Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 9
PETITIONER:
NEHRU MOTOR TRANSPORT COOPERATIVE SOCIETY LTD., AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF RAJASTHAN AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/12/1962
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1098 1964 SCR (1) 220
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1967 SC1815 (12,13)
RF 1981 SC 660 (9)
R 1992 SC1888 (8)
ACT:
Motor Vehicle-Publication of scheme-Scheme, if consti-
tutionally valid-Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (4 of 1939), SS.
68c, 68D(3)-Rajasthan State Road Transport Services
(Development Rules, 196O, r. 3-Constitution of India, Arts.
14, 32.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners were holders of Stage-carriage permits on
Jodhpur-Bilara arid Bilara-Beawar routes. The Rajasthan
Roadways published a draft scheme which provided for taking
over the transport service on the Jodhpur- Bilara-Beawar-Aj-
mer route by the Roadways and also for taking over three
overlapping routes or portions thereof which were entirely
on Jodhpur-Bilara-Beawar-Ajmer road and the names of the
permit-holders on these three overlapping routes with their
permits were also specified for cancellation and no other
transport vehicles were to ply on the route to be taken
over. The petitioners filed objection and challenged the
scheme on the ground of discrimination before the Legal
Remembrancer as some overlapping routes were not notified.
He held that even though these routes were not specified in
the draft scheme and no notice had been given to the permit
holders thereof, it was open to him to render the permits
ineffective with respect to these routes also and passed
orders accordingly. The permitholders affected by the order
of the Legal Remembrance filed writ petitions in the High
Court. The High Court directed the Legal Remembrancer to go
into the matter again and to leave the question of the
twelve partially overlapping routes for a subsequent scheme.
The effect of the decision of the Legal Remembrancer
considered in tile light of the decision of the High Court
was that all the twelve partially overlapping routes were
left out of the scheme and only the three routes notified in
the draft-scheme were affected. The present petition is
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 9
directed against his decision approving the scheme as
modified by him and published on August 31, 1962. In this
Court it was urged (1) that the procedure of approving a
part of the scheme once and another part later was illegal;
221
(ii)that the approval of the scheme by the Legal Rem-
embrancer after abdication of his own judgment was not a
valid approval ; (iii) that the Legal Remembrancer ought to
have given a fresh hearing ab initio to the objectors ; (iv)
that there was no proper hearing and (v) that there was
discrimination, as the, operators of the twelve partially
overlapping routes were left out of the scheme.
Held, that as the twelve overlapping routes were never
included in the draft scheme, the approval given to the
craft scheme without touching these routes cannot be called
0an approval of a part of the scheme.
Held, further that in the present case the order of the High
Court was analogous to a remand order and therefore, the
decision of the Legal Remembrancer must be treated as a
fresh decision and not a review of his earlier decision and
there was no abdication by him of his functions.
Held, further, that when the objectors had been given full
opportunity to lead evidence on the previous occasion which
was still there for the Legal Remembrancer to take into
account, it was sufficient for him to hear the objector’s
arguments. If it is borne in mind that the order passed by
the High Court in the proceedings was in the nature of a
remand order, this objection must fail.
Held, further, that the fact that the rules did not provide
for a coercive process to secure attendance of witnesses did
not mean that there could be no proper hearing without it.
Held, further, that under s. 68C it was open to the State
Government to take over any area or route to the complete or
partial exclusion of other persons and there was no
discrimination in the present case, for routes completely
covered, by the route taken over stand on a different
footing from the routes only partially covered.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ petition No. 142 of 1962.
PetitioN under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for the
enforcement of fundamental rights.
B.Chhangani and B. D. Sharma, for the petitioners.
222
C.K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, Kan Singh, S.
K. Kapoor and P. D. Menon, for the respondents.
1962. December 14. The judgment of’ the Court was
delivered by
WANCHOO, J.-This petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution
challenges the constitutionality of a scheme finalised under
s. 68D (3) of the Motor Vehicles Act, No. IV of 1939,
(hereinafter referred to as the Act) in the State of
Rajasthan. The petitioners are holders of stage-carriage
permits on Jodhpur-Bilara and Bilara-Beawar routes. A draft
scheme was published under s. 68C of the Act by the
Rajasthan Roadways, which is a State Transport Undertaking,
(hereinafter referred to as the Roadways), on January 26,
1961. It provided for taking over of the transport service
on the Jodhpur-BilaraBeawar-Ajmer route by the Roadways.
Further it provided for taking over three overlapping routes
or portions thereof which were entirely on Jodhpur
Bilara-Beawar-Ajmerroad, namely, Jodhpur-Bilara, Bilara-
Beawar, and Beawar-Ajmer, and as required by r. 3 of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 9
Rajasthan State Road Transport Services (Development) Rules,
1960, (hereinafter referred to as the Rules), the names of
the permitholders on these three overlapping routes with
their permits were also specified for cancellation, and no
transport vehicles other than the vehicles of the Road ways
were to ply on the route to be taken over. The usual time
was also given for filing objections to all those whose
interests were affected by the draftscheme. The petitioners
filed objections under s.68D of the Act, which were heard by
the Legal Remembrancer to the Government of Rajasthan, he
being the person appointed to hear and decide the objec-
tions, The objectors wanted to lead evidence and did produce
some witnesses but some witnesses to whom summonses were
issued did not turn up and
223
the objectors wanted the issue of coercive processes against
them. The Legal Remembrancer however refused this on the
ground that lie had no power to issue coercive process. As
the objectors did not produce any further witnesses, the
arguments were heard and the Legal Remembrancer gave his
decisions on May 31, 1962.
One of the main points then raised before the Legal
Remembrancer was that there were a dozen other overlapping
routes which were not touched by the scheme, and therefore
the scheme was bad on the ground of discrimination. It may
be mentioned that these overlapping routes were not
completely overlapping the route to be nationalised, though
the vehicles paying on those twelve routes had to pass over
part of the Jodhpur-Bilara-Beawar-Ajmer road. It was urged
on behalf of the Roadways before the Legal-Remembrancer that
the intention was to render ineffective the permits on these
twelve routes also insofar as they overlapped the route to
be taken over, though these, routes were not mentioned in
the draft-scheme like the three routes which were completely
covered by the Jodhpur-Bilara-Beawar-Ajmer route and no
notice was apparently given to the seventy-two permit-
holders on these twelve partially over-lapping routes. The
Legal Remembrancer held that even though these routes were
not specified in the draft-scheme and no notice had been
given to the permit-holders thereof, it was open to him
to render the permits ineffective with respect to these
routesalso and proceeded to pass orders accordingly.
Thereupon five writ petitions were filed in the High Court
of Rajasthan by the permit-holders on the three routes which
had been notified in the draftscheme as well as by some of
the permit-holders of the twelve partially overlapping
routes which had not been notified but which had been
224
affected by the order of the Legal Remembrancer. Two main
points were urged before the High Court in support of the
cbchallenge to the validity of the scheme as finally
published on June 16, 1962. In the first place, it was
urged that the State Government when publishing the scheme
as required by s. 68D(3) of the Act had made certain changes
in it beyond the decision of the Legal Remembrancer and
therefore the final scheme as published was invalid as it
was not open to the State Government to make any changes in
the scheme as approved by the Legal Remembrancer. Secondly,
it was urged on behalf of the operators on the twelve
partially overlapping routes which had not been notified in
the draft scheme that it was not open to the Legal
Remembrancer to affect their interests when their routes
were not specified in the draft scheme and they had been
given no notice thereof. The High Court accepted both these
contentions. It was of the opinion that it was not open to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 9
the State Government to make any modification in the
decision of the Legal Remembrancer and inasmuch as that had
been done the final scheme as published was invalid. It
also held that as the twelve partially overlapping routes
were not notified in the draftscheme and no notice had been
given to the permitholders thereof, it was not open to the
Legal Remembrancer to pass any orders with respect to them.
It therefore set aside the scheme as published under s. 68D
(3) of the Act. Finally, the High Court observed that as
the scheme as published was not the scheme as approved by
the Legal Remembrancer and as the decision of the Legal
Remembrancer becomes final when it is published, it was open
to the Legal Remembrancer to modify his decision, even
though he may have signed and pronounced it. The Legal
-Remembrancer was thus directed to go into the matter again
and leave the question of the twelve partially overlapping
routes for a subsequent scheme. The final scheme as
published under s. 68D (3) of the Act was set aside and the
Regional Transport
225
Authority was directed not to implement it until it was
regularised in accordance with law.
The matter then went back to the Legal Remembrancer who
considered the draft-scheme in the light of the decision of
the High Court and after hearing further agruments disposed
of the objections. The main effect of his decision was that
all the twelve partially overlapping routes were left out of
the scheme and only the three routes notified in the draft-
scheme which were completely covered by the route Jodhpur-
Bilara-Beawar-Ajmer, were affected. The decision of the
Legal Remembrancer approving the scheme as modified by him
was published on August 31, 1962, and the present petition
is directed against that decision.
The decision of the Legal Remembrancer is being challenged
before us on the following grounds:-
(1)A draft-scheme under the Act has to be approved as a
whole and the procedure of approving a part of the scheme
once and another part later is illegal, and therefore, the
approval given to the draft-scheme by the Legal Remembrancer
does not result in approving the scheme, as required by law.
(2)It was not open to the Legal Remembracer to review his
order dated May 31, 1962 even after the decision of the High
Court, and insofar as the Legal Remembrancer did so in
obedience to the order of the High Court he abdicated his
own judgment, and the approval therefore after such
abdication of his own judgment, is no approval in law.
(3)As the scheme as published on June 16, 1962 was set
aside by the High Court, it was the duty of the Legal
Remembrancer to give a fresh hearing ab initio to the
objectors which he did not do, and therefore the approval
accorded by him to the draft-scheme
226
after the judgment of the High Court is no approval in law.
(4)Hearing requires taking of evidence; but as the Legal
Remembrancer expressed his inability to compel attendance of
witnesses, there was no hearing as contemplated by law, and
therefore the approval of the draft-scheme without a proper
hearing is no approval in law.
(5) There was discrimination inasmuch as the operatorsof
the twelve partially overlapping routes were left out of the
scheme.
Re. (1) &(2).
There is no doubt that a draft-scheme has to be considered
as a whole and all objections to it have to be decided
before it can be approved by the State Government or by the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 9
officer appointed in that behalf, and the Act does not
envisage approving of a part of the scheme once and putting
it into effect and leaving another part unapproved and left
over for enforcement later. It is also true that the Act
does not provide for review of an approval once given by the
Legal Remembrancer, though he may be entitled to correct any
clerical mistakes or inadvertent slips that may have crept
in his order. It is also true that the Legal Remembrancer
when considering the objections has to exercise his own
judgment subject to any directions that the High Court.
might give on questions of law relating to a particular
draftscheme. But we do not think that this is a case where
the draft-scheme has been approved in part and another part
of it has been left unapproved to be taken up later; nor is
this a case where the Legal Remembrancer abdicated his own
judgment or reviewed his earlier decision when he proceeded
to reconsider the matter after the High Court had set aside
the scheme as published under s. 68D (3) of the Act on June
16, 1962.
227
Let us see what the draft-scheme was meant to provide in
this case. As we have already indicated, the draft-scheme
was published in order to take over the Jodhpur-Bilara-
Beawar-Ajmer route. It also provided for taking over all
the three completely overlapping routes, namely, Jodhpur-
Bilara, Bilara-Beawar, and Beawar-Ajmer routes, and also
portions thereof falling entirely on this road from Jodhpur-
Ajmer. There was no indication in the draft-scheme for
taking over what are called partially overlapping routes,
only parts of which overlapped on the Jodhpur-Bilara-Beawar-
Ajmer road. These partially overlapping routes were of two
kinds. In some cases one terminus was on Jodhpur-Bilara-
Beawar-Ajmer road while the other terminus was not on this
road. In other cases, both the termini of the overlapping
routes were not on this road, though a part of the route
fell on this road. Rule 3 of the Rules provides for indi-
cating all such overlapping routes as are intended to be
affected and the draft scheme in the present case only
indicated three routes which were completely on this road
namely, Jodhpur-Bilara, Bilara-Beawar, and Beawar-Ajmer, and
was not concerned at all with the other overlapping routes,
where overlapping was only partial. It was therefore in our
opinion unnecessary to bring in the question of the twelve
partially overlapping routes when objections to this draft
scheme were being considered. There is no doubt that the
Roadways was also responsible for the introduction of this
confusion for it seems to have been urged on its behalf,
when the objections were considered on the first occasion,
that these partially overlapping routes were also meant to
be covered by the draft scheme, even though they were not
mentioned in the draft scheme as required by r. 3 of the
Rules and no notice had been issued to the permitholders of
those routes. The petitioners also raised a point with
respect to these overlapping routes, and that is how on the
first occasion, the Legal Remembrancer held that even though
these routes had
228
not been included in the draft scheme and no notice had been
given to the permit-holders thereof, it was open to him to
pass orders with respect thereto and he proceeded to render
the overlapping part of these routes ineffective. It is
obvious from a perusal of the draft scheme that these twelve
partially overlapping routes were not included in it at all
and they were brought in only because of the objection
raised by the petitioners and the reply of the Roadways that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 9
they were meant to be included. That is why when the writ
petitions were decided by the High Court, it pointed out
that the scheme did not intially include the partially
overlapping routes. The High Court then went on to observe
that if the Legal Remembrancer thought fit to include these
routes in the scheme also, he should have given notice to
all concerned to file their objections. With respect, it
seems to us that this observation of the High Court is not
correct. If the scheme did not include the partially
overlapping routes-as it undoubtedly did not, in spite of
what the objectors might have said and what the Roadways
might have maintained before the Legal Remembrancer on the
first occasion-it was not open to the Legal Remembrancer to
include these overlapping routes in the scheme at all and he
could not do so even if he had given notice to the permit-
holders on these overlapping routes. The question therefore
whether the final approval of the draft scheme as published
on August 31,1962 is an approval of a part of the scheme
only, leaving another part of the scheme unapproved and
therefore liable to enforcement later, can only admit of one
answer, namely, that the approval was of the scheme as a
whole. The contention therefore on behalf of the
petitioners that part of the scheme has been approved and
the rest of it has been left unapproved, can have no force
on the facts of the present case. The twelve overlapping
routes were never meant to be affected by the scheme which
left them untouched. The contention that only part of the
scheme has been
229
approved appears to have been based on the fact that these
routes have not been rendered ineffective as to the
overlapping part. But as these routes were never included
in the draft scheme, the approval given to the draft scheme
without touching these routes cannot in the circumstances be
called an approval of a part of the scheme.
Nor do we think that there is any force in the contention
that the Legal Remembrancer abdicated his judgment when
going into the question on the second occasion after the
judgment of the High Court. The order of the Legal
Remembrancer dated August 17, 1962 shows that he
reconsidered the entire matter after hearing further
arguments and there can be no doubt that he was exercising
his own judgment when he finally decided to approve the
draft scheme with certain modification. What the Legal
Remembrancer has done in this case is to reappraise the
evidence in the light of the legal position indicated by the
High Court. Nor do we think that there is any substance in
the argument that the order of the Legal Remembrancer dated
August 17, 1962, is a review of his earlier order dated May
31, 1962. No question of review of that order arises for
that order was in effect set aside when the High Court set
aside the final scheme as published on June 16, 1962. It is
true that publication made certain further modifications
into the scheme as approved by the Legal Remembrancer but
that in our opinion makes no difference to the fact that the
order of the High Court setting aside the final scheme as
published on.June 16, 1962 put an end to the order of the
Legal Remembrancer dated May 31, 1962 also. This argument
as to review has been raised because of the observation in
the Judgment of the High Court that the scheme as finally
published on June 16, 1962 was not the decision of the Legal
Remembrancer because of the changes made in it by the State
Government and
230
therefore it was open to him to modify it, though he might
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 9
have signed his decision and pronounced it. With respect,
we consider that this observation is not correct. It may be
that the State Government had no authority to modify the
decision of the Legal Remembrancer but when the High Court
set aside the finally approved scheme as published on June
16, 1962, it meant the decision of the Legal Remembrancer
dated May 31, 1962, also came to an end, for the final
scheme as published on June 16, 1962 was undoubtedly based
on it, even though there were further changes in that
decision at the time of publication. In the present case
the order of the High Court was analogous to a remand as
understood in courts of law. What the Legal Remembrancer
did on the second occasion was to reappraise the evidence in
the light of the law laid down by the High Court.
Therefore, it cannot be said that the decision of the Legal
Remembrancer on August 17, 1962, is a review of his earlier
decision dated May 31, 1962. It must be treated as a fresh
decision, after the High Court had set aside the final
scheme as published on June 16, 1962. Though therefore the
proposition put forward on behalf of the petitioners may be
accepted as correct, there is no scope for applying the
principles contained in these propositions to the facts of
this case. The contention therefore that the scheme as
finally published on August 31, 1962 is bad because it
militates against these principles must be rejected.
Re. (3) & (4).
It is urged that after the High Court set aside the final
scheme as published on June 16, 1962, the Legal Remembrancer
should have given a fresh hearing ab initio and that he did
not do so. It is further urged that in as much as there is
no provision in the Rules for compelling the attendance of
witnesses whom an objector might like to produce, there
231
can be no effective hearing of the objection, and therefore
the scheme as finally published on August 31, 1962, is
invalid. It is not disputed that the Legal Remembrancer did
give a hearing to the objectors after the order of the High
Court. What is urged however is that the objectors should
have been allowed to give evidence afresh before the Legal
Remembrancer finally disposed of the objections. We are of
opinion that though the result of the order of the High
Court was to set aside the order of the Legal Remembracer
dated May 31, 1962, it cannot be said that the order of the
High Court wiped out the evidence which the objectors had
given before the Legal Remembrancer on the first occasion.
We have already mentioned the two grounds on which the High
Court set aside the final scheme as published on June 16,
1962, and those grounds had nothing to do with the evidence
which was already produced. In our opinion, it was open to
the Legal Remembrancer to take that evidence into account
and it was not necessary that evidence should be given
again, particularly when no fresh issues arose; nor was the
Legal Remembrancer bound to take fresh evidence simply
because the final scheme as published on June 16, 1962 had
been set aside on account of certain technical and Legal
defects. When the objectors had been given full opportunity
to lead evidence on the previous occasion which was still
there for the Legal Remembrancer to take into account, it
was sufficient for the Legal Remembrancer to hear the
objectors’ arguments in full after the order of the High
Court in the light of the observations made by it, and the
petitioners therefore cannot have any grievance on the score
that they were not given any hearing after the order of the
High Court. If it is borne in mind that the order passed by
the High Court in the proceedings was in the nature of a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 9
remand order, all these objections will plainly be
untenable.
232
As to the contention that the Rules do not provide for
compelling the attendance of witnesses and all that the
Legal Remembrancer can do is to summon witnesses who may or
may not appear in answer to the summonses, it is enough to
say that the proceedings before the Legal Remembrancer
though quasi-judicial are not exactly like proceedings in
court. In proceedings of this kind, it may very well be
concluded when a witness is summoned and does not appear,
that he does not wish to give evidence, and that may be the
reason why no provision is made in the Rules for any
coercive process. We think in the circumstances of the
hearing to be given by the Legal Remembrancer, it is enough
if he takes evidence of the witnesses whom the objectors
bring before him themselves and if he helps them to secure
their attendance by issue of summonses. But the fact that
the Rules do not provide for coercive processes does not
mean in the special circumstances of the hearing before the
Legal Remembrancer that there can be no proper hearing
without such coercive processes. We are therefore of
opinion that the Legal Remembrancer did give a hearing to
the objectors after the order of the High Court and that in
the circumstances that hearing was a proper and sufficient
hearing. The challenge therefore to the validity of the
scheme as published on June 16, 1962, on this ground must be
rejected.
Re. (5).
Lastly we come to the question of discrimination. The
argument is based on the fact that the twelve partially
overlapping routes to which we have already alluded have not
been touched by the scheme. That is undoubtedly so. We
have already pointed out that in the case of some of these
routes one terminus is on the Jodhpur-Bilara-Beawar-Ajmer
road while the other is not on this road. In some cases
neither termini is on this road and only a part of
233
the route overlaps this road. The argument is that as the
permit-holders on these partially overlapping routes have
not been touched by the scheme, there is discrimination
inasmuch as the permit-holders on the three routes which
were totally overlapping the route which was being taken
over, have been completely excluded. We do not think that
this amounts to discrimination. It may be pointed out that
under s. 68C it is open to take over any area or route to
the complete or partial exclusion of other persons.
Therefore, it was open to the State Government to take over
this route only and exclude those who may be plying
completely on this route or parts thereof and unless it can
be shown that others who are similarly situated have -not
been excluded from the scheme there can be no question of
discrimination. In our opinion it cannot be said that-those
permit-holders whose routes were completely covered by the
route taken over stand on the same footing as those whose
routes were only partially covered by the route taken over.
It may very well have been considered that in the first
instance only those permit-holders will be excluded whose
routes are completely covered by the routes taken over, and
if that is permissible under the law it cannot be said that
that would amount to discrimination when there is an obvious
distinction between routes completely covered by the route
to be taken over and the routes partially covered by the
route to be taken over. We have been informed that since
this scheme was approved steps have been taken even to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 9
exclude those permit-holders whose routes are partially
covered by making their permits ineffective over the
overlapping part of the route. But that apart, we can see
no ground to uphold the plea of discrimination in the
present case, for routes completely covered by the route
taken over stand on a different footing from the routes only
partially covered. The contention therefore that the final
scheme as published on August 31, 1962 is bad because it
discriminates in this manner, must be rejected.
234
We therefore dismiss the petition but in the circumstances
of this case pass no order asto costs.
Petition dismissed.