Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 30
PETITIONER:
SHRI SITARAM SUGAR COMPANY LIMITED & ANR. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/03/1990
BENCH:
THOMMEN, T.K. (J)
BENCH:
THOMMEN, T.K. (J)
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (CJ)
SHETTY, K.J. (J)
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 1277 1990 SCR (1) 909
1990 SCC (3) 223 JT 1990 (1) 462
1990 SCALE (1)475
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1991 SC 363 (12)
R 1991 SC 724 (13)
RF 1991 SC1902 (16)
RF 1992 SC1033 (38)
ACT:
Essential Commodities Act, 1955: S. 3(3-C)--Government
of India Notifications dated November 28, 1974 and July 11,
1975--Fixing prices of levy sugar on zonal basis--Validity
of--Whether legislative in character--Whether amenable to
judicial review--Determination of price--Requirement of
’having regard to’ Clauses (a) to (d)--Whether
mandatory--Power delegated to fix different prices for
different areas, different factories or different kinds of
sugar--Nature and scope of-Whether matter of economic poli-
cy--Whether falls within purview of court.
Judicial review of State action--Legislative, executive
or quasijudicial--Nature and scope of.
Administrative law--Delegation of legislative power
Judicial review--Scope of--Courts not to interfere with
matters of economic policy.
Administrative Law--Administrative action--Principles
of natural justice--Observance of--Even if rule of audi
alteram partem not attracted reasonableness and fair play in
action must be observed.
Constitution of India, Article 14: Principle of equality
must govern every State action.
HEADNOTE:
Clause (f) of sub-s. (2) of the Essential Commodities
Act, 1955 empowers the Central Government to require any
person dealing in any essential commodity to sell the whole
or specified part of such commodity to it or the State
Government or to a nominee of such Government. Sub-section
(3) provides for payment to such a seller (a) the price
agreed upon consistently with the controlled price, if any,
fixed under the section; (b) the price calculated with
reference to the controlled price, if any; and (c) where
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 30
none of these applies, a price calculated at
910
the market rate prevailing in the locality at the date of
the sale. Subsection (3-A) deals with orders made with a
view to controlling the rise in prices or preventing the
hoarding of any foodstuff in any locality and determination
of price for payment to the seller, notwithstanding anything
contained in sub-s.(3). Sub-section (3-C) lays down that
where any producer is required by an order made with refer-
ence to cl. (f) of sub-s. (2) to sell any kind of sugar and
either no notification in respect of such sugar has been
issued under sub-s. (3-A) or any such notification having
been issued has ceased to remain in force by efflux of time,
then notwithstanding anything contained in sub-s. (3), there
shall be paid to that producer an amount therefore which
shall be calculated with reference to such price of sugar as
the Central Government may, by order, determine having
regard to (a) the minimum price, if any, fixed for sugarcane
by Central Government under this section; (b) the manufac-
turing cost of sugar; (c) the duty or tax, if any, paid or
payable thereon; and (d) the securing of a reasonable return
on the capital employed in the business of manufacturing
sugar, and different prices may be determined from time to
time for different areas or for different factories or for
different kinds of sugar.
The Central Government by notifications dated 28th
November, 1974 and 11th July, 1975 issued in exercise of the
power under sub-s. (3-C) of s. 3 of the Act fixed the prices
of levy sugar for 1974-75 production.
The petitioners, owners of sugar mills operating in the
State of Uttar Pradesh in areas classified for the purpose
of determining the price of levy sugar as West and East
zones, challenged the validity of the said orders on the
grounds that they were ultra vires the Act and violative of
their fundamental rights as the prices of levy sugar had
been determined arbitrarily with reference to the average
cost profiles of factories grouped together in zones without
regard to their individual capacity and cost characteris-
tics; that although the Government has the discretion to fix
different prices for different areas or for different facto-
ries, or for different kinds of sugar, such wide discretion
has to be reasonably exercised, that the words ’having
regard to’ occurring in sub-s. (3-C) is a mandatory require-
ment demanding strict compliance with clauses (a) to (d);
that the ingredients of the said clauses should, therefore,
have been examined with reference to each producer as a
condition precedent to the determination of the price of
sugar; that the Central Government had not applied its mind
to the relevant questions to which they were expected to
have regard to in terms of thesub-section; and that the
expression ’determine’ used in sub-section (3-C) indicates
911
that the order to which that expression referred to is
quasi-judicial amenable to judicial review. For the inter-
veners it was contended that the cost incurred by units
having lower crushing capacity should be neutralised by
giving them an incremental levy price.
For the respondents it was contended that the division
of the country into zones and the method adopted by the
Government in fixing price of levy sugar was fully supported
by the recommendations of various expert bodies and the
Tariff Commission and was upheld in Anakapalle Co-op. Agri-
cultural & Industrial Society Ltd. Etc. v. Union of India &
Ors., [1973] 2 SCR 882 and the Panipat Co-op. Sugar Mills".
The Union of India, [1973] 2 SCR 860; that the cost of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 30
manufacturing sugar depends not only on recovery from the
sugarcane, duration of crushing season, crushing capacity of
the plant, the sugarcane price paid and the capital em-
ployed, but also to a considerable extent on the conditions
of the plant and machinery, quality of management, invest-
ment policy, relations with cane growers and labour, finan-
cial reputation etc.; that to group together factories
having a high cost profile and to determine a price special-
ly applicable to them is to put a premium on incompetence,
if not mismanagement; and that the orders determining the
price of sugar in terms of sub-section (3-C) were of general
application and, therefore, legislative in character and the
omission, if any, to consider the peculiar problems of
individual producers was not a ground of judicial review.
Dismissing the writ petitions, the Court
HELD: 1. The notifications dated 28th November, 1974 and
11th July, 1975 issued under sub-s. (3-C) of s. 3 of the
Essential Commodities Act, 1955 are intra rites the Act.
There is no merit in the challenge. [950F, 918F-G]
2.1 Sub-section (3-C) is attracted whenever any producer
is required to sell sugar by an order made with reference to
sub-s. (2)(f) and no notification has been issued under
sub-s. (3-A) or any such notification, having been issued,
has ceased to be in force. It operates notwithstanding
anything contained in sub-s. (3). This means the compensa-
tion payable to the seller in the circumstances attracting
sub-s. (3-C) is not the price postulated in sub-s. (3). Nor
is it the price mentioned under sub-s. (3-A), for that sub-
section cannot be in operation when sub-s. (3-C) is attract-
ed. What is payable under sub-s. (3-C) is an amount calcu-
lated with reference to the price of sugar. [930F-H]
912
The Panipat Cooperative Sugar Mills v. The Union of
India, [1973] 2 SCR 860, referred to.
2.2 The price of sugar is determined by the Central
Government having regard to the factors mentioned in cls.
(a) to (d) of sub-s. (3-C). This is done with reference to
the industry as a whole by a process of costing in respect
of a representative cross-section of manufacturing units and
not with reference to any individual seller. The order
notifying the price is required by sub-ss. (5) and (6), to
be notified in official gazette and laid before both Houses
of Parliament. [931H, 932A, 936G, 931G]
3. The words ’having regard to’ in sub-s. (3-C) are the
legislative instruction for the general guidance of the
Government in determining the price of sugar. They are not
strictly mandatory, but in essence directory. They do not
mean that the Government cannot, after taking into account
the matters mentioned in cls. (a) to (d), consider any other
matter which may be relevant. The expression is not "having
regard only to" but "having regard to". These words are not
a fetter, they are not words of limitation. [936D, 934E]
Union of India v. Kamlabhai Harjiwandas Parekh & Ors.,
[1968] 1 SCR 463; Commissioner of Income Tax v. Williamson
Diamonds Ltd., L.R. 1958 A.C. 41; Commissioner of Income
Tax, West Bengal, Calcutta v. Gungadhar Banerjee & Co. (P)
Ltd., [1965] 3 SCR 439; Saraswati Industrial Syndicate Ltd.
etc’. v. Union of India, [1975] 1 SCR 956; State of Karnata-
ka & Anr. etc. v. Shri Ranganatha Reddy & Anr. etc., [1978]
1 SCR 641; State of U. P. & Ors. v. Renusagar Power Co.,
[1988] 4 SCC 59 and O’May & Ors. v. City of London Real
Property Co. Ltd., [1982] 1 All E.R. 660, referred to.
4.1 In considering the reasonableness of the order made
by the Government’ in exercise of its power under sub-s.
(3-C) the Court will not strictly scrutinise the extent to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 30
which matters mentioned in cls. (a) to (d), or any other
matters have been taken into account by the Government in
making its estimate of the price. There is sufficient com-
pliance with the sub-section if the Government has addressed
its mind to the factors which it may reasonably consider to
be relevant, and has come to a conclusion, which any reason-
able person placed in the position of the Government, would
have come to. [936E-F]
4.2 In the instant case, the material brought to the
notice of the Court does not support the arguments at the
bar that the Central Government had not applied its mind to
the relevant questions to which
913
they were expected to have regard in terms of the statute.
Nor any data has been furnished to show that the prices
determined by the Government would have been different had
the ingredients of cls. (a) to (d) of the sub-section been
examined with reference to each individual producer instead
of a representative cross section of manufacturing units.
[947A, 934D]
5.1 Judicial decisions are made according to law while
administrative decisions emanate from administrative policy.
Quasi-judicial decisions are also administrative decisions
emanating from adjudication but they are subject to some
measure of judicial procedure, such as rules of natural
justice. Legislative orders can be distinguished from rest
of orders by reference to the principle that the former are
of general application. They are made formally by publica-
tion and for general guidance with reference to which indi-
vidual decisions are taken in particular situations, [937C,
939E, 938A-B]
H.W.R. Wade.’ Administrative Law, 6th ed., 47, referred to.
5.2 An instruction may be treated as legislative even
when it is not issued formally but by circular or a letter
or the like. What matters is the substance and not the form,
or the name. Where an authority to whom power is delegated
is entitled to sub-delegate his power, be it legislative,
executive or judicial, then such authority may also give
instructions to his delegates and these instructions may be
regarded as legislative. However, a judicial tribunal cannot
delegate its functions except when it is authorised to do so
expressly or by necessary implication. [938B-C, D-E]
Griffith and Street.’ Principles of Administrative Law,
5th ed., p. 65 and Bernard & Ors. v. National Dock Labour
Board & Ors., [1953] 2 Q.B. 18 at 40, referred to.
5.3 What distinguishes legislation from adjudication is
that the former affects the rights of individuals in the
abstract and must be applied in a further proceeding before
the legal position of any particular individual will be
definitely touched by it; while adjudication operates con-
cretely upon individuals in their individual capacity.
[938F]
Davis.’ Administrative Law Text, 3rd ed., p. 123, referred
to.
5.4 A statutory instrument such as a rule, order or
regulation emanates from the exercise of delegated legisla-
tive power which is a
914
part of the administrative process resembling enactment of
law by the legislature. It affects the rights of individuals
in the abstract. [939D-E, C]
Bernard Schwartz.’ Administrative Law [1976] p. 144 and
Davis: Administrative Law Text, p. 123, referred to.
5.5 When the function is treated as legislative, a party
affected by the order has no right to notice and bearing
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 30
unless, of course, the statute so requires. It is neverthe-
less imperative that the action of the authority should be
inspired by reason. It being of general application engulf-
ing a wide sweep of powers, applicable to all persons and
situations of a broadly identifiable class, the legislative
order may not be vulnerable to challenge merely by reasons
of its omission to take into account individual peculiari-
ties and differences amongst those failing within the class.
[939F, 943C, 939F-G]
Union of India & Anr. v. Cynamide India Ltd. & Ant.,
[1987] 2 SCC 720 and Saraswati Industrial Syndicate Ltd., v.
Union of India, [1975] 1 SCR 956, referred to.
5.6 The orders in the instant case, duly published in
the official gazettes notifying the prices determined for
sugar of various grades and produced in various zones, and
applicable without exception to all producers failing within
well defined groups can be legitimately characterised as
legislative. No rule of natural justice is applicable to any
such order. [941H, 942A, 943B-C]
Union of India & Anr. v. Cynamide India Ltd. & Anr.,
[1987] 2 SCC 720; State of U.P. & Ors. v. Renusagar Power
Co., [1988] 4 SCC 59; Saraswati Industrial Syndicate Ltd.
etc. v. Union of India, [1975] 1 SCR 956; Prag Ice & Oil
Mills & Anr. etc. v. Union of India, [1978] 3 SCR 293 and
Bates v. Lord Hailsham of St. Marylebone & Ors., [1972] 3
All ER 1019, referred to.
6. It is with reference to predetermined prices of
sugar that subsection (3-C) postulates the calculation of
the amount payable to each producer who has sold sugar in
compliance with an order made with reference to cl. (f) of
sub-s. (2). The calculation of such amount is in contradis-
tinction to the determination of price of sugar, a non-
legislative act. The individual orders to that effect being
administrative orders rounded on the mechanics of price
fixation, they must be left to the better instructed judg-
ment of the executive, and in regard to them the principle
of audi alteram partem is not applicable- All that is
915
required is reasonableness and fair play which are in es-
sence emanations from the doctrine of natural justice.
[942B, 936F-G, 943A-B]
The Panipat Cooperative Sugar Mills v. The Union of
India, [1973] 2 SCR 860; A.K. Kraipak & Ors. etc. v. Union
of India & Ors., [1970] 1 SCR 457 and State of U.P. & Ors.
v. Renusagar Power Co., [1988] 4 SCC 59, referred to.
Union of India & Anr. v. Cynamide India Ltd. & Anr.,
[1987] 2 SCC 720, distinguished.
7.1 Any Act of the repository of power, whether legisla-
tive or administrative or quasi-judicial, is open to chal-
lenge if it is in conflict with the Constitution or the
governing Act or the general principles of the law of the
land or it is so arbitrary or unreasonable that no fair
minded authority could ever have made it. [946C]
E.P. Royappa v. State of TamilNadu & Anr., [1974] 2 SCR
348; State of U.P. & Ors. v. Renusagar Power Co., [1988] 4
SCC 59; Saraswati Industrial Syndicate Ltd. v. Union of
India, [1975] 1 SCR 956; Mrs. Maneka Gandhi v. Union of
India & Anr., [1978] 1 SCC 248; Ramana Dayaram Shetry v. The
International Airport Authority of India & Ors., [1979] 3
SCR 1014; Ajay Hasia & Ors. v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi &
Ors., [1981] 1 SCC 722; D.S. Nakara & Ors. v. Union of
India, [1983] 1 SCC 305; The Barium Chemicals Ltd. & Ant. v.
The Company Law Board & Ors., [1966] Supp. SCR 311; Leila
Mourning v. Family Publications Service, 411 US 356, 36 L.
Ed. 2d 318; Kruse v. Johnson, [1988] 2 Q.B. 91; Associated
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 30
Provincial Picture Houses Ltd. v. Wednesbury Corporation,
[1948] 1 K.B. 223; Westminster Corporation v. London and
North Western Railway, [1905] AC 426; Mixnam Properties Ltd.
v. Chertsey U.D.C., [1965] AC 735; Commissioners of Customs
JUDGMENT:
ney v. Forde, [1971] AC 632 (H.L.); Carltona Ltd. v. Commis-
sioners of Works, [1943] 2 All ER 560; Point of Ayr. Col-
lieries Ltd. v. Lloyd George, [1943] 2 All E.R. 546; Scott
v. Glasgow Corporation, [1899] AC 470; Robert Baird L.D.v.
City of Glasgow, [1936] AC 32; Manhattan General Equipment
Co. v. Commissioner, [1935] 297 US 129; Yates (Arthur) & Co.
Pty Ltd. v. Vegetable Seeds Committee, [1945-46] 72 CLR 37;
Bailey v. Conole, [1931] 34 WALR 18; Boyd Builders Ltd. v.
City of Ottawa, [1964] 45 DLR 2d 211; Re Burns & Township of
Haldimand, [1966] 52 DLR 2d 1014 and Lynch v. Tilden Produce
Co., 265 US 315, referred to.
916
7.2 Where a question of law is at issue, the Court may
determine the rightness of the decision of the authority on
its own independent judgment. If the decision does not agree
with that which the Court considers to be the right one, the
finding of law by the authority is liable to be upset. Where
it is a finding of fact, the Court examines only the reason-
ableness of the findings. When the finding is found to be
rational and reasonably based on evidence then judicial
review is exhausted even though the finding may not neces-
sarily be what the Court would have come to as a trier of
fact. [944C-E]
7.3 Whether an order is characterised as legislative or
administrative or quasi-judicial, or, whether it is a deter-
mination of law or fact, the judgment of the expert body,
entrusted with power, is generally treated as final and the
judicial function is exhausted when it is found to have
warrant in the record and a rational basis in law. [944E-F]
Rochester Tel. Corp. v. United States, [1939] 307 U.S.
125, 83 L. Ed. 147; Associated Provincial Picture Houses
Ltd. v. Wednesbury Corporation, [1948] 1 K.B. 223 and Chief
Constable of the North Wales Police v. Evans, [1982] 1 WLR
1155 at 1160, referred to.
7.4 The orders, in the instant case, are undoubtedly
based on an exhaustive study by experts. They are fully
supported by the recommendations of the Tariff Commission in
1969 and 1973 and are not shown to be either discriminatory
or unreasonable or arbitrary or ultra vires. [946D-E]
8.1 Judicial review is not concerned with matters of
economic policy. Nor is price fixation within the province
of the Courts. The Court does not substitute its judgment
for that of the legislature or its agents as to matters
within the province of either. The Court does not supplant
the "feel of the experts" by its own views. When the legis-
lature acts within the sphere of its authority and delegates
power to an agent, it may empower the agent to make findings
of fact which are conclusive provided such findings satisfy
the test of reasonableness and are consistent with the laws
of the land. [948F, 949B, 948F-G]
M/s. Gupta Sugar Works v. State of U.P. & Ors., [1987]
Supp. SCC 476; Railroad Commission of Texas v. Rowan &
Nichols Oil Company, 311 US 570-577, 85 L. ed. 358 and
Mississippi Valley Barge Line Company v. United States of
America, 2.92 US 282-290, 78 L.ed 1260, referred to.
917
8.2 In the instant case, sufficient power has been
delegated to the Central Government by sub-s. (3-C) to
formulate and implement its policy decisions by means of
statutory instruments and executive orders. Classification
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 30
of sugar factories with due regard to geographical-cum-agro
economic considerations for the purpose of determining the
price of sugar in terms of the said sub-section is a policy
decision based on exhaustive expert conclusions. Such clas-
sification, cannot, in the absence of evidence to the con-
trary, be characterised as arbitrary or unreasonable or not
rounded on an intelligible differentia having a rational
nexus with the object sought to be achieved by sub-section
(3-C). [949E, 947B-D]
The Panipat Cooperative Sugar Mills v. The Union of
India, [1973] 2 SCR 860 and T. Govindaraja Mudaliar etc. v.
The State of TamilNadu & Ors., [1973] 3 SCR 222, applied.
Federal Power Commission v. Hope Gas Co., 320 US 591;
Union of India & Anr. v. Cynamide India Ltd. &Anr., [1987] 2
SCC 720 and M/s. Gupta Sugar Works v. State of U.P. & Ors.,
[1987] Supp. SCC 476, referred to.
8.3 If the petitioners nevertheless incur losses, such
losses need not necessarily have arisen by reason of geo-
graphical zoning, but for reasons totally unconnected with
it, such as the condition of the plant and machinery, quali-
ty of management, investment policy, labour relations, etc.
These are matters on which they have not furnished data. The
decisions in Anakapalle, [1973] 2 SCR 882 and Panipat,
[1973] 2 SCR 860 do not require reconsideration. [947D-E,
950E-F]
8.4 Whether the policy should be altered to divide the
sugar industry into groups of units with similar cost char-
acteristics with particular reference to recovery from
sugarcane, duration of the crushing season, size and age of
units and capital cost per tonne of output, without regard
to their location, is a matter for the Central Government to
decide. What is best for the sugar industry and in what
manner the policy should be formulated and implemented,
bearing in mind the fundamental object of the statute, is
again a matter for decision exclusively within the province
of the Central Government. Such matters do not ordinarily
attract the power of judicial review. [949E-G]
Secretary of Agriculture, etc. v. Central Roig Refining
Company etc., 338 US 615-617, 94 L. ed. 391-392, referred
to.
918
&
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition Nos. 464 & 617 of
1977.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India. )
K. Parasaran, Attorney General, Shanti Bhushan, Ashwani
Kumar, K.G. Bhagat, L.N. Sinha, Raja Ram Aggarwal, S.P.
Gupta, H.K. Puri, V. Parthasarthy, T.C. Sharma, P.P. Singh,
Ms. A. Subhashini, Mrs. Sushma Suri, G. Gopalakrishnan, O.P.
Rana, A.V. Rangam and Shartha Raju for the appearing par-
ties.
F.S. Nariman, K.K. Venugopal, A.K. Verma, D.N. Mishra
and S. Kachawa for the intervener in W.P. No. 464/77.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
THOMMEN, J. The petitioners are owners of sugar mills
operating in the State of Uttar Pradesh in areas classified
for the purpose of determining the price of levy sugar as
West and East Zones. They challenge the validity of notifi-
cations dated 28th November, 1974 and 11th July, 1975
(Annexures 8 & 9) issued by the Central Government in exer-
cise of its power under sub-section (3-C) of section 3 of
the Essential Commodities Act, 1955 (Act No. 10 of 1955), as
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 30
amended to date (hereinafter referred to as the ’Act’). The
petitioners do not, and cannot, challenge the validity of
the subsection by reason of Article 3 lB of the Constitution
of India. By the impugned orders, the Central Government
fixed the prices of levy sugar for 1974-75 production. For
the purpose of determining the prices, the country is divid-
ed into 16 zones, and the prices fixed for various grades of
sugar in terms of section 3 (3-C) of the Act vary from ’
zone to zone. Prices are determined with reference to the
geographical-cum-agro-economic considerations and the aver-
age cost profiles of factories located in their respective
zones. Each State for this purpose constitutes a separate
zone, while U.P. is divided into 3 zones and Bihar into 2
zones. The petitioners contend that these orders are ultra
vires the Act and violative of their fundamental fights as
the prices of levy sugar have been determined arbitrarily
with reference to the average cost profiles of factories
grouped together in zones without regard to their individual
capacity and cost characteristics. Such prices do not re-
flect the actual manufacturing cost of sugar incurred by
producers like the petitioners or secure to them reasonable
returns on the capital employed by them. Geographical zon-
ing, for the purpose of price fixation, they point out, is
an irrational’ and discriminatory system of
(1) Published in the Gazette of India Extraordinary
dated 28.11.1974 and 11.7.1975.
919
averaging wide cost disparities amongst producers of widely
varying capacity. Cost of manufacture of sugar depends on a
number of factors, such as recoveries from the sugarcanes,
duration of the crushing season, crushing capacity of the
plant, the sugarcane price paid and the capital employed in
the manufacture of sugar. These factors vary from factory to
factory. Fixation of the levy sugar prices on zonal basis
without regard to these divergent factors and the compara-
tive cost profiles gives the owners of bigger factories an
undue advantage over producers like the petitioners whose
factories are comparatively of lower crushing capacity and
whose manufacturing cost is consequently higher. Clubbing of
the petitioners’ factories with dissimilar factories in the
same zones for the purpose of price fixation is discrimina-
tory, arbitrary and unreasonable. The petitioners point out
that the system of geographical zoning for the purpose of
price determination has been severely criticised by the
Bureau of Industrial Costs & Prices (The "BICP") who have
strongly recommended the division of the sugar industry into
groups of units having similar cost characteristics with
particular reference to recovery, duration, size and age of
the unit and capital cost per tonne of output, and irrespec-
tive of their location.
The respondents, on the other hand, contend that the
classification of sugar industry into 15 zones (now 16) was
upheld by a Constitution Bench of this Court in Anakapalle
Co-operative Agricultural & Industrial Society Ltd. etc.
etc. v. Union of India & Ors., [1973] 2 SCR 882. The conten-
tion that the zonal system was discriminatory and violative
of constitutional principles was pointedly urged, but cate-
gorically rejected by this ’Court. The method adopted by the
Government in fixing the price of levy sugar is fully sup-
ported by the recommendations of various expert bodies. The
Tariff Commission in its 1973 Report recommended division of
the country into 16 zones for this purpose. The price of
sugar is fixed with reference to the Cost Schedule recom-
mended by that body. These recommendations are based on
various factors such as cost and output of individual la-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 30
bour, cane price (accounting for about 70 per cent of the
cost of sugar production), quality of sugarcane, taxes on
sugarcane, cost of other material, transport charges, cost
of storing the sugar produced, cane development charges and
other overhead expenses, selling expenses etc. These factors
are almost identical for the entire zone.
The cost of manufacturing sugar, the respondents con-
tend, depends not only on recovery from the sugarcane,
duration of crushing season, crushing capacity of the plant,
the sugarcane price paid and the capital employed, as stated
by the petitioners, but also to a consider-
920
able extent on the condition of the plant and machinery,
quality of management, investment policy, relations with
cane growers and labour, financial reputation etc. They say:
"It is evident from the Tariff Commission Report of 1959, as
also the Official Directory of the Bombay Stock Exchange,
that the petitioner Company has been consistently diverting
huge amounts for investments running into several lakhs
elsewhere instead of ploughing back the same into the peti-
tioner’s sugar industry in question. Thus, the petitioner
Company has been neglecting the sugar factory and for such
neglect of their own they cannot blame the Zonal System."
Mr. Shanti Bhushan, appearing for the petitioners, does
not object to the factories being grouped together on the
basis of factors common to them with a view to fixing the
prices applicable to them as a class of producers. He does
not advocate fixation of price separately for each unit. He
says that the sugar factories must be grouped together, not
on the basis of their geographical location, but similarity
in cost characteristics. He relies upon the 1976 Report of
the BICP. The present system of fixing prices according to
the regions, where the factories are located, he says, is
based on "averaging wide cost disparities" as a result of
which manufacturers like the petitioners incurring a high
cost of production and others incurring a low cost of pro-
duction are treated alike. Such a system works to the disad-
vantage of the former and to the advantage of the latter.
This, Mr. Shanti Bhushan contends, is an unreasonable and
invalid classification and violative of constitutional
principles. While this line of argument is supported by Mr.
Raja Ram Agarwal, Mr. S.P. Gupta appearing for the interven-
er in Civil Writ Petition No. 464 of 1977 advocates aboli-
tion of zonal classification or grouping of any kind and
supports fixation of price for each individual factory with
reference to its cost and regardless of any other considera-
tion. Such unit-wise determination alone, according to him,
satisfies the requirements of Section 3(3-C). Any system of
zoning or grouping for determination of price, he contends,
will fail to meet the norms of that sub-section. Mr. M .M.
Abdul Khader, on the other hand, submits that while averag-
ing and costing with reference to a representative cross-
section may ordinarily be an appropriate method for deter-
mining the fair price, such a method is inappropriate for a
small zone like Kerala where there are only three manufac-
turing units. In respect of such a zone, he says, unit-wise
fixation of price is the only just and proper method.
921
Mr. K.K. Venugopal, counsel for Indian Sugar Mills’
Association (ISMA), on the other hand, supports the zoning
system. He says that, except for a few producers like the
petitioners, all the rest of them in the country have ac-
cepted the principle of zoning. In his written submissions,
Mr. Venugopal states as follows:
"As was seen during the course of hearing only 2 or 3 per-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 30
sons have come forward challenging zoning. There are 389
sugar factories in the country and the present intervener
has 166 members. Besides there are 220 members with the
cooperative sector. Their Association being National Federa-
tion of Cooperative Sugar Factories Ltd., has also inter-
vened in these petitions and have adopted the arguments of
ISMA. Hence almost the entire industry has supported zoning
and only a handful of people who also factually are not
high-cost units have opposed zoning."
Mr. Venugopal submits that the present case is squarely
covered by the decisions of this Court in Anakapalle Cooper-
ative Agricultural & Industrial Society Ltd. etc. etc. v.
Union of India & Ors., [1973] 2 SCR 882 and The Panipat
Cooperative Sugar Mills v. The Union of India, [1973] 2 SCR
860. He says that the petitioners have not made out a case
for reconsideration of these two decisions. He refers to T.
Govindaraja Mudaliar etc. etc. v. The State of Tamil Nadu &
Ors., [1973] 3 SCR 222 at 228 to 230 and submits that this
Court would not reexamine an earlier decision merely because
certain aspects of the question had not been noticed in that
decision. Mr. Venugopal, however, advocates neutralisation
of the high cost incurred by the old units having lower
crushing capacity by giving them an incremental levy price
as recommended by the High Level Committee in 1980.
Before we examine the provisions of section 3(3-C) in
the context of the general scheme of the Act, we shall
briefly refer to the observations of this Court in Anaka-
palle, [1973] 2 SCR 882 and Panipat, [1973] 2 SCR 860.
Grover, J. speaking for the Bench in Anakapalle (supra)
states’:
"The system of fixing the prices, according to certain
regions or zones, is not a new one. The Tariff Commission in
1959 favoured the formation of four zones. In the report of
the Sugar Enquiry Commission 1965 it was pointed out that
the Government had actually fixed the prices for 22
922
zones which meant that from four zones the number had been
increased to twenty two or more. The Commission was of the
view that there should be five zones only in addition to
Assam. The Tariff Commission, 1969 however recommended the
constitution of fifteen zones largely on State-wise basis
with an exception only in case of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.
Uttar Pradesh was divided into three zones and Bihar into
two. The Tariff Commission had been specifically requested
to inquire into the working of the zonal system, the main
point for inquiry being the zones into which the sugar
producers should be grouped having regard to the basis of
classification to be recommended by the Commission. The view
of the Commission was that on the whole the number of price
zones should be fifteen which would reduce, though not
eliminate, the inter-se anomalies in the cost structure
without resorting to the extreme of the fixation of price
for each unit or a single or at the most two, one for the
sub-tropical and other for the tropical one. The Tariff
Commission hoped that in the course of time conditions would
be created making the operation of the second alternative
feasible."
Rejecting the contention that it was the zonal system
that caused the losses allegedly incurred by some of the
sugar producers, Grover, J. says that ordinarily these units
ought to have made profits. The reasons for incurring losses
can be many, such as inefficiency, failure to pursue the
right policy, poor management and planning etc., but these
reasons have no relation to the zonal system. That system by
and large has led to efficiency and provides an incentive to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 30
cut down the cost. Healthy competition among the units in
the same zone should in the normal. course result in reduc-
tion of cost and greater efficiency in the operation of the
units. It is proper management and planning that would lead
to the success of any commercial venture. The contention of
the producers that they have been incurring losses on ac-
count of the zonal system is opposed to the evidence pro-
duced by them. The Court has rejected the extreme contention
that prices should be fixed unitwise, i.e., on the basis of
actual cost incurred by each unit. Referring to this conten-
tion, this Court observes:
"Apart from the impracticability of fixing the prices for
each unit in the whole country, the entire object and pur-
pose of controlling prices would be defeated by the adoption
of such a system."
923
Grover, J. states that, during the earlier period of
price control, it was on an all India basis that the price
was fixed. That is still the objective. If such an objective
is achieved, it would undoubtedly be conducive to conferring
proper benefit on the consumers. The objective of the Tariff
Commission is to have only two regions for the whole coun-
try, viz., sub-tropical and tropical.
The Court has rejected as baseless the criticism against
the principle of weighted average adopted in the fixation of
price in each zone. Such a principle is well recognised and
acted upon by various Sugar Enquiry Commissions. A proper
cost study is intended to do justice to the weak and strong
alike. There is abundant justification for continuing and
sustaining the zonal system. The varying climatic conditions
of each State have been taken into account. For the same
reason, Bihar is divided into 2 zones and U.P. into 3 zones,
while, in the case of many other States, each State is
treated as a single zone. This system of zoning is thus
adopted with special reference to climatic and agro-economic
conditions. Rejecting the contention that the zonal system
has resulted in discriminatory treatment, this Court states:
"We are unable to hold that while classifying zones on
geographical-cum-agro-economic consideration, any discrimi-
nation was made or that the price fixation according to each
zone taking into account all the relevant factors would give
rise to such discrimination as would attract Article 14 of
the Constitution."
Even if there is no price control, the uneconomic units
would be at a great disadvantage. The Court states:
"Even if there is no price control each unit will have to
compete in the market and those units which are uneconomic
and whose cost is unduly high will have to compete with
others which are more efficient and the cost of which is
much lower. It may be that uneconomic units may suffer
losses but what they cannot achieve in the open market they
cannot insist on where price has to be fixed by the govern-
ment. The Sugar Enquiry Commission in its 1965 report ex-
pressed the view that "cost-plus" basis of price fixation
perpetuates inefficiency in the industry and is, therefore,
against the long-term interest of the country."
Considering the general principle involved in price fixa-
tion, the Court states:
924
"It is not therefore possible to say that the principles
which the Tariff Commission followed in fixing the prices
for different zones are either not recognised as valid
principles for fixing prices or that simply because in case
of some factories the actual cost was higher than the one
fixed for the zone in which that factory was situate the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 30
fixation of price became illegal and was not in accordance
with the provisions of sub-section (3-C). It has not been
denied that the majority of sugar producers have made prof-
its on the whole and have not suffered losses. It is only
some of them which assert that their actual cost is far in
excess of the price fixed. That can hardly be a ground for
striking down the price fixed for the entire zone provided
it has been done in accordance with the accepted
principles ..... ".
The Court concludes:
"When prices have to be fixed not for each unit but for a
particular region or zone the method employed by the Commis-
sion was the only practical one and even if some units
because of circumstances peculiar to them suffered a loss
the price could not be so fixed as to cover their loss. That
cannot possibly be the intention of the Parliament while
enacting sub-section (3-C) of section 3 of the Act. If that
were so the price fixation on zonal or regional basis would
have to be completely eliminated. In other words, the entire
system of price control which is contemplated wilt break
down because fixation of price for each unit apart from
being impractical would have no meaning whatsoever and would
not be conducive to the interest of the consumer. ’ ’
This Court has thus in Anakapalle (supra) rejected the
argument that the alleged loss incurred by certain sugar
producers is attributable to fixation of price on a zonal
basis; or the zonal system has led to inefficiency or lack
of incentive, or it has resulted in unequal or unfair treat-
ment. On the other hand, the zonal system has encouraged a
healthy competition amongst the units in the same zone.
Unit-wise fixation is impracticable. The Tariff Commission
is the best judge in selecting units for cost study to
determine the average cost. The fair price has to be deter-
mined with reference to the conditions of a representative
cross section of the industry. For all these reasons, there
is ample justification in continuing and sustaining the
zonal system for
925
the purpose of price fixation. Price has to be fixed for
each zone and necessarily it varies from zone to zone. There
is no discrimination in the classification of zones on a
geographical-cum-agro-economic consideration and any such
classification is perfectly consistent with the principle of
equality.
In Panipat, [1973] 2 SCR 860, Shelat, J. speaking for
the same Constitution Bench that has decided Anakapalle,
[1973] 2 SCR 882, referes to the norms adopted in sub-sec-
tion (3-C), viz., (a) determination by the Government of the
"price of sugar", and (b) payment of "an amount" to the
manufacturer, and states that the concept of fair price
which is what is referred to in sub-section (3-C) as "price
of sugar" does not by any account mean the actual cost of
production of every individual manufacturer. Such price has
to be arrived at by a process of costing with reference to a
representative cross section of the manufacturing units. He
states:
"The basis of a fair price would have to be built on a
reasonably efficient and economic representative crosssec-
tion on whose workings cost-schedules would have been worked
out and the price to be determined by Government under sub-
section (3-C) would have to be built."
So stating, Shelat, J. rejects the contention that such
price has to be determined unit-wise. Any such fixation of
price, he points out, would be contrary to the concept of
partial control postulated by the subsection and would
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 30
perpetuate inefficiency and mismanagement. But, of course,
any such price, he hastens to add, has to be fixed reasona-
bly and on relevant considerations. Referring to the policy
of partial control, Shelat, J. states:
" ..... the Central Government was confronted with two
main problems (a) deterioration in the sugar industry, and
(b) the conflicting interests of the manufacturer, the
consumer and the cane grower. The floor price of cane fixed
by Government was intended to protect the farmer from ex-
ploitation, but that was found not to be an incentive enough
to induce him to increase his acreage. A device had to be
found under which a price higher than the minimum could be
paid by the manufacturer of sugar. The consumer, on the
other hand, had also to be protected against the spiralling
of sugar price and his needs, growing as they were, had to
be satisfied at some reasonable price."
926
Shelat, J. emphasises the need to modernise the factories
which alone would yield a reasonable return. This is what he
states:
’Both these and a larger production of sugar would not be
possible unless there was a reasonable return which would
ensure expansion, which again would not be possible unless
new machinery for such expansion was brought in and facto-
ries, particularly in U.P. and Bihar, were modernised and
renovated. A fair price for sugar, therefore, had to be such
as would harmonise and satisfy at least to a reasonable
extent these conflicting interests."
Significantly, the BICP’s recommendation to group indi-
vidual units having homogenity in cost, irrespective of
their location, was not accepted by the Central Government,
particularly because the Tariff Commission itself had con-
sidered the question and reached the conclusion that geo-
graphical-cum-agro-economic considerations demanded the
grouping of factories with reference to State zones, or
subzones as in the case of U.P. and Bihar. To group them on
the basis of their location in various regions of the coun-
try for the purpose of price fixation is a rational method
reflecting economic realities. This is particularly so as
conditions generally vary from State to State as regards the
availability and quality of sugarcane, labour conditions and
other factors, whereas within the same region like facili-
ties are generally available to all factories. If the cost
structure varies from factory to factory, such variation is
not necessarily caused by the non-availability, or the poor
quality of raw material, or the labour conditions, but
probably for reasons unconnected with them, such as the age
of the plant, availability of finance, management ability,
etc. There is great force in the submission of the respond-
ents that to group together factories having a high cost
profile and to determine a price specially applicable to
them is, as recognised by this Court in Panipat (supra) and
Anakapalle (supra), to put a premium on incompetence, if not
mismanagement.
The history of control over sugar has been set out at
length in Panipat (supra) and we do not wish to burden this
judgment with a narration of the circumstances which have
led to the introduction of partial control under which 60%
of the output of sugar is acquired and the balance left for
free sale. It is in implementation of this policy that sub-
section (3-C) of section 3 was inserted2 Before we examine
the
2. For an illuminating discussion of this aspect, See
A.M. Khusro, Price Policy, Lancer International (1987), p.
62-63:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 30
927
provisions of that sub-section under which the impugned
notification have been issued, we shall refer to the statu-
tory scheme.
The Act was, as stated in the preamble, enacted by
Parliament "to provide, in the interest of the general
public, for the control of the production, supply and dis-
tribution of, and trade and commerce in, certain commodi-
ties". The entire Act is devoted to the cause of the general
public with a view to achieving equitable distribution of
essential commodities at fair prices.
Section 3 of the Act confers wide power upon the Central
Government to control production, supply, distribution,
etc., of essential commodities. It reads:
"3. Powers to control production, supply, distribution,
etc., of essential commodities--(1) If the Central Govern-
ment is of opinion that it is necessary or expedient so to
do for maintaining or increasing supplies of any essential
commodity or for securing their equitable distribution and
availability at fair prices or for securing any essential
commodity for the defence of India or the efficient conduct
of military operations, it may, by order, provide for regu-
lating or prohibiting the production, supply and distribu-
tion thereof and trade and commerce therein."
Sub-section (2) of section 3 says that, without preju-
dice to the generality of the powers conferred by sub-sec-
tion (1), an order made
"After many years of adverse experience a new
strategy of dual pricing was introduced in sugar. The mills
were asked to deliver to the public distribution system
about 60 per cent of their output say at Rs.2 per Kg. and
were allowed to sell the balance of 40 per cent in the free
market at say Rs.6 per kg. The mills were delighted to do so
as they got very much enhanced receipts from their flee-
market sales. With larger receipts they offered in the
following season a higher price to the farmer (the sugarcane
grower) who, in turn, grew and offered more cane. In other
words, the law of supply which had been held captive, as it
were, was freed from bondage. With a higher price offer from
the mills, the cane growers brought more land under sugar-
cane, diverted land from other crops to cane, used more
inputs, produced and delivered to the mills more cane and in
fact diverted cane deliveries from the open-pan system to
the mill system. Having thus obtained much more cane, the
mills produced much more sugar and sold 30-40 per cent of it
in the free market. Within a year or two, the free-market
price of sugar fell from Rs.6 to Rs.3 or even Rs.2.50. At
this rate consumers began to buy more in the free market,
millions of ration cards remained unused and the demands on
the public distribution declined substantially. Prolonged
shortages of sugar got converted into a relative abundance."
928
under that sub-section may provide for the matters specified
in subsection (2). One of them is what is contained in
clause (f) of sub-. section (2) which empowers the Central
Government to require any person dealing in any essential
commodity to sell the whole or a specified part of such
commodity to the Central Government or the State Government
or to a nominee of such Government. It reads:
"(2) Without prejudice to the generality of the powers
conferred by sub-section (1), an order made thereunder may
provide-
(a).................................................
....................................................
(f) for requiring any person holding in stock, or engaged in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 30
the production, or in the business of buying or selling of
any essential commodity ,--
(a) to sell the whole or a specified part of the quantity
held in stock or produced or received by him, or
(b) in the case of any such commodity which is likely to be
produced or received by him, to sell the whole or a speci-
fied part of such commodity when produced or received by
him,
to the Central Government or a State Government or to an
officer or agent of such Government or to a Corporation
owned or controlled by such Government or to such other
person or class of persons and in such circumstances as may
be specified in the order."
The power contained in sub-section (1) or sub-section
(2) is exercisable by an order. An ’order’ is defined under
section 2 to include a direction issued thereunder. Any
order made under section 3 by the Central Government or by
an officer or authority of the Central Government is re-
quired by sub-section (6) of section 3 to be laid before
both Houses of Parliament, as soon as may be, after it is
made. Any order made under section 3 which is of a general
nature or affecting a class of persons has to be notified in
the official gazette. [Subsection (5) of section 3].
929
Sub-section (3) of section 3 provides that where any
person has sold any essential commodity (sugar being such a
commodity) in compliance with an order made with reference
to clause (f) of sub-section (2), he shall be paid the price
of the goods purchased from him as provided under clauses
(a), (b) and (c) of sub-section (3). This subsection oper-
ates only where an order has been made under sub-section (1)
with reference to clause (f) of sub-section (2). While
clause (a) of the sub-section postulates an agreed price,
consistently with the controlled price, if any, clause (b)
speaks of a price calculated with reference to the con-
trolled price, if any, when no agreement is reached. Where
neither clause (a) nor clause (b) applies, either because
there is no agreement or because there is no controlled
price, the seller has to be paid, as per clause (c), a price
calculated at the market rate prevailing in the locality at
the date of the sale.
Sub-section (3-A) empowers the Central Government to
regulate in accordance with the provisions of the sub-sec-
tion the price of any foodstuff sold in a locality in com-
pliance with an order made with reference to clause (f) of
sub-section (2). This power is exercisable by a direction
which has to be duly notified in the official Gazette. The
power to issue the direction is notwithstanding anything
contained in sub-section (3). Before issuing the notifica-
tion, the Central Government has to form an opinion that the
price of any foodstuff (including sugar) has to be regulated
for the purpose of cotrolling the rise in its prices or
preventing its hoarding in any locality. Any such notifica-
tion will remain in force for any specified period not
exceeding 3 months. The price payable in such cases is
either the agreed price consistently with the controlled
price, if any, or where no such agreement is possible, the
price calculated with reference to the controlled price, if
any, or where neither of these two methods is applicable,
the price calculated with reference to the average market
rate prevailing in the locality during the period of 3
months immediately prior to the date of the notification.
The average market rate will be determined by an officer
authorised by the Central Government and the rate so deter-
mined by him is not liable to be questioned in any court.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 30
Sub-section (3-C) which is the crucial provision, was
inserted in 1967. It reads:
"(3-C). Where any producer is required by an order made with
reference to clause (f) of sub-section (2) to sell any kind
of sugar (whether to the Central Government or a State
Government or to an officer or agent of such Govern-
930
ment or to any other person or class of persons) and either
no notification in respect of such sugar has been issued
under sub-section (3-A) or any such notification, having
been issued, has ceased to remain in force by efflux ot
time, then, notwithstanding, anything contained in sub-
section (3), there shall be paid to that producer an amount
therefore which shall be calculated with reference to such
price of sugar as the Central Government may, by order,
determine, having regard to--
(a) the minimum price, if any, fixed for sugarcane by the
Central Government under this section;
(b) the manufacturing cost of sugar;
(c) the duty or tax, if any, paid or payable thereon; and
(d) the securing of a reasonable return on the capital
employed in the business of manufacturing sugar,
and different prices may be determined from time to time for
different areas or for different factories or for different
kinds of sugar.
Explanation--For the purposes of this sub-section, "produc-
er" means a person carrying on the business of manufacturing
sugar."
(emphasis supplied)
Sub-Section (3-C) is attracted whenever any producer is
required to sell sugar by an order made with reference to
sub-section (2)(f) and no notification has been issued under
sub-section (3-A) or any such notification, having been
issued, has ceased to be in force. Whenever sub-section (3-
C) is attracted, it operates notwithstanding anything con-
tained in sub-section (3). This means the compensation
payable to the seller in the circumstances attracting sub-
section (3-C) is not the price postulated in sub-section
(3). Nor is it the price mentioned under sub-section (3A),
for that sub-section cannot be in operation when sub-section
(3-C) is attracted. What is payable under sub-sectin (3-C)
is an "amount" calculated with reference to the "price of
sugar" determined in the manner indicated in that sub-sec-
tion.
931
Construing sub-section (3-C), this Court in Panipat
[1973] 2 SCR 860,870 says:
"Sub-section 3C, with which we are presently concerned was
inserted in sec. 3 by sec. 3 of Act 36 of 1967. The sub-
section lays down two conditions which must exist before it
applies. The first is that there must be an order made with
reference to sub-section 2 cl. (f), and the second is that
there is no notification under sub-section 3A or if any such
notification has been issued it is no longer in force owing
to efflux of time. Next, the words "notwithstanding anything
contained in sub-section" suggest that the amount payable to
the person required to sell his stock of sugar would be with
reference to the price fixed under the subsection and not
the agreed price or the market price in the absence of any
controlled price under sub-sec. 3A. The sub-section then
lays down two things; firstly, that where a producer is
required by an order with reference to sub-sec. 2(f) to sell
any kind of sugar, there shall be paid to that producer’ an
amount therefore, that is for such stock of sugar as is
required to be sold, and secondly, that such amount shall be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 30
calculated with reference to such price of sugar as the
Central Government may, by order, determine, having regard
to the four factors set out in cls. (a), (b), (c) and (d).
Unlike the preceding three sub-sections under which the
amount payable is either the agreed price, or the controlled
price, or where neither of these prices is applicable at the
market or average market price, the amount in respect of
sugar required to be sold is to be calculated at the price
determined by th Central Government ...... "
What is specially significant is that sub-section (3-C)
postulates payment of an amount to the producer who has been
required to sell sugar in the circumstances mentioned there-
in. What is required to be paid to him is not the price of
sugar, but only an amount. That amount has to be calculated
with reference to the price of sugar. The "price" is deter-
mined by the Central Government by means of an order which,
as required by sub-sections (5) and (6), has to be notified
in the official gazette and laid before both Houses of
Parliament. The order notifying the "price of sugar" is of
general application and it is the rate at which the actual
"amount" payable to each seller is calculated.
The price of sugar must be determined by the Central Govern-
932
ment having regard to the factors mentioned in clauses (a)
to (d) of sub-section (3˜C). This is done with reference to
the industry as a whole and not with reference to any indi-
vidual seller. In contradistinction to the "price of sugar",
the "amount" is calculated with reference to the particular
seller. The Central Government is authorised to determine
different prices for different areas or for different facto-
ries or for different kinds of sugar. Whether factories are
required to be grouped together for a rational determination
of the prices according to their location or their size, age
and capacity or by any other standard is a matter for deci-
sion by the Central Government on the basis of relevant
material. What is contemplated by the legislature in dele-
gating such wide discretion to the Central Government is
that it must apply its mind to the manifold questions rele-
vant to the determination of prices and with due regard to
the norms laid down in the sub-section. What is required by
sub-section (3-C) is the adoption of a valid classification
of factories having a rational nexus to the object sought to
be achieved, viz., determination of a fair price of sugar
with reference to which the actual amounts payable to the
producers, in the circumstances attracting the sub-section,
are calculated.
Referring to the legislative background of sub-section
(3-C), this Court in Panipat (supra) observes:
"In order to appreciate the meaning of cls. (a), (b), (c)
and (d), it must be remembered that ever since control on
sugar was imposed, Government had set up expert committees
to work out cost-schedules and fairprices. Starting in the
beginning with an All-India cost-schedule worked out on the
basis of the total production of sugar, the factories were
later grouped together into zones or regions and different
cost-schedules for different zones or regions were con-
structed on the basis of which fair prices were worked out
at which sugar was distributed and sold. The Tariff Commis-
sion in 1958 and the Sugar Enquiry Commission in 1965 had
worked out the zonal cost-schedules on the basis of averaged
recovery and duration, the minimum and not the actual price
of cane, the averaged conversion costs and recommended a
reasonable return on the capital employed by the industry in
the business of manufacturing sugar. This experience was
before the legislature at the time when subsec. 3C was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 30
inserted in the Act. The legislature therefore incorporated
the same formula in the new sub-section as the basis for
working out the price. The purpose behind
933
enacting the new sub-section was three-fold, to provide an
incentive to increase production of sugar, encourage expan-
sion of the industry, to devise a means by which the cane
producer could get a share in the profits of the industry
through prices for his cane higher than the minimum price
fixed and secure to the consumer distribution of at least a
reasonable quantity of sugar at a fair price. ’ ’
Clauses (a) to (d) of sub-section (3-C) postulate that the
price of sugar must be determined having regard to the
minimum price, if any, fixed for sugarcane by the Central
Government, the manufacturing cost of sugar, the duty or tax
applicable in the zone, and the securing of a reasonable
return on the capital employed in the business of manufac-
turing sugar. Referring to clause (d) of sub-section (3-C),
this Court observes in Panipat (supra):
"It is clear from the reports of the Tariff Commission that
a reasonable return recommended by that body at a fixed
amount of Rs. 10.50 per quintal which worked out in 196667
at 12.5% per annum was not in respect of levy sugar only but
on the whole, so that even if such a return was not obtain-
able on levy sugar but was obtainable on the whole, it would
meet the requirement of cl. (d). In this conclusion we
derive a two-fold support, firstly, from the language used
in cl. (d) itself, viz., a reasonable return on the capital
employed in the business of manufacturing sugar, which must
mean the business as a whole and not the business of manu-
facturing levy sugar only, and secondly, from the fact of
the Commission having all along used the same phraseology
while recommending Rs. 10.50 per quintal as an addition by
way of a reasonable return on the capital employed in the
industry. The cost-schedules prepared by these bodies were
for determining a fair price in relation to the entire sugar
produced by the industry and the return which should be
granted to it on the capital employed in the industry and
not with respect to that stock only required to be sold
under sub-sec. 2(f). This is clear from the heading of Ch. 9
of the Tariff Commission’s report, 1969, "Cost Structure and
Price Fixation"."
The petitioners contend that although the Government has
the discretion to fix different prices for different areas
or for different
934
factories, or for different kinds of sugar, such wide dis-
cretion has to be reasonably exercised. It is, of course, a
well accepted principle that any discretion conferred on the
executive has to be reasonably exercised. Nevertheless, it
is a discretion which the Court will not curtail unless the
exercise of it is impeachable on well accepted grounds such
as ’ultra vires’ or ’unreasonableness’.
The petitioners further contend that the Act requires
the Government to have regard to clauses (a) to (d) and,
therefore, it is mandatory on the part of the Government to
act strictly in compliance with the provisions of those
clauses in determining the prices. According to them,
"having regard to" is a mandatory requirement demanding
strict compliance with the provisions to which reference is
made by the legislature. They say that the ingredients of
clauses (a) to (d) must be examined with reference to each
producer as a condition precedent to the determination of
the price of sugar.
We may in this connection point out that the petitioners
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 30
have not furnished any data to show that the prices deter-
mined by the Government would have been different had the
ingredients of clauses (a) to (d) of the sub-section been
examined with reference to each individual producer instead
of a representative cross section of manufacturing units. Be
that as it may, the expression "having regard to" must be
understood in the context in which it is used in the stat-
ute. See Union of India v. Kamlabhai Harjiwandas Parekh &
Ors., [1968] 1 SCR 463 at 471. These words do not mean that
the Government cannot, after taking into account the matters
mentioned in clauses (a) to (d), consider any other matter
which may be relevant. The expression is not "having regard
only to" but "having regard to". These words are not a
fetter; they are not words of limitation, but of general
guidance to make an estimate. The Government must, of
course, address itself to the questions to which it must
have regard, and, having done so, it is for the Government
to determine what it is empowered to determine with refer-
ence to what it reasonably consider to be relevant for the
purpose. The Judicial Committee in Commissioner of Income
Tax v. Williamson Diamonds Ltd., L.R. 1958 A.C. 41, 49
observed with reference to the expression "having regard
to":
"The form of words used no doubt lends itself to the sugges-
tion that regard should be paid only to the two matters
mentioned, but it appears to their Lordships that it is
impossible to arrive at a conclusion as to reasonableness by
considering the two matters mentioned isolated from other
935
relevant factors. Moreover, the statute does not say "having
regard only" to losses previously incurred by the company
and to the smallness of the profits made. No answer, which
can be said to be in any measure adequate, can be given to
the question of "unreasonableness" by considering these two
matters alone ...... "
See Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal, Calcutta v.
Gungadhar Banerjee and Co. (P) Ltd., [1965] 3 SCR 439 at
444-45. See also Saraswati Industrial Syndicate Ltd. etc. v.
Union of India, [1975] 1 SCR 956 at 959. In State of Karna-
taka and Anr. etc. v. Shri Ranganatha Reddy & Anr. etc.,
[1978] 1 SCR 641 at 657-58 this Court stated:
"The content and purport of the expressions "having regard
to" and "shall have regard to" have been the subject matter
of consideration in various decisions of the Courts in
England as also in this country. We may refer only to a few.
In Illingworth v. Welmsley, [1900] 2 Q.B. 142 it was held by
the Court of Appeal, to quote a few words from the judgment
of Romer C.J. at page 144: "All that clause 2 means is that
the tribunal assessing the compensation is to bear in mind
and have regard to the average weekly wages earned before
and after the accident respectively. Beating that in mind, a
limit is placed on the amount of compensation that may be
awarded ..... "In another decision of the Court of Appeal
in Perry v. Wright (etc. etc.), [1908] 1 K.B. 441 Cozens-
Hardy M.R. observed at page 451: "No mandatory words are
there used; the phrase is simply "regard may be had". The
sentence is not grammatical, but I think the meaning is
this: Where you cannot compute you must estimate, as best as
you can, the rate per week at which the workman was being
remunerated, and to assist you in making an estimate you may
have regard to analogous cases." It is worthwhile to quote a
few words from the judgment of Fletcher Moulton L.J. at page
458. Under the phrase "Regard may be had to" the facts which
the Court may thus take cognizance of are to be "a guide,
and not a fetter". This Court speaking through one of us
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 30
(Beg, J., as he then was), has expressed the same opinion in
the case of Saraswati Industrial Syndicate Ltd. etc. v.
Union of India, [1975] 1 SCR 956. Says the learned Judge at
page 959: "The expression "having regard to" only obliges
the Government to consider as relevant data material to
which it must have regard"."
936
In State of U.P. & Ors. v. Renusagar Power Co., [1988] 4 SCC
59, one of us (Mukharji, J., as he then was) observed:
"The expression "having regard to" only obliges the govern-
ment to consider as relevant data material to which it must
have regard ..... ".
In O’May and Ors. v. City of London Real Property Co. Ltd.,
[1982] 1 All E.R. 660 at 665 (H.L.), Lord Hailsham stated:
"A certain amount of discussion took place in argument as to
the meaning of ’having regard to’ in s. 35. Despite the fact
that the phrase has only just been used by the draftsman of
s. 34 in an almost mandatory sense, I do not in any way
suggest that the court is intended or should in any way
attempt to bind the parties to the terms of the current
tenancy in any permanent form ..... ".
The words "having regard to" in the sub-section are the
legislative instruction for the general guidance of the
Government in determining the price of sugar. They are not
strictly mandatory, but in essence directory. The reasona-
bleness of the order made by the Government in exercise of
its power under sub-section (3-C) will, of course, be tested
by asking the question whether or not the matters mentioned
in clauses (a) to (d) have been generally considered by the
Government in making its estimate of the price, but the
Court will not strictly scrutinise the extent to which those
matters or any other matters have been taken into account.
There is sufficient compliance with the sub-section, if the
Government has addressed its mind to the factors mentioned
in clauses (a) to (d), amongst other factors which the
Government may reasonably consider to be relevant and has
come to a conclusion, which any reasonable person, placed in
the position of the Government, would have come to. On such
determination of the price of sugar, which, as stated in
Panipat (supra) is the fair price, the sub-section postu-
lates the calculation of an amount, with reference to such
price, for payment to each producer who has complied with an
order made with reference to sub-section (2)(f). The "price
of sugar", unlike the "amount" is arrived at by a process of
costing in respect of a representative cross section of
manufacturing units, beating, of course, in mind the legis-
lative instruction contained in clauses (a) to (d).
The Attorney General submits that orders determining the
937
prices of sugar in terms of the sub-section are of general
application and, therefore, legislative in character. Omis-
sion, if any, to consider the peculiar problems of individu-
al producers is not a ground for judicial review. The peti-
tioners’ counsel as well as Mr. Venugopal appearing for the
intervener (ISMA), do not agree. They submit that the sub-
section contemplates only administrative or quasi-judicial
orders of particular application and the impugned orders are
not legislative. They rely upon a certain observation of
this Court in Union of India & Anr. v. Cynamide India Ltd. &
Anr., [1987] 2 SCC 720. Mr. Venugopal, however, hastens to
add that his client does not seek personal heating before
prices are determined. Mr. B.R.L. Iyengar, supporting the
contentions of the petitioners, points out that the expres-
sion ’determine’ used in sub-section (3-C) indicates that
the order to which that expression refers is quasi-judicial.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 30
Judicial decisions are made according to law while
administrative decisions emanate from administrative policy.
Quasi-judicial decisions are also administrative decisions,
but they are subject to some measure of judicial procedure,
such as rules of natural justice. To distinguish clearly
legislative and administrative functions is "difficult in
theory and impossible in practice".3 Referring to these two
functions, Wade says:
’They are easy enough to distinguish at the extremities of
the .spectrum: an Act of Parliament is legislative and a
deportation order is administrative. But in between is a
wide area where either label could be used according to
taste, for example where ministers make orders or regula-
tions affecting large numbers of people ..... ,, .4
Wade points out that legislative power is the power to
prescribe the law for people in general, while administra-
tive power is the power to prescribe the law for them, or
apply the law to them, in particular situations. A scheme
for centralising the electricity supply undertakings may be
called administrative, but it might be just as well legisla-
tive. Same is the case with ministerial orders establishing
new towns or airports etc. He asks: "And what of ’directions
of a general character’ given by a minister to a nationa-
lised industry? Are these various orders legislative or
administrative?" Wade says that the correct
(3) Comd. 4060 (1932), p. 73; see H.W.R. Wade-Adminis-
trative Law, 6th ed., p. 47
(4) Ibid p. 848.
938
answer would be that they are both. He says:" ..... there
is an infinite series of gradations, with a large area of
overlap, between what is plainly legislation and what is
plainly administration".5 Courts, nevertheless, for practi-
cal reasons, have distinguished legislative orders from the
rest of the orders by reference to the principle that the
former is of general application. They are made formally by
publication and for general guidance with reference to which
individual decisions are taken in particular situations.
According to Griffith and Street, an instruction may be
treated as legislative even when they are not issued formal-
ly),, but by a circular or a letter or the like. What mat-
ters is the substance and not the form, or the name. The
learned authors say: ". .... where a Minister (or other
authority) is given power in a statute or an instrument to
exercise executive, as opposed to legislative, powers--as,
for example, to requisition property or to issue a
licence--and delegates those powers generally, then any
instructions which he gives to his delegates may be legisla-
tive".6 Where an authority to whom power is delegated is
entitled to sub-delegate his power, be it legislative,
executive or judicial, then such authority may also give
instructions to his delegates and these instructions may be
regarded as legislative. However, as pointed out by Denning,
L.J., (as he then was) a judicial tribunal cannot delegate
its functions except when it is authorised to do so express-
ly or by necessary implication’ see Bernard and Ors. v.
National Dock Labour Board and Ors., [1953] 2 Q.B. 18 at 40.
Kenneth Culp Davis says: "What distinguishes legislation
from adjudication is that the former affects the rights of
individuals in the abstract and must be applied in a further
proceeding before the legal position of any particular
individual will be definitely touched by it; while adjudica-
tion operates concretely upon individuals in their individu-
al capacity".7 Justice Holmes’ definition, which is what is
called the "time test" and which Davis describes as one
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 30
which has produced many unsatisfactory practical results,
reads:
"A judicial inquiry investigates, declares, and enforces
liabilities as they stand on present or past facts and under
laws supposed already to exist. That is its purpose and end.
Legislation, on the other hand, looks to the future and
(5) Ibid.
(6) Principles of Administrative Law, 5th ed., p. 65
(7) Administrative Law Text, 3rd ed., p. 123-24.
939
changes existing conditions by making a new rule, to be
applied thereafter to all or some part of those subject to
its power. The establishment of a rate is the making of a
rule for the future, and therefore is an act legislative,
not judicial ......
Prentis v. Atlantic Cost Line Co., 211 US 210,226.
The element of general application is often cited as a
distinct feature of legislative activity. In the words of
Chief Justice Burger, "rule-making is normally directed
toward the formulation of requirements having a general
application to all members of a broadly identifiable class"?
Bernard Schwarts says: "an adjudication, on the other hand,
applies to specific individuals or situations. Rule-making
affects the fights of individuals in the abstract and must
be applied in a further proceeding before the legal position
of any particular individual will be definitely affected;
adjudication operates concretely upon individuals in their
individual capacity’’9 According to Schwartz, the "time
test" and the "applicability test" are workable in most
cases although in certain situations distinctions are indeed
difficult to draw.
A statutory instrument (such as a rule, order or regula-
tion) emanates from the exercise of delegated legislative
power which is the part of the administrative process resem-
bling enactment of law by the legislature. A quasi judicial
order emanates from adjudication which is the part of the
administrative process resembling a judicial decision by a
court of law. This analogy is imperfect and perhaps unhelp-
ful in classifying borderline or mixed cases which are
better left unclassified .10
If a particular function is termed legislative rather
than judicial, practical results may follow as far as the
parties are concerned. When the function is treated as
legislative, a party affected by the order has no fight to
notice and heating, unless, of course, the statute so re-
quires. It being of general application engulfing a wide
sweep of powers, applicable to all persons and situations of
a broadly identifiable class, the legislative order may not
be vulnerable to challenge merely by reason of its omission
to take into account individual peculiarities and differ-
ences amongst those falling within the class.
(8) Quoted by Bernard Schwartz in ’Administrative Law’
(1976), p. 144.
(9) Ibid
(10) See Davis, Administrative Law Text, p. 123
940
In Union of India & Anr. v. Cynamide India Ltd. & Anr.,
[1987] 2 SCC 720 at 734-35, Chinnappa Reddy, J. referring to
the earlier decisions of this Court states:
" ..... legislative action, plenary or subordinate, is not
subject to .rules of natural justice. In the case of Parlia-
mentary legislation, the proposition is self-evident. In the
case of subordinate legislation, it may happen that Parlia-
ment may itself provide for a notice and for a
hearing .......... But where the legislature has not chosen
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 30
to provide for any notice or hearing, no one can insist upon
it and it will not be permissible to read natural justice
into such legislative activity .......... It is true that,
with the proliferation of delegated legislation, there is a
tendency for the line between legislation and administration
to vanish into an illusion. Administrative, quasi-judicial
decisions tend to merge in legislative activity and, con-
versely, legislative activity tends to fade into and present
an appearance of an administrative or quasi-judicial activi-
ty".
Stating that rule-making is of general application to all
members of a broadly identifiable class while adjudication
is applicable to specific individuals or situations, the
learned Judge observes:
"A price fixation measure does not concern itself with the
interests of an individual manufacturer or producer. It is
generally in relation to a particular commodity or class of
commodities or transactions. It is a direction of a general
character, not directed against a particular situation. It
is intended to operate in the future. It is conceived in the
interests of the general consumer public. The right of the
citizen to obtain essential articles at fair prices and the
duty of the State to so provide them are transformed into
the power of the State to fix prices and the obligations of
the producer to charge no more than the price fixed. Viewed
from whatever angle, the angle of general application, the
prospectiveness of its effect, the public interest served,
and the rights and obligations flowing therefrom, there can
be no question that price fixation is ordinarily a legisla-
tive activity".
The learned Judge emphasises:
941
"Price fixation may occasionally assume an administrative or
quasi-judicial character when it relates to acquisition or
requisition of goods or property from individuals and it
becomes necessary to fix the price separately in relation to
such individuals. Such situations may arise when the owner
of property or goods is compelled to sell his property or
goods to the government or its nominee and the price to be
paid is directed by the legislature to be determined accord-
ing to the statutory guidelines laid down by it. In such
situations the determination of price may acquire a quasiju-
dicial character".
These observations have been cited with approval by one
of uS (Sabyasachi Mukharji, J., as he then was) in Renusagar
(supra).
In Saraswati Industrial Syndicate Ltd. etc. v. Union of
India, [1975] 1 SCR 956 at 961, this Court states:
"Price fixation is more in the nature of a legislative
measure even though it may be based upon objective criteria
found in a report or other material. It could not, there-
fore, give rise to a complaint that a rule of natural jus-
tice has not been followed in fixing the price".
In Prag Ice & Oil Mills & Anr. etc. v. Union of India,
[1978] 3 SCR 293 at 317, Chandrachud, J., as he then was,
speaks for the majority:
"We think that unless, by the terms of a particular statute,
or order. price fixation is made a quasi-judicial function
for specified purposes or cases, it is really legislative in
character in the type of control order which is now before
us because it satisfies the tests of legislation. A legisla-
tive measure does not concern itself with the facts of an
individual case. It is meant to lay down a general rule
applicable to all persons or objects or transactions of a
particular kind or class".
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 30
See also the observation of Megarry, J., as he then was, in
Bates v. Lord Hailsham of St. Marylebone & Ors., [1972] 3
All ER 1019 at 1024.
The impugned orders, duly published in the official
gazettes notifying the prices determined for sugar of var-
ious grades and pro-
942
duced in various zones, and applicable to all producers of
such sugar, can, in our view, be legitimately characterised
as legislative. These orders are required by Sub-section (6)
to be laid before both Houses of Parliament. The notified
prices are applicable without exception to all persons
falling within well defined groups. The prices are deter-
mined in accordance with the norms postulated in the sub-
section. It is with reference to such predetermined prices
of sugar that the "amount" payable to each producer, who has
sold sugar in compliance with an order made with reference
to clause (f) of sub-section (2), is calculated. The calcu-
lation of such amount is, in contradistinction to the deter-
mination of "price of sugar", a non-legislative act.
Thus, while individual consideration is relevant to the
calculation of the "amount", it is not so for the determina-
tion of the "price of sugar" which is the rate at which the
amount is calculated. That price, as stated in Panipat
(supra) is to be arrived at by a process of costing with
reference to a reasonably efficient and economic representa-
tive cross section of manufacturing units.
In this connection, we must point out that at first
blush a certain observation of Chinnappa Reddy, J. in Cyna-
mide, [1987] 2 SCC 720 at 741, on which much reliance is
placed by the petitioners’ counsel, appears to be inconsist-
ent with what we have now stated. The learned Judge says:
"The Order made under Section 3(2)(c), which is not in
respect of a single transaction, nor directed to a particu-
lar individual is clearly a legislative act, while an Order
made under Section 3(3-C) which is in respect of a particu-
lar transaction of compulsory sale from a specific individu-
al is a non-legislative act".
It would appear that what the learned Judge had in mind was
an order by which the "amount" was calculated in terms of
sub-section (3-C) in respect of each individual producer and
not an order determining the "price of sugar". While the
former is non-legislative, the latter, by the very test
adopted by the learned Judge, is legislative in character.
We, therefore, understand the observation of the learned
Judge on this point as applicable only to the individual
order fixing the "amount" in terms of the sub-section and
not to orders determining the "price of sugar" which are
what the impugned orders are. Any other construction of the
sub-section would conflict with what was adopted by the
Constitution Bench in Panipat (supra) and would, therefore,
be unsustainable.
943
The individual orders, calculating the "amounts" payable
to the individual producers, being administrative, orders
rounded on the machanics of price fixation, they must be
left to the better instructed judgment of the executive, and
in regard to them the principle of audi alteram partem is
not applicable. All that is required is reasonableness and
fair play which are in essence emanations from the doctrine
of natural justice as explained by this Court in A.K. Krai-
pak & Ors. etc. v. Union of India & Ors., [1970] 1 SCR 457.
See also the observation of Mukharji, J., as he then was, in
Renusagar, [1988] 4 SCC 103, 105.
Price fixation is in the nature of a legislative action
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 30
even when it is based on objective criteria rounded on
relevant material. No rule at natural justice is applicable
to any such order. It is nevertheless imperative that the
action of the authority should be inspired by reason. Saras-
wati Industrial Syndicate Ltd., [1975] 1 SCR 956, 961, 962.
The Government cannot fix any arbitrary price. It cannot fix
prices on extraneous considerations: Renusagar, (supra).
Any arbitrary action, whether in the nature of a legis-
lative or administrative or quasi-judicial exercise of
power, is liable to attract the prohibition of Article 14 of
the Constitution. As stated in E.P. Royappa v. State of
Tamil Nadu & Anr., [1974] 2 SCR 348, "equality and arbi-
trariness are sworn enemies; one belongs to the rule of law
in a republic while the other, to the whim and caprice of an
absolute monarch." Unguided and unrestricted power is af-
fected by the vice of discrimination: Mrs. Maneka Gandhi v.
Union of India & Anr., [1978] 1 SCC 248 at 293-294. The
principle of equality enshrined in Article 14 must guide
every state action, whether it be legislative, executive, or
quasi-judicial: Ramana Dayaram ’Shetty v. The International
Airport Authority of India & Ors., [1979] 3 SCR 1014 at
1042; Ajay Hasia & Ors. v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi & Ors..
[1981] 1 SCC 722 and D.S. Nakara & Ors. v. Union of India,
[1983] 1 SCC 305.
Power delegated by statute is limited by its terms and
subordinate to its objects. The delegate must act in good
faith, reasonably, intra vires the power granted, and on
relevant consideration of material facts. All his decisions,
whether characterised as legislative or administrative or
quasi-judicial, must be in harmony with the Constitution and
other laws of the land. They must be "reasonably related to
the purposes of the enabling legislation". See Leila Mourn-
ing v. Family Publications Service, 411 US 356, 36 L Ed. 2d
318. If they are manifestly unjust or oppressive or outra-
geous or directed to an unauthorised end or do not tend in
some degree to the accomplishment of
944
the objects of delegation, courts might well say, "Parlia-
ment never intended to give authority to make such rules;
they are unreasonable and ultra vires". per Lord Russel of
Killowen, C.J. in Kruse v. Johnson, [1988] 2 Q.B. 91, 99.
The doctrine of judicial review implies that the reposi-
tory of power acts within the bounds of the power delegated
and he does not abuse his power. He must act reasonably and
in good faith. It is not only sufficient that an instrument
is intra vires the parent Act, but it must also be consist-
ent with the constitutional principles: Maneka Gandhi v.
Union of India, [1978] 1 SCC 248, 314-315.
Where a question of law is at issue, the Court may
determine the rightness of the impugned decision on its own
independent judgment. If the decision of the authority does
not agree with that which the Court considers to be the
right one, the finding of law by the authority is liable to
be upset. Where it is a finding of fact, the Court examines
only the reasonableness of the finding. When that finding is
found to be rational and reasonably based on evidence, in
the sense that all relevant material has been taken into
account and no irrelevant material has influenced the deci-
sion, and the decision is one which any reasonably minded
person acting on such evidence, would have come to, then
judicial review is exhausted even though the finding may not
necessarily be what the Court would have come to as a trier
of fact. Whether an order is characterised as legislative or
administrative or quasi-judicial, or, whether it is a deter-
mination or law or fact, the judgment of the expert body,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 30
entrusted with power, is generally treated as final and the
judicial function is exhausted when it is found to have
"wanant in the record" and a rational basis in law: See
Rochester Tel. Corp. v. United States, [1939] 307 U.S. 125,
83 L. Ed. 1147. See also Associated Provincial Picture
Houses Ltd. v. Wednesbury Corporation, [1948] 1 K.B. 223.
As stated by Lord Hailsham of St. Marylebone L.C.,
(H.L.) in Chief Constable of the North Wales Police v.
Evans, [1982] 1 WLR 1155 at 1160-61:
"The function of the court is to see that lawful authority
is not abused by unfair treatment and not tO attempt itself
the task entrusted to that authority by the law ..........
The purpose of judicial review is to ensure that the indi-
vidual receives fair treatment, and not to ensure that the
authority, after according fair treatment, reaches on a
matter
945
which it is authorised by law to decide for itself a conclu-
sion which is correct in the eyes of the court".
In the same case Lord Brightman says:
"Judicial review, as the words imply, is not an appeal from
a decision, but a review of the manner in which the decision
was made".
A repository of power acts ultra vires either when he
acts in excess of his power in the narrow sense or when he
abuses his power by acting in bad faith or for an inadmissi-
ble purpose or on irrelevant grounds or without regard to
relevant considerations or with gross unreasonableness. See
Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd. v. Wednesbury
Corporation, [1948] 1 K.B. 223. In the words of Lord Mac-
naghten in Westminster Corporation v. London and North
Western ’ Railway, [1905] AC 426, 430:
" ..... It is well settled that a public body invested
with statutory powers such as those conferred upon the
Corporation must take care not to exceed or abuse its pow-
ers. It must keep within the limits of the authority commit-
ted to it. It must act in good faith. And it must act rea-
sonably. The last proposition is involved in the second, if
not in the first.....".
In The Barium Chemicals Ltd. & Anr. v. The Company Law Board
& Ors., [1966] Supp. SCR 311, this Court states:
" ..... Even if (the statutory order) is passed in good
faith and with the best of intention to further the purpose
of the legislation which confers the powers, since the
Authority has to act in accordance with and within the
limits of that legislation, its order can also be challenged
if it is beyond those limits or is passed on grounds extra-
neous to the legislation or if there are no grounds at all
for passing it or if the grounds are such that no one can
reasonably arrive at the opinion or satisfaction requisite
under the legislation. In any one of these situations it can
well be said that the authority did not honestly form its
opinion or that in forming it, it did not apply its mind to
the relevant facts"..
In Renusagar, [1988] 4 SCC 59, 104, Mukharji, J., as he then
was, states:
946
"The exercise of power whether legislative or administrative
will be set aside if there is manifest error in the exercise
of such power or the exercise of the power is manifestly
arbitrary. Similarly, if the power has been exercised on a
non-consideration or non-application of mind to relevant
factors the exercise of power will be regarded as manifestly
erroneous. If a power (whether legislative or administra-
tive) is exercised on the oasis of facts which do not exist
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 27 of 30
and which are patently erroneous, such exercise of power
will stand vitiated".
The true position, therefore, is that any act of the
repository of power, whether legislative or administrative
or quasi-judicial, is open to challenge if it is in conflict
with the Constitution or the governing Act or the general
principles of the law of the land or it is so arbitrary or
unreasonable that no fair minded authority could ever have
made it
The impugned orders are undoubtedly based on an exhaus-
tive study by experts. They are fully supported by the
recommendations of the Tariff Commission in 1969 and 1973.
It is true that these recommendations in some respects were
the subject matter of criticism by a subsequently appointed
expert body, viz., the BICP. Apart from the fact that the
BICP’s criticism has not been accepted by the Government,
that criticism is not relevant in so far as the impugned
orders are concerned because the latter are in regard to an
earlier period. These orders are fully supported by the
relevant material on record. The conclusions reached by the
Central Government in exercise of its statutory power are
expert conclusions which are not shown to be either discrim-
inatory or unreasonable or arbitrary or ultra vires. The
(11) See the observation of Lord Russel in Kruse v.
Johnson, [1898] 2 Q.B. 91 and that of Lord Greene, M.R. in
Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd. v. Wednesbury
Corporation, [1948] 1 K.B. 223; See also Mixnam Properties
Ltd. v. Chertsey U.D.C., [1965] AC 735; Commissioners of
Customs and Excise v. Cure and DeeIcy Ltd. [1962] 1 Q.B.
340; McEldowney v. Forde, [1971] AC 632 (H.L.); Carltona
Ltd. v. Commissioners of Works, [1943] 2 All ER 560, 564;
Point of Ayr. Collieries Ltd. v. Lloyd George, [1943] 2 All
ER 546; Scott v. Glasgow Corporation, [1899] AC 470, 492;
Robert Baird L.D.v. City of Glasgow, [1936] AC 32, 42;
Manhattan General Equipment Co. v. Commissioner, [1935] 297
US 129, 134; Yates (Arthur) & Co. Pty. Ltd. v. Vegetable
Seeds Committee, [1945-46] 72 CLR 37; Bailey v. Conole,
[1931] 34 WALR 18; Boyd Builders Ltd. v. City of Ottawa,
[1964] 45 DLR (2d) 211; Re Burns and Township of Haldimand,
[1966] 52 DLR (2d) 10 14 and Lynch v. Tilden Produce Co. 265
US 3 15,320-322.
947
material brought to our notice by the petitioners does not
support the arguments at the bar that the Central Government
has not applied its mind to the relevant questions to which
they are expected to have regard in terms of the statute.
That the sugar factories for the purpose of determining the
price of sugar in terms of sub-section (3-C) should be
grouped on the basis of their geographical location is a
policy decision based on exhaustive expert conclusions.
Factories are classified with due regard to geographi-
cal-cumagro-economic considerations. Fair prices for differ-
ent grades of sugar are determined for each zone with refer-
ence to a reasonably efficient and economic representative
cross-section of the manufacturing units. Such classifica-
tion, as held in Panipat (supra) and Anakapalle (supra)
cannot, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, be
characterised as arbitrary or unreasonable or not rounded on
an intelligible differentia having a rational nexus with the
object sought to be achieved by subsection (3-C). The person
assailing such classification "carries the heavy burden of
making a convincing showing that it is invalid because it is
unjust and unreasonable in its consequences" Federal Power
Commission v. Hope Gas Co., 320 US 591, 602 (1944). If the
petitioners nevertheless incur losses, such losses need not
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 28 of 30
necessarily have arisen by reason of geographical zoning,
but for reasons totally unconnected with it, such as the
condition of the plant and machinery, quality of management,
investment policy, labour relations, etc. These are matters
on which the petitioners have not furnished data, and, in
any event judicial review is hardly appropriate for their
consideration.
In this connection we would recall the observations of
Chinnappa Reddy, J. in Union of India and Anr. v. Cynamide
India Ltd. andAnr., [1987] 2 SCC 720 at p. 736:
"We do not agree with the basic premises that price fixation
primarily affects manufacturers and producers. Those who are
most vitally affected are the consumer public. It is for
their protection that price fixation is resorted to and any
increase in price affects them as seriously as any decrease
does a manufacturer, if not more."
In M/s. Gupta Sugar Works v. State of U.P. and Ors., [1987]
Supp. SCC 476 at p. 48 1 one of us (Jagannatha Shetty, J .)
stated:
"In this view of the matter, the primary consideration in
the fixation of price would be the interest of consumers
948
rather than that of the producers."
The Court has neither the means nor the knowledge to
reevaluate the factual basis of the impugned orders. The
Court, in exercise of judicial review, is not concerned with
the correctness of the findings of fact on the basis of
which the orders are made so long as those findings are
reasonably supported by evidence. In the words of Justice
Frankfurter of the U.S. Supreme Court in Railroad Commission
of Texas v. Rowan & Nichols Oil Company, 311 US 570-577, 85
L. ed. 358,362:
"Nothing in the Constitution warrants a rejection of these
expert conclusions. Nor, on the basis of intrinsic skills
and equipment, are the federal courts qualified to set their
independent judgment on such matters against that of the
chosen state authorities ..... When we consider the limit-
ing conditions of litigation--the adaptability of the judi-
cial process only to issues definitely circumscribed and
susceptible of being judged by the techniques and criteria
within the special competence of lawyers--it is clear that
the Due Process Clause does not require the feel of the
expert to be supplanted by an independent view of judges on
the conflicting testimony and prophecies and impressions of
expert witnesses".
This observation is of even greater significance in the
absence of a Due Process Clause.
Judicial review is not concerned with matters of econom-
ic policy. The Court does not substitute its judgment for
that of the legislature or its agents as to matters within
the province of either. The Court does not supplant the
"feel of the expert" by its own views. When the legislature
acts within the sphere of its authority and delegates power
to an agent, it may empower the agent to make findings of
fact which are conclusive provided such findings satisfy the
test of reasonable˜ ness. In all such cases, judicial in-
quiry is confined to the question whether the findings of
fact are reasonably based on evidence and whether such
findings are consistent with the laws of the land. As rated
by Jagannatha Shetty, J. in M/s. Gupta Sugar Works, (supra):
"the court does not act like a chartered accountant nor acts
like an income tax officer. The court is not concerned with
any individual case or any particular problem. The court
949
only examines whether the price determined was with due
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 29 of 30
regard to considerations provided by the statute. And wheth-
er extraneous matters have been excluded from
determination."
Price fixation is not within the province of the courts.
Judicial function in respect of such matters is exhausted
when there is found to be a rational basis for the conclu-
sions reached by the concerned authority. As stated by
Justice Cardozo in Mississippi Valley Barge Line Company v.
United States of America, 292 US 282-290, 78 Led 1260, 1265:
"The structure of a rate schedule calls in peculiar measure
for the use of that enlightened judgment which the Commis-
sion by training and experience is qualified to form .....
It is not the province of a court to absorb this function to
itself ..... The judicial function is exhausted when there
is found to be a rational basis for the conclusions approved
by the administrative body".
It is a matter of policy and planning for the Central
Government to decide whether it would be on adoption of a
system of partial control, in the best economic interest of
the sugar industry and the general public that the sugar
factories are grouped together with reference to geographi-
cal-cum-agro-economic factors for the purpose of determining
the price of levy sugar. Sufficient power has been delegated
to the Central Government to formulate and implement its
policy decision by means of statutory instruments and execu-
tive orders. Whether the policy should be altered to divide
the sugar industry into groups of units with similar cost
characteristics with particular reference to recovery,
duration, size and age of the units and capital cost per
tonne of output, without regard to their location, as recom-
mended by the BICP, is again a matter for the Central Gov-
ernment to decide. What is best for the sugar industry and
in what manner the policy should be formulated and imple-
mented, bearing in mind the fundamental object of the stat-
ute, viz., supply and equitable distribution of essential
commodity at fair prices in the best interest of the general
public, is a matter for decision exclusively within the
province of the Central Government. Such matters do not
ordinarily attract the power of judicial review.
We would, in this connection, recall the words of Jus-
tice Frankfurter in Secretary of Agriculture, etc. v. Cen-
tral Roig Refining Com-
950
pany, etc., 338 US 615-617, 94 Led 391-392:
"Congress was ..... confronted with the formula-
tion of policy peculiarly with its wide swath of discretion.
It would be a singular intrusion of the judiciary into the
legislative process to extrapolate restrictions upon the
formulation of such an economic policy from those deeply
rooted notions of justice which the Due Process Clause
expresses ..... ".
"Suffice it to say that since Congress fixed the
quotas on a historical basis it is not for this Court to
reweigh the relevant factors and, perchance, substitute its
notion of expediency and fairness for that of Congress. This
is so even though the quotas thus fixed may demonstrably be
disadvantageous to certain areas or persons. This Court is
not a tribunal for relief from the crudities and inequities
of complicated experimental economic legislation".
It is important to remember that the division of the
industry on a zonal basis for the purpose of price determi-
nation has been accepted without question by almost all the
producers with the exception of a few like the petitioners.
Even if it is true that the petitioners as individuals are
at a disadvantage and have suffered losses on account of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 30 of 30
present system--an assertion which has not been established
and which by its very nature is incapable of determination
by judicial review--that is not sufficient ground for inter-
ference with the impugned orders. We are not satisfied that
the decisions of this Court in Anakapalle, [1973] 2 SCR 882
and Panipat, [1973] 2 SCR 860 require reconsideration in any
respect. We see no merit in the challenge against the im-
pugned orders. The civil writ petitions are, in the circum-
stances, dismissed. However, we do not make any order as to
costs.
P.S.S. Petitions
dismissed.
951