Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
K. M. SHANMUGAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE S. R. V. S. (P) LTD. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/02/1963
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1626 1964 SCR (1) 809
CITATOR INFO :
D 1964 SC 477 (15)
R 1989 SC2138 (99)
ACT:
Stage carriage permit--Marking system--Error apparent on the
face of the record--Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (4 of 1939),
ss. 43A, 47--Constitution of India Art. 226.
HEADNOTE:
On applications for permits made to it the Regional
Transport Authority, applying the markinig system prescribed
by the Government order issued under s. 43A of the Motor
Vehicles Act, granted the permit to the appellant. On
appeal by the first respondent, the State Transport
Appellate Tribunal recast the marks but in doing so did not
allot any mark to the first respondent under the head of
"residence or place of business" and thereby treating the
appellant and the first respondent as equal, gave the
appellant the further advantage of four marks under the head
"viable unit". The first respondent challenged the order of
the Appellate Tribunal before the High Court under Art. 226
on the ground that the Appellate Tribunal had failed to
allot him any mark in respect of his admitted residential
qualification and had thereby committed a breach of s. 47
(1) (a) and (c) of the Motor Vehicles Act. This contention
was accepted by the learned single judge of the High Court
who quashed the order of the Appellate Tribunal and directed
it to proceed according to law. On appeal the Division
Bench confirmed the issue of the writ. On appeal by special
leave by the appellant it was contended in this Court that
the High Court has no jurisdiction to issue a writ of
certiorari, as the error, if any, was one of fact and that
the directions issued by the Government under s. 43A of the
Motor Vehicles Act being only administrative in character,
order made in breach thereof did not give rise to an error
of law which could be the subject matter of a writ.
Held, that the question whether or not there was such an
error apparent on the face of the record as to enable the
High Court to interfere under Art. 226 of the Constitution
was one to be determined in each case and no particular test
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can or need be laid down as a general rule.
810
Hari Vishnu Kamath v. Syed Ahmad Ishaque, [1955] 1 S. C..
R.. 1104, Nagendra Nath Bora v. Commissioner of Hills
Division and Appeals, Assam [1958] S. C. R. 1240, Satya-
narayan v. Mallikarjun, [1960] 1 S. C. R. 890, Shri Ambica
Mills Co. v. S. B. Bhatt, [1961] 3 S.C. R. 220, Provincial
Transport Service v. State Industrial Court [1963] 3 S. C.
R. 650, Batuk Vyas v. Surat Municipality, A. I. R. 1953 Bom.
133 and M/s. Raman & Raman Ltd. v. The State of Madras,
[1959] Supp. 2 S. C. R. 227, referred to.
Held, further, that though the directions issued under s.
43A of the Act were administrative, they were intended to
facilitate an objective, judgment of the considerations laid
down in s. 47 of the Motor Vehicles Act and if applying the
directions to a given case result in the breach of s. 47,
namely, ignoring a relevant consideration, it must give rise
to a manifest error of law and furnish a ground for
interference under Art. 226 of the Constitution.
M/s. Raman & Baman Ltd. v. State of Madras [1959] Supp. 2
S. C. R. 227, Abdulla Rowther v. State Transport Appellate
Tribunal, Madras, A. 1. R. 1959 S. C. R. 896, Ayyasswani
Gounder v. M/s. Soudambigai Motor Service C. A. No. 198 of
1962 decided on 17-9-62 and Sankara Ayyar v. Marayanaswami
Naidu, C. A. No. 213 of 1960 decided on 10-10-60,
distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 697 of 1962.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
March 21, 1962, of the Madras High Court in Writ Appeal No.
154 of 1960.
B. Sen, Ravinder Narain, O. C. Mathur and J.B. Dadachanji,
for the appellant.
A. V. Visvanatha Sastri, and R. Gopalakrishnan, for
respondent 1.
A. Ranganadham Chetty and A. V. Rangam, for respondent
Nos. 2 and 3.
1963. February 6. The judgment of the Court was delivered
by
811
SUBBA RAO J.-This appeal by special leave is directed
against the judgment of a division Bench of the High Court
of judicature for Madras confirming that a single judge of
that Court allowing. the petition filed by the respondent
under Art. 226 of the constitution and quashing the order
made by the State Transport Appellate Tribunal granting a
stage carriage permit to the appellant for the route
Tanjore-Mannargudi via Vaduvoor.
The facts relevant to the question raised may be briefly
stated. The Regional Transport Authority, Tanjore, called
for applications in respect of the issuing of a stage
carriage permit for the route Tanjore-Mannargudi via
Vaduvoor. 11 persons applied for the permit. The Regional
Transport Authority, adopting the marking system prescribed
in’ G.O. Ms. No. 1298 (Home) dated April 28,1956, awarded
marks to different applicants : the appellant of the highest
number of Marks, viz., 7, and the first respondent got only
4 1/4 marks, with the result the appellant was preferred to
the respondent and a permit was issued to him. It is not
necessary to notice the marks secured by the other
applicants before the Regional Transport Authority, for they
are not before us. Total of the said marks secured by each
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of the said two parties was arrived at by gadding the marks
given under the following heads:
Viable Work- Resi- Experi- Special To-
Unit shop dence ence circums- tal
tances.
1 2 3 4 5
K.M.S 4 1 1 1/2 1/4 7
S.R.V.S. 1 1 1 1 1/4 4
It would be seen from the said table of marks that if the 4
marks secured by the appellant under the
812
first column "Viable Unit" were excluded from his total, he
would have got only a total of 3 marks under the remaining
heads and the first respondent would have got a total of 41
marks under the said heads. Under the said G.O., as
interpreted by this Court, the marks under the first column,
i.e., those given under the head "Viable Unit", would be
counted only if other things were equal; that is to say, if
the total number of marks obtained by the said two
applicants under Cols.2 to 5 were equal. It is, therefore,
obvious that on the marks given the Regional Transport
Authority went wrong- in issuing, a permit in favour of the
appellant, as he should not have taken into consideration
the 4 marks given under the 1st Column since the total marks
secured by him under Cols. 2 to 5 were less than those
secured by the first respondent. Aggrieved by the said
order, the first respondent preferred an appeal to the State
Transport Appellate Tribunal, hereinafter called the
Appellate Tribunal. The said Appellate Tribunal recast the
marks in respect of the said two .parties in the following
manner:
Viable Work- Resi- Experi- Special To
Unit shop dence ence circums- tal
tances
1 2 3 4 5
K.M.S. 4 2 1 3/4 1/4 8
S.R.V.S. 2 - 1 1 4
It would be seen from the marks given by the Appellate
Tribunal that the total of the marks secured by the
appellant under Cols. 2 to 5 is equal to that secured by the
first respondent under the said columns, each of them
securing 4 marks. It was contended before the Appellate
Tribunal that the first respondent was entitled to some mark
under the column "Residence or place of business" on the
ground
813
that it had the places of business at Tanjore and Mannargudi
and that the Regional Transport Authority had given one mark
to the first respondent under the said column ; but the
Appellate Tribunal rejected that contention on the ground
that the first respondent had a branch office at Kumbakonam
and, therefore, the office at Tanjore or Mannargudi could
not be treated as a branch office. Aggrieved by that order,
the first respondent filed a petition before the High Court
under Art. 226 of the Constitution for setting aside that
order. Ramachandra lyer, J., who heard the said application
allowed it. The main reason given by the learned judge for
allowing the petition was that the Appellate Tribunal
omitted to give any mark in respect of residential
qualification, which amounted to refusal to take into consi-
deration the admitted fact, namely, the existence of a
workshop at Mannargudi and therefore, it amounted to a
breach of s. 47 (1) (a) and (c) of the Motor Vehicles Act.
The same idea was expressed by the learned judge in a
different way thus:
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It............ in regard to residential
qualification, it (the Appellate Tribunal)
declined to consider whether the office
workshop at Mannargudi are sufficient to
entitle the petitioner to any marks under head
for the mere reason that it was a branch of a
branch office."
He held that the said refusal was an error apparent on the
face of the record; and he accordingly quashed the order and
at the same time indicated that the result ’was that the
State Transport Appellate Tribunal would have to dispose of
the appeal afresh. The Letters Patent appeal filed by the
appellant was heard by a division Bench consisting of
Anantanarayanan and Venkatadri, jj. The learned judges
dismissed the appeal and the reason of their decision is
found in the following remarks
"In essence, the judgment really proceeds on
the basis that with regard to the claim of the
814
respondent to some valuation under Col. 3,
arising from the existence of an alleged
branch office at Mannargudi there has been no
judicial disposal of the claim."
They also observed
"The Tribunal is, of course, at liberty to
adopt its own criteria for the valuation under
Col. 2, provided they are consistently
applied, and based upon some principle."
In dismissing the appeal the learned judges concluded
"............ we desire to make it clear that
we are not in any way fettering the discretion
of the State Transport Appellate Tribunal to
arrive at its own conclusion on the claims of
the two parties irrespective of any
observations that might have been incidentally
made by this Court on those claims."
The appellant has preferred the present appeal by special
leave against the said order.
It will be seen from the aforesaid narration of facts that
the High Court issued the writ as it was satisfied that
there was a clear error apparent on the face of the record,
namely, that the Appellate Tribunal refused to take into
consideration the existence of the branch office at
Mannargudi for awarding marks under the head "residence" on
the ground that there was another office of the first
respondent at Kumbakonam. While it gave marks to the appe-
llant for his residence, it refused to give marks to the
first respondent for its office on the aforesaid ground.
Mr. Sen, learned counsel for the appellant, raised before us
the following points (1) The. Court has no jurisdiction to
issue a writ of certiorari under
816
Art. 226 of the Constitution to quash an order of a Tribunal
on the ground that there is an apparent error of fact on the
face or the record, however gross it may be, and that, in
the instant case, if there was an error, it was only one of
fact; (2) this Court has held that directions given under s.
43 of the Motor Vehicles Act are only administrative in
character and that an order made by a Tribunal in breach
thereof does not confer a right on a party affected and,
therefore, the Appellate Tribunal’s order made in derogation
of the said directions could not be a subject-matter of a
writ.
The argument of Mr. Viswanatha Sastri, learned counsel for
the first respondent, may be summarized thus :
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The petitioner (appellant herein) -has a fundamental right
to carry on business in transport. The Motor Vehicles Act
is a law imposing reasonable restrictions in public interest
on such right. The Appellate Tribunal can decide, on the
material placed before it, whether public interest would be
better served if the permit was given to the appellant or
the first respondent within the meaning of s. 47 of the said
Act. The Government, in exercise its powers under s. 43 of
the said Act, gave administrative directions embodying some
principles for enabling the Tribunal to come to a conclusion
on the said point. The Tribunal had jurisdiction to decide
the said question on the basis of the principles so laid
down or dehors them. In either view, it only decides the
said question. The first respondent raised before the
Tribunal that public interest would be better served if a
permit was issued to it as it had a well equipped branch
office at Mannargudi. The said question was relevant. in an
inquiry under s. 47 of the said Act, whether the Tribunal
followed the instructions given by the Government or ignored
them. In coming to a conclusion on the said
816
question, the Tribunal made a clear error of law inasmuch
as it held that in the case of the first respondent, as it
had a branch at Kumbakonam, its other branch at Mannargudi
should be ignored. This, the learned counsel contends, is
an error apparent on the face of the record. He further
contends that the scope of an inquiry under Art. 226 ’is
wide and that it enables the court to issue an appropriate
direction even in a case of an error of fact apparent on the
face of the record.
It is not necessary to express our opinion on the wider
question in regard to the scope and amplitude of Art. 226 of
the Constitution, namely, whether the jurisdiction of the
High Court under the said Article to quash the orders of
Administrative tribunals is confined only to circumstances
under which the High Court of England can issue a writ of
certiorari or is much Wider than the said power, for this
appeal can satisfactorily and effectively be disposed of
within the narrow limits of the ambit of the English Court’s
jurisdiction to issue a writ of certiorari as understood by
this Court. If it was necessary to tackle the larger
question, we would have referred the matter to a Bench of 5
judges as it involved a substantial question of law as to
the interpretation of the Constitution; and under Art. 145
thereof such a question can be heard only by a Bench of at
least 5 judges. In the circumstances a reference to the
decisions of this Court cited at the Bar, which are alleged
to have expressed conflicting views thereon, is not called
for. We shall therefore, confine ourselves to the narrow
question.
Adverting to the scope of a writ of certiorari in common
law, this Court, in Hari Vishnu Kamath v. Syed Ahmed
Ishaque(1) laid down the following propositions:
(1) Certiorari will be issued for correcting
errors of jurisdiction, as when an inferior
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1104,1121, 1123.
817
Court or Tribunal acts without jurisdiction or
in excess of it, or fails to exercise it.
(2) Certiorari will also be issued when the
Court or Tribunal acts illegally in the exer-
cise of its undoubted jurisdiction, as when it
decides without giving an opportunity to the
parties to be heard, or violates the
principles of natural justice.
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(3) The Court issuing a writ of certiorari
acts in exercise of a supervisory and not
appellate jurisdiction. One consequence of
this is that the Court will not review
findings of fact reached by the inferior Court
or Tribunal, even if they be erroneous.
(4) An error in the decision or
determination itself may also be amenable to a
writ of certiorari but it must be a manifest
error apparent on the face of the proceedings
e.g., when it is based on clear ignorance or
disregard of the provisions of law.
This view was followed in Nagendra Nath Bora, v. The
Commissioner Hills Division and Appeals, Assam (1),
Satyanarayan v. Mallikarjun (2) Shri Ambica Mills Co. v. S.
B. Bhutt (3) and in Provincial Transport Services v. State
Industrial Court, Nagpur (4 ). But the more difficult
question is, what is the precise meaning of the expression
"’manifest error Apparent on the face of the proceedings ?"
Venkatarama Ayyar, J., attempted to define the said
expression in Hari Vishnu Kamath’s Case (5) thus
"Mr. Pathak for the first respondent
contended on the strength of certain
observations of Chagla, C. J., in Botuk K.
Vyas v. Surat Municipality (1), that no error
could be said to be apparent on the face of
the record if it was
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1240. (2) [1960] 1 S.C.R.
8140
(3) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 920. (4) [1963] 3 S.C.R.
650.
(5) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1104,1121, 1123 (6)
A.I.R. 1953 Bom. 133.
818
not self evident, and if it required an
examination or argument to establish it. This
test might afford a satisfactory basis for
decision in the majority of cases. But there
must be cases in which even this test might
break down, because judicial opinions also
differ, and an error that might be considered
by one judge as self-evident might not be so
considered by another. The fact is that what
is an error apparent on the face of the record
cannot be defined precisely or exhaustively,
there being an element of indefiniteness
inherent in its very nature, and it must be
left to be determined judicially on the facts
of each case."
It would be seen from the said remarks that the learned
judge could not lay down an objective test, for the concept
necessarily involves a subjective element. Sinha,J., as he
then was speaking for the Court in Nagendra Nath Bora’s Case
(1), attempted to elucidate the point further and proceeded
to observe at p. 1269-70 thus :
"’It is clear from an examination of the
authorities of this Court as also of the
courts in England, that one of the grounds on
which the jurisdiction of the High Court on
certiorari may be invoked is an error of law
apparent on the face of the record and every
error either of law or fact, which can be
corrected by a superior court, in exercise of
its statutory powers as a court of appeal or
revision."
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This decision assumes that the scope of a. writ in the
nature of certiorari or an order or direction to set aside
the order of an inferior tribunal under Art. 226 of the
Constitution is the same as that of a common law writ of
certiorari in England we do not express any opinion on this
in this case. This decision practically accepts the opinion
expressed
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1240.
819
by this Court in Hari Vishnu Kamath’s Case (1). The only
addition it introduces is the anti-thesis it made between
"’error of law and error of fact" and "error of law apparent
on the face of the record." But the question still remains
in each case whether an error is one of law or of fact and
that falls to be decided on the facts of each case. Das
Gupta, J., makes yet another attempt to define the
expression when he says in Satyanarayan v. Mallikarjun (2),
at p. 141 thus :
"An error which has to be established by a
long drawn process of reasoning on points
where there may conceivably be two opinions
can hardly be said to be an error apparent on
the face of record. As the above discussion
of the rival contentions show the alleged
error in the present case is far from self-
evident and if it can be established, it has.
to be established, by lengthy and complicated
arguments."
The learned judge here lays down the complex nature of the
arguments as a test of apparent error of law. This test
also may break, for what is complex to one judicial mind may
be clear and obvious to another : it depends upon the
equipment of a particular judge. In the ultimate analysis
the said concept is comprised of many imponderables : it is
not capable of precise definition, as no objective criterion
can be laid down, the apparent nature of the error, to a
large extent, being dependent upon the subjective element.
So too, in some cases the boundary between error of law and
error of fact is rather thin. A tribunal may hold that 500
multiplied by 10,000 is 5 lakhs (instead of 50 lakhs);
another tribunal may hold that a particular claim is barred
by limitation by calculating the period of time from 1956
instead of 1961 ; and a third tribunal may make an obvious
error deciding a mixed question of fact and law. The
question whether the said errors are errors of
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1104,1121, 1123. (2) [1960] 1 S.C.R.
890.
820
law or fact cannot be posited on a priori reasoning., but
-falls to be decided in each case. We do not,, therefore,
propose to define with any precision the concept of "error
of law apparent on the face of the record"; but it should be
left, as it has always been done, to be decided in each
case.
The only question therefore, is whether the State Transport
Appellate Tribunal committed an error of law apparent on the
face of the record. A look at the provisions of s. 47 and
s. 43 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, as amended by the
Madras Legislature, will facilitate the appreciation of the
problem. Under s. 47, a Regional Transport Authority in
considering an application for a stage carriage permit is
enjoined to have regard, inter alia, to the interests of the
public generally. Section 43-A, introduced by the Madras
Legislature by the Motor Vehicles (Madras Amendment) Act,
1948, says that the State Government may issue such orders
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and directions of a general character as it may consider
necessary in respect of any matter relevant to road
transport to the State Transport Authority or to a Regional
Transport Authority and such Transport Authority shall give
effect to all such orders and directions. It has been held
by this Court in M/s. Raman & Raman Ltd. v. The State of
Madras (1), that s. 43A conferred a power on the State
Government to issue administrative directions, and that any
direction issued thereunder was not a law regulating rights
of parties. It was also pointed out that the order made and
the directions issued under s. 43-A of the Act cannot
obviously add to, or subtract from, the consideration
prescribed under s. 47 thereof on the basis of which the
tribunal is empowered to issue or refuse to issue a permit,
as the case may be. It is, therefore clear that any
direction given under s. 43A for the purpose of considering
conflicting claims for a permit by applicants can only be to
enable the Regional Transport
(1) [1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 227.
821
Authority to discharge its duties, under s. 47 of the Act
more satisfactorily, efficiently and impartially. To put it
differently,the directions so given cannot enlarge or
restrict the jurisdiction of the said tribunal or authority
but only afford a reasonable guide for exercising the said
jurisdiction. Concretely stated, an applicant in advancing
his claim for a permit may place before the Authority an
important circumstance in his favour, namely, that he has a
branch office on the route in respect whereof- he seeks for
a permit. He may contend that he has an office on the
route, and that the interests of the public will be better
served, as the necessary amenities or help to meet any even-
tuality in the course of a trip will be within his easy
reach. The Government also under s. 43A may issue
instructions to the Regional Transport Authority that the
existence of an office of a particular applicant on the
route would be in the interests of the public and,
therefore, the said applicant should be given a preferential
treatment if other things are equal. The issue of such an
instruction only emphasizes a relevant fact which an
authority has to take into consideration even if such an
instruction was not given. But if the Authority under a
manifest error of law ignores the said relevant
consideration, it not only disobeys the administrative
directions given by the Government, but also transgresses
the provisions of s. 47 of the Act. The disobedience of the
instructions which are administrative in nature may not
afford a cause of action to an aggrieved party, but the
transgression of the statutory law certainly does. What is
the position in the present. case ?
The Government issued G. O. No. 1298 (Home), dated April 28,
1956, introducing a marking system for assessing the merits
of applicants for stage carriage permits. Column 3 reads
thus
"Location of residence or place of business of
the applicant on the route or at the terminal
:
822
This qualification not only is in favour of
local enterprise but also secures that the
owner will pay prompt and frequent attention
to the service entrusted to him. One mark may
be assigned to this qualification."
Under this instruction the location of the residence or the
place of business is considered to be in the interests of
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the public, for whose benefit the service is entrusted to a
permit-holder. The first respondent contended before the
Regional Transport Authority that he had branch offices at
Tanjore and mannargudi and therefore that fact should be
taken into consideration and a mark should be given to him
thereunder. The Regional Transport Authority gave one mark
to the appellant and also one mark to the first respondent
under that column. But the Appellate Tribunal refused to
give any mark under that column to the first respondent for
the following reasons :
"On behalf of the other appellants and the
Respondent it is contended that appellant No.
1 (1st respondent before the Supreme Court) is
a Private Ltd. Company having its registered
office at Madras, that their offices at Kumba-
konam is only a branch office, that the
offices, if any at Tanjore or at Mannargudi
cannot be treated as branch offices, and that,
as such they are not entitled to any mark in
column 3 of the mark list. This contention is
a valid one."
In regard to the Tanjore office the said appellate Tribunal
has given an additional reason by holding on the facts that
it was not an office at all. We can, therefore, ignore the
Tanjore office for the purpose of this appeal. So far as
the mannargudi office is concerned, the decision of the
Appellate Tribunal was based upon an obvious error. It took
the view that if a company bad a branch office at
823
one particular place, it could not have in law any other
branch office though it had one in fact. Whatever conflict
there may be, on which we do not express any opinion, in a
tax law or the company law, in the context of the marking
system and the evaluation of an amenity in the interest of
the public, it is obviously an untenable proposition to hold
that even if a company has a well equipped office on a route
in respect of which a permit is applied for, it shall be
ignored if the company has some other branch somewhere
unconnected with that route. That was what the Appellate
Tribunal held and in our view it is an error apparent on the
face of the record. On that erroneous view, the Appellate
Tribunal did Dot decide the relevant question raised,
namely, whether the respondent has any such office at
mannargudi. Both Ramachandra Iyer, J., at the first insta-
nce, and Anantanarayanan and Venkatadri, jj., in ’appeal,
rightly pointed out this error. As this is an error
apparent on the face of the record, they quashed the order
of the Appellate Tribunal and left the question open for
decision by it. In our view, the conclusion arrived at by
the High Court is correct.
It remains only to notice the decisions on which strong
reliance is placed by learned counsel for the appellant in
support of his contention.
In M/s. Raman and Raman Ltd. v. The State of Madras (1),
the relevant facts were : the appellant and the 4th
respondent therein, along with others, were applicants for a
stage carriage permit. The Regional Transport Authority
granted the permit to the appellant on the basis of
instructions issued by the State Government under s. 43A of
the Motor Vehicles Act; on appeal, the Central Road Traffic
Board set aside that order on the footing of fresh
instructions issued by the Government; and a division Bench
of the Madras High Court dismissed the writ petition filed
by the appellant. It was,
(1) [1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 227.
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824
inter alia, contended before this Court that the ins-
tructions given under s. 43A being law regulating rights of
parties, the appellate authority could not ignore that law
and set aside the order of the Regional Transport Authority
on. the basis of subsequent instructions. The contention
was rejected on the ground that instructions under s. 43A
were not law, but were only administrative directions and
that the fact that the appellate tribunal ignored them would
not affect its jurisdiction if it had come to a decision
having regard to the considerations laid down in s. 47 of
the Act. The question before the tribunal was whether a
small unit or a large one would be viable or would be in the
interest of the public. There was scope, for taking
different views on the question, and the appellate tribunal,
contrary to the earlier directions, came to the conclusion
that smaller units would be more in the interest of the
public than larger ones. This judgment, therefore, is an
authority only for the position that a tribunal in issuing
or refusing to issue a permit to an applicant would be
acting within its jurisdiction notwithstanding the fact that
it ignored the administrative directions given by the
Government under s. 43A of the Act, provided it had come to
a decision on the relevant considerations laid down in s. 47
of the Act.
In Abdulla Rowther v. The State Transport Appellate
Tribunal, Madras (1), the Regional Transport Authority
issued a permit each to the appellant therein and to one
Gopalan Nair. On appeal, the Appellate Tribunal set aside
that order and gave the permits to respondents, 3 and 4.
Both the Regional Transport Authority and the Appellate
Tribunal considered the applications on the basis of G.O.
No. 1298 issued by the Government of Madras on April, 28,
1956. The Regional Transport Authority gave 4 marks each to
the appellant and Gopalan Nair under Col. 1, which dealt
with the building
(1) A.I.R. 1959 S.C. 896.
825
strength to viable units, and refused, to give any marks to
respondents 3 and 4 under the said column on the ground that
they were fleet owners; with the result that the appellant
and Gopalan Nair secured more marks than respondents 3 and 4
and were, therefore, given the permits. But the Appellate
Tribunal held that the appellant and Gopalan Nair were not
entitled to claim the benefit of the marks under Col. 1, as
they had secured less marks than respondents 3 and 4 under
Cols. 3 to 5, for they held, on a fair obstruction of the
said G.O., that it was only when the marks obtained by
applicants under Cols. 2 to 5 were equal, recourse could be
had to ’Col. 1. On that basis, the Appellate Tribunal
quashed the order of the Regional Transport Authority and
gave the permits to respondents 3 and 4. The appellant
challenged the said order by an application under Art. 226
of the Constitution for a writ of certiorari in the High
Court of Madras. Rajagopalan, J., dismissed the application
on two grounds, namely, (1) that the construction of the
G.O. was not shown to be wrong and (2) that even if the G.
O. was misconstrued, it would not justify the issue of a
writ of certiorari, as the said G. O. embodied only
administrative directions. The Letters Patent Appeal filed
against the said order was dismissed. The appeal filed to
this Court was also dismissed. This Court followed the
decision in M/s. Raman and Raman Ltd. v. The State of
Madras (1), and held that the -instructions given under s.
43-A of the Motor Vehicles Act were only administrative
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directions and that, therefore, even if the rule as to the
assignment of marks was infringed, it was not an error of
law at all. This decision only follows the earlier decision
and lays down that instructions given under s. 43A of the
Motor Vehicles Act are only administrative directions and
that a wrong construction of the said instructions would not
enable the party affected to apply for a writ of certiorari.
The instructions laid down a method of evaluation
(1)[1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 227.
826
of the respective claims vis-a-vis ’the considerations laid
down in s. 47 of the Act. The Regional Transport Authority
and the Appellate Tribunal have borne in mind the said
considerations, in deciding upon the rival claims, though
they may have wrongly interpreted one of the instructions.
It may be pointed out that in that case the interpretation
put upon the instructions was a correct one, though this
Court proceeded on the assumption also that they might have
been wrongly interpreted. But the decision cannot obviously
be an authority for the position that on a wrong
interpretation of the administrative directions or dehors
the said directions, a tribunal can ignore the relevant
considerations laid down in s. 47 of the. Act or on the
basis of an error of law apparent on the record wrongly
refuse to decide on any of such considerations.
To the same effect is the decision of this Court in
Ayyaswami Gounder v. M/s. Soudambigai Motor Service (1).
There, the Regional Transport Authority followed the marking
system as laid down by the Government of Madras and gave to
the appellant (therein) 5 marks and to the respondent 6
marks. Though the respondent got 6 marks, he was not given
the permit, as in the view of the said Authority he was
guilty of misconduct. As between the other applicants, the
appellant having secured the highest number of marks, he was
given a permit. But on appeal the Appellate Tribunal
reallotted the marks and under the reallotment the appellant
got the highest number of marks; and because of that fact
and also for the reason that he was a small operator of two
buses, who should be given an opportunity to build up a
viable unit as quickly as possible, he was given the permit
by the Appellate Tribunal upholding the order of the
Regional Transport Authority. One of the question raised
there was whether the appellant was entitled to marks under
Col. 2 for repair and maintenance, facilities at Dharapuram-
the
(1) Civil Appeal No. 198 of 1962 (decided on 17-9-1962).
827
Appellate Tribunal found that he had such facilities. The
appellant filed a writ in the High Court and the learned
single judge thought that some mistakes had been committed
by the Appellate Tribunal in the allotment of marks and that
it acted in contravention of the directions given by the
Government under the said G. O., but dismiss the petition on
the ground that, as the said instructions are Only executive
directions, their contravention did not confer any right on
the parties before the tribunal. On Letters Patent Appeal a
Division Bench of that Court set aside that order on the
ground that the Appellate Tribunal had taken into consi-
deration the following two irrelevant considerations: (i)
the appellant’s claim should suffer because of the
punishment for his past misconduct, and (ii) the -third
respondent being a small operator, he would be entitled to
better Consideration than the appellant who was a
monopolist. On appeal, this court followed the decision in
M/s. Raman and Raman Ltd. v. The State of Madras (1) and
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Abdullah Rowther v. The State Transport Appellate Tribunal
(2) and held that under the said G. O. the Government issued
only administrative directions and that the failure of the
transport authorities to follow them would not entitle the
respondents to a writ. As regards the two reasons given by
the High Court, this Court came to the conclusion that they
were not irrelevant considerations, but were considerations
germane in the matter of issue of permits. In the result
this Court allowed the appeal. This decision accepts two
propositions, namely, (1) misconstruction or even disregard
of the instructions, given by the Government does not confer
a right upon an aggrieved party to file a writ, for the said
instructions are only administrative directions, and (2) the
decision implies that if the Tribunal decides on irrelevant
considerations, the Court can issue a writ. But in that
case it came to the conclusion that no such irrelevant
considerations weighed with the Tribunal.
(1) [1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 227
(2) A.I.R. 1959 S.C. 896.
828
The last of the cases relied upon is that in Sankara Ayyer
v. Narayanaswami Naidu (1). There too., the Regional
Transport Authority and the State Transport Appellate
Tribunal considered the applications for the grant of a
permit for anew route on the basis of the administrative
directions given by the State Government. The regional
Transport Authority gave the appellant 3 marks on the basis
that he was a small operator, but the Appellate Tribunal
came to the conclusion that he was not entitled to any marks
as a small operator. A single judge of the High Court set
aside the order of the Appellate Tribunal on the ground that
it misconstrued the directions contained in the Government
Order relating to small operators. But a division Bench of
that Court in Letters Patent appeal held, relying upon the
earlier decision of this Court, that the said directions
were only administrative in nature and that they did not
confer any legal rights and in that view allowed the appeal.
This Court again following the earlier decisions dismissed
the appeal holding that by construing the administrative
directions the Tribunal did not take irrelevant consi-
derations or refused to take relevant considerations in the
matter of issue of permits. It is always a controversial
question whether the issue of a permit to a small operator
or to a big operator would be in the interest of the public
and a Tribunal is certainly entitled to take either view.
It will be seen from the aforesaid decisions that this Court
only laid down that the instructions given under s. 43A of
the Motor Vehicles Act were only administrative directions
and that the infringement of those instructions by the
Tribunal did not confer any right on a party to apply to a
High Court for a writ under Art. 226 of the Constitution.
In all those cases the Tribunal either ignored the
instructions or misconstrued them, but nonetheless decided
the question of issue of permits on considerations relevant
(1) Civil Appeal No. 213 of 1960 (decided on 10-10-1960).
829
under s. 47 of the Act. They are not authorities on the
question whether a writ of certiorari, would lie, where a
Tribunal had on an obviously wrong view of law refused to
decide or wrongly decided on a consideration relevant -under
s. 47 of the Act, whether or not it was covered by the
instructions given under s. 43-A. For if on the basis of
such an error of law, it refuses to decide a relevant
question, the fact that the Government also issued
instructions to the Tribunal to apply some objective
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standards in deciding such a question does not make the said
question anytheless a relevant consideration under s. 47 of
the Act.
That is the position in the present case. As we have
already indicated, on the basis of an error manifest on the
record, namely, that a company cannot have a branch office
on the route in question, if it has another branch
elsewhere, it refused to take into consideration a relevant
fact, namely, whether the respondent has an office on the
said route. The High Court, therefore, was right in
quashing the order of the Appellate Tribunal and giving an
opportunity to the Tribunal to decide that question on
merits.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
830