Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
P. V. SIVARAJAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE UNION OF INDIA AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/12/1958
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
DAS, S.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 556 1959 SCR Supl. (1) 779
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1970 SC 564 (191)
R 1986 SC1541 (10)
ACT:
Coir Industry, Regulation and Control of-Registration of
exporter and licensee-Quantitative test-Constitutional
validity-Coir Industry Act, 1953 (45 of 1953), S. 26, rr.
18, 19, 20(1)(a), 21, 22(a) -Constitution of India, Arts.
19, 14.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner, an unsuccessful applicant for registration
as an exporter and licensee for exporting coir products,
challenged the vires of the rr. 18, 19, 20(1)(a), 21 and
22(a) made by the Central Government in exercise of its
powers under S. 26(1) of the Coir Industry Act, 1953 (45 Of
1953). The Act had for its object the regulation and
control of the Coir industry in public interest. It was
contended on his behalf that the impugned rules, which
prescribed the quantitative, and not the qualitative, test
for registration of established exporters, were inconsistent
with the provisions of the Act and as such, ultra vires the
Act and that they tended to create a monopoly in the export
trade of coir commodities and thereby destroy the business
of small dealers and discriminated between those who carried
on large scale business and those who carried on small scale
business and thus impugned Arts. 19 and 14 Of the
Constitution.
Held, that the contentions were without substance and must
be negatived.
There was no provision in the Coir Industry Act, 1953, that
excluded or prohibited the application of the quantitative
test and the rules were in no way inconsistent with the Act
nor in excess of the powers conferred on the Central
Government by s. 26 of the Act.
Where an Act sought to control an industry in public
interest it would obviously be for the rule making authority
to decide which rules and regulations would meet the
requirement of public interest. Such rules and regulations,
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though reasonable within the meaning of Art. 19(6), might
cause hardship to those who failed to comply with them. But
once it was conceded that the regulation and control of the
trade were justified in public interest, Art. 19(1)(g) could
not be invoked to challenge the validity of the rules.
Nor did the impugned rules violate Art. 14 Of the Constitu-
tion. The classification of traders under rr. 18 and 19 was
clearly founded on an intelligible differentia that had a
rational relation to the object of the Act. The exemption
made by the rules in favour of co-operative societies from
some of the relevant tests indicated that the Legislature
intended to encourage small
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traders. It was not, therefore, correct to say that the
rules would lead to a monopoly in the trade.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 121 of 1958.
Petition under Article 32 of the Constitution for
enforcement of Fundamental rights.
G. B. Pai and Sardar Bahadur, for the petitioner.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, B. Sen and T.
M. Sen, for the respondents.
1958. December 11. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-The petitioner has been doing business as
an exporter of coir products to foreign countries for the
last twenty years. On July 4, 1958, he applied to
respondent 2, the Chairman, Coir Board, Ernakulam,
requesting that he should be registered as an established
exporter. This application was accompanied by an income-tax
clearance certificate and attested copies of bills of
lading. Respondent 2 declined to register the petitioner on
the ground that his application was defective inasmuch as
the requisite certificate regarding his financial status bad
not been produced and no evidence had been given to show
that he had exported the minimum quantity required (500
Cwts.). The petitioner was told that unless he complied with
the requirements asked for within seven days his application
would be rejected without further notice. The petitioner
found that he could not comply with the directions issued by
respondent 2 and so it became impossible for the petitioner
to get registration and licence applied for by him. That is
why he filed the present petition under Art. 32 of the
Constitution and prayed for the issue of a writ or order in
the nature of mandamus to direct the second respondent to
grant the petitioner registration and licence as applied for
by him and to prohibit or restrain the said respondent from
acting on, or implementing, the rules issued under the Coir
Industry Act, 1953, by issue of a writ of certiorari,
prohibition or such other writ or order appropriate to
protect his rights. The petitioner also prayed that " if
found necessary " the said
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rules should be declared to be ultra vires the powers of the
Central Government and invalid being in violation of the
fundamental rights guaranteed by Arts. 14 and 19 of the
Constitution. The Union of India has, been impleaded as
respondent 1 to the petition.
Before dealing with the points raised by the petition it
would be necessary to refer briefly to the provisions( of
the Coir Industry Act, 1953 (45 of 1953), hereinafter called
the Act, and the rules framed under it in 1958. This Act
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was enacted by the Parliament because it was thought
expedient in the public interest that the Union should take
under its control the coir industry (s. 2). Section 4 of the
Act provides for the establishment and constitution of the
Coir Board and s. 10 enumerates its functions and duties.
Under s. 10(1) it shall be the duty of the Board to promote
by such measures as it thinks fit the development under the
control of the Central Government of the coir industry.
Sub-section (2) enumerates the measures which the Board may
take with the object of developing the coir industry without
prejudice to the generality of the provisions of sub-s. (1).
Amongst the measures thus enumerated, sub-s. (2) (b) refers
to the regulation under the supervision of the Central
Government of the production of husks, coir yarn and coir
products by registering coir spindles and looms for
manufacturing coir products, as also manufacturers of coir
products, licensing exporters of coir yarn and coir products
and taking such other appropriate steps as may be
prescribed. Sub-section (2)(g) refers to the promotion of
co-operative Organisation among producers of husks, coir
fibre and coir yarn and manufacturers of coir products, and
sub-s. (2)(1) refers to the licensing of retting places and
warehouses and otherwise regulating the stocking and sale of
coir fibre, coir yarn and coir products both for internal
market and for exports. Section 26(1) confers on the
Central Government power to make rules for carrying out the
purposes of the Act subject to the condition of previous
publication. Sub-section (2) enumerates the matters in res-
pect of which rules may be made, in particular and without
prejudice to the generality of the power
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conferred by sub-s. (1). Sub- section (2) (k) refers inter
alia to the registration of manufacturers of coir products
and the conditions for such registration and the ,,grant or
issue of licences under the Act; and sub-s. (2)(1) deals
with the form of applications for registration and licences
under the Act and the fee, if any, to be paid in respect of
any such applications.
Under the powers conferred by s. 26 the Central Government
framed rules in 1958. For the purposes of the present
petition it would be relevant to refer to rr. 17 to 22.
Rule 17 deals with registration and licensing of exports;
and it provides that no person shall, after the coming into
force of the rule, export coir fibre, coir yarn or coir
products unless he has been registered as an exporter and
has obtained an export licence under these rules. The
proviso deals with exemptions with which we are not
concerned. Rule 18 lays down that any person who has in any
of the three years immediately preceding the commencement of
the rules exported not less than twenty-five tons of coir
yarn or coir products other than coir rope, or exported any
quantity of coir fibre or coir rope, may be registered an
exporter of coir yarn, coir products other than coir rope or
coir fibre or coir rope as the case may be. Rule 19
provides for the registration of persons other than those
covered by r. 18 and it lays down inter alia that such
persons may be registered as exporters of coir yarn if,
during the period of twelve months immediately preceding the
date of application, a minimum quantity of twenty-five tons
of coir yarn had been rehanked or baled in a factory owned
or otherwise possessed by the applicant and registered under
the Indian Factories Act, 1948, or, if the applicant has had
a total purchase turnover of one hundred tons of coir yarn.
The proviso to this rule authorises the Chairman by
notification to exempt from the operation of this rule any
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co-operative society the members of which are owners of
industrial establishments or any Central Co-operative
Marketing Society. Rules 20 and 22 prescribe the mode of
making an application for registration as an exporter and
for licence respectively while r. 21 provides for the
783
cancellation of registration. The present petition does not
challenge the validity of any of the provisions of the Act.
It, however, seeks to challenge the vires of rr. 18, 19,
20(1)(a), 21 and 22(a).
There is no doubt that coir and coir products play an
important role in our national economy. They are
commodities which earn foreign exchange, the total’ value of
our exports in these commodities being of the order of
Rupees Ten Crores per year. It was found that several
malpractices had crept in the export trade of these
commodities such as non-fulfilment of contracts, supplying
goods of inferior qualities and cut-throat competition; and
these in turn considerably -affected the volume of the
trade. That is why Parliament thought it necessary that the
Union should take under its control the coir industry in
order to regulate its export trade. It is with the object
of developing the coir industry that the Coir Board has been
established and the registration and licensing of exporters
has been introduced. The petitioner does not dispute this
position and makes no grievance or complaint against the
relevant provisions in the Act.
It is, however, urged that the relevant rules which
prescribe the quantitative test for the registration of
established exporters are ultra vires because the
introduction of the said test is inconsistent with the
provisions of the Act. In this connection Mr. Pai, for the
petitioner, sought to rely on the report submitted by the
Ad-Hoc Committee for external marketing which the Coir Board
had appointed on August 20, 1954. His grievance is that the
report of the said Committee does not recommend the adoption
of the quantitative test, but seems to suggest that a
qualitative test would be more appropriate ; and that,
according to Mr. Pai, also indicates that the quantitative
test had been improperly prescribed by the rules. We are
not impressed by these arguments. It is clear that there is
no provision in the Act which excludes or prohibits the
application of the quantitative test in making rules for
registration of exporters or for issuing licences for export
trade. In fact the Act has deliberately left it to the
rule-making authority to frame rules
784
which it may regard as appropriate for regulating the trade;
and so it would be impossible to accept the argument that
the rule-making authority was bound to prescribe the
qualitative rather than the quantitative test. Besides, it
does not appear that the report of the Committee on which
Mr. pai relied definitely indicated its partiality for the
adoption of the qualitative test. Indeed Appx. XI to the
said report would suggest that the Committee in fact was not
averse to the adoption of a quantitative test; but even if
the Committee had expressly recommended the adoption of a
qualitative, not a quantitative, :test, it would be idle to
suggest that the Coir Board was bound to accept the said
recommendation or that the Central Government was not
competent to make rules contrary to the recommendations of
the Committee. The validity of the rules can be
successfully challenged if it is shown that they are
inconsistent with the provisions of the Act or that they
have been made in excess of the powers conferred on the
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rule-making authority by s. 26 of the Act. In our opinion,
no such infirmity has been established in respect of the
impugned rules.
It is then contended that the relevant rules would
ultimately tend to establish a monopoly in the export trade
of coir commodities and would thereby extinguish the trade
or business of small dealers like the petitioner. It is
also contended that the application of the quantitative-test
discriminates between persons carrying on business on a
large scale and those who carry on business on a small
scale. That is how Arts. 19 and 14 of the Constitution are
invoked and the validity of the relevant rules is challenged
on the ground that they violate the fundamental rights of
the petitioner under the said Articles. We think there is
no substance in this contention.
If it is conceded that the regulation of the coir industry
is in the public interest, then it would be difficult to
entertain the argument that the regulation or control must
be introduced only on the basis of a qualitative test. It
may well be that there are several difficulties in
introducing and effectively enforcing the qualitative test.
It is well-known that granting
785
permits or licences to export or import dealers on the basis
of a quantitative test is not unknown in regard to export
and import of essential commodities. It would obviously be
for the rule-making authority to decide which test would
meet the requirements of public interest and what method
would be most expedient in controlling the industry for the
national’ good. Beside,%, even the adoption of a
qualitative test may tend to extinguish the trade of those
who do not satisfy the said test; but such a result cannot
obviously be treated as contravening the fundamental rights
under Art. 19. Control and regulation of any trade, though
reasonable within the meaning of Art. 19, sub-Art. (6), may
in some cases lead to hardship to some persons carrying on
the said trade or business if they are unable to satisfy the
requirements of the regulatory rules or provisions validly
introduced ; but once it is conceded that regulation of the
trade and its control are justified in the public interest,
it would not be open to a person who fails to satisfy the
rules or regulations to invoke his fundamental right under
Art. 19(1)(g) and challenge the validity of the regulation
or rule in question. In our opinion, therefore, the
challenge to the validity of the rules on the ground of Art.
19 must fail.
The challenge to the validity of the said rules on the
ground of Art. 14 must also fail, because the classification
of traders made by rr. 18 and 19 is clearly rational and is
founded on an intelligible differentia distinguishing
persons falling under one class from those falling under the
other. It is also clear that the differentia has a rational
relation to the object sought to be achieved by the Act. As
we have already pointed out, the export trade in coir com-
modities disclosed the existence of many malpractices which
not only affected the volume of trade but also the
reputation of Indian traders; and one of the main reasons
which led to this unfortunate result was that exporters
sometimes accepted orders far beyond their capacity and that
inevitably led to non-fulfilment of contracts or to supply
of inferior commodities. In
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order to remedy this position the trade had to be regulated
and so the intending exporter was required to satisfy the
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test of the prescribed minimum capacity and to establish
the prescribed minimum status before his application for
registration is granted. In this connection it may also be
relevant to point out that -the rules seem to contemplate
the granting of exemption from the operation of some of the
relevant tests to co-operative societies; and that shows
that the intention of the Legislature is to encourage small
traders to form co-operative societies and carry on export
trade on behalf of such societies; and so it would not be
possible to accept the argument that the impugned rules
would lead to a monopoly in the trade. It is thus clear
that the main object which the rules propose to achieve is
to remove the anomalies and malpractices prevailing in the
export trade of coir commodities and to put the said trade
on a firm and enduring basis in the interest of national
economy. We are, therefore, satisfied that the challenge to
the impugned rules on the ground of infringement of Art. 14
of the Constitution must also fail.
In the result we hold that there is no substance in the
petition. It accordingly fails and is dismissed with costs.
Petition dismissed.
787