Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHIVJI NATHUBHAI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE UNION OF INDIA & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/01/1960
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 606 1960 SCR (2) 775
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1961 SC1361 (8)
R 1961 SC1669 (6,34)
R 1962 SC1110 (8)
D 1962 SC1513 (7)
RF 1964 SC1140 (13)
R 1964 SC1643 (4,7)
R 1965 SC1595 (16)
RF 1966 SC 671 (5)
RF 1967 SC1507 (6)
R 1967 SC1606 (8)
APL 1970 SC1896 (18)
R 1973 SC 678 (14)
R 1974 SC 87 (11)
D 1987 SC1802 (29)
RF 1991 SC 818 (37)
ACT:
Mining Lease-Grant by the State Government-Cancellation in
review by the Central Government-Such cancellation if a
quasi-judicial act-Mineral Concession Rules, 1949. rr.
52,54.
HEADNOTE:
Rule 54 of the Mineral Concession Rules, 1949, provided as
follows:
" Review. Upon receipt of such application, the Central
Government may, if it thinks fit, call for the relevant
records and other information from the Provincial
Government, and after considering any explanation that may
be offered by the Provincial Government, cancel the order of
the Provincial Government or revise it in such manner as the
Central Government may deem just and proper.
The appellant was granted mining leases in respect of five
areas and possession was delivered to him. On an
application for review made by one of the respondents under
r. 52 of the Rules, the Central Government, without giving
the appellant an opportunity of being heard, cancelled the
leases with regard to two of the areas and directed the
State Government to grant leases in respect thereof to the
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said respondent. The appellant applied to the High Court
under Art. 226 of the Constitution for quashing the said
order. The Single judge who heard the application as well
as the Division Bench on appeal held that the order of
cancellation was an administrative order and the appellant
was not entitled to a hearing. It was contended on behalf
of the appellant in this Court that rr. 52-55 of the Rules
showed that the proceeding before the Central Government was
a quasijudicial proceeding and, consequently, the rules of
natural justice must apply.
Held, that the contention must prevail and the order of
cancellation be quashed.
In exercising its power of review under r. 54 of the Mineral
Concessions Rules, 1949, the Central Government acted
judicially and not administratively.
Assuming that the act of the State Government in granting a
mining lease was an administrative act, it was not correct
to say that no right of any kind passed to the lessee
thereunder untill the review was decided by the Central
Government where a review had been applied for. Rule 52,
therefore, by giving the aggrieved party the right to a
review created a lis between him and the lessee and,
consequently, in the absence of anything to the contrary
either in r. 54 or the statute itself, there could be no 99
776
doubt that the Central Government was acting quasi-
judicially under r. 54.
Province of Bombay v. Kushaldas S. Advani. [1950]
S.C.R.621, applied.
R. v. Electricity Commissioner. (1924) I. K. B. 171,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 428 of 1959.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated February 25, 1959,
of the Punjab High Court (Circuit Bench) at Delhi in Letters
Patent Appeal No. 47-D of 1955, arising out of the judgment
and order dated November 28, 1955 of the said High Court in
Writ Petition No. 306-D of 1954.
N. C. Chatterjee, J. B. Dadachanji, S. N. Andley,
Rameshwar Nath and P. L. Vohra, for the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary. Solicitor-General of India, R. Gapapathy
Iyer, R. H. Dhebar and T. M. Sen, for respondents Nos. 1 &
2.
G. S. Pathak, S. S. Shukla and Mrs. E. Udayaratnam, for
respondent No. 3.
1960. January 19. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
WANCHOO J.-This appeal upon a certificate granted by the
Punjab High Court raises the question whether an order of
the Central Government under r. 54 of the Mineral Concession
Rules, 1949, (hereinafter called the Rules) framed under s.
6 of the Mines and Minerals (Regulation and Development)
Act, No. 53 of 1941, (hereinafter called the Act) is quasi-
judicial or administrative. The brief facts necessary for
this purpose are these. The appellant was granted a mining
lease by the then Ruler of Gangpur State on December 30,
1947, shortly before the merger of that State with the State
of Orissa on January 1, 1948. This lease was annulled on
June 29, 1949. Thereafter the appellant was granted
certificates of approval in respect of prospecting licences
and mining leases. Eventually, the appellant applied on
December 19, 1949, for mining leases for manganese in
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respect of five areas in the district of Sundergarh
(Orissa). He was asked on July 4, 1950, to submit a
separate
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application for each area which he did on July 27, 1950.
Some defects were pointed out in these applications and
therefore the appellant submitted fresh applications on
September 6, 1950, after removing the defects. In the
meantime, the third respondent also made applications for
mining leases for manganese for the same area on July 10,
1950. These applications were not accompanied by the
deposit required under r. 29 of the Rules. Consequently,
the third respondent was asked on July 24, 1950, to deposit
a sum of Rs. 500, which it did on August 3, 1950. It was
then found that the third respondent’s applications were
defective. It was therefore asked on September 5, 1950, to
send a separate application in the prescribed form for each
block and thereupon it submitted fresh applications on
September 6, 1950. Eventually, on December 22, 1952, the
State of Orissa granted the mining leases of the five areas
to the appellant taking into account r. 32 of the Rules,
which prescribed priority. It was held that the appellant’s
applications were prior and therefore the leases were
granted to him. Thereafter on April 21, 1953, possession of
the areas leased was delivered to the appellant. It seems,
however, that the third respondent had applied for review to
the Central Government under r. 52 of the Rules. This
review application was allowed by the Central Government on
January 28, 1954, and the Government of Orissa was directed
to grant a mining lease to the third respondent with respect
to two out of the five areas.
The appellant’s complaint is that he came to know in
February, 1954, that the third respondent had applied to the
Central Government under r. 52 for review. He thereupon
addressed a letter to the Central Government praying that he
might be given a hearing before any order was passed on the
review application. He was, however, informed on July 5,
1955, by the Government of Orissa of the order passed by the
Central Government on January 28, 1954, by which the lease
granted to him by the State of Orissa with respect to two
areas was cancelled. Consequently, he made an application
under Art. 226 of the
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Constitution to the Punjab High Court praying for quashing
the order of January 28, 1954, on the ground that it was a
quasi-judicial order and the rules of natural justice had
not been followed inasmuch as he had not been given a
hearing before the review application was allowed by the
Central Government, thus affecting his rights to the -lease
granted by the State of Orissa. The writ petition was heard
by a learned Single Judge of the High Court and it was held
that the order was not a quasi-judicial order but merely an
administrative one and that there being no lis, the
appellant was not entitled to a hearing. In the result, the
writ petition failed. The appellant went up in Letters
Patent Appeal to a Division Bench of the High Court, which
upheld the order of the learned Single Judge. The appellant
then applied for a certificate to permit him to appeal to
this Court which was granted; and that is how the matter has
come up before us.
Shri N. C. Chatterji appearing on behalf of the appellant
contends that the Central Government was acting in a quasi-
judicial capacity when it passed the order under r. 54 of
the Rules and therefore it was incumbent upon it to hear the
appellant before deciding the review application, and
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inasmuch as it did not do so it contravened the principles
of natural justice which apply in such a case and the order
is liable to be quashed. In support of this, learned
counsel relies on Nagendra Nath Bora and another v. The
Commissioner of Hills Division and Appeals, Assam and others
(1), and submits that rr. 52 to 55 of the Rules which are
relevant for the purpose clearly show that the proceeding
before the Central Government is a quasi-judicial proceeding
in view of the following circumstances appearing from these
rules: (1) Rule 52 gives a statutory right to any person
aggrieved by an order of the State Government to apply for
review in case of refusal of a mining lease; (2) It also
prescribes a period of limitation, namely, two months; (3)
Rule 53 prescribes a fee for an application under r. 52.
These circumstances taken with the circumstance that a lis
is
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1240.
779
created as soon as a person aggrieved by an order is given
the right to go up in review against another person in whose
favour the order has been passed by the State Government
show that the proceeding before the Central Government at
any rate at the stage Of review is quasi-judicial to which
rules of natural justice apply.
Mr. G. S. Pathak appearing for the third respondent on the
other hand contends that the view taken by the High Court is
correct and that the order of January 28, 1954, is a mere
administrative order and therefore it was not necessary for
the Central Government to hear either party before passing
that order. He points out that the minerals, for mining
which the lease is granted under the Rules, are the property
of the State. No person applying for a mining lease of such
minerals has any right to the grant of the lease. According
to him, the right will only arise after the lease has been
granted by the State Government and the review application,
if any, has been decided by the Central Government. He
submits that even under r. 32, which deals with priority the
State Government is not bound to grant the lease to the
person who applies first and it can for any special reason
and with the prior approval of the Central Government grant
it to a person who applies later. His contention further is
that as at the earlier stage when the grant is made by the
State Government the order granting the lease is a mere
administrative order-as it must be in these circumstances
(he asserts)-, the order passed on review by the Central
Government must also partake of the same nature.
In order to decide between these rival contentions it is
useful to refer to rules 52 to 55 which fall for
consideration in this case. These are the rules as they
existed up to 1953. Since then we are told there have been
amendments and even the Act has been replaced by the Mines
and Minerals (Regulation and Development) Act, 1957. We
are, however, not concerned with the Rules as modified after
January 1954 or with the Act of 1957. Rule 52 inter alia
provides that -any person aggrieved by an order of the
780
State Government refusing to grant a mining lease may within
two months of the date of such order apply to the Central
Government for reviewing the same. Rule 53 prescribes a
fee. Rule 54 may be quoted in extenso,
" Upon receipt of such application, the Central Government
may, if it thinks fit, call for the relevant records and
other information from the State Government and after
considering any explanation that may be offered by the State
Government, cancel the order of the State Government or
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revise it in such manner as the Central Government may deem
just and proper. "
Rule 55 then says that the order of the Central Government
under r. 54, and subject only to such order, any order of
the State Government under these rules shall be final.
This Court had occasion to consider the nature of the two
kinds of acts, namely, judicial which includes quasi-
judicial and administrative, a number of times. In Province
of Bombay v. Kushaldas S. Advani (1), it adopted the
celebrated definition of a quasi-judicial body given by
Atkin L. J. in R. v. Electricity Commissioners (2), which is
as follows:-
" Whenever any body of persons having legal authority to
determine questions affecting rights of subjects, and having
the duty to act judicially act in excess of their legal
authority they are subject to the controlling jurisdiction
of the King’s Bench Division exercised in these writs. "
This definition insists on three requisites each of which
must be fulfilled in order that the act of the body may be a
quasi-judicial act, namely, that the body of persons (1)
must have legal authority, (2) to determine questions
affecting the rights of subjects, and (3) must have the duty
to act judicially. After analysing the various cases, Das
J. (as he then was) laid down the following principles as
deducible therefrom in Kushaldas S. Advani’s case (1)at p.
725 :-
" (i) That, if a statute empowers an authority, not being a
Court in the ordinary sense, to decide
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 621.
(2) [1924] 1 K.B. 171.
781
disputes arising out of a claim made by any party under the
statute which claim is opposed by another party and to
determine’ the respective rights of the contesting parties
who are opposed to each other, there is a lis and prima
facie and in the absence of anything in the statute to the
contrary it is the duty of the authority to act judicially
and the decision of the authority is a quasi-judicial act;
and (ii) that if a statutory authority has power to do any
act which will prejudicially affect the subject, then,
although there are not two parties apart from the authority
and the contest is between the authority proposing to do the
act and the subject opposing it, the final determination of
the authority will yet be a quasi-judicial act provided the
authority is required by the statute to act judicially. "
It is on these principles which are now well-settled that we
have to see whether the Central Government when acting under
r. 54 is acting in a quasi-judicial capacity or otherwise.
It is not necessary for present purposes to decide -whether
State Government when it grants a lease is acting merely
administratively. We shall assume that the order of the
State Government granting a lease under the Rules is an
administrative order. We have, however, to see what the
position is after the State Government has granted a lease
to one of the applicants before it and has refused
the lease to others.
Mr. Pathak contends that even in such a situation there is
no right in favour of the person to whom the lease has been
granted by the State Government till the Central
Government has passed an order on a review application
if any. Rule 55, however, makes clear that the order of
the State Government is final subject to any order by the
Central Government under r. 54. Now when a lease is granted
by the State Government, it is quite possible that there may
be no application for review by those whose applications
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have been refused. In such a case the order of the State
Government would be final. It would not therefore be in our
opinion right to say that no right of any kind is created
in favour of a person to whom the lease is
782
granted by the State Government. The matter would be
different if the order of the State Government were not
to be effective until confirmation by the Central
Government; for in that case no right would arise until the
confirmation was received from the Central Government. But
r. 54 does not provide for confirmation by the Central
Government. It gives power to the Central Government to act
only when there is an application for review before it under
r. 54. That is why we have not accepted Mr. Pathak’s
argument that in substance the State Government’s order
becomes effective only after it is confirmed; r. 54 does not
support this. We have not found any provision in the Rules
or in the Act which gives any power to the Central
Government to review suo motu the order of the State
Government granting a lease. That some kind of right is
created on the passing of an order granting a lease is clear
from the facts of this case also. The order granting the
lease was made in December 1952. In April 1953 the
appellant was put in possession of the areas granted to him
and actually worked them thereafter. At any rate, when the
statutory rule grants a right to any party aggrieved to make
a review application to the Central Government it certainly
follows that the person in whose favour the order is made
has also a right to represent his case before the authority
to whom the review application is made. It is in the
circumstances apparent that as soon as r. 52 gives a right
to an aggrieved party to apply for review a lis is created
between him and the party in whose favour the grant has been
made. Unless therefore there is anything in the statute to
the contrary it will be the duty of the authority to act
judicially and its decision would be a quasi-judicial act.
The next question is whether there is anything in the Rules
which negatives the duty to act judicially by the reviewing
authority. Mr. Pathak urges that r. 54 gives full power
to the Central Government to act as it may deem I just
and proper’ and that it is not bound even to call for the
relevant records and other information from,, the State
Government before deciding an application for review. That
is undoubtedly
783
so. But that in our opinion does not show that the statutory
Rules negative the duty to act judicially. What the Rules
require is that the Central Government should act justly
and properly; and that is what an authority which is
required to act judicially must do. The fact that the
Central Government is not bound even to call for records
again does not negative the duty cast upon it to act
judicially, for even courts have the power to dismiss
appeals without calling for records. Thus r. 54, lays down
nothing to the contrary. We are therefore of opinion that
there is prima facie a lis in this case as between the
person to whom the lease has been granted and the person
who is aggrieved by the refusal and therefore Prima facie
it is the duty of the authority which has to review the
matter to act judicially and there is nothing in r. 54 to
the contrary. It must therefore be held that on the Rules
and the Act, as they stood at the relevant time, the
Central Government was acting in a quasi-judicial capacity
while deciding an application under r. 54. As such it was
incumbent upon it before coming to a decision to give a
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reasonable opportunity to the appellant, who was the other
party in the review application whose rights were being
affected, to represent his case. In as much as this was not
done, the appellant is entitled to ask us to issue a writ in
the nature of certiorari quashing the order of January
28,1954, passed by the Central Government.
We therefore allow the appeal and setting aside the order
of the High Court quash the order of the Central Government
passed on January 28, 1954. It will, however, be open to the
Central Government to proceed to decide the review
application afresh after giving a reasonable opportunity to
the appellant to represent his case. The appellant will
get his costs throughout from the third respondent, who is
the principal contesting party.
Appeal allowed.
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