Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
G.B. MAHAJAN AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JALGAON MUNICIPAL COUNCIL AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/09/1990
BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
OJHA, N.D. (J)
CITATION:
1991 AIR 1153 1990 SCR Supl. (3) 20
1991 SCC (3) 91 1991 SCALE (1)378
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950: Articles 14 and 298--State
Instrumentality--Municipal Council entering into contract
with private developer for construction of Commercial Com-
plex on self financing basis--Adoption of such an unconven-
tional technique as a policy option--Validity of.
Article 226--Resort to--Contractual transaction of
Government or its instrumentality--Presence public law
element--Essential for invoking Judicial Review.
Municipalities: Maharashtra Municipalities Act, 1965:
Sections 92 & 272(1)--Municipal Market--Disposal of occupan-
cy rights-Construction of Commercial Complex--Private de-
veloper to undertake on self financing basis--Giving admin-
istrative building to Municipal Council free of cost--Shops
to be given to allottees--Liberty to dispose of the remain-
ing accommodation to cover financial outlays and project
---Whether valid.
Administrative Law: Judicial Review--Policy
decision--Government or its instrumentality--Whether free to
evolve and adopt any method for executing of a Project--Such
decisions--whether open to Judicial Review.
Test of ’Reasonableness’--To distinguish between proper
use and improper use of power--Applicability of the test
depends upon context.
Delegation of power----Statutory function under Section
272 of the Maharashtra Municipalities Act, 1965 Occupancy
rights--Powers to substitute occupiers in its own place by
developer--Whether permissible.
Interpretation of Statutes: Use of same word/phrase or
concept in different laws--Distinction in meaning and
usage--Need for.
Words & Phrases.’ ’Reasonableness’--’Reasonable
man’--Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
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The respondent Municipal Council received by way of gift
certain lands from one ’L’ and the said lands were used by
the Agricultural Produce Market Committee as a cotton market
and wholesale fruit and vegetables market. The Respondent
Council, in order to put the land to a better and more
profitable use, persuaded the Market Committee to yield up
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possession. However, since the gift stipulated certain
conditions regarding the user, the Respondent Council ap-
proached the heirs of the donor for amending the terms of
the gift, and the heirs bargained for and secured a benefit
that five shops be given to them free of cost in the pro-
posed commercial complex. The entire project of constructing
the Administrative building, an adjacent structure for
vegetable market and a commercial complex was to be executed
by a developer at his own expense. The estimated/financial
outlay was about Rs.11 crores. It was contemplated that the
developer was to hand over the Administrative building free
of cost to the Municipality and the vegetable market to the
allottees and the five shops to the heirs of the donee of
the land. Thereafter the developer would be entitled to
dispose of the occupancy rights in respect of the rest of
the accommodation in the commercial complex and retain the
promia received therefrom to cover the financial outlays and
profit thereon. The occupiers to whom allotments were made
as also the occupiers inducted by the developer were to pay
rents to the Respondent Council for 50 years.
Tenders were issued for the project, and after scrutiny
of the tenders submitted by five developers, the tender of
Respondent No. 6 was accepted by the Respondent-Council, and
a formal agreement was entered into between the Council and
Respondent No. 6.
The appellants, residents of the area petitioned to the
Collector to suspend the Resolutions of the Council under-
taking the said project and the agreement entered with
Respondent No. 6, on the grounds that the proposed transac-
tion amounted to a lease for 50 years which was prohibited
under Section 92 of the Maharashtra Municipalities Act,
1956; that sanction of the Development Department was not
obtained; that an impermissible encumbrance would be created
on the Councils property in favour of the developer and that
the intended user violated the original terms of the gift.
On the said petition, the Collector passed orders suspending
the Resolutions. On revision, the Minister stayed the opera-
tion of the Collector’s order.
Meanwhile, a Writ Petition was filed before the High
Court, assailing the said Resolutions. Another Writ Petition
was filed challenging the Minister’s orders staying the
order of the Collector. Both the
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Writ Petitions were heard together. The main contention of
the Writ Petitioners was that the financial estimates of the
project were made grossly under-estimating the probable
receipts by way of premia for the grant of occupancy rights
with the intention of giving an opportunity for unjust
enrichment to Respondent No. 6. The High Court directed that
occupancy rights in regard to the shops at the disposal of
the developer tenders be called from the public, so that the
difference between what was taken into account in the esti-
mate and what was actually secured might go to the benefit
of the Municipality. Accordingly, advertisement were issued,
but it did not evoke any favourable response from the pub-
lic. The matter was listed again before the High Court. It
was held that the High Court’s earlier order was self-execu-
tory, and the Writ Petitions were dismissed. Review Petition
was also dismissed. Another Writ Petition challenging the
advertisement issued pursuant to High Court’s earlier order
was also dismissed.
The Special Leave Petitions fried against the above-said
orders of the High Court, were dismissed by this Court with
the observations that it was open to the petitioners to move
the Minister for final disposal and the Minister would
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expeditiously dispose of the matter taking into considera-
tion whether the scheme was in conformity with the statutory
provisions. The Minister disposed of the Revision Applica-
tion recording his findings against the appellants. There-
upon, the appellants filed a fresh Writ Petition before the
High Court challenging the Minister’s orders. The High Court
declined to interfere. Aggrieved by the High Court’s order,
appellate preferred the present appeal by special leave.
It was contended on behalf of the appellants that the
scheme of financing the project was not, as a matter of
policy, open and permissible to a Governmental authority;
that the Municipal authority could have put up the construc-
tion itself departmentally or awarded the execution of the
whole project to a building contractor; that the method of
financing and the execution of the project are, beyond the
powers of the Municipal authority under the Act; that the
terms of the agreement with the developer that the latter be
at liberty to dispose of the occupancy rights in the commer-
cial complex in such manner and on such terms as it may
choose would amount to an impermissible delegation of the
statutory functions of the Municipal Council, under Section
272 of the Maharashtra Municipalities Act; that the project,
in effect amounted to disposal of Municipal property by way
of a long term lease with rights of sub-letting in favour of
the developer and hence violative of Section 92 of the Act;
and that the scheme was arbitrary, unreasonable and viola-
tive of Article 14 of the Constitution. It was further con-
23
tended that the project was patently intended to provide for
an unjust enrichment of Respondent No. 6 at public expense.
On behalf of the Respondent it was contended that the
increasing revenue expenditure and other financial commit-
ments rendered it impossible for the Municipal Council to
set apart the financial inputs required for the project;
that in the management of the transaction regarding disposal
of occupancy rights and prompt mobilisation of funds, the
deficiencies and limitations of the bureaucratic machinery
should not be ignored in assessing the value and utility of
the alternatives; that all the said Resolutions in regard to
the Project were passed unanimously which lend credance to
the propriety and wisdom of the measure and its reasonable-
ness; that the estimates and calculations on which the
scheme was worked out by the Respondent Council would show
that the developer had no opportunity of making any run-away
profits or exploitative gains.
Dismissing the appeal, this Court,
HELD: 1. A project, otherwise legal, does not become any
the less permissible by reason alone that the local authori-
ty, instead of executing the project itself, had entered
into an agreement with a developer for its financing and
execution. The question is not whether it is un-conventional
by the standard of the extant practices, but whether there
was something in the law rendering it impermissible. No
doubt there is a degree of public accountability in all
governmental enterprises. But, the present question is one
of the extent and scope of judicial review over such mat-
ters. With the expansion of the State’s presence in. the
field of trade and commerce and of the range of economic and
commercial enterprises of government and its instrumentali-
ties there is an increasing dimension to governmental con-
cern for stimulating efficiency, keeping costs down, im-
proved management methods, prevention of time and cost
over-runs in projects, balancing of costs against time-
scales, quality-control, cost-benefit ratios. etc. In search
of these values it might become necessary to adopt appropri-
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ate techniques of management of projects with concommitant
economic expediencies. There are essentially matters of
economic policy with lack adjudicative disposition, unless
they violate constitutional or legal limits on power or have
demonstrable pejorative environmental implications, or if
they amount to clear abuse of power. This again is the
judicial recognition of administrator’s right to trial and
error, as long as both trial and error are bona fide and
within the limits of authority. [35C-G]
24
Forward Construction Co. & Ors. v. Prabhat Mandal,
[1986] 1 SCC 100; relied on.
Ramana Dayanand Shetty v. International Airport Authori-
ty, [1979] 3 SCR 1014; Kasturilal Laxmi Reddy v. State of J
JUDGMENT:
New State Ice Company v. Ernest A. Liebmann, 285 US 262
Dissenting opinion of Brandeis J; Education Secretary v.
Tameside B.C., [1977] AC 1014; referred to,
"The Purpose and Scope of Judicial Review" by Sir Garard
Brennan is "Judicial Review of Administrative Action in the
1980s", Oxford University Press; referred to.
2. In the ever increasing tempo of urban life and the
emerging stresses and strains of planning, wide range of
policy options not inconsistent with the objectives of the
statute should be held permissible. In the context of ex-
panding exigencies of urban planning it will be difficult
for the court to say that a particular policy option was
better than another. The project is not ultra vires of the
powers of the Municipal Council, and hence there is no
justification for quashing the Resolution of the Municipal
Council. [36G]
Policy making Paradigms in Administrative Law" by Colin
S. Diver in Harward Law Review, vol. 95 p. 393; referred to.
3. In the instant case, it is possible to fit the power
exercised by the Municipal authority into Section 272(1) of
the Maharashtra Municipalities Act and hence there is no
reason why the provision be interpreted unduly restrictively
to exclude such enterprise. [40E]
4. It has not been established that the essential ele-
ments of the transaction are such that Section 92 of the Act
is violated. It would, indeed be unduly restrictive of the
statutory powers of the local authority if a provision
enabling the establishment of markets and disposal of occu-
pancy-rights therein are hedged in by restrictions not found
in the statute. The developer who was authorised to induct
occupiers in respect of the area earmarked for him merely
exercised, with the consent of the Municipal Council a power
to substitute an Occupier in his own place. This is not
impermissible when it is with the express consent of the
Municipal Council. [40H; 41A-B]
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5.1 Some phrases which pass from one branch of law to
another--as did the expression ’void’ and ’voidable’ from
private law areas to public law situations-carry over with
them meanings that may be inapposite in the changed context.
Some such thing has happened to the words "Reasonable",
"Reasonableness" etc. Different contexts in which the opera-
tion of "Reasonableness" as test of validity must be kept
distinguished. The administrative law test of ’reasonable-
ness’ as the touch-stone of validity of the Resolution in
the instant case is different from the test of the ’reasona-
ble man’ familiar to the law of torts, whom English Law
figuratively identifies as the "man on the clapham omnibus".
In the latter case the standards of the ’reasonable-man’, to
the extent such a ’reasonable man’ is court’s creation, is a
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mere transferred epithet. Yet another area of reasonableness
which must be distinguished is the constitutional standards
of ’reasonableness’ of the restrictions on the fundamental
rights of which the Court of Judicial Review is the arbiter.
[42F-G; 43A-B]
5.2. The ’reasonableness’ in administrative law must
distinguish between proper and improper use of power. [44D]
Davis Contractors v. Fareham U.D.C., [1956] 2 AH ER 145;
Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd. v. Fednesbury
Corporations, [1948] 1 KB 223; Nottinghamshire County Coun-
cil v. Secretary of State for Environment, [1986] AC 240;
Tiller v. Atlantic Coast Line Rail Road Company, 318 US 54;
Chief Constable v. Evans, [1982] 3 All ER 141; referred to.
Administrative Law, by H.W.R. Wade, 6th Edn., pp. 407,
408; Legal Control of Government, by Bernard Sehwartz and
H.W.R. Wade, p. 253; referred to.
6. While it is true that principles of judicial review
apply to the exercise by a government body of its contractu-
al powers, the inherent limitations on the scope of the
inquiry are themselves a part of those principles. In a
matter even as between the parties, there must be shown a
public law element to the contractual decision before judi-
cial review is invoked. In the present case the material
placed before the Court fails far short of what the law
requires to justify interference. [46F]
7. There is no merit in the contention that the Project
Scheme was tailored to suit Respondent No. 6 alone or that
the project as put to tender did not admit of tenders on
fixed comparable parameters. No
26
other tenderer expressed any grievance. The tenders were
such that the tenderer could identify the terms which form
the basis of comparative evaluation. The charge of arbi-
trariness cannot be upheld. [46G-H; 47A]
8. To condemn the Municipal authority’s decision, other-
wise valid, on the ground alone that the developer is likely
to resort to transactions of unaccounted money would, as a
judicial remedy, be plainly unthinkable. [47E]
&