Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LADU LAL JAIN
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/05/1963
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
SUBBARAO, K.
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1681 1964 SCR (3) 624
CITATOR INFO :
D 1988 SC1003 (2,3)
R 1990 SC 104 (4)
ACT:
Civil Procedure-Jurisdiction of Court-Railway headquarters
at a place within the jurisdiction of Court-Railway owned by
the Government "if a business"-Code of Civil Procedure,
1908 (V of 1908), ss. 20, 115-Constitution of India, Arts.
19 (6), 298.
HEADNOTE:
The plaintiff respondent instituted a suit in the court of
the Additional Subordinate Judge, Gauhati, against the Union
of India and the Northern Frontier Railway represented by
the General Manager, having its headquarters at Pandu.
Pandu is within the jurisdiction of the Subordinate judge.
The claim was for the recovery of a sum of Rs. 8,250/- on
account of nondelivery of the goods which had been consigned
to the plaintiffs firms, The consignment was booked from
Kalyanganj station of defendant No. 2 fair carriage to
Kanki, a station of the same defendant. It was alleged in
the plaint that the cause of action arose at Pandu within
the jurisdiction of the Court, where the defendant railway
had its principal place of business by virtue of its
headquarters being at Pandu. The suit was resisted by the
defendants on the ground that the court bad no jurisdiction
to entertain the suit.
Relying on the decision of the Assam High Court in P. C.
Biswas v. Union of India, A. I. R. 1956 Assam 85, the court
of first instance held that the principal place from which
the railway administration in a particular area is carried
on is the principal place of business for the purpose of
jurisdiction under s. 20 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908, and decided the issue in favour of the plaintiff. The
revision petition filed by the appellants was rejected by
the High Court. The present appeal was filed with special
leave granted by this Court.
It was contended in the appeal by the appellants that the
running of the railway by the Union of lndia could not be
said to amount to carrying on of business and that therefore
the fact that the headquarters of Northern Frontier Railway
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Administration was at Pandu within the jurisdiction of the
625
Court at Gauhati did not give the Court jurisdiction under
s. 20 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Held that Arts. 19 (6) and 298 of the Constitution clearly
indicate that the State can carry on business and can even
exclude citizens completely or partially from carrying on
that business.
The running of railways which is a business when carried on
by private companies or individuals does not cease to be a
business when they are run by the Government. It is the
nature of the activity which determines the character of an
activity. The fact as to who runs it and with what motive
cannot affect it. ’Profit element’ is not a necessary
ingredient of carrying on of business, though usually
business is carried on for profit.
The fact that the Government runs the railways for providing
cheap transport for the people and goods and for strategic
reasons will not convert what amounts to carrying on of
business into an activity of the State as a sovereign body.
The Union of India carries on the business of running
railways and can be sued in the court of the Subordinate
judge of Gauhati within whose territorial jurisdiction the
headquarters of one of the railways run by the Union is
situated.
Case Law reviewed.
State of Bombay v. Hospital Mazdoor Sabha [1960] 2 S.C.R.
866, The Corporation of the City of Nagpur v. Ito Employees,
[1960] 2 S. C. R. 942 and Satya Narain v. District Engineer,
P. W. D., A. I. R. 1962 S. C. 1161.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 717 of 1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 10, 1961 of the Assam High Court in Civil Revision No.
10 of 1961.
D. R. Prem, P. D. Menon for R. N. Sachthey, for the
appellants.
The respondent did not appear.
626
1963. May 7. The judgment of the Court was delivered by
RAGHUBAR DAYAL J. -This appeal, by special leave, is
directed against the order of the High Court of Assam
rejecting the revision application, under s. 115 of the Code
of Civil Procedure, hereinafter called the Code, of the
appellants against the order of the Additional Subordinate,
Judge, Gauhati, in a money suit to the effect that he had
jurisdiction to try the suit.
The contention of the appellants is that this view of the
Subordinate judge, confirmed by the High Court, is wrong.
To appreciate the contention for the appellants, the facts
of the case may be stated. The suit was instituted by the
plaintiff -respondent against the Union of India and the
Northern Frontier Railway represented by the General
Manager, having its headquarters at Pandu. It related to a
claim for recovery of a sum of Rs. 8,250/- on account of
nondelivery of the goods which had been consigned to the
plaintiff’s firm run tinder the name and style of M/s. Ladu
Lal Jain. The consignment consisted of 134 bags of rice and
was booked from Kalyanganj station of defendant No. 2 for
carriage to Kanki station of the same defendant on April 13,
1958. The goods consigned were no, delivered to the
plaintiff and hence the suit, after serving a notice under
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s. 77 of the Indian Railways Act on the defendant railway
and also serving a notice tinder s. 80 of the Code. It was
alleged in the plaint that the cause of action arose at
Pandu within the jurisdiction of the Court at Gauhati, the
place where notice under s. 80 of the Code was duly served
upon the defendant railway and that the suit was filed in
the Court within the jurisdiction of which the defendant
railway had
627
its principal place of business by virtue of its held-
quarters being at Pandu. The two defendants filed a joint
written statement.
Kalyanganj is in West Bengal and Kanki is in the State of
Bihar. Gauhati is in the State of Assam. It was contended
inter alia that Gauhati Court had no territorial
jurisdiction to try the suit as neither of the aforesaid
railway stations was within its jurisdiction and that the
consignment never travelled within any part of the State of
Assam and therefore the cause of action could not arise
within the jurisdiction of any Court in Assam It was further
contended that mere service of notice, which was not
admitted, on the defendants at a place within the
jurisdiction of the Court, could not vest territorial
jurisdiction on it and that defendant No. 1, the Union of
India, had no principal place of business at Pandu or any
other place within the jurisdiction of the Court, its head-
quarters office being at New Delhi. It was also stated that
defendant No. 2 is owned and managed by defendant No. 1,
that the office of defendant No. 2 at Pandu was also owned
and controlled by defendant No. 1 and that the office at
Pandu was a branch office of the Union of India which was
controlled by defendant No. I from New Delhi.
Relying on the case reported as P.C. Biswas v. Union of
India (1), the Trial Court decided the preliminary issue
about jurisdiction against the defendants holding that the
principal place from which the railway administrator- in a
particular area is carried on is the principal place of
business for the purpose of s. 20 of the (ode. The single
judge of the High Court rejected the revision also on the
basis of the same decision of his Court.
The territorial jurisdiction of a Court is in general
determined by the provisions of s. 20 of the Code which
reads :
"Subject to the limitations aforesaid, ever
suit
628
shall be instituted in a Court within the
local limits of whose jurisdiction -
(a) the defendant, or each of the defendants
where there are more than one, at the time of
the commencement of the suit, actually and
voluntarily resides, or carries on business,
or personally works for gain or
(b) any of the defendants, where there are
more than one, at the time of the commencement
of the suit, actually and voluntarily
resides,. or carries on business, or
personally works for gain, provided that in
such case either the leave of the Court
is given, or the defendants who do not reside,
or carry on business, or personally work for
gain, as aforesaid, acquiesce in such
institution ; or
(c) the cause of action, wholly or in part,
arises.
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Explanation I : Where a person has a permanent
dwelling at one place and also temporary
residence at another place, he shall be deemed
to reside at both places in respect of any
cause of action arising at the place where he
hag such temporary residence.
Explanation 11 : A corporation shall be deemed
to carry on business at its sole or principal
office in India or in respect of any cause of
action arising at any place where it has also
a subordinate office, at such place."
The principle behind the provisions of clauses (a) and (b) of
s. 20 is that the suit be instituted at a place
629
where the defendant be able to defend the suit without undue
trouble.
The expression ’voluntarily resides or personally works for
gain’ cannot be appropriately applied to the case of the
Government. The Government can however carry on business.
The mere fact that the expression ’carries on business’ is
used along with the other expressions, does not mean that it
would apply only to such persons to whom the other two
expires ions regarding residence or of personally working
for gain would apply.
The sole contention raised for the appellants in this Court
is that the running of railways by the Union of India cannot
be said to amount to its carrying on business and that
therefore the fact that the headquarters of the Northern
Frontier Railway Administration is at Pandu within the
jurisdiction of the Court at Gauhati does not give the Court
jurisdiction under s. 20 of the Code.
The contention is based on the reasoning that any
undertaking run by the Government, even if it amounts to the
carrying on of a business when run by a private individual,
would not be the carrying on of business by the Government
if there was no element of profit making in it. There is no
allegation in the written statement that the Government is
not running railways for profit. No issue was framed about
it. The Court below recorded no decision on the point. It
cannot be presumed that the Government is not making a
profit from its running the railways in the country or is
not running it with a profit motive.
The fact that the Government runs the railways for providing
quick and cheap transport for people and goods and for
strategic reasons will not convert what amounts to the
carrying on of a business into an activity of the State as a
sovereign body.
630
Article 298 of the Constitution provides that the executive
power of the Union and of each State shall extend to the
carrying on of any trade or business and cl. (6) of Art. 19
provides that nothing in sub-cl. s. (g) of cl. (1) of that
Article shall prevent the State from making any law relating
to the carrying on by the State or by a corporation owned-
or controlled by the State, of any trade, business, industry
or service, whether to the exclusion, complete or partial,
of citizens or otherwise. These provisions clearly indicate
that the State can carry on business and can even exclude
citizens completely or partially from carrying on that
business. Running of railways is a business. that is not
denied. Private companies and individuals carried on the
business of running railways, prior to the State taking them
over. The only question then is whether the running of
railways ,ceases to be a business when they are run by
Government. There appears to be no good reason to hold that
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it is so. It is the nature of the activity which defines
its character. Running of railways is such an activity
which comes within the expression ’business’. The fact as
to who runs it and with what motive cannot affect it.
This Court bad occasions to detemine the nature of certain
activities of Government. The rationale of those cases is a
good guide for determining the point before us. In State of
Bombay v. The Hospital Mozdoor Sabha(1)’ the question was
whether the relevant provisions of the Industrial Disputes
Act, 1947, applied to the group of hospitals run by the
State of Bombay and whether they are ’industry’ within the
meaning of that Act. The decision of the question depended
on the interpretation of the definition of ’industry’
prescribed -by s. 2 (j) of the Act. This section provides
that industry means any business, trade, undertaking etc.,
of employers. In considering the question it became
necessary to enquire whether that activity, i.e., the
running of the
(1) [1961] 2 S. C. R. 866.
631
hospitals, would be an undertaking if it is carried on by a
private citizen or a group of private citizens. It was
field that if a hospital is run by private citizens for
profit, it would be an undertaking very much like the trade
or business in their conventional sense. It was observed at
p. 878 :
"Thus the character of the activity involved
in running a hospital brings the institution
of the hospital within s. 2.(j). Does it make
any difference that the hospital is run by the
Government in the interpretation of the word
undertaking’ in s. 2 (j) ? In our opinion, the
answer to this question must be in the
negative. It is the character of the activity
which decides the question as to whether the
activity in question attracts the provision of
s. 2(j); who conducts the activity and whether
it is conducted for profit or not do not make
a material difference "
To similar effect were the observations in The
Corporation of the City of Nagpur v. Its
employees where it was said :
"If a service rendered by an individual or a
private person would be an industry, it would
equally be an industry in the hands of a
corporation."
It was earlier said at p. 960
"Monetary considerations for service is,
therefore, not an essential characteristic of
industry in a modern State."
"Barring the regal functions of a
municipality, if such other activities of it,
if undertaken by an individual, would be
industry, then they would equally be industry
in the hands of a municipality,
(1) [1960] a S.C.R. 942, 962,
632
Lastly, in Satya Narain v. District Engineer, P.W.D. (1),
the question for determination was whether plying motor
buses by the Government by way of commercial activity
amounts to its running it on a public service. In
determining this question, this Court observed at p. 1163:
"It is undoubtedly not easy to define what is
"Public service’ and each activity has to be
considered by itself for deciding whether it
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is carried on as a public service or not.
Certain activities will undoubtedly be
regarded as public services, as for instance,
those undertaken in the exercise of the
sovereign power of the State or of
governmental functions. About these there can
be no doubt. Similarly a pure business
undertaking though run by the Government
cannot be classified as public service. But
where a particular activity concerns a public
utility a question may arise whether it falls
in the first or the second category. The mere
fact that that activity may be useful to the
public would not necessarily render it public
service. An activity however beneficial to
the people and however useful cannot, in our
opinion, be reasonably regarded as public
service if it is of a type which may be
carried on by private individuals and is
carried on by government with a distinct
profit motive. It may be that plying stage
carriage buses even though for hire is an
activity undertaken by the Government for
ensuring the people a cheap, regular and
reliable mode of transport and is in that
sense beneficial to the public.- It does not,
however, cease to be a commercial activity if
it is run with profit motive. Indeed even
private operators in order to attract custom
are also interested in providing the same
facilities to the public as the Government
undertaking provides. Since that is so, it-is
difficult
(1) A, I, R. 1962 B. C. 1161.
633
to see what difference there is between the
activity carried on by private individuals and
that carried on by Government. By reason of
the fact that a commercial undertaking is
owned and run by the State it does not ipso
facto become a "public service’."
This case simply held that commercial activity carried on
with profit motive cannot be held to be ’public service’.
It does not hold that such activity carried on by Government
will not be "business’ if conducted without profit motive.
We are of opinion that ’profit element’ is not a necessary
ingredient of carrying on business, though usually business
is carried on for profit. It is to be presumed that the
Railways are run on a profit basis, though it may be that
occasionally they are run at a loss.
The case reported as Director of Rationing & Distribution v.
The Corporation of Calcutta (1), relied on for the
appellants is really of no help to them. It was in
connection with the sovereign activities of the State that
it was said that the State was not bound by any statute
unless the statute provided to that effect in express terms
or by necessary implication. The contention that the
Government could not get the benefit of this law in
connection with its business activities was neither repelled
nor considered. It was held to have no foundation as there
was nothing on the record that the Food Department of the
Government of West Bengal by undertaking rationing and
distribution of food on a rational basis had embarked upon
any trade or business and, in the absence of any such
indication, it appeared that the department was discharging
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the elementary duty of a sovereign to ensure proper and
equitable distribution of available foodstuffs with a view
to maintaining peace and good government.
(1) [1961] I. &.C. A? 158,
634
In view of what we have said above, we hold that the, Union
of India carries on the business of running railways and can
be sued in the Court of the Subordinate Judge of Gauhati
within whose territorial jurisdiction the headquarters of
one of the railways run by the Union is situated. We accor-
dingly dismiss the appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed.