Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NILKANTH PRASAD AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/12/1961
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 1135 1962 SCR Supl. (1) 728
CITATOR INFO :
R 1966 SC1661 (9)
R 1969 SC 273 (5)
D 1974 SC1940 (7,9,13,14,28,31,39,40,42,47,4
R 1986 SC 319 (4,9,10,12,13)
ACT:
Motor Transport-Route notified under scheme-
State Transport Undertaking exclusively allowed to
operate thereon-Previous operator’s licence, if
can be renewed-Notified route forming part of
longer route operated by private operators-Private
operators, if excluded-Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (4
of 1939), s. 68F(2)(c)(iii).
HEADNOTE:
Under a scheme framed and notified under the
Motor Vehicles Act a certain route was notified
under s. 68D of the Act and the Rajya Transport,
Bihar was exclusively allowed to operate on that
route. The said notified route formed part of
routes on which the appellants were operating, and
in respect of which they had asked for renewal of
their permits. The Rajya Transport, Bihar filed
objections against the renewal of the permits in
some cases but in other case no objection was
filed. The question which arose for decision was
whether the permits of the appellant could be
renewed by the Regional Transport Authority. The
appellants contended that as the notified route
formed part of a larger route operated by a
private operator, the two routes must be regarded
as different route, and the private operator could
not be prevented from running his omnibuses on
that portion of his route, which was a different
route, although notified.
^
Held, that as decided by this Court in Abdul
Gafoor’s case, the Regional Transport Authority
had no option but to refuse the permit to the
private operator, if the State Transport
Undertaking had either applied for a permit or had
already been granted one.
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Abdul Gafoor v. State of Mysore, A.I.R. 1961
S.C. 1956, followed.
If the Regional Transport Authority did not
do its duty under the law the Appeal Board was
entitled, when the record was before it, to revise
the order of the Regional Transport Authority
under its revisional powers as provided in s. 64A
of the Act, even if the appeal was incompetent.
Samarth Transport Co. v. Regional Transport
Authority Nagpur, A.I.R. 1961 S.C. 93, followed.
729
In the present case the appellants were not
entitled to run over those portions of their
routes which were notified as part of the scheme.
Those portions could not be said to be different
routes, but must be regarded as portions of the
routes of the private operators, from which the
private operators stood excluded under s. 68F (2)
(c) (iii) of the Act.
Kelani Valley Motor Transit Co. v. Colombo
Ratnapura Omnibus Co., [1946] A. C. 338 and
Kondala Rao v. Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport
Corporation, A.I.R. 1961 S.C. 82, considered.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
Nos. 524 to 539 of 1961.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment
and order dated July 5, 1961, of the Patna High
Court, in Misc. Judicial cases Nos. 670 to 675 of
1959.
WITH
Civil Appeal No. 434 of 1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
order dated August 8, 1960, of the Patna High
Court, in Misc. Judicial Case No. 334 of 1960.
A.V. Viswanatha Sastri and B.P. Jha, for the
appellants. (in C. As. Nos. 534 to 538 and 434 of
1961).
B.P. Jha, for the appellant (in C.A. No. 539
of 1961).
Lal Narain Sinha, L.S. Sinha and S.P. Verma,
for the respondents.
1961. December 1. The Judgment of the Court
was delivered by
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-The judgment in Civil Appeal
No. 534 of 1961 will dispose of Civil Appeals Nos.
535 to 539 of 1961. In these appeals, private
operators of omnibuses challenge the orders of the
Appeal Board of the State Transport Authority, by
which it set aside the renewal of the permits on
certain routes granted by the South Bihar Regional
Transport Authority, Patna. The appellants held
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previously stage carriage permits over certain
routes and which were due to expire in December,
1958 or in January, 1959. They had applied for
renewal of their permits under s. 58(2) of the
Motor Vehicles Act. Under a scheme framed and
notified on July 8, 1957, vide Notification No. P-
2-203/57T/4794, the route, Gaya to Khijirsarai,
was notified under s. 68D of the Motor Vehicles
Act. The Rajya Transport, Bihar, was exclusively
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allowed to operate on that route. In Civil Appeals
No. 535 to 538 of 1961, the Rajya Transport,
Bihar, filed objections against the renewal of the
permits. In Civil appeals Nos. 534 and 539 of
1961, no objections were filed. The route, Gaya to
Khijirsarai, which may be called conveniently
route ’AB’ formed part of routes, on which the
appellants were operating and in respect of which
they had asked for renewal of their permits. The
south Bihar Regional Transport Authority, however,
renewed the permits of the appellants, holding
that route ’AB’ was different from the routes, for
which renewal was demanded.
Against the orders of the Regional Transport
Authority, appeals were filed by the Rajya
Transport, Bihar in all the cases, that is to say,
in those cases in which the Rajya Transport,
Bihar, had objected, and those in which it had not
objected. While these appeals were pending, the
State of Bihar, acting under s. 3 of the Road
Transport Corporations Act, 1950 (64 of 1950)
notified on April 20, 1959 as follows:
"No. R.T. Cor. 1/59-3090-In exercise of
the powers conferred by section 3 of the Road
Transport corporation Act, 1950 (LXIV of
1950), the Governor of Bihar is pleased to
establish with effect from the 1st May, 1959
a Road Transport Corporation, for the State
of Bihar, to be called, the Bihar State Road
Transport Corporation’.
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2. The said Corporation shall with
effect from the said date, exercise all the
powers and perform all the functions which
are at present being exercised and performed
by the Rajya Transport, Bihar.
By order of the Governor of Bihar.
K. B. Sharma, Dy. Secy."
At the hearing of the appeals, the Government
Advocate, Mr. Lal Narain Sinha, appeared for the
Road Transport Corporation. Objection was taken to
the competency of the appeals on two grounds. In
those cases in which the Rajya Transport, Bihar,
had not objected to the renewal of the permits
before the Regional Transport Authority, it was
contended that it had no locus standi to file
appeals. In those cases in which it had so
objected, the ground was that the Road Transport
Corporation could not, in law, represent the Rajya
Transport, Bihar, in the appeals filed by the
latter. On merits, it was contented that the order
of the Regional Transport Authority that route ’
AB ’ though part of the routes for which renewal
was asked, was a different route, and the State
Corporation had an exclusive right to ply
omnibuses on routes ’AB’ did not affect the rights
of the appellants to ply their omnibuses on
routes, which were entirely different.
The Government Advocate contended that, on
the analogy of the principle underlying O. 22, Re.
10 of the Civil Procedure Code, the Road Transport
Corporation on which devolved the powers and
functions of the Rajya Transport, Bihar, could
prosecute the appeals. He also contended, in the
alternative, that he was representing also the
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Rajya Transport, Bihar, and that the appeals were
not defective. The Board accepted the argument of
the Government Advocate, and set aside the orders
of renewal passed by the Regional Transport
Authority. The appellants then filed petitions
732
under Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution
challenging the order of the Board on many
grounds. The High Court, by its judgment dated
July 5, 1961, dismissed all the petitions. In the
order under appeal, the High Court considered the
competency of the appeals, and held that the Rajya
Transport, Bihar, was competent to prosecute the
appeals before the Appeal Board. In dealing with
the question whether the Appeal Board was entitled
to interfere with the order of the Regional
Transport Authority at the instance of the Rajya
Transport in those cases, where the Rajya
Transport had not filed objections under the Motor
Vehicles Act, the High Court held that it was not
necessary to express an opinion on the correctness
of the argument, because the Regional Transport
Authority was not competent to grant a renewal,
inasmuch as such a grant was a direct violation of
the scheme approved by the State Government and
published in the Official Gazette. On the merits,
the High Court was of opinion that under s. 68F(2)
(c) (iii), the Regional Transport Authority could
curtail the length of the route covered by the
permit, and exclude the portion, which overlapped
a notified route. The present appeals have been
filed against the order of the High Court, with
the special leave of this Court.
These appeals thus fall into two groups. In
one group are Civil Appeals Nos. 534 and 539 of
1961 and in the other are Civil Appeals Nos. 535
to 538 of 1961. In the former, the grant of
renewal of the permits has been made without any
objection, and in the latter, in spite of the
objections filed by the Rajya Transport. The
competency of the appeals before the Appeal Board
is involved in both the groups, though on
different grounds. The answer to the different
objections is, however, the same.
733
In Abdul Gafoor v. State of Mysore, the
effect of notifying a scheme was considered by
this Court, and it was there stated that when a
scheme has been notified under Chap. IVA of the
Motor Vehicles Act, and an application is made for
the grant of a permit on a route notified under
the scheme by a private operator, the Regional
Transport Authority has no option but to refuse
the permit to the private operator, if the State
Transport Undertaking has either applied for a
permit or has already been granted one. In all the
present cases, the State Transport Undertaking had
already been granted a permit over route ’AB’, and
if the private operators, that is to say, the
appellants, were not entitled, in law, to the
renewal of their permits for routes which embraced
also route ’AB’, then the Regional Transport
Authority could not but refuse to renew the
permits. It was observed in Abdul Gafoor’s case
that the duty of the Regional Transport Authority
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was merely mechanical, and that it was required to
take note of routes which had been notified and to
adapt its orders so as to be in conformity with
the notified scheme. In view of the fact,
therefore, that the scheme had been notified and
route ’AB’ had already been granted to the Rajya
Transport and/or the State Transport Undertaking,
the Regional Transport Authority was incompetent
to renew a permit over a route embracing route
’AB’. The Regional Transport Authority not having
done its duty under the law, the Appeal Board was
entitled, when the record was before it, to revise
the order of the Regional Transport Authority,
even if the appeal was incompetent, in view of the
vast powers of revision under s. 64A. That
section, omitting the provisos, reads:
"The State Transport Authority may,
either on its own motion or on an application
made to it, call for the record of any case
in which an order has been made by a Regional
734
Transport Authority and in which no appeal
lies, and if it appears to the State
Transport Authority that the order made by
the Regional Transport Authority is improper
or illegal, the State Transport Authority may
pass such order in relation to the case as it
deems fit."
The High Court came to the conclusion that it
should not interfere, in its discretionary powers
under Arts. 226 and 227, with the order of the
Appeal Board, because even if the appeal for some
reason was incompetent, the Appeal Board had the
record before it, and gave effect to the correct
legal position arising from a notified scheme. The
same view was expressed also in Samarth Transport
Co. v. Regional Transport Authority, Nagpur. In
our opinion, we should not interfere on this
ground either. In this connection, the difference
between the two sets of cases arising from the
fact whether the Rajya Transport, Bihar, had
objected or not, completely disappears.
We are now concerned with the merits of the
contention that where the scheme notifies, as a
route, a part of a larger route operated by a
private operator, the two routes must be regarded
as different, and the private operator cannot be
prevented from running his omnibuses on that
portion of his route which is a different route,
although notified. Reliance is placed upon a
decision of the Privy Council in Kelani Valley
Motor Transit Co., Ltd., v. Colombo-Ratnapura
Omnibus Co., Ltd. There, the Privy Council was
concerned with two Ordinances promulgated in
Ceylon intituled the Motor Car Ordinance (No. 45
of 1938) and the Omnibus Service Licensing
Ordinance (No. 47 of 1942). By the first schedule,
para I of the latter Ordinance, it was provided
that if applications were made by two or more
persons for road service licences in respect of
the same route, preference should be given to (a)
an
735
application from a company or partnership
comprising the holders of all the licences for the
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time being in force under the Motor Car Ordinance
No. 45 of 1938, authorising the use of omnibuses
on such route, and (b) an application from a
company or partnership comprising the holders of
the majority of the licences referred to in (a)
above. Section 7, sub-s. 1, provides:
"The issue of road service licences
under this Ordinance shall be so regulated by
the Commissioner as to secure that different
persons are not authorised to provide regular
omnibus services on the same section of any
highway: Provided, however, that the
Commissioner may, where he considers it
necessary to do so having regard to the needs
and convenience of the public, issue licences
to two or more persons authorizing the
provision of regular omnibus services
involving the use of the same section of a
highway, if, but only if-(a) that section of
the highway is common to the respective
routes to be used for the purposes of the
services to be provided under each of the
licences, but does not constitute the whole
or the major part of any such route."
The real question in the case was whether the
appellant there could take into account for the
purpose of the first schedule, six omnibuses which
had been licenced for the route, Panadura to
Badulla via Colombo and the low level road.
Panadura is 16 miles along the coast to Colombo
and thence from Colombo to Ratnapura is 50 miles
and from Ratnapura to Badulla, a further 80 miles.
It was clear that the route from Panadura to
Badulla was not the same or substantially the same
route as the route, Colombo to Ratnapura; but if a
licence for an omnibus on the route, Panadura to
736
Badulla, was one authorising the use of the
omnibus on the route, Colombo to Ratnapura, then
six omnibuses plied by the appellant could be
taken into account to turn the scale between the
parties. Sir John Beaumont in expounding the
meaning of the word "route" observed as follows:
"If ’route’ has the same meaning as
’highway’ in the Ordinance this argument must
prevail, since admittedly an omnibus running
on the highway from Panadura to Badulla will
pass over the whole of the highway between
Colombo and Ratnapura, but in their
Lordships’ opinion it impossible to say that
’route’ and ’highway’ in the two Ordinances
are synonymous terms............ A ’highway’
is the physical track along which an omnibus
runs, whilst a ’route’ appears to their
Lordships to be an abstract conception of a
line of travel between one terminus and
another, and to be something distinct from
the highway traversed."
This distinction between "route" and "road"
is relied upon by the appellants to show that the
notified route, which we have called ’AB’ was a
different route from the routes for which renewal
of permits was demanded, even though route ’AB’
might have been a portion of the "road" traversed
by the omnibuses of the appellants plying on their
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"routes." The distinction made by the Privy
Council is right; but it was made with reference
to the words used in the Ordinances there under
consideration. The question is whether a similar
distinction can be made in the context of the
Motor Vehicles Act. Mr. Viswanatha Sastri
appearing for the appellants took us through ss.
42 to 57 of the Motor Vehicles Act and drew our
attention to those in which the word "route" has
been used, contra-distinguished from the word
"area", and contended that everywhere the word
"route" is used in the sense of a notional line
between two
737
termini running a stated course, and is used in
contradistinction to what may be conveyed by the
word "area ". In Kondala Rao v. Andhra Pradesh
State Road Transport Corporation, this court, in
dealing with the scheme of the Motor Vehicles Act,
declined to make any such distinction between
"route" and "area". This Court, speaking through
Subba Rao, J., observed at p. 93:
"Under s. 68C of the Act the scheme may
be framed in respect of any area or a route
or a portion of any area or a portion of a
route. There is no inherent inconsistency
between an ’area’ and a ’route’. The proposed
route is also an area limited to the route
proposed. The scheme may as well propose to
operate a transport service in respect of a
new route from point A to point B and that
route would certainly be an area within the
meaning of s. 68C."
In any event, under s. 68C it is provided that a
scheme may notify a route or an area or a portion
of a route or a portion of an area, and the
exclusion of the private operators from the whole
route or the whole area or a part of the route or
a part of that area, as the case may be, may be
either complete or partial, and under s. 68F(2)
(c) (iii), the Regional Transport Authority may
modify the terms of any existing permit so as to
"curtail the area or route covered by the permit,
in so far as such permit relates to the notified
area or notified route ". This means that even in
those cases where the notified route and the route
applied for run over a common sector, the
curtailment by virtue of the notified scheme would
be by excluding that portion of the route or, in
other words, the " road " common to both. The
distinction between " route " as the notional line
and " road " as the physical track disappears in
the working of Chap. IVA, because you cannot
curtail the route without curtailing a portion of
the road,
738
and the ruling of the Court to which we have
referred, would also show that even if the route
was different, the area at least would be the
same. The ruling of the Judicial Committee cannot
be made applicable to the Motor Vehicles Act,
particularly Chap. IVA, where the intention is to
exclude private operators completely from running
over certain sectors or routes vested in State
Transport Undertakings. In our opinion, therefore,
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the appellants were rightly held to be disentitled
to run over those portions of their routes which
were notified as part of the scheme. Those
portions cannot be said to be different routes,
but must be regarded as portions of the routes of
the private operators, from which the private
operators stood excluded under s. 68F (2)(c)(iii)
of the Act. The decision under appeal was,
therefore, correct in all the circumstances of the
case.
This leaves over for consideration Civil
Appeal No. 434 of 1961. There, the question which
arose was decided in the same way in which we have
disposed of the other appeals on merits.
Ramaswami, C.J., and Kanhaiya Singh, J., referred
to an earlier decision (M.J.C. No. 354 of 1960
decided on May 13, 1960) given by the Chief
Justice and Chaudhuri, J., in which they had
applied the Privy Council case, and made a
distinction between a route which was longer than
the notified route, though running for part of the
way along the notified route and the notified
route. In the judgment from which Civil Appeal No.
434 of 1961 arises, the learned Chief Justice has
declined to follow his earlier ruling which, he
considers, was given perincuriam, because the
provisions of s. 68 F(2)(c)(iii) of the Motor
Vehicles Act were not taken into account. After
considering the matter in the light of that
section, the Divisional Bench has reached the same
conclusion as we have, and along almost the same
line of reasoning. In view of what we have said in
Civil Appeal No. 534 of 1961, Civil Appeal No. 434
of 1961 must also fail.
739
In the result, the appeals are dismissed, but
in the circumstances of the case, we make no order
about costs.
Appeals dismissed.