Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3100 of 2000
PETITIONER:
V. PURUSHOTHAM RAO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/10/2001
BENCH:
G.B. Pattanaik & Ruma Pal
JUDGMENT:
With
Civil Appeal Nos. 3104-3105, 3089, 3090, 3117, 3097, 3102,
3086, 3106, 3085, 3094, 3099, 3103, 3092 & 3101 of 2000.
JUDGMENT
PATTANAIK, J.
In this batch of appeals the judgment of Delhi High
Court, canceling the allotment made by the concerned
minister from out of his so- called discretionary quota on
petroleum dealership as well as LPG dealership is under
challenge. Prior to 1995, the Minister of Petroleum in
exercise of his discretion had been allotting retail outlets for
petroleum products, LPG dealership and SKO dealership,
without having any prescribed norms. A Public Interest
Litigation had been filed in this Court by Centre for Public
Interest Litigation under Article 32 of the Constitution,
praying that guidelines to regulate the exercise of discretion
in the matter of such allotment, which results in exercise of
the discretion arbitrarily be fixed. It may be stated that
initially a prayer had also been made in that application to
cancel the dealership in favour of respondent No. 4, but
that prayer stood deleted and an amended petition was filed
as the said respondent did not accept the dealership in
question. This Court after hearing the counsel for the
petitioner, and the learned Attorney General, issued a set of
guidelines for discretionary allotment of petroleum products
agencies to ensure that the exercise of discretion in making
such allotments are in conformity with the rule of law and by
excluding the likelihood of arbitrariness and minimising the
area of discretion. The said decision of this Court has since
been reported in the case of Centre for Public Interest
Litigation vs. Union of India and Ors., 1995 Supp.(3)
S.C.C. 382. In para (4) of the aforesaid Judgment, the
Court had directed as under:
We hereby direct that the above-quoted
norms/guidelines etc. shall be followed by the
Central Government in making all such
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discretionary allotments of retail outlets for
petroleum products, LPG Dealership and SKO
Dealership, hereafter.
The Common Cause had filed a petition under Article 32 on
the basis of a news item which appeared in a national
newspaper that the Minister of Petroleum was personally
interested in making allotment of petrol pumps in favour of
15 persons, who were either the relations of his personal
staff or sons of the Ministers, or sons/relations of the
Chairman and Members of the Oil Selection Boards, praying
for cancellation of allotments made inter alia on the ground
that the allotments had been made by the concerned minister,
mala fide and the decision is arbitrary and motivated by
extraneous considerations. The Court ultimately cancelled
the allotments made in favour of the 15 persons mentioned in
the petition, on a conclusion that the allotments are arbitrary,
discriminatory, mala fide and wholly illegal. The Court also
issued certain other directions in relation to the allottees and
called upon the concerned minister to show cause as to why a
direction be not issued to the appropriate police authority to
register a case and initiate prosecution against him for
criminal breach of trust or any other offence under law and in
addition, why he should not be liable to pay damages for his
mala fide action in allotting petrol pumps to 15 persons
mentioned therein. This judgment of the Court is reported in
1996(6) SCC 530. While the Common Cause case was
pending in this Court, Civil Writ Petition Nos. 4003 and 4430
of 1995 had been filed in Delhi High Court by the Centre for
Public Interest Litigation, as public interest litigation, which
were pending in Delhi High Court. In those two petitions,
allotment of petrol pumps/gas agencies to various persons
during the period 1992-93, 1993-94, 1994-95 and 1995-96
had been challenged. A Transfer Petition had been filed in
this Court, which was registered as Transfer Petition No.
127/96 and this Court had issued notice in the transfer
petition and stayed further proceedings before the High
Court. In an affidavit filed by the Ministry of Petroleum in
the aforesaid transfer petition, the then Joint Secretary had
stated that in 1995-96 under the discretionary power of the
Government, allotment had been made to 99 persons and
further orders had already been made in favour of 61 more
persons, allotting petrol pumps/gas agencies. One Mr.
Srinivasan, Advocate had filed an affidavit giving a long list
of persons who are related to the then Prime
Minister/Ministers and other V.I.Ps and who had been
allotted petrol pumps and gas agencies. On behalf of
petroleum ministry, an affidavit had been filed, stating that
due inquiry had been made through the oil companies and
after due inquiry, the concerned minister had made the
allotment. This Court ultimately held that since the two writ
petitions are pending before the High Court, wherein the
allotment made to all these persons have been challenged, it
would not be necessary for this Court to get the writ
petitions transferred and decide the matter. The Court,
therefore, vacated the stay order granted and directed the
Registry of the Court to send all affidavits filed by the parties
in the transfer petition along with the annexures to the High
Court. The Court observed:
We have no doubt that the High Court shall
examine the issues involved in the writ petitions
and shall also go into the validity of the allotment
of petrol pumps/gas agencies to various persons,
after hearing them, in accordance with law. We
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request the High Court to expedite the hearing of
the petitions.
Pursuant to the directions contained in the judgment of this
Court in Common Cause vs. Union of India, 1996(6) SCC
530, show cause notice having been issued to the then
Minister Captain Satish Sharma, said Shri Sharma had filed
an affidavit in reply to the show cause notice. The Court
ultimately perused the show cause notice filed and after
hearing the counsel appearing for the Minster, directed the
CBI to hold an investigation, after registering a case against
the concerned minister in respect of the allegations dealt with
and findings made by the Court earlier in the Common Cause
case. On the question of liability of the minister to pay
exemplary or compensatory damages, the Court considered
the matter and came to the conclusion that Captain Satish
Sharma, the then minister would be liable to pay exemplary
damages and quantified the same at Rs. 50 lacs. This
Judgment of the Court has been reported in 1996(6) S.C.C.
593.
Pursuant to the directions of this Court in Common
Cause case, 1996(6) S.C.C. 530, the Delhi High Court took
up the writ petitions which had been filed as Public Interest
Litigation by the Centre for Public Interest Litigation. On
examination of the relevant files dealing with the allotment
of retail outlets of petrol, LPG distributorship and SKO/LDO
dealership under the discretionary quota made by the
minister concerned, it was revealed that between January
1993 till 1996, 179 retail outlets (petrol pumps), 155 LPG
distributorships and 45 SKO/DLO dealerships had been
allotted by the concerned minister under the discretionary
quota. In its order dated 29th of August, 1997, the Division
Bench of Delhi High Court came to the conclusion that the
examination of files clearly shows that these are not the cases
of aberrations here or there but are cases which show a
pattern of favouritism. From the judgment of Delhi High
Court in C.W. 4003/95 dated 29.8.1997, it transpires that
even before the Supreme Court stayed the proceedings by
order dated 6th December, 1995 , the High Court had called
upon the respondents by order dated 2nd November, 1995 to
produce the list of allotments made under the discretionary
quota of the petroleum minister for allotment of petrol retail
outlets, LPG distributorship and Kerosene distributorship
from the date of the tenure of the minister which was 18th of
January, 1993. Before the Delhi High Court, it had been
contended by the allottees as well as by the Government that
the judgment dated 31st March, 1995 of the Supreme Court
laying down the guidelines, since reported in 1995 Supp.(3)
S.C.C. 382 would indicate that the Supreme Court had
implidely regularised the allotments made prior to 31st
March, 1995 and consequently the validity of the said
allotments need not be gone into. The High Court however
was not persuaded to agree with the submissions and in our
view rightly, particularly, when in the Common Cause case
[1996(6) SCC 530] this Court has positively directed the
High Court to examine the issues involved and dispose of the
two pending writ petitions in accordance with law. Since the
allottees were required to be noticed before any decision is
taken, the High Court by its order dated 11th December,
1996, constituted a Committee of three advocates and
directed them to examine all the files and submit a report in a
Proforma which had been prepared by the Court itself, after
discussion with the counsel appearing for the parties. The
said Committee submitted its report, on the basis of which
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the Court issued notices to various persons by its order dated
27th of February, 1997 and 20th of March, 1997 and the Court
was to deal with the cases of about 400 allottees. Pursuant to
the notices issued, the allottees filed their respective show
causes and then the Court heard the respective counsel for
the allottees as well as examined the report of the Committee
and scrutinized the same by perusing the original file and
finally disposed of the cases of about 100 allottees by its
judgment dated 29th of August, 1997. The Court on
examination of the materials before it and on perusal of the
original files, appears to have taken the view in several cases
that the discretion had been exercised on sufficient materials
and after inquiry and held those allotments to have been
proper exercise of the discretion and accordingly discharged
the notices of cancellation. But in those cases, where the
Court found either there were no materials before the
concerned minister in support of the applications filed to
justify the exercise of power for allotment under the
discretionary quota or such allotments had been made on
account of political patronage or some other extraneous
considerations, the Court cancelled the allotment made with
certain directions therein. It would be appropriate at this
stage to notice the observations of the High Court:
It is unfortunate that perusal of the files show that
a large number of persons to whom allotments
were made under the discretionary quota belong to
an affluent class of society and not to the class
which may deserve compassion, resulting in
exercise of discretion in their favour. Whether this
large number of persons got allotment on account
of their affluence or on account of their close
proximity with the powers that be, it may be
difficult to say definitely, one way or the other but
that makes no difference since both affluence
and/or proximity, are irrelevant and extraneous
considerations for exercise of discretion.
The Court also came to the further conclusion that there had
been no verification of the statements made in the
applications by the allottees and hardly any application
contains details of annual income or bio-data and hardly any
person had filed any affidavit in support of his claim, seeking
grant of discretionary allotment and in several cases the
applications even did not bear any data and a number of
allottees belonged to one Parliamentary Constituency and
were active members and supporters of the party in power at
the relevant time. The Court having cancelled the allotments
made in favour of the appellants, who are before us, the
present appeals have been filed by grant of special leave.
After the disposal of first batch of cases by the High Court by
its judgment dated 29.8.1997, the High Court issued notices
to some other allottees and disposed of the second batch of
cases by its order dated 11.10.99 and both these orders of
Delhi High Court are under challenge, so far as it relates to
the cancellation of allotments made under the discretionary
quota.
Captain Satish Sharma, who was the concerned
minister and against whom the Court had directed
registration of a criminal case by the C.B.I., and also levied
penalty of Rs. 50 lacs, filed a review petition against the
aforesaid two directions of the Court, which was entertained
and that review petition was allowed by a three Judge Bench
of this Court, since reported in 1999(6) S.C.C. 667. In the
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aforesaid case, this Court came to the conclusion that the
factors relevant to the award of exemplary damages had not
been taken by this Court and consequently the levy of
penalty of Rs.50 lacs was not in accordance with law. The
Court also held that no case could be said to have been made
out against the concerned minister for directing registering a
case under Section 409 and such a direction could not have
been given under Article 32 or under Article 142 and further,
such a direction would be contrary to the concept of right to
life under Article 21. The Court, therefore, set aside the two
directions earlier made in relation to registering a criminal
case and levy of penalty against the minister. Certain
observations had been made in the aforesaid three Judge
Bench Judgment, which form the sheet anchor of one of the
contentions of the appellants in the present batch of appeals
and we will refer to those observations and deal with the
same at appropriate stage. The aforesaid judgment of the
Court has since been reported in 1999(6) SCC 667.
Between 1997 and 1999, against the order of cancellation of
allotments made under discretionary quota, about 79 special
leave petitions had been filed in this Court, which had been
dismissed or dismissed as withdrawn. Notwithstanding the
dismissal of the aforesaid special leave petitions, after the
three Judge Bench Judgment of this Court dated 3rd August,
1999 since reported in 1999 (6) S.C.C. 667, special leave
petitions having been filed, this batch of cases were listed
before the Bench presided over by the very learned Judge,
who was presiding over the Bench which reviewed the earlier
judgment and absolved the concerned minister from the
direction of levy of penalty as well as from the criminal
prosecution. The Bench, therefore, having granted leave, the
present appeals were placed for hearing. At this stage, it
would be appropriate for us to notice that the review petitions
filed by Captain Satish Sharma, the concerned Minister was
in relation to the order dated 4.11.96 in the case of Common
Cause vs. Union of India, 1996(6) S.C.C. 593 and was not
in relation to the judgment dated 25.9.96 in the case of
Common Cause vs. Union of India reported in 1996(6)
S.C.C. 530. The three Judge Bench however committed an
error in paragraph (7) by noticing that the review petition
relates to both the judgments viz. the Judgment dated 25.9.96
and 4.11.1996. Mr. P.P. Rao, the learned counsel,
appearing in four of these appeals viz. Civil Appeal Nos.
3085, 3094, 3099 and 3092, seriously contended that the
judgment of this Court in the Centre for Public Interest
Litigation vs. Union of India, 1995 Supp.(3) S.C.C. 382
in no uncertain terms, stipulates that the norms and
guidelines should be followed by the Central Government in
making discretionary allotment of retail outlets of petroleum
products, LPG distributorship and SKO dealership,
subsequent to the said judgment which necessarily and
impliedly indicates that the Court has approved the earlier
lapses in the matter of such allotment under discretionary
quota and, therefore, it was not open to the High Court to re-
examine all the cases and decide the legality of the allotments
made under the discretionary quota. He further contended
that in view of the observations of this Court in the three
Judge Bench Judgment [1999(6) S.C.C. 667], in paragraph
115 of the said judgment, the plea of constructive res-
judicata should have been applied by the High Court and the
High Court committed error in rejecting the said contention.
According to Mr. Rao, on a plain reading of the judgment of
this Court in Centre for Public Interest Litigation case [1995
Supp.(3) S.C.C. 382], the conclusion is irresistible that the
Court in that case had given its stamp of judicial approval to
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the discretionary allotments had already been made by that
date and it is for that reason, the Court had indicated that the
guidelines therein would be followed hereafter. That being
the position, not only that the principle of constructive res-
judicata would apply, but also it was not open for the High
Court to re-open and examine the legality of the discretionary
allotments made prior to 1995. According to Mr. Rao, during
the period when the allotments had been made in favour of
his clients, which is prior to the guidelines indicated by this
Court in the Centre for Public Interest Litigation case, under
the pre-existing practice and norms, the concerned minister
having exercised the discretion, the High Court committed
serious error in interfering with those discretionary orders of
allotment. Mr. Rao further urged that the impugned judgment
would indicate that there has been no due consideration of
the show-cause filed by the allottees and the materials
referred to in the show-cause have not been considered by the
High Court and, therefore, it would be a fit case where matter
should be remitted back to the High Court for re-
consideration. According to Mr. Rao , the discretion having
been exercised in favour of his clients, who happened to be
political sufferers and a political sufferer having been
recognised as a class/category by themselves in the case of
D.N. Chanchala vs. State of Mysore and Ors. etc., 1971
Supp.S.C.R. 608 at 629, the High Court committed serious
error of law in interfering with the allotments made in favour
of his clients and as such the impugned orders cannot be
sustained. Mr. Rao also urged that allotments having been
made in individual cases of extreme hardship by the minister
concerned and that being one of the norms which this Court
formulated in its guidelines in the case of Centre for Public
Interest Litigation and the appellants having invested huge
money and this being the only source of livelihood since
1993, the same ought not to have been cancelled, particularly
when no public interest will be served by such cancellation.
Mr. P.S. Narasimha, the learned counsel, appearing for
the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 3100/2000, while
supporting the arguments of Mr. Rao, further urged that all
the necessary information was available with the High Court
but the Court never considered those materials nor did the
Court inquire into the correctness of those materials, as it
would be apparent from the affidavit of the appellant, filed
pursuant to the notice of show-cause and also the impugned
order of the High Court dealing with the appellants case.
This being the position, Mr. Narsimhan urged that the order
of cancellation should be set aside and the matter should be
remitted back to the High Court for re-consideration.
Appearing for the appellants in Civil Appeal Nos.
3104-3105 of 2000, Mr. Narsimha, the learned counsel
urged that in these two cases, the concerned authority having
exercised the discretion in favour of a young educated
unemployed youth belonging to a back-ward community
and his family being under financial constraint, the
conclusion of the High Court that it was a case of arbitrary
allotment, is unsustainable in law.
Mr. V.A. Mohta, the learned senior counsel appearing
for the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 3089/2000, urged that
the allotment in favour of his client had been made under
discretionary quota as the family of the applicant had been
put to severe financial hardship on account of natural
calamity on one hand and the Naxailite activities on the other
hand. According to the learned counsel, this must be held to
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be a germane consideration which weighed with the
concerned authority for exercise of his discretionary power
and, therefore, the High Court ought not to have cancelled
the allotment made in favour of the appellant.
Mr. Dushyant A. Dave, the learned senior counsel
appearing for the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 3090 of 2000
urged that the only ground on which the High Court has set
aside the allotment made in favour of the appellant is that
there had been no verification whatsoever regarding other
members of his family and their sources of income before
exercising discretion, and therefore, since the minister
approved the allotment without any verification, the
allotment is liable to be cancelled. According to Mr. Dave,
the fact that the order of allotment itself indicated that the
I.O.C.Ltd. would conduct requisite verification before
issuance of Letter of Intent, it cannot be said that the order in
question was without any inquiry. Mr. Dave urged that it is
nobodys case that the I.O.C., on an inquiry came to the
conclusion that the grant of distributorship in favour of the
appellant on compassionate grounds was unjustified. That
apart, the appellant himself had filed an affidavit before the
High Court, indicating his family conditions and the fact that
he had no resources and he had gathered the resources from
friends, but the High Court unfortunately over-looked these
materials and directed cancellation of the allotment made in
favour of the appellant. The learned counsel also urged that
the order of the High Court would indicate that in case of
several other noticees, the High Court discharged the notice
of cancellation without ascribing any reason and therefore,
there was no reason why the High Court should have
cancelled the allotment made in favour of the appellant. The
learned counsel further urged that even if the High Court
found that there had been no verification, then it would have
been appropriate for the High Court to direct for a fresh
verification, rather than canceling the distributorship and the
approach of the High Court is wholly uncalled for.
According to the learned counsel, the appellants case being
covered under the existing discretionary scheme, as was
prevalent, and further even under the guidelines issued by
this Court in the judgment reported in 1995 Supp.(3) S.C.C.
382, individual cases of extreme hardship which in the
opinion of the Government are extremely compassionate and
deserve sympathetic consideration being one of the criteria,
there was absolutely no rhyme or reason on the part of the
High Court to set aside the discretionary allotment made in
favour of the appellant. He also reiterated the arguments
advanced on behalf of Mr. Rao that the judgment of this
Court in 1995 Supp.(3) S.C.C. 382 must be so construed,
that allotments made under the discretionary quota prior to
the date of the said judgment were not intended to be
interfered with and as such, the High Court had no
jurisdiction to examine the allotment made in favour of the
appellant, which was in the year 1993.
Mr. Sushil Kumar Jain, the learned counsel, appearing
for the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 3117 of 2000,
contended in addition to what had been urged by Mr. P.P.
Rao that the impugned judgment of the High Court is earlier
to the three Judge Bench Judgment of this Court in 1999(6)
S.C.C. 667 and the observations made in the three Judge
Bench Judgment more particularly, in paragraph 115 thereof,
unequivocally supports the contention of the appellant that
the Court approved all allotments made prior to the Judgment
in 1995 Supp.(3) S.C.C. 382 and therefore, the matter
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should be remitted back to the High Court for re-
consideration in the light of the aforesaid three Judge Bench
decision of this Court. Mr. Jain also appearing for the
appellant in Civil Appeal No. 3114 of 2000 reiterated his
submissions made in the earlier case and contended that there
has been gross injustice by the High Court in canceling the
allotment made and the equitable considerations require that
this Court should interfere with the order of cancellation and
in the alternative, the matter should be remitted back to the
High Court for reconsideration after due inquiry.
In the written submission given by Mr. Bhachawat,
learned senior counsel, in this case it was urged that prior to
31st March, 1995 there being no fixed guidelines for
allotment under discretionary quota, the High Court was not
justified in canceling the allotment which are not tainted by
any favoritism or nepotism merely because there is no proof
to support the allotment on compassionate ground, or that the
application is undated, or there is no receipt entry on the
application or even that there is no bio-data of the applicant.
According to Mr. Bhachawat even judicial notice can be
taken of the fact that Ministers hold open Darbar in which
they meet people, hear their grievances and also solve their
problems on the spot, therefore, the possibility of
applications for allotment from discretionary quota having
been received during such Darbars cannot be denied. Mr.
Bhachawat also urged in his written submission that the
concerned Minister, who is the author of the alleged wrong
allotment having been given a clean chit by the three Judge
Bench of this Court, since reported in 1999 (6) SCC 667
and the main culprit thus being exonerated, it would not be
fair deal to punish the allottees, particularly when they have
made investments and are earning their livelihood by
operating the allotments made in their favour. He also
reiterated on the question of applicability of the principle res
judicata by stating that if the parties were the same and the
relief sought for is identical then Explanation 6 to Section 11
should apply.
Mr. M.C. Bhandari, the learned senior counsel,
appearing for the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 3101 of
2000, seriously contended that the appellant does not belong
to any of the three categories of persons mentioned in the
judgment of this Court in 1996(6) S.C.C. 530 inasmuch as
the High Court never found that the allotment in favour of
the appellant had been made as he happened to be relation of
any personal staff of the minister or that the allotment had
been made on extraneous considerations nor the appellant
can be said to be belonging to the category of sons of
ministers or related to any member of the Oil Selection
Board. That being so and no mala fide, favouritism or
nepotism having been established, the allotment could not
have been nullified by the High Court. According to Mr.
Bhandari, the father of the appellant, Karibasavaraj, being a
well known talented stage artist in the State of Karnataka,
who through his performance, had been able to convey the
messages of freedom fighters and religious tolerance, having
faced with acute financial stringency and said Karibasavaraj
having died, the responsibility to maintain a large family fell
on the appellant, who though a graduate, had no job or
employment. It is on this consideration, the then Chief
Minister of Karnataka and the then Vice President of India
had recommended the case of the appellant for being
favourably considered for getting allotment under
discretionary quota and ultimately the Minister, Petroleum
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had made the grant in favour of the appellant. The said
allotment is neither arbitrary nor motivated nor vitiated by
mala fides and as such the High Court was wholly in error in
canceling the allotment without proper examination of the
aforesaid materials. According to Mr. Bhandari, the finding
of the High Court that the minister has exercised his
discretion without any verification, is on the face of it
erroneous inasmuch as the order of allotment itself specified
that the Letter of Intent could be issued only after requisite
verification. In fact such verification can be effectively done
only by the Oil Company at site and not by the Minister,
sitting in Delhi and to hold that the minister must verify the
contents of the application, would be unreasonable and
impracticable. Mr. Bhandari further urged that the so-called
questionnaire which was formulated was behind the back of
the appellant and the records indicating that the appellant is
related/connected to Mr. Veerapa Moily, the then Chief
Minister of Karnataka is untrue. Mere recommendation by
the Chief Minister would not constitute any relationship and
the conclusion therefore, is without any materials.
According to the learned counsel, the procedure adopted by
the High Court, so far as the appellant is concerned,
tantamounts to denial of a fair hearing and justice to the
appellant inasmuch as even before serving the notice on the
appellant on 15.4.1999, the High Court itself heard the first
batch of cases and delivered its judgment on 29.8.97,
answering all the questions of law, including the question of
constructive res judicata. Mr. Bhandari urged that in a public
interest litigation like the one, the High Court was duty
bound to issue notice under Order 1 Rule 8 CPC so that
persons likely to be affected, could have appeared before the
High Court and made their submissions before the High
Court prior to its first order on 29.8.1997. Since the Court
itself has come to a definite conclusion on several issues
arising in the matter by its order dated 29.8.97, the issuance
of notice to the appellant was a mere formality to comply
with the principles of natural justice and the ultimate disposal
of the appellants case by the High Court must be held to be
a disposal by the learned Judges who had already made up
their mind and this resulted in patent injustice. In support of
this contention, the learned counsel placed reliance on the
decision of this Court in 1989(3) S.C.C. Page 202 at 208-
210 (para 13). Mr. Bhandari also urged that even in the case
of a public interest litigation, the basic principle of law to
avoid multiplicity of proceedings should be implemented.
Necessarily, therefore, when the Centre for Public Interest
Litigation filed a petition in this Court, which was disposed
of by the Judgment since reported in 1995 Supp.(3) SCC
382 and that application also related to the allotment of retail
dealership in petroleum, under discretionary quota and did
not assail the allotments already made, then a second
petition before the Delhi High Court was not entertainable.
He also reiterated the argument that explanation 4 to Section
11 CPC should apply to the case in hand and in support of
the same he placed reliance on the judgment of this Court
reported in AIR 1986 SC 391 at Page 397, para 20. The
learned counsel with emphasis urged that it is no doubt true
that discretion in public matters should be least but it cannot
be totally denuded of, nor can any Court strike down the
power exercised by an authority having discretion even in
deserving cases. The exercise of discretion by an authority
depends upon the independence and integrity of the
individual exercising such discretion. Adjudged from any
stand point, the allotment made in favour of the appellant in
his case would not be a case of allotment on the ground of
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favouritism, nepotism and/or abuse of power and, therefore,
the High Court committed serious error in canceling the
allotment made. According to Mr. Bhandari, compassion or
a case of extreme hardship has all along been recognised as a
germane factor for exercise of a discretion. Even this has
been recognised in the guidelines issued by this Court in
1995 Supp (3) S.C.C. 382. The allotment made in favour
of the appellant being covered by the guidelines (6) and (7)
of the Judgment of this Court in 1995 Supp.(3) S.C.C. 382,
it must be held that the discretion has been exercised in a
fair, reasonable and legal manner and, therefore, the same
ought not to have been interfered with by the High Court.
Mr. Bhandari lastly urged that such a discretionary allotment
having existed for a long time, as has been noticed by the
three Judge Bench decision of this Court in 1999(6) S.C.C.
667 and the appellant having been allowed to run the agency
for about eight years and having invested about Rs. 30 lacs
and the entire family being dependent on the income derived
from the agency, this Court should set aside the order of
cancellation made by the Delhi High Court and follow the
judgment of this Court dated 28th of September, 2001 in
Civil Appeal No. 6840/2001 and batch, relating to allotment
of land from the discretionary quota in the State of Haryana.
Mr. Jaideep Gupta, the learned counsel, appearing for
the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 3103 of 2000 contended
that in his case, an eminent Member of Parliament, highly
respected in the political sphere Smt. Gita Mukherjee, since
deceased, had herself filed an affidavit before the Delhi
High Court, explaining the circumstances that led her to
recommend the case of the appellant and the High Court
even did not bother to notice the said affidavit filed by Late
Smt. Gita Mukherjee and came to the conclusion that the
Minister before exercising the discretion, did not himself
verify about the source of income of the applicant and his
family members. According to Mr. Gupta, if a Member of
Parliament recommends the case of a citizen belonging to
his/her constituency and if the Minister acts upon such
recommendations, it cannot be said that the Minister did not
verify himself before exercising his discretion. Mr. Gupta
also urged that even before entering into the dealership
agreement, the appellant had been extensively interviewed
by the Chief Regional Manager and the Legal Officer of the
company regarding his income and on being fully satisfied
with the same and the aforesaid state of affairs having been
made by the appellant on oath, which was not denied by
anyone concerned, on the un-controverted statement of the
appellant, the High Court was not justified in canceling the
allotment made on the ground as already stated. Mr. Gupta
further urged that the agreement entered into between the
appellant and the Oil Company itself contains power to
terminate the dealership if it is found that the applicant had
made any incorrect statement at the time of allotment of
dealership. That being the position, it would be always open
for the Oil company to annul the dealership if it is found that
the appellant had furnished any incorrect information. In the
premises, it would be more appropriate to direct the oil
company to investigate into the matter, rather than to cancel
the allotment made. According to Mr. Gupta, the principles
to be followed in a case of cancellation of a grant should be
different from the principles for determining the legality of a
grant and, therefore, the High Court was wholly unjustified
in canceling the allotment made on the sole ground that the
concerned minister had not made any inquiry before
exercising his discretion. The learned counsel also urged
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that the appellant has invested a huge amount of money and
cancellation of the dealership at this point would cause
untold hardship. To deprive of the appellant and his family
of earning his livelihood at this length of time would not be
in the interest of justice and, therefore, this Court should set
aside the order of cancellation passed by the Delhi High
Court.
Mr. Subba Rao, the learned counsel appearing for the
appellant in Civil Appeal No. 3097 of 2000 urged that the
appellant, a widow was a destitute, having no source of
income and the allotment made in her favour cannot but be
held to be an allotment on germane consideration and,
therefore, the High Court was wholly in error in canceling
the allotment solely on the ground that the minister accepted
the statement made in the application as a gospel truth.
According to Mr. Subba Rao, it is nobodys contention nor
has the High Court found as a fact that the statements made
in the application for allotment are untrue and in such a case
the discretion exercised ought not to have been interfered
with on an hypothesis that the Minister committed an error
in accepting the statement made in the application for
allotment. In this case the source of livelihood from out of
the agency is a source for the entire family. According to
Mr. Rao, this source ought not to be closed down, which
would make the entire family destitute. Mr. Subba Rao in
support of his contention placed reliance on a judgment of
this Court in the case of Ram and Shyam Company vs.
State of Haryana and Ors. 1985 Supp.(1) S.C.R.541,
whereunder this court noticed that there exists a clear
distinction between the use and disposal of private property
and social property. While the Court observed in the
aforesaid case that disposal of public property partakes the
character of a trust in that in its disposal their should be
nothing dubious, but this is subject to one important
limitation namely that the socialist property may be disposed
at a price lower than the market price or even for a token
price to achieve some defined constitutionally recognised
public purpose, one such being to achieve that goals set out
in Part IV of the Constitution. In this view of the matter,
according to Mr. Subba Rao the discretion used by the
concerned minister in favour of his client cannot be held to
be illegal or invalid.
Mr. P. N. Misra, the learned senior counsel appearing
for the appellant in Civil Appeal Nos. 3102/2000 and
3086/2000, strenuously urged that in the first appeal, the
applicant had lost her husband in a road accident while she
was of a young age of 32. She had two small school going
children and to establish her in life for the maintenance of the
young children it is her father-in-law who had made the
application to allot her a retail outlet. The concerned
Minister had approved the case of allotment in favour of the
applicant. In the other case, on an application being made,
an inquiry had been made from the ministry to furnish the
bio-data which the applicant had furnished and on being
satisfied with the materials furnished, the allotment had been
made in favour of the applicant. According to Mr. Misra,
these are two genuine cases and a case of pure compassion
and as such the order of allotment ought not to have been
interfered with. Be it be stated that the father-in-law, who
had made the application for getting an allotment in favour
of the applicant was none else than a Member of Parliament.
According to Mr. Misra, the allotment letter clearly having
stipulated that the allotment would be subject to verification
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to be made by the concerned oil company and the company
itself having made the necessary verification, the High Court
was not justified in interfering with the allotment made.
According to Mr. Misra, the applicant was asked to furnish
the bio-data, which the applicant did comply with and
therefore, the conclusion that there were no material before
the minister was incorrect. According to Mr. Misra, it is no
doubt true that the father-in-law of the applicant was an
M.P. since 1991 but the application was made only in 1994,
after the unfortunate death of his son which is indicative of
the fact that the father-in-law never misused his position.
Mr. P. N. Misra also placed before us the counter affidavit
filed on behalf of the Union Government in the Delhi High
Court in some other allied matters and also the noting dated
5.5.93, which indicates as to how the application of the
allottee is sent to the company concerned for verification of
facts therein like income, residence, social status etc., and
contends that the conclusion of the High Court that there had
been no verification is unsustainable.
Mr. O.P. Sharma, the learned senior counsel, appearing
for the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 3106/2000 reiterated
the submissions made by all the counsel appearing before
him and argued at considerable length by placing all the
decisions afresh and urged that the three Judge Bench
Judgment having over-ruled the earlier two Judge Bench
decision, the High Court could not have set aside the
allotment made, relying upon the judgment of this Court in
the two Judge Bench decision. The learned counsel also
urged that the three Judge Bench Judgment has categorically
come to a finding that allotment has been made in
accordance with the prescribed guidelines. That being the
position, the High Court was not competent to over-ride the
aforesaid conclusion of the three Judge Bench Judgment of
this Court and arrive at a conclusion contrary to the same.
Mr. Sharma also urged that the plea of constructive res
judicata should apply to the case in hand inasmuch as the
aforesaid plea is applied as a matter of public policy to avoid
multiplicity of litigation and not to allow re-opening of a
matter already adjudicated upon. In this view of the matter,
the High Court was not entitled to re-examine the matter
after the judgment of this Court in 1995 Supp.(3) SCC 382.
In support of this contention, reliance had been placed on the
decision of this Court in AIR 1997 SC 1680. Mr. Sharma
also relied upon the recent judgment of this Court in Haryana
Land Allotment case and contended that the theory of
prospective over-ruling should apply to prospective
cancellation of the grant made and that would subserve larger
public interest and in this view of the matter this Court
should set aside the order of cancellation made by the High
Court. Relying upon the observations made in the reviewed
judgment of three learned Judges of this Court, Mr. Sharma
contended that this decision approves the fact that allotments
made earlier to the guidelines issued by this Court in 1995
must not be interfered with and the said observation being
binding on this Bench, this Bench should allow this appeal
or refer the matter to a three Judge Bench. Mr. Sharma
urged that right to life engrafted in Article 21 of the
constitution also equally applies to the case in hand and as
such the entire family will be ruined if the dealership is
cancelled. He lastly urged that pursuant to the notice issued
to the appellant, the appellant having filed an affidavit before
the High Court, giving all material particulars, the High
Court could not have set aside the allotment made in favour
of the appellant without even consideration of those
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materials. The disposal made by the High Court on such
non-consideration of such germane materials must be held to
be vitiated and therefore, the matter should be remitted back
to the High Court. So far as the ground on which the High
Court set aside the allotment made viz. the minister had not
verified the particulars, Mr. Sharma urged that the minister is
not required to make any check or verification and can make
the allotment under the discretionary quota, relying upon the
statements made by an applicant, since the so-called grant is
subject to the verification to be made by the oil company. It
is always open for the oil company on verification, not to
grant the dealership notwithstanding the order of the minister
inasmuch as order itself stipulates that the grant should be
subject to the verification by the oil company. According to
Mr. Sharma, the touch-stone for exercise of discretionary
power being that it should not suffer from the virus of
nepotism and favouritism and should be devoid of any
personal interest and should not be for extraneous
considerations and none of these grounds having been found
by the High Court, the order of cancellation on the face of it
is wholly unsustainable.
Mr. Sanjeev K. Kapoor, the learned counsel appearing
for the Centre for Public Interest Litigation repels the
submissions made by the counsel for the appellants.
According to the learned counsel, the contention that the
judgment of this Court in the Centre for Public Interest
Litigation[1995 Supp.(3) S.C.C 382] amounts to a tacit
approval of the Court to the allotments made, any illegal
exercise of discretionary power is nothing but a misreading
of the judgment. He further urged that in public interest
litigation, when there is no adversarial adjudication, the
principles of constructive res judicata ought not to apply, as
was held by this Court in the case of Rural Litigation and
Entitlement Kentra vs. State of U.P. 1989 Supp.(1) S.C.C.
504. At any rate the earlier litigation filed at the behest of
the Centre for Public Interest Litigation was only for laying
down the guidelines for exercise of the discretionary power,
as is apparent from the amended petition, the amended
petition was considered and disposed of and as such there
has been no adjudication by this Court with regard to the
legality or illegality of the allotments made by the concerned
minister from the discretionary quota. The learned counsel
also vehemently submitted that in the Common Cause case,
where subsequent to the judgment in Centre for Public
Interest Litigation case, legality of allotments made in favour
of 15 allottees from the discretionary quota was the subject
matter for adjudication, this Court in no uncertain terms,
cancelled the allotments made and in the very same
judgment, directed the Delhi High Court where the writ
petitions were pending to dispose of the matter in accordance
with law. In fact the High Court proceeded to dispose of the
matter pursuant to the aforesaid judgment/observations of
this Court in the Common Cause case. In this view of the
matter, the contention that the High Court should have
applied the principle of constructive res judicata, is wholly
misconceived. So far as the observations made by the three
Judge Bench Judgment of this Court in the review petition
arising out of Common Cause case judgment, Mr. Kapoor
contends that the review petition merely related to the
subsequent order, wherein this Court directed institution of a
criminal case and levied exemplary damages to the tune of
Rs.50 lacs on the concerned minister Capt. Satish Sharma.
In the aforesaid premise, any observations made by the said
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three Judge Bench in relation to the legality of the allotments
made by the minister from discretionary quota, cannot be
treated to be of any binding precedent. According to Mr.
Kapoor, the High Court was examining the legality of the
exercise of discretion by the concerned minister on the
materials available to find out whether it was in fact an
exercise of discretion on germane materials or the discretion
has been exercised arbitrarily and for extraneous
considerations in which event the order emanated out of such
discretion was required to be nullified. The High Court has
applied its mind to each and individual case of allotment
under the discretionary quota and wherever some materials
were there, the High Court has discharged the notice of
cancellation and it is only when there existed no materials for
the minister concerned for exercise of his discretion and the
minister passed the order of allotment without any inquiry
into the assertions made in the application, the Court has set
aside the same. According to Mr. Kapoor, the notoriety by
which such discretionary allotment by a Minister has
reached, it would be unwise to interfere with well reasoned
order of the High Court, particularly when the High Court
had the opportunity of examining the file from the Ministry,
in relation to each and every case of allotment under the
discretionary quota.
Mr. T.L.V. Iyer, the learned senior counsel, appearing
for the Union of India, submitted that the Union Government
has no role to play and it merely complied with the directions
of the Court.
In view of the rival submissions at the Bar, the
following questions arise for our consideration:
(a) Is the Judgment of this Court in the case of Centre for
Public Interest Litigation [1995 Supp.(3) S.C.C. 382]
susceptible of a construction that the Court indicated
the guidelines for future guidance and had it given its
stamp of judicial approval to the discretionary
allotments already made by the date of the judgment?
(b) Would the principle of constructive res judicata as
provided under Section 11 explanation 4 of the Code of
Civil Procedure or Order 2 Rule 2 CPC apply to a
public interest litigation and if so, in the case in hand,
can it be said that the writ petitions filed by the Centre
for Public Interest Litigation in Delhi High Court from
out of the judgment of which the present appeals have
been preferred, are barred by the aforesaid principles on
the ground that in the petition filed under Article 32 by
the said Centre, no prayer for cancellation of illegal
allotments had been made, though could have been
made? and what is the impact of the observations
made by the three Judge Bench in the review petition
filed by Captain Satish Sharma, which stood disposed
of by the judgment reported in 1999(6) S.C.C. 667?
(c) Does the expression over ruled in the three Judge
Bench Judgment, refer to over-ruling the judgment in
the Common Cause case wholly or does it refer to only
the subsequent order in the Common Cause case,
directing registration of the criminal case and its
investigation and levy of penalty/exemplary damages
against Captain Sharma?
(d) The judgment of the High Court being earlier to the
three Judge Bench judgment of this Court in the review
petition filed by Captain Satish Sharma since reported
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in 1999(6) SCC 530, is there any necessity for
remitting these appeals to the High Court for
reconsideration, in the light of the subsequent three
Judge Bench judgment of this Court?
(e) Are the appellants entitled to any equitable
considerations on the ground that they have spent a
substantial amount and have also operated the petrol
outlets/gas agencies for about eight years? and
(f) Can the impugned judgment of the High Court in any of
these appeals be said to be vitiated on account of non-
consideration of any germane materials?
(g) Whether in a Public Interest Litigation, where large
number of persons are going to be affected, the Court is
bound to issue notice under Order I Rule 8 and does
non-issuance of such notice vitiate the entire
proceedings?
(h) Whether the verification supposed to have been made
by the Oil Company pursuant to the order of allotment
made by the Minister, can be held to be the proper
verification for exercise of discretion by the Minister
himself and in such event whether the order of
cancellation by the High Court is valid?
(i) Whether the principle decided in the judgment of this
Court in Civil Appeal No. 6840 of 2001, in relation to
such discretionary allotment of land in the State of
Haryana, can be made applicable to the case in hand, so
that the judgment would be made applicable
prospectively and consequently, the orders of
cancellation will have to be set aside?
So far as the first question is concerned, the entire
emphasis is on the directions given by the Court in
paragraph (4) of the Judgment, which is quoted hereunder:
We hereby direct that the above-quoted
norms/guidelines etc. shall be followed by the
Central Government in making all such
discretionary allotments of retail outlets for
petroleum products, LPG Dealership and SKO
Dealership, hereafter.
The appellants contention is that while the writ petition was
filed in public interest, the exercise of discretion in allotment
of retail outlets for petroleum products, LPG Dealership and
SKO Dealership had been challenged and a prayer for laying
down the guidelines to regulate the exercise of discretion
had been made, the Court only laid down the guidelines and
further observed that the norms and guidelines would be
followed hereafter and necessarily, therefore, there has been
a tacit approval to the earlier allotments made under the
discretionary quota inasmuch as the Court never cancelled
the allotments made nor had issued any direction in that
respect. This contention in our considered opinion, cannot
be sustained for two reasons. Firstly, the amended petition
which the Centre for Public Interest Litigation has filed,
merely prayed for laying down the guidelines to regulate
exercise of discretion in the matter of such allotments.
Secondly, which is rather more important is that this
judgment was delivered by the Court on 31st of March, 1995.
The Common Cause had filed another petition under Article
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32, alleging arbitrary exercise of discretion in favour of 15
allottees and that petition was entertained by this Court and
disposed of by Judgment dated 25th September, 1996 and the
Court cancelled all such allotments on a finding that the
Minister without keeping in view any guidelines, allotted in
exercise of his discretion in a cluster manner and the public
property have been doled out in wholly arbitrary and
discriminatory manner. If the earlier Judgment is susceptible
of the construction, as contended by the appellants, then it
would not have been possible in the Common Cause case to
examine the legality of such allotments which had been
made in favour of 15 persons. Instead of construing the
judgment in the Centre for Public Interest Litigation to the
effect that it accords a tacit approval of the allotments made
prior to the judgment in the Common Cause case, the Court
relied upon the earlier judgment in 1995 Supp.(1) S.C.C.
382, and ultimately cancelled the orders of allotment, having
found that the allotments were made arbitrarily and for
extraneous considerations. In this view of the matter, it is
difficult for us to sustain the contention of the learned
counsel, appearing for the appellants. We, therefore, hold
that the judgment of this Court in Centre for Public
Interest Litigation, 1995 Supp.(3) S.C.C. 382, cannot be
construed by any stretch of the imagination to be a tacit
approval of the discretionary allotments made prior to that
judgment. We, therefore, do not find any substance in this
submission of the learned counsel for the appellants.
Coming to the second question, Explanation (IV) to
Section 11 of the Civil Procedure Code postulates that any
matter which might and ought to have been made ground of
defence or attack in such former suit shall be deemed to
have been a matter directly and substantially in issue in such
suit. Order II Rule (2) of the Code of Civil Procedure
provides that every suit shall include the whole of the claim
which the plaintiff is entitled to make in respect of the cause
of action and if he omits to sue in respect of, or intentionally
relinquishes, any portion of his claim, then he shall not
afterwards sue in respect of the portion, so omitted or
relinquished. By virtue of explanation to Section 141 of the
Code of Civil Procedure, since proceedings under Article
226 of the Constitution is excluded from the expression
proceedings, therefore, the Civil Procedure Code is not
required to be followed in a proceeding under Article 226
unless the High Court itself has made the provisions of Civil
Procedure Code applicable to a proceeding under Article
226. Then again, the principles of Section 11 as well as
Order II Rule 2, undoubtedly contemplate an adversarial
system of litigation, where the Court adjudicates the rights
of the parties and determines the issues arising in a given
case. The Public Interest Litigation or a petition filed for
public interest cannot be held to be an adversarial system of
adjudication and the petitioner in such case, merely brings it
to the notice of the Court, as to how and in what manner the
public interest is being jeopardised by arbitrary and
capricious action of the authorities. In the case of Rural
Litigation and Entitlement Kendra vs. State of U.P. 1989
Supp.(1) S.C.C. 504, which is commonly known as the
Doon Valley case, such a contention had been raised, as is
apparent from paragraph (14) of the judgment viz. the
decision of the Court dated 12th March, 1985 was final in
certain aspects, including the release of A category mines
outside the city limits of Mussoorie from the proceedings
and in view of such finality it was not open to this Court in
the same proceedings at a later stage to direct differently in
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regard to what had been decided earlier. The Court repelled
the same by holding that the writ petitions are not inter-
parties disputes and have been raised by way of public
interest litigation and the controversy before the Court is as
to whether for social safety and for creating a hazardless
environment for the people to live in, mining in the area
should be permitted or stopped. The Court hastened to add:
We may not be taken to have said that for public
interest litigations, procedural laws do not apply.
At the same time it has to be remembered that
every technicality in the procedural law is not
available as a defence when a matter of grave
public importance is for consideration before the
Court. Even if it is said that there was a final
order, in a dispute of this type it would be difficult
to entertain the plea of res judicata.
Thus even in the self-same proceeding, the earlier order
though final, was treated not to create a bar inasmuch as the
controversy before the Court was of grave public interest.
The learned counsel appearing for the appellants drew our
attention to the decision of this Court in the case of Forward
Construction Co. and Ors. vs. Prabhat Mandal, AIR 1986
SC 391, whereunder the Court did record a conclusion that
Section 11 of the Civil Procedure Code applied to Public
Interest Litigation. In our considered opinion, therefore, the
principle of constructive res judicata cannot be made
applicable in each and every public interest litigation,
irrespective of the nature of litigation itself and its impact on
the society and the larger public interest which is being
served. There cannot be any dispute that in competing rights
between the public interest and individual interest, the public
interest would over-ride. In the Centre for Public Interest
Litigation case, which had been filed in this Court, the prayer
that had been made was to lay down the guidelines for the
discretion being exercised in the matter of allotment of Gas
agencies, petroleum dealership and others. It is no doubt true
that the applicant therein could have made a prayer for
examining the legality of the allotments already made but as
the applicant states in the writ petition filed in Delhi High
Court that he had no knowledge about the persons to whom
such allotments had been made and in fact the Delhi High
Court itself on a petition being filed, called upon the
respondents to submit the list of such allottees, whereafter
notices could be issued to the allottees. That apart, when this
Court entertained another public interest litigation, filed by
the Common Cause in respect of 15 discretionary allotments
made in favour of 15 persons, the Court did entertain the
same and instead of treating the earlier decision to be a bar
and applying the principle of constructive res judicata, the
Court relied upon the same and cancelled the allotments
made in favour of those 15 persons who had been arrayed as
parties to the said petition filed under Article 32. That apart,
the writ petitions in which the judgment of which are the
subject matter of challenge in these appeals, had been filed in
Delhi High Court and which were pending when the
Common Cause case was taken up by this Court. This Court
initially stayed the proceedings and issued notice in the
Transfer Petitions but ultimately, vacated the stay order and
instead of bringing the writ petitions to this Court on transfer,
directed the Registry of the Court to send the petitions along
with the annexures to the High Court and required the High
Court to examine the issues involved in the writ petitions and
go into the validity of the allotments of petrol pumps/Gas
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agencies to various persons. In view of the aforesaid positive
direction in para 31 of the judgment of this Court in Common
Cause case, 1996(6) S.C.C. 530, it is difficult for us to
sustain the plea of bar of constructive res judicata, as urged
by the counsel, appearing for the appellants. In this
connection, the counsel also brought to our notice,
observation made in the review petition judgment in the
Common Cause Case 1999(6) S.C.C. 667 in paragraph 115,
which is quoted herein below in extenso:
It is contended that since the allotments
made by the petitioner till the filing of the writ
petition in this Court, in spite of a challenge
having been raised therein, were not set aside and
only guidelines were settled for future exercise of
discretionary quota, tacit stamp of judicial
approval shall be deemed to have been placed on
the allotments made by the petitioner and
consequently those allotments could not have
been reopened on the principle of constructive res
judicata. Normally, we would have accepted this
argument, but in this case we cannot go to that
extent.
According to the learned counsel, the three Judge Bench
accepted the contention of the applicability of principle of
constructive res judicata and, therefore, this Bench being a
two Judge Bench must be bound by the said observations or
in the alternative, may refer the matter to a larger Bench. We
are not in a position to accept either of these submissions. It
may be stated at the outset that the three Judge Bench was
concerned with the review petition that had been filed in
relation to the order dated 4.11.96 since reported in 1996(6)
S.C.C. 593. The learned Judges committed an error in the
beginning in thinking that the review petition filed by Capt.
Satish Sharma was in relation to both the judgments viz.
1996(6) S.C.C. 530 as well as 1996(6) S.C.C. 593. In the
review petition, the Court was concerned with the correctness
of the directions contained in the order dated 4.11.96 to
institute criminal prosecution against the concerned Minister
and levy of penalty as exemplary damages to the tune of Rs.
50 lacs. It is in that context the Court made the aforesaid
observations not noticing the fact that in 1996(6) S.C.C.530,
the Court had earlier directed the High Court to dispose of
the two writ petitions pending in the High Court and decide
the legality of the order of discretionary allotment made by
the concerned minister. It is indeed interesting to notice that
in paragraph 125 of the judgment of the three Judge Bench,
the Court itself had indicated that the conduct of the
concerned minister in making allotments of petrol outlets was
atrocious and reflects a wanton exercise of power by the
Minister. But what the Court wanted to examine and
ultimately held was that the said action fell short of
misfeasance in public office which is a specific tort and the
ingredients of that tort were not wholly met in the case, so
that there was no occasion to award exemplary damages. It
would be indeed a travesty of justice to accept the submission
of the counsel for the appellants that the three Judge Bench
expressed opinion that the principle of constructive res
judicata would apply to the case in hand, so as to debar the
High Court from entertaining the writ petitions and disposing
them of on merits. As we have already noted, prior to the
three Judge Bench Judgment of this Court , the self-same
order of the Delhi High Court had been assailed in as many
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as 79 cases by approaching this Court by way of special
leave petitions and all those petitions had been dismissed.
The extent to which corruption in the governing
structure has corroded the very core of our democracy, the
notoriety which the discretionary allotment of petroleum
dealership and LPG gas agencies had acquired, the earlier
petition under Article 32 entertained by this Court at the
behest of the Common Cause, the cancellation of 15 of
such allotments and finally, the express direction therein to
the High Court to dispose of the pending writ petitions after
examining the individual cases, it is difficult for us to accept
the bar of principle of constructive res judicata on the ground
that the earlier judgment in the case of Centre for Public
Interest Litigation has accorded any tacit approval or the
subsequent so-called observation made in the three Judge
Bench decision of this Court in the review petition. We,
therefore, unhesitatingly hold that the aforesaid contention is
devoid of any substance.
The third contention was seriously argued by Mr.
Sharma, the learned counsel appearing for the appellant in
Civil Appeal No. 3106 of 2000. The learned counsel very
much emphasised that Common Cause vs. Union of India
1996(6) S.C.C. 530, has been over-ruled and, therefore,
nothing survived for Delhi High Court to examine the
legality of the allotments made under discretionary quota.
This argument appears to have been made on the basis of the
Head Note at page 671 of the reported judgment with
reference to paragraph 123 of the judgment. But when we
examine paragraph 123 of the judgment, we do not find
anywhere that the three Judge Bench had in fact over-ruled
the judgment in Common Cause case, 1996(6) S.C.C.530.
On the other hand, in paragraph 125 it affirms the earlier
conclusion that the conduct of the Minister was wholly
unjustified. Then again, the review petition itself, as already
stated had been filed by Capt. Satish Sharma, the then
Minister only in relation to the order and direction dated
4.11.96 since reported in 1996(6) S.C.C.593. In this view of
the matter, we find no substance in the aforesaid contention
raised by Mr. Sharma, appearing for the appellant in Civil
Appeal No. 3106 of 2000. We have therefore no hesitation in
rejecting the same.
So far as the fourth question is concerned, it is no
doubt true that the three Judge Bench decision of this Court,
reviewing the direction in the Common Cause Case, so far as
order dated 4.11.96 is concerned, is subsequent to the
disposal of the writ petition by the Delhi High Court, but we
do not find any justification for requiring the Delhi High
Court to re-consider the appeals in the light of the
observations made by the three Judge Bench judgment of this
Court inasmuch as in the said judgment this Court was
merely concerned with the directions to register a criminal
case and prosecute the concerned minister, if he is found to
have committed any criminal offence and levy of exemplary
damages to the tune of Rs. 50 lacs. Consequently, any
observation made in that regard will have no bearing on the
merits of the individual allotments, which were the subject
matter of consideration in the two writ petitions before the
Delhi High Court. We, therefore, do not find any substance
in the aforesaid submission made on behalf of the appellants.
So far as the fifth question is concerned, it is no doubt
true that the appellants have invested considerable amount in
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the business and have operated for about eight years but even
on equitable considerations, we do not find any equity in
favour of the appellants. The conduct of the Minister in
making the discretionary allotments has been found to be
atrocious, in the very three Judge Bench decision of this
Court and in relation to similar allotments made by the said
minister in favour of 15 persons, who were respondents in the
Common Cause case. This Court came to hold that the
allotments of the public property has been doled out in
arbitrary and discriminatory manner and the appellants had
been held to be beneficiaries of such arbitrary orders of
allotments. The question of granting the allottees relief on an
equitable consideration did not arise at all, for the same
reasons in a case like this, a sympathetic consideration on the
ground of equity would be a case of misplaced sympathy and
we refrain from granting any relief on any equitable
consideration. In our view, the appellants do not deserve any
equitable consideration.
So far as the sixth question is concerned, we have
examined the judgment of Delhi High Court in the case of
each individual appellant. We have also considered the
questionnaire that had been evolved and also the replies to
the show-cause notices that had been filed by the allottees.
We have also considered the original applications that had
been filed by these appellants and the orders of allotment
made by the concerned minister, wherever they are available
on record as well as the recommendations and circumstances
leading to the exercise of discretion. The impugned
judgment also indicates that in each and every case, the High
Court had considered the original file, dealing with the
allotments in question and it cancelled only those allotments
where there was not an iota of material in support of the
claim made by the applicant, whereas it sustained several
other cases of discretionary allotments made during that
period, wherever materials were available in the original file.
It is difficult for us to come to a conclusion that the
conclusion of the High Court in the cases in hand can be said
to be vitiated on account of non-consideration of any
germane materials. Factually, we do not have any basis to
come to the aforesaid finding. On the other hand, we are
satisfied that the High Court has applied its mind to each and
every individual case of discretionary allotment and
cancelled only those, which it came to hold to have been
arbitrarily granted without any inquiry and only on being
persuaded by certain recommendations of high dignitaries
and without verification of any materials. We, therefore, see
no infirmity with the ultimate conclusion of the High Court,
canceling the allotments in favour of the appellants, so as to
be interfered with by this Court.
So far as the seventh question is concerned, it is Mr.
Bhandari, who argued with vehemence that non-issuance of
notice under Order I Rule 8 CPC by the High Court before
deciding the legal issues by its order dated 22.8.97, has
vitiated the entire proceedings and consequently, the order of
cancellation must be set aside by this Court. According to
Mr. Bhandari, in a matter like the present one, unless the
Court directs issuance of notice by publication in a
newspaper, following the procedure under Order I Rule 8
CPC and all the affected persons get an opportunity to appear
and made their submissions, before the Court formulates the
legal position and answers them, the subsequent notice to
different persons like the appellants is nothing but a
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compliance of paper formality and such procedure adopted
has grossly prejudiced the appellants. We, however, are not
persuaded to accept this submission. The provisions of Order
I Rule 8 C.P.C. get attracted when there are numerous
persons having the same interest, are sued or sue and the
Court can permit such a suit to be defended by adopting the
procedure under Order I Rule 8 CPC. In the case in hand, the
writ petition that had been filed was in fact a petition in
Public Interest, where the allegations were that the
concerned authority had been involved in large-scale
allotments of retail outlets in petrol, gas and kerosene,
arbitrarily and for extraneous considerations without having
any guidelines for such allotments and as such it
tantamounted to disposal of public property in a manner
which is shocking to conscience. By the time when the High
Court went into those allegations in the two petitions filed,
this Court had taken the view that such allotments had in fact
been made arbitrarily and contrary to the public interest and
this Court directed the High Court to dispose of the pending
proceedings in accordance with law. The High Court, on
receipt of the names of the allottees during a specified period
from the Union Government, issued notice to each and every
such allottee, who had been allotted out of the discretionary
quota of the concerned Minister and granted opportunity to
each of such allottee to inspect the relevant file dealing with
the allotment in his/her favour and then heard the said
allottee before passing the final order, either discharging
notice of cancellation or canceling the allotment made. In
this view of the matter, we hardly find any justification in the
submission of Mr. Bhandari that the entire proceedings are
vitiated as notice under Order I Rule 8 CPC had not been
given. If the allottee like the appellant whose allotment has
been cancelled by the impugned order, had the opportunity of
examining the materials on the file of the Government,
wherein his case of allotment has been dealt with and had the
opportunity of filing his show-cause, pursuant to the notice of
cancellation that had been issued and the allotment in his
case having been cancelled on the ground that the concerned
minister did not make any verification with regard to the
necessary criteria indicated in the application for
discretionary allotment, we fail to understand how a
contention could be raised that the whole procedure adopted
is vitiated for non-compliance of the procedure under Order I
Rule 8 CPC. The object of order 1 Rule 8 CPC is to give
notice to persons likely to be affected by litigation, so that
they may be heard. If the Court would have directed
issuance of notice under Order I Rule 8 CPC without giving
individual notice to the allottees to show-cause why the
allotment will not be cancelled, then that perhaps would
have been an infraction and violation of the principle of
natural justice. But in this case, each and every allottee had
been duly noticed, they have filed their replies to the notices,
they have availed of the opportunity of examining the
original file, wherein the case of discretionary allotment had
been dealt with and it was only after hearing them that the
orders of cancellation had been passed. We have, therefore,
no hesitation in answering this question that there was no
requirement of following the procedure under Order I Rule 8
nor can it be said that the entire exercise is vitiated.
So far as the eighth question is concerned, it was
repeatedly argued before us by several counsel that the
concerned minister was not required to verify and since the
order of allotment stipulates that the Oil company would
verify before granting the agency in question that itself is a
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good verification and consequently, the High Court was in
error in canceling the allotment on the ground that there had
been no proper verification. It is no doubt true that the
Minister having exercised his discretion and allotting a
particular agency in favour of the applicant, has required the
Oil company to make necessary verification before entering
into an agreement with the allottee, but that verification
supposed to have been done by the oil company has nothing
to do with the materials on which the subjective satisfaction
of the Minister was arrived at for exercise of his discretion in
favour of any individual for any justifiable reason. When a
State property as distinct from a private property is being
dealt with by a Minister then it is of paramount importance
that such public property must be dealt with for public
purpose and in the public interest. The disposal of a public
property undoubtedly partakes the character of a trust and
therefore, in the matter of such disposal, there should not be
any suspicion of a lack of principle. The exercise of
discretion must not be arbitrary or capricious or for any
extraneous considerations. It is in that context when the
Court was examining each and every individual case of
discretionary allotment, the Court was trying to find out
whether there existed some materials, on the basis of which
the Minister could be said to have arrived at his subjective
satisfaction for exercise of his discretion in favour of the
applicant. It is the so-called satisfaction of the Minister for
exercise of his discretionary power and making the grant that
was being examined and scrutinized by the Court and only
when the Court found that there had been absolutely no
materials or that Minister had made the grant without making
any inquiry or verification, that the Court had interfered with
the allotments in question, obviously on a conclusion that
such allotments had been arbitrarily made. The subsequent
inquiry supposed to have been conducted by the Oil company
cannot replace the pre-conditions for exercise of discretion
by the Minister. If the initial order of allotment by exercise
of discretion is vitiated on the ground of absence of any
materials or verification by the concerned authority who has
exercised the discretion, then the so-called subsequent
inquiry by the Oil company which operates in different fields
cannot make the so-called arbitrary order of the Minister a
legal or just order. This being the position, we see no force
in the submission made by the counsel appearing for the
appellants on this score. The same accordingly stands
rejected.
The next question which arises for consideration is
whether the judgment of this Court in Civil Appeal No. 6840
of 2001 and principles evolved therein can be applied to the
case in hand, so as to protect the allotments already made
under the discretionary quota. The aforesaid case no doubt
was a case of allotment of land by the Chief Minister of a
State in the State of Haryana. The High Court of Punjab and
Haryana by its order dated 20th January, 1988 disposed of the
case of S.R. Dass vs. State of Haryana, 1988 Punjab Law
Journal page 123, under which it formulated certain
principles on which the discretionary allotments could be
made with certain conditions. The so-called discretionary
allotments made by the Government and HUDA, pursuant to
the earlier judgment of Punjab and Haryana High Court were
sought to be assailed as being contrary to certain stricter
principles, which were evolved in the case of Anil
Sabharwal which stood disposed of on 5.12.97. This Court
in the appeal in question held that the stricter scrutiny
required to be made as per the guidelines evolved in Anil
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Sabharwals case, must be made applicable to the period
subsequent to the judgment viz. 5.12.97 and allotments made
between 1988 and 1997 in accordance with the principles and
guidelines indicated in S.R. Dass case, were protected by
applying the principle of prospective application, so far as the
judgment in Anil Sabharwals case. We fail to understand
how the aforesaid principle can apply to the case in hand
where the allotments made prior to the judgment of this
Court in Centre for Public Interest Litigation, 1995(3)
Supp.(3) S.C.C. 382, are the subject matter of scrutiny and
had been made indiscriminately, as there had been no
guiding principle for making such allotments. Consequently,
the principles evolved in Civil Appeal No. 6840 of 2001, will
have no application at all to the present appeals. The said
contention, therefore, must fail.
In view of our conclusions on the nine issues, as
mentioned above, these appeals fail and are dismissed. There
however will be no order as to costs.
While, we are dismissing the appeals, we are also aware
of the fact that these appellants are operating the allotments
made in their favour since 1993-94 and even after the
judgment of the High Court, they are continuing by virtue of
an interim order of this Court. In these circumstances, we
direct that they shall be allowed to wind-up their respective
businesses by 31st of December, 2001.
..........................J
(G.B. PATTANAIK)
..........................J.
(RUMA PAL)
October 19, 2001.