Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LAXMI KHANDSARI ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/03/1981
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
KOSHAL, A.D.
CITATION:
1981 AIR 873 1981 SCR (3) 92
1981 SCC (2) 600 1981 SCALE (1)455
CITATOR INFO :
F 1987 SC1867 (6)
ACT:
Essential Commodities Act 1955, S. 3 and Sugarcane
(Control) Order 1966, Clause 8-Notification by Cane
Commissioner-Imposition of a ban for a month and half on
operation of power crushers of Khandsari units in reserved
area of mill-Validity of-Exemption in favour of vertical
power crushers-Whether discriminatory and justified.
HEADNOTE:
In the State of Uttar Pradesh, sugarcane was produced
by the sugar mills through the ’hydraulic process’ and by
the power crushers through the ’open pan process’. Both the
mills as also the crushers drew their raw material, namely
sugarcane from sugarcane growers. In order to facilitate
production by the sugar mills, most of which were controlled
by the State, reserved area of the fields growing sugarcane
was fixed through out the State.
With a view to removing nation-wide shortage of sugar,
enhancing sugar production and achieving an equitable
distribution of the commodity so as to make it available to
consumers at reasonable rates, the Cane Commissioner in
exercise of the powers conferred under clause (8) of the
Sugarcane (Control) Order, 1966 issued a notification dated
9th October, 1980 which directed that no power crusher other
than vertical power crushers manufacturing gur or rab from
sugarcane grown on their own fields or a Khandsari unit or
any agent of such owner in the reserved area of a mill could
be worked until December 1, 1980.
The petitioners who were owners of power crushers of
Khandsari units and had taken out regular licences under the
Uttar Pradesh Khandsari Sugar Manufacturers Licensing Order
1967, assailed the notification which limited the ban to
work power crushers for a period of one month and a half
i.e. from October 9. 1980 to December 1, 1980 in writ
petitions to this Court. They contended: (1) The
notification, as also the Control Order under which it was
passed are violative of Article 19(1)(g) and the
restrictions contained therein do not contain the quality of
reasonableness. (2) Clause 8 of the Control Order under
which the notification had been issued suffers from the vice
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of excessive delegation of powers and is, therefore,
violative of Article 14 of the Constitution. The
Notification seeks to establish a monopoly in favour of the
sugar mills at the cost of the petitioners, and must be
struck down as being violative of Article 14. (3) There is
no rational nexus between the prohibition contained in the
Notification preventing the crushers of petitioners from
working them and the object sought to be achieved by it. (4)
Clause 8 of the Control Order does not contemplate a
complete prohibition of the production of an article but
envisages only a regulation of the period of hours of
working. (5) The Notification violates the principles of
natural justice inasmuch as it was passed without hearing
the petitioners whose rights were curtailed as they were put
completely out of production. (6) The impugned Notification
by imposing a prohibition against the working of the power
crushers amounts to a partial revocation of the licences
granted to the petitioners under clause 3 of the
93
Licensing Order and is, therefore violative of clause 11.
(7) The impugned Notification goes against the very spirit
and object of the Act of 1955 and in fact, frustrates the
equal distribution and production of sugar which was the
objective of the Notification.
On behalf of the respondent-State it was submitted
that: (1) An order passed under clause 8 of the Control
Order is of a legislative character and therefore the
question of the application of the principles of natural
justice, does not arise. (2) The notification does not
violate Article 14 or Article 19 because it is in public
interest and aimed at maintaining and securing proper and
equitable distribution of sugar. (3) The Notification is
justified by the fact that the recovery of sugar from
sugarcane in case of Khandsari units run by power crushers
is between 4 to 6 per cent whereas in the case of sugar
factories it ranges between 9-1/2 to 11-1/2 per cent, so
that utilisation of sugarcane in the case of mills is double
of that of the power crusher. (4) The Khandsari produced by
the crushers has got a very narrow sphere of consumption as
it is used mostly by halwais or villagers, whereas sugar
produced by the sugar mills is consumed in far larger
quantities by the public. The action taken in order to
protect national interest and distribution of sugar to the
entire country on rational basis cannot be said to be an
unreasonable restriction. (5) There is a marked difference
between the quality of Khandsari and that of sugar produced
by the mills in their character, specification, etc. (6) The
question of natural justice does not arise because the
crusher owners were fully aware of the situation and had
also knowledge of the considerations which prevailed with
the Government in stopping crushers for a short period in
order to boost production by the sugar mills and fix support
price for the sugarcane supplied to the mills. (7) Clause 8
of the Control Order uses the words period or working hours’
which are wide enough to embrace within their ambit a fixed
period of time covering more than a day as also hours of
work on any working day.
Dismissing the writ petitions and appeals,
^
HELD: The impugned Notification cannot be said to
contain the quality of unreasonableness but is per se fair
and reasonable. In so far as the word ’vertical’ used in the
Notification is concerned, it must be struck down as being
violative of Article 14. This, however, does not render the
entire Notification void because the word ’vertical’ is
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clearly severable from the other portions of the
Notification. All that has to be done is to read the
Notification void because the word ’vertical’ as a result of
which the exemptions from the ban will include all owners of
power crushers whether vertical or horizontal which
manufacture Gur or rab from sugarcane grown on their fields.
As the Notification has already spent its force, if any
order is passed in future, the Government will see that such
an invidious discrimination is not repeated. [134F; 124H-
125B]
1(i) Where a citizen complains of the violation of
fundamental rights contained in any of sub-clauses (a) to
(g) of Article 19 the onus is on the State to prove or
justify that the restraint or restrictions imposed on the
fundamental rights under clauses 2 to 6 of the Article are
reasonable. [104 C]
Saghir Ahmed v. The State of U.P. and Ors. [1955] 1
S.C.R. 707 and Mohammed Faruk v. State of Madhya Pradesh and
Ors. [1959] 1 S.C.C. 853.
94
(ii) Fundamental rights enshrined in Part III of the
Constitution are neither absolute nor unlimited but are
subject to reasonable restrictions which may be imposed by
the State in public interest under clauses 2 to 6 of Article
19. What are reasonable restrictions would naturally depend
on the nature and circumstances of the case, the character
of the statute, the object which it seeks to serve, the
existing circumstances, the extent of the evil sought to be
remedied as also the nature of restraint or restriction
placed on the rights of the citizen. No hard or fast rule of
universal application can be laid down, but if the
restriction imposed appear to be consistent with the
Directive Principles of State Policy they would have to be
upheld as the same would be in public interest and
manifestly reasonable. [105D-E, G]
(iii) Restrictions may be partial, complete, permanent
or temporary but they must bear a close nexus with the
object in the interest of which they are imposed. Sometimes
even a complete prohibition of the fundamental right to
trade may be upheld if the commodity in which the trade is
carried on is essential to the life of the community and the
said restriction has been imposed for limited period in
order to achieve the goal. Freezing of stocks of food-grains
in order to secure equitable distribution and availability
on fair prices have been held to be a reasonable
restriction. [105-106A, C]
Narendra Kumar and Ors. v. The Union of India and Ors.
[1960] 2 S.C.R. 375, M/s. Diwan Sugar and General Mills (P)
Ltd. and Ors. v. The Union of India, [1959] 2 Supp.
S.C.R.123 and The State of Rajsthan v. Nath Mal and Mitha
Mal, [1954] S.C.R. 982 referred to.
(iv) In determining the reasonableness of restrictions
imposed by law in the field of industry, trade or commerce,
the mere fact that some of the persons engaged in a
particular trade may incur loss due to the imposition of
restrictions will not render them unreasonable because it is
manifest that trade and industry pass through periods of
prosperity and adversity on account of economic, social or
political factors. In a free economy, controls have to be
introduced to ensure availability of consumer goods, like
food-stuffs, cloth or the like at a fair price and the
fixation of such a price cannot be said to be an
unreasonable restriction. [107-A-B]
(v) Where restrictions are imposed on a citizen
carrying on a trade or commerce in an essential commodity,
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the aspect of controlled economy and fair and equitable
distribution to the consumer at a reasonable price leaving
an appreciable margin of profit to the producer is
undoubtedly a consideration which does not make the
restriction unreasonable. [107 C]
State of Madras v. V.G. Row, [1960] 2 S.C.R. 375,
Mineral Development Ltd. v. The State of Bihar and Anr.,
[1960] 2 S.C.R. 609, Collector of Customs, Madras v.
Nathella Sampathu Chetty and Anr. [1962]3 S.C.R. 786 and
M/s. Diwan Sugar and General Mills (P.) Ltd. and Ors. v.
U.O.I. [1959] 2 Supp. S.C.R. 123 referred to.
(vi) A restriction on the right of a trader dealing in
essential commodities, or fixation of prices aimed at
bringing about distribution of essential commodities keeping
the consumers interests as the prime consideration cannot be
regarded as unreasonable. [110 C]
In the instant case, the Petitioners by rushing to
Court the moment the Notification was issued, deprived the
State as also themselves of the actual con-
95
sequences of the notification and the prejudice which it
really may have caused. They did not at all show any
patience in waiting for a while to find out if the
experiment functioned successfully and in the long run paid
good dividends. As the petitioners obtained stay orders the
experiment died a natural death and the Notification
remained ineffective. [111D-E]
Prag Ice and Oil Mills and Anr. etc. v. Union of India,
[1978] 3 S.C.R. 293, referred to.
(vii) In the case of essential commodities like sugar
the question of the economic production and distribution
thereof must enter the verdict of the Court in deciding the
reasonableness of the restrictions. In such cases even if
the margin of profit left to the procedure is slashed that
would not make the restriction unreasonable. The reason is
that such a trade or commerce is subject to rise and fall in
prices and other diverse factors, and if any measure is
taken to strike a just balance between the danger sought to
be averted and the temporary deprivation of the right of a
citizen to carry on his trade, it will have to be upheld as
reasonable restriction. [112 G-113A]
Shree Meenakshi Mills Ltd. v. U.O.I. [1974] 2 S.C.R.
398 and Saraswati Industrial Syndicate Ltd. v. U.O.I.[1975]
1 S.C.R. 956 referred to.
(viii) The restriction imposed by the Notification in
stopping the crushers for the period 10th October to 1st
December, 1980 is in public interest and bears a reasonable
nexus to the object which is sought to be achieved, namely,
to reduce shortage of sugar and ensure a more equitable
distribution of this commodity. Taking an overall picture of
the history of sugar production it cannot be said that the
stoppage of sugar crushers for a short period is more
excessive than the situation demanded.
Madhya Bharat Cotton Association Ltd. v. Union of India
and Anr. A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 634 referred to.
2(i) The Control Order has been passed under the
authority of section 3 of the Act of 1955 which has been
held to be constitutionally valid and not in any way
discriminatory so as to attract Article 14. The Control
Order itself contains sufficient guidelines, checks and
balances to prevent any misuse or abuse of the power. The
Central Government under clause 8 on whom the power is
conferred is undoubtedly a very high authority who must be
presumed to act in a just and reasonable manner. [119 E-F]
Chinta Lingam and Ors. v. Government of India and Ors.
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[1971] 2 S.C.R. 871 and V.C. Shukla v. State (Delhi Admn.),
[1980] 3 S.C.R. 500.
(ii) There was no question of creating any monopoly to
benefit the mills. A very large majority of the mills were
controlled by the State or co-operative societies and only a
small fraction of them were working in the private sector.
In view of the low working cost of the crushers they sought
to outcompete the mills and deprive them of the requisite
amount of sugarcane which they should have got. It was not
only just but also essential to boost the production of the
factories so that while sugar may be produced on a large
scale and sugarcane may not be wasted which would have been
the case if most of the sugarcane went
96
to the crusher. The recovery of sugarcane juice by the mills
is double that by the crushers and if the latter were
allowed to operate the wastage would have been almost 50 per
cent which could have been avoided if sugarcane was allowed
to be utilised by the mills. [121 E-G]
(iii) If in the larger public interest it becomes
necessary to compel the sugarcane growers to supply
sugarcane to the mills at a particular rate in order to meet
a national crisis, no person can be heard to say that his
rights are taken away in an unjust or discriminatory
fashion. Personal or individual interests must yield to the
larger interests of community. This was the philosophy
behind the passing of the Act of 1955. [123 F-G]
3. It has not been proved that there is any real
distinction between a vertical and a horizontal power
crusher. Both are regarded as falling in the same class. The
Notification by exempting vertical power crushers and
prohibiting horizontal power crushers is clearly
discriminatory and the discrimination is not justified by
any rational nexus between the prohibition and the object
sought to be achieved. [124 G]
4. (i) Clause 8 used the words ’period or hours to be
worked’. A plain reading of this expression reveals that the
words ’period’ and ’hours’ have been used to connote to
different aspects. Clause 8 contemplates regulation of
working of the sugar by two separate methods-(1) Where only
hours of work per day are to be regulated or fixed, and (2)
the word ’period’ which has nothing to do with the hours to
be worked but it refers to another category of regulation,
namely, whether a crusher is to run or not for a particular
period of time. [125 D-E]
In the instant case, the Notification has resorted to
the first category, viz. the ’period’ of the working of the
crushers, that is about one and a half month, and has not at
all touched or impinged upon the working hours of the
crushers. If, however, the notification had fixed certain
hours of the day during which only the crushers could work,
then the Notification would have resorted to the alternative
mode of regulation, which obviously has not been done. The
impugned Notification is, therefore, wholly consistent with
the provisions contained in clause 8 of the Control Order.
[125 G-126A]
5. (i) Two prominent features exclude the rules of
natural justice in the instant case. Section 3 of the Act of
1955 under which the Control Order was passed really covers
an emergent situation so as to meet a national crisis,
involving the availability or distribution of any essential
commodity which may make it necessary to restrict or control
the business carried on by a citizen. There was an acute
shortage of sugar which was not made available to consumers
at reasonable rates and the situation caused serious
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dissatisfaction among the people. Nothing short of immediate
and emergent measures taken to solve this crisis would have
eased out the situation. If hearing was to be given to so
may owners of power crushers, it would have completely
defeated and frustrated the very object not only of the
Notification but also of the Act of 1955 and created
complications which may have resulted in a further
deterioration of an already serious situation. If the rules
of natural justice were not applied in such an emergent
case, the petitioners cannot be heard to complain. Afterall,
the Notification directed stoppage of operation only for a
very short period and the petitioners would have had an
opportunity of recouping their loss after they were allowed
to function because the proportion of consumption of
Khandsari Sugar was limited.
97
The petitioners were, therefore, not seriously prejudiced
but have rushed to this Court rather prematurely. [128 B-C;
F-129 A]
Mohinder Singh Gill and Anr. v. The Chief Election
Commissioner, New Delhi and Ors. [1978] 2 S.C.R. 272, Maneka
Gandhi v. U.O.I. [1978] 2 S.C.R. 621, S.L. Kapoor v.
Jagmohan, [1980] 4 S.C.C. 379 and Prag Ice and Oil Mills and
Anr. v. U.O.I. [1978] 3 S.C.R. 293, referred to.
(ii) The impugned Notification is a legislative
measure. The rules of natural justice therefore stand
completely excluded and no question of hearing arises. The
passing of the notification was a trial and error method
adopted to deal with a very serious problem. [129 G-H, 130
F]
Chairman, Board of Mining Examination and Anr. v.
Ramjee, [1977] 2 S.C.R. 904, Joseph Beauhernais v. People of
the State of Illinois, 96 L.ed. 919 at 930 and Bates v. Lord
Hailsham of St. Marylebone and Ors. [1972] 1 W.L.R. 1373; at
1378 referred to.
6. A revocation of licence means that the licence has
not been suspended but cancelled for all times to come
entailing civil consequences and complete abolition of the
right for the exercise of which the licence was granted. A
temporary suspension of the working of the crushers owned by
the petitioners cannot amount to a revocation, either
complete or partial. The proviso to sub-clause (2) of clause
11 of the Control Order does not at all envisage a partial
or periodical revocation of a licence. The proviso comes
into play only if a licence is revoked or cancelled once for
all. The proviso is wholly inapplicable to the facts of the
instant case. [132 C-D]
State of Maharashtra v. Mumbai Upnagar Gramodyog Sangh,
[1969] 2 S.C.R. 392.
7. The Notification ex-facie cannot be said to have
been passed without due care and deliberation. The impugned
Notification having been passed under section 3 of the Act
it fulfils all the conditions contained therein, viz. it is
expedient for maintaining or increasing the supply of an
essential commodity, namely sugar which is included in
clause (e) of the section 3 of the Act of 1955 and it
regulates the supply and distribution of the essential
commodities of the trade and commerce. Neither the Control
Order nor the impugned Notification is against the tenor and
spirit of section 3. It is manifestly clear from the
circumstances disclosed that it is in pursuance of the aim
and object for which section 3 was enshrined in the Act of
1955 that the Control Order and the Notification were
promulgated. [133E; H-134 C]
8. In case Government decides to impose a ban in future
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on the power crushers or other units, a bare minimum hearing
not to all the owners of Khandsari units but to only one
representative of the Association representing them, and
getting their views, would help the Government in
formulating its policy. Even if an emergent situation
arises, a representation against the proposed action may be
called for from such Association and considered after giving
the shortest possible notice. [135A-B]
9. Whenever any steps for banning production is taken,
the Government has to evolve some procedure to detect the
defaulters and ensure compliance of the baning order. [136
C]
98
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petitions Nos. 5637-
41,5643-45, 5646-47,5649-51, 5597-98,5553-67,5609-11,5516-
20,5623-28,5657, 5673-74,5702-23,5668, 5659-67,5733, 5740-
42, 5782-84, 5763-64, 5762,5747-52,5779-81,5745, 5785, 5737-
39, 5841-43, 5786-5797, 5861-62 and 5863-64 of 1980.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution.)
AND
Civil Appeal No. 2734 of 1980.
Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 12.11.1980 of the Allahabad High Court in W.P.No.
3115/80.
R.A. Gupta for the Petitioners in WPs.5637-41/80,
5797,5733/80 and CA No.2734/80.
A.P.S. Chauhan, Roopendra Singh Gajraj Singh, and C.K.
Ratnaparkhi for the Petitioners in WP 5762/80.
B.S. Chauhan, Birj Bihari Singh Sridhar for the
Petitioner in WP 5745/80.
Rameshwar Dial and Sarwa Mitter for the Petitioners in
WPs 5782-84/80
R.K. Garg, S.N. Kacker, R.K. Jain and R.P. Singh for
the Petitioners in WPs 5553-5567, 5616-5620, 5646, 5647,
5750-52, 5779-81,5623-28,5646-47, 5649-5651,5643-45,5702 to
5723, 5673-5674,5659 to 5667,5740-42, 5737-39 and 5841-
43/80.
R.P. Singh for the Petitioners in WPs 5609-11 & 5597-
98/80.
Soli J.Sorabjee, Arvind Minocha and Mrs. Veena Minocha
for the Petitioners in WP 5661/70.
Mohan Behari Lal for the Petitioners in WPs 5785/80,
5786/80, and 5657/80.
A.K. Gupta for the Petitioners in WPs 5763-64/80.
Lal Narain Sinha Att. Genl., S.C. Maheshwari Addl.
Advocate General (U.P.), O.P. Rana, Mrs.Shobha Dikshit for
the Respondents in all the matters.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by,
FAZAL ALI, J. Inspired by the objective of removing
nation-wide shortage of sugar and for the purpose of
enhancing sugar production
99
in order to achieve an equitable distribution of the
commodity so as to make it available to consumers at
reasonable rates and thereby relieving the sugar famine, the
Cane Commissioner, Government of Uttar Pradesh by virtue of
a Notification dated 9th October, 1980, acting under clause
8 of the Sugarcane (Control) Order, 1966 (hereinafter
referred to as the ’Control Order’) directed that no power
crusher, with certain exceptions, of a khandsari unit or any
agent of such owner in the reserved area of a mill could be
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worked until December 1, 1980. The exact contents of the
Notification may be extracted thus:
"Lucknow, Thursday 9th October 1980
In exercise of the powers under clause 8 of the
Sugarcane (Control) Order, 1966 read with the Central
Government, Ministry of Food & Agriculture, Community
Development and Cooperation (Department of Food),
Government of India Order No. GSR 122/Ess.
Comm/Sugarcane dated July 16, 1966, I, Bhola Nath
Tiwari, Cane Commissioner, Uttar Pradesh hereby direct
that no owner of power Crusher (other than those
vertical power crushers which manufacture Gur or Rab
from Sugarcane grown on their own fields) or a
Khandsari Unit or any agent of such owner shall in any
reserved area, of any Sugar Mill work the Power
Crusher, or the Khandsari Unit prior to December 1,
1980 during the Year 1980-81.
By Order
Bhola Nath Tiwari
Cane Commissioner
Uttar Pradesh"
The Control Order was passed by the Central Government
in exercise of the powers conferred on it by s.3 of the
Essential Commodities Act, 1955 (hereinafter referred to as
the ’Act of 1955’). In order to understand the contentions
raised by the parties it may be necessary to analyse the
prominent features of the above Notification with reference
to the situation it was intended to meet.
It is not disputed that sugar was being produced in the
State of U.P. by the sugar mills through hydraulic process
and by the power crushers through what is known as the ’open
pan process’. Both the mills as also the crushers drew their
raw material, namely, sugarcane, from the sugarcane growers.
In order to facilitate production by the sugar mills, most
of whom were controlled by the State, a reserved area of the
fields growing sugarcane was fixed throughout the State
100
The Notification applied only to the reserved areas of a
mill and not to any other areas. In other words, any area
which fell outside the reserved area was not affected by the
Notification and the power crushers situated in that area
could still manufacture Khandsari by the open pan process.
Thus, it would be seen that the ban imposed by the
notification was confined only to a particular area in the
State of U.P.
Secondly, the Notification limited the ban to work
power crushers only to a short period of one month and a
half i.e., from October 9, 1980 to December 1, 1980.
Thirdly, (and it has also not been disputed) the owners of
power crushers of khandsari units, who are the petitioners
in these cases, had taken out regular licences under the
U.P. Khandsari Sugar Manufacturers Licensing Order of 1967
(hereinafter referred to as the ’Licensing Order’). It,
therefore, logically follows that the power crushers owned
or worked by the conditions of the licences under which they
were working the crushers. Fourthly, what was prohibited by
the Notification was only the manufacture of khandsari while
the production of gur or rab from sugarcane grown in the
fields belonging to the owners of the crushers was left out
of the ambit of the Notification.
We have mentioned these essential features of the
Notification because the most important argument put forward
before us by the counsel for the petitioners has been that
it imposes unreasonable restrictions on the right of the
petitioners under Art. 19(1)(g) of the Constitution to carry
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on their trade namely, production of khandsari. A subsidiary
argument buttressing the main contention was that the
Notification intends to create a monopoly in favour of the
sugar mills at the cost of the crushers owned by the
petitioners and is, therefore, clearly violative not only of
Art. 19(1)(g) but also of Art. 14 of the Constitution. We
would, however, deal with this aspect of the matter when we
examine the contentions raised by the counsel for the
parties.
The Attorney-General, appearing for the Union of India,
and Mr. Maheshwari, Additional Advocate-General appearing
for the State of U.P., contended that, decision to ban the
power crushers of the petitioners was taken as a part of a
high powered policy to boost the production of sugar which
had fallen during the year 1979-80 with the result that in
the current year the country faced a great sugar famine. As
the situation called for some positive action to increase
the production, the matter having been discussed at the 34th
Annual Convention of
101
Sugar Technologists of India, it was decided to ban the
production of khandsari by the power crushers for a limited
period.
A large number of documents in the nature of
affidavits, counter- affidavits, reports and books have been
filed by the counsel for both the parties in support of
their respective contentions. We might also mention here
that the Notification has since spent its force and, in
fact, was not carried into effect because immediately after
it was issued the present writ petitions were filed in this
Court and the petitioners obtained stay of the operation of
the Notification from this Court. The Attorney-General,
however, insisted that the matter should be finally decided
so that if the Central Government wants to take any steps of
this kind in future it may be aware of the correct
constitutional or legal position. The petitioners also
insisted that the constitutional and legal questions
involved in these cases may be decided even though our
decision may be more or less of an academic value.
This brings us now to the various contentions raised by
counsel for the petitioners and the respondents. As the
Notification has already spent its force, we propose to deal
only with the important and relevant contentions that have
been advanced before us.
The counsel for the petitioners headed by Mr. Garg, Mr.
Mridul and others raised the following constitutional points
before us :-
(1) The Notification, as also the Control Order
under which it was passed are clearly violative of of
Art. 19(1)(g) and the restrictions purported to be
placed on the right of the petitioners not do contain
the quality of reasonableness.
(2) Clause 8 of the Control Order under which the
impugned Notification has been issued suffers from the
vice of excessive delegation of powers and is,
therefore, violative of Article 14 of the Constitution.
By the same token, as the impugned Notification seeks
to establish a monopoly in favour of the sugar mills at
the cost of the petitioners, invidious discrimination
is writ large on the very face of the Notification
which must be struck down as being violative of Art.
14.
(3) There is absolutely no rational nexus between
the prohibition contained in the Notification
preventing the crushers of the petitioners from working
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them and the object sought to be achieved by it. Thus,
the State had selected the petitioners for hostile
discrimination between one segment
102
and another of persons engaged in the purchase of
sugarcane, its sale and production of sugar without
striking a just balance between the manufacturers of
gur, khandsari and sugar. India lives in villages and
it was not understandable why the Central Government
was bent on reducing the support price of sugarcane
which was adversely affecting the sugarcane growers
because while the mills were not able to pay a
reasonable price the crushers were able to pay a
handsome price for the sugarcane supplied to them by
the growers. When tested for reasonableness, therefore,
the Notification completely fails.
(4) Clause 8 of the Control Order does not
contemplate a complete prohibition of the production of
an article but envisages only a regulation of the
period or hours of working.
(5) The Notification violates the principles of
natural justice inasmuch as it was passed without
hearing the petitioners whose valuable rights were
curtailed as they were put completely out of production
even though for a short period.
(6) The impugned Notification violative of clause
11 of the Control Order itself inasmuch as the
prohibition against the working of the power crushers
amounts to partial revocation of the licences of the
petitioners granted to them under clause 3 of the
Licensing Order. Clause 11 of the Control Order clearly
provides that no adverse orders could be passed against
any manufacturer without hearing him.
(7) Even though the impugned Notification purports
to have been passed under the Control Order which
itself was passed under s. 3 of the Act of 1955 yet if
the notification is properly considered and the
mischief it causes is borne in mind, it goes against
the very spirt and object of the Act of 1955 and, in
fact, frustrates the equal distribution and production
of sugar which apparently seems to be the objective of
the impugned notification.
The Attorney-General and the Additional Advocate
General appearing for the Union of India and the State of
U.P. respectively countered the submissions made by the
petitioners on the following grounds:
(1) An order passed under clause 8 of the Control
Order is of a legislative character and therefore the
question of the
103
application of the principles of natural justice to it
does not arise.
(2) The Notification does not violate Art. 14 or
19 because it is in great public interest and is aimed
at maintaining and securing proper and equitable
distribution of sugar in view of the nation wide
shortage of the commodity.
(3) The Notification is justified by the fact that
recovery of sugar from sugarcane in case of khandsari
units run by power crushers is between 4 to 6 per cent
whereas in the case of sugar factories it ranges
between 9 1/2 to 11 1/2 per cent, so that utilisation
of sugarcane in the case of mills is double that of the
power crushers. In these circumstances, khandsari units
and mills belong to two different classes which cannot
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be said to be similarly situate so as to attract Art.
14 (vide pp. 69-70 of W.P .5565-5567 of 1980 Bhagwati
Sugar Industry’s case).
(4) The khandsari produced by the crushers has got
a very narrow sphere of consumption as it is used
mostly by halwais or villagers, whereas sugar produced
by the sugar mills is consumed in far larger quantities
by the public in India generally and in foreign
countries after export. Therefore, the sugar mills fall
within a special class and the question of hostile
discrimination does not arise. Similarly, the action
taken in order to protect national interests and
distribution of sugar to the entire country on a
rational basis cannot be said to be an unreasonable
restriction.
(5) There is a marked difference between the
quality of khandsari and that of sugar produced by the
mills in their character, specification, etc., which is
evident from the various reports filed by the State.
(6) The question of natural justice does not arise
because the crusher owners were fully aware of the
situation and had also knowledge of the considerations
which prevailed with the Government in stopping
crushers for a short period in order to boost
production by the sugar mills and fix support price for
the sugarcane supplied to the mills. However, as the
Notification has expired, if proper guidelines are laid
down by the Court, before passing a fresh order the
State will certainly hear the petitioners in order to
know their point of view.
104
(7) Clause 8 of the Control Order uses the words
‘period’ or working hours’ which are wide enough to
embrace within their ambit a fixed period of time
covering more than a day as also hours of work on any
working day.
We might also mention that some of the sugarcane
growers have supported the arguments advanced by the
petitioners. We now proceed to scrutinise and examine the
contentions of the counsel for the petitioners.
On the contention according to which the impugned
notification is violative of Art. 19(1)(g), it may be
necessary to dwell in some detail. It is no doubt well
settled that where a citizen complains of the violation of
fundamental rights contained in sub-clause (g) of clause (1)
of Art 19 or for that matter in any of sub clauses (a) to
(g) thereof, the onus is on the State to prove or justify
that the restraint or restrictions imposed on the
fundamental rights under clauses 2 to 6 of the Article are
reasonable. In the instant case, we are mainly concerned
with sub-clauses 4, 5 and 6 of Art.19. As far back as 1955
this Court in Saghir Ahmad v. The State of U.P, and Ors.(1)
made this position very clear and observed as follows :-
"There is undoubtedly a presumption in favour of
the constitutionality of a legislation. But when the
enactment on the face of it is found to violate a
fundamental right guaranteed under article 19(1) (g) of
the Constitution, it must be held to be invalid unless
those who support the legislation can bring it within
the purview of the exception laid down in clause (5) of
the article. If the respondents do not place any
materials before the Court to establish that the
legislation comes within the permissible limits of
clause (6), it is surely not for the appellants to
prove negatively that the legislation was not
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reasonable and was not conducive to the welfare of the
community."
A similar view was taken in Mohammed Faruk v. State of
Madhya Pradesh and Ors.(2) where this Court, speaking
through Shah, J. reiterated the position mentioned above in
the following words:
"When the validity of a law placing restriction
upon the exercise of fundamental rights in Article
19(1) is challenged, the onus of proving to the
satisfaction of the Court that the restriction is
reasonable lies upon the State."
105
We, therefore fully agree with the contention advanced
by the petitioners that where there is a clear violation of
Art. 19(1)(g), the State has to justify by acceptable
evidence, inevitable consequences or sufficient materials
that the restriction, whether partial or complete, is in
public interest and contains the quality of reasonableness.
This proposition has not been disputed by the counsel for
the respondents, who have, however, submitted that from the
circumstances and materials produced by them the onus of
proving that the restrictions are in public interest and are
reasonable has been amply discharged by them.
This brings us to the main question as to the
circumstances under which restriction imposed by the State
can be said to contain the quality of reasonableness. For
this purpose, almost all the decisions of this Court on the
subject have been placed before us and it may be necessary
to notice those of them which have a close bearing on the
point at issue.
It is abundantly clear that fundamental rights
enshrined in Part III of the Constitution are neither
absolute nor unlimited but are subject to reasonable
restrictions which may be imposed by the State in public
interest under clauses 2 to 6 of Art.19. As to what are
reasonable restrictions would naturally depend on the nature
and circumstances of the case, the character of the statute,
the object which it seeks to serve, the existing
circumstances, the extent of the evil sought to be remedied
as also the nature of restraint or restriction placed on the
rights of the citizen. It is difficult to lay down any hard
or fast rule of universal application but this Court has
consistently held that in imposing such restrictions the
State must adopt an objective standard amounting to a social
control by restricting the rights of the citizens where the
necessities of the situation demand. It is manifest that in
adopting the social control one of the primary
considerations which should weigh with the Court is that as
the directive principles contained in the Constitution aim
at the establishment of an egalitarian society so as to
bring about a welfare state within the frame-work of the
Constitution, these principles also should be kept in mind
in judging the question as to whether or not the
restrictions are reasonable. If the restrictions imposed
appear to be consistent with the directive principles of
State policy they would have to be upheld as the same would
be in public interest and manifestly reasonable.
Further, restrictions may by partial, complete,
permanent or temporary but they must bear a close nexus with
the object in the
106
interest of which they are imposed. Sometimes even a
complete prohibition of the fundamental right to trade may
be upheld if the commodity in which the trade is carried on
is essential to the life of the community and the said
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restriction has been imposed for a limited period in order
to achieve the desired goal.
Another important consideration is that the
restrictions must be in public interest and are imposed by
striking a just balance between the deprivation of right and
the danger or evil sought to be avoided. Thus freezing of
stocks of food-grains in order to secure equitable
distribution and availability on fair prices have been held
to be a reasonable restriction in the cases of Narendra
Kumar and Ors. v. The Union of India and Ors.(1) M/s. Diwan
Sugar and General Mills (P) Ltd. and Ors v. The Union of
India and The State of Rajasthan v. Nath Mal and Mitha
Mal(3).
These are some of the general principles on the basis
of which the quality of reasonableness of a particular
restriction can be judged and have been lucidly adumbrated
in State of Madras v. V.G. Row’s(4) case. Another important
test that has been laid down by this Court is that
restrictions should not be excessive or arbitrary and the
Court must examine the direct and immediate impact of the
restrictions on the rights of the citizens and determine if
the restrictions are in larger public interest while
deciding the question that they contain the quality of
reasonableness.
In such cases a doctrinaire approach should not be made
but care should be taken to see that the real purpose which
is sought to be achieved by restricting the rights of the
citizens is subserved. This can be done only by examining
the nature of the social control, the interest of the
general public which is subserved by the restrictions, the
existing circumstances which necessitated the imposition of
the restrictions, the degree and urgency of the evil sought
to be mitigated by the restrictions and the period during
which the restrictions are to remain in force. At the same
time the possibility of an alternative scheme which might
have been but has not been enforced would not expose the
restrictions to challenge on the ground that they are not
reasonable.
107
Finally, in determining the reasonableness of
restrictions imposed by law in the field of industry, trade
or commerce, the mere fact that some of the persons engaged
in a particular trade may incur loss due to the imposition
of restrictions will not render them unreasonable because it
is manifest that trade and industry pass through periods of
prosperity and adversity on account of economic, social or
political factors. In a free economy controls have be
introduced to ensure availability of consumer goods like
food-stuffs, cloth or the like at a fair price and the
fixation of such a price cannot be said to be an
unreasonable restriction in the circumstances.
Thus, apart from the various other factors which we
have referred to above where restrictions are imposed on a
citizen carrying on a trade or commerce in an essential
commodity, the aspect of controlled economy and fair and
equitable distribution to the consumer at a reasonable price
leaving an appreciable margin of profit to the producer is
undoubtedly a consideration which does not make the
restriction unreasonable.
In fact, the leading case decided by this Court which
may justly be regarded as the locus classicus on the
questions as to what are reasonable restrictions is V.G.
Row’s case (supra) where Patanjali Sastri, C.J., speaking
for the Court observed as follows:
"It is important in this context to bear in mind that
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the test of reasonableness, where ever prescribed,
should be applied to each individual statute impugned,
and no abstract standard, or general pattern, of
reasonableness can be laid down as applicable to all
cases. The nature of the right alleged to have been
infringed, the underlying purpose of the restrictions
imposed, the extent and urgency of the evil sought to
be remedied thereby the disproportion of the imposition
the prevailing conditions at the time, should all enter
into the judicial verdict. In evaluating such elusive
factors and forming their own conception of what is
reasonable, in all the circumstances of a given case,
it is inevitable that the social philosophy and the
scale of values of the judges participating in the
decision should play an important part, and the limit
to their interference with legislative judgment in such
cases can only be dictated by their sense of
responsibility and self-restraint and the sobering
reflection that the Constitution is meant not only for
people of their way of thinking but for all, and that
the majority of the elected representatives of the
people have, in
108
authorising the imposition of the restrictions,
considered them to be reasonable."
This case was followed in a later decision of this
Court in Mineral Development Ltd. v. The State of Bihar and
Anr.(1) where after quoting the observations of Patanjali
Sastri, C.J., as extracted above, Subba Rao, J., speaking
for the Court observed as follows:-
"These observations, if we may say so with great
respect, lay down the correct principle. It follows
that it is the duty of this Court to decide, having
regard to the aforesaid considerations and such others
whether a particular statute satisfies the objective
test of ‘reasonableness’."
In the case of Collector of Customs, Madras v. Nathella
Sampathu Chetty and Anr.(2) the observations of Patanjali
Sastri, C.J., were endorsed by this Court when Ayyangar, J.,
speaking for the Court, made the following observations:
"There are several decisions of this Court in
which the relevant criteria have been laid down but we
consider it sufficient to refer to a passage in the
judgment of Patanjali Sastri, C.J., in State of Madras
v. V.G. Row."
In M/s. Diwan Sugar and General Mills (Private) Ltd.
and Ors. v. U.O.I.(3) which was also a case arising out of
the Act of 1955 and the Sugar Control Order of 1955
promulgated by the Central Government under s. 3 of the said
Act, a Constitution Bench of this Court while examining the
nature of the restrictions imposed in that case took into
account the various circumstances and observed :
"Clause 5 of the Order lays down the factors which
have to be taken into consideration in fixing prices.
These factors include among other things a reasonable
margin of profit for the producer and/or trade and any
incidential charges. This was kept in mind when prices
were fixed by the impugned notification... The prices
were prevalent in the free market and must certainly
have taken account of a fair margin of profit for the
producer, though in the case of an individual factory
due to factors for which the producer might
109
himself be responsible, the cost of production might
have been a little more. Therefore, the prices fixed by
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the Government by the impugned notification can on no
circumstances be said to have been proved to be below
the cost of production."
... ... ...
"In these circumstances if price is fixed in this
area, price all over India is practically fixed, and it
is not necessary to fix prices separately so far as
factories in other States which are said to be mainly
deficit, are concerned... There is, therefore, in our
opinion, no discrimination in effect by the fixation of
prices in these three regions."
It will be noticed that even though clause 5 had fixed
prices, the Court upheld the restrictions because a
reasonable margin of profit for the producer was left and
did not insist that the producer should be allowed to have
full sway in the production of sugar to the maximum capacity
possible. Similarly one of the important tests laid down by
this Court was that the price prevailing in the free market
must be taken into account in the formula of fixation of
price for essential commodities secondly while dealing with
the price control imposed on factories in various States,
this Court held that the policy of fixation of price could
not be challenged because States where they were fixed were
deficit areas. We might mention here that the sheet anchor
of the argument of the Attorney-General is that the impugned
Notification was passed in order to relieve the sugar famine
by boosting the production of sugar by mills. Similarly, in
Nath Mal and Mitha Mal’s case (supra), which was also a case
dealing with food-grains, an order freezing the stocks of
the commodity in order to secure its equitable distribution
so as to make it available at a fair price to consumers was
upheld by the Court with the following observations:
"The clause authorises the Commissioner and
various others authorities mentioned therein and such
other officers as may be authorised by the Commissioner
to frreeze any stock of foodgrains held by a person...
Nor do we think that the power to freeze the stocks of
foodgrains is arbitrary or based on no reasonable
basis.
... ... ...
We are clear, therefore, that the freezing of
stocks of food-grains is reasonably related to the
object which the Act was in-
110
tended to achieve, namely, to secure the equitable
distribution and availability at fair prices and to
regulate transport, distribution, disposal and
acquisition of an essential commodity such as
foodgrains."
The most material ratio of this case is that even the
freezing of stocks of foodgrains, with a view to securing
their equitable distribution and availability was held to be
a reasonable restriction. Even if by seizing the food stocks
the right of a citizen to trade in food grains was seriously
impaired and hampered yet such a State action was justified
on the ground of public interest.
On a parity of reasoning, therefore, a restriction (on
the right of a trader dealing in essential commodities) like
the ban in the instant case or fixation of prices aimed at
bringing about distribution of essential commodities keeping
the consumers interests as the prime consideration, cannot
be regarded as unreasonable.
We are fortified in our view by a decision of this
Court in Prag Ice and Oil Mills and Anr. etc. v. Union of
India(1) where Beg, C.J. observed as follows :-
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"All the tests of validity of the impugned price
control or fixation order are, therefore, to be found
in section 3 of the Act. Section 3 makes necessity or
expediency of a control order for the purpose of
maintaining or increasing supplies of an Essential
Commodity or for securing its equitable distribution at
fair prices the criteria of validity. It is evident
that an assessment of either the expediency necessity
of a measure, in the light of all the facts and
circumstances which have a bearings on the subjects of
price fixation, is essentially a subjectives matter. It
is true that objective criteria may enter into
determinations of particular selling prices of each
kilogram of mustard oil at various time. But, there is
no obligation to have to fix the price in such a way as
to ensure reasonable profits to the producer or
manufacturer. It has also to be remembered that the
objective is to secure equitable distribution and
availability at fair prices so that it is the interest
of the consumer and not of the producer which is the
determining factor in applying any objective tests at
any particular time."
The observations extracted above, furnish a complete
answer to the contentions raised by the petitioners on
contention No. 1.
111
Furthermore, we would like to reiterate what Chandrachud,
C.J,, observed in that case regarding the history and the
manner in which the petitioners rushed to this Court :-
"Before closing, we would like to mention that the
petitioners rushed to this Court too precipitately on
the heels of the Price Control Order. Thereby they
deprived themselves of an opportunity to show that in
actual fact, the Order causes them irreparable
prejudice. Instead they were driven through their ill-
thought haste to rely on speculative hypotheses in
order to buttress their grievance that their right to
property and the right to do trade was gone or was
substantially affected. A little more patience, which
could have been utilised to observe how the experiment
functioned, might have paid better dividends."
This is exactly what the petitioners have done in this
case by rushing to this Court the moment the notification
was issued and thus depriving the State as also themselves
of the actual consequences of the issuing of the
notification and the prejudice which it really may have
caused. They did not at all show any patience in waiting for
a while to find out if the experiment functioned
successfully and in the long run paid good dividends. As the
petitioners obtained stay orders from this Court on filing
these petitions, the experiment died a natural death and the
notification remained ineffective.
It was vehemently contended by Mr. Garg that the
Notification or the Control Order is in direct contravention
of the Directive Principles of State policy contained in
Art. 39 in part IV of the Constitution inasmuch as instead
of developing small-scale industries like the crushers the
Notification has curbed the rights of their owners in order
to benefit the mills. It is true that one of the important
considerations which must weigh with the Court in
determining the reasonableness of a restriction is that it
should not contravene the Directive Principles contained in
Part IV of the Constitution which undoubtedly has a direct
bearing on the question as held by this Court in the cases
of Saghir Ahmad v. State of U.P. and Ors.(1) and The State
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of Bombay and Anr. v. F. N. Balsara(2) where this Court made
the following observations :
112
"The new clause in Article 19(6) has no doubt been
introduced with a view to provide that a State can
create a monopoly in its own favour in respect of any
trade or business, but the amendment does not make the
establishment of such monopoly a reasonable restriction
within the meaning of the first clause of Article
19(6). The result of the amendment is that the State
would not have to justify such action as reasonable at
all in a Court of law and no objection could be taken
to it on the ground that it is an infringement of the
right guaranteed under Article 19(1) (g) of the
Constitution"
(Saghir Ahmed’s case)
"In judging the reasonableness of the restrictions
imposed by the Act, one has to bear in mind the
directive principles of State policy set forth in
Article 47 of the Constitution."
(Balsara’s case)
In the instant case, however, if the argument of the
Attorney General is to be accepted, there is no violation of
the Directive Principles because the main object sought to
be achieved by a temporary suspension of the business of the
petitioners is to ensure large-scale production of white
sugar and to make it available to the consumers at
reasonable rates which is an implementation rather than a
contravention of the Directive Principles particularly
clauses (b) and (c) of Art. 39. Whether the State has been
able to prove this fact or not would be considered when we
deal with the facts and materials placed before us by the
parties.
Another important aspect to which we may advert at this
stage is the test which should be laid down to determine the
reasonableness of a restriction involving a citizen carrying
on trade or business in an essential commodity. We have
already seen that this Court has held that fixation of price
of sugar or freezing of stock of foodgrains does not amount
to an unreasonable restriction on the fundamental right to
trade enshrined under Art. 19(1)(g). There are other cases
in which this Court has clearly held that in the case of
essential commodities like sugar the question of the
economic production and distribution thereof must enter the
verdict of the Courts in deciding the reasonableness of the
restrictions. In such cases even if the margin of profit
left to the producer is slashed that would not make the
restriction unreasonable. The reason for this view is that
such a trade or commerce is subject to rise and fall in
prices and other diverse factors which may destroy or
prohibit one industry or the other so as to affect the
general body of the consumers and if any measure is taken to
strike a just
113
balance between the danger sought to be averted and the
temporary deprivation of the right of a citizen to carry on
his trade, it will have to be upheld as a reasonable
restriction. In Shree Meenakshi Mills v. U.O.I. (1) Ray
C.J., speaking for the Court observed as follows:
"If fair price is to be fixed leaving a reasonable
margin of profit, there is never any question of
infringement of fundamental right to carry on business
by imposing reasonable restrictions. The question of
fair price to the consumer with reference to the
dominant object and purpose of the legislation claiming
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equitable distribution and availability at fair price
is completely lost sight of if profit and the
producer’s return are kept in the fore-front......
In determining the reasonableness of a restriction
imposed by law in the field of industry, trade or
commerce, it has to be remembered that the mere fact
that some of those who are engaged in these are
alleging loss after the imposition of law will not
render the law unreasonable. By its very nature,
industry or trade or commerce goes through periods of
prosperity and adversity on account of economic and
sometimes social and political factors. In a largely
free economy when control have to be introduced to
ensure availability of consumer goods like foodstuff,
cloth and the like at a fair price it is an
impracticable proposition to require the Government to
go through the exercise like that of a Commission to
fix the prices."
According to the Attorney General by virtue of the
impugned Notification this is exactly what the Central
Government wants to achieve by banning the working of power
crushers for a short period. This case was followed in
another decision of this Court in Saraswati Industrial
Syndicate Ltd. v. U.O.I.(2) which was also a case of a
notification issued under clause 7 of the Control Order of
1966, where the following observations were made:
"It is a well-known fact that rationalisation of
industry by the use of modern methods, reduces the
amount of labour needed in more mechanised modes of
manufacture. Therefore, we do not think that these
assertions could prove any inequitable treatment meted
out to the Haryana manufacturers of sugar. In any case
no breach of a mandatory duty, which could justify the
issue of writ of mandamus, was established.’
114
In the light of the principles enunciated and the
decisions discused above, we now proceed to examine the
facts and circumstances placed before us by the Union of
India to prove that the restrictions imposed under the
impugned Notification contain the quality of reasonableness
and are not violative of Art. 19(1)(g). The main pleas of
the State of U.P. which have been adopted by the Union of
India, are to be found in paragraphs 6 to 11 of the counter
affidavit filed by the respondents in writ petition Nos.
5565-5567 of 1980. The respondents have taken the stand that
there has been a very steep rise in the prices of sugar
which is doubtless an essential commodity. It has further
been alleged that one of the major factors responsible for
the present rise in the prices of sugar is that there is a
sharp rise in the demand for consumption of sugar whereas
its production has slumped to a very low level. In order to
illustrate the point it has been averred that the demand of
sugar in the country has increased to over 60 lakh tonnes
whereas production of the commodity in the preceding year
(1979-80) was only about 39.5 lakh tonnes. In order to meet
the demand the Central Government had to import for the
first time after several years 2 lakh tonnes of sugar at a
cost of about one hundred crores of rupees. One reason for
the shortfall in production during 1979-80 was the poor
availability of cane to the sugar factories. This in turn
resulted from the worst drought conditions faced by our
country particularly the State of U.P. which is one of the
main suppliers of sugarcane. Yet another cause of the
shortage was that the sugar famine led to the large scale
diversion of cane to gur and khandsari manufacturers. The
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counter-affidavit then proceeds to give a chart of the
production of sugar by the crushers and the mills.
It was further averred that unless the position was set
right the stocks of 1979-80 would have been exhausted
completely by the middle of November 1980. To meet this
national crisis, the Government of India took various steps
to increase the production of sugar in the country during
the current season (1980-81). In the first place, the
Government of India allowed rebate in the basic excise duty
on excess sugar production in order to serve as an incentive
to the sugar mills to start early cane crushing operation.
This step however, could not possibly have the desired
effect unless the sugar factories got the raw material,
viz., constant supply of sugarcane. Indisputably sugarcane
is utilised for manufacture of sugar, gur, rab and khandsari
and some of the quantity is also utilised for seed, feed and
chewing. It was further alleged that the crushers
particularly those producing gur were in an advantageous
position so as to be able to purchase cane at a very high
rate and outcompete the sugar
115
factories. It was possible for the crushers to pay a higher
price because no excise duty or compulsory levy was imposed
on them, on the other hand, the factories suffered from
certain disabilities, namely, sixty five per cent of the
sugar production was taken by the Government of India on
levy process and excise duty on free sale sugar was very
high as compared to khandsari sugar. Further, the Government
required distribution of molasses at a fixed price of Rs.6/-
per quintal to the mills whereas there was no such
obligation on the power crushers. Finally, because of the
monthly release system the factories could sell only
released quantity during a particular month whereas there
was no such restriction on khandsari units owned by the
petitioners. These steps taken by the then Government
resulted in an unhealthy competition causing diversion of
cane from the sugar factories with the result that sugar
factories could get only 61.5% of the bonded cane. It was
further pointed out in the counter-affidavit that keeping in
view the fact that the sugar stocks of 1979-80 were likely
to be exhausted by the middle of November 1980, it was
considered necessary to maintain an adequate supply of
sugarcane to the sugar factories which would have started
production earlier because of the incentives given to them
by the Government of India.
In an additional affidavit filed by the respondents,
sworn by Karan Singh, Joint Cane Commissioner, Government of
U.P, it was pointed out that khandsari sugar could never be
a substitute for sugar produced by sugar mills because
khandsari sugar is not used for domestic purpose in
preference to mill sugar as the former has higher molasses
content and has unpleasant smell and taste. Further, there
is no gradation of khandsari sugar as its grain is not
regular and bold. It was further alleged that in public
distribution it is only the mill sugar which is supplied at
fair price to the consumers at large and which also forms
the bulk of the export. The khandsari sugar, according to
the respondents, was generally consumed for preparation of
sweets, boora and batasha and was consumed mostly by the
halwais. There is no reliable evidence to rebut the
aforesaid facts detailed in the counter-affidavit of the
respondents.
Thus, in view of the factors detailed above, it was
contended by the Union of India that it was in public
interest that with a view to remove shortage of sugar and
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achieve equal distribution of sugarcane to the mills the
impugned notification was passed which seems to strike a
just balance between the requirements of the country and
those of the khandsari units. The Attorney General contended
that since the ban was imposed only for a very short period
of about
116
one month and a half, there could be no appreciable loss to
the khandsari units, and even if there was some loss it
could be recouped after the ban was lifted because the
working cost of the khandsari units was much less than that
of the mills. In other words, by virtue of the policy
adopted by the Government in passing the impugned
notification, a fair margin of profit was left to the
khandsari units which were not completely closed. It was
further stated that out of 89 sugar mills in the entire
State of U.P., 18 sugar mills are owned by the U.P. State
Sugar Corporation which is a Government company and
controlled by the State. Sixteen sugar mills are under the
cooperative sector in which the Government Investment is
considerable and these mill are run by cooperative societies
of which cane growers are shareholders. Thus, the ultimate
benefit did undoubtedly go to the sugarcane growers also
through the profits made by the cooperative societies. The
learned counsel, Mr. Garg, appearing for the petitioners
countered the inferences drawn by the respondents with the
submission that although the above facts may not be disputed
yet it was not correct to say that the khandsari units had
put the mills completely out of competition. It was
suggested that the khandsari units were also, apart from
paying a higher price to the sugarcane growers, prepared to
be subjected to compulsory levies or excise duty levied on
the mills or to such terms as the Government may like to put
on the owners of the crushers. The argument is, no doubt,
attractive but we are not sure if and when these harsher
terms are imposed on the petitioners, it would be possible
for them to run the crushers and make the huge profits which
they are making without the aforesaid impositions. At any
rate, since the impugned notification has expired, the
Government will certainly consider the desirability of a
reappraisal of the situation after taking into account this
aspect of the matter. It was further pointed out by the
Union of India that only 39 sugar mills are in the private
sector and ensuring actual availability of sugar at
reasonable rates to the sugar mills was the prime
consideration which formed the basis of impugned
notification in conformity with the object of the Act of
1955 and the Control Order so as to maintain a fair price
for the general public. Learning a lesson from the
performance of the sugar market in the preceding year, the
Government thought it more desirable to channelise the
production of sugarcane so that the interests of neither the
sugar mill owners nor of the khandsari units nor those of
the cane-growers suffered.
It was then contended that the impugned notification
far from causing any appreciable damage or loss to the
petitioners serve a
117
two-fold purpose which ensures equitable production and
distribution of sugar.
Another important argument advanced by the Attorney-
General which has impressed us most is one resulting from
the use by the mills of the hydraulic process as
distinguished from the open pan process employed by
khandsari units for the production of sugar. The consequence
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is the recovery of sugar from sugarcane in the case of
khandsari units run by power crushers is between 4 to 6 per
cent whereas in the case of sugar factories it ranges
between 9 1/2 to 11 1/2 per cent. Thus, the overall position
is that the utilisation of sugarcane by the mills is double
that by the crushers and if the crushers are not able to
produce more than the existing 4 to 6 per cent, half of the
total quantity of sugarcane supplied to them goes waste
which, if utilised by the factories, would have served for
production of more sugar.
This solid distinction between the two processes of
manufacture followed by the mills and the crushers is, in
our opinion, a very rational distinction which puts the
mills in a different class and which also provides a
reasonable nexus between the restrictions imposed on the
crushers and the object sought to be achieved. The
petitioner sought to falsify the figures quoted by the Union
of India regarding the percentage of recovery of sugar by
reference to a book written by Mr. Bepin Behari, and
entitled ‘Rural Industrialization in India’. On page 100 of
the book, the author has observed as follows :
"Originally, the percentage of recovery in traditional
khandsari units did not go beyond 6.5 per cent, but
recent innovations have raised the recovery ratio to
almost 9.5 per cent. Thereby the two processes have
become almost commutative. In inversion loss, however,
there is some difference. In the large-scale sugar
mills, only ten per cent of the sugar is lost while in
small khandsari plants the loss can be as much as 30
per cent."
and great reliance has been placed on these observations of
the author. It may be noted, however, that the author has
not cited any expert opinion as the foundation for his
conclusion nor has he referred to any experiment carried out
by him personally. In fact he has not even disclosed the
source of his information. Apart from that the book fully
supports the averments of the respondents that the
percentage of recovery in traditional khandsari units did
not go beyond 6.5 per cent. Besides, there is no evidence or
allegation in any of the affidavits filed by the petitioners
to the effect that any new methodo-
118
logy or innovation was adopted by any of the petitioners. In
these circumstances, the extract from the book does not
appear to be of any assistance to the petitioners.
On the other hand, the facts detailed by the
respondents in the various counter-affidavits filed by them
are based on the statistics maintained by the Government
from year to year and reports of experts. One such report
entitled ‘studies on Specific Conductances of Indian Sugar’
has been filed by the State before us and it gives the
entire history and economics of sugar production.
After a careful consideration of the arguments and
documents produced by both the parties we are satisfied that
the restriction imposed by the impugned notification in
stopping the crushers for the period 10th October to 1st
December 1980 is in public interest and bears a reasonable
nexus to the object which is sought to be achieved, namely,
to reduce shortage of sugar and ensure a more equitable
distribution of this commodity.
One of the tests that has been laid down to determine
the reasonableness of a restriction is to find out if the
restraint is more excessive than that warranted by the
situation. In the instant case, taken an overall picture of
the history of sugar production it cannot be said that the
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stoppage of sugar crushers for a short period is more
excessive than the situation demanded.
In Madhya Bharat Cotton Association Ltd. v. Union of
India & Anr.(1) while considering a restriction imposed for
a short time, this Court observed as follows :-
"Further, cotton being a commodity essential to the
life of the community, it is reasonable to have
restriction which may, in certain circumstances, extend
to total prohibition for a time, of all normal trading
in the commodity. Accordingly, we are of opinion that
Clause 4 of the Cotton Control Order of 1950 does not
offend Art. 19 (1) (g) of the Constitution because sub-
clause (5) validates it."
(Emphasis supplied)
In that case the restriction imposed on cotton was for
a short period of one month in February 1954 and for another
month in May 1954; and was held to be justified and a
reasonable restraint so
119
as not to be violative of Art 19 (1) (g). The situation here
is similar. Afterall, the petitioners were working their
crushers under a licence granted to them under the Licensing
Order and the impugned notification merely seeks to regulate
the right and not to abolish the same.
For the above reasons the first contention put forward
by the petitioners that the restrictions imposed by the
impugned notification are unreasonable is hereby overruled
and it is held that such restrictions clearly contain the
quality of reasonableness and when tested on the touchstone
of the principles laid down by the various authorities
referred to above, they fully satisfy all the requirements
of a reasonable restriction.
This takes us to contention No. 2 raised by the
petitioners. It was submitted before us that clause 8 of the
Control Order under which the impugned notification has been
issued suffers from the vice of excessive delegation of
powers and is, therefore, violative of Art. 14 of the
Constitution. It was argued that as the notification seeks
to establish a monopoly in favour of the sugar mills at the
cost of the petitioners it seeks to make per se an invidious
discrimination which is writ large on the very face of the
notification which is, therefore violative of Art. 14.
As regards first limb of the argument it may be
necessary to state that the Control Order itself has been
passed under the authority of s.3 of the Act of 1955 which
has been held by this Court to be constitutionally valid and
is not in any way discriminatory so as to attract Art. 14.
The Control Order itself having been passed under s.3
contains sufficient guidelines, checks and balances to
prevent any misuse or abuse of the power conferred on the
authorities concerned under clause 8. Clause 8 runs thus:-
"8. Power to issue directions to producers of
khandsari, sugar, power-crushers, khandsari units,
crushers and cooperative societies.-The Central
Government may, from time to time, by general or
special order, issue directions to any producer of
khandsari sugar or owner of a power-crusher, khandsari
unit or crusher or the agent of such producer or owner
or a cooperative society regarding the purchase of
sugar or sugarcane juice, production, maintenance of
stocks, storage, price, packing, payment disposal,
delivery and distribution of sugar-cane, gur gul,
jaggery and rab or khandsari sugar or the period or
hours to be worked."
120
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To begin with it may be noticed that the power to issue
orders or directions from time to time is conferred on the
Central Government which is undoubtedly a very high
authority and must be presumed to act in a just and
reasonable manner. This point is well settled and concluded
by several decisions of this Court as detailed below. In
Chinta Lingam & Ors. v. Government of India Ors., (1) this
Court made the following observations:
"At any rate, it has been pointed out in more than one
decision of this Court that when the power has to
exercised by one of the of the highest officers the
fact that no appeal has been provided for is a matter
of no moment.....It was said that though the power was
discretionary but it was not necessarily discriminatory
and abuse of power could not be easily assumed. There
was moreover a presumption that public officials would
discharge their duties honestly and in accordance with
rules of law."
This case was followed in V. C. Shukla v. State (Delhi
Admn.)(2) where one of us (Fazal Ali, J.) speaking for the
Court observed as follows :
"Furthermore, as the power is vested in a very
high authority, it cannot be assumed that it is likely
to be abused. On the other hand, where the power is
conferred on such a high authority as the Central
Government, the presumption will be that the power will
be exercised in a bona fide manner and according to
law."
Moreover, the power cannot be said to be arbitrary or
unguided because the impugned notification derives its
source from s. 3 of the Act of 1955 which clearly lays down
sufficient guidelines and the existence of certain
conditions for proper distribution of an essential
commodity. The said guidelines therefore, govern the
authority passing the impugned notification.
Secondly, clause 8 merely seeks to regulate and guide
the conditions and the circumstances under which the
manufacturers may exercise their rights. In other words, any
order passed under clause 8 is prima facie purely of a
regulatory nature. It was, however, submitted that the
Notification has been passed by the Cane Commissioner,
Government of U.P. and it does not contain any materials
121
or reasons why the ban was imposed on the crushers owned by
the petitioners. As the Notification itself has been passed
under clause 8 of the Control Order read with Government of
India G.S.R. No. 1122 dated July 16, 1966 and under the
Essential Commodities Act it was not necessary for the Cane
Commissioner to have stated or detailed the reasons why the
Notification was issued. In fact, the Notification and the
Control Order have to be read in the light of the main Act,
viz., the Act of 1955, which itself provides the necessary
guide lines, namely, that it is essential in public interest
and to secure proper distribution of an essential commodity
to pass orders by various authorities from time to time.
This is the scheme of s. 3 of the Act of 1955 which has not
been challenged before us by the petitioners.
It was further argued in the same token that the
impugned notification seeks to establish a monopoly in
favour of the sugar mills at the cost of the petitioners who
have been selected for hostile discrimination as against the
mills. While detailing and narrating the facts and the
history of sugar production we have already shown that the
State has placed cogent materials before us to show why the
sugar mills had to be given a special treatment by
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temporarily stopping the production of sugar by the
crushers. We have already dealt with the various factors
while examining contention No. 1 of the petitioners and it
is not necessary for us to repeat the same here. There was
no question of creating any monopoly to benefit the mills
particularly when a very large majority of the mills were
controlled by the State or cooperative societies and only a
small fraction of them were working in the private sector.
In view of the low working cost of the crushers they sought
to outcompete the mills and deprive them of the requisite
amount of sugarcane which they should have got. It was not
only just but also essential to boost the production of the
factories so that white sugar may be produced on a large
scale and sugarcane may not be wasted which would have been
the case if most of the sugar-cane went to the crushers. We
have pointed out that the recovery of sugarcane juice by the
mills is double that by crushers, and if the latter were
allowed to operate the wastage of the sugarcane would have
been almost 50 per cent which could have been avoided if
sugar cane was allowed to be utilised by the mills.
The third limb of the argument on this point was that
there was was no rational nexus between the prohibition
contained in the Notification preventing the petitioners
from working their crushers, even though for a short period,
and the object sought to be achieved by it. This contention
also must necessarily fail as we have already shown that
such nexus existed.
122
It was argued by Mr. Garg that as India lives in
villages it was not understandable why the Central
Government was bent on reducing the support price of
sugarcane and thus causing loss to the sugarcane growers. It
was true that the mills were not in a position to pay as
high a price for sugarcane as the crushers but that was for
so many reasons which we have discussed above, namely, the
various liabilities which were imposed on the mills, e.g.,
the excise duties, the levy, etc. Once a certain amount of
stability was achieved in the sugarcane industry, the
ultimate benefit would undoubtedly go to the sugarcane
grower even though he may have to be paid a lesser support
for supply of sugarcane to the mills. It was, therefore, in
public interest that a lesser support price for sugarcane
had been fixed. Moreover, it was for the Central Government
who was in the know of the circumstances prevailing in the
State or for that matter in the country to determine the
support price of sugarcane. Even though the crushers may
have paid a higher price, in the long run, the sufferers
would be the sugarcane growers as also the consumers who
would be deprived of the sugar produced by the mills which
was undoubtedly superior to the khandsari sugar and has a
vaster area of consumption in the country and is also meant
for purposes of export.
The report entitled ’Studies on Specific Conductances
of Indian Sugar’ referred to above, details the distinctive
features of the white sugar produced by the mills and the
khandsari sugar where the various features of the nature and
character of sugar are pointed out thus.
"This plantation sugar is crystalline, white
lustrous and has a purity of 99.8 per cent. The size of
the crystal of this sugar varies from 0.3 to 2.5mm.
This sugar is graded according to the Indian sugar
standards: Sugar corresponding to 30A is very white
sugar with grain size of about 2.5mm. While 27 E refers
to less white sugar with grain size of about 0.4 mm.
The numeral 30, 29 and 27 indicate the decreasing order
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of the whiteness of the sugars and the letters A E to
the grade of the grain size Apart from these sugars
produced in well established commercial factories, the
similar type of which are known in other countries,
another kind of sugar produced perhaps only in India
and nowhere else, is the khandsari sugar which is being
manufactured in small scale industrial units While, in
the sulphitation factories the classified sugar syrups
are boiled under vacuum, in Khandsari units the same is
carried out in the open pans. This sugar used to be
palish yellow in colour
123
Nagaranjars and his co-workers studied the conductivity
of plantation white sugars and refined sugars and found
distinctive difference in conductivity of plantation
white sugar and refined sugar."
It has been clearly averred in para 15 of the counter
affidavit filed by Mr. Bhola Nath Tiwari, Cane Commissioner,
Government of U.P. (who issued the impugned notification)
that in year 1978-79 the production in the reserved areas
was 578.78 lakh tonnes out of which the percentage of cane
utilised by the sugar mills was 27.24 whereas it was 9.73%
in the case of the khandsari manufactured by power crushers.
It is also stated that out of the total quantity of
sugarcane only 45.23 per cent was utilised by gur
manufacturers and the remaining 17.5 per cent was used for
seed, feed and chewing purposes etc. Similarly, in the year
1979-80 there was a steep fall in the production of
sugarcane from 578.78 lakh tonnes in the previous year to
471.11 lakh tonnes. Owing to this loss of production, there
was keen competition for purchase of sugarcane between the
sugar mill owners and the khandsari units. As a result of
this unhealthy competition sugar mills had to close down
prematurely resulting in the loss of production of sugar.
A very attractive argument was submitted before us by
Mr. Gupta, appearing for some of the owners of power
crushers. It was submitted that so far as the petitioners
represented by him were concerned, they were growing
sugarcane in their own fields and had installed power
crushers in their own land though the said land fell within
the reserved area. It was argued that these petitioners fell
in a separate category and the Government could not compel
them to supply sugarcane to the mills instead of using the
sugarcane grown by them in their own crushers. An apparent
snag in this argument is that if in the larger public
interest it becomes necessary to compel the sugarcane
growers to supply sugarcane to the mills at a particular
rate in order to meet a national crisis, no person can be
heard to say that his rights are taken away in an unjust or
discriminatory fashion...Personal or individual interests
must yield to the larger interests of the community. This is
exactly the philosophy behind the passing of the Act of
1955.
Merely because the petitioners are growing sugarcane in
their own fields and own power crushers, therefore, they
cannot be treated as a class separate from the others owners
of power crushers situated within the reserved area of the
the mills.
124
Secondly, it was argued by Mr. Gupta and, in our
opinion, rightly that the impugned notification is ex-facie
discriminatory inasmuch as it differentiates between
vertical and horizontal power crushers without any rhyme or
reason. He submitted that no rational basis has been
suggested by the State for making the distinction when both
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types of crushers produce almost the same quantity of
khandsari and apply the same mechanical process (open pan
process). What difference does it make, says Mr. Gupta, if a
power crusher is vertical or horizontal ? In the case of a
horizontal power crusher rollers are in a horizontal line
situated on the surface whereas in the vertical power
crusher the rollers instead of being on the surface are in a
vertical position without there being any difference in the
working of the two crushers. We are of the opinion that this
argument of Mr. Gupta is sound and must prevail. The
Additional Advocate-General, U.P. sought to draw several
distinctions between a vertical power crusher and a
horizontal one, namely, (1) a vertical power crusher can
crush 1500 quintals of sugarcane per month whereas a
horizontal one crushes 5600 quintals of the commodity in the
same period; (2) vertical power crushers are non commercial
and fall within the category of cottage industry whereas
horizontal power crushers are included in the category of
small-scale industry; (3) vertical power crushers are run by
their owners them selves and draw supplies from sugarcane
growers and (4) vertical power crusher do not require any
licence. So far as the last part of the argument of the
Additional Advocate-General of U.P. that vertical power
crushers do not require a licence is concerned, it is
factually wrong because all such crushers require a licence
by virtue of the Orders passed by the Central Government
under s.3 of the Act of 1955. Regarding the other
distinctive features the mere ipse dixit of deponent Gupta
who has sworn an affidavit, there is absolutely no
documentary evidence to support the features pointed out or
relied upon by the Additional Advocate General. In these
circumstances, it has not been proved to our satisfaction
that there is any real distinction between a vertical and a
horizontal power crusher, and we regard both as falling in
the same class. The notification by exempting vertical power
crushers and prohibiting horizontal power crushers is
clearly discriminatory and the discrimination is not
justified by any rational nexus between the prohibition and
the object sought to de achieved.
In these circumstances, therefore, we hold that in so
far as the word ’vertical’ used in the impugned Notification
is concerned it must be struck down as being violative of
Art. 14. This, however,
125
does not render the entire notification void because the
word ’vertical’ used in the notification is clearly
severable from the other portions of the notification. All
that has to be done is to read the notification without the
the word ’Vertical’ as a result of which the exemptions from
ban will include all owners of power crushers (whether
vertical or horizontal) which manufacture gur or rab from
sugarcane grown on their fields. Again, as the notification
has al- ready spent its force, if any order is passed in
future, the Government will see to it that such an invidious
discrimination is not repeated.
We now come to contention No.4 by which it was urged
that the express language of clause 8 of the Control Order
does not contemplate a complete prohibition of the
production of an article but envisages mere regulation of
the period or hours of working. It was argued that the words
’period or hours’ used in clause 8 are relatable only to the
number of actual hours in a day for which the crushers may
be permitted to work from time to time and not a complete
stoppage or prohibition of the crushers for a period of a
month or two. Clause 8, as extracted supra, uses the words
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’period or hours to be worked.’ A plain reading of this
expression clearly reveals that the words ’period’ and
’hours’ have been used to connote two different aspects of
the matter. In other words, clause 8 contemplates regulation
of working of the sugar by two separate methods (1) where
only hours of work per day are to be regulated or fixed, for
instance, where a crusher normally works for 10 hours, a
notification under this clause may provide that it should
work only for 8 hours or 6 hours or 10 hours a day or for a
number of days. (2) The word ’period’ however, has nothing
to do with the hours to be worked but it refers to another
category of regulation viz., whether a crusher is to run or
not for a particular period of time. We are unable to agree
with the contention of Mr. Garg that the two words must be
taken to have been used in clause 8 in the same sense. In
fact, this interpretation of the words will cause violence
to the language of the statutory provision and instead of
advancing its object it would frustrate the purpose which
clause 8 seeks to subserve. In the instant case, the
notification has resorted to the first category, viz., the
period of the working of the crushers, that is to say, about
one and a half month, and has not at all touched or impinged
upon the working hours of the crushers. If, however, the
notification had fixed certain hours of the day during which
only the crushers could work, then the notification would
have resorted to the alternative mode of regulation, which
obviously has not been done in this case We are unable to
agree with the contention put forward by Mr.
126
Garg and hold that the impugned notification is wholly
consistent with the provisions contained in clause 8 of the
Control Order.
Contention Nos. 5, 6 and 7 relate to the objection
taken by the petitioners to the validity of the impugned
notification on several grounds. In regard to contention No.
5, the notification has been attacked on the ground that the
Central Order violates the principles of natural justice
inasmuch as it was passed without hearing the petitioners
whose valuable rights were involved and their trade was
stopped and they were put completely out of production even
though for a short period of about one and a half month. It
was contended that though clause 8 does not expressly
provide for a hearing yet even if it be considered to be an
administrative order, the rule of audi alteram partem fully
applies and the Cane Commissioner should have passed the
impugned notification only after hearing the petitioners.
Reliance was placed for this proposition on a large number
of authorities. It is true that with the growth of law in
our country, this Court has consistently held for the last
few years that the rules of natural justice must apply even
to an administrative order unless the same are expressly
excluded. Mr. Garg as also other counsel for the petitioners
submitted that the mere fact that there is no express
provision in clause 8 for hearing the petitioners before
imposing any restrictions on their business provides good
reason to hold that the right to be heard was inherent in
the very act of prohibition since the stoppage of the
business of the petitioners would entail civil consequences.
Thus, they argued, as no hearing was given to the
petitioners, the notification was void and inoperative.
Reliance was placed on the observations of Krishna Iyer, J.,
in Mohinder Singh Gill & Anr. v. The Chief Election
Commissioner, New Delhi & Ors.(’) which may be extracted
thus:-
"Indeed, natural justice is a pervasive facet of
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secular law where a spiritual touch enlivens
legislation administration and adjudication, to make
fairness a creed of life. It has many colours and
shades, many forms and shapes and, save where valid law
excludes, it applies when people are affected by acts
of Authority. It is the bone of healthy government,
recognised from earliest times and not a mystic
testament of judge-made law
The dichotomy between administrative and quasi-
judicial functions vis-a-vis the doctrine of natural
justice is presumably
127
Obsolescent after Kraipak 1970 1 SCR 457 in India
and Schmidt (1969 (2) Ch.. 149) in England.
... ... ...
The procedural pre-condition of fair hearing,
however minimal, even post-decisional, has relevance to
administrative and judicial gentlemanliness. The
Election Commission is an institution of central
importance and enjoys far-reaching powers and the
greater the power to affect others’ right or
liabilities the more necessary the need to hear.
... ... ...
We consider it a valid point to insist on
observance of natural justice in the area of
administrative decision-making so as to avoid the
devaluation of this principle by administrators already
alarmingly insensitive to the rationale of audi alteram
partem !"
Strong reliance was also placed on the observations of
this Court in Maneka Gandhi v. U. O. I.(’) where Bhagwati,
J., after full discussion of the entire subject, observed
thus:-
"The law must, therefore now be taken to be well
settled that even in an administrative proceeding which
involves civil consequences, the doctrine of natural
justice must be held to be applicable."
Similarly, in a very recent case S. L. Kapoor v.
Jagmohan(2) this Court had taken an opportunity to emphasis
the importance of rules of natural justice and reiterated as
follows:
"The old distinction between a judicial act and an
administrative act has withered away and we have been
liberated from the psittacine incantation of
"administrative action". Now from the time of the
decision of this Court in State of Orissa v. Dr. (Miss)
Binapani Dei [1967] 2 S.C.R. 625, even an
administrative order which involves civil
consequences...must be made consistently with the rules
of natural justice."
A number of other decisions were also cited on the
question of natural justice and we agree with the
propositions adumbrated by
128
Mr. Garg that normally where an administrative order
adversely affects the valuable rights of the party affected,
a reasonable opportunity of hearing must be given to the
person affected. The instant case, however, contains two
prominent features which exclude the rules of natural
justice. Section 3 of the Act of 1955 under which the
Control Order was passed really covers an emergent situation
so as to meet a national crisis involving the availability
or distribution of any essential commodity which may make it
necessary to restrict or control the business carried on by
a citizen. It has already been pointed out by us while
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discussing the case of the respondent that there was an
acute shortage of sugar which was not made available to
consumers at reasonable rates and the situation caused
serious dissatisfaction among the people. Nothing short of
immediate and emergent measures taken to solve this crisis
would have eased out the situation. We are fortified in this
opinion by a Constitution Bench decision of this Court in
Prag Ice and Oil Mills and Anr. v. U. O. I.(’) where
Chandrachud, C. J.. observed as follows:-
"The dominant purpose of these provisions is to ensure
the availability of essential commodities to the
consumers at a fair price. And though patent injustice
to the producer is not to be encouraged, a reasonable
return on investment or a reasonable rate of profit is
not the sine qua non of the validity of action taken in
furtherance of the powers conferred by section 3 (1)
and section 3 (2) (c) of the Essential Commodities Act.
The interest of the consumer has to be kept in the
forefront and the prime consideration that an essential
commodity ought to be made available to the common man
at a fair price must rank in priority over every other
consideration."
If hearing was to be given to so many owners of power
crushers, it would have completely defeated and frustrated
the very object not only of the Notification but also of the
Act of 1955 and created complications which may have
resulted in a further deterioration of an already serious
situation. If the rules of natural justice were not applied
in such an emergent case, the petitioners cannot be heard to
complain. Afterall the notification directed stoppage of
operation of the petitioners’ crushers only for a very short
period and they would have had an opportunity of recouping
their loss after they were allowed to function because the
proportion of consumption of khandsari sugar was limited as
indicated
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above. The petitioners were, therefore, not seriously
prejudiced and have rushed to this Court rather prematurely.
The Attorney General had, however, a much more
effective answer to the contention raised by Mr. Garg on
this point. It was submitted by the Attorney General that
having regard to the circumstances, the background and the
situation in which the impugned notification was issued
under clause 8 of the Control Order, it had a statutory
complexion and should be regarded as purely legislative in
character. He added that no one had ever argued that before
passing a legislation, the persons affected by the
legislation should he heard, and that therefore, the
question of hearing or complying with the rules of natural
justice would not arise. The Attorney General placed
reliance on a decision of this Court in Saraswati Industrial
Syndicate Ltd. etc. (supra) and particularly on the
following observations made by Beg, J.,-
"Price fixation is more in the nature of a legislative
measure even though it may be based upon objective
criteria found in a report or other material. It could
not, therefore, give rise to a complaint that a rule of
natural justice has not been followed in fixing the
price. Nevertheless, the criterion adopted must be
reasonable. Reasonableness, for purposes of judging
whether there was an "excess of power" or an
"arbitrary" exercise of it, is really the demonstration
of a reasonable nexus between the matters which are
taken into account in exercising a power and the
purposes of exercise of that power.
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(Emphasis ours)
Having regard to the facts in the instant case, a temporary
ban on power crushers of a particular type was a measure
governed by same, if not higher, considerations as an order
of fixation of price.
The las tmentioned case is an authority for the
proposition that an order like the impugned notification is
a legislative measure. That being the position, the rules of
natural justice stand completely excluded and no question of
hearing arises. Mr. Garg, however, submitted that in that
case the petitioner did not urge that the price fixation
required a quasi-judicial procedure. Even so, the Court
clearly decided that a measure like the one we have in the
instant case is purely of a legislative character and there
is no question of complying with the rules of natural
justice in such cases.
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In Chairman Board of Mining Examination and Anr. v.
Ramjee(’) Krishna Iyer, J. speaking for the Court, pointed
out that there may be cases where rules of natural justice
can be dispensed with. In this connection he observed as
follows:
"Natural justice is no unruly horse, no lurking land
mine nor a judicial cure-all. If fairness is shown by
the decision-maker to the man proceeded against, the
form, features and the fundamentals of such essential
processual propriety being conditioned by the facts and
circumstances of each situation, no breach of natural
justice, can be complained of. Unnatural expansion of
natural justice, without reference to the
administrative realities and other factors of a given
case, can be exasperating."
(Emphasis supplied)
In Joseph Beauharnais v. People of the State of
IIIinois(2) the following observations were made which are
apposite to the facts of the present case :-
"This being so, it would be out of bounds for the
judiciary to deny the legislature a choice of policy,
provided it is not unrelated to the problem and not
forbidden by some explicit limitation on the State’s
power. That the legislative remedy might not in
practice mitigate the evil, or might itself raise new
problems, would only manifest once more the paradox of
reform. It is the price to be paid for the trial-and-
error inherent in legislative efforts to deal with
obstinate social issues."
The passing of the notification in the instant case was
an act of a legislative character and was really a trial-
and-error method adopted to deal with a very serious social
problem.
In Bates v. Lord Halsham of St. Marlebone and Ors.(3)
under similar circumstances a statutory committee had made
an order in relation to powers to licence hackney carriages.
Commenting on this provision Megarry, J. Observed as
follows:-
"In the present case, the committee in question has an
entirely different function: it is legislative rather
than administrative or executive. The function of the
committee is to make or refuse
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to make a legislative instrument under delegated
powers. The order, when made, will lay down the
remuneration for solicitors generally; and the terms of
the order will have to be considered and construed and
applied in number-less cases in the future... Many of
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those affected by delegated legislation, and affected
very substantially are never consulted in the process
of enacting that legislation, and yet they have no
remedy."
For the reasons aforesaid we find ourselves in complete
agreement with the argument of the Attorney General that the
impugned notification having been passed to effectuate the
object or ideal to be achieved in order to solve a national
crisis cannot but be considered a legislative measure so as
to exclude rules of natural justice. The contention raised
by the petitioners on this ground is, therefore, overruled.
In contention No. 6 another infirmity pointed out by
the learned counsel for the petitioners was that the
impugned notification is clearly violative of clause 11 of
the Control Order itself because the prohibition against the
working of the power crushers even for a short period
amounted to a partial revocation of the licences granted to
the petitioners under clause 3 of the Licensing Order. In
order to appreciate this contention it is necessary to
extract clause 11 (2) of the Control Order which runs:-
"(2) Where all or any of the powers conferred upon the
Central Government by this Order have been delegated in
pursuance of sub-clause (I) (b) to any officer or any
authority of a State Government, every Order or
direction issued by such officer or authority in
exercise of that power may be amended, varied or
rescinded by the State Government to whom the officer
or authority is subordinate either suo motu, or on an
application made within a period of thirty days from
the date of the order or direction.
Provided that no order revoking a licence or
permit issued to a person shall be made without giving
such person an opportunity to make representation."
Reliance was particularly placed on the proviso
extracted above. It was contended that even a temporary
suspension of the operation of power crushers amounted to a
partial revocation of the licence granted to the petitioners
and that therefore it was incumbent on the authorities
concerned to give the petitioners an opportunity of being
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heard and making a representation before such revocation
took effect. The Attorney General rightly pointed out that
neither subclause (2) nor the proviso thereto is attracted
in the instant case. It is true that the petitioners got
licences under the Licensing Order which was also passed
under the Act of 1955. A revocation of a licence means that
the licence has not been suspended but cancelled for all
times to come entailing civil consequences and complete
abolition of the right for the exercise of which the licence
was granted. A temporary suspension of the working of the
crushers owned by the petitioners cannot amount to a
revocation, either complete or partial. In fact, in our
opinion, the proviso to sub-clause (2) of clause 11 of the
Control Order does not at all envisage a partial or
periodical revocation of a licence. The proviso would come
into play only if a licence is revoked or cancelled once for
all. Since a revocation or cancellation of the licence would
operate to the serious prejudice of the licensee and affect
him adversely, it was considered necessary and expedient to
give him a hearing. We are fully satisfied that the impugned
notification does not attract the conditions laid down in
the proviso so as to confer upon the petitioners a right of
hearing. The proviso is, therefore, wholly inapplicable to
the facts of the present case.
It was further submitted by the counsel for the
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petitioners that even if clause 11 did not apply because the
notification is of a legislative character a hearing would
have removed the apprehensions of the petitioners. This
argument has no substance because once it is held that the
notification is impressed with a legislative character, the
question of hearing does not arise. It may be true that
despite the fact that there is no necessity of hearing, the
Government could have evolved some method of giving a very
short notice to the Association and taking its views. But
the omission to do so would not vitiate the notification
impugned. It is well settled that possibility of an
alternative scheme which might have been but has not been
designed, would not be sufficient to make a restriction
unreasonable. In State of Maharashtra v. Mumbai Upnagar
Gramodyog Sangh(1) this Court observed as follows:-
"The legislature has designed a scheme by which
reasonable restrictions are placed upon the right of a
citizen to dispose of his property: possibility of an
alternative scheme which might have been but has not
been designed, will not justifiably expose
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the first scheme to the attack that it imposes
unreasonable restrictions."
Lastly, on contention No. 7 it was urged that the
impugned notification, which purports to have been passed
under the Control Order (which itself was a subordinate
legislation passed under s.3 of the Act of 1955) if properly
considered along with the serious mis-chief it causes to the
citizens, goes against the very spirit and object of the Act
of 1955 and frustrates the equitable distribution and
production of sugar which apparently seems to be the main
object sought to be achieved. This argument has already been
considered by us when we dealt with the various facts and
materials produced before us to justify the impugned
notification. We have already pointed out that in view of an
extraordinary situation viz., the sugar famine and the
increasing demand of sugar by the consumers, the interests
of the consumers had to rank above all considerations. The
notification, as stated by us earlier strikes a just balance
between the needs of the consumers and the harm which may be
done to the owners of the crushers. The degree and urgency
of the evil sought to be remedied by a social control is the
purport and the central theme of the impugned notification.
Having regard to the various aspects which we have indicated
above, it cannot be argued with any show of force that the
remedy sought by the notification is in any way arbitrary or
excessive. On the other hand, the report of the experts,
stoppage of the production of sugar by the factories, the
drought conditions and other factors have to enter into the
decision of the Government in passing the impugned
notification. The notification ex facie cannot be said to
have been passed without due care and deliberation. Relevant
portion of Section 3 of the Act of 1955 runs thus:-
"3. (1) If the Central Government is of opinion that it
is necessary or expedient so to do for maintaining or
increasing supplies of any essential commodity or for
securing their equitable distribution and availability
at fair prices. (or for securing any essential
commodity for the defence of India or the efficient
conduct of military operations) it may, by order,
provide for regulating or prohibiting the production,
supply and distribution thereof and trade and commerce
therein."
The impugned notification having been passed under s.3
of the Act, it fulfils all the conditions contained therein,
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viz., it is expedient for maintaining or increasing the
supply of an essential commodity namely, sugar, which is
included in clause (e) of s.2 of the Act of
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1955 and it regulates the supply and distribution of that
essential commodity and the trade and commerce therein.
Having regard, therefore, to the facts and
circumstances proved in this case, it cannot be said that
either the Control Order or the the impugned notification is
against the tenor and spirit of section 3. On the other
hand, it is manifestly clear from the circumstances
disclosed above that it is in pursuance of the aim and
object for which s.3 was enshrined in the Act of 1955 that
the Control Order and the notification were promulgated. The
contention of the learned counsel for the petitioners on
this score is accordingly overruled.
Mr. Rameshwar Dayal, appearing for some of the
petitioners raised a novel argument which was to the effect
that not only the notification impugned but also the Control
Order was violative of Art. 14 of the Constitution. It was
contended that since the State had already fixed reserved
areas for the factories, the selection of khandsari units
for banning or stopping their production amounted to a mini
classification without any rational basis. We are, however,
unable to accept this contention because in view of the
various circumstances discussed above, the classification,
if at all, was based on a reasonable nexus with the object
sought to be achieved by the notification. Certain other
aspects were also raised by Mr. Dayal which amount to almost
a repetition of the main arguments placed before us by Mr.
Garg and the counsel following him.
Thus, on an overall consideration of the various
aspects of the matter we are fully satisfied that applying
the well established tests of reasonableness, the impugned
notification cannot be said to contain the quality of
unreasonableness but is per se fair and reasonable and fully
satisfies the conditions laid down by this Court in
determining whether or not a restriction is reasonable.
Before closing the judgment we would like to lay down
certain guidelines for any future policy that the Government
may consider fit to shape in the light of the discussion on
the points raised before us in this case. In fact, both
counsel for the petitioners and the Attorney General had
requested us to lay down certain guidelines so that the
Government may benefit from the same. Although we have
upheld the impugned notification but having regard to the
special features of the present case we are not quite
satisfied that a better policy to control sugar or increase
its production could not be followed which may satisfy the
parties concerned, viz., the crushers, the mills, the
sugarcane growers and the consumers.
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In case the Government decides to impose a ban in
future on the power crushers or other units, it may consider
the desirability of giving a bare minimum hearing not to all
the owners of khandsari units but to only one representative
of the Association representing them all, and getting their
views on the subject. It is possible that they might give
some suggestions which the Government would like to
incorporate in formulating its policy. Even if the
Government thinks that an emergent situation has arisen and
it may not be possible to give a hearing, atleast a
representation against the proposed action may be called for
from such Association and considered after giving the
shortest possible notice. Not that such action is a legal
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requirement but it will generate greater confidence of the
persons who may be affected by any order to be passed
against them. In the same token, we may mention that when in
passing an order like the impugned one, the Government has
adopted the trial-and-error method, it would be in the
fitness of things if the matter is carried to its logical
end so that any future order passed contains the colour and
quality of objectivity.
Secondly, could it not be possible for the Government
to allow the crushers to function by regulating the working
hours or to fix a quota of sugarcane to be delivered to the
mills and the crushers in the ratio of 60:40 or 70:30, as
may be advised by the experts and to insist that both the
crushers and the mills should pay a uniform price to the
cane growers ? The counsel for the petitioners have brought
to our notice a disturbing element in the entire case which
is that in the past although the sugarcane growers supplied
sugarcane on condition of payment to them of the support
price fixed. by the Government yet the mills did not pay the
price to the cane growers for a long time with the result
that arrears accumulate running into lakhs of rupees. It
would indeed be extremely desirable for the Government to
take steps to see that payment of the price of the quantity
of the cane supplied to the mills or the crushers is paid
against delivery or, at any rate, within a reasonable time
thereafter so as to provide a strong incentive to the
farmers to increase their production and earn substantial
profits by supplying the sugarcane to mills or crushers
during the crushing season (October to May).
Lastly, it was represented to us by the petitioners
that the crushers are used for the twin purpose of
production of khandsari sugar and gur, rab, etc., but as the
crushers are sealed by the officers of the Government, the
owners are not in a position to produce
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even gur or rab on the production of which not only no ban
has been imposed by the impugned notification but the same
has been completely exempted from the purview of the
notification. Thus it was asserted that the owners of
crushers who want to switch over to production of gur or
rab, because of the ban imposed by the Government on the
production of khandsari may be allowed to do so. The
Attorney General, however, pointed out that if this course
is adopted it will be difficult to detect as to how many
crushers are producing khandsari sugar in the garb of gur or
rab. Wherever any step for banning production is taken, the
Government has to evolve some procedure to detect the
defaulters and with the resources at its command, we cannot
understand why a special staff cannot be appointed on a
temporary basis for looking after the compliance of the
order by the "crushers and making surprise checks
periodically. Another method to prevent the abuse of the
privilege of production of gur or rab by producing khandsari
in a clandestine fashion may be to insert a condition in the
licences of the manufacturers of khandsari sugar that if
they produce khandsari during the period of the ban their
licences would be cancelled.
The result is that all the contentions raised by the
petitioners except the one raised by Mr. Gupta that the
introduction of the word ’vertical’ was violative of Art. 14
of the Constitution are rejected. The word ’vertical’ must
be considered to have been deleted from the impugned
notification. Since the impugned notification has already
spent its force. no relief can be given even to the
petitioners represented by Mr. Gupta. But, in future the
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Government will bear in mind the infirmity pointed out. The
petitions, along with the Civil Appeal, are accordingly
dismissed but in the circumstances without any order as to
costs.
N.V.K. Petitions and Appeal dismissed.
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