Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 4
PETITIONER:
M.NAINA MOHAMMED
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
K. A. NATARAJAN & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT23/07/1975
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1975 AIR 1867 1976 SCR (1) 102
1975 SCC (2) 352
CITATOR INFO :
C 1991 SC 225 (8)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Art. 226- Jurisdiction of High
Court-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The Regional Transport Authority granted a permit to
the appellant but this decision was reversed by the State
Transport Appellate Tribunal. In a petition under Art. 226
of the Constitution a single Judge of the High Court, on an
examination of the merits of the case, reversed the view of
the Stale Transport Appellate Tribunal. On appeal, a
Division Bench of the High Court held that a full scale
reappraisal of the points was in excess of the jurisdiction
of the single Judge under Art. 226. the Division Bench
restored the order of the State Transport Appellate
Tribunal.
On appeal to this Court, remitting the, case to the
State Transport Appellate Tribunal,
^
HELD: The boundaries of the High Court’s jurisdiction
under Art. 226 of the Constitution are clearly and strongly
built and cannot be breached without risking jurisprudential
confusion. The power of the High Court under Art. 226 be
supervisory in nature. [103E]
Sri Rama Vilas Service (P) Ltd. v. C. Chandrasekharan
[1964] 5 S.C.R. 869. referred to.
The single judge had undertaken an evaluation of the
merits on his own which was beyond his jurisdiction. The
Division Bench disposed of the case in a short paragraph
which hardly did justice to the order appealed against. But
while reversing the order appealed against valid reasons had
to be adduced. While the Division Bench was justified in
observing that, sitting on the writ side, judicial review
should have been more restricted than while sitting on the
appellate side, its own judgment was vulnerable because of
the plain finding that what was not pertinent was taken into
consideration by the Appellate Tribunal. [103G, H; 104A-B]
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 4
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 98 of
1975. From the Judgment and order dated 25-7-1974 of the
Madras High Court of Judicature at Madras in Writ Appeal No.
519 of 1968.
K. S. Ramamurthi and A. T. M. Sampath, for the
appellant.
M. K. Ramamurthi and Vineet Kumar, for respondent no.
1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J.-A spiral of reversals is the fate of
this litigative battle between the appellant and the first
respondent over a permit to ply a bus on the route between
Madurai and Paramakkudi, Tamil Nadu. While its admission
into this Court was by special leave, the first round of the
contest was fought before the RTA (Regional Transport
Authority) which, on an evaluation of the relative merits
and demerits of the rivals, granted the permit to the
present appellant, but this victory was short-lived because,
at the second stage of the legal bout, the STAT (State
Transport Appellate Tribunal) held that the
103
respondent before us had better claims. The worsted
appellant, invoked the writ jurisdiction of the High Court
under Art. 226 and the learned Single Judge, who heard the
petition, re-judged the relevance and weight of the points,
pro and con, and as a result of this adjudicatory exercise
of facts, demolished the order of the STAT. The learned
Judge disagreed with the conclusion of the STAT instead of
sending the case back for a fresh look at the merits of the
matter, set aside the permit granted to the respondent and
affirmed the award in favour of the appellant. Thereupon,
the respondent moved a Division Bench of that Court which
felt that a full-scale re-appraisal of the points for and
against such claimant was in excess of the jurisdiction of
the Single Judge under Art. 226, although it noticed that
certain factors not relevant to the adjudication had been
taken into consideration by the STATE. Consequently, the
order of the learned Judge was set aside, the result being
that the respondent’s permit was restored. ’the appellant
urged that the decision of the Division Bench of the High
Court was utterly wrong and somewhat casual, while that of
the learned Single Judge was careful, elaborate and correct.
Of course, this view of the matter was hotly controverted by
counsel for the 1st respondent but, after having heard both
Shri K. S. Ramamurthy, for the appellant, and Shri M. K.
Ramamurthy. for the respondent, we are satisfied that the
reluctant course of remitting the whole case to the STAT for
a de novo disposal is called for as a matter of law and in
the interests of justice
The boundaries of the High Court’s jurisdiction under
Art. 226 are clearly and strongly built and cannot be
breached without risking jurisprudential confusion (Shri
Rama Vilas Service (P) Ltd. v, C. Chandrasekharan(1). The
power is supervisory in nature, although the Judges at both
the tiers, in the instant case, have unwittingly slipped
into the subtle, but fatal, error of exercising a kind of
appellate review.
Shri M. K. Ramamurthy, for the respondent, was right in
pointing out that the learned Single Judge went into the
factum and weight of the claims which could be put in the
scales in choosing the better of the two applicants for the
permit. However, the Court rightly pointed out that some
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 4
relevant factors had been ignored by the STAT (for example.
that the first respondent’s history sheet was not clean) and
included in the judicial verdict factors which were
extraneous, such as ‘that the bus of the petitioner did not,
in fact, ply from 2-9-65 to 4-12-65, this being attributable
to non-payment of surcharge rather than operational
inefficiency. A reading of the learned Single Judge’s
judgment leaves us in no doubt that he had undertaken an
evaluation of the merits on his own. This, undoubtedly, was
beyond the jurisdiction of the High Court. Nor is it
possible to support the direction that if there were errors
of law vitiating the STAT’s finding, the case need not to
back for fresh consideration but could be finally decided by
the High Court itself.
In Writ Appeal, the leaned Chief Justice, speaking for
the Division Bench of the High Court, disposed of the case
in a short paragraph which hardly did justice to the order
appealed against. May be that
104
order was wrong and unsustainable, but while reversing it
valid reasons had to be adduced. All that we find in the
appellate judgment is a partial admission that extraneous
considerations were inputs of the order of the STAT and a
brief disposal of the whole matter in a single sentence, as
it were-"Even so, there is nothing in the order of the
Tribunal to support it." While the Division Bench was
perhaps justified in. Observing that while sitting on the
writ side, judicial review should have been more restricted
that while sitting on the appellate side, its own judgment
was vulnerable because of the plain finding that what was
not pertinent was taken into consideration by the STAT. For
instance, The learned Chief Justice observed: ’It is no
doubt true that the non-performance of service after the
grant was made, cannot go into the computation and the
reference relating to night-halt might will have been
avoided in its discussion.’ ’The non performance of
service’, which is slightly obscure, but we read it in the
context as meaning the failure to ply the bus on the route
is question subsequent to the grant of the permit. We
express no opinion on the soundness of the observation but
it is clear that the Division Bench itself has plainly
accepted the position that what was not, according to it,
relevant had gone into the reckoning when the STAT awarded
the permit to the appellant. In this view, this judgment
cannot also be sustained. 1
The fair course would, therefore, be to set aside the
judgment under appeal and send the whole case back to the
STAT to hear the case afresh, consider relevant factors
bearing upon ’public interest’ as highlighted in s.47 of the
Motor Vehicles Act and dispose of the appeal before it in
accordance with law, guided by the decisions of this Court
and untrammeled by any observations made either by the
Single Judge or by the Division Bench.
Currently, the respondent is plying his bus on the
route and we direct that the status quo be maintained and he
will continue to operate on the route until the appeal is
disposed of by the STAT. Of course, the RTA passed its
orders as early as 1966 November and is it thinks that
public interest demands the need for an extra bus to ply on
the route to cope with the traffic, it will be open to the
RTA to grant a permit, pending disposal of the appeal, to
the present appellant.
The fluctuating fortunes of the combatants for the
permit have been such that it is appropriate to direct both
parties to bear their costs throughout.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 4
P.B.R. Case remanded.
105