Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 4
PETITIONER:
NEW SAMUNDRI TRANSPORT CO. (P) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/10/1975
BENCH:
GOSWAMI, P.K.
BENCH:
GOSWAMI, P.K.
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
UNTWALIA, N.L.
CITATION:
1976 AIR 57 1976 SCR (2) 218
1976 SCC (1) 757
CITATOR INFO :
F 1978 SC 434 (5)
R 1984 SC1622 (142,198)
ACT:
Motor Vehicles Act, 1939-S. 60(1)-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
Section 60 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 empowers the
State Transport Authority to cancel or suspend a permit
granted by it under certain circumstances. The proviso to
the section states that no permit shall be cancelled unless
an opportunity has been given to the holder of the permit to
furnish his explanation.
On receipt of reports and complaints regarding the
appellant, the State Transport Commissioner issued a show
cause notice to it without specifying therein the nature of
complaints. Action was taken for cancellation of the
permits. The High Court summarily dismissed the writ
petition of the appellant filed under Art. 226 of the
Constitution against the order of the State Transport
Appellate Tribunal.
Allowing the appeal to this Court,
^
HELD: (1) The High Court was not right in not
interfering with the order of the authority cancelling the
permits. A manifestly wrong procedure in a departmental
action of this nature is obvious on the face of the notice
resulting in violation of the principles of natural justice.
[221D; 220A]
(2) The proposed penal action has to be particularised
with reference to each permit detailing the particular
conditions for breach of which action is sought to be taken.
Proviso to s. 60(1) which requires mandatory compliance is
nothing short of a reasonable opportunity to the permit-
holder to furnish his explanation. Unless the breaches of
conditions or other allegations are particularised with
reference to each permit in the show cause notice such
notice is clearly invalid and no action can be taken under
such a notice. [220G: 221D]
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 4
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 879 of
1975.
Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and order
dated the 4th November, 1974 of the Punjab and Haryana High
Court in Civil Writ No. 4346 of 1974.
Hardyal Hardy, S. K. Mehta, K. B. Nagaraja, P. N. Puri,
M. Qamaruddin and K. Khanna, for the appellant.
O. P. Sharma, for respondent No. 1.
Luxmi Grover and S. S. Jauhar, for respondent No. 3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GOSWAMI, J.-This appeal by special leave is against the
judgment of the Punjab and Haryana High Court summarily
dismissing a writ application under article 226 of the
Constitution against the order of the State Transport
Appellate Tribunal, Punjab.
The appellant is a private limited company carrying on
transport business over a long period. The company was
granted 33 stage
219
carriage permits for various routes. It had a sanctioned
fleet of 35 transport vehicles. On receipt of several
reports and complaints from various sources, the State
Transport Commissioner issued the following show cause
notice to the appellant on March 28, 1974:-
"Regd. A.D.
From:
S. Balinder Singh, IAS,
State Transport Commissioner,
Punjab.
To
The Managing Director,
New Samundri Transport Company (P) Ltd.,
Ferozepur.
No. 455/JFI(2) dated Chandigarh the 28th March, 1974.
Subject: Departmental Action.
Memorandum
A list of prosecutions launched against your
company by the Operational Staff is forwarded herewith.
The offences committed are of a very serious nature.
Your company is also short of fleet of fit vehicles. A
copy of the joint report of the Secretary, Regional
Transport Authority, Jullundur and Motor Vehicles
Inspector, Jullundur relating to the condition of buses
of your company is also enclosed. Due to the shortage
of fit vehicles against the sanctioned fleet of 35
buses, number of services are being missed whereby the
public is being put to a great inconvenience. You are,
therefore, required to show cause as to why
departmental action by way of suspension/cancellation
of stage carriage permits under section 60 of the Motor
Vehicles Act, 1939, should not be taken against your
Company. Reply should be sent to this office within 10
days of the receipt of this notice failing which it
will be presumed that you have nothing to say.
State Transport Commissioner
Punjab".
The appellant says that an explanation was posted to
the Commissioner within time under certificate of posting.
According to the Commissioner it was not received. The
District Judge, who is the State Transport Appellate
Tribunal, observed in his order that-
"some mischief appears to have been committed in
the office of the respondent with regard to the reply
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 4
which was sent under postal certificate".
220
We will, however, proceed on the assumption that no
explanation was sent by the appellant to the Commissioner.
Even so a manifestly wrong procedure in a departmental
action of this nature is obvious on the face of the above
notice resulting in violation of the principles of natural
justice.
The notice was issued under section 60 of the Motor
Vehicles Act, 1939 (briefly the Act) which may be quoted:
60(1)"The transport authority which granted a permit
may cancel the permit or may suspend it for such
period as it thinks fit-
(a) on the breach of any condition specified in sub-
section (3) of section 59, or of any condition
contained in the permit, or
(b) if the holder of the permit uses or causes or
allows a vehicle to be used in any manner not
authorised by the permit, or
(c) if the holder of the permit ceases to own the
vehicle or vehicles covered by the permit, or
(d) if the holder of the permit has obtained the
permit by fraud or misrepresentation, or
(e) if the holder of the permit, not being a private
carrier’s permit, fails without reasonable cause
to use the vehicle or vehicles for the purposes
for which the permit was granted; or
(f) if the holder of the permit acquires the
citizenship of any foreign country:
Provided that no permit shall be cancelled unless an
opportunity has been given to the holder of the permit
to furnish his explanation".
Sub-section (3) of section 60 provides for composition of
breach of certain conditions. Section 59(3) contains the
conditions laid down for every permit. The target of section
60 is the permit that has been issued breach of conditions
of which is the subject matter of action under it except in
cases covered by section 60(1) (d) and (f). It is true that
for each permit the permit-holder is responsible and he is
the person who has to submit the explanation. The proposed
penal action has to be particularised with reference to each
permit detailing the particular conditions for breach of
which action is sought to be taken in connection with a
particular permit. This is the minimum requirement of
section 60.
What we find in this case is a kind of bald notice
making no reference to any particular permit for
cancellation or suspension of which action has been taken.
It is as if all the 33 permits were going to be suspended or
cancelled. It is clear that after receipt of the various
reports the Commissioner did not apply his mind to
scrutinise the same
221
for the purpose of taking appropriate legal action against
any specific permit under section 60 of the Act. On the
other hand taking the reports as they were, which may as
well have been general allegations against the permit-
holder, immediately action was taken for suspension or
cancellation of all the permits. From the list of
prosecutions we find only 15 vehicles are involved and most
of the cases are of overloading. Some of the cases relate to
non-accompaniment with the vehicles of registration
certificates and other documents. In some cases, against
certain vehicles, the time schedule was not kept and certain
trips were missed. We are not at all on the merits of these
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 4
prosecutions.
What is important in a departmental action of this type
for violation of conditions of permit is that it must relate
to the particular permits appertaining to concerned
vehicles. It is of utmost importance that charges are made
with reference to each permit in clear terms in order to
enable the permit-holder to furnish his explanation. Proviso
to section 60(1) which requires mandatory compliance is
nothing short of a reasonable opportunity to the permit-
holder to furnish his explanation. Unless, therefore, the
breaches of conditions or other allegations are
particularised with reference to each permit in the show
cause notice, such notice is clearly invalid and no action
can be taken under such a notice. This is exactly what has
happened in this case resulting in violation of the
principles of natural justice ingrained in the proviso to
section 60(1) of the Act. The High Court, therefore, was not
right in not interfering with the order of the authorities
cancelling the permits.
In the result the appeal is allowed. The order of the
High Court as well as the orders of the State Transport
Appellate Tribunal and the Commissioner are set aside. We
will, however, make no order as to costs.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed.
222