Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INDIAN OIL CORPORATION LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MUNICIPAL CORPORATION & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT07/04/1995
BENCH:
J.S. VERMA & MRS. SUJATA V. MANOHAR, JJ.
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
ORDER
1. Heard the learned Additional Solicitor General.
2. The impugned judgment by a Full Bench of the Madhya
Pradesh High Court overrules the decision of a Division
Bench in Municipal Corporation, Indore and Others v. Smt.
Ratnaprabha Dhanda, Indore and Another, 1989 MPLJ 20. The
challenge in this special leave petition is to the
correctness of the Full Bench decision. The question
involved relates to the construction of Section 138(b) of
the Madhya Pradesh Municipal Corporation Act, 1956
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(for short the "M.P. Act") which reads as under:-
"The annual value of any building shall
notwithstanding anything contained in’ any
other law for the time being in force be
deemed to be the gross annual rent at which
such building, together with its appurtenances
and any furniture that may be let for use or
enjoyment therewith might reasonably at the
time of assessment be expected to be let from
year to year, less any allowance of ten
percent for the cost of repairs and for all
other expenses necessary to maintain the
building in a state to command such gross
annual rent."
(emphasis supplied)
3. In the High Court the matter was not res integra being
concluded by the authority of the direct decision by a 3-
Judge Bench of this Court in Municipal Corporation, Indore
and Others v. Smt. Ratna Prabha and Others, 1977 (1) SCR
1017, on the correct construction of Section 138(b) of the
M.P. Act. No other direct decision of this Court is to the
contrary. However, the Division Bench of the High Court in
a later case between the very same parties took a different
view on the construction of the same provision placing
reliance on some other decisions of this Court wherein the
question arose for decision in the context of a similar
provision in some other statutes applicable in the other
States wherein there was no non-obstante clause as in the
M.P. Act. The Division Bench took the view that the de-
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cision of this Court in Ratna Prabha (supra) was not binding
on it even though it related to construction of the same
provision, namely, Section 138(b) of the M.P. Act since it
was in conflict with later decisions of this Court by co-
equal Benches wan Daulat Rai Kapoor etc. etc. v. New Delhi
Municipal Committee & Another etc. etc., 1980 (2) SCR 607
and Dr. Balbir Singh and Ors. etc. etc. v. Municipal
Corporation, Delhi and Ors., 1985 (2) SCR 439. Accordingly,
it proceeded on the basis that the decision of this Court in
Ratna Prabha (supra) is no longer good law binding on it.
This situation gave rise to the need for a Full Bench to
consider the correctness of the view taken by the Division
Bench. The Full Bench has overruled the decision of the
Division Bench. In our opinion, the Full Bench was right in
its view that the decision of this Court in Ratna Prabha
(supra) binds the High Court. There is no ground to
entertain this special leave petition which challenges the
decision of the Full Bench of the High Court.
4.The only, direct decision of this Court on the
construction of Section 138(b) of the M.P. Act, with which
we are concerned, is Ratna Prabha (supra). It referred to
the earlier decision in The Corporation of Calcutta v. Smt.
Padma Debi and Others, 1962 (3) SCR 49 and distinguished it
on the ground that Section 127(a) of the Calcutta Municipal
Corporation Act, 1923 on which the decision in Padma Debi
(supra) was based, did not contain a non obstante clause
like that in Section 138(b) of the M.P. Act. The other
earlier decisions of this Court in which construction of
similar provision in other statutes was involved were also
referred and distinguished in Ratna Prabha (supra); and it
was then held as under:-
"As has been stated, clause (b) of section 138
of the Act provides that the annual value of
any building shall " notwithstanding anything
contained in any other law for the time being
in force" be deemed to be the gross annual
rent for
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which the building might "reasonably at the
time of the assessment be expected to be let
from year to year". While therefore the
requirement of the law is that the reasonable
letting value should determine the annual
value of the building, it has also been
specifically provided that this would be so
"notwithstanding anything contained in any
other law for the time being in force". It
appears to us that it would be a proper
interpretation of the provisions of clause (b)
of section 138 of the Act to hold that in a
case where the standard rent of a building has
been fixed under section 7 of the Madhya
Pradesh Accommodation Control Act, and there
is nothing to show that there has been fraud
or collusion, that would be its reasonable
letting value, but, where this is not so, and
the building has never been let out and is
being used in a manner where the question of
fixing its standard rent does not arise, it
would be permissible to fix its reasonable
rent without regard to the provisions of the
Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Control Act,
1961. This view will, in our opinion, give
proper effect to the non-obstante clause in
clause (b), with due regard to its other
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provision that the letting value should be
reasonable ".
We have gone through the decision in Padma
Debi’s case (supra). There the premises were
on rent and section 127(a) of Calcutta
Municipal Corporation Act, 1923, did not
contain a non-obstante clause. That the
section provided, inter alia, was that the
annual value shall be deemed to be the gross
annual rent at which the land or building
might at the time of assessment "reasonably be
expected to let from year to year. " This
Court examined the significance of the word
"reasonable" and held that it would be
incongruous to consider fixation of rent
beyond the limits fixed by penal legislation
as reasonable. That view was taken with
reference to the provisions of the Rent
Control Act which penalised the taking of a
higher rent, and also made it irrecoverable.
While, therefore, we are in agreement with the
view taken in Padma Debi’s case (supra) that
it would not be reasonable to consider
fixation of rent beyond the limits fixed by
the Rent Control Act as reasonable, it would
not be a proper interpretation of section
138(b) to hold that as no standard rent has
been fixed so far in respect of die Viram
Lodge, the Municipal Commissioner was
justified in adopting another suitable
criterion for determining the annual value of
the building. There is in fact nothing in the
Act to make it obligatory for the Commissioner
to follow the provisions of the Madhya Pradesh
Accommodation Control Act in spite of the non-
obstante clause and to limit the annual value
to any standard rent that the building might
fetch under that Act.
xxx xxx xxx
The High Court did not properly appreciate the
difference between the wording of section 127
of the Calcutta Municipal Corporation Act,
1923, and section 138(b) of the Act, and
committed an error in thinking that this was
virtually similar to Padma Debi’s case. "
(at pages 10 1 9-20 of SCR)
(emphasis supplied)
5. In Dewan Daulat Rai (supra), an other 3-Judge Bench of
this Court while construing a similar provision in the
Punjab Municipal Act, 1911 referred to the decision in
RatnaPrabha (supra) and distinguished it on the ground that
there was n non-obstante clause in the relevant provision of
the Punjab Municipal Act and therefore, the decision in
Ratna Prab (supra) had no application. No doubt, i doing
so, a reservation was expressed
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about the view taken in Ratna Prabha (supra) on the basis of
the existence of the non-obstante clause in Section 138(b)
of the M.P. Act but that cannot have the effect of
overruling the decision of this Court in Ratna Prabha
(supra) inasmuch as a later co-equal Bench could not
overrule it and could only refer it for reconsideration to a
larger Bench, which it did not do.
6. In Dr. Balbir Singh (supra), after pointing out that
the relevant provisions in the Delhi Municipal Corporation
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Act, 1957 and the Punjab Municipal Act, 1911 were almost
identical, the decision in Dewan Daulat Rai (supra) was
followed by another 3-Judge Bench. No reference was made
therein to the decision of this Court in Ratna Prabha
(supra).
7. Recently, another 3-Judge Bench of this Court in Morvi
Municipality v. State of Gujarat and Ors., 1993 (2) SCR 803,
dealt with the same question with reference to the
provisions of the Gujarat Municipalities Act, 1963. It
referred to the earlier decisions and indicated that the
presence of the non-obstante clause "notwithstanding
anything contained in any other law" in Section 138(b) of
the M.P. Act distinguished the decision of this Court in
Ratna Prabha (supra); and since in the Gujarat act there was
no such non-obstante clause that decision had no application
to the Gujarat Act.
8. It is thus clear that the decision of this Court in
Ratna Prabha (supra) on the construction of Section 138(b)
of the M.P. Act has all along been understood and justified
on the basis of the presence of the non-obstante clause in
Section 138(b) of the M.P. Act and the later decisions have
distinguished it on that ground. That is the basis on which
the decision in Padma Debi (supra) was distinguished in
Ratna Prabha (supra) itself It is also obvious that a Bench
of 3-Judges only in the later decisions could not overrule
the decision of this Court in Ratna Prabha, 1977 (1) SCR 10
1 7 and, therefore, none of the later decisions could be so
read to have that effect. The Division Bench of the High
Court in 1989 MLJ 20 was clearly in error in taking the view
that the decision of this Court in Ratna Prabha (supra) was
not binding on it. In doing so, the Division Bench of the
High Court did something which even a later co-equal Bench
of this Court did not and could not do. The view taken by
the Division Bench of the High Court in 1989 MPLJ 20 pro-
ceeds on a total misunderstanding of the law of precedents
and Article 141 of the Constitution of India, to which it
referred. But for the fact that the view of the Division
Bench of the High court proceeds on a misapprehensions of
the law of precedents and Article 141 of the Constitution,
it would be exposed to the criticism of an aberration in
judicial discipline. The decision of the Division Bench of
the High Court was, therefore, rightly overruled by the Full
Bench in the impugned judgment.
9. The other submission of the learned Additional
Solicitor General is a plea for reconsideration of the
decision of this Court in Ratna Prabha, 1977 (1) SCR 1017,
which can arise only in this Court and was not available in
the High Court. The decision in Ratna Prabha (supra), the
only direct decision of this Court on the construction of
Section 138(b) of the M.P. Act has held the field for a long
time and has formed the basis of assessment of the annual
value in the State of Madhya Pradesh since then. That
decision is based
632
on the presence of the non-obstante clause in the M.P. Act
and distinguishes the earlier larger Bench decision in Padma
Debi (supra) on that ground. There can be no doubt that the
view taken by this Court in Ratna Prabha (supra) is a
reasonably permissible construction of Section 138(b) of the
M.P. Act. In the later decisions of this Court, Ratna
Prabha (supra) was invariably distinguished and not referred
for reconsideration by a larger Bench. There is thus no
ground now for reconsideration of the decision in Ratna
Prabha (supra).
10. In The Keshav Mills Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-
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tax, Bombay North, 1965 (2) SCR 908, the correct approach in
this behalf was indicated as under:-
"........ In exercising this inherent power,
however, this Court would naturally like to
impose certain reasonable limitations and
would be reluctant to entertain pleas for the
reconsideration and revision of its earlier
decisions, unless it is satisfied that there
are compelling and substantial reasons to do
so When it is urged that the view already
taken by this Court should be reviewed and
revised it may not necessarily be an adequate
reason for such review and revision to hold
that though the earlier view is a reasonably
possible view, the alternative view which is
pressed on the subsequent occasion is more
reasonable. In reviewing and revising its
earlier decision, this Court should ask itself
whether in the interests of the public good or
for any other valid and compulsive reasons, it
is necessary that the earlier decision should
be revised.......".
(at page 921 of SCR)
(emphasis supplied)
11.In our opinion, the test indicated in Keshav Mills
(supra) for reconsideration of a decision of this Court is
not satisfied in the present case and, therefore, we are
unable to entertain the plea for reconsideration of the
decision in Rama Prabha.
12.The special leave petition is, therefore, dismissed for
the above reasons.