Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
R. OBLISWAMI NAIDU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ADDL. STATE TRANSPORT APPELLATE TRIBUNAL,MADRAS & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
17/02/1969
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
SIKRI, S.M.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 1130 1969 SCR (3) 730
1969 SCC (1) 733
CITATOR INFO :
R 1970 SC1542 (3,15,62,63)
E 1970 SC1704 (6)
E&D 1974 SC 391 (3,6)
R 1975 SC 386 (2)
R 1978 SC 949 (2)
E 1984 SC 9 (4)
ACT:
Motor Vehicles Act (4 of 1939), ss. 47 and 57-Application
for stage carriage permit on new route-Procedure to be
followed.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant applied to the R.T.A. for a permit to ply a
stage carriage on a new route on which no stage carriage was
plying before. The R.T.A. published the application under
s. 57(3) of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939. Some
representations against the grant of the permit on the
ground that there was no need were received. The R.T.A.,
after overruling the objections granted the permit to the
appellant. The appeal by some of the objectors was allowed
by the State Transport Appellate Tribunal on the ground that
the procedure adopted by the R.T.A. was not in accordance
with law inasmuch as it failed’ to determine the question of
the need for a service in that ’route before entertaining
the application. The appellate order was confirmed by the
High Court.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD : (Dismissing the appeal) Having regard to the purpose
behind ss. 47 and 57, that only public interest should be
considered and any manipulation in favour of a particular
applicant should be eliminated, there should be two
independent steps before granting a stage carriage permit :
(a) there should be a determination by the R.T.A., under s.
47(3), of the number of stage carriages for which permits
may be granted on that route, and (b) applications for
permits for such number of stage carriages should be
entertained thereafter. Otherwise, the R.T.A. will ’have no
opportunity to choose between competing operators. The ’re-
presentations’ made under s. 57(3) cannot be considered as
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competing applications. Further, if ’representations’
should be interpreted to include applications’. then s.
57(3) becomes unworkable as there will be unending
applications and publications. [733 B-C, F, H]
Jaya Ram Motor Service v. S. Rajarathinam, C.A. No. 95/65
dated 27-10-1967, followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1426 of
1968.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 16, 1968 of
the Madras High Court in Writ Petition No. 908 of 1968.
D. Narsaraju Subramaniam, Vineet Kumar, J. Ramamurthy, P.
S. Khera and Shyamala Pappu, for the appellant.
S.T. Desai, A. R. Ramanathan and R. Gopalakrishnan, for
respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hegde, J. The scope of s. 47(3) of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1
939 (to be hereinafter referred to as the Act) comes up for
consideration in this appeal by certificate.
731
The facts of the case necessary for the purpose of deciding
the point in issue are few, and they are as follows :-
On August 8, 1966, the appellant applied to the R.T.A. Coim-
batore for a permit to ply a stage carriage on the route
Bhavani to Vellithiruppur. That was entirely a new route.
No stage carriage was plying on that route at that time.
The R.T.A. published that application under s. 57(3) of the
Act. Respondents Nos. 2-3 and others made representations
against that application contending that there was no need
to grant a stage carriage permit for that route. The R.T.A.
overruled their objection and granted the permit asked for
on October 9, 1967. As against the order of the R.T.A. some
of the objectors went up in appeal to the State Transport
Appellate Tribunal, Madras. The Additional State Transport
Appellate Tribunal allowed the appeal by its order of
February 22, 1968 holding that the procedure adopted by the
R.T.A. was not in accordance with law inasmuch as it had
failed to determine the question of the-need for a service
in that route before entertaining the application for a
stage carriage permit.’ The Tribunal held that the procedure
adopted by the R.T.A. contravened s. 47(3) of the Act. The
appellant challenged that order before the High Court of
Madras in Writ Petition No. 908 of 1968. The High Court
dismissed that application. Hence this appeal.
Section 47 of the Act prescribes the procedure to be adopted
by the R.T.A. in considering applications for stage carriage
permit. That section reads :
"A Regional Transport Authority shall, in
considering an application for a stage
carriage permit, have regard to the following
matters namely :
(a) the interests of the public generally;
(b) the advantages to the public of the
service to be provided, including the saving
of time likely to be effected thereby and any
convenience arising from journeys not being
broken;
(c) the adequacy of other passenger
transport services operating or likely to
operate in the near future, whether by road or
other means, between the, places to be served;
(d) the benefit to any particular locality
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or localities likely to be afforded by the
service;
(e) the operation by the applicant of other
transport services, including those in respect
of which applications from him for permits-are
pending;
(f) the condition of the roads included in
the proposed route or area;
732
and shall also take into consideration any
representations made by persons already
providing passenger transport facilities by
any means along or near the proposed route or
area, or by any association representing
persons interested in the provision of road
transport facilities recognised in this behalf
by the State Government, or by any local
authority or police authority within whose
jurisdiction any part of the proposed route or
area lies
Provided that other conditions being equal, an
application for a stage carriage permit from a
co-operative society registered or deemed to
have been registered under any enactment in
force for the time being shall, as far as may
be given preference over applications from
individual owners.
(2) A Regional Transport Authority shall
refuse to grant a stage carriage permit if it
appears from any time-table furnished that the
provisions of this Act relating to the speed
at which vehicles may be driven are likely to
be contravened :
Provided that before such refusal an oppor-
tunity shall be given to the applicant to
amend the time-table so as to conform to the
said provisions.
(3) A Regional Transport Authority may,
having regard to the matters mentioned in sub-
s. (1), limit the number of stage carriages
generally or of any specified type for which
stage carriage permits may be granted in the
region or in any specified area or on any
specified route within the region."
Sub-section (3) of s. 47 of the Act required the Regional
Transport Authority to limit the number of stage carriage
permits that may be granted in a route having regard to the
matters mentioned in sub-s. (1) of that section. The
question for determination is whether the determination as
to the number of stage carriages required on a route should
be done at a stage anterior to that of entertaining
applications for stage carriage permits or that it could be
done at the time it considers applications made by operators
for stage carriage permits in that route. The R.T.A. has
proceeded on the basis that question can be decided while
considering the applications made to it for permits by
operators whereas the Appellate Tribunal and the High Court
have taken a contrary view.
Sub-s. (3) of s. 47 of the Act if read by itself does not
throw any light on the controversy before us but if ss. 47
and 57 of the Act are read together it appears to us to be
clear that the view
733
taken by the Appellate Tribunal and the High Court is the
correct view. if contrary view is taken it will throw open
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the door for manipulations and nepotism. There may be
possibility of the personality of the applicant influencing
the decision of the R.T.A. on the question of need for a
stage carriage permit in the route and thereby public
interest which should be the main consideration while taking
a decision under s. 47(3) may suffer. If we accept the view
taken by the R.T.A. as correct, an operator who happens to
apply for the route first will be in a commanding position.
The R.T.A. will have no opportunity to choose between
competing operators and hence public interest might suffer.
Mr. Narsaraju, learned Counsel for the appellant tried to
meet the difficulty by suggesting that sub-s. (3) of s. 57
of the Act is wide enough to allow the competing operators
to apply for the route in question when the first
applicant’s application is published and representations
called for.’ Section 57(3) reads
"On receipt of an application for a stage
carriage permit or a public carrier’s permit,
the Regional Transport Authority shall make
the application available for inspection at
the office of the Authority and shall publish
the application or the substance thereof in
the prescribed manner together with a notice
of the date before which representations in
connection therewith may be submitted and the
date, not being less than 30 days from such
publication, on which, and the time and place
at which, the application and any
representation received will be considered."
(Proviso is not relevant for our present
purpose).
We are unable to accept this contention. That sub-section
merely permits representations to be made in respect of the
application published. Such representations cannot take the
form of competing applications. It is difficult to accept
the contention that the word "representations" in s. 57(3)
includes applications for the route. That apart if we
accept Mr. Narsaraju’s contention then the whole thing will
become unworkable. If at the time of making his
representation an operator can also make an application for
a stage carriage permit for that route, that application
again will have to be published under s. 57(3) and
objections called for. Extending the logic of Mr.
Narsaraju’s argument as we ought to, at the time of making
representations to those applications, further applications
can be made. This may turn out to be an unending chain.
On an examination of the relevant provisions of the Act and
the purpose behind ss. 47, and 57, we are convinced that
before granting a stage carriage permit two independent
steps have to be taken. Firstly there should a
determination by the R.T.A. under
Sup./69-12
734
s.47(3)of the number of stage carriages for which stage
carriage permits may be granted in that route. Thereafter
applications for stage carriage permits in that route should
be entertained. The R.T.A. is not competent to grant stage
carnage permits for more carriages than fixed under s.47(3).
Our above conclusion accords with the view expressed by this
Court in Civil Appeal No. 95 of 1965. (M/s. Jaya Ram Motor
Service v. S. Rajarathinam and ors.) (1). Therein the Court
observed :
"The scheme of sec. 47 is that when a person
makes an application under sections 45 and 46
the Authority first considers it under sec. 47
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( 1 ) in the light of the matters set out
therein and also the representations, if any,
made by the persons mentioned therein. The
Authority then fixed under sec. 47 (2), having
regard to the matters mentioned in s. 47(1),
the number of stage carriages for which
permits may be granted in the region or on any
specified route within such region. Having
fixed the limit the Authority publishes under
s. 57(3)the application with a notice of the
date before which representations in
connection therewith may be submitted and the
date on which such application and
representations would be considered. The
proviso to s.57(3) lays down that if the grant
of a permit has the effect of increasing the
number of vehicles operating in that region or
in any specified area thereof or on the route
within such region beyond the limit fixed
under s. 47 (3), the Authority may dismiss the
application summarily. If it does dot exceed
such limit and the Authority decides to grant
a permit it has to consider the application
and the representations submitted to it in
conformity with the procedure laid down in
sec. 57. Therefore sec. 47 envisages two
stages of the inquiry; (i) the fixing of the
number of permit under s. 47(3) and (ii) the
consideration thereafter of the application
for grant of a permit and the representations
if any by the persons mentioned in s. 47(1).
It would therefore seem that once the
Authority has fixed the number of vehicles to
be operated in the region or the area or the
particular route and the number of permits to
be granted therefore, the stage of inquiry
under s. 47 (3) is over. The next thing that
the Authority has to consider is whether grant
of a permit would be within such limit or not.
If it does not exceed the limit the Authority
has to consider the application and the
representation if any, in connection therewith
and to grant or refuse to grant the permit
under sec. 48(1).. Therefore, once the
C.A. No. 95/65 decided on 27-10-1967.
735
limit is fixed,, if the grant of an
application does not have the effect of
exceeding that limit, the only question before
the Authority would be whether the applicant
is a person fit to be granted the permit or
not in the light of the matters set out in
sub-sec. (1) of sec. 47. The question of the
number of permits to be granted, having been
already canvassed and decided, cannot become
the subject at that stage of any further
controversy. This is clear from the fact that
sec. 48(1) which empowers the Authority to
grant or refuse to grant the permit starts
with the words ’subject to the provisions of
s. 47’. It is therefore clear that the
Authority has first to fix the limit and after
having done so, consider the application or
representations in connection therewith in
accordance with the procedure laid down in
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sec. 57. As held in Abdul Mateen v. Ram
Kailash Pandey(1) the Authority may modify the
limit fixed by it under sec. 47 (3) but once
such a limit is fixed, it cannot ignore it
while considering the applications before it
under sec. 48. Sec. 47(3), as observed there,
’is concerned with a general order limiting
stage carriages, generally etc., on a
consideration of matters specified in s.
47(1). That general order can be modified by
the Regional Transport Authority, if it so
decides, one way or the other. But the
modification of that order is not a matter for
consideration when the Regional Transport
Authority is dealing with the actual grant of
permits under s. 48 read with s. 57 for at
that stage what the Regional Transport
Authority has to do is to choose between
various applicants.... That, in our opinion,
is not the stage, when the general order
passed under section 47(3) can be reconsidered
for the order under s. 48 is subject to the
provisions of s. 47, which includes s. 47 (3 )
under which a general order limiting the
number of stage carriages etc. may have been
passed.’
That being so, if an application is refused
such refusal is under sec. 4 8 (1) and the
appellant who is denied the permit has a right
of appeal under sec. 64(1) (a)."
In the result this appeal fails and the same
is dismissed with cost
V.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
735
(1) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 523, 529.