Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAHARASHTRA STATE ROAD TRANSPORT CORPO-RATION
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BABU GOVERDHAN REGULAR MOTOR SERVICE ANDOTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/09/1969
BENCH:
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
BENCH:
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
SHELAT, J.M.
DUA, I.D.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 1926 1970 SCR (2) 319
1969 SCC (2) 746
CITATOR INFO :
R 1971 SC1804 (4,5,6,9,18)
ACT:
Motor Vehicles Act IV of 1939, ss. 46 and 68--Whether
requirements of s. 46 mandatory--If application for permit
not furnishing information required by s. 46 bound to be
rejected summarily--Form prescribed by Stare Government
under its rule making power under s. 68--Whether valid.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, as well as. Respondents 1 to 5 and 8 to 16,
applied to the Regional Transport Authority, Nagpur, on
various dates in the. years 1964-65, under s: 46 of Act IV
of 1939 for grant of stage carriage permits on certain
routes. After notification of the applications-and
considering objections of and hearing the parties, the
Regional Transport Authority passed orders granting
permits in favour of the appellant. Respondents 1 to 5
filed appeals before the Appellate Committee of the
transport authority of Maharashtra challenging the permits
granted to the appellant on the ground that in the
appellant’s application, mandatory information required to
be submitted under s. 46 read with the form prescribed under
Rule 80 of the relevant rules had not been furnished by the
appellant. The Appellate committee upheld the challenge and
remanded’ the matter to the Regional Transport Authority for
re-consideration with a direction that the appellant should
be asked to furnish complete information and, after the
receipt of such information in the prescribed form as well
as compliance with the normal procedure the entire matter be
re-heard and decided afresh. Respondents 1 to 5 challenged
this order of the Appellate Committee before the High Court
trader Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution contending
that the Committee should have rejected the applications of
the appellant on the ground that the mandatory provisions
of s. 46 had not been complied with and that the order of
the Committee really amounted to allowing the appellant to
convert a defective. application so as to bring it in
conformity with the provisions of the Act and the form,
which was not permissible in law. The High Court accepted
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this contention holding that the Appellate Committee had no
jurisdiction to give the appellant a fresh opportunity to.
furnish the necessary particulars. It therefore remanded
the matter with a direction that the applications of all
parties excepting that of the State. Road Transport
Corporation be considered and a decision reached on the
grant of permits between the rival applicants.
In appeal before this Court it was contended inter alia
that the. High Court was in error in interfering in a writ
petition under Arts. 226 and 227 with the order of the
Appellate Committee; that the form prescribed by the State
Government for an application for a permit had’ gone beyond
the rule making power of the State. Government under s. 68
of the Act; and that the provisions of s. 46 of the Act are
not mandatory and there is no jurisdiction in the
authorities functioning under the Act to reject an
application summarily on the ground that it was not in
conformity with the Act or the Rules framed thereunder.
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HELD: Allowing the appeal: (i) Since the impugned order
of the Appellate Committee was challenged on the ground’ of
lack of jurisdiction, it was not possible to hold that the
High Court could not have entertained the writ petition
under Ars. 226 and 227. [326. C]
Nagendra Nath Bora v. The Commissioner of Hills Division
JUDGMENT:
(ii) The form prescribed by the State Government
requiring the furnishing of information on the various
particulars and matters referred to. therein was not beyond
the rule making power of the State: Government under s. 68
of the. Act. Section 46, rule 80, and the form prescribed,
have. to be read together, and so read it follows that an
applicant for a permit must comply, at any rate,
substantially with the various matters mentioned therein.
Section 68 is not controlled by s. ’46 of the Act. In fact
it specifically enables the State Government to make rules
for the purpose of carrying into. effect the provisions of
Chapter IV. The Chapter itself is entitled ’Control of
Transport Vehicles’ and if, with a view to carrying into
effect the object of control of transport vehicles, the form
requires information on various matters over and above those
enumerated in cls. (a) to (d) of s. 46, it cannot be stated
that the State Government has acted beyond its rule-making
powers when prescribing such a form. The form so
prescribed, forms an integral part of rule 80 which the
State Government is authorised to make., under s. 68 of the
Act. [330 A-D]
C.K.M. Services v. Mys. Revenue Board, A.I.R. 1960 Mys.
72; and Sethuramachar v. Hirannayya, A.I.R. 1960 Mys. 90;
referred to.
(iii) The order of the High Court treating the
appellant’s applications as invalid and excluding them from
the consideration of the Transport Authority, was not
warranted by the provisions of the Act.
There is no provision in the statute giving a power to
the transport authorities to reject an application summarily
on the ground that it does not give some information on
certain particulars required under s. 46. It is needless to
state that an applicant must furnish full and complete
information that is within his knowledge or possession in
his application for the grant of a permit. It is in the
interest of the applicant himself to give such full and
complete information because he stands the risk of the
permit not being granted to him for lack of information on
certain matters. But this is quite a different thing from
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the power of the authority to reject an application
forthwith on the ground that the application is defective.
[332. D--F]
S.H. Motor Transport Company v. The State Transport
Appellate Authority. Mise. Petition No. 6 of 1969, decided
on 3-3-1969 by the Madhya Pradesh High Court,
disapproved.
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No..1297 of 1968.
Appeal by special leave ,from the judgment and order
dated October 5, 1967 of the Bombay High Court, Nagpur
Bench in S.C.A. No. 770 of 1966.
S.V. Gupte, Santosh Chatterjee and G.S. Chatterjee, for
the, appellant.
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B.R.L. Iyengar and Naunit Lal, for respondents Nos. 1 to
3 and 5.
N.S. Bindra and S.P. Nayar, for respondent No. 7 and the
intervener.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Vaidialingam, J. The appellant, the State Corporation,
constituted under the Road Transport Corporation Act (LXIV
of 1950), challenges in this appeal, by special leave, the
order of the Nagpur Bench of the Bombay High Court dated
October 5, 1967 in Special Civil Application No. ’770 of
1967.
The appellant, as well as respondents 1 to 5 and 8 to
16, applied to the Regional Transport Authority, Nagpur, on
various dates in the year 1964-65, under s. 46 of the Motor
Vehicles Act, 1939 (Act IV of 1939) (hereinafter called the
Act) for grant of stage carriage permits on the routes (a)
Chanda to Chimur; (b) Arni to Manora; (c) Sakoli to
Lakhandur; (d) Sondkheri to Kalmeshwar; and (e) Chanda to
Rajura. The appellant’s applications in respect of routes
(a) and (c) were for additional trips and timings.
Regarding (b), (d) and (e), the appellant’s applications
were for grant of permits over the new routes opened for the
first time. The applications were notified by the Regional
Transport Authority under s. 57(3) of the Act. The
appellant and the other applicants filed objections and
representations against each other’s applications. The
Regional Transport Authority, after considering the
applications and objections and hearing the parties, passed
order granting the permits in favour of the appellant, in
respect of all the routes. The order in respect of route
(a) was passed on May 18, 1965, for routes (b) and (c) on
August 19, 1965, for route (d) on October 9, 1965 and for
route (e) on October 30, 1965.
Respondents 1 to 5 filed appeals before the Appellate
Committee of the Transport Authority of Maharashtra,
challenging the grant of permits in favour of the appellant
and rejecting their respective applications. Their appeals
were Nos. 64, 82. 84, 106 and 114, all of 1965. Respondents
8 to 16 do not seem to have filed any appeals. All the
appeals were heard and disposed of by the Appellate
Committee by a common order, dated June 9, 1966.
Before the Appellate Committee respondents 1 to 5 raised
a contention that the mandatory information required to be
submitted in an application for permit under s. 46 of the
Act, read with Form P.St.S.A. prescribed under rule 80 of
the relevant rules, have not been fully and completely
furnished by the appel-
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322
lant in its application. They also filed an affidavit
pointing out what, according to them, were the details of
information that should have been furnished by the
appellant. The Appellate Committee, after noting that the
appellant herein represented that the major items of
information, as required under s. 46 and the relevant form,
had been given in the application, has expressed the view
that information regarding certain other matters, as
provided in the form of application, had not been provided
by the State Corporation, and in consequence there was a
major defect in its application and that the other operators
had no opportunity to properly object and contest the
claim of the State Corporation. In this view the Appellate
Committee remanded the matter to the Regional Transport
Authority for reconsideration with a direction that the
State Corporation should be asked to furnish complete
information and, after receipt of such information in the
prescribed form, they must be duly published and an
opportunity afforded to the respondents 1 to 5 herein to be
duly heard by way of object.ion and that the entire matter
be re-heard and decided afresh.
Respondents 1 to 5 challenged this order of the
Appellate Committee before the Nagpur Bench of the Bombay
High Court in Special Civil Appeal No. 770 of 1966 under
Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution. They contended
before the High Court that the Appellate Committee should
have rejected the application of the State Corporation on
the ground that the mandatory provisions of s. 46 of the Act
had not been complied with. They also urged that the
application, filed by the State Corporation, inasmuch as it
lacked information on vital matters, as provided in s. 46 of
the Act read with the form prescribed, could not be
considered to be an application under the Act and, as such,
it did not deserve to be considered at all. The order of
the Appellate Committee really amounted to allowing the
appellant to convert a defective application so as to bring
it in conformity with the provisions of the Act and the
form, which is not permissible in law.
Though the appellant pleaded that all the necessary
particulars had been furnished in its application and that
even in respect of all matters on which further information
was called for, it had already been furnished and that the
authorities had jurisdiction to call for any additional
information that may be neces sary for a proper
consideration and disposal of the applications filed by the
parties, the High Court, in the order under attack, has
taken the view that there has been no proper compliance, by
the State Corporation, with regard to the matters dealt.
with, particularly in columns 10, 14 and 15 of the
prescribed form, viz., the application for permit. The High
Court is of the view
3 2 3
that the information furnished by the appellant, under those
headings, cannot be considered to be either sufficient or
adequate. The High Court has taken the view that
withholding of information on vital points, constitutes a
defect in the application of the appellant and that creates
considerable difficulty to the authorities in considering
the claim for grant of a permit. It is also of the view
that the Act does not, either expressly or impliedly, give
power to either the Regional Transport Authority or the
Appellate Committee to give an opportunity to an erring
applicant to furnish additional or further particulars so as
to convert a defective application into a proper
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application. The High Court is also of the view that the
provisions of s. 46 of the Act read with s. 48, cast a
mandatory duty upon an applicant, applying for a permit, to
give the particulars required in the several clauses of s.
46. If the required particulars are not given, it is
the view of the High Court that such applications are not
applications within the meaning of s. 46 and the rules and
therefore are liable to be rejected. In the end the High
Court has held that after the application filed by the State
Corporation had been held to be defective, the Appellate
Committee had no jurisdiction to give the State Corporation
a fresh opportunity to furnish additional paritculars and,
in that view, set aside the order of the Appellate
Committee. The High Court, in consequence, remanded the
appeals to the Appellate Committee, directing the latter
to reconsider, on the materials already on record, the
applications of all parties excepting that of the State
Corporation and to decide the question of grant of permits
between the rival parties afresh. The appellant has come up
to this Court, against this order of the High Court.
Mr. Gupte, learned counsel for the appellant, apart
from contending that the High Court was in error in
interfering in a writ petition, with the order of the
Appellate Committee, when exercising jurisdiction under
Arts. 226 and 227, has raised substantially two contentions:
(1) That the form prescribed by the State Government, in
this case, for an application for permit, has gone beyond
the rule-making power of the State Government under s. 68 of
the Act. (2) That the provisions of s. 46 of the Act are
not mandatory and there is no jurisdiction in the
authorities functioning under the Act to reject an
application summarily on the ground that the application is
not in conformity with the Act or the rules framed
thereunder.
It is not necessary for us to reiterate the nature of
the jurisdiction exercised by a High Court under Art. 226 or
Art. 227. Under Art. 226 the High Court has power to quash
an order when the error committed by a Tribunal or authority
is one of
324
law and that is apparent on the face of the record.
Similarly the powers of judicial supervision of a High Court
under Art. 227 of the Constitution are not greater than
those under Art. 226 and must be limited to seeing that the
Tribunal functions within the limits of its authority (Vide:
Nagendra Nath Bora v. The Commissioner of Hills Divn. &
Appeals Assam(1). In this case, as we have already pointed
out, the High Court has taken the view that the application
filed by the appellant, for lack of the necessary
particulars provided in the form prescribed, cannot be
considered to be an application under the Act and in respect
of such an application, the authorities have no jurisdiction
to deal with. It is really the correctness of this view
expressed by the High Court that arises for consideration.
Since the impugned order of the Appellate Committee was
challenged on the ground of lack of jurisdiction, it is not
possible to hold that the High Court could not have
entertained the writ petition.
Mr. B.R.L. Iyengar, learned counsel for the contesting
respondents, has urged that in order that an application
filed by a party may be considered by the authorities
charged with the duty of granting permits, the essential
condition precedent is that the application must conform to
the requirements of the statute-in this case the Act.
Section 46 of the Act provides various matters in respect of
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which an applicant will have to give full and detailed
particulars. Over and above the requirements contained in
els. (a) to (e) of the said section, any other matter that
may be prescribed by the rules framed under the Act, by
virtue of clause (f) of s. 46 will have also to be properly
and fully dealt with by an applicant. By vitrue of the
rule-making powers under s. 68 of the Act, the State
Government have framed the Bombay Motor Vehicles Rules, 1959
(hereinafter referred to as the rules); and r. 80(1)
provides that every application for a permit in respect of a
transport vehicle, including a private service vehicle, is
to be in one of the forms mentioned therein. The
appropriate form with which this Court is concerned now is
the Form P.St.S.A. in respect of item 2. The form deals
with various items, some of which may be covered by clauses
(a) to (d) and others are over and above these particulars.
The object underlying the Act, of an applicant being called
upon to give the necessary particulars in respect of these
matters, is obvious, viz., that the other applicants and the
various other interested persons will be able to know the
nature of the claim made by a particular applicant and
either make suitable representations against the same or
file objections. The High Court’s view, counsel points out,
that the absence of particulars in this case, in respect of
items 10, 14 and 15 in the form is a non-compliance with the
Act and is no application under
(1) (1958) S.C.R. 1240.
3 2 5
the Act, is correct. Therefore counsel urged that the
Appellate Committee’s order allowing the appellat to, so to
say, amend the application, by giving additional
particulars, was properly set aside by the High Court.
Mr. Bindra, appearing for the State, while supporting
the appellant that the Appellate Committee, in this case,
acted within its jurisdiction in calling for particulars,
urged that the form prescribed under the rules was perfectly
valid and is not beyond the rule-making power of the State
Government.
The scheme of the Act has been considered in several
decisions of this Court and we do not propose to cover the
ground over again. Chapter IV containing ss. 42 to 68,
deals with control of transport vehicles. Section 42
emphasises the necessity for permits. Section 45 deals with
the various authorities to whom the application for permits,
in the circumstances stated therein. is to be made. Section
46 provides that an application for a permit shall ’as far
as may be, contain’ the particulars mentioned in clauses (a)
to (f). Clauses (a) to (e) deal with certain definite
particulars, but cl. (f) refers to ’such other matters as
may be prescribed’. Section 2(21) defines the expression
’prescribed’ to mean ’prescribed by rules made under the
Act.’. Therefore it will be seen that an application for a
permit, apart from containing the particulars referred to in
clauses (a) to (e) of s. 46, must also contain. under el.
(f), such other matters as may be prescribed. We will come
to the rule-making power a lit.tie later. Section 47
provides for the various matters to be taken into account by
the Regional Transport Authority in considering an
application for a stage carriage permit. That section also
provides for taking into consideration any representation
made by certain other parties referred to therein. Sub-s.
(2) gives power to a Regional Transport Authority to refuse
to grant a permit if from any time table furnished it
appears that the provisions of the Act relating to the speed
at which vehicles may be driven are likely to be
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contravened; but the proviso to this sub-section casts a
duty on the Authority to give an opportunity to the
applicant to amend the time table before such refusal. Sub-
s. (3) gives power to a Regional Transport Auhtority to
limit the number of stage carriages in region or in any
specified area or in any specified route within the region.
Section 48 empowers the Regional Transport Authority, on an
application made to it under s. 46, to grant a stage
carriage permit, subject to the provisions of s. 47, in
accordance with the application or with such modifications
as it deems fit. It also gives the Authority power to
refuse to grant such a permit. Section 57 deals with the
procedure in applying for and granting permits. Sub-s. (3)
provides for the Regional Transport Authority making
L2SupCI/70--9
326
available an application for a permit for inspection at its
office and also publish the application in the prescribed
manner inviting representations within the period mentioned
therein. The proviso to sub-s. (3) gives power to t,he
Authority concerned to summarily refuse the application
without, following the procedure laid down in sub-s. (3), in
the circumstances mentioned therein. Sub-ss. (4), (5) and
(6) read together, deal with the consideration of the
representation received from a party and disposal of an
application for a permit at, a public hearing in which an
applicant and a person who had made a representation are
given an opportunity of being heard. Sub-s. (7) casts a
duty on the Regional Transport Authority, when refusing an
application for permit, to give in writing to the applicant,
concerned, its reasons for the refusal. Section 68(1) gives
power to the State Government to make rules for the purpose
of carrying into effect the provisions of Chapter IV. Sub-
s. (2) enumerates the various matters in respect of which
rules can be framed without prejudice to the generality of
the power contained in sub-s. (1). Clause (c) of sub-s. (2)
deals with the ’forms to be used for the purposes of this
Chapter, including the forms of permits’. The State
Government has framed the rules.
Rule 80(1) provides that every application for a permit
in respect of a transport vehicle, including a private
service vehicle shall be in one of the enumerated forms and
the forms are mentioned as items (i) to (x). Item (ii)
deals with a permit in respect of a service of stage
carriages and the form prescribed is Form P.St.S.A. Sub-r.
(2) provides that the application shall be addressed to the
Regional Transport Authority or to the Regional Transport
Officer, as the case may be and accompanied by the fee
prescribed by rule 84. In this case we are concerned with
the Form P.St.S.A. It is seen from the judgment of the High
Court that a copy of an application filed by the appellant
in respect of the route Arni to Manora has been filed and it
has been directed to form part of the record of the case.
The form P.St.S.A. provides for nearly 22 items in respect
of which a party has to fill up particulars. The
particulars governed by item 4 may be related to s. 46(a),
those of items 5 and 7 to s. 46(b), items 6 and 8 to s.
46(c), item 10 to s. 46(d) and items 11, 12, 14 to s. 46(e).
Over and above these particulars, the form provides several
other matters on which information has to be given. The
ground on which the High Court has regarded the application
of the appellant as invalid is that the application did not
give full and detailed particulars in respect of item 10, 14
and 15.
We will now refer to the relevant entries in the
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application made by the appellant regarding the route Arni
to Manora in
327
respect of columns 10, 14 and 15 and also the answers given
by the appellant:
"10. Number of vehicles kept in reserve to
maintain the service regularly and to provide
for special occasion :--
Nagpur Division which will operate
this/these route(s) holds 470 vehicles
against., 376 schedule, to be operated by that
Division. Thus there will be 94 vehicles in
reserve to maintain the services regularly and
to provide for special occasions.
14. Particulars of any stage or contract
carriage permit valid in the State held by the
applicant. :--
Pt. St.S. 4 61, 5 61, 6 61, 7 61, 8 61, 9
61, 10 61, 13 61, 39 63, 40 63, 63 63, etc.
15. Particulars of any permit held by the
applicant in respect of the use of any
transport vehicle in any other State :--
Pt.St.S. 4/52, 4/53, 7 59, 1 60, 63 63, etc."
According to the High Court, the information given by the
appellant is not sufficient and, that especially in respect
of columns 14 and 15 the applicant has not given
exhaustively the list of t, he permits owned by it.
We are not inclined to accept the contention of Mr.
Gupte that the form prescribed, requiring the furnishing of
information on the various particulars and matters referred
to therein is beyond the rule making power of the
Government.
Section 46, as we have already pointed out, requires
information to be given by an applicant for permit not only
in respect, of ’all the particulars’ enumerated under els.
(a) to (e), but also under cl. (f). He has to give
information on such other matters as may be prescribed and
’prescribed’ as defined in s. 2(21), means ’prescribed by
rules made under the Act’. Section 68 to which we have
already referred, gives power to the State Government to
make rules for the purpose of carrying into effect, the
provisions of Chapter IV and also, without prejudice to the
generality of’ this power, to make rules in respect of the
various matters mentioned in sub-s. (2). Clause (c) of sub-
s. (2) specifically gives power to prescribe the form to be
used for the purpose of Chapter’ IV, including the form of
permit. s. Therefore, an application filed by a party for a
permit must, at any rate, substantially con-
328
form to the requirements of s. 46, as well as to the form
framed under the rule-making power of the State Government.
We have already pointed out that rule 80 provides that every
application for permit should be in the appropriate form
mentioned therein. Therefore s. 46, the relevant rule, and
the form prescribed, have to be read together, and so read
it follows that an applicant for a permit must comply, at
any rate, substantially with the various matters mentioned
therein. It must be borne in mind that s. 68 is not
controlled by s. 46 of the Act. In fact it specifically
enables the St.ate Government to make rules for the purpose
of carrying into effect the provisions of the Chapter. The
Chapter itself, we have mentioned, is entitled ’Control of
Transport Vehicles’ and if, with a view to carrying into
effect the object. of control of transport vehicles, the
form requires information on various matters over and above
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those enumerated in els. (a) to (d) of s. 46, it cannot be
stated that the State Government has acted beyond its rule-
making powers when prescribing such a form. The form so
prescribed, in our opinion, forms an integral part of rule
80 which the State Government is authorised to make, under
s. 68 of the Act. Therefore, we are not inclined to accept
the contention of Mr. Gupte that the matters enumerated in a
form provided by a rule framed under the rule-making power
of the State Government cannot be considered to be ’such
other matters as may be prescribed under s. 46(f)’. The
further contention that in order to treat the matter as one
prescribed under s. 46(f), it must have been enumerated as
such in a rule framed’under the Act, has also to be
rejected. Even otherwise, we have already pointed out that
s. 68 is not controlled by s. 46, in which case also it
follows that the form prescribed by the State Government, by
virtue of a rule framed under its rule making powers, must
be considered to be valid.
Mr. Gupte drew our attention of the decision of the
Mysore High Court in Narayana v.S.T. Authority(1). One of
the questions that arose for consideration in that decision
was whether an application for a permit under the Act can be
considered to be defective when it did not deal with certain
matters provided in a from prescribed under r. 156 of the
Rules framed by the State of Madras under the Act. The High
Court held that such an application has to be considered to
be defective and observed:
"It is true that if by a rule properly
made by the State, it was provided that
further particulars in addition to those
referred to in clauses (a) to (e) of s. 46,
should be furnished in the application, these
particulars should have to be so furnished as
directed by s. 46(f).
(I) A.I.R. 1950 Mys. 33=I.L.R. (1950) Mys.
584.
329
But no such rule made by the State was pointed
out to us. What the State did under r. 156
was to merely prescribe the form in which an
application should be made, although that form
contained columns which referred to many
matters not specified in s. 46.
That. rule, which was made under s.
68(2)(c) of the Act prescribed only a form.
It did not prescribe any particulars. That
being the position, those additional matters
for which columns were provided in the form
prescribed by it cannot merely for that
reason, claim the status of particulars
prescribed by rules under the Act, and cannot,
therefore, be regarded as particulars referred
to in s. 46(f) of the Act."
We are not inclined to agree with this reasoning of the
learned Judges of the Mysore High Court. We have already
held that the form prescribed by the St.ate Government under
the rules becomes part of the rule itself, which the State
Government is competent to frame. Therefore the contention
of Mr. Gupte that in prescribing the form the State
Government has exceeded its rule-making power, cannot be
accepted.
The further question that arises for consideration, is
as to whether the view of the High Court that the
application of the appellant is defective and suitable to be
dismissed inasmuch as columns 10, 14 and 15 in the
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application form have not been properly filled up, is
correct. Here again, we are not inclined to agree with the
reasoning of the High Court that under such circumstances
the application filed by the appellant cannot., be treated
to be an application under the Act. It is needless to state
that an application must. furnish full and complete
information that is within his knowledge or possession, in
his application for the grant of a permit. The scheme of the
Act is quite clear, viz. that an applicant must have a
proper permit for operating transport services. To obtain
that permit, certain formalities and procedure have to be
gone through. Apart from the other applicants having an
opportunity to make representations or objections to the
claim made by a particular applicant, certain other persons
and authorities, as will be seen under s. 57(3), have been
given a right to make representations. Such filing of
objections or making of representations can be effective
only if an applicant gives all the information which is in
it.s power or control. The expression, ’as far as may be’,
occurring in s. 46 of the Act, must only mean that an
applicant must give information on the various particulars
and matters referred to in s. 46, in so far as those
requirements apply to him and in respect of which it is
possible to give information. In the absence of the
expression ’as far as may be’ in the
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old s. 46 of the Act, the Mysore High Court, in two of its
decisions C.K.M. Services v. Mys. Revenue Board(1) and
Sethuramachar v. Hiranayya(2) has taken the view that the
provisions in s. 46 must be considered to be mandatory and
non-compliance with those provisions will mean that there is
no proper and valid application under the Act and that an
authority would be justified in rejecting the same. In
Sethuramachar’s case(’2) the High Court has indicated that
in the section, as it now stands, the position may be
different.
The Madhya Pradesh High Court in an unreported decision
in S.H. Motor Transport Company v. The State Transport
Appellate Authority(3) (a certified copy of which has been
given to us) has held that when an applicant does not give
some information on certain particulars required under s.
46, it must be understood that he does not intend to do
the necessary things as mentioned therein. In our opinion,
the matter has to be approached from a slightly different
angle, viz., whether the authorities have got the power to
reject an application summarily if it does not contain
information on any matters or particulars referred to in the
form. We are unable to find any provision in the statute
giving a power to the transport. authorities to reject an
application summarily on that ground; but, we have already
emphasized that the application must give the necessary
information on the various particulars and matters
enumerated in the form prescribed for such purpose. It is
to the interest of the applicant himself to give full and
clear information because he stands the risk of the permit
not being granted to him for lack of information on certain
matters. But this is quite a different thing from the power
of the authority to reject an application forthwith on the
ground that the application is defective. The only
provision where such a power to reject summarily is given is
under the proviso to s. 57(3). Under this proviso, the
Regional Transport Authority, without following the
procedure of publishing an application and inviting
objections can summarily refuse the application in the
circumstances mentioned therein. No doubt it may be asked
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that if an application lacks information on very vital
matters, the whole object of publishing the same and
inviting objections could not be achieved because the
parties entitled to make objections and representations
cannot effectively make the same. But, as we have already
pointed out it is really in the interest of the applicant
himself to give the information as far as it lies within his
power, on all matters. What the High Court has done in this
case, was really to reject the application of the appellant
summarily, a power which even the Transport Authority does
not, in our opinion, have under
(1) A.I.R. 1960 Mys. 72.
(2) A.I.R. 1960 Mys. 90.
(3) Misc. Petition No. 6 of 1969, decided on 3-3-1969.
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the Act. Probably the statute did not give power to an
authority to reject an application summarily in cases not
coming within the proviso to s. 57(3) because when
considering an application for grant of permit on merits, it
may be open to the Regional Transport Authority, after
giving reasons, under s. 57(7), to refuse the application
for permit. In such a case, as the Regional Transport
Authority is bound to give reasons, the sufficiency and
validity of the reasons given may also be canvassed before
the appellate authority in an appeal under s. 64 of the Act.
But all this can be done only at the time of considering the
grant of permit on merits, and not at an earlier stage, and
the refusal to grant the permit will be not on the ground
that the application is defective, but on the ground that
the particulars or information and other matters given in
the permit do not enable the Regional Transport Authority to
take the view that a particular applicants claims are
superior to those of others.
The question can also be considered from another point
of view. Section 47 makes it obligatory on a Regional
Transport Authority, in considering an application for stage
carriage permit, to have regard to the various matters
mentioned therein. One of the matters about which regard
must be had is contained in cl. (e) viz., "the operation by
the applicant of other transport services, including those
in respect of which applications from him for permits are
pending". In respect of item 10, in our opinion, the answer
given by the appellant appears to be fairly satisfactory. In
respect of items 14 and 15, the High Court’s view appears
to be that over and above the number of permits mentioned
therein, the appellant should have given an exhaustive list
of the other permits held by it in the State under item 14
or in any other State, under item 15. The Transports.
Authorities. in our opinion, would be acting within their
jurisdiction when they take into account the matter governed
by cl. (e) of s. 47(1) in calling upon a party to give more
complete details, and give an opportunity to the other
parties before it to state their objections. That is exactly
what had been directed to be done by the Appellate Committee
when it sent back the proceedings to the Regional Transport
Authority.
In this view, it follows that the order of the High
Court treating the appellant’s applications as invalid and
excluding them from the consideration of the Transport
Authority, is not warranted by the provisions of the Act.
The result is that the order of the High Court, dated
October 5, 1967 is set aside and that of the Appellate
Committee, dated June 9, 1966 is restored. Respondents 1 to
3 and 5 will pay the costs of the appellant.
R.K.P.S.
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