Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SATYANARAYANA SINHA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S S. LAL AND COMPANY (PVT.) LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT10/09/1973
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
DWIVEDI, S.N.
CITATION:
1973 AIR 2720 1974 SCR (1) 615
1973 SCC (2) 696
CITATOR INFO :
F 1976 SC 578 (33)
ACT:
Practice-Constitution of India, 1950, Art-226-Writ
jurisdiction of High Court-If can be invoked by person not
aggrieved.
HEADNOTE:
The first respondent filed a writ petition in the High Court
challenging the grant of a mining lease to the appellant on
the ground of a direct. infringement of his right to be
granted a mining lease over an area for which he applied for
a mining lease and which, according to him, formed part of
the area for which the appellant was given the lease. But
in fact, the first respondent’s application was not in
respect of any part of the area for which the appellant was
granted a mining lease. Though the appellant was made party
to the proceeding, he did not appear as notices were not
served on him. The High Court allowed the petition in the
view that there was a violation: of s. 31 of the Mines and
Minerals (Regulation and Development) Act, 1957, and rr. 58
and 59 of the Mineral Concession Rules 1960.
Allowing the appeal to this Court,
HELD : The first respondent had no interest in the subject-
matter of the lease, and the petition was not maintainable.
[618 G-H]
Though this contention was not urged before the High Court
as the appellant did not appear in the High Court, this
Court, in appeal, can not only determine the soundness of
the decision, but has jurisdiction to determine any point
raised before, it, such as, whether the appeal is competent,
whether a party has a locus standi to present the petition
and whether the petitioner was maintainable. Ordinarily,
the foundation for exercising the jurisdiction under Article
32 or Article 226, is the personal or individual right of
the petitioner himself, though in cases of writs of habeas
corpus or quo warranto, the rule may be relaxed. In respect
of persons who are not aggrieved and who seek to invoke the
jurisdiction of the High Court or this Court, the matter
rests ultimately on the discretion of the Court, and depends
on the nature and extent of the right or interest said to
have been infringed and whether the infringement affects the
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petitioner in some way. [619 A-B, D, G-H]
In the present case, the first respondent only alleged
direct infringement of his right,but it was found that no
right of his had been affected. He was neither aparty nor
a person aggrieved or affected and hence had no locus standi
to file the petition. [620 B-C]
Ebrahim Aboobakar and Another v. Custodian General of
Evacuee Property, [1952] S.C.R. 696, Chiranjit Lal
Chowdhuri, v. The , Union of India, [1950] S.C.R. 869, The
State of Orissa v. Madan Gopal Rungta, [1952] S.C.R. 28, The
Calcutta Gas Company (Proprietary) Ltd. v. The State of West
Bengal and Others [1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R. 1, Godde
Venkateswara Rao v. Government of Andhra Pradesh and Others
[1966] 2 S.C.R. 172 and R. v. Thamples Magistrates’ Court
ex. p. Greenbaum, [19571 55 L.C.R. 129-extracted in Yardley
Source Book of English Administrative Law, 1970, P. 228,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2572 (N) of-
1972.
Appeal by certificate from the Judgment and Order dated 4th
April 1972 of the Patna High Court in Civil Writ
Jurisdiction Case No. 1121 of 1969.
616
B. P. Singh, for the appellant.
Lal Narain Sinha, Solicitor General of India and S. P.
Nayar, for respondent Nos. 2 and 6.
D. Goburdhan, for respondents Nos. 3-5.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by,
JAGANMOHAN REDDY, J. The appellant was granted a mining
lease on August 30, 1969 by the State of Bihar (Respondent
3) with the prior approval of the Central Government
(Respondent 2) for winning a mineral known as Apatite over
as area of 1999.634 acres. Respondent 1 filed a writ
petition on September 15, 1969 challenging the lease on the
ground that he had earlier on March 22, 1965, applied for a
mining lease over an area of 280.62 acres in certain
villages of Singhbhum District which was included in the
lease granted to the appellant, but as no orders were passed
by the State Government within the statutory period the
application was ,deemed ’to have been rejected. He
thereafter filed a revision petition to the Central
Government which called for the comments of the State
Government. The State Government intimated to the Central
Government that it wanted to work the area itself and for
that reason had in fact rejected all the applications for
this area including that of the first respondent. On
receipt of this comment, the Central Government rejected the
revision petition of the first respondent.
It appears that the appellant had pursuant to an
advertisement in the newspapers applied along with others
for the grant of a mining lease for phosphatic rock
(Apatite) over an area of 4.1 sq. miles in village
Khajurdari in Singhibhum District. But all ’the
applications were rejected as the State Government had by
then decided to work the phosphatic bearing areas in the
public sector. Later, however, as 3rd respondent felt that
such a venture could be better undertaken by a private party
rather than the State Government in view of the dispersed
nature of the deposits, whose concentrated and efficient
supervision may not be possible through the public sector,
it decided to release the area in question to be worked in
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the private sector. Accordingly permission was sought from
the Central Government and an advertisement published in the
newspapers for the general information of the interested
parties who may be willing to set up a benefication plant
for upgrading the low grade Apatite to ensure its use for
the production of phosphatic fertiliser and who were capable
of making an investment to the extent of Rs. 40 to 50 lakhs.
The appellant who is reported to be financially sound
submitted a scheme for setting up a benefication plant for
upgrading the Apatite. In view of the financial solvency,
of the appellant his application was recommended to the
Central Government. The Central Government accepted this
recommendation and directed the grant of the mining lease in
the following terms :
" The Central Government in the interest of
mineral development, in exercise of the powers
conferred by subrule (2) of rule 58 of the
Mineral Concession Rules, 1960,
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hereby authorise the State Government to grant
mining lease for apatite over the area to Dr.
Satya Narain Sinha without following the
procedure laid down in sub-rule (1) of the
said Rule 58 of the Mineral Concession Rules,
1960.
Further in exercise of the powers conferred by
section 31 of the Mines and Minerals
(Regulation and Development) Act, 1957, the
Central Government hereby authorise the State
Government to grant mining lease to Dr. Sinha
over the area in question which does not form
a compact block.
The Central Government also, in exercise of
the powers conferred by proviso to section
6(1) of the Mines and Minerals (Regulation and
Development) Act, 1957, authorise the State
Government to grant mining lease for apatite
over the areas to Dr. Sinha in excess of the
limit of 10 square miles prescribed in section
6(1) and (b) of the said Act."
Immediately on getting to know of the approval given by the
Central Government to the grant of the mining lease to the
appellant, the first respondent moved the State Government
for a stay and though that application was rejected he made
several other attempts but without any success. The last
revision application was filed on November 17 1970 under r.
54 of the Mineral Concession Rules--hereinafter referred to
as ’the Rules’-before the 2nd respondent on which an order
dated November 23, 1971 was passed. This order as disclosed
fly the 1st respondent in his supplementary affidavit shows
that the Central Government had in exercise of their
revisional powers under r. 55 of the Rules, set aside the
orders of the State Government and directed it to give
further consideration and pass appropriate orders within a
period of four months in as much as the State Government had
not followed the correct procedure in dealing with the
application of the 1st respondent.
At this stage we may point out that in the writ petition
filed by the first respondent though the appellant was a
party it seems he did not appear and the proceeding was ex
parte. The appellant’s case is that as no notices were
served on him, nor was there any proof of service as neither
the covers in which the registered notices were sent nor the
acknowledgment cards had been returned to the Court, he did
not have an opportunity to be heard. No doubt the State of
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Bihar and the Central Government had opposed the petition
but the High Court came to the conclusion that the
conditions required for relaxation of the Rules in special
cases under s. 31 of the Mines and Minerals (Regulation and
Development) Act, 1957 (hereinafter termed the Act) read
with rr. 58 & 59 of the Rules, were not complied with while
according its approval for the grant of the mining lease to
the appellant. in this view it allowed the petition and
quashed the lease in favour of the appellant.
Before us it is contended by the appellant’s learned
advocate that the appellant did not have an opportunity of
urging before the Court
618
that the writ petition filed by’ the first respondent was
not maintain.able, because he is- not a person aggrieved as
the area for which the ,first respondent had made an
application for the grant of mining lease was not included
in the area granted to the appellant. He further ,contends
that reasons were given by the State of Bihar while recom-
mending the grant of the lease to the Central Government,
which reasons, at any rate one of them as is evident from
the order of the Central Government, were approved. There
is, according to him, no infringement of the provisions of
s. 31 of the Act read with rr. 58 & .59 of the Rules.
The learned Solicitor-General on behalf of the Central
Government supports the grant of the mining lease to the
appellant on the ground that r. 59 of the Rules is not
applicable to the facts of this case inasmuch as the 3rd
respondent had not taken any firm decision to reserve the
area granted to the appellant, which is a necessary
condition of the applicability of that rule. If that rule
did not apply then he submits the procedure prescribed in r.
58 which is referred to therein need not be complied with.
He further submits that even if r. 59 is applicable, reasons
have been recorded by the Central Government for relaxing
the Rules as required in s. 31 of the Act.
In so far as the 3rd respondent-the State of Bihar-is con-
cerned, there has been a volte-face in its stand before us.
After having called for the applications and recommended the
lease in favour of the appellant, and after having placed
him in a position where he had to incur huge expense, it now
wants to contend that the grant of the lease is invalid.
Even the first respondent, once he found, that the area for
which he applied for a lease was not included in the appel-
lant’s lease, seems to have perferred to remain absent in
the case, but the State Government wants to challenge the
validity of the lease which it did not do before the High
Court.
There is no doubt, as the High Court has pointed out, that
where by relaxing the Rules the Central Government intends
to authorise in any case the grant, renewal or transfer of
any prospecting licence or mining lease, or the working of
any mine for the purpose of searching for or winning any
mineral, on terms and conditions different from those laid
down in the Rules made under s. 13 of the Act, it can do ’so
for reasons to be recorded in writing. Whether any such
reasons can be said to have been recorded in the order
authorising the grant of the lease on terms and conditions
different from those laid down in the Rules made under s. 13
of the Act need not concern us in this case, because, in our
view, as the writ petition has been filed by a person who is
not the person aggrieved, it is not maintainable.
As already pointed out it is admitted by respondents 2 and 3
that the application made by the first respondent was not in
respect of the area which is granted to, the appellant and
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consequently the first respondent had no-interest in the
subject-matter of the lease. Even
619
though this contention was not urged before the High Court,
and in the circumstances adverted to by us could not have
been urged, as the appellant did not appear, this Court in
an appeal can not only determine the soundness of the
decision, but has jurisdiction to determine any point raised
before it, such as whether the appeal is competent, whether
a party has locus standi to present the petition and whether
the petition is maintainable etc. See Ebrahim Aboobakar and
Another v. Custodian General of Evacuee Property(1). In
Chiranjit Lal Chowdhuri v. The Union of India(2) it was held
by this Court that the legal right that can be enforced
under Art. 32 must ordinarily be the right of the petitioner
himself who complains of infraction of such right and
approaches the Court for relief. In respect of the
jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the Constitution it was laid
down in The State of Orissa v. Madan Gopal Rungta(3) that
the existence of the right is the foundation of the exercise
of jurisdiction of the Court under Art. 226 of the
Constitution. The right to which this Court had adverted as
being the foundation for exercising the jurisdiction under
Art. 32 or Art. 226 of the Constitution, according to The
Calcutta Gas Company (Proprietary) Ltd. v. The State of West
Bengal and Others(4) is ordinarily the personal or
individual right of the petitioner himself, though in the
case of some of the writs like habeas corpus or quo warranto
this rule may have to be relaxed or modified. Subba Rao,
J., as he then was, observed in that case :
"Article 226 confers a very wide power on the
High Court to issue directions and writs of
the nature mentioned therein for the
enforcement of any of the rights conferred by
Part III or for any other purpose. It is,
therefore, clear that persons other than those
claiming fundamental rights can also approach
the court seeking a relief thereunder."
After citing the above passage in Godde Venkateswara Rao v.
Government of Andhra Pradesh and Others(5) the learned Judge
who delivered the judgment in this case also observed at p.
181 :
"A personal right need not be in respect of a
proprietary interest : it can also relate to
an interest of a trustee. That apart, in
exceptional cases, as the expression
,,ordinary" indicates, a person who has been
prejudicially affected by an act or omission
of an authority can file a writ even though-
he has no proprietary or even fiduciary
interest in the subject-matter thereof."
In respect of persons who are strangers and who seek to
invoke the jurisdiction of the High Court or of this Court,
difficulty sometimes arises because of the nature and extent
of the right or interest which is said to have been
infringed, and whether the infringement in some way affects
such persons. On this aspect there is no clear enunciation
of principles on which the Court will exercise its
jurisdiction.
(1) [1952] S. C. R. 696. (2) [1950] S. C. R. 869.
(3) [1952] S. C. R. 28. (4) [1962] Supp. 3 S. C. R. 1.
(5) [1966] 2 S. C. R. 172.
620
In England also the Courts have taken the view that when
the, application is made by a party or by a person aggrieved
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the Court will intervene ex debito justitias, in justice to
the applicant, and when it is made by a stranger the Court
considers whether the public interest demands its
intervention. In either case it is a matter which rests
ultimately in the discretion of the Court : (see R. v.
Thames Magistrates’ Court, ex. p. Greenbaum(1).
In this case, however, the first respondent has not
challenged the grant of the lease on the ground of ex debito
justitiae but has done so on the ground of a direct
infringement of his right to be granted a mining lease over
280.62 acres for which the appellant was given a lease along
with other area. Since it is now found that no such right
of the first respondent has been affected, he has no locus
standi. He is neither a party nor a person aggrieved or
affected and consequently his writ petition in the High
Court is not maintainable.
On this short ground, this appeal will be allowed and the
writ petition filed by the first respondent in the High
Court dismissed. The appellant will have his costs only
against the State of Bihar.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed.
(1)(1957) 55 L.C.R. 129-extracted in Yardley Source Book
of English Administrative Law, 1970, p. 228).
621