench which heard the
appeal against his decision. Srinivasan J. agreed with the
contention of respondent No. 1 that the question as to
whether any applicant for a permit is a monopolist is not
irrelevant having regard to the provisions of s. 47(1)(a) of
the Motor Vehicles Act (No. 4 of 1939). He, however, took
the view that in assessing the value of the said
consideration, the Appellate Tribunal had failed to consider
the fact that between the monopolist appellant and the near
monopolist Raman & Raman (P) Ltd. there would be keen
competition on the route in question, and so, the argument
that a monopolist would tend to ignore the public interest
for want of competition with anybody else was not valid in
the present case. In the opinion of the learned Judge, the
Appellate Tribunal had also failed to take into account the
fact that between Tiruvarur and Nagapattinam there is a
parallel railway which also offers some competition to the
bus-operators. In the result, the learned Judge was
satisfied that in rejecting the application for a permit
made by the appellant, the Appellate Tribunal had been
influenced mainly by the abstract concept of monopoly and
its adverse effect on public interest. That, in brief, is
the basis of the order passed by the learned Judge quashing
the decision of the Appellate Tribunal.
On the other hand, when the matter went before the Division
Bench in the Letters Patent Appeal, the Division Bench took
the view that the Appellate Tribunal had referred to the
existence of the amenity of the railway service parallel to
the route and it observed that merely because the Appellate
Tribunal had not marshalled all the reasons in support of
its conclusion, it would not be appropriate for the High
Court to exercise its special jurisdiction under Art.226.It
noticed the fact that in support of the view taken by the
Appellate Tribunal there were other valid reasons which the
judgment indicated, and so, it was held that the learned
Judge was in error in issuing a writ of certiorari in the
present case.
875
Mr. Pathak contends that the Division Bench was in error in
reversing the conclusion of the learned single Judge.
There can be no doubt that in granting a permit, the
appropriate authorities under the Motor Vehicles Act are
required to consider the interests of the public generally
under s. 47(1) (a), and in assessing the merits of an
individual applicant for a permit on any route, it would be
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open to the appropriate authority to enquire whether the
service which the individual applicant would render to the
public if he is given a permit would be efficient and
satisfactory or not. In dealing with this aspect of the
matter, it would not be irrelevant for the appropriate
authority to hold that if any applicant is or would be in
the position of a monopolist if a permit was granted to him,
he would be liable to neglect the interests of the public
and may not be very keen on taking all steps to keep his
service in good and efficient order. Absence of any
competition from another bus-operator on the route is likely
to develop a feeling of complacence in the monopolist and
that is a factor which the appropriate authority can
certainly take into account. Therefore, it cannot be urged
that in taking into account the fact that the appellant was
a monopolist on a part of the route, the Appellate Tribunal
has been influenced by any irrelevant fact, vide R.K.
Ayyaswami Gounder v. M/s. Soudambigai Motor Service,
Dharampura & Others(1).
In this connection, Mr. Pathak has invited our attention to
the fact that the Madras Government has issued certain
administrative directions under s. 43(a) of the Motor
Vehicles Act and it has been held by this Court in M/s.
Raman & Raman Ltd. v. The State of Madras & Ors. (2) that
the said administrative directions have no legal force and
cannot be said to be binding on the appropriate authorities.
The argument is that in the relevant administrative orders
in regard to the assignment of marks in respect
(1) A. No. 198 of 1962 decided on 17.9.1962.
(2) [1959] Suppl. 2 S.C.R. 227.
876
of the merits of the several applicants for permit, it seems
to have been assumed that a person owning in re than five
buses may not get more marks though up to five buses owned
by a single applicant appropriate marks are assigned; and
Mr. Pathak urges that the policy underlying this
administrative rule appears to be to discourage monopoly in
road transport; but this policy is enunciated by an
administrative rule which has no legal or binding force, and
so, it is urged that the Appellate Tribunal was in error in
referring to the consideration that the appellant was a
monopolist on a part of the route. This argument is
entirely misconceived. It is true that the administrative
directions issued by the Government under s. 43(a) have no
force of statutory rules and are, therefore, not binding;
but that does not mean that the consideration that the
granting of a monopoly to a bus-operator may be prejudicial
to public interest, becomes irrelevant only because it has
been included or is implied, in the administrative
instructions. If on the merits, the said consideration is
relevant, and we have already held that it is relevant, we
do not see how the fact that the said consideration has also
been included in the administrative directions would make it
irrelevant. The said consideration has to be taken into
account not because it has been included in the
administrative instructions, but because, by itself, it is a
relevant consideration under
s. 47 (1) (a).
In dealing with applications for writs of certiorari under
Art. 226 in cases of this kind, it is necessary to bear in
mind that the High Court is not exercising the jurisdiction
of art Appellate Court in the matter. There is no doubt
that in granting or refusing permits to applicants, the
appropriate authorities are discharging a very important and
a very onerous quasi-judicial function. Large stakes are
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generally involved in these applications, and so, it is of
utmost importance that the appropriate authority should
consider all the relevant facts carefully and in its order
should set out concisely and clearly the reasons in support
877
of its conclusions. It is hardly necessary to emphasise
that applicants for permits whose applications are rejected
should be satisfied that all points urged by them in support
of their respective claims have been duly considered before
the matter was decided. Even so, it would, we think, be
inappropriate for the High Court to issue a writ of
certiorari mainly or solely on the ground that all reasons
have not been set out in the judgment of the appropriate
authority. In entertaining writ petitions, the High Court
must not lose sight of the fact that decisions of questions
of fact under the Motor Vehicles Act have been left to the
appropriate authorities which have been constituted into
quasi-judicial Tribunals in that behalf, and so, decisions
rendered by them on all questions of fact should not be
interfered with under the special jurisdiction conferred on
the High Courts under Art. 226, unless the well-recognised
tests in that behalf are satisfied. In the present case, we
have no doubt that the Division Bench was right in holding
that Srinivasan J. should not have issued a writ in favour
of the appellant.
We have carefully considered the order delivered by the
Appellate Tribunal and we see no justification for the
criticism made against that order that the decision of the
Appellate Tribunal proceeded solely on the ground of the
abstract concept of the evil effects of monopoly. The order
has referred to the railway which runs parallel to the route
and the order has taken into account the fact that the
appellant is a monopolist on a part of the route and Raman &
Raman (P) Ltd. is a near monopolist on the remaining part of
the route. Srinivasan J. thought that in dealing with the
matter, the Appellate Tribunal ignored the fact that there
was bound to be some kind of competition between the
monopolist and the near monopolist. On the merits, we find
some difficulty in acceding that a theoretically possible
competition between the monopolist and the near monopolist
can have any relevance or validity in the present case. A
passenger who wants to travel more than 18 miles
878
of the route which is covered by the monopoly of the
appellant would naturally prefer to go by the appellant’s
bus all the way, because in trying to take advantage of the
near monopolist’s service on the second sector of the route
he would have to face the risk of not having a continuous
journey. A competition between the monopolist on the first
sector of the route who would have run his buses on the
whole distance if he was granted the permit, and the near
monopolist so far as the second sector of the route is
concerned, is itself a matter of a purely theoretical
character. There would be obvious difficulties and causes
of inconvenience for through passengers to take advantage of
this hypothetical competition. If the argument as to the
competition between the two powerful operators has to be
factual and effective, it must mean that permits should have
been granted to both of them over the whole route, and that
clearly would mean that smaller operators would be excluded.
We are not suggesting that this consideration itself is
decisive we are only pointing out that the ultimate decision
of the Appellate Tribunal must have been the result of a
proper assessment of all the relevant factors, and so, it
would not be safe to issue a writ of certiorari against its
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decision because some reasons which were urged before the
High Court had not been expressly considered by the
Appellate Tribunal. Speaking generally and in a broad way,
we do not think it could be seriously denied that encourag-
ing bus-operators who do not own a fleet of buses and
discouraging monopoly on the route is consistent with the
interests of the general public which is of paramount
importance under s. 47(1)(a), of the Motor Vehicles Act.
Besides, the Division Bench has also referred to some other
aspects of the matter which would indicate that the
Appellate Tribunal was right in not granting a permit to the
appellant. In cases of this kind, the High Court should
naturally be slow in exercising its jurisdiction under Art.
226. If the order passed by the Appellate Tribunal which is
challenged in writ proceedings suffers from infirmities
which would justify the issue of a writ under
879
the well-recognised principles laid down by judicial
decisions in that behalf, the High Court should and ought to
interfere but the writs of certiorari should not be issued
merely on the ground that all relevant reasons have not been
set out in the judgment of the Appellate Tribunal or that
the High Court would have taken a different view on the
evidence adduced in the proceedings.
In support of his case that the impugned order was properly
set aside by Srinivasan J., Mr. Pathak has relied upon the
decision of the Court of Appeal in R. v. Agricultural Land
Tribunal for the Eastern Province of England, Ex parte
Grant. (1) In that case the Court of Appeal was called upon
to consider whether the discretion vested in the Tribunal
under s. 25(1) (a) of the Agricultural Holdings Act, 1948,
had been validly exercised. The test prescribed by s.
25(1)(a) was that the landlord should show that the carrying
out of the purpose for which he proposed to terminate the
tenancy in question is desirable in the interests of
efficient farming, whether as respects good estate
management or good husbandry or otherwise. In coming to the
conclusion that the said requirement had not been satisfied,
the Tribunal appears to have relied substantially on the
fact that the tenants sought to be dispossessed had been in
possession of the lands for many years. It appears that the
Court of Appeal took the view that the real grounds for the
Tribunal’s decision on the section 25 point which appeared
from paragraphs 5 and 6 of the statement were ambiguous and
to some extent in conflict with each other. Besides, the
effect which would result if the landlord’s request was
granted on the tenants’ other land which had influenced the
Tribunal was, in the opinion of the Court of Appeal,
irrelevant in considering the applicability of s. 25(1)(a).
In other words, the Court of Appeal held that the decision
of the Tribunal was vitiated by the fact that it rested at
least on some invalid and irrelevant grounds, and that is
why a writ of certiorari was ordered to be
(1) [1956] 3 All E.R. 321.
880
issued. There can be little doubt that if a decision of a
quasi-judicial Tribunal is challenged before the High Court
under Art. 226 and it is shown that the said decision is
based on irrelevant considerations or on considerations
which are invalid in law, a writ will undoubtedly be issued
under Art. 226. But the order passed by the Appellate
Tribunal in the present case does not suffer from any such
infirmity. Therefore, we are satisfied that the decision in
the case of ex parts Grant on which Mr. Pathak relies, does
not assist his case.
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The result is, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.