Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/s. BHARAT BARREL & DRUM MFG. CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
L. K. BOSE & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/10/1966
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
WANCHOO, K.N.
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 361
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1976 SC 425 (13)
ACT:
Essential Commodities Act, 1955-Steel Control Order, 1956-
Controller cancelling allotment of steel sheets-In
subsequent inquiry refusing to record oral evidence-Natural
justice whether violated-Error apparent on face of award,
what is.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company carried on the business of
manufacturing barrels and for that purpose required steel
sheets. By ’reason of the Essential Commodities Act, 1955
the Iron & Steel (Conirol) Order, 1956 and diverse orders
passed by the Iron and Steel Controller the appellant
company could get supply of steel sheets only by obtaining
release orders from the Controller on stockists and
importers. The Controller would direct under such a release
order an importer or a stockist to supply steel sheets to
the appellant company at rates and on terms and conditions
specified by him therein. By three such release orders of
October 28 and 29, 1960 the Controller directed the 6th
respondent to supply to the appellant a certain quantity of
steel sheets at a specified rate. There was dispute between
the appellant and the 6th respondent as to the quantity to
be supplied and the rate of supply. The appellant claimed
that it had already -paid an excess. sum of Rs. 7 lacs and
odd to the 6th respondent in respect of earlier release
orders. On the dispute being referred to the Controller he
ordered the 6th respondent to supply steel sheets to the
appellant at the specified rate after making allowance for
the excess of Rs. 7 lacs and odd already paid. He also
ordered that if the appellant did not pay the price and the
transaction was not completed Within a certain time owing to
the fault of the appellant be would allot the steel sheets
to some other party. Owing to the persistence of
differences with the 6th respondent the appellant could not
carry out the transaction but instead filed a suit in the
High Court. The Controller then cancelled the allotment in
favour of the appellant. Against this order of cancellation
the appellant filed a writ petition in the High Court. The
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High Court passed a consent order asking the Controller to
’hear’ the parties and decide whether the appellant was at
fault in not lifting the goods. At the bearing the
appellant wanted to examine a witness but the request was
refused by the Controller. The Controller decided against
the- appellant. The appellant filed another writ petition
in the High Court. The writ petition and the subsequent
letters patent appeal filed by the appellant were both
dismissed. The appellants came to Court and contended :
(1) The Controller by refusing to examine the appellants
witness violated natural justice.
(2) On the question of the refund of the excess charges the
Controller’s order suffered from an error apparent on the
face of the record; and
(3) The finding of the Controller that the appellant wanted
to pick and choose the goods was without evidence.
HELD : (i) While considering the question of breach of the
principles of natural justice the court should not proceed
as if there are any
740
inflexible rules of natural justice of universal
application. The Court has to consider in each case whether
in the light of the facts and circumstances of that case,
the nature of the issues involved in the inquiry,, the
nature of the order passed and the interest affected
thereby, a fair and reasonable opportunity of being heard
was furnished by the person affected. A refusal to record
oral evidence does not necessarily mean contravention of the
rules of natural justice. [746 D; 747 G-H]
Local Government Board v. Arlidge, [1915] A.C. 120, New
Prakash Transport Co. Ltd. v. New Suwarna Transport Co. Ltd.
[1957] S.C.R. 98, Western India Match Co. v. Industrial
Tribunal, Madras, [1962] 1 L.L.J. 629 De Verteuil v. Knaggs
JUDGMENT:
[1943] A.C. 627., and Union of India v.
T. R. Varma, [1958] S.C.R. 499, referred to.
The Controller had heard the case of the parties through
their counsel. The witness was a director of the appellant
company. Being present at the hearing,he could have
instructed counsel to state all that he wanted to depose.
That not having been done the company could have no
grievance of nothaving been heard. The witness
produced by the appellant was not of a material character.
On the facts of the case the refusal of the Controller to
examine the witness in question did not constitute a breach
of natural justice. [749 C-D; 750 C],
(ii)An error of law on the face of an award means that the
court must first find whether there is any legal proposition
which is the basis of the award. Reading the impugned order
it was difficult to say what legal proposition it contained
in respect of which it could be said that there was an error
on the face of the record. [750 D-E]
(iii)It could not be said that there was no evidence
that the appellant company wanted to pick and choose the
goods. [751 G]
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Civil Appeal No. 928 of 1965.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 24, 1964 of the Calcutta High Court in Appeal from
Original Order No. 269 of 1963.
Bishan Narain, B. Dutta, S. C. Chagla, Ravinder Narain, for
the appellant.
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B. Sen and R. H. Dhebar, for respondents Nos. 1-5.
A. K. Sen, Rameshwar Nath, S. N. Andley, P. L. Vohra,
Mahinder Narain, for respondent No. 6.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J.-This appeal by special leave is directed aganist
the judgment and order of the High Court at Calcutta which
upheld the judgment and order of the Single Judge of that
High. Court dismissing the writ pettition filed by the
appellant company.
The appellant company was at all material times carrying on
the business of manufacturing barrels and for that purpose
required steel sheets. By reason of the Essential
Commodities Act,
741
1955, the Iron and Steel (Control) Order, 1956 and diverse
orders passed by the Iron and Steel Controller the appellant
company could get supplies ‘ of steel sheets only by
obtaining release orders from the Controller on stockists
and importers. The Controller would direct under such a
release order an importer or a stockist to supply steel
sheets to the appellant company at rates and on terms and
conditions specified by him therein. By three such release
orders, of October 28 and 29, 1960 the Controller directed
the 6th respondent M/s. Amichand Pyarelal & Co., to supply
to the appellant company 3406.386 metric tons of steel
sheets. Prior to these three orders certain other release
orders had been issued on the 6th respondent and the
appellant company had paid large amounts in respect of steel
sheets supplied thereunder on the basis of pro forma
invoices issued by the 6th respondent and their sister
concerns. An amount of Rs. 7 lacs and odd said to be excess
payment was claimed by the appellant company from the 6th
respondent to recover which the appellant company had filed
suits in August 1961 and January 1963 in the High Courts at
Bombay and Calcutta. In pursuance of the said three release
orders the 6th respondent sent its pro forma invoice but
only for 2,168 tons and odd stating that it had already
delivered between November 1961 and February 1962, 1238 tons
and odd in part satisfaction of the said release orders. In
these invoices the 6th respondent claimed Rs. 975.55 per
metric ton which was a higher rate than the one fixed by the
Controller. The appellant company thereupon tendered the
price at the rate fixed by the Controller also deducting
therefrom the said excess of Rs. 7 lacs and odd. The 6th
respondent declined to accept the same whereupon the
appellant company apprised the Controller about the
difference between them. By his order dated 1/2 May, 1962
the Controller directed that the 6th respondent should
charge the appellant company at the rate of Rs. 921 per
metric ton and deduct the excess charges paid to it earlier.
He also directed the 6th respondent to send to the appellant
company revised pro forma invoice within three days. The
order also stated that the appellant company should make
arrangement for payment within three days of the receipt of
the revised pro forma invoice and that if the transaction
was not completed by May 12, 1962 due to any fault on the
part of the appellant company he would consider the disposal
of the said sheets in favour of some other party. The
Controller sent a copy of this letter to the appellant
company and in the note appended thereto informed the
company that it should lift the materials before May 12,
1962. The 6th respondent thereafter sent its revised
invoice at the rate directed by the Controller but without
adjusting the said excess and insisting that 1,238 tons and
odd were already delivered and that only 2,168 tons remained
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to be delivered. In the said invoice it also included the
price of 1,238 tons at Rs. 921 per metric ton. The
appellant company tendered its banker’s slip at the rate of
Rs. 921 per ton after deducting therefrom
742
the said amount of Rs. 7 lacs and odd as excess payable to
it by the 6th respondent. The 6th respondent refused to
accept the said slip and instead sent on May 7, 1962 another
invoice without adjusting the said excess thus, according to
the appellant company, making it impossible for it to lift
the steel sheets. The appellant company filed another suit
in the High Court at Bombay inter alia for a mandatory
injunction directing the 6th respondent to deliver the
entire quantity of 3,406 tons and odd at Rs. 921 after
deducting from the price therefore the said excess of Rs. 7
lacs.
By his order dated 24/26 May, 1962 addressed to the 6th res-
pondent the Controller allotted 2,168 and odd tons of the
said steel sheets in favour of the 7th respondent cancelling
the allotment in favour of the appellant company. Appended
to the said order was a note of the Controller addressed to
the appellant company which ran as follows
"Due to their non-lifting of Drum sheet 18G for 2168.25 M/T
against.... (the said three release orders), they are
advised to note that the same quantity of allotment against
the said R/Os has been treated as cancelled, matter is
treated as closed finally."
Against this order of cancellation the appellant corn any
filed a writ petition in the High Court at Calcutta. It
came up for hearing on September 14, 1962 before Banerjee J.
when the parties took a consent order. The said consent
order provided , inter alia, that the Controller shall
himself "hear" the parties and ascertain for himself which
of them was at fault in making the said order of 1/2 May,
1962 ineffective. It also provided that if the Controller
were to find that the appellant company was not at fault but
that the order could not be complied with by it because of
any unreasonable stand taken by the 6th respondent he should
reconsider his said order of cancellation of allotment. On
the other hand if he were to find that the appellant company
was at fault he need not change the said cancellation order.
In pursuance of the said consent order the Controller fixed
December 13, 1962 for hearing the parties and gave
permission to them to appear through counsel. On the 13th
and the 18th December, 1962 the Controller heard the parties
who appeared through counsel and took on record
correspondence, affidavits and other documents produced by
the parties. The’ appellant company contended that the 6th
respondent failed to implement the said order and thereby
made it ineffective. The contention was that the 6th
respondent was not justified in offering delivery of 2,168
and odd tons only instead of 3,406 and odd tons, that it was
not justified in claiming that the delivery of the said
1,238 tons and odd was under the said release orders, that
the said 1,238 tons and odd were delivered under and in
pursuance of an oral agreement arrived at between
743
Lalta Prasad Goenka, a director of the appellant company and
one Jitpal on behalf of the 6th respondent whereunder the
6th respondent had agreed to deliver 4,500 tons from out of
its free sale stock at Rs. 875 per ton, that the said 1,238
tons having been delivered under the said agreement the
entire quantity of 3,406 tons and odd remained undelivered
and that therefore its offer to deliver only 2,168 and odd
tons was not a proper -offer. The appellant company also
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contended that the 6th respondent failed to deduct the
excess amount of Rs. 7 lacs and odd though directed by the
Controller and further that it was not entitled to charge
the said 1,238 tons and odd at Rs. 921 per ton as the said
quantity as aforesaid was delivered under the said oral
agreement and therefore could charge at Rs. 875 per ton. It
also contended that in spite of specific directions from the
Controller the 6th respondent failed to send its said
revised pro forma invoice within three days. The last
contention however was not pressed and it need not therefore
detain us. At the time of the hearing the appellant company
offered to examine the said Lalta Prasad Goenka as its
witness to prove the said oral agreement. The Controller,
however, refused to record his evidence.
On December 21, 1964 the Controller passed his order holding
the appellant company responsible for not carrying out his
directions in the order dated 1/2 May, 1962 and held that
the cancellation of allotment in favour of the appellant
company need not be reconsidered. As regards the appellant
company’s application to examine the said Lalta Parsad, he
gave three reasons for refusing it: (1) that he was not in a
position to take down the evidence; (2) that it was not
possible for him to examine him on oath or on solemn,
affirmation; and (3) that his evidence would not have been
conclusive as one party would have asserted and the other
party would, have denied the aid agreement.
Aggrieved by this order the appellant company filed a writ
petition in the High Court at Calcutta for having the said
order quashed. The writ petition was heard by Banerjee J.
who dismissed it on the ground that the said order could not
be held to be mala fide or one made at the instance of or
with a view to help the 6th respondent as alleged. He held
that even if the Controller was wrong in refusing to record
the testimony of Lalta Prasad such a refusal was not
perverse or wanting in bona fides. The learned Judge also
held that the finding of the Controller that the appellant
company’s demand for inspection and survey of the goods
offered by the 6th respondent was unreasonable was in the
circumstances of the case neither perverse nor arbitrary.
He also held that though the Controller’s refusal to examine
Lalta Prasad ’was unfortunate, and the reasons given by him
were open to criticism it could not be said to be perverse.
He observed that though a different view could be taken on
the question as to blame worthiness the view taken by the
Controller could not be said to be arbitrary or perverse,
for,-
744
it was difficult for the Controller to decide on the
evidence adduced by the parties whether the 6th respondent
was guilty of not offering the full quantity of goods under
the said release orders. The learned Judge added that the
Controller may be right in condemning the appellant company
for its insistence that goods should be of standard and
merchantable quality. The pendency of the appellant
company’s suit to recover the said excess may also have made
it difficult for the Controller to hold that the 6th
respondent was to be blamed in not adjusting the said excess
in the said revised pro forma invoice. If, in these
circumstances, the Controller held that the appellant
company was more to be blamed than the 6th respondent it
would not be possible to quash his order either on the
ground of its being arbitrary or perverse. The learned
Judge examined the appellant company’s letters dated the
9th, the 11 th, the 17th of January, 1962 and February 6,
1962 and found that its case with regard to the oral
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agreement suffered from contradictions, for, at one stage
its case was that the 6th respondent had agreed to supply
4,500 tons over and above 3,400 and odd tons under the said
release orders and the said 1,238 tons were delivered under
the said oral agreement while in the letter of February 6,
1962 its case was that the 6th respondent was to deliver
4,500 tons which would include the said 3,400 and odd tons
deliverable under the said release orders and charge at the
rate of Rs. 875 per ton. Therefore, the delivery of 1,238
tons, if this letter were to be true, would be not under the
oral agreement but under the release orders and consequently
the 6th respondent could not be said not to have offered the
full quantity under the said release orders. On the other
hand, there was also the letter of the 6th respondent to the
Steel Minister in which it had complained of the appellant
company not having taken delivery at all. If its case that
1,238 tons were delivered under the release orders, was
correct the statement made by it to the said Minister would
obviously be not correct. In the view of Banerjee J. the
Controller took a very lenient view when he simply
characterised the letter as unethical. He observed that
instead of speculating about the unethical attitude of the
6th respondent the Controller could well have agreed to
record the evidence of the said Lalta Prasad. According to
the learned Judge, howsoever unfortunate that refusal was
the order could not be held to be perverse or arbitrary and
since the case of the appellant company regarding the oral
agreement was inconsistent the Controller could not be
blamed for not accepting it though it might be that a court
of law might come to a different conclusion.
Against the order of Banerjee J. the appellant company filed
Letters Patent Appeal which was heard by a Division Bench
consisting of Bachawat and A. K. Mukherjee JJ. Before the
Division Bench the Controller’s finding that it was for the
first time that in its letter dated May 8, 1962 the
appellant company made it a condition
745
that it would accept delivery only of goods found on
inspection to be of standard and merchantable quality, was
challenged. The appeal court found that even before the
said letter of May 8, 1962 there was correspondence in which
allegations of the goods having become rusty and damaged
were made and a demand for inspection was also made. But
the appeal court found that those letters indicated that the
appellant company was agreeable to take delivery of the
goods in their present condition but was insisting upon a
certificate of their being merchantable or not so as to
enable it to demand rebate. Therefore the Controller was in
a way right when he said that it was for the first time in
its letter of the 8th May, 1962 that the appellant company
insisted that it would accept only those goods which were of
standard and merchantable quality. The appeal court also
rejected the company’s contention that until May 7, 1962
when the 6th respondent sent its revised invoice asking the
appellant company to take delivery of the goods as "it is
lying with us" the appellant company had no chance to raise
this point. The learned Judges observed that that
contention was not sustainable as the appellant company
could have made a demand for the goods being of standard and
merchantable quality earlier as the correspondence showed
that it was all along aware that the said goods had become
rusted. The proper thing for the appellant company there-
fore was to waive the said condition assuming it was
entitled to insist upon it and subsequently claim rebate
particularly as the demand for inspection was only with the
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object of claiming rebate. As regards the Controller’s
finding that the appellant company was more to be blamed for
the non-implementation of the order of 1/2 May, 1962, the
learned Judges observed that though the Controller had
directed the 6th respondent to deduct the said excess and
though the 6th respondent had not done so there was
difficulty in the way of the Controller to throw the blame
on the 6th respondent. Neither party had asked the
Controller to fix the amount of the said excess and the time
when the appellant company should withdraw its suit. There
was besides discrepancy in the amount of excess claimed by
the appellant company. In its letter dated February 23,
1962 to the Controller the excess amount claimed was Rs.
7,40,595 whereas in its letter dated April 23, 1962 to the
6th respondent the claim was for Rs. 7,64,438.40 nP. The
difficulty therefore was as to what was the amount which the
6th respondent was expected to refund. As regards the
Controller’s refusal to record the evidence of the said
Lalta Prasad the learned Judges were of the view that it was
not incumbent upon the Controller to record such evidence,
that the Controller had given adequate opportunity to both
the parties to adduce their respective case, that all the
relevant correspondence and documents were produced by them
before the Controller and that therefore it was impossible
to hold that there was any breach of the principles of
natural justice. In this view the Division Bench confirmed
the order of Banerjee J. and dismissed the appeal.
up. C.I./66-3
746
Challenging the order of the High Court Mr. Bishan Narain
for the appellant company raised three contentions :
(1) that the Controller did not hear the appellant company
in full and violated the principles of natural justice by
refusing to record the evidence of Lalta Prasad;
(2) that on the question of refund of the excess charges
the Controller’s order suffered from an error of law
apparent on the face of the record; and
(3) that the finding of the Controller that the appellant
company wanted to pick and choose was without evidence.
In order to appreciate the first contention it is necessary
first to consider the content of the principles of natural
justice. That question has been the subject-matter of a
number of decisions. It is now well-settled that while
considering the question of breach of the principles of
natural justice the court should not proceed as if there are
any inflexible rules of natural justice of universal appli-
cation. The Court therefore has to consider in each case
whether in the light of the facts and circumstances of that
case, the nature of the issues involved in the inquiry, the
nature of the order passed and the interests affected
thereby, a fair and reasonable opportunity of being heard
was furnished to the person affected. In Local Government
Board v. Arlidge(l), Lord Parmoor observed as follows:-
"Where, however, the question of procedure is raised in a
hearing, before some tribunal other than a court of law,
there is no obligation to adopt the regular forms of
judicial procedure. It is sufficient that the case has been
heard in a judicial spirit and in accordance with the
principles of substantial justice. In determining whether
the principles of substantial justice have been complied
with in matters of procedure regard must necessarily be had
to the nature of the issue to be determined and the
constitution of the Tribunal."
A similar approach to the question is also to be found in
New Prakash Transport Co.. Ltd.., v. New Suwarna Transport
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Co. Ltd.(2), where this Court laid down the following
guiding criterion :-
"Rules of natural justice vary with the varying consti-
tutions of statutory bodies and the rules prescribed by the
legislature under which they have to act, and the question
whether in a particular case they have been contravened must
be judged not by any preconceived notion of what they may be
but in the light of the provisions of the
relevant Act."
(1)[1915] A.C. 120.
(2) [1957] S.C.R. 98.
747
In that case r. 73 of the Rules framed under the Motor Vehi-
cles Act, IV of 1939 provided that the, Chairman of the
Provincial Transport Authority on receipt of an appeal shall
appoint the ,time and place for hearing the appeal and shall
give a notice of not less than thirty days to the appellant,
the original authority and any other person interested in
the appeal and on such appointed or adjourned date the
appellate authority "shall hear such persons as may appear
and, after such further enquiry, if any, as it may deem
necessary, confirm, vary, or set aside the order against
which the appeal is preferred." At page 105 of the report
the Court observed that neither the sections nor the rules
framed under the Act contemplated anything like recording
oral or documentary evidence in the usual way as in courts
of law, nor did they contemplate a regular hearing as in a
court of justice. The Court also observed that the
provisions of the Act and the Rules did not provide for any
elaborate procedure as to how the parties interested had to
be heard in regard to the question as to who should be
granted a stage carriage permit. This Court held on a
consideration of the provisions of the Act and the Rules
that though the appellate authority had to function in a
quasi-judicial capacity but not as a court of law, it was
not required to record oral or documentary evidence and that
the only requirement was that in considering the rival
claims for the stage carriage permits the authority had to
deal with such claims in a fair and just manner. Similarly,
in Western Indian Match Co. v. Industrial Tribunal,
Madras(’) this Court once again stated that the Industrial
Tribunal was not bound by the strict rules of procedure of
the Evidence Act and that if having regard to the fact that
the agreement alleged was denied by the respondents, it came
to the conclusion that proof of the agreement would not
really matter, that clearly would be a decision within its
jurisdiction and it would be unreasonable to invoke the
prerogative jurisdiction of the High Court-under Art. 226 to
overrule or reverse such a conclusion. As in the present
case the dispute between the parties there was as to the
existence of an agreement said to have been arrived at
before the conciliation officer. The Tribunal had held that
the agreement reached between the parties had been recorded
by the conciliation officer in some of his letters and so it
was only a matter of construction of those letters and in
that view refused to examine the conciliation officer. It
was in connection with the Tribunal’s refusal to examine
that officer that this Court made the aforesaid
observations. (See also De Verteuil v. Knaggs & Anr.(2)). It
is thus clear that a refusal to record oral evidence does
not necessarily mean contravention of the rules of natural
justice.
Mr. Bishan Narain, however, relied upon two decisions in
General Medical Council v. Spackman(3) and Union of India v.
T. R. Varma (4). In Spackman’s case(3) a registered
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medical practi-
(1) [1962] 1 L.L.J. 629.
(3) [1943] A.C. 627.
(2) [1918] A.C. 557.
(4) [1958] S.C.R. 499.
748
tioner who was a co-respondent in a divorce suit, was held
by the Divorce Court to have committed adultery with Mrs.
Pepper, the respondent therein, with whom he had
professional relationship and a decree nisi was pronounced
which was subsequently made absolute. The General Medical
Council appointed under the Medical Act, 1958 served upon
Spackman a show cause notice why his name should not be
erased from the medical register for infamous conduct and
professional misconduct. At the hearing Spackman’s attorney
applied for permission to lead evidence to challenge the
finding of adultery of the Divorce Court which evidence
though available was not produced during the hearing of the
Divorce Suit. The Council rejected the application on the
ground that the practice followed by it did not permit
leading of additional evidence and accepted the decree nisi
as prima facie proof of adultery and directed that the
petitioner’s name should be removed from the register. On
appeal the House of Lords held that while the Council was
entitled to regard the decree in the divorce suit as prima
facie evidence of adultery, it was bound to hear any
evidence tendered by the practitioner and that having
refused to hear such evidence, it had not made "due inquiry"
as contemplated by s. 29 of the Act. It should be observed
that this conclusion was based on the provisions of s. 29
which provided for "due inquiry" and (as is clear from page
645 of the Report) on Rule 9 which, inter alia, provided
that the Council shall call upon the practitioner "to state
his case and to produce evidence in support of it." That
Rule also provided that the practitioner may address the
Council either before or at the conclusion of the evidence
but only once. It is thus clear that the Council’s order
was set aside on the footing that it had failed to hold "due
inquiry" within the meaning of s. 29 and the said Rule, as
contrary to the provisions of that Rule the Council had
prevented Spackman from leading evidence. The decision in
Union of India v. T. R. Varma(l) was in connection with an
inquiry held under Art. 311 of the Constitution. The
observations made in that case therefore would bear no
analogy to the inquiry held by the Controller in the instant
case. Neither of those two decisions therefore can help Mr.
Bishan Narain.
It is clear from the said consent order that the Controller
was not a judicial tribunal in the sense of a Court of law
and though the inquiry held by him was a quasi-judicial.
inquiry it certainly was not a trial. It was confined to
one question only, viz., whether he ,should reconsider the
order made by him cancelling the allocation in favour of the
appellant company. In order to decide that question he had
to ascertain who was to be blamed as between the appellant
company and the 6th respondent for non-implementation of his
order dated 1/2 May, 1962. No doubt the consent order
required him "to hear" the parties. But it is obvious that
the order never contemplated that he should follow an
elaborate procedure and take
(1) [1958] S. 99.
749
oral evidence of witnesses tendered by the parties. The
order did not lay down any such procedure or any procedure
at all, with the consequence that he was left to devise his
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own procedure. So long as the procedure devised by him gave
a fair and adequate opportunity to the parties to put
forward and explain their respective case such procedure
would be sufficient and cannot be challenged on the ground
of any contravention of natural justice. The dispute
between the parties was as to the existence of an oral
agreement under which the 6th respondent was to deliver
4,500 tons of steel sheets. From that arose the question
whether the delivery of 1,238 and odd tons was made under
the said alleged agreement or under the said release orders.
It is not disputed that the Controller heard the parties on
the 13th and the 18th December, 1962 and the respective
cases of the parties were put forward before him through
counsel who, we have no doubt, made their submissions fully.
The said Lalta Prasad was present at the hearing presumably
giving instructions to the company’s counsel. He had
therefore ample opportunity to put forward the case of the
appellant company in regard to the said alleged oral
agreement. The parties also produced before the Controller
such correspondence and documents as they thought proper and
necessary to establish their case. There is no doubt that
the letters already referred to above in which the appellant
company has set out the said alleged agreement were produced
before the Controller and considered by him. In these
circumstances it is difficult to appreciate what difference
it would have made if Lalta Prasad’s oral testimony had been
recorded. The letters presumably contained all that he had
to say in regard to the alleged agreement arrived at between
him and the said Jitpal. Obviously he could not have added
anything to those letters nor could he have deposed contrary
to them. This position seems to have been realised by the
appellant company. It was therefore that though the
Controller had rejected the application for recording the
evidence of Lalta Prasad no protest was made by the
appellant company or on its behalf at that stage. No such
protest was also placed on record between the 18th and 21st
December, 1962 when the Controller declared his order. It
was only on the 5th January, 1963 that the attorneys of the
appellant company complained for the first time about the
Controller’s decision rejecting the application to record
Lalta Prasad’s evidence alleging that the said order of the
Controller was mala fide. The appellant company filed the
present writ petition on January 7, 1963. It would appear
from these facts that the grievance of Lalta Prasad not
being allowed to give evidence was made in the letter of the
5th January, 1963 to bolster up the case in the proposed
writ petition that the said order of the Controller was
perverse and mala fide. It is true that the Controller
rejected the appellant company is case about the said oral
agreement on the ground that the correspondence indicated
that it had been putting up its case inconsistently. It may
perhaps be said that if
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Lalta Prasad had been examined he might have explained the
inconsistency, But as already stated Lalta Prasad had ample
opportunity through his counsel to explain the said
inconsistency. If that inconsistency had been explained by
the company’s counsel ,during the hearing it cannot be
doubted that the Controller would have considered such
explanation tendered by counsel. That being so, the refusal
of the Controller to record Lalta Prasad’s evidence cannot
be said to have precluded the company from offering an ex-
planation of the said inconsistency. Nor can it be said
that the refusal amounted to any breach of natural justice.
Since the procedure for inquiry was left to be devised by
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the Controller and the procedure followed by him was not in
any way in contravention of the said consent order nor
contrary to natural justice the contention urged by Mr’
Bishan Narain must be rejected.
The next contention of Mr. Bishan Narain was that on the
question of refund of the excess charges the impugned order
suffered from an error of law apparent on the record. The
question is what is an error of law apparent on the record.
In Champsey Bhara & Co. v. Jiraj Palle Spinning and Weaving
Co.(’). Lord Dune-din observed that an error on the face of
an award means that the court must first find whether there
is any legal proposition which is the basis of such an
award. He also said that where an award is challenged upon
such a ground it is not permissible to read words into it or
to draw inferences and the award or the order must be taken
as it stands. Tucker J. said the same thing in James Clark
(Brush Materials) Ltd v. Carters (Marchants) Ltd. (2)
Reading the impugned order it is difficult to say what legal
proposition it contains in respect of which it can be said
that there is an error of law apparent on the record. The
issue before the Controller was whether in refusing to give
the refund of the said excess the 6th respondent was guilty
of obstructing the implementation of the order dated May
1/2, 1962 or of preventing the appellant company from taking
delivery of the said goods. It is true that the Controller
had on more then one occasion directed the 6th respondent to
deduct the said excess from its pro forma invoice and the
6th respondent had in fact expressed -its willingness to
deduct it. The dispute between the the parties was within a
circumscribed compass viz., whether the appellant company
should first withdraw the suit. The appellant company would
not withdraw the suit and hence the controversy. But then
it is not possible to say that there was no difficulty in
the way of the 6th respondent in deducting straightaway the
said excess from its invoice, for, as already stated, the
appellant company, had stated different sums of such excess
at different times. The Controller had not fixed the exact
amount of the said excess an not directed as to when and on
what condition the appellant cornpany’s suit should be
withdrawn. If in these circumstances the Controller finds
that the appellant company would not have insisted
(1) [1923] A.C. 480.
(2) [1944] 1 K.B. 566.
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on the deduction before withdrawing its suit, even if a
court were to come to a different conclusion it certainly is
not a case of an error apparent on the face of the record.
That takes us to the third and the last contention, viz.,
that the impugned order that the appellant company wanted to
pick and choose was without evidence. The order was based
on the finding that it was for the first time in its letter
dated May 8, 1962 that the appellant company claimed that it
would only accept goods of standard and merchantable
quality. That conclusion, in our view, cannot be said to be
without evidence. As explained by the High Court, the
appellant company, no doubt, had in its letter of April 23,
1962 claimed survey and inspection but that letter does not
show that the appellant company was not willing to accept
the goods in the condition in which they were in the 6th
respondent’s godown. The demand for inspection and survey
was made with a view to claim rebate in the event of the
goods being found either rusty or in damaged condition. But
in the letter of May 8, 1962 it would seem that the
appellant company stiffened its attitude and laid down the
condition that it would accept such of the goods only as
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were of standard and merchantable quality. As already
stated, long before May 8, 1962 the appellant company was
well aware that the goods had become rusted as they were
lying for a long time in the godown. Even the 6th
respondent had complained that the goods were getting
rusted. Yet, at no time before May 8, 1962 the appellant
company had insisted that it would accept only those goods
which were of standard and merchantable quality. It may
perhaps be that the Controller could have taken the view
that since the appellant company required the goods for
manufacturing barrels, it was entitled to have goods of
merchantable quality. At the same time it is also possible
to take a different view, viz., that the appellant company
could have abided by the Controllor’s directions in his
order dated 1/2 May 1962 and could have accepted delivery
under protest and if necessary claimed damages. But merely
because there was the possibility of two views being taken
it would not be possible to say, as was contended in the
High Court, that the order was perverse. In any event,
since it was for the first time in its letter of May 8, 1962
that the aforesaid demand was made by the appellant company
it is impossible to say that this part of the order was
without any evidence and therefore liable to be quashed.
These were the only contentions raised on behalf of the
appellant company. For the reasons aforesaid it is not
possible to uphold any one of them. The result is that the
appeal fails and is dismissed. It appears to us, looking at
the entire record of the case that the 6th respondent also
was not altogether free from blame. In the circumstances,
we decline to make any order as to costs. Each party
therefore will bear its own costs.
G.C. Appeal
dismissed.
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