Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
G.J. FERNANDEZ
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MYSORE & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/04/1967
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N. (CJ)
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N. (CJ)
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1753 1967 SCR (3) 636
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1975 SC1331 (24)
R 1988 SC1681 (18)
R 1989 SC2138 (99)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Arts. 14 and 162-Article 162,
if confers power on State Government to make rules-
Administrative instructions-Effect of violation.
HEADNOTE:
Sealed tenders were submitted to the Chief Engineer of the
P.W.D. of the respondent-State for a certain construction.
The tender submitted by the appellant was the lowest
unconditional tender, whereas that of the third respondent,
though lower in amount was a conditional tender. None of
the tenders was accepted by the Chief Engineer. Instead, he
wrote to the third respondent asking him if he would
withdraw his conditions, and wrote to the other tenderers
asking them if they would undertake the work at the lowest
amount, that is the amount tendered by the third respondent.
The replies were to be submitted within a week of the
receipt of the letters by the tenderers, but the third
respondent submitted his reply. withdrawing his conditions,
beyond that time. The appellant wrote that his tender being
unconditional should have been accepted. The Chief Engineer
again wrote to the appellant asking him to send a
categorical reply and the appellant ’replied that he was not
prepared to reduce the amount. The third respondent wrote
thereafter asking for a higher payment, and so, the Major
Irrigation Projects Control Board, which was the final
accepting authority, directed that fresh negotiations should
be opened with all the tenderers. The Chief Engineer
therefore again called for tenders and wrote to all the
tenderer% if they were prepared to reduce the amounts. The
appellant did not send any revised quotations but protested
against the action taken by the Chief Engineer. As the
offers made by the others in their second tenders were not
advantageous to the Government, the Chief Engineer called a
meeting of all the tenderers and asked them if they were
prepared to make further reductions. ’MO appellant and some
other tenderers stated that they had no further reduction to
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make, two of the tenderers said that they would write later,
while the third respondent wrote immediately reducing the
amount of his tender. The Chief Engineer made a report to
the Technical SubCommittee which made its recommendations to
the Board and the Board accepted the third respondent’s
final tender.
The appellant filed a writ petition challenging the grant of
the contract to the third ’respondent on the grounds that :
(1) the rules in the Mysore Public Works Department Code
were not followed; and (2) there was a violation of Art. 14
because, (a) the Chief Engineer accepted the first offer of
the third respondent beyond the prescribed period of one
week, and (b) the Chief Engineer favored the third
respondent by entering into secret negotiations with him.
The High Court dismissed the petition.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD : (i) There is no statute nor any Article of the
Constitution which confers any authority on the State
Government to issue rules in matters with which the Code was
concerned. Article 162 of the Constitution only provides
that the State Government can take executive action in all
matters in which the legislature of the State can pass laws.
But
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the Article by itself does not confer any rule making power
on the State Government. Therefore, the instructions in the
Code were mere administrative instructions and even if there
was a breach thereof the appellant had no right to apply to
the Court for quashing orders in breach of such
instructions. [643B-E]
(2) There was no discrimination by the Chief Engineer.
(a) The period of seven days fixed by the Chief Engineer
for sending the reply was not a period of’ limitation, no
other tender’s reply was rejected an that ground, and even
the appellant was given extended time to reply, showing that
the period was not meant to be rigid. [644A-C]
(b) There was no evidence of any secret negotiations between
the chief Engineer and the third respondent. [644G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 218 of 1967.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated January 18, 1967 of
the Mysore High Court in Writ Petition No. 2426 of 1966.
S. K. Venkataranga lyengar, Shyamala pappu and Vineet
Kumar, for the appellant.
H. R. Gokhale, B. R. L. Iyengar, R. H. Dhebar and S. P.
Nayyar, for respondents Nos. 1 and 2.
The Judgment of the- Court was delivered by
Wanchoo, C.J. This is an appeal on a certificate granted by
the Mysore High Court and arises in the following circum-
stances. Tenders were called for construction of the right
bank masonary dam called "Hidkal Dam" by the Public Works
Department, Irrigation Projects, of the State of Mysore.
The tenders were to be submitted to the, Chief Engineer of
the department. Among, the tenderers was the appellant.
Another tenderer was respondent No. 3 before us. Eventually
the contract was granted by the Major Irrigation Projects
Control Board (hereinafter referred to as the Board) on
November 5, 1966 to respondent No. 3. The appellant
challenged the grant of contract to respondent No. 3 and
prayed for quashing the resolution of the Board mainly on
two grounds, namely, (i) that the rules in the Mysore Public
Works Apartment Code (hereinafter referred to as the Code)
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were not followed, and (ii) that there was unequal treatment
between the various tenderer,, which was in violation of
Art. 14 of the Constitution.
Most of the facts are not in dispute and we shall narrate
them in some detail, as they are necessary for the purpose
of determining whether there was any breach of Art. 14 of
the Constitution. A notification was issued on April 4, 1966
for the contract on question calling for sealed tenders, the
estimated cost of the contract being 230.44 lakhs. The
estimated quanti
638
ties of several items of work were stated in the tender
documents and tenderers were required to quote their rates
for various items of work and the amount for each item on
the basis of the said estimated quantities. The
notification also said that conditional tenders were liable
to be rejected at the discretion of the competent authority
without assigning any reason therefore. The notification
further said that the competent authority reserved the power
to reject all or any of the tenders without assigning any
reason therefore.
Nine sealed tenders were received in response to this noti-
fication and they were opened on July 30, 1966 in the pre-
sence of the tenderers or their representatives. The
appellant’s tender was unconditional and was for a total sum
of Rs. 2,22.72 lakhs, this being 3.64 per cent below the
estimated cost. Respondent No. 3 made a tender for Rs.
214.58 lakhs i.e. 7.16 per cent below the estimated cost but
he had stipulated certain conditions and his rates for
excavating soft and hard rock were rather strange. Another
tenderer was the National Projects Construction Corporation
Limited (hereinafter referred to as the Corporation) and it
submitted the tender for Rs. 229.34 lakhs i.e. 0.7773 per
cent below the estimated cost. The Corporation however did
not furnish the earnest money demanded and prayed for
exemption from such deposit, presumably on the ground that
it was a public corporation entirely owned by the Central
Government and State Governments. The Corporation also made
certain conditions to which it is unnecessary to refer, We
also do not think it necessary to refer to other six
tenderers in detail. It is enough to say that five of them
had made unconditional tenders while the sixth had made a
conditional tender, but the amounts tendered by them were
much above the amounts tendered by these three tenderers.
Soon thereafter on August 6, 1966, the appellant addressed a
letter to the Chief Engineer saying that his was the lowest
unconditional tender. and therefore the contract should be
granted to him. The appellant also pointed out in this
letter that the tender of respondent No. 3 was conditional
and the rates q noted for excavation of soft rock and hard
rock were speculative, and therefore, that tender,. though
it was the lowest in amount should be rejected. None of
these tenders was however accepted. On August 10, 1966, the
Chief Engineer addressed letters to all the nine tenderers
enquiring from all of them (except respondent No. 3) if they
would be agreeable to undertake the work for the lowest
amount tendered, namely, Rs. 214.58 lakhs. They were
requested to send their replies within a week and to keep
their tenders open till the end of November 1966. It was
also made clear in this letter that if no reply was
received in time it would be, understood that the tenderer
was not prepared
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to do the work at the rate indicated. The letter to
respondent No. 3 was however different inasmuch as his was
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the lowest tender and he was merely asked whether he was
prepared to withdraw the conditions he had attached to the
tender.
The appellant in his reply on August 16, 1966 contended that
his tender was the lowest as the tender of respondent No. 3
was liable to be rejected on the ground that it was
conditional and that there was no question therefore of
asking him to reduce the amount tendered by him to Rs.
214.58 lakhs. Thereupon lie received a letter from the
Chief Engineer requesting him again to give a categorical
reply whether he was prepared to reduce the amount to Rs.
214.58 lakhs and that this reply should reach the Chief
Engineer by August 31, 1966. Respondent No. 3 received the
letter of the Chief Engineer on August 19, 1966 and he
should have replied by August 26, 1966 but actually he sent
the reply on August 31, 1966 informing the Chief Engineer
that he had withdrawn his conditions and requesting that the
work might be entrusted to him. The appellant’s reply to
the letter of August 25, 1966 was not received by August 31,
1966. It was received on September 10, 1966, and the
appellant stated therein that he was not prepared to reduce
the amount tendered by him. We may indicate here that one
of the arguments before us is that there was discrimination
inasmuch as the Chief Engineer accepted the reply of
respondent No. 3 on August 31, 1966 even though it did not
come within 7 days as required. It way be added that this
point was not apparently taken up before the High Court in
this form.
On September 12, 1966, respondent No. 3 wrote a letter to
the Chief Engineer saying that he should be paid rupees
seven lakhs more above his tender in view of the fact that
the requisite quality of sand was not available at the site
and had to be brought from some distance. On September 21,
1966, a meeting of the Board was held and the Board directed
that fresh negotiations with all the tenderers should be
made to arrive at the rate most favourable to Government.
In consequence of this, letters were addressed to all the
nine tenderers by the Chief Engineer on September 27, 1966.
In this letter, the Chief Engineer suggested to the nine
tenderers whether they were prepared to accept one of two
alternatives namely-(i) to limit the overall cost of tender
to Rs. 214.58 lakhs and so arrange the internal item rates
that they should not be too speculative, i.e., too far above
or below the estimated rates in the tender documents, or
(ii) to confirm in writing whether the tenderer was prepared
to reduce his overall rates by 7.1 6 per cent below the
estimated rates pro rata on all items and thus bring the
tendered amount down to Rs. 214.58 lakhs. The tenderers
were also requested to indicate (in case they were not
prepared to reduce the tendered rate by 7.16 per cent) the
highest figure by which they would be prepared to reduce
the,
640
rate below the estimated cost. Finally tenderers were
requested to submit sealed tenders by October 12, 1966. On
October 4, 1966 the tenderers were informed that sealed
tenders would be opened on October 15, 1966.
The appellant did not send revised quotations and protested
against the negotiations sought to be carried on by the
Chief Engineer with the tenderers and accused the Chief
Engineer of trying to favour respondent No. 3. In that
connection the appellant addressed letters to the Chief
Minister, the Minister for Public ’Works, the Chief
Secretary to Government and the Secretary to the Government,
Public Works Department, complaining that the ;chief
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Engineer was acting contrary to rules and illegally with
regard to the appellant’s tender and starting negotiations
with the tenderers. On October 12, 1966, respondent No. 3
replied that it was extremely difficult for him to re-
arrange the internal item rates or to. reduce overall rates
by a certain percentage, as suggested in the circular
letter, and pleaded that his tender coupled with the
withdrawal of conditions might be accepted without modifica-
tion.
We now come to what happened on October 15, 19,06 for the
main plank of the appellant in support of his case for
contravention of Art. 14 is based thereon. The appellant’s
case is that after the tenders had been opened on October
15, 1966, the Chief Engineer carried on secret negotiations
with respondent No. 3 whom he was favouring and accepted
from him a letter secretly on that date by which respondent
No. 3 quoted an overall reduction of 4 per cent below the
estimated rates. The suggestion of the appellant is that
this was done to bring down the reduction by respondent No.
3 to a little above 3.64 per cent below the estimated cost
which. was what he had tendered from the very beginning and
thus the Chief Engineer helped respondent No. 3 to quote
rates which became the lowest by a paltry amount and
eventually succeeded in getting them approved by the
Technical Sub Committee and the Board. it may be mentioned
that before the Board considers any matter, there is a
Technical Sub Committee which considers that matter and
makes recommendation to the Board which is the final
accepting authority subject to confirmation- by Government.
It ,may also- be mentioned that at one stage in September
1966, the Technical Sub Committee had accepted the tender of
the Corporation, but on September, 22, 1966 the Board had
turned down that tender as it was unduly high and ordered
fresh negotiations. On November 2, 1966 the Chief Engineer
made a ,report which was placed before the Technical Sub
Committee on November 3, 1966. Eventually the Board
accepted the tender of respondent No. 3 at 4 per cent below
the estimated cost.
641
We may indicate here the second ground in support of the
contention that there was discrimination and this is based
on what happened on October 15, 1966 after the sealed
tenders were opened at 4 p.m. The case of the appellant was
that thereafter the Chief Engineer carried on secret
negotiations with respondent No. 3 and managed to get from
him the letter reducing the rates by 4 per cent below the
estimated cost so that his became the lowest tender and that
no such opportunity was given to other tenderers. The case
of the State on the other hand was that the Chief Engineer
called a meeting of all the tenderers at 7 p.m. on October
15, 1966, as in his opinion the offers made in the second
tenders were in no way advantageous to Government and had
not shown any substantial improvement over the earlier
tenders. At that meeting the Chief Engineer asked all the
tenderers if they wanted to make any further reductions or
withdraw any conditions, if so they should immediately give
it in writ’ Thereupon only two tenderers, namely, the
Corporation and one other, said that they would write again
while the appellant and five others said that they had no
further reduction to make. Respondent No. 3 Immediately
thereafter wrote the letter which was received that very
evening stating that he would be prepared to take the
contract unconditionally at 4 per cent below the estimated
cost. The Chief Engineer- also denied that there were any
secret negotiations, opened by him with respondent No. 3 on
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October 15 1966 or that he was favouring respondent No. 3 or
that he had, not invited all the tenderers to make the
reduction if they could.
The grievance of the appellant was that he would have been
equally prepared to reduce his tender by the paltry per-
centaee of 36 per cent and to take the contract at 4 per
cent below the estimated ’cost if that was all that was
required.But e contended that things were so manipulated in
favour ofrespondent No. 3 that he was eventually granted
the tender at only a little less than what the appellant had
offered andmuch above what the respondent No. 3 had
originally offered.so on November 14, 1966 the appellant
filed the writ petition inthe High Court based on the
two points already indicated.The State repudiated both the
contentions. The High Court dismissed the petition holding
firstly that there was no breach of the conditions of tender
contained in the Code, and secondly that there was no
discrimination which attracted the application of Art. 14.
The same two contentions have been urged on behalf of the
appellant before us. The first is that the way in which
tenders were dealt with from July 30, 1966 right up to
October 15. 1966 showed- that the rules contained in the
Code relating to tenders were not followed. Secondly, it is
urged that in any
7 Sup. C.T./67-11
642
case there was discrimination between the appellant and res-
pondent No. 3.
Taking first the contention with respect to the code not
being followed in the matter of tenders, the question that
arises is whether this Code consists of statutory rules or
not. The High Court has observed that the so-called rules
in the Code are not framed either under any statutory
enactment or under any provision of the Constitution. They
are merely in the nature of administrative instructions for
the guidance of the department and have been issued under
the executive power of the State. Even after having said
so, the High Court has considered whether the instructions
in the Code were followed in the present case or not.
Before however we consider the question whether instructions
in the Code have been followed or not, we have to decide
whether these instructions have no statutory force. If they
have no statutory force, they confer no right on any body
and a tenderer cannot claim any rights on the basis of these
administrative instructions. If these are mere
administrative instructions it may be open to Government to
take disciplinary action against its servants who do not
follow these instructions but non-observance of such
administrative instructions does not in our opinion confer
any right on any member of the public like a tenderer to ask
for a writ against Government by a petition under Art. 226.
The matter may be different if the instructions contained in
the Code are statutory rules. Learned counsel for the
appellant is unable to point out any statute under which
these instructions in the Code were framed. He also admits
that they are administrative instructions by Government to
its servants relating to the Public Works Department. But
his contention is that they are rules issued under Art. 162
of the Constitution. Now Art. 162 provides that "exec power
of a State shall extend to the matters with respect to which
the legislature of the State has power to make laws". This
Article in our opinion merely indicates the scope of the
executive power of the State; it does not ’confer any power
on the State Government to issue rules thereunder. As a
matter of fact wherever the Constitution, envisages issue of
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rules it has so provided in specific terms. We may, for
example, refer to Art. 309, the proviso to which lays down
in specific terms that the President or the Governor of a
State may make rules regulating the recruitment and the
conditions ,of service of persons appointed to services and
posts under the Union or the State. We are therefore of
opinion that Art. 162 does not confer any power on the State
Government to frame rules and it only indicates the scope of
the executive power of the State. Of course, under such
executive power, the State can give administrative
instructions to its servants how to act in ;certain
circumstances; but that will not make such instructions
643
statutory rules which-are justiciable in certain
circumstances. In order that such executive instructions
have the force of statutory rules it must be shown that they
have been issued either under the authority conferred on the
State Government by some statute or under some provision of
the Constitution providing therefore. It is not in dispute
that there is no statute which confers any authority on the
State Government to issue rules in matters with which the
Code is concerned; nor has any provision of the Constitution
been pointed’ out to us under which these instructions can
be issued as statutory rules except Art. 162. But as we
have already indicated, Art. 162 does not confer any
authority on the State Government to issue statutory rules.
It only provides ,for the extent and scope of the executive
power of the State Government, and that coincides with the
legislative ,power of the State legislature. Thus under
Art. 162, the State Government can take executive action in
all matters in which the legislature of the State can pass
laws. But Art. 162 itself does not confer any rule making
power on the State Government in that behalf. We are
therefore of opinion that instructions contained in the Code
are mere administrative instructions and are not statutory
rules. Therefore even if there has been any breach of such
executive instructions that does not confer any right on the
appellant to apply to the court for quashing orders in
breach of such instructions. It is unnecessary for us to
decide whether there has been in fact a breach of any
instruction contained in the Code with respect to tenders
and we do not therefore so decide. But assuming that there
has been any breach that is a matter between the State
Government and its servants and the State Government may
take disciplinary action against the servant concerned who
disobeyed these instructions. But such disobedience did not
confer any right on a person like the appellant, to come to
court for any relief based on the breach of these
instructions. It is for this reason that we are not
referring to the Code, though the High Court did consider
whether there was any breach of these administrative
instructions and came to the conclusion that there was no
breach. In the view we take it is unnecessary for us to
consider this, for we are of opinion that no claim for any
relief before a court of law can be founded by a member of
the public, like the appellant, on the breach of mere
administrative instructions.
Coming now to the argument under Art. 14, the first con-
tention is that though seven days’, time had expired on
August 26, 1966, the Chief Engineer took into account the
letter of respondent No. 3 which came to him on August 31,
1966 and that this is discriminatory. We have already
indicated that no such argument was apparently put forward
in the High Court; nor do we think that there is any
substance therein. The seven days
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644
period given is not a period of limitation and it cannot be
said that it was not open to the Chief Engineer to take into
account a letter which came a few days later. There might
have been some case of discrimination if at that stage i.e.
on August ’31, 1966, the Chief Engineer had rejected any
other tenderers reply on the ground that it was beyond seven
days or if some ones conditional tender was rejected on the
ground that it was not made unconditional by August 31,
1966. But no such thing happened and therefore there can be
no question of discrimination on the ’ground that the letter
of August 31, 1966 written by respondent No. 3 was acted
upon by the Chief Engineer. Besides, it appears that in a
letter dated August 25, 1966 the appellant was asked to
reply by August 31, 1966 and so it seems that the seven days
time fixed by the Chief Engineer for reply was not
absolutely rigid and that explains why he wrote to the
appellant also to send a final reply by August 31, 1966. We
are therefore of opinion that the fact that the Chief
Engineer acted on the letter of respondent No. 3 which came
to him on August 31, 1966 cannot be said to amount to
discrimination.
The other discrimination alleged is about what happened on
October 15, 1966. The case of the appellant is that some
negotiations were carried on by the Chief Engineer with
respondent No.. 3 alone after sealed tenders were opened at
4 p.m. on October 15, 1966. But the Chief Engineer has
clearly denied that and his case is that all the tenderers
were called by him at 7 p.m. and he asked them all whether
they were prepared to make any further reduction. His case
further is that six of them were not prepared to make any
change while two said that they would send a reply later.
His case further is that respondent No. 3 sent a letter the
same day reducing the rates 4 per cent below the estimated
cost. The High Court has accepted the Chief Engineer’s
version. The appellant does not deny that there was a
meeting with the Chief Engineer after the tenders were
opened at 4 p.m. on October 15, 1966. His first affidavit
on this point was vague and it was only in the reply
affidavit that he stated that the Chief Engineer had not
asked all the tenderers whether they would be prepared to
reduce rates further or withdraw conditions. Nothing has
been brought to our notice which would induce us to disagree
with the view taken by the High Court, namely, that the
Chief Engineers assertion that he asked all the tenderers
whether they were prepared to make any further reductions or
withdraw any conditions is correct. If that is so-and we
have no difficulty in accepting the Chief Engineers
assertion in that behalf-there is no question of
discrimination in connection with what happened on October
15, 1966.
The appeal therefore fails and is hereby dismissed with
costs: V.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
645