Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MYSORE STATE ROAD TRANSPORT CORPORATION
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MYSORE STATE TRANSPORT APPELLATE TRIBUNAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/08/1974
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1940 1975 SCR (1) 615
CITATOR INFO :
R 1984 SC 953 (2)
RF 1986 SC 319 (1,7,13)
R 1992 SC1888 (9)
ACT:
Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, Chapter IVA--Scheme private
operators from the notified area or route--Licence to any
operator whose route traversed or overlapped any part or
whole of notified route, if can be granted.
Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, Section 2 (28-A)--Definition of
"route"--"Route and highway, if can be equated--Private
operator, whether can be completely excluded on a route
which overlaps even a portion of notified route.
HEADNOTE:
The Mysore State Road Transport Corporation operates on the
notified route under Ch. IV of the Motor Vehicles Act,
1939, between Hiriyur and V.V. Sagar. It objected to the
renewal of a permit to the third respondent for the route
Hiriyur to Chitradurga and back via V. V. Sagar, Hosadurga
and Janakal on the ground that this renewal will authorise
an overlapping over three miles on the notified route. Both
the Regional Transport Authority, Chitradurga and the State
Transport Authority, Bangalore, negatived the objection.
The writ petition filed by the appellant was dismissed by
the High Court of Karnataka in limine. The application for
the grant of a certificate of fitness under Art. 133(1)(c)
was also rejected. This appeal has been filed after
obtaining special leave against that dismissal order.
It was contended for the appellant that the Bangalore scheme
under Ch. IV-A of the Act prohibits overlapping of the
route or routes of private operators on a part or whole of
the notified route and therefore, permit to operate bus
service over the notified route cannot be granted to the
third respondent.
Allowing the appeal,
HELD :-By majority (P. Jaganmohan Reddy and A.
Alagiriswami, JJ.) Ch IV of the Act in specific terms
provides a complete and, and in the circumstances a
satisfactory machinery for reasonably regulating the
exclusion of all or some of the private operators from the
notified area or route. [618G]
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Y. S. Kondala Rao and Ors. v. Andhra Pradesh State Road
Transport Corporation and Ors., A.I.R. 1961 SC 82 relied on.
Sasaghir Ahmed v. State of UP. [1955] 1 S.C.R. 707 held not
applicable to the scheme notified under Ch IV--A of the Act.
Thus, this Court has consistently taken the view that if
there is a prohibition to operate on a notified route or
routes no licences can be granted to any operator whose
route traversed or overlapped any part or whole of that
notified route. But in Mysore State Road Transport
Corporation v. The Mysore Appellate Tribunal ors. (C. As.
Nos. 1755-1756 of 1968 etc. decided on 17-5-1974, this Court
has taken a contrary view. [622H]
S. Abdul Khader Saheb v. The Mysore Revenue Appellate
Tribunal, Bangalore and Ors. [1973] 2 S.C.R. 925 Nilkanth
Prasad and Ors. v. State of Bihar, [1962] Supp. (1) S.C.R.
728, Abdul Gaffoor v. State of Mysore, [1955] C.R. 707,
kelani Valley Motor Transit Co. Ltd. v. Colombo-Retnapura
Omnibus Co. Ltd. [1946] A.C. 338,C.P. C.-Motor Service,
Mysore v. The State of Mysore and Another [1962]Supp.(1)
S.C.R.Tribunal, [1965]1 S.C.R. 841 and Mohanlal Chunnilal
Kothari V. Tribovan Haribhai Tamboli, [1963] 2 S.C.R. 707
referred to.
(ii) In any case under s. 2 (28A) inserted by s. 2 of Act 56
of 1969 the word "route" has been defined as meaning " a
line of travel which specifies the highway which may be
traversed by a motor vehicle between one terminus and
another". This definition correlates the notional line of
travel between two termini with the portion of the highway
which has to be traversed on that route.. It is, therefore,
apparent that where a private transport owner makes an
application to operate on a route which overlaps even a
portion of the notified route, i.e. where the part of the
highway to be used by the private transport owner traverses
on a line on the Sarno highway on the notified route, then
that application has to be considered Only in the light of
616
the scheme as notified. If any conditions are placed then
those conditions have to be fulfilled and if there is a
total prohibition then the application must be
rejected.[622B-C]
Kelani Valley Motor Transit Co. Ltd. v. Colombo-Ratnapura
Omnibus Co. Ltd. [1946] A.C. 338, Y. J. Kodala Rao and Ors.
v. Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation and
Ors., AIR [1961] S.C. 82 and Nilkanth Prasad & Ors. v. State
of Bihar [1962] Supp. (1) S.C.R. 728 referred.
(iii) In as much as Hiriyur to V.V. Sagar route granted to
the third respondent overlaps the notified route Chitradurga
to Hiriyur, there can be no doubt that no permit or renewal
can be granted. This is so even if it overlaps however
short the distance of the route. There is no justification
for holding that the integrity of the notified scheme is not
affected if the overlapping is under five miles or because a
condition has been stipulated in the permit that the
operators will not pick up or set down any passengers on the
overlapped route. [625G; 626A-B] HELD :-Per Beg J.
(dissenting)
(i) It is not correct to say that the views expressed in
Mysore State Road Transport Corporation’s cases decided on
17-5-1975 are not reconcilable with earlier decisions, and,
in particular, with Nilkanth Prasad’s case. it is well-
established that the principle of a case is to be determined
by taking into account the facts treated by the Judge
deciding a case as material and his decision as based
thereon’. The provisions of Bangalore scheme disclose that
there were altogether 94 routes separately numbered. Each
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route is identified by its termini with a separate column
for intermediate stations of each route. Out of these
routes only 29 are placed in class (a) and therest in
class (b). In class (a), one could reasonably assume
complete exclusionof private operators but not in class
(b) where exclusion of privateoperators from
overlapping parts of routes was expressly exempted. The
Bench, in its decision of 17-5-1974 was unable to relate the
facts of the cases before it to a prohibition of overlapping
of routes. This also meant that it could not determine
whether cases before the Court relating to the Bangalore
scheme fell within class (a) or class (b). It also pointed
out that the Mysore Transport undertaking had the remedy for
this uncertain state of affairs in its own hands if complete
exclusion of private operators from every overlapping part
of a notified route was also intended by the framers of the
scheme. It could have gone before the State with a proposal
to get the Bangalore scheme appropriately clarified and
modified under sec. 68-E of the Act. Before asking the
Court to infer complete exclusion, it was essential to show
that the overlapping part involved in a case falls at least
under class(a)of notified routes. In as much as all the
cases before the Bench were decided on a common question of
law, it is very difficult to discover any flaw in the
reasoning of the Division Bench decision, [629H, 632B-H]
(ii) The reasons why the bench of this Court in its judgment
dated 17-5-74, did not equate the term "route" with "road"
were two fold : firstly, a different concept underlay each
of the three schemes before the Court including the
Bangalore scheme, and the relevant rules to be observed in
framing such schemes; and, secondly. the newly introduced
definition constituted an amendment of or a departure from
the’ definition of ’route" found in Nilkanth Prasad’s case
(supra). Obviously, neither Nilkanth Prasad’s case nor
other cases are applicable authorities either on any
question of interpretation of the provisions of the
Bangalore Scheme or on the question whether the law giving
the meaning of "route". There was no clear definition of
the term "route". Nilkanth Prasad’s case(supra) had
practically identified the term route with a road and
contained an observation that the "route" vested in the
Undertaking. If this view was to be carried to its logical
conclusion, the State Transport Undertaking could exclude
even the user of a road by anyone for any purpose whatsoever
provided it notified a route which ran over it. Such a
consequence appeared to be quite alarming. In any case,
until a scheme made it clear what was really excluded, Court
had to be careful not to exclude operators who may be
serving an urgent public need without damaging the interests
of any State Undertaking. In the definition of "route"
introduced by the amending Act 56 of 1966, there is a clear
distinction between "the line of travel" between two
termini, which a route is, and the highway which is to be
traversed by a motor vehicle to which a "route" as a line of
travel" may be assigned. The new definition was not
intended to merely declare the law, which is a judicial
function, but to amend the law as declared by this Court in
Nilkanth Prasad’s case so as to bring it in line with public
needs and conveniences. It answered a "felt necessity". In
this view of the matter it could not be urged that either
Nilkanth Prasad’s case or
617
that S. Abdul Khader Sahib’s case, which do not deal with
the law as the Division Bench found laid down in the amended
provision would stand in the way of the view taken in the
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judgment of 17-5-1974. [634D-E; 637H; 638A-B; 639F; 640B]
(iii) If the concept of a route is understood to mean the
mere overlapping of some portions of route, whether it falls
in class (a) or class (b) of the routes mentioned against
heading 3 of the Bangalore Scheme, it would not debar a
private operator from plying on his own but different route
which is not notified at all.(642B)
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1801 of
1972.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated
the 26th November, 1968 of the Mysore High Court in Writ
Petition No. 4068 of 1968.
Shyamla Pappu and Vineet Kumar for the appellant,
The Judgment of P. Jaganmohan Reddy and A, Alagiriswami, J.
was delivered by Jaganmohan Reddy, J, M, H. Beg, J, gave a
dissenting Opinion.
JAGANMOHAN REDDY, J.-The Mysore State Road Transport
Corporation, the appellant hereinafter called "the
corporation" operates on the notified route under Ch. IV of
the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939-hereinafter referred to as "the
act"-between Hiriyur and V.V. Sagar. It objected to the
renewal of a permit to the third respondent C. Abdul Rahim
for the route Hiriyur to Chitradurga and back via V.V.
Sagar, Hosadurga and Janakal on the ground that this renewal
will authorise an overlapping over three miles on the
notified route. Both the Regional Transport Authority,
Chitradurga and the State Transport Authority, Bangalore,
negatived the objection. It may be mentioned that the
ground upon which the Appellate Tribunal dismissed the
appeal against the order of renewal passed by the Regional
Transport Authority was that in some other cases the Mysore
Revenue Appellate Tribunal had held that the integrity of a
scheme is not impaired if the distance of the overlapping
portion is about five miles and if a condition not to pick
up or set down passengers on the notified route is attached.
On this reasoning the Tribunal thought there were no grounds
to interfere with the impugned order. The appellant then
filed a writ petition in what is now the Karnataka High
Court, but it is was dismissed by a Division Bench in
limine. This appeal is by special leave against that
dismissal order.
It appears that the passenger transport services on the
routes appearing at Serial Nos. I to 22, 24, 25, 26, 27 and
53 of the statement appended to the scheme approved under S.
68D(2) of the Act, subject to the modifications set out in
the notification dated June 7, 1960, included "6 services
between any two places therein" and the transport services
were ’to be run and operated by the State Transport
undertaking to the complete exclusion of other operators."
The notification then sets out the various details of the
said approved scheme known as the Bangalore Scheme. The
question at issue is whether the scheme prohibits over-
lapping of the route or routes of private operators on a
part or whole of the notified route. If the route or routes
overlap as aforesaid, then no permit can be granted to those
private operators over the notified
618
routes which prohibit them to operate over those routes.
This Proposition was laid down is several decisions of this
Court to which reference will be made hereafter.
In a recent judgment of this Court by one of us(Beg,J.,and
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Chandrachud, J., concurring with him in Mysore State Road
Transport Corporation v. The Mysore Revenue Appellate
Tribunal & Ors,(1) this Court has taken a contrary view. No
doubt this case was one rendered in respect of inter-State
routes, while the instant case is one relating to inter-
State routes. There, however seems to be no difference in
the principal applicable to both the cases. The principle
governing intra-State routes has been extended to inter-
State routes vide S. Abdul Khader Saheb v. The Mysore
Revenue Appellate Tribunal, Bangalore Ors.(2) As the recent
decision to which reference has been made seems to take a
contrary view to that taken by even larger Benches of this
Court, we find it necessary to reexamine the question posed
before us.
Under s. 68C of the Act where a State Transport Undertaking
is of opinion that for the purposes of providing an
efficient, adequate, economical and properly coordinated
road transport service, it is necessary in the public
interest that road transport services in general or any
particular class of such service in relation to any area or
route or portion thereof should be run and operated by the
State TransPort Undertaking, whether to the exclusion,
complete or partial, of other persons or otherwise, the
State Transport Undertaking may prepare a scheme giving
particulars of the nature of the services proposed to be
rendered, the area or route proposed to be covered etc. The
scheme so framed has to be published under s. 68D,
objections called for and the scheme as finally approved has
to be published under s. 68F with or without modifications
including any prohibitions on the area or route or parts of
an area or a route covered by the notified scheme. There is
now no doubt that any route or area either wholly or partly
can be taken over by a State Undertaking under any scheme
published, approved and notified under the provisions of Ch.
IV-A of the Act inserted by s. 62 of Act 100 of 1956. The
provisions of this Chapter confer a monopoly on the State in
respect of transport services to the partial or complete
exclusion of other persons. In Y. J. Kondala Rao and others
v. Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation and
others,(3) a Constitution Bench of this Court held that Ch.
IV-A of the Act in specific terms provides a complete and in
the circumstances, a satisfactory machinery for reasonably
regulating the exclusion of all or some of the private
operators from the notified area or route. Subba Rao, J.,
as he then was, speaking for the Court pointed out that in
Saghir Ahmed v. State of U.P.(4) the constitutional validity
of s. 42(3) of the Act was questioned. What Saghir Ahmed’s
case(4) decided was that the public were entitled to use
public streets and roads which vest in the State as a matter
of
(1)C. As. Nos. 1755-1756 of 1968 etc. decided on 17-5-1974.
(2)[1973] 2 S.C.R. 925.
(4)[1973] 2 S.C.R. 925.
(3) A.I.R. [1961] S. C. 82.
619
right. The State as a trustee on behalf of the public was
entitled to impose all such limitations on the character and
extent of the user as may be requisite for protecting the
rights of the public generally Within the limits imposed by
State Regulations any member of the public can ply motor
vehicles on public roads and to that extent he can also
carry on business of transporting passengers with the aid of
vehicle. As infringement of the right which was challenged
in that case arose before the Constitution (First Amendment)
Act, 1951, the impugned restriction was held not to be
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justified as a reasonable restriction imposed in the
interests of the general public. As a result of the,
Constitution (First Amendment) Act, 1951, Art. 19(6) enables
the State to carry on any trade or business either by
itself, or by a corporation owned or controlled by the
State, to the exclusion, complete or partial, of citizens or
otherwise. Saghir Ahmed’s case(supra) would have no
application to schemes notified under Ch. IV-A of the Act
because what has now to be seen is whether under that scheme
private operators are permitted to ply vehicles on the
notified route or routes with or without restrictions, or
totally prohibited from using those routes. Whether a route
is inter-State route or intra-State route, the, power to
exclude is conferred by Ch. IV-A.
In Y. J. Konda a Rao’s case(supra) the question was whether
the word "route" in s. 68C refers to a pre-existing route.
It was contended that the words ’route or portion thereof’
in the section clearly indicates that the route is an
existing route because a scheme cannot be framed in respect
of a portion of the proposed route. This contention was
negatived. The Court observed at p. 93 :
"We do not see any force in this contention.
Unders.68C of the Act the scheme may be framed
in respect of any area or route or a portion
of any area or a portion of a route. There is
no inherent inconsistency between an "area"
and a "route". The proposed route is also an
area limited to the route proposed. The
scheme may as well propose to operate a
transport service in respect of a new route
from point A to point B and that route would
certainly be an area within the meaning of s.
68C. We, therefore, hold that s. 68C
certainly empowers the State Transport
Undertaking to propose a scheme to include new
routes".
in the case of Abdul Gafoor v. State of Mysore,(1) another
Constitution Bench of this Court considered the effect of
notifying a scheme and it was stated there that when a
scheme had been notified under Ch. IV-A of the Act and an
application was made for the grant of a permit on a route
notified under the scheme by a private operator, the
Regional Transport Authority had no option but to refuse the
permit to the private operator and to grant the application
presented by the State Transport Undertaking for a permit.
It has no right to ask for assistance from the public or
existing permit-holders of the transport service holders.
Neither the public in general nor the permit-holders have
any part to play in the matter. the only duty it has
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 707.
620
to do is to examine the application and to see whether it is
in pursuance of an approved scheme and secondly whether it
has been made in the manner laid down in Ch. IV-A. If,
therefore, the scheme prohibits private transport owners to
operate on the notified area or route or any portion
thereof, the Regional Transport Authority cannot either
renew the permit of such private owners or give any fresh
permit in respect of a route which overlaps the notified
route. The question is whether the scheme read as a whole
prohibits the private owners from operating on any of the
notified routes.
In Nilkanth Prasad & Ors. v. State of Bihar (1) the
appellants contended that as the notified route formed part
of a larger route operated by the private operator, the two
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routes must be regarded as different routes, and the private
operator could not be prevented from running his omnibuses
on that portion of his route, which was a different route,
although notified. This Court (Gajendragadkar and Hida-
yatullah, JJ.,) held that the appellants were not entitled
to run over those portions of their routes which were
notified as part of the scheme. Those portions could not be
said to be different routes but must be regarded as portions
of the routes of the private operators, from which the
private operators stood excluded under s. 68F(2) (c) (iii)
of the Act. It was observed in that case that as the State
Transport Undertaking had already been granted permits over
the route "AB", the private operators i.e. the appellants
were not entitled in law to renewal of their permits for
routes which embraced also route’AB’. In such
circumstances, the Regional Transport Authority could not,
but refuse to renew their permits. It was, therefore,
incompetent to renew a permit over a route embracing route
’AB’. Reliance seems to have been placed upon a decision of
the Privy Council in Keani Valley Motor Transit Co. Ltd. v.
Colombo-Ratnapura Omnibus Co. Ltd.(2). That decision is
hardly of any relevance to the question at issue here. In
that case both the appellant and the respondent were
applicants for exclusive road service licence for the route
from Colombo to Ratnapura. There was another route from
Panadura to Badu Hi through Colombo and Ratnapura. The
decision in that case depended upon the words of the
Ordinance ’such route or on a route substantially the same
as such route". As pointed out by the Privy Council :
"It appears that Panadura is some sixteen
miles along the coast to Colombo, thence from
Colombo to Ratnapura is some fifty miles and
from Ratnapura to Badulla is a further eighty
miles. It is obvious, therefore that the
route Panadura to Badulla is not the same or
substantially the same route as the route
Colombo to Ratnapura."
On the above fact situation Sir John Beaumount giving the
opinion of the Board observed
"If "route" his the same meaning as " highway"
in the Ordinance this argument must prevail
since ’admittedly an Omnibus running on the
highway from Panadura to Badulla
(1) [1962] Supp. (1) S.C.R. 728.
(2) [1946] A.C. 338.
621
will pass over the whole of the highway
between Colombo and Ratnapura, but in their
’Lordships’ opinion it is impossible to say
that "route" and "highway" in the two
ordinances are synonymous terms. In both
ordinances....... the, two words are used, and
certainly not interchangeably. A "highway" is
the physical track along which an omnibus
runs, whilst a " route" appears to their
Lordships to be an abstract conception of line
of travel between one terminus and another,
and to be something distinct from the highway
traversed...... there may be alternative roads
leading from one terminus to another but that
does not make the route and highway the same."
The question that arises in this case, whether when one
party has a monopoly over a route a licence can be granted
to any other party over any part of that route, did not
arise for consideration there and in considering that
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question the distinction between "route" and "highway" is
not at all relevant.
In Ni kanth Prasad’s case(supra) the distinction between
"route" and road" was relied upon by the appellants to show
that the notified route "AB" was a different route from the
routes for which renewal of permits was demanded, even
though route "AB" might have been a portion of the "road"
traversed by the omnibus of the appellants plying on their
"routes". Hidayatullah, J., observed at P. 736 :
"The distinction made by the Privy Council is
right ; but it was made with reference to the
words used in the ordinances there under
consideration. The question is whether a
similar distinction can be made in the context
of the Motor Vehicles Act."
It seems to have been argued before the Court that the word
"route" had been used in contradistinction with the word
"area" and hence wherever the word "route" was used it was
used in the sense of a national line between two termini
running a stated course, and was used in contradistinction
to what may be conveyed by the word "area". As we have seen
in Kondala Rao’s case, (supra) this argument was negatived
and so the Bench in Ni kanth Prasad’s case(supra) following
that decision negatived it. To our mind the decision in
Kelani Valley Motor Transit Co. Ltd’s case(supra) lends no
assistance to the basic concept of a " route", a line of
travel between two points, which can be traversed by
different roads as was pointed out in that decision itself.
A route between Delhi to Bombay can be traversed via Agra,
Gwalior, Indore, etc. or by some other road say via Nagpur,
but where the road of the route is specified in scheme,’and
private operators are prohibited to traverse on that route
between the two termini, any overlapping of that route would
transgress the provisions of the notified route and the
Regional Transport Authority cannot but reject an
application for a permit to traverse that overlapping.
Under the Ordinance which the Privy Council was considering
in Kelani Valley Motor Transit Co. Ltd’s case(supra) a
preference was to be given to an application from (a)
company or partnership comprising the holders of all the
licences for the time being in force and (b) a company or
partnership comprising
622
the holders of the majority of the licences referred to in
above, authorising the use of omnibuses on such routes which
established the largest number of permits over the route.
It is in that connection that the word "route" was
considered.
In any case under s. 2(28A) inserted by s. 2 of Act 56 of
1969 the word "route" has been defined as meaning "a line of
travel which specifies the highway which may be traversed by
a motor vehicle between one terminus and another". This
definition correlates the notional line of travel between
two termini with the portion of the highway which has to be
traversed on that route. it is, therefore, apparent that
where a private transport owner makes an application to
operate on a route, which overlaps even a portion of the
notified route i.e. where the part of the highway to be used
by the private transport owner traverses on a line on the
same highway on the notified route, then that application
has to be considered only in the light of the scheme as
notified. If any conditions are placed then those
conditions have to be fulfilled and if there is a total
prohibition then the application must be rejected.
In C.P.C. Motor Service, Mysore v. The State of Mysore and
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Another (1) the prohibition was only against the private
owners operating on the routes which lay within the
District. In the circumstances this Court held that the
exclusive operation of the routes within the District meant
that no other omnibus belonging to a private operator could
run on that sector. The direction, therefore, clearly said
that the route left to the private operators would be open
to them beyond the border of the District, but they were
excluded from that portion of the route which lay within the
District. again Hidayatullah, J., who delivered the judgment
of the Court observed at p. 726.
"The scheme of the Act in s. 68F(2)(c)(iii)
also shows that the Regional Transport
Authority, in giving effect to the approved
scheme, may "curtail the area or route covered
by the permit in so far as such permit relates
to the notified area or notified route". This
makes the route or area stand for the road on
which the omnibuses run or portions Thereof,
and in view of the fact that the scheme
reserved all the routes within the Mysore
District to the State Transport Under taking,
even those routes which were inter-District
open the private operators would stand
pretanto cut down to only that portion, which
lies outside the Mysore District. The result,
therefore, is that no distinction can be made
between the notification of a portion of the
route of the private operators lying within
the Mysore ]District and the notification of a
different route, in which the portio
n within
the Mysore District is also included"
This view also has been subsequently taken in Shri Roshanlal
Goutam v. State of Uttar Pradesh and Others.(2)
This Court has consistently taken the view that if there is
prohibition to operate on a notified route or routes no
licences can be granted
(1) [1962] Supp. (1) S.C.R. 717. (2) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 841.
623
to any private operator whose route traversed or overlapped
any part or whole of that notified route. The intersection
of the notified acute may not, in our view, amount to
traversing or overlapping the route because the prohibition
imposed applies to a whole or a part of the route on the
highway on the same line of the route. An intersection
cannot be said to be traversing the same line, as it cuts
across it.
In the recent case Mysore State Road Transport Corporation
v.The Mysore Revenue Appellate Tribunal, (supra) the view
taken was that where two routes-(1) the route plied over by
private operators and (2) the route notified do not coincide
at the points of termini it may not be enough to exclude the
private inter-State owners by any necessary implication, and
that if the intention is to exclude such used of operation
that intention must be made clear in order to have that
effect. Three schemes were considered in that case (1) the
Anakal Scheme; (2) the Gulbarga Scheme and (3) the Bangalore
Scheme and even though it was admitted that with regard to
the Bangalore Scheme the case of the appellant Corporation
was better inasmuch as the words used there are "the
complete exclusion of all other operators excluding the
intermediate routes", nonetheless it was observed that the
exclusion appears to, be only of operators providing
services between the termini mentioned there and not merely
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 27
using overlapping portions of the notified routes
incidentally, and that if the exclusion of those using over
lapping.portions of the surface of the highway common to two
different routes was also really intended, they should have
been named in the appended statement and the number of their
stage carriages should have been given. As no explanation
was forthcoming for this commission, the interpretation of
the three schemes advanced on behalf of the inter State
operators was considered to be more reasonable. The judgment
further observed :
"Whatever maybe said about the correctness of
the decision of this Court in Nilkanth
Prasads’ case (supra) in the context of the
scheme before this Court for consideration in
that case and the provisions of the Act as
they stood then,we do not think that the Ratio
Decidendi of that case is applicable here.
Upon the contents of the scheme before us for
interpretation we find that only operators
named therein or those who seek to provide
"services" upon the routes mentioned in the
schemes, in the sense that they carry
passengers travelling from one place to
another situated only upon the notifie
d routes,
could be totally excluded from using the
highways which the notified routes cover. We
think that conditions were rightly imposed by
the final Transport Appellate Authority on the
permits of inter State operators to bring out
what it understood the scheme to mean in each
case".
With respect we do not doubt the correctness of the decision
in Nilkanth Prasad’s case (supra) which followed the
decisions of different Constitution Benches of this Court.
Even if that decision has to be dissented from, it could
only be done by a larger Bench of this Court. On the other
hand if at all the definition of the word "route" in s.
2(28A) lends further support to the principle enunciated
624
in Nilkanth Prasad’s case (supra) The scheme before us
clearly notified the routes at Serial Nos. 1 to 22, 24, 25,
26, 27 and 53 including services between the two places
therein were to be operated by the State Transport
Undertaking to the complete exclusion of all other opera-
tors. In other words, the State Transport Undertaking has
been given exclusive right to run on those routes or any two
places between those routes or between any two places on
those routes. The routes specified in the statement show
routes Nos. 11 and 12 between Chitradurga to Hiziyar via
Ivmangala and Chitradurga to Hiriyur via Mardihalli.
The proceedings before the Regional Transport Authority of
March 25, 1968 in respect of the application of M/s C. Abdul
Rahim & Sons for renewal of their permit were considered as
additional Item No.23 C. Abdul Rahim & Sons had been granted
permit No. 176/58-59 and that permit was being evidently
renewed from time to time on the route Hiriyur to Chiradurga
and back via V.V. Sagar, Hosadurga and Janakal. The last
application for renewal which gave rise to the present
controversy was evidently made on October 1, 1967 for rene-
wing it for a period of five years. This was published on
January II, 1968 and before the Regional Transport Authority
C. Abdul Rahim & Sons asked for renewal of their permit as
applied for by them in the interest of the travelling
public. But the Mysore State Road Transport Corporation
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objected on the ground that its services will be affected if
the grant is renewed. That objection was overruled and the
permit was directed to be renewed for a period of three
years from the ,date of the expiry of the permit.
A revision petition was filed by Mysore State Road Transport
Corporation before the Mysore State Transport Appellate
Tribunal on the ground that the renewal of the permit was
bad as the route proposed for renewal overlapped the
notified route Hiriyur to V. V. Sagar over a distance of
three miles coming under the Bangalore Scheme. This
contention was rejected on the ground that in B.
Munivenkataswamy Naidu’s case (Civil Appeal No. 3203 of 1966
etc.) the Mysore Revenue Appellate Tribunal had held "that
the integrity of a scheme is not impaired if the distance of
the overlapping portion is about five miles and if a
condition not to pick up or set down passengers on the
notified route is attached."
Throughout these proceedings it was no where contested that
the route granted to M/s. C. Abdul Rahim & Sons does not
overlap the notified route. If that was the case, this
question would not have arisen. On the other hand, because
the route granted to C. Abdul Rahim & Sons overlapped three
miles over the notified route and since the Tribunal had
held earlier that any overlapping within five miles does not
impair the integrity of the scheme, the validity of this
view is being agitated before us. The High Court dismissed
the writ petition in limine, notwithstanding the contention
urged in the writ petition by the appellant that both the
Full Bench as well as Division Bench of the Court had held
that the nationalised routes are to be operated by the State
Transport-Undertaking to the complete exclusion of all other
operators, if such a scheme excluded private operators from
operating on them.
625
A similar question has been dealt with by this Court in the
Mysore State Road Transport Corporation’s case(supra) to
which we have referred earlier. In that case, the facts
have not been stated and we are not in a position to know
which of the permits in cases before the Court had expired
and which of them were renewed during the pendency of’ the
hearing. If the ),ears in which those appeals were filed
are taken as a guide, the permits in all those appeals
whether renewed for three years of five years would have
expired before the decision was rendered But that was not
the reason given for dismissing those appeals. If this
reason is valid, then what was decided in that case would
not be the ratio of that case. At any rate, the decision in
that case would suffer from the same infirmity which a
decision in this case may be considered to suffer. But that
is not how the decision in that case proceeded. On the other
hand, it was assumed in all those case that the appellant
was contending that the permits granted were illegal because
those routes overlapped the nationalised notified routes.The
fact that permits had expired did not preclude this Court
from expounding the law on the basis that those permits were
current. ’Where a permit has been granted against the
objection of the State Transport Undertaking and the matter
is agitated before this Court, there being no stay, it is
difficult to postulate that even after the expiry of those
permits they are not renewed. In this very case, it can be
observed that the permit is being renewed in favour of C.
Abdul Rahim & Sons after the expiry of each of the periods
from 1958 onwards. In any case, it Is impermissible for us
suo motu to look into the interstices of the case or to
raise objections on assumptions which may or may not be
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correct. The respondents’ non-appearance after due notice
cannot preclude this Court from proceeding on admitted
facts. At any rate, no objection of any kind which might
preclude determination of this question has been put to the
appellant’s counsel and it would be unfair if we were to
deal with them as if it is admitted. In any case, if the
permits which have expired have been renewed, which we have
no doubt must have been, then we can mould our relief to
suit that changed situation. See Mohatilal Chunilal Kothari
v. Tribhovan an Haribhai Tramboli (1).
The "Bangalore Scheme" has been the subject matter of the
Mysore State Road Transport Corporation’s case (supra) as
also other cases. Even the special leave petition has set
it out. Since the decision which has been challenged
proceeds on the basis that Hiriyur to V. V. Sagar route
granted to C. Abdul Rahim & Sons overlaps the notified route
Chitradurga to Hiriyur. there can no doubt that no permit or
renewal can be granted. This is so even if it overlaps
short the distance of the route. Whether a particular route
granted to a private operator overlaps the notified route or
not cannot be ascertained from the notified route. The
notified route may merely state the route to be operated by
the State Transport Undertaking and the total of partial
prohibition on other operators from operating on. that route
or a portion thereof. Where, however other operators are
permitted to operate on any portion. of that route, it may
also provide the terms and conditions under
(1) [1963] 2 S.C.R. 707.
626
which they can be permitted Beyond this, from the notified
scheme it cannot be ascertained whether any particular
permit overlaps the notified route or transgresses any of
the conditions or prohibitions set out therein. There is no
justification for holding that the intergrity of the
notified scheme is not affected if the overlapping is under
five miles or because a condition has been stipulated in the
permit that the operators will not pick up or set down any
passengers on the overlapped route
On this view, we allow the appeal, set aside the order of
the High Court and direct the Regional Transport a Authority
to comply with the requirements of the scheme as stated by
us in respect of any permit granted or in respect of renewal
of any such permit made in favour ,of the third respondent
during the pendency of this appeal
BEG, J -The appellant, the Mysore State Road Transport
Corporation, had filed a writ Petition-cum-affidavit in the
Mysore High Court in 1968 It reads :
"I, B. P. Kulkarni Deputy General Manager, Planning Central
offices, Mysore State Road Transport Corporation Bangalore
do on solemn affirmation state as follows :
I am the Deputy General Manager (Planning) Central Office in
the Department of the petitioner and having read the
relevant documents of the case state the following which I
believe to be true and correct
Being aggrieved by the Judgment of the first respondent
,dated 12-7-68 passed in revision petition No 41 of 1968 by
which the resolution of the second respondent in subject No
23 dated 25th March to renew the permit in favour of the
third respondent for a period of three years which in effect
permitting of overlapping the notified route of about three
miles between Hiriyur and V. V. Sagar Cross in Bangalore
Scheme is upheld, this writ petition is file under Article
226 of the Constitution of India. A certified copy of the
judgment of the first respondent is filed marked ’A’ and a
certified copy of the resolution of the second respondent is
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filed marked ’B’ the following are some of the grounds of
objections amongst others
GROUNDS
1. The second respondent had no jurisdiction to grant the
renewal of the permit which overlaps the notified route. of
the petitioner to a
627
distance of about three miles and hence the first respondent
ought to have quashed the said resolution and allowed the
revision petition filed by the petitioner against the said
resolution. In refusing to do so, the first respondent has
acted ultra vires of his powers and in excess of his
jurisdiction.
2. That the case of the H. C. Narayanappa v. State of Mysore
and others reported in A. 1. R. 1960 Supreme Court at page
1072 has no bearing. The Supreme Court was concerned, in
that case with the contention that in the Anekar Scheme,
only the routes are notified and not the area. In this case
the renewal overlaps the notified routes of the Bangalore
Scheme provides total exclusion of private operators.
3. That the Bangalore Scheme provides for total exclusion of
the private operators on the notified routes as decided by
this Hon’ble Court in W. P. 2579/66 on 6-8-68.
4. That it is the duty of the respondents 1 arid 2 to give
effect to the notified scheme under section 68 F(2), of the
Indian Motor Vehicles Act. But by the impugned order the
first respondent has acted in violation of the said
mandatory provision of law.
5. I believe that there is no other alternate remedy for the
petitioner except to invoke the powers of the Hon’ble High
Court under Article 226 of the Constitution of India"
No copy of the scheme involved was annexed to the petition-
cum-affidavit. Some relevant facts may, however, be gleaned
from other material on the meagre record. A copy of the
impugned order annexure ’A’ to the writ petition) of the
Mysore State Transport Tribunal indicated that the
petitioner had objected to the renewal of "Permit No. 176/58
for the route Hiriyur to Chitradurga and back via V. V.
Sagara, Mosadurga and Janakal" for a period of 3 years from
the date of the expiry of the permit. The short order of
the Tribunal rejecting the appeal of the petitioner
appellant mentioned:
" According to Shri Srinivasan, the order of
renewal is bad as the route proposed for
renewal overlaps the notified route between
Hiriyur and V. V. Sagar, a distance of 3 miles
coming under Bangalore Scheme."
It then stated that the reasons for the conclusion reached
by the Tribunal, that the overlapping portion of 3 miles
does not impair the integrity of the scheme, are to be found
in another judgment which was neither placed before the High
Court nor before us. Again, a glance at a copy of
proceedings before the Regional Transport Authority on
record (annexure’B’) shows that item No. 23 related to an
application for a renewal of permit No. 176158 for the
route "Hiriyur to Chitradurga and back via V. V. Sagara,
Mosadurga, and Janakal daily one trip for a period of five
years from 1-10-67 to 30-9-72".
The renewal granted was for 3 years which meant that it had
examined on 30-9-70. No attempt has been made to challenge
any subsequent renewal. we do not know when the original
permit was given, but
628
number "176/58" indicates that it was probably taken out in
1958. Therefore, any relief we could now grant could only
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be declaratory in respect of a very old permit whose
validity should have been challenged long ago. It was,
presumably, renewed earlier. There must have been similar
objections earlier too on the strength of the provisions of
the Bangalore Scheme which came into force on 7-6-1960. If
so, these must have been failed. An attack in 1968 upon the
validity of such a permit which was probably issued ten
years earlier but said to have become invalid, so far as the
overlapping portion of the route is concerned, eight years
before challenging it by means of’ a writ petition would be
too belated to deserve even consideration.
Even the date on which the Bangalore Scheme was notified was
not apparent from anything on record. It was not given in
any order or other material either in our printed paper book
or on the record of the Mysore High Court sent to this Court
which I have examined. We have, therefore, to be able to
proceed further at all to consider this case, to assume that
the purported copy of the scheme, giving the date of
notification of its approval as 7-6-1960, handed in by
learned counsel for the appellant after arguments, is a
correct copy of the relevant notification in an official
Gazette. We could of course, take judicial notice of such a
notification.
As I shall indicate later, the date of the original grant or
permit and whether the respondent operator and others like
him were plying stage carriages for hire upon a part of a
notified route, and if so. on which particular route, at the
time of the notification of the Bangalore Scheme, have
considerable importance for the rights of the parties
determine by an interpretation of the scheme, in the context
of relevant rules, which) seems to be not only open but
decisive on the language of the scheme quite apart from any,
other question. Indeed, without necessary averments and
findings of facts on these questions, it does not seem to me
to be possible to deal satisfactorily at all with the case
before us. To add to our difficulties, the respondent
operator, the/ renewal of whose permit was questioned by the
appellant, could not appear before the High Court because no
notice of the Writ Petition, dismissed in limine, was set to
him, and, for some reason (possibly cause lie is no longer
interested in this particular permit after the expiry of the
impugned renewal in 1970), the operator has not put in
appearance in this Court. The result is that we have not
had the benefit of hearing any arguments for the respondents
in this appeal before us by a special leave granted, as the
order of this Court on the special leave petition shows only
because it had been granted in other similar cases with
which this case should have been connected. Those other
cases have been heard and decided on 17-5-1974 against the
appellant in Mysore State Road Transport Corporation v. the
Mysore Revenue Appellate Tribunal & Ors. (1).
I have referred to the state of the record before us
because, speaking for myself, I think it is imperative for a
petitioner invoking the writ issuing jurisdiction of a High
Court, whoever
(1)Civil Appeals Nos.1755-56 etc. etc. decided on 17-5-1974.
629
the petitioner may be, to set out facts with sufficient
particulars to enable the High Court to exercise its writ
issuing prerogative powers correctly. In the case before
us, I find it very difficult to hold that the High Court had
erred in rejecting the appellant’s writ petition in limine.
As it gave no reasons for the rejection we do not know what
they were. There could on facts stated above, be more than
one good ground for rejecting the writ petition in limine.
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It also rejected an application for grant of a certificate
under Art. 133(1) (c) of fitness of the case for an appeal
to this Court after merely expressing the opinion that it
was not a fit case for certification. Thus, we are faced,
at the outset, with the difficulty that, unless we were to
assume certain state of facts giving rise to a question of
law, it would be difficult to find the question we could or
should consider and decide in this appeal by special leave.
We have riot got before us any judgment in which essential
facts are elucidated. The Writ-Petition-cum-affidavit, set
out in full above, is devoid of indispensable particulars.
Learned Counsel for the petitioner seemed to me to assume
that the so called "Bangalore scheme" does exclude plying of
stage carriages over overlapping portion of 3 miles between
Hiriyur and V. V. Sagar simply because it is a notified
route. This is exactly what had to be shown to us from the
contents of the scheme, after applying correct principles of
interpretation to it, and from facts asserted and found
showing which out of the large number of notified routes was
being used by the respondent operator. Even in the course
of arguments learned Counsel for the appellant did not show
us on which route the strip between Hiriyur and V. V. Sagar
fell. This was essential because plying on overlapping
parts of each one of 94 notified routes is not by itself, I
find, forbidden by the relevant provisions of the scheme
which I propose to consider.
It appears to be the submission of learned Counsel for the
appellant that, as the Bangalore scheme was actually
considered and interpreted earlier in the judgment of 17-5-
74 by a bench of this Court and certain general propositions
of law were also discussed and enunciated there, we should,
simply for that reason, consider those very questions of law
again on assumed facts and rectify what, it is submitted on
behalf of the appellant, are errors in the opinion of the
Bench which decided the cases mentioned above. The main
argument against the views expressed in that judgment is
that these are not reconcilable with earlier decisions’ and,
in particular, with Nilkanth Prasad & Ors. v. State of
Bihar (1) case. This contention rests on a failure to
appreciate whit was really in dispute in earlier cases and
what was the ratio decidendi of Mysore State Road Transport
Corporation’s oases decided on 17-5-1974.
I think Dr ’. A. L. Goodhart has correctly said, in an
elaborate essay on "Determining the Ratio Decidendi of a
case" (See : "Jurisprudence in Action", 1953, Essays
published by the Association of the Bar of New York). that
the principle of a case is determined by taking into account
the facts treated by the Judge deciding a case as material
and
(1) [1962] 1 Suppl. S.C.R. 729.
630
his decision "as based thereon". Salmond, in his
"Jurisprudence" (12th Ed. p. 181) has observed that Courts,
in their quest for "the rule which the Judge thought himself
to be applying" tend to ignore this method in practice. It
was stated there : "any such rule must be evaluated in the
light of facts considered by the Court to be material".
Therefore, we have to find out what was really the basis of
the decision of 17-5-1974 in Mysore State Road Transport
Corporation’s case (Supra) before attempting to deduce any
general principle or proposition of law from it which could
be said to be in conflict with earlier decisions of this
Court given upon other schemes and in a different legal
setting.
A perusal of the Judgment of 17-5-1974 in Mysore State Road
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Transport Corporation’s cases reveals that it dealt with 22
appeals by special leave and thirteen special leave
petitions involving 3 different schemes. All these were
connected and heard together because of a common question of
law said to be involved there. This Court could not,
therefore, go into the facts of each case separately. It
framed the common question of law an answer to which could
decide all the cases before it. It then found that the
answer could not be given without reference to the
provisions of and an interpretation of each particular
scheme.
The judgment starts by accepting as correct the position
found in Nilkanth Prasad’s case (supra) and in S. Abdul
Khader v. Mysore Revenue Appellate Tribunal & Ors, (1) that
a scheme could exclude plying of state carriages on hire by
private operators completely on a route if that is what was
intended by it. It then referred to the relevant provisions
of law for framing of a scheme, including the rules notified
in the Mysore Gazette dated 27-2-1958 laying down
specification of certain particulars as necessary conditions
to be observed in framing schemes so as to make it clear
which private operators were excluded either wholly or
partially from plying upon any route or portion of a route.
These particulars were required by the rules framed so that
a duty imposed by Section 68C of the Motor Vehicles Act
(hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’) may be discharged.
It was also difficult, without these particulars, to apply
Section 68F meant for the enforcement of the scheme. The
cases were decided on an interpretation of each scheme the
light of the rules. The correctness of the decision of each
case by interpreting the provisions of each scheme, stands
apart from the meaning to be attributed to the term "route"
under the provisions of the Act.
As one of the schemes whose provisions were interpreted by
the judgment of 17-5-74 was the Bangalore Scheme now before
us, we have to look at the provisions of that scheme to test
the correctness of the decision on the assumption that the
term "route", for the purposes of this aspect of
interpretation, must be equated with a highway or road
covered by it. Proceeding on this assumption, for the
purposes of this argument, we may examine the Bangalore
scheme.
(1) [1973] 2 S.C.R. 925.
631
We find that sub-rule 3 and 4 of rule 1 are repeated the
headings of clauses 3 and 4 of the scheme, given in on the
left hand side with the relevant contents of the scheme
under the appropriate heading on the right hand side against
each heading. The relevant clauses read thus:
"3. The route or routes
(with their starting points,
termini, intermediate stat-
ions and route length)in
which the State Road Trans-
port Undertaking shall int-
roduce its services to the
exclusion of private operat-
ors.
(a) The passenger transport
services on the routes
appearing at S. Nos. 1 to 22
and 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 39
and 53 of the statement
appended including services
between any two places
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therein should be run and
operated by the State Trans
port Undertaking to the com-
plete exclusion of other
operators;
(b) Subject to (a) above, the
State Transport Undertaking
should operate services on
the remaining routes
appearing in the statement
appended between the two
specified terminals only to
the complete exclusion of all
other operators, excluding
intermediate routes;
4.The number of existing
stage At present, only the
Mysore carriages on each
route with the number of
trips and the names of
their operators.
At present only the Mysore
Government Road Transport
Department is operating
services on these routes,
and in the number of
existing stage carriages and
number of trips areas in
statement appended".
In the preamble to the Banglore Scheme we find that the
scheme submitted by the Mysore State Transport Undertaking
was approved under Section 68-D(2) of the Act by the Govt.of
Mysore subject to the following modifications:
"(a) that the passenger transport services on the routes
appearing at S. Nos. 1 to 22 and 24,25,26,27, and 53 of the
statement appended including services between any two places
therein should be run and operated by the State Transport
Under taking to the complete exclusion of other operators;
(b) Subject to (a) above, the State Transport Undertaking
should operate services on the remaining routes appearing in
the Statement appended between the two specified terminals
only, to the complete exclusion of all other operators,
excluding the intermediate routes;
(c) the approved scheme shall come into force from the date
of its publication in the Mysore Gazette".
632
Neither proposals originally made nor the decisions given
thereon apart from what is stated in the preamble were
placed before us to throw light on the precise meaning of
any ambiguous parts of the contents under headings 3 and 4
of the scheme. We also find that the headings 3 and 4
mechanically repeat the provisions of sub-rules 3 and 4 of
rule 1 of the Mysore rules. The contents of the scheme
against the heading similarly repeat faithfully the
provisions of the preamble except that route Nos. 28 and 39
are found added in class (a). It is quite clear that
notified routes are divided into two classes. In class (a).
are placed routes numbered 1 to 22 and 24 to 28 and 39 and
53, whereas the remaining routes are placed in class (b). A
glance at the purported copy of the scheme placed before us
shows that there were altogether 94 routes separately
numbered. Each route is identified by its termini with a
separate column for intermediate stations of each routes.
Out of these routes, only 29 are placed in class (a) of
complete exclusion of private operators from them, including
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services between "any 2 places therein". The remaining 65
notified routes obviously fall in class (b) of exclusion
private operators from services "between 2 specified
terminals only." In other words, plying on overlapping
portions, which did not constitute service "between the 2
specified terminals only" of a notified routes, was not
excluded. This interpretation is clarified further and
reinforced by the specific statement that the complete
exclusion of all other operators in class (b) was subject to
the exclusion of "intermediate routes" from the exclusion
clause itself. This is the only distinction between the
classes and its only reasonably possibly meaning. Other-
wise, there was no point in dividing the 94 routes into two
classes.
In cases falling within class (a) of the Bangalore Scheme
one could perhaps reasonably assume complete exclusion of
private operators but not in class (b) where exclusion of
private operators from overlapping parts of routes was
expressly exempted. Indeed, this meaning becomes even more
reasonable and evident if the term "route" is identified
with a "highway" or a "road". Plying between an
"intermediate" portion of a specified route as a part of the
highways necessarily implies running on overlapping portions
of highways. The Bench, in its decision of 17-5-1974, was
unable to relate the facts of the cases before it to the
prohibition of overlapping of routes. This also meant that
it could not determine whether cases before the Court
relating to the Bangalore scheme fell within class (a) or
class (b). It pointed out that the Mysore Transport
Undertaking had the remedy for this uncertain state of
affairs in its own hands if complete exclusion of private
operators from every overlapping part of a notified route
was also intended by the framers of the scheme. It could go
before the State Govt. with a proposal to get the Bangalore
scheme appropriately clarified and modified under Section
68-E of the Act. Instead of doing that, the Mysore State
Road Transport Corporation had preferred to litigate over
this issue from 1968 ownwards in an attempt to exclude other
operators who may have been operating even before the scheme
came into force but who were not treated as excluded
operators by the scheme itself as they only used overlapping
parts of certain routes. It was essential to show us,
before asking us to infer a complete exclusion that,-even on
the
633
assumption made above, the overlapping part involved in a
case falls at least under class (a) of notified routes.
Speaking for myself, I am unable to discover any flaw in the
reasoning of the Division Bench decision of 17-5-74 of this
Court. It did not deal with such questions as the failure
of the Mysore State Road Transport Corporation either to
object to earlier renewals or to challenge any possible
subsequent renewals in cases where renewals had expired
during the pendency of appeals in this Court because doing
that would have meant burdening the judgment with questions
relating to individual cases. It was not necessary to do so
for the decision of all the cases on a common question of
law.
The Bangalore scheme was found to be too ambiguous to be
capable of implying a prohibition in all the cases before
the Court which were set up with no greater clarity and
definiteness than the case now before us has been set up.
Indeed, I suspect that the meagre statement of facts in the
Writ Petition of the case before us and in other cases which
were decided on 17-5-74 and the failure of the appellant to
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base its case upon a clear assertion that it fell squarely
within the four corners of class (a) of the excluded
operators may be due to the fact that the case actually fell
in class (b). I do not find it possible, en the statements
made in the petition before us or in the orders of the
Transport Authorities, to correlate any particular part of
the route of the respondent with a route falling within
class (a) of the 29 routes dealt with in class 3 (a) of the
scheme. A similar view underlay the decision of 17-5-74 by
a Bench of this Court. It said
"Lastly, as regards the Bangalore scheme, the
case of the appellant Corporation may seem
better inasmuch as the words used there are
:’the complete exclusion of all other
operators excluding the intermediate routes’.
But even here,the exclusion appears to be only
of operators providing services between the
termini mentioned there and not merely using
overlapping portions of the notified routes
incidentally".
The reasons for this view are now given by me more
elaborately and explicitly and with special reference to the
assertions made by the appellant in the case before us.
I will now turn to the question whether the concept of a
"route", which was held to be correct, by the Division Bench
in the judgment dated 17-5-1974, in the context of the
schemes before it and the change of law after the amendment
of the Motor Vehicles Act by the Act No. 56 of 1966, adding
a definition of "route" was in conflict with any of the
earlier decisions. inasmuch as neither the provisions of the
schemes interpreted by the judgment of 17-5-1974 nor the
amended law was before this Court on any earlier occasion, I
find it very difficult to accept the view that we are still
bound by a declaration of law by this Court on other schemes
or on law prior to the amendment relied upon in the judgment
of 17-5-1974. Indeed, I think that the bench of this Court
respectfully followed the
634
rule of interpretation deducible from Nilkanth Prasad’s case
(supra) : that the meaning to be assigned to the term
"route" depends upon the relevant provisions of law for
interpretation before the Court. It has been contended on
behalf of the appellant itself that each approved scheme
constitutes law. Accepting this submission, which is
supported by pronouncements of this Court, an interpretation
of each separate scheme would be an interpretation of a
different law to be given in the context of the provisions
of that scheme.
Hidayatullah J., in Nilkanth Prasad’s case (supra) did not
consider the concept of a "route" found in the Kelani Valley
Motor Transit Co. V. Colombo Ratnapura Omnibus Co.(1). to
be incorrect. The learned Judge said (at p. 736) :
"The distinction made by the Privy Council is
right; but it was made with reference to the
words used in the Ordinances there under
consideration".
The Division Bench of this Court in its judgment of 17-5-
1974 also found this meaning of a "route" to be correct in a
context different from the one which was before the Court
when it decided Nilkanth Prasad’s case (supra). The reasons
why the bench of this Court, in its judgment dated 17-5-
1974, did not equate the term "route" with " road" were two
fold : firstly, a different concept under-lay each of the
three schemes before the Court, including the Bangalore
scheme, and the relevant rules to be observed in framing
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such schemes; and, secondly, the newly introduced definition
constituted an amendment of or a departure from the
definition of "route" found in Nilkanth Prasad’s case
(supra). Obviously, neither Nilkanth Prasad’s case nor
other cases are applicable authorities either on any
question of interpretation of the provisions of the
Bangalore Scheme or on the question whether the law giving
the meaning of "route" had changed in the direction
indicated by the judgment of 17-5-1974.
I may now elaborate the two sets of reasons underlying the
definition of the term "route" adopted in the judgment of
17-5-1974, although, as I have explained earlier, a new
definition of the term "route" was not absolutely necessary
for the decision of 17-5-1974 or of the case before us
because of the ambiguities resulting from the very meagre
assertions, devoid of particulars, with which the appellant
petitioner went to the High Court. Their scantiness could
perhaps be only matched by the paucity of the provisions of
the Bangalore scheme itself.
I will first take up the second of the two sets of reasons
given above for accepting a new definition of "route", as
that seems to me to raise the narrow question into which the
main difference between the views of my learned brethren,
for which I have the greatest respect, and mine resolves
itself. That question is : Did the addition of a definition
of "route" by Section 2(28A) of the Motor Vehicles Act in
1966 signify a departure from or change in any definition of
it by this Court deducible from the judgment in Nilkanth
Prasad’s case (supra) ?
(1) [1946] A.C. 338.
635
The rules to be employed in answering such a question were
laid down along ago in Heydon’s case(1) where, in what
appears to us the rather quaint 16th century language, it
was said :
" that for the sure and true interpretation of
all statutes ’four things are to be discerned
and considered : 1st, what was the Common Law
before the making of the Act ? 2nd, what was
the mischief and defect for which the Common
Law did not provide ? 3rd, what remedy the
Parliament hath resolved and appointed to cure
the disease of the Commonwealth ; and, 4th,
the true reason of the remedy. And then the
office of all the Judges is to make such
construction as shall suppress the mischief
and advance the remedy................
according to the true intent of the makers of
the Act".
This Court, which has repeatedly applied these rules,
pointed out, in Bengal Immunity Co. v. The State of Bihar &
Ors.,(2) that the method of interpretation found in what is
known as the "Mischief Rule" is "as necessary now as it was
when Lord Coke reported Heydon’s case". Expressed in modern
terms it only means that the purpose and significance of an
enactment is to be found after exploring the short-comings
or the defects which were sought to be removed by means of
it by Parliament which does not legislate in vain or without
some reason or need for it. And, as all law, including
enacted law, is a response to a need which has arisen, we
have to examine the situation or the context in which the
need for an amendment in it arose by an addition in it or
alteration of it in order to appreciate its true meaning.
Law, after all, is not static. It changes in response to
the growing needs it has to serve so as to advance the
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public good.
Ours is a developing country in which Motor Transport serves
an essential need for locomotion by members of the public
who, as workers, as businessmen, or as persons pursuing
their various avocations in life must be transported
conveniently and rapidly from one place to another if they
are to efficient in work and add to national wealth. It is
obvious that the expenditure and Organisation involved in
maintaining an efficient and comfortable motor transport
service extending over long distances is so great that only
the State can meet this public need satisfactorily. It was
for this reason that the amending Act 100 of 1956,
introduced the provisions of Chapter IV-A into the Motor
Vehicles Act so that (See Section 68C) schemes may be framed
for running motor transport services by State run
undertakings for the purpose of providing "efficient,
adequate, economical, and properly coordinated road
transport services", when it is found to be .,necessary in
the public interest that road transport services in general
or any particular class of such service in relation to any
area or route or portion thereof should be run and operated
by the State Transport Undertaking, whether to the
exclusion, complete or partial, of other persons or
otherwise". It is noticeable that the power given to frame
a scheme which has the force of law was to be exercised in
such a way I as to give all persons affected including
members of the public, for whose benefit a scheme was to be
framed, due opportunity of being heard
(1) 1584 (3) Co. Rep. 8.
(2) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603 633.
636
so that there may be a proper adjustment between the amount
of exclusion needed for maintaining an efficient State owned
motor transport service and the needs of the public,
particularly on smaller routes, which could, in certain
cases perhaps be better served by private operators. Such
Private operators may be more aware more watchful, and
better able to meet the needs of the public of a particular
locality. Hence, consistently with our mixed economy, the
provision made was not for a total exclusion of private
operators, automatically by the mere fact of a notification
of a route or area, but, for framing of schemes with
necessary particulars indicating the extent to which private
operators were to be excluded or still allowed to operate in
any manner on notified routes. The schemes could be of
either total or partial exclusion of private operators from
routes or areas.
Another noticeable feature of the law, as found in Section
68C of the Act, is that it confers power to exclude private
operators only from proposed "services" of particular areas
or routes. Each scheme was meant to contain "particulars of
the nature of the services proposed to be rendered, the area
or route proposed to be covered and such other particulars
respecting thereto as may be prescribed". The whole object
of these provisions was to make a scheme elastic enough to
be ,capable of serving public needs by such combinations or
mutations of State Transport as well as private transport
services as may be shown to best subserve public convenience
and interests, although, where this was found necessary for
satisfying public needs, complete exclusion of private
operators from certain routes and areas is possible.
Furthermore, the framers of Section 68C spoke of "the area
or route proposed to be covered" by services but avoided
using the word "road". It seemed, therefore, that they
intended to distinguish the right of the public to use the
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highways which are, as is well settled in law, dedicated to
the use of members of the public in various ways (See :
Himat Lal K. Shah v. Commissioner of Police, Ahmedabad &
Anr;(1) Municipal Board Manglaur V. Mahadeoji Maharaj; (2)
and Sagir Ahmed v. State of U.P.)(3) from the right to
provide motor transport services to passengers paying for
these services on specified routes or in particular areas.
The right to provide these services could be vested wholly
or partially in State undertakings. It is only in this
sense that a particular cc route" of a stage carriage,
representing a right to provide a particular service
exclusively, could "vest" in a State undertaking
It is also noticeable that, before the addition of Section
2(28A) of the Act by the Amendment Act 56 of 1966, there was
no definition of the term "route". The result was that this
Court had indicated its own definition in Nilkanth Prasad’s
case (supra). This case related to a route from Gaya to
Khijirsarai on which, according to the statement of facts in
the case, the Rajya Transport, Bihar "was exlclusively
allowed to operate". No question of exclusion of a private
operator from merely an overlapping part of a route was
involved there. It appeared that there private operators
claimed a right to ply for hire over the whole
(1) A.I.R. 1973 S.C. 87, 103.
(3) [1955] 1 S.C.R.707.
(2) [1965] 2 S.C.R. 242.
637
of a notified route on the ground that it was included in
their longer route. In this context, this Court, after
holding the definition of ’route" given by. the Privy
Council, in Kelani Valley MotOr Transit Co.’s case (supra),
to be correct, in its own context, said (at p. 737-738)
"The distinction between "route" as the
notional line and ,,road" as the physical
track disappears in the working of Chap. IV-
A, because you cannot curtail the route
without curtailing a portion of the road, and
the ruling of the Court to which we have
referred, would also show that even if the
route was different, the area at least would
be the same. The ruling of the Judicial
Committee cannot be made applicable to the
Motor Vehicles Act, particularly Chap. IV-A,
where the intention is to exclude private
operators completely from running over certain
sectors Or routes vested in State Transport
Undertakings. In our opinion, therefore, the
appellants were rightly held to be disentitled
to run over those portions of their routes
which were notified as part of the scheme."
It could be and was, therefore, urged before us that this
amounted to really identifying the term route with a road.
In addition, there was the observation that certain sectors
or routes "vested in State Transport Undertakings".
In Nilkanth Prasad’s case (supra), this Court relied upon a
passage from Kondala Rao v. Andhra Pradesh State Road
Transport Corporation, (1) which did not really deal with a
definition of a route but only pointed out that there was
"no inherent inconsistency between an area and a route" and
that "the proposed route is also an area limited to the
route". In Konda Rao’s case (supra) this Court said :
"The scheme may as well propose to operate a
transport service in respect of a new route
from point A to point B and that route would
certainly be an area within the meaning of s.
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68C".
But, in that case, this Court did not go so far as to say
that the "route", viewed as the road itself over which it
ran, vested in the State Undertaking. On the other hand, it
spoke of the State’s power to exclude from "service" only of
an area or a route. It said of Section 68C (at p. 87) :
"The section enables the State to take over a
particular class of a service, say, the bus
service, and exclude all or some of the
persons doing business in that class of
service".
Classes of "service" could be most conveniently indicated by
"service" between certain specified termini and at given
times. If the termini or timings were different a "service"
may be different even if it meant an overlapping part of
service between other termini.
The result of this state of law was that there
was no clear definition of the term "route".
Nilkanth Prasad’s case (supra) had practically
(1) AIR 1961 S.C. 82.
638
identified the term route with a road and contained an
observation that the "route" vested in the Undertaking. If
this view was to be carried to its logical conclusion, the
State Transport Undertaking could exclude even the user of a
road by anyone for any purpose whatsoever provided it
notified a route which ran over it. Such a consequence
appeared to be quite alarming. In any case, until a scheme
made it clear what was really excluded, a Court had to be
careful not to exclude operators who may be serving an
urgent public need without damaging the interests of any
State Undertaking.
While this was the state of our law before the definition of
the term "route" by Act 56 of 1966, there was another
definition of this term contained in Kelani Motor Transit
Co.’s case (supra). It was held there with reference to the
provisions of certain ordinances from Colombo; (at p. 345-
346) :
"........ in their Lordships opinion it is
impossible to say that route" and "highway" in
the two Ordinances are synonymous terms. In
both Ordinances, particularly in S. 54 of the
original Ordinance and s. 7 of the amending
Ordinance, the two words are used, and
certainly not interchangeable. A "highway" is
the physical track along which an omnibus
runs, whilst a " route" appears to their
Lordships to be an abstract conception of a
line of travel between one terminus and
another, and to be something distinct from the
highway traversed".
A perusal of the judgment of the Privy Council in Kelani
Valley Motor Transit Co.’ s case (supra) shows that in
arriving at the conclusion set out above, it thought that it
was very significant : "that, every applicant for a licence
for an omnibus shall specify in his application particulars
of the route or routes on which it is proposed to provide a
"service" under the licence"; that, every licencing
authority had, under Section 54, to "specify on every
licence for an omnibus issued by that authority......
(a) the approved route or routes on which that
omnibus may Ply or stand for hire, and the
number, if any, assigned to each route under
S. 57 ;
(b) the two places which shall be the termini
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of each such route and
(c) the highway or the several highways to be
followed by the omnibus in proceeding from one
terminus to the other" ;
that, the Commissioner had to "specify in the licence the
route or routes on which the service is to be provided in
the licence". It is clear that these features, which were
present under the Ordinances interpreted by the Privy
Council, are also present under our Motor Vehicles Act.
Moreover, it is very difficult to conceive of anyone getting
a monopoly to use certain roads merely because of an
exclusive right to ply over a particular route given for the
purpose of providing particular services between given
termini. Some overlapping of routes,
639
particularly in a large city, whether it is Delhi, or
London, or New York or Colombo, is quite unavoidable where a
number of services between different termini have to be
provided. The routes are invariably numbered as they are
under the Bangalore Scheme. This fact was also considered
significant by the Privy Council in reaching its conclusion
which appears to conform to a general practice world over to
meet practical requirements and exigencies. It is
particularly useful in framing schemes which have to specify
what particular services are to be provided by State
agencies and which by other operators., Particular routes,
irrespective of overlapping over their portions, could be
separately numbered and indicated for particular classes of
service. This seems quite unavoidable if the convenience of
the public using the highways and elasticity in the framing
of schemes are to be governing factors. These
considerations are meant to be decisive both under Section
47 of the Act as well as under Section 68C of Chapter IV-A
of the Act.
One is, therefore, driven irresistibly to the conclusion
that an amendment in the definition of a route was
considered necessary by Act 56 of 1966 by Parliament as the
concept of "route" contained in Nikanth Prasad’s case
(supra) was highly inconvenient and unsatisfactory in
framing schemes of transport services for the benefit of the
public for whose use the highways are dedicated, and that it
preferred the definition of a route as an abstract "line of
travel" between two termini. In fact, this is exactly what
the definition said when it laid down in Section 2(28A) :
" route" means a line of ’travel which
specifies the highway which may be traversed
by a motor vehicle between one terminus and
another".
In the definition set out above, introduced by the Amending
Act 56 of 1966, there is a clear distinction between "the
line of travel"between two termini, which a route is, and
the highway which is to be traversed by a motor vehicle to
which a "route", as a "line of travel", may be assigned. To
identify a route as a line of travel with the actual road on
which vehicles traverse would, it appears to me, amount to
altering the definition set out above into : "a route is
that part of the highway on which a motor vehicle may
travel". If that was the real meaning there was no point in
introducing the concept of a "line of travel", which is
abstract, and mentioning the highway as the concrete surface
of the earth over which a vehicle traverses or the route
lies. What is super-imposed as a "line of travel" can only
be conceived of as an abstraction or a separable essence.
It seems to me that there is nothing in the working of the
provisions of Chapter IV-A of the Act which conflicts with
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the new definition lying down that a route is "a line of
travel" as an abstract concept. Section 68F of the Act,
which enables the curtailment of a route, does not appear to
me to have anything to do with the concept of a route. It
merely provides for the consequences of the enforcement of a
scheme which may involve the curtailment of a route or area
so as to fulfil
640
the requirements of the scheme, whatever may be the meaning
of "route". The curtailment of a route does not imply that
the route is to be necessarily equated with a highway or
that its curtailment eliminates overlapping of routes.
For all the reasons given above, I think that the new
definition of ,a route introduced by Act 56 of 1966 was not
intended to merely declare the law. which is a judicial
function. but to amend the law as ,declared by this Court in
Nilkanth Prasad’s case (supra) so as to bring it in line
with public needs and convenience. It answered a "felt
necessity". On this view of the matter, I think it could
not be urged that either Nilkanth Prasad’s case (supra) or
that S. Abdul Khader Saheb’s case (supra), which do not deal
with the law as we find it laid down in the amended
provision would stand in the way of the view taken in the
judgment of 17-5-1974.
I may now briefly dispose of the first of the two set of
reasons given for adopting what may be called the "abstract"
definition of "route" discussed above-that the provisions of
the Bangalore scheme fit in with such a definition. In
support of this approach, as already mentioned above, one
could cite Nilkanth Prasad’s case (supra) itself because
that decision had proceeded on the view that the definition
of a route must vary with the legal provisions to be
interpreted. If each scheme embodies a set of rules which
have the force of law it is possible for the term "route" to
bear a different meaning under each separate scheme unless
there is Some statutory provision which prevents this from
being done. I have already considered the statutory
provision which has, in my opinion, introduced an abstract
concept of a "route" even though it is linked with a highway
so that the two routes may be different, even when the
termini are identical, if the highway specified and to be
traversed are different. The specification of the
termini .as well as of intermediate stations is intended to
indicate only the direction to be followed or the high way
to be traversed. It does not mean that the route is to be
identified with a highway to be traversed taking a route.
This view seems to me to be borne out by the provisions of
the rules 3 and 4 framing the schemes and also by the
contents of the Bangalore scheme.
in reaching a conclusion about the meaning of the term
"route" to be found in the Bangalore scheme, the judgment of
17-5-1974 shows that this Court accepted the argument
advanced on behalf of the private inter-State operators
that. the failure to specify their names in entries against
heading 4, as required by Rule 4, indicated that they were
not considered by the framers of the scheme to be plying on
any of the notified routes at.all. In other words, although
they were plying on overlapping portions of notified routes,
yet, the scheme treated them as persons, not plying on the
notified routes. The entry actually was that only State
owned vehicles were plying on notified routes. This meant
that the concept of the route in the minds of the framers of
the scheme was an abstract one of service between two
termini only with ,certain given intermediate stations
indicating the directions to be taken
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641
by the line of travel and that they did not Consider mere
user of overlapping portions of routes by private operators,
who were actually already there, as provision of services on
those routes.
To counter this argument in the cases decided on 17-5-1974,
as in the case before us, learned Counsel for the appellant
Corporation tries to contend that private operators had been
introduced only after the scheme had come into force in
1960. This assertion is based on no evidence whatsoever.
On the other hand all the probabilities of the case are
against the correctness of such a sweeping claim. The whole
scheme governs according to the copy of it handed in by the
learned Counsel of the Appellant Corporation 94 routes
including a very large number of routes starting from
Bangalore and others from Mysore City. It seems quite
inconceivable that in 1960 no private state carriages were
providing any service on any of the roads covered by ninety
four routes. The only rational explanation of the statement
that only State transport services ran on these routes in
1960 is that routes were identified by their termini and
intermediate stations. The-highways were to be specified to
distinguish them from and not to identify them with routes.
The two concepts were different.
Furthermore route No. 39 is mentioned merely as "Mysore
City, Service". In other words it is described as a
"service" which is air abstract concept. in column 3 meant
or intermediate stations in the statement annexed to the
scheme occur the words : "all routes in the city of Mysore
and its suburbs". Now "Mysore City Service" could not
conceivably be any highway. The entries in column 3 of the
statement are not of intermediate stations but "all routes
in the city of Mysore and its suburbs". If the intention
was that all the roads in the city of Mysore were reserved
exclusively for the use of’ vehicles of the State Transport
Undertaking it would completely paralyse the business of all
private operators who could not enter Mysore City at all. I
do not think that we could adopt such an unreasonable
interpretation of the Bangalore scheme. If that was the
intention of its framers they should have clearly said so.
in that case the constitutional validity of such a provision
could be considered because the. constitution postulates the
exercise of all power including legislative power,
reasonably and for satisfying the purposes for which it is
meant. The restriction or deprivation could not be
excessive or more than what was needed to serve the purpose
for which it was to be, imposed. Section 68C of the Act
restricts schemes to be framed under it to purposes given
there. A scheme of complete exclusion of private operators
from any number of "routes, as defined by Sec. 2(28A) and
explained above, could satisfy these tests. But, their
complete exclusion from the user of certain highways may
violate Article 19(1) (g) of the Constitution in addition to
failing outside the purview of’ Section 68C of the Act. It
is a well established rule of construction that, even where
two alternative interpretations are equally open, the one
which avoids an invalidity should prevail. This mode of
construction is only an application of the principle :
utres magis valeat quam pereat,
642
It therefore,appears to me that the difficulties mentioned
above could only be overcome by accepting the view that both
the introduction of a new definition of route by Act 56 of
1966 as well as the provisions of the Bangalore scheme are
based upon a definition of a "route" which coincides with
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the view taken of very similar provisions by the Privy
Council in the Kelani Valley Motor Transit Co.’s ,case
(supra). If we were to accept this concept of a route the
mere overlapping of some portions of a route, whether it
falls in class (a) or class (b) of the routes mentioned
against heading 3 of the Bangalore ’Scheme, would not debar
a private operator from plying on his own but different
route which is not notified at all.
An objection to the meaning of the term "route" adopted by
me is that, if it was accepted, the provisions of a scheme
could be defeated ’by creating almost wholly overlapping but
very slightly longer or shorter routes. I have no doubt
that, if malafide attempts were made to deliberately
circumvent provisions of a scheme, neither transport
authorities nor Courts would allow them to succeed. it was
for this reason that the State Transport Tribunal had
evolved its own formula that overlapping beyond five miles
should not be permitted. This limit set by it did not, in
my opinion, contravene any provision of the scheme which is
silent on the matter. in any case, I do not see why Courts
and not those who can fill up gaps by amending a scheme
should ’be called upon to convert into a prohibition what
seems, on grounds given above, to be permitted to citizens
as incidents of their rights to use highways.
For all the reasons given above, I see no reason whatsoever
to take a different view from the one I took in the judgment
of 17-5-1974. The result is that I would dismiss this
appeal with costs.
ORDER
In view of the majority decision, we allow the appeal and
direct the Regional Transport Authority to comply with the
requirements of the Scheme as stated by us in respect of any
permit granted or in respect of renewal of any such permit
made in favour of the third respondent ,during the pendency
of this appeal.
M.K.
643