Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SWADESHI COTTON MILLS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/01/1981
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
DESAI, D.A.
CITATION:
1981 AIR 818 1981 SCR (2) 533
1981 SCC (1) 664 1981 SCALE (1)90
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1985 SC 520 (35)
F 1985 SC1416 (100)
RF 1986 SC 555 (6)
RF 1986 SC1173 (24)
RF 1986 SC1571 (44)
D 1987 SC1802 (29)
RF 1988 SC 686 (12)
RF 1988 SC 782 (8,9)
F 1990 SC1402 (23)
RF 1992 SC 1 (133)
ACT:
Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951, (65
of 1951) Ss. 18A(1)(b), 18AA(1)(a)-Taking over of an
industrial undertaking-Opportunity of being heard-Whether
and when to be given-Denial of opportunity-Whether vitiates
order-Opinion of take-over by Government-Whether liable to
judicial scrutiny.
Administrative Law-Doctrine of Natural Justice-What is-
When applicable-Pre-decisional and post-decisional hearing-
When arises.
HEADNOTE:
The Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951
empowers the Union of India in the public interest to take
under its control the industries specified in the First
Schedule to the Act. Item 23 of the First Schedule relates
to textiles of various categories.
Section 15 authorises the Central Government to make or
cause to be made a full and complete investigation into the
circumstances of the case if the Central Government is of
the opinion that (a) in respect of any scheduled industry or
industrial undertaking or undertakings (i) there has been,
or is likely to be, a substantial fall in the volume of
production for which, having regard to the economic
conditions prevailing, there is no justification; or (ii)
there has been, or is likely to be, a marked deterioration
in the quality of any article... which could have been or
can be avoided; or (iii) there has been or is likely to be a
rise in the price of any article..... for which there is no
justification; or (iv) it is necessary to take any such
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action for the purpose of conserving any resources of
national importance; or (b) any industrial undertaking is
being managed in a manner highly detrimental to the
scheduled industry concerned or to public interest. After
the investigation is made under section 15, section 16(1)
empowers the Central Government if action is desirable, to
issue appropriate directions, and section 16(2) provides for
the issue of interim directions by the Central Government
pending investigation under section 15.
Chapter III-A consisting of Sections 18A, 18-AA, 18-B,
18-C, 18-D, 18-E and 18-F deal with "direct management or
control of Industrial Undertakings by Central Government in
certain cases". Sec. 18-A empowers the Central Government by
notified order, to authorise any person or body of persons
to take over the management of the whole or any part of an
industrial undertaking or to exercise in respect of the
whole, or any part of the undertaking such functions of
control as may be specified in the order, if the Central
Government is of opinion that:
(a) an industrial undertaking to which directions have
been issued in pursuance of section 16 has failed to comply
with such directions, or (b) an industrial undertaking in
respect of which an investigation has been made under
534
section 15 is being managed in a manner highly detrimental
to the scheduled industry concerned or to public interest.
Section 18AA(5) stipulates that the provisions of
Sections 18-B to 18 E shall be applicable to the industrial
undertaking in respect of which an order has been made under
section 18-AA even as they apply to an industrial
undertaking taken over under Section 18-A. Section 18-F
empowers the Central Government to cancel the order made
under section 18-A if it appears that the purpose of the
order has been fulfilled or it is not necessary that the
order should remain in force.
The appellant M/s. Swadeshi Cotton Mills was taken over
by the Government of India by a notification dated April 13,
1978 in exercise of the powers conferred on it under clause
(a) of sub-section (1) of section 18AA of the Industries
(Development and Regulation) Act, 1951 on the ground that
the company had by creation of encumbrances on the assets of
its industrial undertakings, brought about a situation which
had affected and is likely to further affect the production
of articles manufactured or produced by it and that
immediate action is necessary to prevent such a situation.
The Government authorised the National Textile
Corporation Limited to take over the management, subject to
the conditions that the authorised person shall comply with
all the directions issued from time to time by the Central
Government and that the authorised person shall hold office
for a period of five years.
The appellant Mills challenged the aforesaid order in a
writ petition in the High Court. The case was heard by a
Full Bench of five Judges to consider the question whether
in construing section 18AA of the Industries Development and
Regulation Act, 1951, compliance with the principle of audi
alteram partem is to be implied and whether hearing is to be
given to the parties who would be affected by the order to
be passed prior to the passing of the order or whether
hearing can be given after the order is passed and whether
the order passed under the said Section is vitiated by not
giving of such hearing and whether such vice can be cured.
The Bench by a majority answered the three questions as
follows:-
(a) Section 18AA(1)(a)(b) excludes the giving of prior
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hearing to the party who would be affected by order
thereunder.
(b) Section 18-F expressly provides for a post-
decisional hearing to the owner of the industrial
undertaking, the management of which is taken over under
section 18AA to have the order made under section 18AA
cancelled on any relevant ground.
(c) As the taking over of management under section 18A
is not vitiated by the failure to grant prior hearing the
question of any such vice being cured by a grant of a
subsequent hearing does not arise.
The minority, however, held that in compliance with the
principles of natural justice, prior hearing to the owner of
the undertaking was required to be given before the passing
of an order under section 18AA, that the second question did
not arise as the denial of a prior hearing would not cure
the vice by the
535
grant of subsequent hearing, but it would be open to the
Court to moderate the relief in such a way that the order is
kept alive to the extent necessary until the making of the
fresh order to subserve public interest and to make
appropriate directions.
After the decision on the reference the case was
reheard on merits by a Full Bench of three Judges and the
writ petition was allowed in part. The challenge to the
validity of the order being rejected but insofar as the
impugned order seeking to take over the corporate entity of
the company, the corporate entity of the subsidiary and its
assets, the petition was allowed and the respondents, the
Union of India and the authorised person were directed to
release from its control and custody and/or deliver
possession of any assets or property of the company which
were not referable to the industrial undertakings.
Appeals to this Court were filed on behalf of the
Company as well as by the Union of India and the National
Textile Corporation.
Two propositions were propounded on behalf of the
company that: (a) Whether it was necessary to observe the
rules of natural justice before issuing a notified order
under section 18AA(1)(a) and further whether section 18-F
impliedly excludes rules of natural justice relating to
prior hearing; and it was contended (1) the mere use of the
word ’immediate’ in sub-clause (a) of section 18AA does not
show a legislative intent to exclude the application of audi
alteram partem rule altogether. (2) The word ’immediate’ in
clause (a) has been used in contra distinction to
’investigate’. It only means that under section 18AA action
can be taken without prior investigation under section 15.
The use of the word ’immediate’ in section 18AA(1)(a) only
dispenses with investigation under section 15 and not with
the principle of audi alteram partem altogether and this is
indicated by the marginal note of section 18A and para 3 of
the Statement of Objects and Reasons of the Amendment Bill
which inserted section 18AA in 1971. (3) The word
’immediate’ occurs only in clause (a) and not in clause (b)
of section 18AA(1). It would be odd if intention to exclude
this principle of natural justice is spelt out in one clause
of the sub-section when the other clause does not exclude
it. (4) Section 18-F does not exclude a pre-decisional
hearing. The so-called post-decisional hearing contemplated
by section 18-F cannot be and is not intended to be a
substitute for a pre-decisional hearing. (5) Section 18F
incorporates only a facet, albeit qualified, of section 21
of the General Clauses Act. The language of the Section
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implicity prohibits an enquiry into circumstances that led
to the passing of the order of take-over and under it the
aggrieved person is not entitled to show that on merits the
order was void ab initio. (6) ’Immediacy’ does not exclude a
duty to act fairly because even an emergent situation can
co-exist with the canons of natural justice. The only effect
of urgency on the application of the principle of fair
hearing would be that the width, form and duration of the
hearing would be tailored to the situation and reduced to
the reasonable minimum so that it does not delay and defeat
the purpose of the contemplated action. (7) Where the civil
consequences of the administrative action are grave and its
effect is highly prejudicial to the rights and interests of
the person affected and there is nothing in the language and
scheme of the statute which unequivocally excludes a fair
pre-decisional hearing and the post-decisional hearing
provided therein is not a real remedial hearing equitable to
a full right of appeal the Court should be loath to infer a
legislative intent to exclude even a minimal fair hearing at
the
536
pre-decisional stage merely on ground of urgency. (8) The
Central Government appointed four Government Officials
including one from the office of the Textile Commissioner to
study the affairs of the Company and to make recommendation.
This Official Group submitted its report on February 16,
1978. The evidence on the basis of which the impugned order
was passed was not disclosed to the appellant company till
May 1978, only after it had filed the writ petition in the
High Court. If there was anything adverse to the appellants
in the survey report there was time enough about six weeks
between the submission of the Survey Report and the passing
of the impugned order for giving a short, reasonable
opportunity to the appellants to explain the adverse
findings against them. If there was immediacy situational
modifications could be made to meet the requirement of
fairness, by reducing the period of notice; that even the
manner and form of such notice could be simplified to
eliminate delay, that telephonic notice or short opportunity
for furnishing their explanation to the Company might have
satisfied the requirements of natural justice. Such an
opportunity of hearing could have been given after the
passing of a conditional tentative order and before its
enforcement under section 18AA. For the interregnum suitable
interim action such as freezing the assets of the Company or
restraining the Company from creating further encumbrances,
could be taken under section 16.
On behalf of the Union of India and the Authorised
Officer it was contended that (1) the presumption in favour
of audi alteram partem rule stands impliedly displaced by
the language scheme, setting and the purpose of the
provision in section 18AA. (2) Section 18AA on its plain
terms deals with situations where immediate preventive
action is required. The paramount concern is to avoid
serious problems which may be caused by fall in production.
The purpose of an order under section 18AA is not to condemn
the owner but to protect the scheduled industry. The issue
under section 18AA is not solely between the Government and
the management of the industrial undertaking. The object of
taking action under this Section is to protect other outside
interests of the community at large and the workers. (3) The
rule of natural justice to give a hearing has been
incorporated in section 18-F which gives an opportunity of a
post-decisional hearing to the owner of the undertaking who
if he feels aggrieved can on his application be heard, to
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show that even the original order under section 18AA was
passed on invalid grounds and should be cancelled or
rescinded. (4) On a true construction of section 18AA read
with section 18-F the requirements of natural justice and
fair play can be read into the statute only insofar as
conformance to such canons can reasonably and realistically
be required of it by the provision for a remedial hearing at
a subsequent stage. (5) Under section 18-F the Central
Government exercises curial functions and that Section
confers on the aggrieved owner a right to apply to the
Government to cancel the order of take-over. This section
casts an obligation on the Central Government to deal with
and dispose of an application filed thereunder with
reasonable expedition.
Allowing the appeal by the Company,
^
HELD: (Sarkaria & Desai, JJ. per Chinnappa Reddy, J.
dissenting.)
In the facts and circumstances of the instant case,
there has been a noncompliance with the implied requirement
of the audi alteram partem rule of
537
natural justice at the pre-decisional stage. The impugned
order could be struck down as invalid on that score alone.
But in view of the commitment / concession that a hearing
would be afforded to the Company, the case is remitted to
the Central Government to give a full, fair and effective
hearing.
[587G-H, 588C]
1. The phrase ’natural justice’ is not capable of a
static and precise definition. It cannot be imprisoned in
the straight-jacket of a cast-iron formula. Rules of natural
justice are not embodied rules. Hence not possible to make
an exhaustive catalogue of such rules. Two fundamental
maxims of natural justice have now become deeply and
indelibly ingrained in the common consciousness of mankind
as pre-eminently necessary to ensure that the law is
applied impartially objectively and fairly. These twin
principles are (i) audi alteram partem and (ii) nemo judex
in re sua. Audi alteram partem is a highly effective rule
devised by the Courts to ensure that a statutory authority
arrives at a just decision and it is calculated to act as a
healthy check on the abuse or misuse of power. Its reach
should not be narrowed and its applicability
circumscribed.[554C-G]
2. The rules of natural justice can operate only in
areas not covered by any law validly made. If a statutory
provision either specifically or by inevitable implication
excludes the application of the rules of natural justice
then the Court cannot ignore the mandate of the Legislature.
Whether or not the application of the principles of natural
justice in a given case has been excluded in the exercise of
statutory power depends upon the language and basic scheme
of the provision conferring the power, the nature of the
power the purpose for which it is conferred and the effect
of that power. [556A-B]
3. The maxim audi alteram partem has many facets. Two
of them are (a) notice of the case to be met, and (b)
opportunity to explain. The rule cannot be sacrificed at
the altar of administrative convenience or celerity; for,
convenience and justice are often not on speaking terms.
Difficulties, however, arise when the statute conferring the
power does not expressly exclude this rule but its exclusion
is sought by implication due to the presence of certain
factors such as urgency where the obligation to give notice
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and opportunity to be heard would obstruct the taking of
prompt action of a preventive or remedial nature. Audi
alteram partem rule may be disregarded in an emergent
situation where immediate action brooks no delay to prevent
some imminent danger or injury or hazard to paramount public
interests. Section 133 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
empowers the magistrates specified therein to make an
exparte conditional order in emergent cases for removal of
dangerous public nuisances. Action under section 17 Land
Acquisition Act furnishes another such instance. Similarly
action on grounds of public safety public health may justify
disregard of the rule of prior hearing. [556C-H]
4. Cases where owing to the compulsion of the fact
situation or the necessity of taking speedy action no pre-
decisional hearing is given but the action, is followed soon
by a full post-decisional hearing to the person affected do
not in reality constitute an exception to the audi alteram
partem rule. To call such cases as exception is a misnomer
because they do not exclude fair play in action but adapt it
to the urgency of the situation by balancing the competing
claims of hurry and hearing. [560H-561A]
5. The general principle as distinguished from an
absolute rule of uniform application seems to be that where
a statute does not in terms exclude this rule
538
of prior hearing but contemplates a post-decisional hearing
amounting to a full review of the original order on merits
then such a statute would be construed as excluding the audi
alteram partem rule at the pre-decisional stage. [561G]
6. If the statute conferring the power is silent with
regard to the giving of pre-decisional hearing to the person
affected and the administrative decision taken by the
authority involves civil consequences of a grave nature and
no full review or appeal on merits against that decision is
provided courts will be extremely reluctant to construe such
a statute as excluding the duty of affording even a minimal
hearing shorn of all its formal trappings and dilatory
features at the pre-decisional stage, unless viewed
pragmatically it would paralyse the administrative process
or frustrate the need for utmost promptitude. [561H]
7(i). A comparison of the provisions of Section
18A(1)(b) and Section 18AA(1)(c), bring out two main points
of distinction: First, action under Section 18A(1)(b) can be
taken only after an investigation had been made under
Section 15; while under Section 18AA(1)(a) or (b) action can
be taken without such investigation. The language, scheme
and setting of Section 18AA read in the light of the Objects
and Reasons for enacting this provision make this position
clear beyond doubt. Second, before taking action under
Section 18A(1)(b), the Central Government has to form an
opinion on the basis of the investigation conducted under
section 15, in regard to the existence of the objective
fact, namely: that the industrial undertaking is being
managed in a manner highly detrimental to the scheduled
industry concerned or to public interest; while under
section 18A(1)(a) the Government has to satisfy itself that
the persons incharge of the undertaking have brought about a
situation likely to cause fall in production, by committing
any of the three kinds of acts specified in that provision.
This shows that the preliminary objective fact attributable
to the persons in charge of the management or affairs of the
undertaking, on the basis of which action may be taken under
section 18(A)(1)(b), is of far wider amplitude than the
circumstance, the existence of which is a sine qua non for
taking action under section 18AA(1). The phrase "highly
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detrimental to the scheduled industry or public interest" in
section 18-A is capable of being construed to cover a large
variety of acts or things which may be considered wrong with
the manner of running the industry by the management. In
contrast with it, action under section 18AA(1)(a) can be
taken only if the Central Government is satisfied with
regard to the existence of the twin conditions specifically
mentioned therein, on the basis of evidence in its
possession. [569D-H]
7(ii). An analysis of section 18AA(1)(a), indicates
that as a necessary preliminary to the exercise of the power
thereunder, the Central Government must be satisfied "from
documentary or other evidence in its possession" in regard
to the co-existence of two circumstances: (i) that the
persons in charge of the industrial undertaking have by
committing any of these acts, namely, reckless investments,
or creation of incumbrances on the assets of industrial
undertaking, or by diversion of funds, brought about a
situation which is likely to affect the production of the
article manufactured or produced in the industrial
undertaking, and (ii) that immediate action is necessary to
prevent such a situation.
[570B-D]
8. It cannot be laid down as a general proposition that
whenever a statute confers a power on an administrative
authority and makes the exercise of that power conditional
on the formation of an opinion by that authority in regard
539
to the existence of an immediacy, its opinion in regard to
that preliminary fact is not open to judicial scrutiny at
all. While it may be conceded that an element of
subjectivity is always involved in the formation of such an
opinion, the existence of the circumstances from which the
inference constituting the opinion, as the sine qua non for
action, are to be drawn, must be demonstrable, and the
existence of such "circumstances", if questioned, must be
proved at least prima facie. [571 E-G]
9. From a plain reading of section 18AA, it is clear
that it does not expressly in unmistakable and unequivocal
terms exclude the application of the audi alteram partem
rule at the pre-decisional stage. [574B]
In the instant case, so far as Kanpur Unit is
concerned, it was lying closed for more than three months
before the passing of the impugned order. There was no
’immediacy’ in relation to that unit, which could absolve
the Government from the obligation of complying fully with
audi alteram partem rule at the pre-decisional or pre-
takeover stage. [583A]
Keshav Mills Co. Ltd. v. Union of India, [1973] 3
S.C.R. 22; Kamla Prasad Khetan v. Union of India, [1957]
S.C.R. 1052; Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India, [1978] 2
S.C.R. 621; Sukhdev Singh & Ors. v. Bhagatram Sardar Singh,
[1975] 3 S.C.R. 619; A. K. Kraipak v. Union of India, [1970]
1 S.C.R. 457; Ridge v. Baldwin, [1964] A.C. 40; 196; Heatley
v. Tasmanian Racing & Gaming Commission, 14 Australian Law
Reports 519; Nawabkhan Abbaskhan v. State of Gujarat, [1974]
3 S.C.R. 427; State of Orissa v. Dr. Bina Pani Dei, [1962] 2
S.C.R. 625; Ambalal M. Shah v. Hathi Singh Manufacturing Co.
Ltd. [1962] 3 S.C.R. 171; and S. L. Kapoor v. Jagmohan &
Ors., [1981] 1 S.C.R. 746, referred to.
(Per Chinnappa Reddy, J. dissenting)
The principles of natural justice are not attracted to
the situations contemplated by section 18AA of Industries
(Development and Regulation) Act.
1. Natural justice like Ultra Vires and Public Policy
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is a branch of the public law and is a formidable weapon
which can be wielded to secure justice to the citizen. While
it may be used to protect certain fundamental liberties,
civil and political rights, it may be used as indeed it is
used more often than not, to protect vested interests and to
obstruct the path of progressive change. The time has come
to make an appropriate distinction between natural justice
in its application to fundamental liberties, civil and
political rights and natural justice in its application to
vested interests. [590A-B]
2. Our constitution as befits the Constitution of a
Socialist Secular Democratic Republic, recognises the
paramountcy of the public weal over the private interest.
Natural justice, ultra vires, public policy, or any other
rule of interpretation must, therefore, conform, grow and be
tailored to serve the public interest and respond to the
demands of an evolving society. [590C]
3(i). The principles of natural justice have taken deep
root in the judicial conscience of our people. They are now
considered so fundamental as to be implicit in every
decision making function, judicial, quasi-judicial or
administra-
540
tive. Where authority functions under a statute and the
statute provides for the observance of the principles of
natural justice in a particular manner, natural justice will
have to be observed in that manner and in no other. Where
the statute is silent about the observance of the principles
of natural justice, such statutory silence is taken to imply
compliance with the principles of natural justice. Where the
conflict is between the public interest and the private
interest the presumption must necessarily be weak and may,
therefore, be readily displaced. The presumption is also
weak, where what are involved are mere property rights. In
cases of urgency, particularly where the public interest is
involved, preemptive action may be a strategic necessity.
Even in cases of preemptive action, if the statute so
provides or if the Courts so deem fit in appropriate cases,
a postponed hearing may be substituted for natural justice.
[590A-C; 591F-G]
3(ii). Where natural justice is implied, the extent of
the implication and the nature of the hearing must vary with
the statute, the subject and the situation.
[592B]
4. The absence of the expression ’immediate action’ in
section 18AA(1)(b) does not make any difference. Section
18AA(1)(a) refers to a situation where immediate preventive
action may avert a disaster, whereas section 18AA
contemplates a situation where the disaster has occurred and
action is necessary to restore normalcy. Restoration of
production where production has stopped in a key industry or
industrial undertaking is as important and urgent in the
public interest as prevention of a situation where
production may be affected. Immediate action is, therefore,
as necessary in the situation contemplated by section
18AA(1)(b) as in the situation contemplated by section
18AA(1)(a).
[596 F-G]
5. The marginal note refers to the power to take over
without investigation but there is no sufficient reason to
suppose that the word immediate is used only to contra-
distinguish it from the investigation contemplated by
section 15 of the Act, though of course a consequence of
immediate action under section 18AA may be to dispense with
the enquiry under section 15. In fact, facts which come to
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light during the course of an investigation under section 15
may form the basis of action under section 18AA(1)(a). Where
in the course of an investigation under section 15 it is
discovered that the management have, by reckless investments
or creation of encumbrances on the assets of the industrial
undertaking or by diversion of funds brought about a
situation which is likely to affect the production of the
articles manufactured or produced in the industrial
undertaking, if the Government is satisfied that immediate
action is necessary to prevent such a situation, there is no
reason why the Central Government may not straightaway take
action under section 18AA(1)(a) without waiting for
completion of investigation under section 15. [597A-B]
6. Where there is a provision in the statute itself for
revocation of the order by the very authority making the
decision, it appears to be unnecessary to insist upon a pre-
decisional observance of natural justice. [598A]
7. The likelihood of production being jeopardized or
the stoppage of production in a key industrial undertaking
is a matter of grave concern affecting the public interest.
Parliament has taken so serious a view of the matter that it
has authorised the Central Government to take over the
management of the industrial undertaking if immediate action
may prevent jeopardy to production or restore production
where it has already stopped. The necessity for immediate
541
action by the Central Government contemplated by Parliament
is definitely indicative of the exclusion of natural
justice. It is not as if the owner of the industrial
undertaking is left with no remedy. He may move the Central
Government under section 18-F to cancel the order made under
section 18AA. [598C-D]
8. Neither section 18-F of the Industries (Development
and Regulation) Act nor section 21 of the General Clauses
Act by itself excludes natural justice. The exclusion of
natural justice where such exclusion is not express has to
be implied by reference to the subject, the statute and the
statutory situation. Where an express provision in the
statute itself provides for a post decisional hearing the
other provisions of the Statute will have to be read in the
light of such provision and the provision for post-
decisional hearing may then clinch the issue where pre-
decisional natural justice appears to be excluded on the
other terms of the statute. That a post-decisional hearing
may also be had by the terms of section 21 of the General
Clauses Act may not necessarily help in the interpretation
of the provisions of the statute concerned. [599 A-C]
Ridge v. Baldwin, 1964 A.C. p. 40; Annie G. Phillip v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 75 L.E.d. 1289; John H.
Fahey v. Paul Mallonee, 91 L.E.d. 2030; Margarita Fuentes v.
Robert L. Shevin, Attorney General of Florida, 32 L.E.d. 2d
556 and Lawrence Mitchell v. W. T. Grant Co., 40 L.E.d. 2d
406, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 1629,
1857 & 2087 of 1979.
From the Judgment and Order dated 1-5-1979 of the Delhi
High Court in Civil Writ No. 408 of 1978.
F. S. Nariman, S. D. Parekh, A. D. Mehta, Lalit Bhasin,
Vinay Bhasin and Vineet Kumar for the Appellants in C.A. No.
1629 and for R. 1 in C.A. No. 2087/79.
V. N. Tarkunde, S. Ganesh, K. Vasudev and T.V.S.N.
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Chari for the Appellants in CA 1857/79.
Soli J. Sorabjee, Solicitor General and Girish Chandra
for Appellants in CA 2087 and for Respondent (UOI) in CA
1629/79.
Soli J. Sorabjee, Solicitor General, S. Ganesh Vasdev
and T.V.S.N. Chari for Respondent No. 2 in CA 1629.
T. V. S. N. Chari for Respondent No. 4 in CA 2087
Suresh Parik and S. Swarup for Respondent No. 3 in CA 2087.
F. S. Nariman, B. P. Maheshwari and Suresh Sethi for
Respondent-Swadeshi Cotton Mills Co. Ltd. in CA No. 1857 and
2087/79.
C. M. Chopra for Intervenor.
The Judgment of R. S. Sarkaria and D. A. Desai, JJ. was
delivered by Sarkaria, J. O. Chinnappa Reddy, J. gave a
dissenting Opinion.
542
SARKARIA,J. These appeals arise out of a judgment,
dated May 1, 1979, of the High Court of Delhi, in the
following circumstances:
Appellant No. 1 in Civil Appeal 1629 of 1979 is
Swadeshi Cotton Mills Co. Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as
the Company). It was incorporated as a private company with
an authorised capital of Rs. 30 lakhs in 1921 by the
Horseman family by converting their partnership business
into a Private Joint Stock Company. Its capital was raised
in 1923 to Rs. 32 lakhs and thereafter in 1945 to Rs. 52.50
lakhs by issue of bonus shares. In 1946, the Jaipuria family
acquired substantial holding in the Company. Jaipuria family
is the present management. By issue of further bonus shares
in 1946, the capital of the Company was increased to Rs.
122.50 lakhs. In 1948, the paid-up capital of the Company
was raised to Rs. 210 lakhs by the issue of further bonus
shares. The subscribed and issued capital consisting mainly
of the bonus shares has since remained constant at Rs. 210
lakhs.
In the year 1946, the Company had only one undertaking,
a Textile Unit at Kanpur, known as "The Swadeshi Cotton
Mills, Kanpur". Between 1956 and 1973, the Company set up
and/or acquired five further Textile Units in Pondicherry,
Naini, Udaipur, Maunath Bhanjan and Rae Bareilly. Each of
these six Units or undertakings of the Company was
separately registered in accordance with the provisions of
Section 10 of the Industries (Development and Regulation)
Act, 1951 (hereinafter called the IDR Act).
In addition to these six industrial undertakings, the
Company (it is claimed) had other distinct businesses and
assets. It holds inter alia 97 per cent shares in the
subsidiary, Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing Company Ltd.,
which owns two sugar Mills. The Company claims, it has
substantial income from other businesses and activities
including investments in its subsidiary and in other shares
and securities which include substantial holding of
10,00,000 Equity Shares of Rs. 10/- each in Swadeshi Polytex
Ltd., representing 30 per cent of the total equity capital
value of Swadeshi Polytex Ltd., the intrinsic value whereof
exceeds Rs. 5 crores.
The Company made considerable progress during the years
1957 to 1973. The reserves and surplus of the Company
increased from Rs. 2.3 crores in 1957 to Rs. 4.3 crores in
1973-74, but declined to Rs. 2.8 crores in 1976-77. The
fixed assets of the Company increased from 5.8 crores in
1957 to 19 crores in 1973-74, but declined to Rs. 18 crores,
registering a marginal decrease of Rs. 1 crore in 1976-77.
543
The Company maintained separate books of accounts for
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each of its six industrial undertakings. From and after
April 1973, the Company maintained separate sets of books of
accounts of the businesses and assets other than of the said
six industrial undertakings. Annual accounts of the six
industrial undertakings were first prepared separately in
seven sets which were separately audited. The consolidated
annual accounts of the Company were then prepared from such
annual accounts at the registered office of the Company at
Kanpur, and after audit, were placed before the shareholders
of the Company. The Company made over-all profits up to the
year 1969 and even thereafter up to 1975. The Balance Sheet
showed that the Company suffered a loss of Rs. 86.23 lakhs
after providing depreciation of Rs. 93.93 lakhs and gratuity
of Rs. 48.79 lakhs, though the trading results showed a
gross profit of Rs. 56.49 lakhs. During the year ending
March 31, 1976, the Company again suffered a loss of Rs.
294.82 lakhs after providing for depreciation. The last
Balance Sheet and Profit & Loss Account adopted by the
shareholders and published by the Company relates to the
year ending March 31, 1977. It shows that the Company
suffered a loss of Rs. 200.34 Lakhs after taking into
account depreciation of Rs. 73.27 lakhs which was not
provided in accounts.
Between 1975 and 1978, the Company created the under-
noted encumbrances on the fixed assets:
------------------------------------------------------------
Unit As on As on As on As on Remarks
31-3-75 31-3-76 31-3-77 31-3-78
(in lakhs) (in lakhs)
------------------------------------------------------------
1 2 3 4 5 6
------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Pondi- 2.40 Nil Nil Nil On fixed
chery assets of
of Pondi-
cherry
Unit.
(ii) Maun- 11.40 5.71 Nil Nil On fixed
ath assets of
Bhanjan Unit.
(iii)Udaipur 2.76 Nil Nil Nil On fixed
assets of
Udaipur
Unit.
(iv) Kanpur 13.44 9.75 5.95 2.00 On fixed
(ICICI) asset of
Kanpur
Unit.
(v) Kanpur Nil 150.00 150.00 150.00 On fixed
assets of
Kanpur,
Maunath
Bhanjan &
Pondi-
cherry
Units for
wages and
Bank Dues
------------------------------------------------------------
544
------------------------------------------------------------
1 2 3 4 5 6
------------------------------------------------------------
vi)Company 67.53 68.45 59.44 59.44 On diesel
generating
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sets of
Kanpur,
Naini,
Pondi-
cherry,
Maunath
Bhanjan
and Rae
Bareilly
Units.
(vii)Udaipur Nil 25.00 25.00 25.00 On fixed
assets of
Udaipur
Unit for
gratuity
fund.
(viii)Naini Nil Nil 70.00 70.00 On fixed
assets of
Naini for
gratuity.
(ix) Kanpur, 106.20 75.31 50.67 15.97 On new
Rae machinery
Bareilly of Kanpur,
& Naini Rae
Bareilly &
Naini
Units
under de-
ferred
payment
credit.
-------------------------------------------------
203.73 334.22 361.06 322.41
------------------------------------------------------------
The borrowings of the Kanpur, Pondicherry, Naini,
Udaipur, Maunath Bhanjan and Rae Bareilly Units of the
Company as on March 31, 1978 against current assets were Rs.
256.78, 183.92, 271.05, 70.72, 47.98 and 55.82 lakhs
respectively. All the encumbrances on fixed assets (except
the encumbrances of Rs. 70 lakhs on the fixed assets of
Naini Unit for gratuity funding to get the benefit of
Section 44A of the Income-tax Act) were created prior to
March 31, 1976.
In the accounting year 1976-77, only one new
encumbrance was created by the Company on its fixed assets.
The following are statistics of production in each of the
six units of the Company during the years 1975-76, 1976-77
and 1977-78:
------------------------------------------------------------
Name of the Unit 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78
(figures in lakhs)
------------------------------------------------------------
Naini 66.13 kgs. 65.76 kgs. 72.35 kgs.
Udaipur 18.51 kgs. 18.50 kgs. 18.60 kgs.
Maunath Bhanjan 15.59 kgs. 16.63 kgs. 18.49 kgs.
Rae Bareilly 12.09 kgs. 13.58 kgs. 14.00 kgs.
Pondicherry 170.52 Mtrs 178.77 Mtrs 176.54 Mtrs
Kanpur 318.75 Mtrs 472.12 Mtrs 238.22 Mtrs
------------------------------------------------------------
545
On April 13, 1978, the Government of India in exercise
of its power under clause (a) of sub-section (1) of Section
18AA of the IDR Act, passed an order (hereinafter referred
to as the impugned order) which reads as follows:
"SO 265(E)/18AA/IDRA/78-Whereas the Central
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Government is satisfied from the documentary and other
evidence in its possession, that the persons in charge
of the industrial undertakings namely,
(i) M/s. Swadeshi Cotton Mills, Kanpur,
(ii) M/s. Swadeshi Cotton Mills, Pondicherry,
(iii)M/s. Swadeshi Cotton Mills, Naini,
(iv) M/s. Swadeshi Cotton Mills, Maunath Bhanjan,
(v) M/s. Udaipur Cotton Mills, Udaipur, and
(vi) Rae Bareilly Textile Mills, Rae Bareilly of
M/s. Swadeshi Cotton Mills Company Ltd.,
Kanpur (hereinafter referred to as the said
industrial under takings), have, by creation
of encumbrances on the assets of the said
industrial undertakings, brought about a
situation which has affected and is likely to
further affect the production of articles
manufactured or produced in the said
industrial undertakings and that immediate
action is necessary to prevent such a
situation;
Now, therefore, in exercise of power conferred by
clause (a) of sub-section (1) of Section 18AA of the
Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951 (65
of 1951), the Central Government hereby authorises the
National Textile Corporation Limited (hereinafter
referred to as the Authorised person) to take over the
management of the whole of the said industrial
undertakings, subject to the following terms and
conditions, namely:-
(i) The authorised person shall comply with all
the directions issued from time to time by
the Central Government;
(ii) the authorised person shall hold office for a
period of five years from the date of
publication of this order in the Official
Gazette;
(iii)the Central Government may terminate the
appointment of the authorised person earlier
if it considers necessary to do so.
546
This order shall have effect for a period of five
years commencing from the date of its publication in
the Official Gazette.
Sd/- R. Ramakrishna
Joint Secretary to the Govt. of India
(Seal)."
On April 19, 1978, three petitioners, namely, the
Company through its Joint Secretary, Shri Bhim Singh Gupta,
its Managing Director, Dr. Rajaram Jaipuria, and its
subsidiary company, named Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing
Company, through its Directors and Shareholders filed a writ
petition under Article 226 of the Constitution in the Delhi
High Court against the Union of India and the National
Textile Corporation to challenge the validity of the
aforesaid Government Order dated April 13, 1978. The writ
petition was further supplemented by subsequent affidavits
and rejoinders.
The Union of India and the National Textile Corporation
Ltd., who has been authorised to assume management of the
undertakings concerned were impleaded, as respondents. The
writ petition first came up for hearing before a Division
Bench who by its order dated August 11, 1978, requested the
Chief Justice to refer it to a larger Bench. The case was
then heard by a three Judge Bench who by their order dated
October 12, 1978, requested the Hon’ble the Chief Justice to
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constitute a still larger Bench to consider the question
whether a prior hearing is necessary to be given to the
persons affected before the order under Section 18AA is
passed. Ultimately, the reference came up for consideration
before a Full Bench of five Judges to consider the question,
which was reframed by the Bench as under:
"Whether in construing Section 18AA of the
Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951, as a
pure question of law compliance with the principle of
audi alteram partem is to be implied. If so,
(a) whether such hearing is to be given to the
parties who would be affected by the order to be passed
under the said Section prior to the passing of the
order; or
(b) whether such hearing is to be given after the
passing of the order; and
(c) if prior hearing is to be normally given and
the order passed under the said Section is vitiated by
not giving of such
547
hearing whether such vice can be cured by the grant of
a subsequent hearing."
The Bench by a majority (consisting of Deshpande,
C.J.,R. Sacher and M. L. Jain, JJ.) answered this three fold
question as follows:
"(1) Section 18AA(1) (a) (b) excludes the giving
of prior hearing to the party who would be affected by
order thereunder.
(2) Section 18F expressly provides for a post-
decisional hearing to the owner of the industrial
undertaking, the management of which is taken over
under Section 18AA to have the order made under Section
18AA cancelled on any relevant ground.
(3) As the taking over of management under Section
18AA is not vitiated by the failure to grant prior
hearing, the question of any such vice being cured by a
grant of a subsequent hearing does not arise."
H. L. Anand and N. N. Goswamy, JJ, however dissented. In the
opinion of the minority, in compliance with the principles
of natural justice, a prior hearing to the owner of the
undertaking was required to be given before passing an order
under Section 18AA, that the second question did not arise
as the denial of a prior hearing would not cure the vice by
the grant of subsequent hearing, but it would be open to the
Court to moderate the relief in such a way that the order is
kept alive to the extent necessary until the making of the
fresh order to subserve public interest, and to make
appropriate directions to ensure that the subsequent hearing
would be a full and complete review of the circumstances of
the take-over and for the preservation and maintenance of
the property during the interregnum.
After the decision of the reference, the case was
reheard on merits by a Bench of three learned Judges
(consisting of Deshpande, C.J., Anand and M. L. Jain, JJ.)
who by their judgment, dated May 1, 1979, disposed of the
writ-petition. The operative part of the judgment reads as
under:
"In the result, the writ-petition succeeds in
part, the challenge to the validity of the impugned
order fails and to that extent the petition is
dismissed. The petition succeeds in so far as it seeks
to protect from the impugned order the corporate entity
of the company, the corporate entity of the subsidiary
and its assets, the holding of the company in Polytex
and the assets and property of the company which are
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not referable to any of the industrial undertakings.
The respondents are hereby restrained from in any
manner interfering
548
with the corporate entity, the assets and property
which are outside the impugned order. The respondents
would release from its control and custody and/or
deliver possession of any assets or property of the
company, which are not referable to the industrial
undertakings in terms of the observations made in paras
46 and 47 of the judgment, within a period of three
months from today (May 1, 1979). In the peculiar
circumstances the parties would bear their respective
costs."
On the application of the Company, the Delhi High Court
certified under Article 133 of the Constitution that the
case was fit for appeal to this Court. Subsequently, on July
12,1979, a similar certificate was granted by the High Court
to the Union of India and the National Textile Corporation
Ltd. Consequently, the Company, the Union of India and the
National Textile Corporation have filed Civil Appeals 1629,
2087 and 1857 of 1979, respectively, in this Court. All the
three appeals will be disposed of by this judgment.
The primary, two-fold proposition posed and propounded
by Shri F. S. Nariman, learned counsel for the appellant-
Company in Civil Appeal 1629 of 1979, is as follows:
(a) Whether it is necessary to observe the rules of
natural justice before issuing, a notified order under
Section 18AA, or enforcing a decision under Section 18AA, or
(b) Whether the provisions of Section 18AA and/or
Section 18F impliedly exclude rules of natural justice
relating to prior hearing.
There were other contentions also which were canvassed
by the learned counsel for the parties at considerable
length. But for reasons mentioned in the final part of this
judgment, we do not think it necessary, for the disposal of
these appeals to deal with the same.
Thus, the first point for consideration is whether, as
a matter of law, it is necessary, in accordance with the
rules of natural justice, to give a hearing to the owner of
an undertaking before issuing a notified order, or enforcing
a decision of its take-over under Section 18AA.
Shri Nariman contends that there is nothing in the
language, scheme or object of the provisions in Section 18AA
and/or Section 18F which expressly or by inevitable
implication, excludes the application of the principles of
natural justice or the giving a pre-decisional hearing,
adapted to the situation, to the owner of the undertaking.
It is submitted that mere use of the word "immediate" in
sub-clause (a) of Section 18AA (1) does not show a
legislative intent to exclude the
549
application of audi alterm partem rule, altogether. It is
maintained that according to the decision of this Court in
Keshav Mills Company Ltd. v. Union of India, even after a
full investigation has been made under Section of the I.D.R.
Act, the Government has to observe the rules of natural
justice and fairplay, which in the facts of a particular
case, may include the giving of an opportunity to the
affected owner to explain the adverse findings against him
in the investigation report. In support of his contention,
that the use of the word "immediate" in Section 18AA(1)(a)
does not exclude natural justice, learned counsel has
advanced these reasons:
(i) The word "immediate" in clause (a) has been used in
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contra distinction to ’investigation’. It only means that
under Section 18AA action can be taken without prior
investigation under Section 15, if there is evidence in the
possession of the Government, that the assets of the Company
owning the undertaking are being frittered away by doing any
of the three things mentioned in clause (a); or, the
undertaking has remained closed for a period of not less
than three months and the condition of plant and machinery
is such that it is possible to restart the undertaking. This
construction, that the use of the word "immediate" in
Section 18AA(1)(a) only dispenses with investigation under
Section 15 and not with the principle of audi alterm partem
altogether, is indicated by the marginal heading of Section
18AA and para 3 of the Statement of Objects and Reasons of
the Amendment Bill which inserted Section 18AA, in 1971.
(ii) The word ’immediate’ occurs only in clause (a) and
not in clause (b) of Section 18AA(1). It would be odd if
intention to exclude this principle of natural justice is
spelt out in one clause of the sub-section, when its other
clause does not exclude it.
(iii) Section 18F does not exclude a pre-decisional
hearing. This section was there, when in Keshav Mills’ case,
(ibid), it was held by this Court, that even at the post-
investigation stage, before passing an order under Section
18A, the Government must proceed fairly in accordance with
the rules of natural justice. The so-called post-decisional
hearing contemplated by Section 18F cannot be-and is not
intended to be-a substitute for a pre-decisional hearing.
Section 18F, in terms, deals with the power of Central
Government to cancel an order of take-over under two
conditions, namely: First when "the purpose of an order
under Section 18A has been fulfilled, or, second when "for
any other reason it is not necessary that the order should
remain in force". "Any other reason" has reference to post-
"take-
550
over" circumstances only, and does not cover a reason
relatable to pre-takeover circumstances. An order of
cancellation under Section 18F is intended to be
prospective. This is clear from the plain meaning of the
expressions "remain in force", "necessary" etc. used in the
Section.
Section 18 incorporates only a facet, albeit qualified,
of Section 21 of the General Clauses Act, (Kamla Prasad
Khetan v. Union of India, referred to.) Therefore, the
illusory right given by Section 18F to the aggrieved owner
of the undertaking, to make an application for cancellation
of the order, is not a full right of appeal on merits. The
language of the Section impliedly prohibits an enquiry into
circumstances that led to the passing of the order of "take-
over", and under it, the aggrieved person is not entitled to
show that on merits, the order was void ab initio.
As held by a Bench (consisting of Bhagwati and Vakil
JJ.) of the Gujarat High Court, in Dosabhai Ratanshah
Keravale v. State of Gujarat, a power to rescind or cancel
an order, analogous to that under Section 21, General
Clauses Act, has to be construed as a power of prospective
cancellation, and not of retroactive obliteration. It is
only the existence of a full right of appeal on the merits
or the existence of a provision which unequivocally confers
a power to reconsider, cancel and obliterate completely the
original order, just as in appeal, which may be construed to
exclude natural justice or a pre-decisional hearing in an
emergent situation. (Reference on this point has been made
to Wade’s Administrative Law, 4th Edition, PP.464 to 468.)
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(iv) ’Immediacy’ does not exclude a duty to act fairly,
because, even an emergent situation can co-exist with the
canons of natural justice. The only effect of urgency on the
application of the principle of fair-hearing would be that
the width, form and duration of the hearing would be
tailored to the situation and reduced to the reasonable
minimum so that it does not delay and defeat the purpose of
the contemplated action.
(v) Where the civil consequences of the administrative
action- as in the instant case-are grave and its effect is
highly prejudicial to the rights and interests of the person
affected and there is nothing in the language and scheme of
the statute which unequivocally excludes a fair pre-
decisional hearing, and the post-decisional hearing provided
therein is not a real remedial hearing equitable to a full
551
right of appeal, the Court should be loath to infer a
legislative intent to exclude even a minimal fair hearing at
the pre-decisional stage merely on ground of urgency.
(Reference in this connection has been made to Wade’s
Administrative Law, ibid, page 468 bottom.)
Applying the proposition propounded by him to the facts
of the instant case, Shri Nariman submits that there was
ample time at the disposal of the Government to give a
reasonably short notice to the Company to present its case.
In this connection, it is pointed out that according to para
3 of the further affidavit filed by Shri Daulat Ram on
behalf of the Union of India and other respondents, the
Central Government had in its possession two documents,
namely: (a) copy of the Survey Report on M/s. Swadeshi
Cotton Mills Company Ltd., covering the period from May to
September, 1977 prepared by the office of the Textile
Commissioner, and (b) Annual Report (dated September 30,
1977) of the Company for the year ending March 31, 1971. In
addition, the third circumstance mentioned in the affidavit
of Shri Daulat Ram is, that by an order dated January 28,
1978, the Central Government appointed four Government
Officials, including one from the office of the Textile
Commissioner, to study the affairs of the Company and to
make recommendation. This Official Group submitted its
report on February 16, 1978. It is submitted that this
evidence on the basis of which the impugned order was
passed, was not disclosed to the appellant Company till May
1978, only after it had filed the writ petition in the High
Court to challenge the impugned order. It is emphasised that
if the Survey Report was assumed to contain something
adverse to the appellants, there was time enough-about six
weeks between the submission of the Survey Report and the
passing of the impugned order for giving a short, reasonable
opportunity to the appellants to explain the adverse
findings against them. It is urged that even if there was
immediacy, situational modifications could be made to meet
the requirement of fairness, by reducing the period of
notice; that even the manner and form of such notice could
be simplified to eliminate delay, that telephonic notice or
short opportunity for furnishing their explanation to the
Company might have satisfied the requirements of natural
justice. Such an opportunity of hearing could have been
given after the passing of a conditional tentative order and
before its enforcement under Section 18AA. For the
interregnum suitable interim action such as freezing the
assets of the Company or restraining the Company from
creating further encumbrances, etc. could be taken under
Section 16.
552
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Reference in this connection has been made to Keshav
Mills case (ibid); Mohinder Singh Gill v. Election
Commissioner of India; Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India
Sukhdev Singh & Ors. v. Bhagatram Sardar Singh; A. K.
Kraipak v. Union of India; Ridge v. Baldwin; Heatley v.
Tasmanian Racing & Gaming Commission; Commissioner of Police
v. Tanos; Secretary of State for Education & Science v.
Metropolitan Borough of Tameside; Wiseman v. Borneman;
Nawabkhan Abbaskhan v. State of Gujarat and State of Orissa
v. Dr. Bina Pani Dei.
As against this, Shri Soli Sorabji, learned Solicitor-
General appearing on behalf of respondent 1, contends that
the presumption in favour of audi alteram partem rule stands
impliedly displaced by the language, scheme, setting, and
the purpose of the provision in Section 18AA. It is
maintained that Section 18AA, on its plain terms, deals with
situations where immediate preventive action is required.
The paramount concern is to avoid serious problems which may
be caused by fall in production. The purpose of an order
under Section 18AA is not to condemn the owner but to
protect the scheduled industry. The issue under Section 18AA
is not solely between the Government and the management of
the industrial under taking. The object of taking action
under this Section is to protect other outside interests of
the community at large and the workers. On these premises,
it is urged, the context, the subject-matter and the
legislative history of Section 18AA negative the necessity
of giving a prior hearing; that Section 18AA does not
contemplate any interval between the making of an order
thereunder and its enforcement, because it is designed to
meet an emergent situation by immediate preventive action.
Shri Sorabji submits that this rule of natural justice in a
modified form has been incorporated in Section 18F which
gives an opportunity of a post-decisional hearing to the
owner of the undertaking who, if he feels aggrieved, can, on
his application, be heard to show that even the original
order under Section 18AA was passed on invalid grounds and
should be cancelled or rescinded. Thus,
553
Shri Sorabji does not go to the length of contending that
the principles of natural justice have been fully displaced
or completely excluded by Section 18AA. On the contrary, his
stand is that on a true construction of Section 18AA read
with Section 18F, the requirements of natural justice and
fair-play can be read into the statute only "in so far as
conformance to such canons can reasonably and realistically
be required of it", by the provision for a remedial hearing
at a subsequent stage.
Shri Sorabji further submits that since Section 18F
does not specify any period of time within which the
aggrieved party can seek the relief thereunder, the
opportunity of full, effective and post-decisional hearing
has to be given within a reasonable time. It is stressed
that under Section 18F, the Central Government exercises
curial functions, and that Section confers on the aggrieved
owner a right to apply to the Government to cancel the order
of take-over. On a true construction this Section casts an
obligation on the Central Government to deal with and
dispose of an application filed thereunder with reasonable
expedition. Shri Sorabji further concedes that on the well-
settled principle of implied and ancillary powers, the right
of hearing afforded by Section 18F carries with it the right
to have inspection and copies of all the relevant books,
documents, papers etc. and the Section obligates the Central
Government to take all steps which are necessary for the
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effective hearing and disposal of an application under
Section 18F.
Shri Sorabji has in connection with his arguments cited
these authorities: Mohinder Singh Gill v. Chief Election
Commissioner (ibid); In re. K. (An Infant), Official
Solicitor v. K. & Anr.; Collymore v. Attorney General; Union
of India v. Col. J. N. Sinha; Judicial Review, 3rd Edn. by
De Smith; Queen v. Davey; Gaiman v. National Association for
Internal Revenue; John H. N. Fahey v. Paul Millionee;
Schwartz’s Administrative Law’; Madhav Hayawadanrao Hoskot
v. Maharashtra; Vijay Kumar Mundhra v. Union of India;
Joseph Kuruvilla Vellukumel v.
554
Reserve Bank of India; Corporation of Calcutta v. Calcutta
Tramways and Furnell v. Whapgarei High School.
Before dealing with the contentions advanced on both
sides, it will be useful to have a general idea of the
concept of "natural justice" and the broad principles
governing its application or exclusion in the construction
or administration of statutes and the exercise of judicial
or administrative powers by an authority or tribunal or
constituted thereunder.
Well then what is "natural justice" ? The phrase is not
capable of a static and precise definition. It cannot be
imprisoned in the straight-jacket of a cast-iron formula.
Historically, "natural justice" has been used in a way
"which implies the existence of moral principles of self-
evident and unarguable truth. In course of time, judges
nurtured in the traditions of British jurisprudence, often
invoked it in conjunction with a reference to "equity and
good conscience". Legal experts of earlier generations did
not draw any distinction between "natural justice" and
"natural law". "Natural justice" was considered as "that
part of natural law which relates to the administration of
justice". Rules of natural justice are not embodied rules.
Being means to an end and not an end in themselves, it is
not possible to make an exhaustive catalogue of such rules.
But two fundamental maxims of natural justice have now
become deeply and indelibly ingrained in the common
consciousness of man kind, as pre-eminently necessary to
ensure that the law is applied impartially, objectively and
fairly. Described in the form of Latin tags these twin
principles are :(i) audi alteram partem and (ii) nemo judex
in re sua. For the purpose of the question posed above, we
are primarily concerned with the first. This principle was
well-recognised even in the ancient world. Seneca, the
philosopher, is said to have referred in Medea that it is
unjust to reach a decision without a full hearing. In Maneka
Gandhi’s case, Bhagwati, J. emphasised that audi alteram
partem is a highly effective rule devised by the Courts to
ensure that a statutory authority arrives at a just decision
and it is calculated to act as a healthy check on the abuse
or misuse of power. Hence its reach should not be narrowed
and its applicability circumscribed.
During the last two decades, the concept of natural
justice has made great strides in the realm of
administrative law. Before the epoch-making decision of the
House of Lords in Ridge v. Baldwin, it was
555
generally thought that the rules of natural justice apply
only to judicial or quasi-judicial proceedings; and for that
purpose, whenever a breach of the rule of natural justice
was alleged, Courts in England used to ascertain whether the
impugned action was taken by the statutory authority or
tribunal in the exercise of its administrative or quasi-
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judicial power. In India also, this was the position before
the decision, dated February 7, 1967, of this Court in Dr.
Bina Pani Dei’s case (ibid); wherein it was held that even
an administrative order or decision in matters involving
civil consequences, has to be made consistently with the
rules of natural justice. This supposed distinction between
quasi-judicial and administrative decisions, which was
perceptibly mitigated in Bina Pani Dei’s case, was further
rubbed out to a vanishing point in A. K. Kraipak v. Union of
India (ibid), thus:
"If the purpose of these rules of natural justice
is to prevent miscarriage of justice one fails to see
why those rules should be made inapplicable to
administrative enquiries. Often times it is not easy to
draw the line that demarcates administrative enquiries
from quasi-judicial enquiries.....................
Arriving at a just decision is the aim of both quasi-
judicial enquiries as well as administrative enquiries.
An unjust decision in an administrative enquiry may
have more far-reaching effect than a decision in a
quasi-judicial enquiry."
In A. K. Kraipak’s case, the Court also quoted with
approval the observations of Lord Parker from the Queens
Bench decision in In re H. K. (An Infant) (ibid), which were
to the effect, that good administration and an honest or
bona fide decision require not merely impartiality or merely
bringing one’s mind to bear on the problem, but acting
fairly. Thus irrespective of whether the power conferred on
a statutory body or tribunal is administrative or quasi-
judicial, a duty to act fairly, that is, in consonance with
the fundamental principles of substantive justice is
generally implied, because the presumption is that in a
democratic polity wedded to the rule of law, the state or
the Legislature does not intend that in the exercise of
their statutory powers its functionaries should act unfairly
or unjustly.
In the language of V.R. Krishna Iyer, J. (vide Mohinder
Singh Gill’s case, ibid.):
"Subject to certain necessary limitations natural
justice is now a brooding omnipresence although varying
in its play. Its essence is good conscience in a given
situation; nothing more-but nothing less."
556
The rules of natural justice can operate only in areas
not covered by any law validly made. They can supplement the
law but cannot supplant it (Per Hegde, J. in A. K. Kraipak,
ibid). If a statutory provision either specifically or by
inevitable implication excludes the application of the rules
of natural justice, then the Court cannot ignore the mandate
of the Legislature. Whether or not the application of the
principles of natural justice in a given case has been
excluded, wholly or in part, in the exercise of statutory
power, depends upon the language and basic scheme of the
provision conferring the power, the nature of the power, the
purpose for which it is conferred and the effect of the
exercise of that power. (See Union of India v. Col. J. N.
Sinha, ibid.)
The maxim audi alteram partem has many facets. Two of
them are: (a) notice of the case to be met; and (b)
opportunity to explain. This rule is universally respected
and duty to afford a fair hearing in Lord Loreburn’s oft-
quoted language, is "a duty lying upon every one who decides
something", in the exercise of legal power. The rule cannot
be sacrificed at the altar of administrative convenience or
celerity; for, "convenience and justice"-as Lord Atkin
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felicitously put it- "are often not on speaking terms".
The next general aspect to be considered is: Are there
any exceptions to the application of the principles of
natural justice, particularly the audi alteram partem rule ?
We have already noticed that the statute conferring the
power, can by express language exclude its application. Such
cases do not present any difficulty. However, difficulties
arise when the statute conferring the power does not
expressly exclude this rule but its exclusion is sought by
implication due to the presence of certain factors: such as,
urgency, where the obligation to give notice and opportunity
to be heard would obstruct the taking of prompt action of a
preventive or remedial nature. It is proposed to dilate a
little on this aspect, because in the instant case before
us, exclusion of this rule of fair hearing is sought by
implication from the use of the word ’immediate’ in Section
18AA(1). Audi alteram partem rule may be disregarded in an
emergent situation where immediate action brooks no delay to
prevent some imminent danger or injury or hazard to
paramount public interests. Thus, Section 133 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, empowers the magistrates specified
therein to make an exparte conditional order in emergent
cases, for removal of dangerous public nuisances. Action
under Section 17, Land Acquisition Act, furnishes another
such instance. Similarly, action on grounds of public safety
public health may justify disregard of the rule of prior
hearing.
557
Be that as it may, the fact remains that there is no
consensus of judicial opinion on whether more urgency of a
decision is a practical consideration which would uniformly
justify non-observance of even an abridged form of this
principle of natural justice. In Durayappah v. Fernando.
Lord Upjohn observed that "while urgency may rightly limit
such opportunity timeously perhaps severely, there can never
be a denial of that opportunity if the principles of natural
justice are applicable.
These observations of Lord Upjohn in Durayappah’s case
were quoted with approval by this Court in Mohinder Singh
Gill’s case. It is therefore, proposed to notice the same
here.
In Mohinder Singh Gill’s case, the appellant and the
third respondent were candidates for election in a
Parliamentary Constituency. The appellant alleged that when
at the last hour of counting it appeared that he had all but
won the election, at the instance of respondent, violence
broke out and the Returning Officer was forced to postpone
declaration of result. The Returning Officer reported the
happening to the Chief Election Commissioner. An officer of
the Election Commission who was an observer at the counting,
reported about the incidents to the Commission. The
appellant met the Chief Election Commissioner and requested
him to declare the result. Eventually, the Chief Election
Commissioner issued a notification which stated that taking
all circumstances into consideration the Commission was
satisfied that the poll had been vitiated, and therefore in
exercise of the powers under Article 324 of the
Constitution, the poll already held was cancelled and a
repoll was being ordered in the constituency. The appellant
contended that before making the impugned order, the
Election Commission had not given him a full and fair
hearing and all that he had was a vacuous meeting where
nothing was disclosed. The Election Commission contended
that a prior hearing has, in fact, been given to the
appellant. In addition, on the question of application of
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the principles of natural justice, it was urged by the
respondents that the tardy process of notice and hearing
would thwart the conducting of elections with speed, that
unless civil consequences ensued, hearing was not necessary
and that the right accrues to a candidate only when he is
declared elected. This contention, which had found favour
with the High Court, was negatived by this Court. Delivering
the judgment of the Court, V. R. Krishna Iyer, J., lucidly
explained the meaning and scope of the concept of natural
justice and its role in a case where there is a competition
between the necessity of taking speedy
558
action and the duty to act fairly. It will be useful to
extract those illuminating observations, in extenso:
"Once we understand the soul of the rule as
fairplay in action - and it is so - we must hold that
it extends to both the fields. After all,
administrative power in democratic set-up is not
allergic to fairness in action and discretionary,
executive justice cannot degenerate into unilateral
injustice. Nor is there ground to be frightened of
delay, in convenience and expense, if ’natural justice
gains access. For fairness itself is a flexible,
pragmatic and relative concept, not a rigid,
ritualistic or sophisticated abstraction. It is not a
bull in a china shop, nor a bee in one’s bonnet. Its
essence is good conscience in a given situation;
nothing more - but nothing less. The ’exceptions’ to
the rules of natural justice are a misnomer or rather
are but a shorthand form of expressing the idea that in
those exclusionary cases nothing unfair can be inferred
by not affording an opportunity to present or meet a
case."
After referring to several decisions, including the
observations of Lord Upjohn in Durayappah v. Fernando, the
Court explained that mere invocation or existence of urgency
does not exclude the duty of giving a fair hearing to the
person affected:
"It is untenable heresy, in our view, to lock law
the victim or act behind his back by tempting
invocation of urgency, unless the clearest case of
public injury flowing from the least delay is self-
evident. Even in such cases a remedial hearing as soon
as urgent action has been taken is the next best. Our
objection is not to circumscription dictated by
circumstances, but to annihilation as an easy escape
from benignant, albeit inconvenient obligation. The
procedural pre-condition or fair hearing, however
minimal, even post-decisional, has relevance to
administrative and judicial gentlemanliness."
"We may not be taken to....say that situational
modifications to notice and hearing are altogether
impermissible......... the glory of the law is not that
sweeping rules are laid down but that it tailors
principles to practical needs. doctors remedies to suit
the patient promotes not freezes Life’s processes, if
we may mix metaphors.".............
559
The Court further emphasised the necessity of striking
pragmatic balance between competing requirements of acting
urgently and fairly, thus:-
"Should the cardinal principle of "hearing’ as
condition for decision-making be martyred for the cause
of administrative, immediacy? We think not. The full
panoply may not be there but a manageable minimum may
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make-do."
"In Wiseman v. Borneman there was a hint of the
competitive claims of hurry and hearing. Lord Reid
said: ’Even where the decision has to be reached by a
body acting judicially, there must be a balance between
the need for expedition and the need to give full
opportunity to the defendant to see material against
him (emphasis added). We agree that the elaborate and
sophisticated methodology of a formalised hearing may
be injurious to promptitude so essential in an election
under way. Even so, natural justice is pragmatically
flexible and is amenable to capsulation under the
compulsive pressure of circumstances. To burke it
altogether may not be a stroke of fairness except in
very exceptional circumstances."
The Court further pointed out that the competing claims of
hurry and hearing can be reconciled by making situational
modifications in the audi alteram partem rule:
"Lord Denning M.R., in Manward v. Boreman,
summarised the observations of the Law Lords in this
form. No doctrinaire approach is desirable but the
Court must be anxious to salvage the cardinal rule to
the extent permissible in a given case. After all, it
is not obligatory that counsel should be allowed to
appear ’nor is it compulsory that oral evidence should
be adduced. Indeed, it is not even imperative that
written statements should be called for disclosure of
the prominent circumstances and asking for an immediate
explanation orally or otherwise may, in many cases be
sufficient compliance. It is even conceivable that an
urgent meeting with the concerned parties summoned at
an hour’s notice, or in a crisis, even a telephone
call, may suffice. If all that is not possible as in
the case of a fleeing person whose passport has to be
impounded lest he should evade the course of justice or
a dangerous nuisance needs immediate abate-
560
ment, the action may be taken followed immediately by a
hearing for the purpose of sustaining or setting aside
the action to the extent feasible. It is quite on the
cards that the Election Commission, if pressed by
circumstances may give a short hearing. In any view, it
is not easy to appreciate whether before further steps
got under way he could have afforded an opportunity of
hearing the parties, and revoke the earlier
directions...... All that we need emphasize is that the
content of natural justice is a dependent variable, not
an easy casualty."
"Civil consequence’ undoubtedly cover infraction
of not merely property or personal rights but of civil
liberties, material deprivations and non-pecuniary
damages. In its comprehensive connotation, everything
that affects a citizen in his civil life inflicts a
civil consequence." (emphasis added)
In Maneka Gandhi, it was laid down that where in an
emergent situation, requiring immediate action, it is not
practicable to give prior notice or opportunity to be heard,
the preliminary action should be soon followed by a full
remedial hearing.
The High Court of Australia in Commissioner of Police
v. Tanos, ibid, held that some urgency, or necessity of
prompt action does not necessarily exclude natural justice
because a true emergency situation can be properly dealt
with by short measures. In Heatley v. Tasmanian Racing &
Gaming Commission, ibid, the same High Court held that
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without the use of unmistakable language in a statute, one
would not attribute to Parliament an intention to authorise
the Commission to order a person not to deal in shares or
attend a stock exchange without observing natural justice.
In circumstances of likely immediate detriment to the
public, it may be appropriate for the Commission to issue a
warning-off notice without notice or stated grounds but
limited to a particular meeting, coupled with a notice that
the Commission proposed to make a long-term order on stated
grounds and to give an earliest practicable opportunity to
the person affected to appear before the Commission and show
why the proposed long term order be not made.
As pointed out in Mohinder Singh Gill v. Chief Election
Commissioner and in Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India ibid,
such cases where owing to the compulsion of the fact
situation or the necessity of taking speedy action, no pre-
decisional hearing is given but the action is followed soon
by a full post decisional hearing to the
561
person affected, do not, in reality, constitute an
’exception’ to the audi alteram partem rule. To call such
cases an ’exception’ is a misnomer because they do not
exclude ’fair-play in action’, but adapt it to the urgency
of the situation by balancing the competing claims of hurry
and hearing.
"The necessity for speed", writes Paul Jackson, "may
justify immediate action, it will, however, normally allow
for a hearing at a later stage. The possibility of such a
hearing-and the adequacy of any later remedy should the
initial action prove to have been unjustified-are
considerations to be borne in mind when deciding whether the
need for urgent action excludes a right to rely on natural
justice. Moreover, however the need to act swiftly may
modify or limit what natural justice requires. it must not
be thought ’that because rough, swift or imperfect justice
only is available that there ought to be no justice’ Pratt
v. Wanganui Education Board."
Prof. de Smith the renowned author of ’Judicial Review’
(3nd Edn.) has at page 170, expressed his views on this
aspect of the subject, thus:
"Can the absence of a hearing before a decision is made
be adequately compensated for by a hearing ex post
facto ? A prior hearing may be better than a subsequent
hearing, but a subsequent hearing is better than no
hearing at all; and in some cases the courts have held
that statutory provision for an administrative appeal
or even full judicial review on the merits are
sufficient to negative the existence of any implied
duty to hear before the original decision is made. The
approach may be acceptable where the original decision
does not cause serious detriment to the person
affected, or where there is also a paramount need for
prompt action, or where it is impracticable to afford
antecedent hearings."
In short, the general principle-as distinguished from
an absolute rule of uniform application-seems to be that
where a statute does not in terms, exclude this rule of
prior hearing but contemplates a post-decisional hearing
amounting to a full review of the original order on merits,
then such a statute would be construed as excluding the audi
alteram partem rule at the pre-decisional stage. Conversely,
if the statute conferring the power is silent with regard to
the giving of a pre-decisional hearing to the person
affected and the administrative decision taken by the
authority involves civil consequences of a grave nature, and
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no full review or appeal on merits against that decision is
provided, courts will be extremely reluctant to con-
562
strue such a statute as excluding the duty of affording even
a minimal hearing, shown of all its formal trappings and
dilatory features at the pre-decisional stage, unless,
viewed pragmatically, it would paralyse the administrative
process or frustrate the need or utmost promptitude. In
short, this rule of fairplay "must not be jettisoned save in
very exceptional circumstances where compulsive necessity so
demands". The court must make every effort to salvage this
cardinal rule to the maximum extent possible, with
situational modifications. But, to recall the words of
Bhagvati, J., the core of it must, however, remain, namely,
that the person affected must have reasonable opportunity of
being heard and the hearing must be a genuine hearing and
not an empty public relations exercise.
Keeping the general principles stated above, let us now
examine the scheme content, object and legislative history
of the relevant provisions of the I.D.R. Act.
The I.D.R. Act (Act 65 of 1951) came into force on May
8,1952 The Statement of Objects and Reasons published in the
Gazette of India, dated March 26, 1949, says that its object
is to provide the Central Government with the means of
implementing their industrial policy which was announced in
their Resolution, dated April 6, 1948, and approved by the
Central Legislature. The Act brings under Central Control
the development and regulation of a number of important
industries specified in its First Schedule, the activities
of which affect the country as a whole and the development
of which must be governed by economic factors of all-India
import. The requirement with regard to registration, issue
or revocation of licences of these specific industrial
undertakings has been provided in Chapter II of the Act.
Section 3(d) defines an ’industrial undertaking’ to mean
"any undertaking pertaining to a scheduled industry carried
on in one or more factories by any person or authority
including Government": Clause (f) of the same section
defines "owner" in relation to an undertaking.
Section 15 gives power to the Central Government to
cause investigation to be made into a scheduled industry or
industrial undertaking. The Section reads as follows:
"where the Central Government is of the opinion that-
(a) in respect of any scheduled industry or industrial
undertaking or undertakings-
(i) there has been, or is likely to be a substantial
fall in the volume of production in respect of any
article or class
563
of articles relatable to that industry or manufactured
or produced in the industrial undertaking or
undertakings, as the case may be; for which having
regard to the economic conditions prevailing, there is
no justification, or
(ii) there has been, or is likely to be, a marked
deterioration in the quality of any article or class of
articles relatable to that industry or manufactured or
produced in the industrial undertaking or undertakings,
as the case may be, which could have been or can be
avoided; or
(iii) there has been or is likely to be a rise in the
price of any article or class of articles relatable to
that industry or manufactured or produced in the
industrial undertaking or undertakings, as the case may
be, for which there is no justification; or
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(iv) it is necessary to take any such action as is
provided in this Chapter for the purpose of conserving
any resources of national importance which are utilised
in the industry or the industrial undertaking or
undertakings, as the case may be; or
(b) any industrial undertaking is being managed in a
manner highly detrimental to the scheduled industry
concerned or to public interest.
the Central Government may make or cause to be made a
full and complete investigation into the circumstances
of the case by such person or body of persons as it may
appoint for the purpose."
Section 16 empowers the Central Government to issue
appropriate directions to the industrial undertaking
concerned on completion of investigation under Section 15.
Such directions may be for all or any of the following
purposes:
"(a) regulating the production of any article or
class of articles by the industrial undertaking or
undertakings and fixing the standards of production;
(b) requiring the industrial undertaking or
undertakings to take such steps as the Central
Government may consider necessary, to stimulate the
development of the industry to which the undertaking or
undertakings relates or relate;
564
(c) prohibiting the industrial undertaking or
undertakings from resorting to any act or practice
which might reduce its or their production, capacity or
economic value;
(d) controlling the prices, or regulating the
distribution of any article or class of articles which
have been the subject matter of investigation."
Sub-section (2) enables the Central Government to issue such
directions to the industrial undertakings pending
investigation.
In the course, of the working of I.D.R. Act, certain
practical difficulties came to light. One of them was that
"Government cannot take over the management of any
industrial undertaking, even in a situation calling for
emergent action without first issuing directions to it and
waiting to see whether or not they are obeyed." In order to
remove such difficulties, the Amending Act 26 of 1953
inserted Chapter IIIA containing Sections 18A to 18F in the
I.D.R. Act. Section 18A confers power on the Central
Government to assume management or control of an industrial
undertaking in certain cases. The material part of the
Section reads as under:
"(1) If the Central Government is of opinion that
(a) an industrial undertaking to which directions
have been issued in pursuance of Section 16 has failed
to comply with such directions, or
(b) an industrial undertaking in respect of which
an investigation has been made under Section 15
(whether or not any directions have been issued to the
undertaking in pursuance of Section 16), is being
managed in a manner highly detrimental to the scheduled
industry concerned or to public interest;
the Central Government may, by notified order,
authorise any person or body of persons to take over
the management of the whole or any part of the
undertaking or to exercise in respect of the whole or
any part of the undertaking such functions of control
as may be specified in the order.
(2) Any notified order issued under sub-section
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(1) shall have effect for such period not exceeding
five years as may be specified in the order."
Section 18B specifies the effect of notified order under
Section 18A Sub-section (1) of the section reads thus:
565
"On the issue of a notified order under Section
18A authorising the taking over of the management of an
industrial undertaking-
(a) all persons in charge of the management
including, persons holding office as managers or
directors of the industrial undertaking immediately
before the issue of the notified order, shall be deemed
to have vacated their offices as such;
(b) any contract of management between the
industrial undertaking and any managing agent, or any
director thereof holding office as such immediately
before the issue of the notified order shall be deemed
to have been terminated;
(c) the managing agent, if any, appointed under
Section 18A shall be deemed to have been duly appointed
as the managing agent in pursuance of the Indian
Companies Act, 1913 (7 of 1913), and the memorandum and
articles of association of the industrial undertaking,
and the provisions of the said Act and of the
memorandum and articles shall, subject to the other
provisions contained in this Act, apply accordingly,
but no such managing agent shall be removed from office
except with the previous consent of the Central
Government;
(d) the person or body of persons authorised
under Section 18A to take over the management shall
take all such steps as may be necessary to take into
his or their custody or control all the property,
effects and actionable claims to which the industrial
undertaking is or appears to be entitled, and all the
property and effects of the industrial undertaking,
shall be deemed to be in the custody of the person or,
as the case may be, the body of persons as from the
date of the notified order; and
(e) the persons, if any, authorised under Section
18A to take over the management of an industrial
undertaking which is a company shall be for all
purposes the directors of industrial undertaking duly
constituted under the Indian Companies Act, 1913 (7 of
1913), and shall alone be entitled to exercise all the
powers of the directors of the industrial undertaking,
whether such powers are derived from the said Act or
from the memorandum or articles of association of the
industrial undertaking or from any other source."
566
Section 18D provides that a person whose office is lost
under clause (a) or whose contract of management is
terminated under clause (b) of Section 18B shall have no
right to compensation for such loss or termination. Section
18F is material. It reads thus:
"If at any time it appears to the Central
Government on the application of the owner of the
industrial undertaking or otherwise that the purpose of
the order made under Section 18A has been fulfilled or
that for any other reason it is not necessary that the
order should remain in force, the Central Government
may, by notified order, cancel such order and on the
cancellation of any such order the management or the
control, as the case may be of the industrial
undertaking shall vest in the owner of the
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undertaking."
By the Constitution Fourth Amendment Act 1955, Chapter
IIIA of the I.D.R. Act was included as Item 19 in the Ninth
Schedule of the Constitution.
Before we may come to Section 18AA, we may notice here
the legislative policy with regard to Cotton Textile
Industry, as adumbrated in the Cotton Textile Companies
Management of Undertakings and Liquidation or Reconstruction
Act, 1967 (Act XXIX of 1967). The Statement of Objects and
Reasons for enacting this statute, inter alia, says:
"The cotton textile industry provides one of the
basic necessities of life and affords gainful
employment to millions of people. Over the last few
years, this vital industry has been passing through
difficult times. Some mills have already to close down
and the continuing economic operation of many others is
beset with many difficulties. These difficulties have
been aggravated in many cases by the heavy burden of
past debts. The taking over the management of the mills
for a limited time and then restoring them to original
owners has not remedied the situation. Steps are
therefore, necessary to bring about a degree of
rationalisation of the financial and managerial
structure of such units with a view to their
rehabilitation, so that production and employment may
not suffer."
Textile Industry is also among the industries, included in
the First Schedule to the I.D.R. Act.
567
The Amendment Act 72 of 1971 inserted Section 18AA in
the original I.D.R. Act. The material part of the Statement
of Objects and Reasons for introducing this Bill of 1971
published in the Gazette of India Extraordinary, is as
follows:
"The industries included in the First Schedule ..
not only substantially contribute to the Gross National
produce of the country, but also afford gainful
employment to millions of people. For diverse reasons a
number of industrial undertakings engaged in these
industries have had to close down and the continuing
economic operation of many others is beset with serious
difficulties affecting industrial production and
employment. . . During the period of take over
Government has to invest public funds in such
undertakings and it must be able to do so with a
measure of confidence about the continued efficient
management of the undertaking at the end of the period
of take over. In order to ensure that at the end of the
period of take over by Government, the industrial
undertaking is not returned to the same hands which
were responsible for its earlier misfortune, it has
been provided in the Bill that in relation to an
undertaking taken over by them, Government will have
the power to move for (i) the sale of the undertaking
at a reserve price or higher (Government purchasing it
at the reserve price if no offer at or above the
reserve price is received), action being taken
simultaneously for the winding up of the company owning
the industrial undertaking; or (ii) the reconstruction
of the company owning the industrial undertaking with a
view to giving the Government a controlling interest in
it. . . . With a view to ensuring speedy action by
Government, it has been provided in the Bill that if
the Government has evidence to the effect that the
assets of the company owning the industrial undertaking
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are being frittered away or the undertaking has been
closed for a period not less than three months and such
closure is prejudicial to the concerned scheduled
industry and that the financial condition of the
company owning the industrial undertaking and the
condition of the plant and machinery installed in the
undertaking is such that it is possible to restart the
undertaking and such restarting-is in the public
interest, Government may take over the management
without an investigation."
(emphasis added).
568
With the aforesaid Objects in view, Section 18AA was
inserted by the Amendment Act No. 72 of 1971. The marginal
heading of the Section is to the effect: "Power to take over
industrial undertakings without investigation under certain
circumstances". This marginal heading, it will be seen,
accords with the Objects and Reasons extracted above.
Section 18AA runs as under:
"Without prejudice to any other provision of this
Act, if, from the documentary or other evidence in its
possession, the Central Government is satisfied, in
relation to an industrial undertaking that-
(a) the persons incharge of such industrial
undertaking have, by reckless investments or creation
of encumbrances on the assets of the industrial
undertaking, or by diversion of funds, brought about a
situation which is likely to affect the production of
articles manufactured or produced in the industrial
undertaking, and that immediate action is necessary to
prevent such a situation; or
(b) it has been closed for a period of not less
than three months (whether by reason of the voluntary
winding up of the company owning the industrial
undertaking or for any other reason) and such closure
is prejudicial to the concerned scheduled industry and
that the financial condition of the company owning the
industrial undertaking and the condition of the plant
and machinery of such undertaking are such that it is
possible to re-start the undertaking and such re-
starting is necessary in the interests of the general
public, it may, by a notified order, authorise any
person (hereinafter referred to as the ’authorised
person’) to take over the management of the whole or
any part of the industrial undertaking or to exercise
in respect of the whole or any part of the undertaking
such functions of control as may be specified in the
order.
(2) The provisions of sub-section (2) of Section
18A shall, as far as may be, apply to a notified order
made under sub-section (1) as they apply to a notified
order made under sub-section (1) of Section 18A.
(3) Nothing contained in sub-section (1) and sub-
section (2) shall apply to an industrial undertaking
owned by a company which is being wound up by or under
the supervision of the Court.
569
(4) Where any notified order has been made under
sub-section (1), the person or body of persons having,
for the time being, charge of the management or control
of the industrial undertaking, whether by or under the
orders of any court or any contract, instrument or
otherwise, shall notwithstanding anything contained in
such order, contract, instrument or other arrangement,
forthwith make over the charge of management or
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control, as the case may be, of the industrial
undertaking to the authorised person.
(5) The provisions of Section 18-B to 18-E (bot
inclusive) shall, as far as may be, apply to, or in
relation to the industrial undertaking in respect of
which a notified order has been made under sub-section
(1), as they apply to an industrial undertaking in
relation to which a notified order has been issued
under Section 18-A."
A comparison of the provisions of Section 18A(1)(b) and
Section 18AA(1)(a) would bring out two main points of
distinction: First, action under Section 18A (1)(b) can be
taken only after an investigation had been made under
Section 15: while under Section 18AA(1)(a) or (b) action can
be taken without such investigation. The language, scheme
and setting of Section 18AA read in the light of the objects
and Reasons for enacting this provision make this position
clear beyond doubt. Second, before taking action under
Section 18A(1) (b), the Central Government has to form an
opinion on the basis of the investigation conducted under
Section 15, in regard to the existence of the objective
fact, namely: that the industrial undertaking is being
managed in a manner highly detrimental to the Scheduled
industry concerned or to public interest; while under
Section 18AA(1) (a) the Government has to satisfy itself
that the persons incharge of the undertaking have brought
about a situation likely to cause fall in production, by
committing any of the three kinds of acts specified in that
provision. This shows that the preliminary objective fact
attributable to the persons in charge of the management or
affairs of the undertaking, on the basis of which action may
be taken under Section 18A(1) (b), is of far wider amplitude
than the circumstances, the existence of which is a sine qua
non for taking action under Section 18AA(1). The phrase
"highly detrimental to the scheduled industry or public
interest" in Section 18A is capable of being construed to
over a large variety of acts or things which may be
considered wrong with the manner of running the industry by
the management. In contrast with it, action under Section
18AA(1) (a) can be taken only if the Central Gov-
570
ernment is satisfied with regard to the existence of the
twin conditions specifically mentioned therein, on the basis
of evidence in its possession.
From an analysis of Section 18AA(1) (a), it will be
clear that as a necessary preliminary to the exercise of the
power thereunder, the Central Government must be satisfied
"from documentary or other evidence in its possession" in
regard to the co-existence of two circumstances:
(i) that the persons in charge of the industrial
undertaking have by committing any of these acts, namely,
reckless investments, or creation of incumbrances on the
assets of industrial undertaking, or by diversion of funds,
brought about a situation, which is likely to affect the
production of the article manufactured or produced in the
industrial undertaking, and
(ii) that immediate action is necessary to prevent such
a situation.
Speaking for the High Court (majority), the learned
Chief Justice (Deshpande, C.J.) has observed that only with
regard to the fulfilment of condition (i) the satisfaction
of the Government is required to be objectively reached on
the basis of relevant evidence in its possession; while with
regard to condition (ii), that is, the need for immediate
action, it is purely subjective, and therefore, the
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satisfaction of the Government with regard to the immediacy
of the situation is outside the scope of judicial review.
Shri Sorabji has in his arguments, forcefully supported
this opinion of the High Court. He maintains that the
satisfaction of the Government with regard to the existence
of the immediacy is not justiciable. Reliance has been
placed on the following passage in the judgment of Channell,
J. in Queen v. Davey & Ors.:
"The general principle of law is that an order
affecting his liberty or property cannot be made
against any one without giving him an opportunity of
being heard; the result is that, if general words used
in a statute empowering the making of such an order as
this, it must be made on notice to the party affected.
There are, however, exceptions to this rule, which
arise where it can be seen on the words of the statute
that it was intended that the order should be made on
an ex parte application, and the case in which it is
easiest to see the propriety of the exception is where,
looking
571
at the scope and object of the legislation, it was
clearly intended that the parties putting the law in
force should act promptly. Such a case is an order for
the destruction of unsound meat, which clearly may be
made ex parte, because it is desirable in the interest
of the public health that it should be acted upon at
once. The case of removing an infectious person, likely
to spread abroad the infection, to an infectious
hospital is obviously of the same character."
According to the learned Solicitor-General, the power
conferred on the Central Government is in the nature of an
emergency power, that the necessity for taking immediate
action is writ large in Section 18AA(1) (a)-the provision
being a legislative response to deal with an economically
emergent situation fraught with national repercussions. The
object of the exercise of this power is not to punish anyone
but to take immediate preventive action in the public
interest.
On the other hand, Shri Nariman submits that the High
Court was clearly in error in holding that the satisfaction
of the Central Government with regard to the necessity of
taking immediate action was not open to judicial review at
all. It is emphasised that the very language of the
provision shows that the necessity for taking immediate
action is a question of fact, which should be apparent from
the relevant evidence in the possession of the Government.
We find merit in this contention. It cannot be laid
down as a general proposition that whenever a statute
confers a power on an administrative authority and makes the
exercise of that power conditional on the formation of an
opinion by that authority in regard to the existence of an
immediacy, its opinion in regard to that preliminary fact is
not open to judicial scrutiny at all. While it may be
conceded that an element of subjectivity is always involved
in the formation of such an opinion, but as was pointed out
by this Court in Bariam Chemicals (ibid), the existence of
circumstances from which the inferences constituting the
opinion, as the sine qua non for action are to be drawn,
must be demonstrable, and the existence of such
"circumstances", if questioned, must be proved at least
prima facie.
Section 18AA(1)(a), in terms, requires that the
satisfaction of the Government in regard to the existence of
the circumstances or conditions precedent set out above,
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including the necessity of taking immediate action, must be
based on evidence in the possession of the Government. If
the satisfaction of the Government in regard to the
existence of any of the conditions, (i) and (ii), is based
on no evidence, or on irrelevant evidence or on an
extraneous consideration,
572
it will vitiate the order of ’take-over’, and the Court will
be justified in quashing such an illegal order on judicial
review in appropriate proceedings. Even where the statute
conferring the discretionary power does not, in terms,
regulate or hedge around the formation of the opinion by the
statutory authority in regard to the existence of
preliminary jurisdictional facts with express checks, the
authority has to form that opinion reasonably like a
reasonable person.
While spelling out by a construction of Section
18AA(1)(a) the proposition that the opinion or satisfaction
of the Government in regard to the necessity of taking
immediate action could not be the subject of judicial
review, the High Court (majority) relied on the analogy of
Section 17 of the Land Acquisition Act, under which,
according to them, the Government’s opinion in regard to the
existence of the urgency is not justiciable. This analogy
holds good only upto a point. Just as under Section 18AA of
the I.D.R. Act, in case of a genuine ’immediacy’ or
imperative necessity of taking immediate action to prevent
fall in production and consequent risk of imminent injury
paramount public interest, an order of ’take-over’ can be
passed without prior, time-consuming investigation under
Section 15 of the Act, under Section 17(1) and (4) of the
Land Acquisition Act, also, the preliminary inquiry under
Section 5A can be dispensed with in case of an urgency. It
is true that the grounds on which the Government’s opinion
as to the existence of the urgency can be challenged are not
unlimited, and the power conferred on the Government under
Section 17(4) of that Act has been formulated in subjective
term; nevertheless, in cases, where an issue is raised, that
the Government’s opinion as to urgency has been formed in a
manifestly arbitrary or perverse fashion without regard to
patent, actual and undeniable facts, or that such opinion
has been arrived at on the basis of irrelevant
considerations or no material at all, or on materials so
tenuous, flimsy, slender or dubious that no reasonable man
could reasonably reach that conclusion, the Court is
entitled to examine the validity of the formation of that
opinion by the Government in the context and to the extent
of that issue.
In Narayan Govind Gavate v. State of Maharashtra & Ors.
this Court held that while exercising the power under
Section 17(4) of the Land Acquisition Act, the mind of the
officer or authority concerned has to be applied to the
question whether there is an urgency of such a nature that
even the summary proceedings under Section 5A of the Act
should be eliminated. It is not just the existence of an
573
urgency but the need to dispense with an inquiry under
Section 5A of the Act which has to be considered. If the
circumstances on the basis of which the Government formed
its opinion with regard to the existence of the urgency and
the other conditions precedent, recited in the notification,
are deficient or defective, the Court may look beyond it. At
that stage, Section 106, Evidence Act can be invoked by the
party assailing the notification and if the Government or
the authority concerned does not disclose such facts or
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circumstances especially within its knowledge, without even
disclosing a sufficient reason for their abstention from
disclosure, they have to take the consequences which flow
from the non-production of the best evidence which could be
produced on behalf of the State if its stand was correct.
Again, in Dora Phalauli v. State of Punjab & Ors., this
Court held that where the purported order does not recite
the satisfaction of the Government with regard to the
existence of urgency, nor the fact of the land being waste
or arable land, the order was liable to be struck down and
the mere direction, therein, to the Collector to take action
on ground of urgency was not a legal and complete fulfilment
of the requirement of the law.
Recently, in State of Punjab v. Gurdial Singh, V. R.
Krishna Iyer, J., speaking for the Court, made these
apposite observations:
"It is fundamental that compulsory taking of a
man’s property is a serious matter and the smaller the
man the more serious the matter. Hearing him before
depriving him is both reasonable and preemptive of
arbitrariness, and denial of this administrative
fairness is constitutional anathema except for good
reasons. Save in real urgency where public interest
does not brook even the minimum time needed to give a
hearing, land acquisition authorities should not,
having regard to Articles 14 (and 19), burke an enquiry
under Section 17 of the Act."
From these decisions, it is abundantly clear that even
under Section 17 of the Land Acquisition Act, the
satisfaction or opinion of Government/authority in regard to
the urgency of taking action thereunder, is not altogether
immune from judicial scrutiny.
For the reasons already stated, it is not possible to
subscribe to the proposition propounded by the High Court
that the satisfaction of the Central Government in regard to
condition (ii), i.e. the exis-
574
tence of ’immediacy’, though subjective, is not open to
judicial review at all.
From a plain reading of Section 18AA, it is clear that
it does not expressly in unmistakable and unequivocal terms
exclude the application of the audi alteram partem rule at
the pre-decisional stage. The question, therefore, is
narrowed down to the issue, whether the phrase "that
immediate action is necessary" excludes absolutely, by
inevitable implication, the application of this cardinal
canon of fairplay in all cases where Section 18AA(1)(a) may
be invoked. In our opinion, for reasons that follow, the,
answer to this question must be in the negative.
Firstly, as rightly pointed out by Shri Nariman, the
expression "immediate action" in the said phrase, is to be
construed in the light of the marginal heading of the
Section, its context and the Objects and Reason for enacting
this provision. Thus construed, the expression only means
"without prior investigation" under Section 15. Dispensing
with the requirement of such prior investigation does not
necessarily indicate an intention to exclude the application
of the fundamental principles of natural justice or the duty
to act fairly by affording to the owner of the undertaking
likely to be affected, at the pre-decisional stage, wherever
practicable, a short-measure fair hearing adjusted, attuned
and tailored to the exigency of the situation.
At this stage, it is necessary to examine two decisions
of this Court, viz., Ambalal M. Shah v. Hathi Singh
Manufacturing Co Ltd.; and Keshav Mills Co. Ltd. v. Union of
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India (ibid), because according to the High Court (as per
Deshpande, C.J., who wrote the leading opinion) these two
decisions-which are binding on the High Court-conclusively
show that:-
"The only prior hearing consisted of the
investigation under Section 15 read with Rule 5 before
action under Section 18A is taken. The very object of
Section 18AA is to enable action to be taken thereunder
without being preceded by the investigation under
Section 15. On the authority of the two Supreme Court
decisions in Ambalal M. Shah and Keshav Mills that the
only hearing prior to action under Section 18A was the
investigation under Section 15, it would follow that
action under Section 18AA is to be taken without the
investigation under Section 15 and, therefore, without
a prior hearing."
575
Shri Nariman maintains that the High Court has not
correctly construed these decisions. According to the
learned counsel, the corollary deduced by the High Court,
viz., that exclusion of the investigation under Section 15
includes exclusion of the audi alteram partem rule at the
pre-takeover stage, is just the contrary of what was laid
down by this Court in Keshav Mills in which Ambalal’s case
was also noticed. Indeed, Shri Nariman strongly relies on
this decision in support of his argument that if the
application of this rule of natural justice at the pre-
decisional stage is not excluded even where a full
investigation has been made, there is stronger reason to
hold that it is to be observed in a case where there has
been no investigation at all.
We will first notice the case of Keshav Mills because
that is a later decision in which Ambalal’s case was
referred to. In that case, the validity of an order passed
by the Central Government under Section 18A was challenged.
By that impugned order the Gujarat State Textile Corporation
Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as the Corporation) was
appointed as authorised controller of the Company for a
period of five years. The Company was the owner of a cotton
textile mill. Till 1965, the Company made flourishing
business. After the year 1964-65, the Company fell on evil
days and the textile mill of the Company was one of the 12
sick textile mills in Gujarat, which had to be closed down
during 1966 and 1968. On May 31, 1969, the Central
Government passed an order appointing a Committee for
investigation into the affairs of the Company under Section
15 of the I.D.R. Act. After completing the inquiry, the
Investigating Committee submitted its report to the
Government who thereafter on November 24, 1970, passed the
impugned order under Section 18A authorising the Corporation
to take over the management of the Company for a period of
five years. The Company challenged the order of ’take-over’
by a writ-petition in the High Court of Delhi. The High
Court dismissed the petition. The main contention of the
Company before the High Court was that the Government was
not competent to proceed under Section 18A against the
Company without supplying before hand, a copy of the report
of the Investigating Committee to the Company. It was
further contended that the Government should also have given
a hearing to the Company before finally deciding upon take-
over under Section 18A. This contention was pressed on
behalf of the Company in spite of the fact that an
opportunity had been given by the Investigating Committee to
the management and the employees of the Company for adducing
evidence and for making representation before the completion
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of the investigation. On the contentions raised by the
Company and
576
resisted by the respondent, in that case, the Court
formulated the following questions:
(1) Is it necessary to observe the rules of natural
justice before enforcing a decision under Section 18A of the
Act?
(2) What are the rules of natural justice in such a
case?
(3)(a) In the present case, have the rules to be
observed once during the investigation under Section 15 and
then again, after the investigation is completed and action
on the report of the Investigating Committee taken under
Section 18A?
(b) Was it necessary to furnish a copy of the
Investigating Committee’s Report before passing an order of
take-over?
Mukherjea, J. speaking for the Court, answered these
questions, thus:
(1) "The first of these questions does not present
any difficulty. It is true that the order of the
Government of India that has been challenged by the
appellants was a purely executive order embodying on
administration decision. Even so, the question of
natural justice does arise in this case. It is too late
now to contend that the principles of natural justice
need not apply to administrative order or proceedings;
in the language of Lord Denning M.R. in Regina v.
Gaming Board, exparte Beniam "that heresy was scotched
in Ridge v. Baldwin"
(2) "The second question, however, as to what are
the principles of natural justice that should regulate
an administrative act or order is a much more difficult
one to answer We do not think it either feasible or
even desirable to lay down any fixed or rigorous yard-
stick in this manner. The concept of natural justice
cannot be put into a straight jacket. It is futile,
therefore, to look for definitions or standards of
natural justice from various decisions and then try to
apply them to the facts of any given case. The only
essential point that has to be kept in mind in all
cases is that the person concerned should have a
reasonable opportunity of presenting his case and that
the administrative authority concerned should act
fairly, impartially and reasonably. Where
administrative officers are concerned, the duty is not
so much to act judicially as to act fairly. See, for
instance, the observations of Lord Parker in In re
577
H.K. (an infant). It only means that such measure of
natural justice should be applied as was described by
Lord Reid in Ridge v. Baldwin as insusceptible of exact
definition but what a reasonable man would regard as a
fair procedure in particular circumstances. However,
even the application of the concept of fairplay
requires real flexibility. Everything will depend on
the actual facts and circumstances of a case."
(3) (a) "For answering that question we shall keep
in mind .... and examine the nature and scope of the
inquiry that had been carried out by the Investigating
Committee set up by the Government, the scope and
purpose of the Act and rules under which the
Investigating Committee was supposed to act, the matter
that was being investigated by the Committee and
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finally the opportunity that was afforded to the
appellants for presenting their case before the
Investigating Committee."
(After noticing the object, purpose and content of the
relevant provisions, the judgment proceeded):
"In fact, it appears from a letter addressed by
appellant No. 2 Navinchandra Chandulal Parikh on behalf
of the Company to Shri H. K. Bansal, Deputy Secretary,
Ministry of Foreign Trade and Supply on 12th September,
1970 that the appellants had come to know that the
Government of India was in fact considering the
question of appointing an authorised controller under
Section 18A of the Act in respect of the appellants
undertaking. In that letter a detailed account of the
facts and circumstances under which the mill had to be
closed down was given. There is also an account of the
efforts made by the Company’s Directors to restore the
mill. There is no attempt to minimise the financial
difficulties of the Company in that letter .... The
letter specifically mentions the company’s application
to the Gujarat State Textile Corporation Ltd., for
financial help... the Corporation ultimately failed to
come to the succour of the Company. Parikh requested
Government not to appoint an authorised controller and
further prayed that the Government of India should ask
the State Government and the Gujarat State Textile
Corporation Ltd., to give a financial guarantee to the
Company..."
"Only a few days before this letter had been
addressed, Parikh, it appears, had an interview with
the Minister of
578
Foreign Trade on 26th August, 1970, when the Minister
gave him, as a special case, four weeks’ time with
effect from 26th August, 1970 to obtain the necessary
financial guarantee from the State or the Gujarat State
Textile Corporation without which the Company had
expressed its inability to reopen and run the mill. In
a letter of 22 September, 1970, Bansal informed Parikh
in clear language that if the Company failed to obtain
the necessary guarantee by 26 September 1970,
Government was proceeding to take action under the Act.
It is obvious, therefore, that the appellants were
aware all long that as a result of the report of the
Investigating Committee the Company’s undertaking was
going to be taken up by Government, Parikh had not only
made written representations but had also seen the
Minister of Foreign Trade and Supply. He had requested
the Minister not to take over the undertaking and, on
the contrary, to lend his good offices so that the
Company could get financial support from the Gujarat
State Textile Corporation or from the Gujarat State
Government." (emphasis added)
"All these circumstances leave in no manner of
doubt that the Company had full opportunities to make
all possible representations before the Government
against the proposed take-over of its mill under
Section 18A. In this connection, it is significant that
even after the writ petition had been filed before the
Delhi High Court the Government of India had given the
appellants at their own request one month’s time to
obtain the necessary funds to commence the working of
the mill. Even then, they failed to do so ....."
"There are at least five features of the case
which make it impossible for us to give any weight to
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the appellants complaint that the rules of natural
justice have not been observed. First on their own
showing they were perfectly aware of the grounds on
which Government had passed the order under Section 18A
of the Act. Secondly, they are not in a position to
deny (a) that the Company has sustained such heavy
losses that its mill had to be closed down
indefinitely, and (b) that there was not only loss of
production of textiles but at least 1200 persons had
been thrown out of employment. Thirdly, it is
transparently clear from the affidavits that the
Company was not in a position
579
to raise the resources to recommence the working of the
mill. Fourthly, the appellants were given a full
hearing at the time of the investigation held by the
Investigating Committee and were also given
opportunities to adduce evidence. Finally, even after
the Investigating Committee had submitted its report,
the appellants were in constant communion with the
Government and were in fact negotiating with Government
for such help as might enable them to reopen the mill
and to avoid a take-over of their undertaking by the
Government. Having regard to these features it is
impossible for us to accept the contention that the
appellants did not get any reasonable opportunity to
make out a case against the take-over of their
undertaking or that the Government has not treated the
appellants fairly. There is not the slightest
justification in this case for the complaint that there
has been any denial of natural justice."
"In our opinion, since the appellants have
received a fair treatment and also all reasonable
opportunities to make out their own case before
Government they cannot be allowed to make any grievance
of the fact that they were not given a formal notice
calling upon them to show cause why their undertaking
should not be taken over or that they had not been
furnished with a copy of the report. They had made all
the representations that they could possibly have made
against the proposed take-over. By no stretch of
imagination, can it be said that the order for take-
over took them by surprise. In fact, Government gave
them ample opportunity to reopen and run the mill on
their own if they wanted to avoid the take-over. The
blunt fact is that the appellants just did not have the
necessary resources to do so. Insistence on formal
hearing in such circumstances is nothing but insistence
on empty formality." (emphasis added)
(3) (b) "In our opinion it is not possible to lay
down any general principle on the question as to
whether the report of an investigating body or an
inspector appointed by an administrative authority
should be made available to the persons concerned in
any given case before the authority takes a decision
upon that report. The answer to this question also must
always depend on the facts and circumstances of the
case. It is not at all unlikely that there may be
certain cases where unless the report is
580
given the party concerned cannot make any effective
representation about the action that Government takes
or proposes to take on the basis of that report.
Whether the report should be furnished or not must
therefore, depend in every individual case on the
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merits of that case. We have no doubt that in the
instant case, non-disclosure of the report of the
Investigating Committee has not caused any prejudice
whatsoever to the appellants. (emphasis added)
It will be seen from what has been extracted above that
in Keshav Mills case, this Court did not lay it down as an
invariable rule that where a full investigation after
’notice to the owner of the industrial undertaking has been
held under Section 15, the owner is never entitled on
grounds of natural justice, to a copy of the investigation
report and to an opportunity of making a representation
about the action that the Government proposes to take on the
basis of that report. On the contrary, it was clearly said
that this rule of natural justice will apply at that stage
in cases "where unless the report-is given the party
concerned cannot make any effective representation about the
action that Government takes or proposes to take on the
basis of that report." It was held that the application or
non-application of this rule depends on the facts and
circumstances of the particular case. In the facts of that
case, it was found that the non-disclosure of the
investigation report had not caused any prejudice whatever
because the Company were "aware all along that as a result
of the report of the Investigating Committee the Company’s
undertaking was going to be taken (over) by Government", and
had full opportunities, to make all possible representations
before the Government against the proposed take-over of the
Mill.
Shri Sorabji submitted that the observations made by
this Court in Keshav Mills case, to the effect, that in
certain cases even at the post-investigation stage before
making an order of take-over under Section 18A, it may be
necessary to give another opportunity to the affected owner
of the undertaking to make a representation, appear to be
erroneous. The argument is that the Legislature has provided
in Sections 15 and 18A of the Act and Rule 5 framed
thereunder, its measure of this principle of natural justice
and the stage at which it has to be observed. The High
Court, therefore, was not right in engrafting any further
application of the rule of natural justice at the post
investigation stage. According to the learned Solicitor-
General for the decision of the case, it was not necessary
to go beyond the
581
ratio of Shri Ambalal M. Shah & Anr. v. Hathi Singh
Manufacturing Co. Ltd which was followed in Keshav Mills
case.
In our opinion, the observations of this Court in
Keshav Mills in regard to the application of this rule of
natural justice at the post-investigation stage cannot be
called obiter dicta. There is nothing in those observations,
which can be said to be inconsistent with the ratio
decidendi of Ambalal’s case. The main ground on which the
order of take-over under Section 18A was challenged in
Ambalal’s case was that on a proper construction of Section
18A, the Central Government had the right to make the order
under that Section on the ground that the Company was being
managed in a manner highly detrimental to public interest,
only where the investigation made under Section 15 was
initiated on the basis of the opinion as mentioned in
Section 15(b), whereas in the present case (i.e. Ambalal’s
case), the investigation ordered by the Central Government
was initiated on the formation of an opinion as mentioned in
clause (a) (i) of Section 15. It was urged that in fact, the
Committee appointed to investigate had not directed its
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investigation into the question whether the industrial
undertaking was being managed in the manner mentioned above.
The High Court came to the conclusion that on a correct
construction of Section 18 A(1) (b) it was necessary before
any order could be made thereunder that the investigation
should have been initiated on the basis of the opinion
mentioned in Section 15(b) of the Act. It also accepted the
petitioner’s contention that no investigation had, in fact,
been held into the question whether the undertaking was
being managed in a manner highly detrimental to public
interest.
On appeal by special leave, this Court reversed the
decision of the High Court, and held that the words used by
the Legislature in Section 18A (1) (b) "in respect of which
an investigation has been made under Section 15" could not
be cut down by the restricting phrase "based on an opinion
that the industrial undertaking is being managed in a manner
highly detrimental to the scheduled industry concerned or to
public interest"; that Section 18A (1) (b) empowers the
Central Government to authorise a person to take over the
management of an industrial undertaking if the one condition
of an investigation made under Section 15 had been fulfilled
irrespective of on what opinion that investigation was
initiated and the further condition is fulfilled that the
Central Government was of opinion that such undertaking was
being managed in a manner highly detrimental to the
scheduled industry concerned or to public interest. In this
Court, it
582
was urged on behalf of the Company that absurd results would
follow if the words "investigation has been made under
Section 15" are held to include investigation based on any
of the opinions mentioned in Section 15(a). Asked to mention
what the absurd results would be, the counsel could only say
that an order under Section 18A (1) (b) would be unfair and
contrary to natural justice in such cases, as the owner of
an industrial undertaking would have no notice that the
quality of management was being investigated. The Court
found no basis for this assumption because in its opinion,
the management could not but be aware that investigation
would be directed in regard to the quality of management,
also. It is to be noted that the question of natural justice
was casually and halfheartedly raised in a different context
as a last resort. It was negatived because in the facts and
circumstances of that case, the Company was fully aware that
the quality of the management was also being inquired into
and it had full opportunity to meet the allegations against
it during investigation.
The second reason-which is more or less a facet of the
first-for holding that the mere use of the word "immediate"
in the phrase "immediate action is necessary", does not
necessarily and absolutely exclude the prior application of
the audi alteram partem rule, is that immediacy or urgency
requiring swift action is a situational fact having a direct
nexus with the likelihood of adverse effect on fall in
production. And, such likelihood and the urgency of action
to prevent it, may vary greatly in degree. The words "likely
to affect production" used in Section 18AA (1) (a) are
flexible enough to comprehend a wide spectrum of situations
ranging from the one where the likelihood of the happening
of the apprehended event is imminent to that where it may be
reasonably anticipated to happen sometime in the near
future. Cases of extreme urgency where action under Section
18AA(1) (a) to prevent fall in production and consequent
injury to public interest, brooks absolutely no delay, would
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be rare. In most cases, where the urgency is not so extreme,
it is practicable to adjust and strike a balance between the
competing claims of hurry and hearing.
The audi alteram partem rule, as already pointed out,
is a very flexible, malleable and adaptable concept of
natural justice. To adjust and harmonise the need for speed
and obligation to act fairly, it can be modified and the
measure of its application cut short in reasonable
proportion to the exigencies of the situation. Thus, in the
ultimate analysis, the question, (as to what extent and in
what measure) this rule of fair hearing will apply at the
pre-decisional stage will depend upon the degree of urgency,
if any, evident from the facts and circumstances of the
particular case.
583
In the instant case, so far as Kanpur Unit is
concerned, it was lying closed for more than three months
before the passing of the impugned order. There was no
‘immediacy’ in relation to that unit, which could absolve
the Government from the obligation of complying fully with
the audi alteram partem rule at the pre-decisional or pre-
takeover stage. As regards the other five units of the
Company, the question whether on the basis of the evidential
matter before the Government at the time of making the
impugned order, any reasonable person could reasonably form
an opinion about a likelihood of fall in production and the
urgency of taking immediate action, will be discussed later.
For the purpose of the question under consideration we shall
assume that there was a likelihood of fall in production.
Even so, the undisputed facts and figures of production of 2
or 3 years preceding the take-over, relating to these units,
show that on the average, production in these units has
remained fairly constant. Rather, in some of these units, an
upward trend in production was discernible. Be that as it
may, the likelihood of fall in production or adverse effect
on production in these five units, could not, by any stretch
of prognostication or feat of imagination, be said to be
imminent, or so urgent that it could not permit the giving
of even a minimal but real hearing to the Company before
taking-over these units. There was an interval of about six
weeks between the Official Group’s Report, dated February
16, 1978 and the passing of the impugned order dated April
13, 1978. There was thus sufficient time available to the
Government to serve a copy of that report on the appellant
Company and to give them a short-measure opportunity to
submit their reply and representation regarding the findings
and recommendations of the Group Officers and the proposed
action under Section 18AA(1).
The third reason for our forbearance to imply the
exclusion of the audi alteram partem rule from the language
of Section 18AA(1) (a) is, that although the power
thereunder is of a drastic nature and the consequences of a
take-over are far-reaching and its effect on the rights and
interests of the owner of the undertaking is grave and
deprivatory, yet the Act does not make any provision giving
a full right of a remedial hearing equitable to a full right
of appeal, at the post-decisional stage.
The High Court seems to be of the view that Section 18F
gives a right of full post-decisional remedial hearing to
the aggrieved party. Shri Soli Sorabji also elaborately
supported that view of the High Court. In the alternative,
the learned counsel has committed himself on behalf of his
client, to the position, that the Central Government will if
required, give the Company a full and fair hearing on
merits,
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584
including an opportunity to show that the impugned order was
not made on adequate or valid grounds.
Shri Nariman on the other hand contends-and we think
rightly-that the so-called right of a post-decisional
hearing available to the aggrieved owner of the undertaking
under Section 18F is illusory as in its operation and effect
the power of review, if any, conferred thereunder, is
prospective, and not retro-active, being strictly restricted
to and dependent upon the post-takeover circumstances.
By virtue of sub-section (2) of Section 18AA, the
reference to Section 18A in Section 18F will be construed as
a reference to Section 18AA, also. The power of cancellation
under Section 18F can be exercised only on any of these
grounds : (i) "that the purpose of the order made under
Section 18A has been fulfilled", or (ii) "that for any other
reason it is not necessary that the order should remain in
force". These ‘grounds’ and the language in which they are
couched is clear enough to show that the cancellation
contemplated thereunder cannot have the effect of annulling,
rescinding or obliterating the order of take-over with
retro-active force; it can have only a prospective effect.
Section 18F embodies a principle analogous to that in
Section 21 of the General Clauses Act. The first ‘ground’ in
Section 18F for the exercise of the power, obviously does
not cover a review of the merits or circumstances preceding
and existing at the date of passing the order of ‘take-over’
under Section 18AA(1). The words "for any other reason" if
read in isolation, no doubt, appear to be of wide amplitude.
But their ambit has been greatly cut down and circumscribed
by the contextual phrase "no longer necessary that it should
remain in force". Construed in this context, the expression
"for any other reason" cannot include a ground that the very
order of take-over was invalid or void ab initio. Thus, the
post-decisional hearing available to the aggrieved owner of
the undertaking is not an appropriate substitute for a fair-
hearing at the pre-decisional stage. The Act does not
provide any adequate remedial hearing or right of redress to
the aggrieved party even where his under-taking has been
arbitrarily taken-over on insufficient grounds. Rather, the
plight of the aggrieved owner is accentuated by the
provision in 18D which disentitles him and other persons
whose officers are lost or whose contract of management is
terminated as a result of the ‘take-over’, from claiming any
compensation whatever for such loss or termination.
Before we conclude the discussion on this point, we may
notice one more argument that has been advanced on behalf of
the respondents. It is argued that this was a case where a
prior hearing to the Company could only be a useless
formality because the impugned action has been
585
taken on the basis of evidence, consisting of the Balance-
sheet, account-books and other records of the Company
itself, the correctness of which could not have been
disputed by the Company. On these premises, it is submitted
that non-observance of the rule of audi altrem partem would
not prejudice the Company, and thus make no difference.
The contention does not appear to be well-founded.
Firstly, this documentary evidence, at best, shows that the
Company was in debt and the assets of some of its ‘units’
had been hypothecated or mortgaged as security for those
debts. Given an opportunity the Company might have explained
that as a result of this indebtedness there was no
likelihood of fall in production, which is one of the
essential conditions in regard to which the Government must
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be satisfied before taking action under Section 18(1)(a).
Secondly, what the rule of natural justice required in the
circumstances of this case, was not only that the Company
should have been given an opportunity to explain the
evidence against it, but also an opportunity to be informed
of the proposed action of take-over and to represent why it
be not taken.
In the renowned case, Ridge v. Baldwin & Ors. (ibid),
it was contended before the House of Lords that since the
appellant police officer had convicted himself out of his
own mouth, a prior hearing to him by the Watch Committee
could not have made any difference; that on the undeniable
facts of that case, no reasonable body of men could have
reinstated the appellant. This contention was rejected by
the House of Lords for the reason that if the Watch
Committee had given the police officer a prior hearing they
would not have acted wrongly or unreasonably if they had in
the exercise of their discretion decided to take a more
lenient course than the one they had adopted.
A similar argument was advanced in S. L. Kapoor v.
Jagmohan & Ors to which decision two of us (Sarkaria and
Chinnappa Reddy, JJ.) were parties. In negativing this
argument, this Court, inter alia, quoted with approval the
classic passage, reproduced below, from the judgment of
Megarry, J. in John v. Rees & Ors.
"As everybody who has anything to do with the law
well knows, the path of the law is strewn with examples
of open and shut cases which, somehow, were not; of
unanswerable charges which, in the event, were
completely answered; of inexplicable conduct which was
fully explained; of fixed and unalterable
determinations that, by discussion, suffered a change.
Nor are those with any knowledge of human
586
nature who pause to think for a moment likely to under-
estimate the feelings of resentment of those who find
that a decision against them has been made without
their being afforded any opportunity to influence the
course of events."
In General Medical Council v. Spackman, Lord Wright
condemned the oft-adopted attitude by tribunals to refuse
relief on the ground that a fair hearing could have made no
difference to the result. Wade in his Administrative Law,
4th Edn., page 454, has pointed out that "in principle it is
vital that the procedure and the merits should be kept
strictly apart, since otherwise the merits may be prejudged
unfairly".
In Maxwell v. Department of Trade & Industry, Lawton
L.J. expressed in the same strain that "doing what is right
may still result in unfairness if it is done in the wrong
way." This view is founded on the cordinal canon that
justice must not only be done but also manifestly be seen to
be done.
Observance of this fundamental principle is necessary
if the courts and the tribunals and the administrative
bodies are to command public confidence in the settlement of
disputes or in taking quasi-judicial or administrative
decisions affecting civil rights or legitimate interests of
the citizens. The same proposition was propounded in R. V.
Thames Magistrates’ Court ex p. Polemis, by Lord Widgery
C.J. at page 1375; and by the American Supreme Court in
Margarita Fuentes et al., v. Tobert L. Shevin.
In concluding the discussion in regard to this aspect
of the matter, we can do no better than reiterate what was
said by one of us (Chinnappa Reddy, J.) in S. L. Kapoor v.
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Jagmohan (ibid) :
"In our view the principles of natural justice
know of no exclusionary rule dependent on whether it
would have made any difference if natural justice had
been observed. The non-observance of natural justice is
itself prejudice to any man and proof of prejudice
independently of proof of denial of natural justice is
unnecessary. It ill comes from a person who has denied
justice that the person who has been denied justice is
not prejudiced."
587
We, therefore, over-rule this last contention.
In sum, for all the reasons aforesaid, we are of the
view that it is not reasonably possible to construe Section
18AA(1) as universally excluding, either expressly or by
inevitable intendment, the application of the audi alteram
partem rule of natural justice at the pre-takeover stage,
regardless of the facts and circumstances of the particular
case. In the circumstances of the instant case, in order to
ensure fairplay in action it was imperative for the
Government to comply substantially with this fundamental
rule of prior hearing before passing the impugned order. We
therefore, accept the two-fold proposition posed and
propounded by Shri Nariman.
The further question to be considered is : What is the
effect of the non-observance of this fundamental principle
of fairplay? Does the non-observance of the audi alteram
partem rule, which in the quest of justice under the rule of
law, has been considered universally and most spontaneously
acceptable principle, render an administrative decision
having civil consequences, void or voidable ? In England,
the outfall from the watershed decision, Ridge v. Baldwin
brought with it a rash of conflicting opinion on this point.
The majority of the House of Lords in Ridge v. Baldwin held
that the non-observance of this principle, had rendered the
dismissal of the Chief Constable void. The rationale of the
majority view is that where there is a duty to act fairly,
just like the duty to act reasonably, it has to be enforced
as an implied statutory requirement, so that failure to
observe it means that the administrative act or decision was
outside the statutory power, unjustified by law, and
therefore ultra vires and void. (See Wade’s Administrative
Law, ibid, page 448). In India, this Court has consistently
taken the view that a quasi-judicial or administrative
decision rendered in violation of the audi alteram partem
rule, wherever it can be read as an implied requirement of
the law, is null and void. (e.g. Maneka Gandhi’s case, ibid,
and S. L. Kapoor v. Jagmohan, ibid). In the facts and
circumstances of the instant case, there has been a non-
compliance with such implied requirement of the audi alteram
partem rule of natural justice at the pre-decisional stage.
The impugned order therefore, could be struck down as
invalid on that score alone. But we refrain from doing so,
because the learned Solicitor-General in all fairness, has
both orally and in his written submissions dated August 28,
1979, committed himself to the position that under Section
18F, the Central Government in exercise of its curial
functions, is bound to give the affected owner of the
undertaking taken-over, a "full and effective hearing on all
aspects touching the validity and/or correctness of the
order and/or action of take-
588
over", within a reasonable time after the take-over. The
learned Solicitor has assured the Court that such a hearing
will be afforded to the appellant Company if it approaches
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the Central Government for cancellation of the impugned
order. It is pointed out that this was the conceded position
in the High Court that the aggrieved owner of the
undertaking had a right to such a hearing.
In view of this commitment/or concession fairly made by
the learned Solicitor-General, we refrain from quashing the
impugned order, and allowing Civil Appeal 1629 of 1979 send
the case back to the Central Government with the direction
that it shall, within a reasonable time, preferably within
three months from today, give a full, fair and effective
hearing to the aggrieved owner of the undertaking, i.e., the
Company, on all aspects of the matter, including those
touching the validity and/or correctness of the impugned
order and/or action of take-over and then after a review of
all the relevant materials and circumstances including those
obtaining on the date of the impugned order, shall take such
fresh decision, and/or such remedial action as may be
necessary, just, proper and in accordance with law.
In view of the above decision, no separate order is
necessary in Civil Appeals 1857 and 2087 of 1979.
All the three appeals are disposed of accordingly with
no order as to costs. Since the appeals have been disposed
of on the first and foremost point canvassed before us, in
the manner indicated above, it is not necessary to burden
this judgment with a discussion of the other points argued
by the counsel for the parties.
CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. I have the misfortune to be unable
to agree with the erudite opinion of my learned brother
Sarkaria on the question of the applicability of the
principles of natural justice. I do so with diffidence and
regret.
The first of the submissions of Shri F. S. Nariman,
learned counsel for the appellant company was that there was
a violation of the principles of natural justice. He
submitted that the provisions of the Industries (Development
and Regulation) Act did not rule out natural justice and
that there were several occasions in the march of events
that led to the passing of the order under Sec. 18AA when an
opportunity could have been given to the Company and the
principles of natural justice observed but the Government of
India refrained from doing so. He urged that the immediate
action contemplated by Sec. 18AA(1) (a) was not to be
construed as negat-
589
ing natural justice but as intended merely to distinguish it
from action under Sec. 18A which was to be taken only after
investigation under Sec. 15. He drew inspiration for this
argument from the marginal note to Section 18AA which is
"power to take over industrial undertakings without
investigation under certain circumstances". He also urged
that Sec. 18F contemplated a post-decisional situation
necessitating cancellation of the order of take-over but did
not contemplate cancellation of the order of take-over on
the ground that such order ought never to have been made. He
urged that the scope of Sec. 18F was very narrow and did not
entitle the party affected to a fair hearing. In any case he
argued that the remedy such as it was provided by Sec. 18F
was not an answer to the claim to pre-decisional natural
justice. His submission was that natural justice was not to
be excluded except by the clear and unmistakable language of
the statute, though the "quantum" of natural justice to be
afforded in an individual case might vary from case to case.
Shri Soli Sorabji, learned Solicitor General, while
conceding that statutory silence on the question of natural
justice should ordinarily lead to an implication by
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presumption that natural justice was to be observed, urged
that the presumption might be displaced by necessary
implication, as for instance where compliance with natural
justice might be inconsistent with the demands of
promptitude, and delayed action might lead to disaster. The
presumption of implication of natural justice was very weak
where action was of a remedial or preventive nature or where
such action concerned property rights only. In appropriate
situations post-decisional hearing might displace pre-
decisional natural justice. The statute itself might well
provide for a post-decisional hearing as a substitute for
pre-decisional natural justice in situations requiring
immediate action. Sec. 18-F of the Industries Development
and Regulation Act expressly provided for such a post-
decisional hearing and the urgency of the situation
contemplated by Sec. 18AA necessarily excluded pre-
decisional natural justice. There was no reason to belittle
the scope of Sec. 18F, so, to exclude a fair post-decisional
hearing at the instance of the party affected and
consequently, to imply pre-decisional natural justice.
Both the learned counsel invited our attention to
considerable case-law. I do not propose to discuss the case
law as my brother Sarkaria has referred to all the cases in
great detail. Before I consider the submissions of the
learned counsel as to the applicability of the principles of
natural justice, a few prefatory remarks, however, require
to be made.
590
Natural justice, like Ultra Vires and Public Policy, is
a branch of the Public Law and is a formidable weapon which
can be wielded to secure justice to the citizen. It is
productive of great good as well as much mischief. While it
may be used to protect certain fundamental liberties, civil
and political rights, it may be used, as indeed it is used
more often than not, to protect vested interests and to
obstruct the path of progressive change. In the context of
modern welfare legislation, the time has perhaps come to
make an appropriate distinction between natural justice in
its application to fundamental liberties, civil and
political rights and natural justice in its application to
vested interests. Our Constitution, as befits the
Constitution of a Socialist Secular Democratic Republic,
recognises the paramountcy of the public weal over the
private interest. Natural justice, Ultra Vires, Public
Policy, or any other rule of interpretation must therefore,
conform, grow and be tailored to serve the public interest
and respond to the demands of an evolving society.
In Ridge v. Baldwin, it was thought by Lord Reid that
natural justice had no easy application where questions of
public interest and policy were more important than the
rights of individual citizens. He observed :
"If a Minister is considering whether to make a
scheme for, say, an important new road, his primary
concern will not be with the damage which its
construction will do to the rights of individual owners
of land. He will have to consider all manner of
questions of public interest and, it may be, a number
of alternate schemes. He cannot be prevented from
attaching more importance to the fulfilment of his
policy than to the fate of individual objectors, and it
would be quite wrong for the Courts to say that the
Minister should or could act in the same kind of way as
a board of works deciding whether a house should be
pulled down."
And, as pointed out by a contributor in 1972 Cambridge Law
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Journal at page 14 :
"...... the safeguarding of existing rights can
after all in some circumstances amount to little more
than the fighting of a rear-guard action by the
reactionary element in society seeking only to preserve
its own vested position."
The United States Supreme Court has recognised the
distinction between cases where only property rights are
involved and cases where other civil and political rights
are involved. In cases where only
591
property rights are involved postponement of enquiry has
been held not to be a denial of due process, vide : Annie G.
Phillips v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, John H. Fahey
v. Paul Mallonee, Margarita Fuentes v. Robert L. Shevin,
Attorney General of Florida, and Lawrence Mitchell v. W. F.
Grant Co.
In the first case (75 L.Ed. 1289), Brandeis J observed:
"Where only property rights are involved, mere
postponement of the judicial inquiry is not a denial of
due process, if the opportunity given for the ultimate
judicial determination of the liability is adequate.
Delay in the judicial determination of property rights
is not uncommon where it is essential that Governmental
needs be immediately satisfied. For the protection of
public health, a state may order the summary
destruction of property by administrative authorities
without antecedent notice or hearing. Because of the
public necessity the property of citizens may be
summarily seized in war time. And at any time, the
United States may acquire property by eminent domain,
without paying, or determining the amount of the
compensation before the taking."
The principles of natural justice have taken deep root
in the judicial conscience of our people, nurtured by
Binapani, Kraipak, Mohinder Singh Gill, Maneka Gandhi etc.
etc. They are now considered so fundamental as to be
"implicit in the concept of ordered liberty" and, therefore,
implicit in every decision making function, call it
judicial, quasi judicial or administrative. Where authority
functions under a statute and the statute provides for the
observance of the principles of natural justice in a
particular manner, natural justice will have to be observed
in that manner and in no other. No wider right than that
provided by statute can be claimed nor can the right be
narrowed. Where the statute is silent about the observance
of the principles of natural justice, such statutory silence
is taken to imply compliance with the principles of natural
justice. The implication of natural justice being
presumptive it may be excluded by express words of statute
or by necessary intendment. Where the conflict is between
the public interest and the private interest, the
presumption must necessarily be weak and may, therefore, be
readily displaced. The presumption is also weak where what
are involved are mere property rights. In cases of urgency,
particularly where the public interest is involved, pre-
emptive
592
action may be a strategic necessity. There may then be no
question of observing natural justice. Even in cases of
preemptive action. if the statute so provides or if the
Courts so deem fit in appropriate cases, a postponed hearing
may be substituted for natural justice. Where natural
justice is implied, the extent of the implication and the
nature of the hearing must vary with the statute, the
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subject and the situation. Seeming judicial ambivalence on
the question of the applicability of the principles of
natural justice is generally traceable to the readiness of
judges to apply the principles of natural justice where no
question of the public interest is involved, particularly
where rights and interests other than property rights and
vested interests are involved and the reluctance of judges
to apply the principles of natural justice, where there is
suspicion of public mischief and only property rights and
vested interests are involved.
In the light of these prefatory remarks, I will proceed
to consider the relevant statutory provisions. The
Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951, was
enacted pursuant to the power given to Parliament by Entry
52 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. As
required by that Entry Section 2 of the Act declares that it
is expedient in the public interest that the Union should
take under its control the industries specified in the First
Schedule to the Act. Item 23 of the First Schedule to the
Act relates to Textiles of various categories, Sec. 3(d)
defines "Industrial undertaking" to mean "any undertaking
pertaining to a scheduled industry carried on in one or more
factories by any person or authority including Government".
The expression undertaking is not, however, defined Sec.
3(f) defines "Owner", "in relation to an industrial
undertaking" as "the person who, or the authority which, has
the ultimate control over the affairs of the undertaking,
and, where the said affairs are entrusted to a manager,
managing director or managing agents, such manager, managing
director or managing agent shall be deemed to be the owner
of the undertaking". Sec. 3(j) provides that words and
expressions not defined in the Act but defined in the
Companies Act shall have the meaning assigned to them in
that Act. Sec. 10 obliges the owner of an industrial
undertaking to register the undertaking in the prescribed
manner. Sec. 10A authorises the revocation of registration
after giving an opportunity to the owner of the undertaking
in certain circumstances. Sec. 11 provides for the licensing
of the new industrial undertaking and Sec. 11A provides for
the licensing of the production and manufacture of the new
articles. Sec. 13 provides, among other things, that, except
under, and in accordance with, a licence issued in that
behalf by the Central Government, no owner of an industrial
undertaking shall effect any substantial expansion or
593
change the location of the whole or any part of an
industrial undertaking. Sec. 14 provides for a full and
complete investigation in respect of applications for the
grant of licence or permission under Sections 11, 11A, 13 or
29B. Sec. 15 authorises the Central Government to make or
cause to be made a full and complete investigation into the
circumstances of the case if the Central Government is of
the opinion that :
(a) in respect of any scheduled industry or
industrial undertaking or undertakings (i) there has
been, or is likely to be, a substantial fall in the
volume of production.... for which, having regard to
the economic conditions prevailing, there is no
justification; or (ii) there has been, or is likely to
be, a marked deterioration in the quality of any
article........... which could have been or can be
avoided; or (iii) there has been or is likely to be a
rise in the price of any article..... for which there
is no justification; or (iv) it is necessary to take
any such action for the purpose of conserving any
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resources of national importance; or
(b) any industrial undertaking is being managed in
a manner highly detrimental to the scheduled industry
concerned or to public interest. After the
investigation is made under Sec. 15, Sec. 16(1)
provides, if the Central Government is satisfied that
such action is desirable, it may issue appropriate
directions for
(a) regulating the production of any article
......and fixing the standards of production;
(b) requiring the industrial undertaking to take
such steps as the Central Government may
consider necessary, to stimulate the
development of the industry;
(c) prohibiting resort to any act or practice
which might reduce the undertaking’s
production, capacity or economic value;
(d) controlling the prices, or regulating the
distribution of any article.
Sec. 16(2) also provides for the issue of interim directions
by the Central Government pending investigation under Sec.
15. Such directions are to have effect until validly revoked
by the Central Government.
594
Chapter III-A consisting of Sections 18A, 18-AA. 18-B,
18-C, 18-D, 18-E and 18-F deals with "direct management or
control of Industrial Undertakings by Central Government in
certain cases". Sec. 18-A which is entitled "Power of
Central Government to assume management or control of an
industrial undertaking in certain cases" provides that the
Central Government may, by notified order, authorise any
person or body of persons to take over the management of the
whole or any part of an industrial undertaking or to
exercise in respect of the whole or any part of the
undertaking such functions of control as may be specified in
the order, if the Central Government is of opinion that :
(a) an industrial undertaking to which directions
have been issued in pursuance of Sec. 16 has
failed to comply with such directions, or
(b) an industrial undertaking in respect of which
an investigation has been made under section
15 is being managed in a manner highly
detrimental to the scheduled industry
concerned or to public interest.
Sec. 18-AA refers to "Power to take over industrial
undertakings without investigation under certain
circumstances". It enables the Central Government by a
notified order to authorise any person or body of persons to
take over the management of the whole or any part of an
industrial undertaking or to exercise in respect of whole or
any part of the undertaking such functions of control as may
be specified in the order, if, without prejudice to any
other provisions of the Act, from the documentary or other
evidence in its possession, the Central Government is
satisfied in relation to the industrial undertaking, that
"(a) the persons incharge of such industrial
undertakings have, by reckless investments or
creation of encumbrances on the assets of the
industrial undertaking, or by diversion of
funds, brought about a situation which is
likely to affect the production of articles
manufactured or produced in the industrial
under taking, and that immediate action is
necessary to prevent such a situation; or
(b) it has been closed for a period of not less
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than three months (whether by reason of the
voluntary winding up of the company owning
the industrial undertaking or for any other
reason) and such closure is prejudicial to
the concerned scheduled industry and
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that the financial condition of the company
owning the industrial undertaking and the
condition of the plant and machinery of such
undertaking are such that it is possible to
re-start the undertaking and such re-starting
is necessary in the interests of the general
public".
Sec. 18-AA(5) stipulates that the provisions of Sections 18-
B to 18-E shall be applicable to the industrial undertaking
in respect of which an order has been made under s. 18-AA
even as they apply to an industrial undertaking taken over
under Sec. 18-A. Sec. 18-B specifies the effect of a
notified order under Sec. 18-A. Sec. 18C empowers the Court
to cancel or vary contracts made in bad faith etc. by the
management of an undertaking before such management was
taken by the Central Government. Sec. 18-D provides that
there shall be no right to compensation for termination of
office or contract as a result of the ‘take over’. Sec. 18-E
deprives the shareholders and the Company of certain rights
under the Indian Companies Act. if the industrial
undertaking whose management is taken over is a Company.
Sec. 18-F empowers the Central Government on the application
of the owner of the industrial undertaking or otherwise to
cancel the order made under Sec. 18-A if it appears to the
Central Government that the purpose of the order has been
fulfilled or that for any other reason it is not necessary
that the order should remain in force. Sec. 18FD(3) enables
the Central Government to exercise the powers under Sec. 18-
F in relation to an undertaking taken over under Sec. 18-AA.
The question for consideration is whether Sec. 18-AA
excludes natural justice by necessary implication. The
development and regulation of certain key industries was
apparently considered so basic and vital to the economy of
our country that Parliament, in its wisdom, thought fit to
enact the Industries Development & Regulation Act, after
making the declaration required by Entry 52 of List I of the
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution that it was expedient,
in the public interest, that the Union should take under its
control the industries specified in the schedule to the Act,
as earlier mentioned by us. Apart from making provision for
the establishment of a Central Advisory Council and other
Development Councils, and the licensing of scheduled
industries, the Act empowers the Central Government to cause
a full and complete investigation to be made where there is
a substantial fall in the volume of production for which
there is no justification having regard to the prevailing
economic conditions or there is marked deterioration in the
quality of the
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goods produced or the price of the goods produced is rising
unjustifiably or where conservation of resources of national
importance is necessary or the industrial undertaking is
being managed in a manner highly detrimental to the
scheduled industry or to public interest (Sec. 15) and
thereafter to issue necessary and appropriate directions to
the industrial undertaking to mend matters suitably (Sec.
16). Where the instructions issued under Sec. 16 are not
complied with or where the investigation reveals that the
industrial undertaking is being managed in a manner highly
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detrimental to the scheduled industry or to the public
interest the Central Government may take over the industry
under Sec. 18-A. Whether there is an investigation or not,
the Central Government may also ‘take over’ the management
of the industry under Sec. 18-AA, if consequent on certain
wilfull acts of commission on the part of the management the
production is likely to be effected but immediate action may
prevent such a situation, or the industrial undertaking has
been closed for a period of not less than three months and
the closure is prejudicial to the scheduled industry. Action
under Sec. 18-AA is thus preventive and remedial. Where
there is an apprehension that production is likely to be
affected as a result of the wilfull acts of the management
or where the production has already come to a stand-still
because of the closure of the undertaking for a period of
not less than three months the Central Government is
authorised to intervene to restore production. The object
clearly is to take immediate action to prevent a situation
likely to affect production or to restore production. There
was some argument at the Bar that the expression ‘immediate
action’ was not to be found in Sec. 18-AA(1) (b). I do not
think that the absence of the expression "immediate action
in Sec. 18-AA(1)(b) makes any difference. Sec. 18-AA(1)(a)
refers to a situation where immediate preventive action may
avert a disaster, whereas Sec. 18-AA contemplates a
situation where the disaster has occurred and action is
necessary to restore normalcy. Restoration of production
where production has stopped in a key industry or industrial
undertaking is as important and urgent, in the public
interest, as prevention of a situation where production may
be affected. Immediate action is, therefore, as necessary in
the situation contemplated by Sec. 18-AA(1)(b) as in the
situation contemplated by Sec. 18-AA(1)(a).
It is true that the marginal note refers to the power
to take over without investigation but there is no
sufficient reason to suppose that the word ‘immediate’ is
used only to contra-distinguish it from the investigation
contemplated by Sec. 15 of the Act, though, of course a
consequence of immediate action under Sec. 18-AA may be to
dis-
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pense with the enquiry under Sec. 15. In fact, facts which
come to light during the course of an investigation under
Sec. 15 may form the basis of action under Sec. 18-AA(1)(a).
Where in the course of an investigation under Sec. 15 it is
discovered that the management have, by reckless investments
or creation of encumbrances on the assets of the industrial
undertaking or by diversion of funds brought about a
situation which is likely to affect the production of the
articles manufactured or produced in the industrial
undertaking, if the Government is satisfied that immediate
action is necessary to prevent such a situation, there is no
reason why the Central Government may not straight away take
action under Sec. 18-AA(1)(a) without waiting for completion
of investigation under Sec. 15. Parliament apparently
contemplated a situation where immediate action was
necessary, and having contemplated such a situation, there
is no reason to assume that Parliament did not contemplate
situations which brooked not a moments delay. If Parliament
also contemplated situations which did not brook a moment’s
delay, it would be difficult to read natural justice into
Sec. 18-AA. The submission of Shri Nariman was that the
immediacy of the situation would be relevant and relatable
to the quantum of natural justice and not to a total denial
of natural justice. According to him the scope and extent of
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the opportunity to be given to the party against whom action
is taken may depend upon the situation but nothing would
justify a negation of a natural justice. He pointed out that
in a situation of great urgency which brooked no delay, an
order under Sec. 18-AA might be made, the situation could be
so frozen that the persons incharge of the industrial
undertaking might do no more mischief and the Government
could then, without giving further effect to the order under
Sec. 18-AA, give a notice to the person incharge to show
cause why the order under Sec. 18-AA should not be given
effect. In another given case, according to Shri Nariman,
notice of, say two weeks, might be given before making an
order, if the making of an order was not so very urgent. He
suggested that the opportunity to be given might vary from
situation to situation but opportunity there must be, either
before the decision was arrived at or so shortly after the
decision was arrived at and before any great mischief might
result from the order. The argument of Shri Nariman would
vest in the Government a power to decide from case to case
the extent of opportunity to be given in each individual
case and, as a corollary, a corresponding right in the
aggrieved party to claim that the opportunity provided was
not enough. Such a procedure may be possible, practicable
and desirable in situations where there is no statutory
provision enabling the decision making authority to review,
or reconsider its decision. Where there is a
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provision in the statute itself for revocation of the order
by the very authority making the decision, it appears to us
to be unnecessary to insist upon a pre-decisional observance
of natural justice. The question must be considered by
regard to the terms of the statute and by an examination, on
the terms of the statute, whether it is possible,
practicable and desirable to observe pre-decisional natural
justice and whether a post decisional review or
reconsideration provided by the statute itself is not a
sufficient substitute.
The likelihood of production being jeopardized or the
stoppage of production in a key industrial undertaking is a
matter of grave concern affecting the public interest.
Parliament has taken so serious a view of the matter that it
has authorised the Central Government to take over the
management of the industrial undertaking if immediate action
may prevent jeopardy to production or restore production
where it has already stopped. The necessity for immediate
action by the Central Government, contemplated by
Parliament, is definitely indicative of the exclusion of
natural justice. It is not as if the owner of the industrial
undertaking is left with no remedy. He may move the Central
Government under Sec. 18-F to cancel the order made under
Sec. 18-AA. True some mischief affecting the management and
top executives may have already been done. On the other
hand, greater mischief affecting the public economy and the
lives of many a thousand worker may have been averted. While
on the one hand mere property rights are involved, on the
other vital public interest is affected. This ......again,
in the light of the need for immediate action contemplated
by Parliament, is a clear pointer to the exclusion of
natural justice. It was submitted by the learned counsel
that Sec. 18-F did not provide any remedy but merely
provided for cancellation of an order of take over on the
fulfilment of the purpose of the order of take over or for
any other reason which rendered further continuance in force
of the order unnecessary because of the happening of
subsequent events. According to the learned counsel the
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basic assumption of Sec. 18-F was the validity of the order
under Sec. 18-A or Sec. 18-AA. All that Sec. 18-F did was to
prescribe conditions for the exercise of the general power
which every authority had under Sec. 21 of the General
Clauses Act to cancel its own earlier order. It was said
that if Sec. 18-F could be said to impliedly exclude natural
justice there is then no reason not to hold that Sec. 21 of
the General Clauses Act similarly excluded natural justice
in every case. I am unable to agree with these submissions
of the learned counsel. Neither Sec. 18-F of the Industries
(Development and Regulation) Act nor Sec. 21 of the General
Clauses Act, by itself, excludes natural justice. The
exclusion of natural justice, where such exclusion is not
express, has to be implied by reference
599
to the subject, the statute and the statutory situation.
Where an express provision in the statute itself provides
for a post decisional hearing the other provisions of the
statute will have to be read in the light of such provision
and the provision for post decisional hearing may then
clinch the issue where pre-decisional natural justice
appears to be excluded on the other terms of the statute.
That a post-decisional hearing may also be had by the terms
of Sec. 21 of the General Clauses Act may not necessarily
help in the interpretation of the provisions of the statute
concerned. On the other hand even the general provision
contained in Sec. 21 of the General Clauses Act may be
sufficient to so interpret the terms of a given statute as
to exclude natural justice. As I said it depends on the
subject, statute and the statutory situation.
I am, therefore, satisfied that the principles of
natural justice are not attracted to the situations
contemplated by Sec. 18-AA of the Industries (Development
and Regulation) Act. In view of the order proposed by my
learned brothers Sarkaria and Desai JJ. I do not propose to
consider the other questions.
ORDER
As per majority decision, the appeals are allowed.
N. K. A. Appeals allowed.
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