Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TRUSTEES OF THE PORT OF MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. AMINCHAND PYARELAL & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/09/1975
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
CITATION:
1975 AIR 1935 1976 SCR (1) 721
1976 SCC (3) 167
CITATOR INFO :
R 1977 SC1622 (10)
R 1984 SC1543 (21)
R 1987 SC 622 (10)
ACT:
Madras Port Trust Act 1905-Sec. 42, 43, 43A-Port Trust
Rules 13- Bye-law-Nature of-Demurrage-Unreasonable-Customs
Act Secs. 17(3) & 1(4).
HEADNOTE:
On 10-4-1968, a steamer arrived at the Madras port and
landed inter alia a consignment or 202 bundles of black
plain sheets of various sizes. The appellants received the
goods and stored them in the transit sheds. The goods were
imported by the first respondent under an authorisation
issued by the State Trading Corporation of India which held
a licence to import the goods from Hungary. The clearing
agents of the first respondent filed a bill of entry with
the Collector of Customs. But, the Customs authorities
detained the goods as the specifications in the import
licence did not tally with the description of the imported
goods. The Customs Authorities then issued a show cause
notice to the 1st respondent and after considering his
explanation passed an order confiscating the goods.
The first respondent preferred an appeal against that
order to the Board which allowed the appeal. On an
application of respondent No. 1 the Customs Authorities
issued a certificate stating that the goods were detained by
the Customs Authorities from 24-4-1963 to 21-8-1964 for
examination under sections 17(3) and 17(4) of the Customs
Act, 1962 other than in the ordinary process of
appraisement and that the detention was due to no fault or
negligence on the part of the correspondent. Acting on this
certificate, the appellants waived the demurrage for the
period covered by the certificate. As a result of the said
certificate, the appellant charged respondent No. 1, Rs.
1963/- instead of Rs. 3,20,951/- by way of demurrage.
Thereafter, the respondent No. I cleared the consignment.
In January, 1965, the appellants wrote a letter to the
Customs Authorities stating that the certificate was issued
erroneously and that the Customs Authorities should
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reconsider the matter. In April, 1965, the Customs
Authorities owned the mistake that the certificate was
incorrect as the goods were detained in order to ascertain
whether the Import Trade Control formalities were complied
with and not for examination and assessment of duty under
Sections 17(3) and 17(4) of the Customs Act.
The appellants brought the present suit against
respondent No. 1. and the Union of India and Customs
Authorities to recover the balance of’ demurrage amounting
to about Rs. 3 Lacs. The first respondent disputed is
liability to pay the demurrage on the ground that it could
not be penalised either for the delay caused by the Customs
Authorities in clearing the goods or in the issuance by them
of a wrong certificate. The first respondent also contended
that the scale of charges in the Port Trust Regulations
under the heading Demurrage was void and ultra vires both
for the reason that it was unreasonable and because the
scale of charges was not within the authority of the
appellants.
The High Court dismissed the suit for the following
reasons
(1) The Scale of rates fixed by the Board is in
the nature of bye laws.
(2) Viewed as a bye-law Rule 13(b) under which
the Board can charge demurrage for the period
during which the goods are detained for. no
fault or negligence of the importer or his
agent, is unreasonable and therefore void.
(3) In principle, there can be no distinction
between cases falling under clause (a) and
those falling under clause (b) of Rule 13 and
if
722
no demurrage is leviable in respect of cases
falling within clause (a) no demurrage could
be charged in respect of cases falling within
clause (b). The distinction made by the Board
between the two kinds of cases was therefore
arbitrary and unreasonable.
(4) ’Demurrage’, being a charge for wilful
failure to remove the goods, can be levied
only if the failure to remove the goods is
due to the fault or negligence, of the
importer or his agent.
(5) Having regard to this well accepted meaning
of the word ’demurrage’, the authority given
to the Board by section 12 of the Act to
frame the scale of rates can be exercised
only for the purpose of levying charges where
the importer was not prevented by any lawful
authority from clearing the goods from the
transit area and he had defaulted or was
negligent in clearing the goods.
(6) Since Rule 13(b) empowers the Board to charge
demurrage even when the goods are detained
for no fault or negligence of the importer or
his agent, it is beyond the authority
conferred by section 42 and is therefore,
void.
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD:(1) The High Court erred in holding that the sale
of rates and statements of condition framed by the appellant
under sections 42, 43, and 43A are by-laws. Those sections
confer authority on the. Board to frame a sale of rates at
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which and a statement of conditions under which any of the
services specified therein shall be performed. [732-C, 731-
F]
2. A bye-law has been said to be an ordinance affecting
the public, or some portion of the public, imposed by some
authority clothed with statutory powers, ordering something
to be done or not to be done and accompanied by some
sanction or penalty for its non-observance. The Board’s
power to frame a scale of rates and statement of conditions
is not a regulatory power to order that something must be
done or something may not be done. The rates and conditions
govern the basis on which the Board performs the services.
Those who desire to avail of the services of the Board are
liable to pay for those services at prescribed rates and to
perform the conditions framed by the Board. In fact some of
the services which the Board renders are optional. Where
services are offence by a public authority on payment of a
price, conditions governing the offer and acceptance of
services are not in the nature of bye-laws. They reflect or
represent an agreement between the parties one offering his
services at the prescribed rates and the other accepting the
service at those rates. [732-D-H]
3. Bye laws may be treated as ultra vires on the
grounds, amongst others that they are repugnant to the
statute under which they are made or that they are
unreasonable. But even a bye-law cannot be declared ultra
vires on the ground of unreasonableness merely because the
court thinks that it goes further than is necessary or that
it does not contain the necessary qualifications or
exceptions. Kruse v. Johnson [1898] 2 Q.B. 91, relied on.
[731-F. 733 B]
4. Port Trusts are bodies of a public representative
character who are entrusted by the Legislature with
authority to, frame a scale of’ rates and a statement of
conditions subject to which the shall or may perform certain
services. Port Trusts are not commercial organisations which
carry on business for their own profit. The Board of
Trustees is broad based body representing a cross section of
a variety of interests. The requirement of sanction by the
Central Government is a restraint on unwise, excessive, or
arbitrary fixation of rates. section or a variety of
interests. The requirement of sanction by the Central whole
or any portion of rates or charges leviable according to any
scale in force under section 44. Thus the Statute provides
for the necessary safeguards, checks and counter checks as
an insurance against fixation and levy of harsh or unjust
rates. Section 49 of the Act confers power on the Assistant
Collector of Customs if he is satisfied that the goods
cannot be cleared within a
723
reasonable time to permit that the goods might pending
clearance be stored in a public warehouse or in a private
warehouse. In face of these considerations it is impossible
to characterise the scheme for the levy of rates as
arbitrary or unreasonable. [734 & G-H, 735 A-C]
5. The High Court erred in equating cases falling under
clause (h) with those falling under clause (a) of Rule 13.
The two classes deal with different sets of cases. Clause
(a) deals with cases where goods are detained for
examination under sections 17(3) and 17(4) or for chemical
test under section 144 whereas clause (b) deals with cases
where the goods are detained on account of Import Trade
Control formalities or for compliance of formalities
prescribed under the Drugs Act. There is no warrant for the
court substituting its own view as to the allowance of
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three days in a technical matter like the fixation of rates
which has been considered by an export Board of Trustees and
whose decision has been confirmed by the Central Government.
Equating the two clauses of cases dealt with by clauses (a)
and (b) of Rule 13 might seem to the court a more prudent or
reasonable way of fixing scales of rates but that is not a
correct test for deciding the validity of the impugned
provision. [735-D-F]
6. The High Court overlooked a fundamental aspect of
fixation of rates. The Board is under a statutory obligation
to render services of various kinds and those services have
not to be rendered for the personal benefit of this for that
importer but in the larger national interest. Congestion in
the ports affects the free movement of ships and of
essential goods. The scale of rates has, therefore, to be
framed in a manner which will act both as an incentive and
as a compulsion for the expeditious removal of the goods
from the transit area. Ships, like wagons, have to be kept
moving and that can happen only if there is pressure on the
importer to remove the goods from the Board’s permises with
the utmost expedition. 1735-F-H; 736 A]
7. As regards the appellants’ claim against the first
respondent. facts must come before the law because legal
principles cannot be applied in a vacuum. No oral evidence
was let by the parties and documents do not prove them
selves nor indeed is the admissibility of a document proof
by itself of the truth of its; contents. The Import Licence
stood in the name of the State Trading Corporation. It
issued an authorisation in favour of the first respondent.
The first respondent was only entitled to charge a
commission for the work done by it in pursuance of the
authorisation issued by the Corporation. If the appellants
were to enforce the statutory lien. the incidence of the
demurrage would have fallen on the Corporation in whom the
title to the goods was vested. The appellants permitted the
goods to be cleared without demanding the demurrage which
they claimed later, thereby depriving the respondent of the
opportunity and the right to reject the goods as against the
supplier. In the absence of any more faces, it is impossible
on the record as it stands, to accept the appellants’ claim
against the first respondent. [737 F-H, 738 A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No 707 of
1973.
From the Judgment and Decree dated the 23rd December
1971 of the Madras High Court in Civil Suit No. 158 of 1966.
K. S. Ramamurthi, S. Balakrishnan, N. M. Ghatate for
the appellant.
A.K. Sen, J. S. Arora and H. K. Puri for respondent No.
1.
G. L. Sanghi and Girish Chandra for respondents Nos. 2
and 3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, J.-The Trustees of the Port of Madras,
appellants herein, filed suit No. 158 of 1966 in the High
Court of Madras for recovering a sum of Rs. 3,1 8,968.04
from the respondents by way
724
of demurrage. The 1st respondent is a firm called M/s.
Aminchand Pyarelal, the 2nd respondent is the Union of
India and the 3rd respondent is the Collector of Custom,
Madras. A learned single Judge referred the suit to a
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Division Bench which dismissed it by a judgment dated
December 23, 1971. This is an appeal by certificate granted
by the High Court under Article 133(1)(a) of the
Constitution.
On April 10, 1963 a Steamer "A.P.J. AKASH" arrived at
the Madras Port and landed, among other goods, a consignment
of 202 bundles of black plain sheets of various sizes. The
appellants received the goods and stored them in transit
sheds. The goods were imported by the 1st respondent under
an authorisation issued by the State Trading Corporation of
India which held a licence dated June 16, 1962 to import the
goods from Hungary. The Clearing Agents of the 1st
respondent filed a Bill of Entry with the 3rd respondent but
the customs authorities detained the goods as the
specifications in the import licence did not tally with the
description of the imported goods. The Customs authorities
then issued a show cause notice to the 1st respondent and
after considering its explanation the 3rd respondent passed
an order on November 12, 1963 confiscating the goods under
section 111 (a) of the Customs Act, 1962. The 1st respondent
preferred an appeal against that order to the Central Board
of Excise and Customs, New Delhi, which was allowed by the
Board on July 27, 1964. On August 21, 1964 the Clearing
Agents of the 1st respondent requested the customs
authorities to issue a certificate for the permission of the
transit dues for the period during which the goods were
detained. A certificate was accordingly issued by the 3rd
respondent stating that the goods were detained by the
Customs Authorities from April 24, 1963 to August 21, 1964
for examination under section 17(3) and section 17(4) of the
Customs Act 1962, other than in the ordinary process of
appraisement and that the detention was due to no fault or
negligence on the part of the 1st respondent. Acting on this
certificate, appellants waived the demurrage for the period
covered by the certificate, whereupon the 1st respondent
cleared the consignment on August 25 and August 27, 1964 on
payment of the Harbour dues, Cranage charges and Demurrage
charges for the period not covered by the certificate.
Thinking that the certificate was issued erroneously,
appellants wrote a letter dated January 27, 1965 to the 3rd
respondent requesting him to reconsider the matter. By his
letter of April 12, 1965 the 3rd respondent owned up the
mistake and stated that the certificate was incorrect as the
goods were detained in order to ascertain whether the Import
Trade Control formalities were complied with and not for
examination and assessment of duty under section 17(3) and
(4) of the Customs Act.
The case of the appellants is that due to the negligent
mistake committed by the 3rd respondent in issuing the
certificate, they charged to the 1st respondent a sum of Rs.
1963.60 only whereas
725
it was liable to pay a sum of Rs. 3,20,951.64 by way of
demurrage. The appellants called upon the 3rd respondent to
pay up the balance but the latter, by his reply dated July
6, 1965 repudiated all liability, contending that the Union
of India could not be held liable for the negligent or
tortious acts of its officers done in good faith during the
course of their official duties and that the appellants
should seek J their remedy against the 1st respondent.
Later, the appellants brought the present suit against
the three respondents to recover the demurrage. The case of
the appellants as made out in the plaint is that the
liability of respondents 2 and 3 was in the region of
contract or quasi-contract, that the appellants were put to
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a loss due to the wrong certificate issued by the 3rd
respondent and therefore respondents 2 and 3 could not
repudiate their liability to pay the demurrage. As regards
the 1st respondent, the case of the appellants is that it
had contravened the Import Trade Control regulations, that
it was fully aware of the true facts that it was not open to
it to take advantage of the wrong certificate issued by
respondent 3 and that therefore it was also liable to pay
the demurrage.
The 1st respondent disputed its liability to pay the
demurrage contending that it could not be penalised either
for the delay caused by the Customs authorities in clearing
the goods or for the issuance by them of a wrong
certificate. According to the 1st respondent, the
consignment imported in April, 1963 was one of a series of
consignments which the 1st respondent had imported under a
con tract with the State Trading Corporation for a fixed
remuneration. The 1st respondent had not authority to deal
with he imported goods - but was bound to hand them over at
the agreed price to the State Trading Corporation or its
nominee The 1st respondent further stated that the only
controversy raised by the Customs authorities related to a
difference in the size of the sheets imported under the
import licence and that if the appellants had called upon it
to pay by way of demurrage a sum as large as over rupees 3
lakhs, the 1st respondent would have rejected the goods as
against the supplier unless the State Trading Corporation
was willing to accept the goods. The import clearance orders
were granted on the recommendation of the Corporation which
held the import licence and which arranged for the grant of
import clearance permits to persons like the 1st respondent
on the basis that the goods were imported on behalf of the
Corporation. Finally the 1st respondent contended that the
scale of charges in the Port Trust Regulations under the
heading "Chapter IV-Demurrage" was void and ultra vires both
for the reason that it was unreasonable and because the
scale of charges was not within the authority of the
appellants. The unreasonableness of the demurrage charges,
according to the 1st respondent, was obvious from the fact
that whereas the goods were of the value of Rs. 1,31,501
appellants were claiming a sum of over rupees 3 lakhs by way
of demurrage.
726
The 2nd respondent, the Union of India, set out the
various facts attendant upon the import of the goods and
contended that the appellants had no cause of action against
it or the 3rd respondent. The 3rd respondent adopted the
written statement of the 2nd respondent.
The High Court held that the levy of demurrage ill
cases where the goods were detained by the Customs
authorities for no fault or negligence on the part of the
importer, was unreasonable and also beyond the powers of the
appellants and that the appellants were not entitled to
recover demurrage from any of the respondents.
Two questions, mainly, arise for consideration in this
appeal : firstly, whether the scale of fees under which the
appellants charge demurrage is void as being unreasonable
and as being beyond their powers; and, if the answer to the
first question is in the negative, whether the 1st
respondent is liable to pay the demurrage claimed by the
appellants. Counsel for the appellants did not press the
claim against respondents 2 and 3. The decision of the first
question turns on the relevant statutory provisions but
before considering the validity of the levy, it would be
necessary to know the procedure which is adopted in the
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Madras Port during the process of importation and clearance
of goods.
The local agents of the ship inform the Traffic Manager
of the Port Trust of the probable date of arrival of the
ship and submit to the customs House the "Import General
Manifest" which contains a description of the goods which
are at board for landing at the Port. The Dock Labour Board
supplies the labour to the Master of the ship for unloading
the goods and for putting them on the quay-side so as to
enable the Port Trust authorities to take charge of the
goods. The Port Trust labour handles the goods on the shore
and when the Port Trust takes charge of the same, it is
obliged under section 39(3) of the Madras Port Trust Act,
1950, to give a receipt to the Master of the Ship. With few
exceptions, all goods received by the Port Trust are kept in
the transit sheds. The Port Trust charges Harbour Dues for
receiving the goods, handling them and keeping them in tile
transit sheds. The importer then files the Import
Application and the Steamer Agent’s Delivery order which is
in the nature of an authority from the Steamer as bailor, to
the Port Trust as the bailee, to deliver the goods to the
importer or his agent. Section 45 of the Customs Act, 1962
forbids the person having the custody of any imported goods
in the customs area from permitting their removal except
under and in accordance with the written permission of the
Customs authorities. The goods are cleared by the Customs
authorities if the importation is not contrary to any law
and if the importer pays the import duty assessed on the
goods and the other charges payable under the Customs Act.
If the customs officer is of me opinion that the goods have
been imported contrary to any prohibition imposed by the
Customs Act or the Imports and Exports (Control) Act, or by
the orders issued or the rules framed thereunder,
727
a notice is issued under section 111 or section 112 of the
Customs Act calling upon the importer to show cause why the
goods should not be confiscated. If the importer shows good
cause" the goods are released and thereupon the Customs
authorities issue a Detention Certificate stating if that be
true, that the goods were detained for examination under
sections 17(3) and (4) of the Customs Act and that the
detention was due to no fault or negligence on the part of
the importer.
The Port Trusts are under a statutory obligation to
perform certain duties and equally so they have statutory
powers to fix scales of fees and rates. The statute with
which we are here concerned directly is the Madras Port
Trust Act, 2 of 1905, (hereinafter called "the Act"). It is
necessary to notice the relevant provisions thereof in order
to understand the controversy in this appeal.
Section 5(1) defines the "Board" to mean the Trustee of
the Port of Madras appointed under the Act. Section 5(12)
defines "Rate" as including any toll, due, rent, rate or
charge leviable under the Act. By section 7 the Board
consists of 21 Trustees including the Chairman. Section 8
provides that the Chairman of the Board shall be appointed
by the Central Government and the remaining trustees shall
be (1) the Collector of Customs, Madras, (2) the Municipal
Commissioner for the City of Madras, (3) the General
Manager, M. & S. M. Railway, (4) the General Manager, South
Indian Railway; (5) one representative of the Mercantile
Marine Department chosen by the Central Government; (6) one
representative of the Defence Services chosen by the Central
Government. (7) one representative of the State Government
chosen by the State Government; (8) two representatives of
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labour chosen by the Central Government after consultation
with the registered trade unions, if ally, composed of
persons employed in the port; and (9) eleven elected
trustees. By section 8(2), of the eleven elected trustees
one is elected by the Madras Municipal Corporation and the
remaining by such provincial or local bodies representing
commercial interests as the Central Government may, from
time to time, by notification in the official Gazette,
specify. Such notification may also specify the number of
trustees that each of such bodies may elect. Section 10
which lays down disqualifications for the trustee’s office
provides, inter alia, that a person shall be disqualified to
be a trustee if, inter alia, he holds any office or place of
profit under the Board. This provision does not, however,
apply to the Chairman. ex-officio Trustees and Trustees
appointed by virtue of office. Section 23(1) lays down the
procedure governing the proceedings of the Board while
section 23 (2) provides that the Board may, from time to
time, appoint committees consisting of not less than five of
its members for carrying into effect any part of the
provisions of the Act with such powers and under such
instructions, directions or limitations as shall be defined
by the Board.
By section 39 the Board is under an obligation,
according to its powers, to provide all reasonable
facilities for, and has the power to
728
undertake the services of the description mentioned in the
sub-section among those services are landing of goods from
vessels in the Port, and receiving, storing or delivering
goods brought within the Board’s premises. Section 39(2)
imposes upon the Board the obligation, if so required by any
owner, to perform in respect of goods all or any of the
services mentioned in clauses (a), (b) and (d) of section
39(1). Under section 39(3) the Board shall, if required,
take charge of the goods for the purpose of performing the
service and shall give a receipt in the prescribed form.
After the goods have been taken charge of and the receipt
given by the Board, no liability for any loss or damage
which may occur to the goods can attach to any person to
whom a receipt shall have been given by the Board or to the
master or the owner of the vessel from which the goods have
been landed. Under section 40 the responsibility of the
Board for the loss, destruction or deterioration of goods of
which it has taken charge is, subject to cerain provisions,
that of a bailee under sections 151, 152 and 161 of the
Indian Contract Act subject to certain modifications.
Chapter VI of the Act which appears under the heading
"Imposition and Recovery of Rates" contains provisions which
have direct impact on the contentions raised in this appeal.
Section 42 empowers the Board to frame a scale of rates at
which and a statement of the conditions under which any of
the services specified in clauses (a) to (e) of the section
shall be performed by the Board. Clause (b) refers to
landing of goods from any vessel upon any land or building
in the possession or occupation of the Board or at any place
within the limits of the Board. Clause (d) refers to
"wharfage, storage or demurrage of goods on any such place".
Sections 43 and 43-A also confer on the Board power similar
to that conferred by section 42. By Section 44 every scale
and every statement of conditions framed by the Board under
sections 42, 43 and 43-A shall be submitted to the Central
Government for sanction and, when so sanctioned and
published in the official Gazette, such scale and statement
of conditions have the force of law. The Central Government
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has power under section 44(1a) at any time to cancel any of
the scales framed by the Board or to call upon the Board to
modify any portion of such scales whereupon the Board shall
modify the scales according to the directions of the Central
Government. Section 44(2) confers power on the Board, in
special cases, for reasons to be recorded in writing, to
remit the whole or any portion of the rates or of any charge
leviable according to any scale. Under section 50 rates in
respect of goods to be landed are payable immediately on the
landing of the goods; rates in respect of goods to be
removed from the premises of the Board are payable before
the goods are removed. Under section 51 the Board has a lien
on the goods for the amount of all rates leviable under the
Act on the goods and it may seize and detain the goods until
the rates are fully paid. This lien has by section 52
priority over all other liens and claims except for general
average and the ship-owner’s lien for freight and other
charges where
729
such lien exists and has been preserved in the manner
provided in section 53. Under section 56, if the rates
payable to the Board remain unpaid, it is competent to the
Board to sell the goods by public auction after expiry of
two months from the time That the goods have passed into its
custody and in the case of perishable goods after the expiry
of a shorter period not being less than 24 hours. Section 57
requires that the notice of sale must be published in the
official Gazette. By section 58 notice is also required to
be given to the owner of the goods, if the address of the
owner is known. Under section 58-A? notwithstanding anything
contained in the Act, where any goods placed in the custody
of the Board are not removed by the owner or other person
entitled there to from the premises of the Board within one
month, the Board may, after due notice, required that the
goods be removed forthwith or that in default of compliance
the goods would be liable to be sold by public auction. In
cases where all the rates and charges payable under the Act
have been paid, such a notice for removal of the goods
cannot be given before the expiry of two months from the
date on which the goods. were placed in the custody of the
Board. If the notice is not complied with, the Board may at
any time after the expiration of one month from the date on
which the notice was served or published sell the goods by
public auction. Section 62 preserves the right of the Board
to recover the rates by a suit.
Section 95 of the Act which appears ill Chapter XI
called "Bye Laws" empowers the Board to make bye-laws not
inconsistent with the provisions of the Act, inter alia, for
the safe and convenient use of sheds, for the reception and
storage of goods brought within the premises of the Board,
for the mode of the payment of the rates leviable under the
Act and generally for carrying out the purposes of the Act.
Section 109 of the Act which has an important bearing
on these proceedings provides that nothing contained in the
Act shall affect any power vested in the Chief officer of
Customs under any Law for the time being in force. Section
49 of the Customs Act, 52 of 1962, provides that where in
the case of any imported goods, the Assistant Collector of
Customs, is satisfied on the application of the importer
that the goods cannot be cleared within a reasonable time,
the goods may, pending clearance, be permitted to be stored
in a public warehouse or in a private warehouse if
facilities for deposit in a public warehouse are not
available.
Acting in pursuance of the power conferred by sections
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42, 43 and 43-A, the appellants have framed a "Scale of
Rates" payable at the Port of Madras, which has been duly
sanctioned by the Central Government under section 44 of the
Act. We are concerned with the rates framed under section 42
which are contained in Chapter IV of the Scale of Rates. The
various scales of rates arc divided into three parts: Book
I, Book II and Book III. Chapter IV is headed "Demurrage "
and it occurs in Book I called "Charges for certain
16-L925SupCI/75
730
services which the Board is prepared to render to the
public". The introductory part of Chapter IV says:
"Demurrage is chargeable on all goods left in the
Board’s transit sheds or yards beyond the expiry of the
free days. After demurrage begins to accrue no
allowance is made for Sundays or Board’s holidays. The
free days are fixed by the Board from time to time."
Scale ’A’ of Chapter IV prescribes conditions governing
"Free Days", the normal rule being that two working days in
the case of coast cargo and three working days in the case
of foreign cargo excluding Sundays and the Board’s holidays
arc treated as free after complete discharge of a vessel’s
cargo, or the date when the last package was put overside.
Rule 13(b) is the focus of controversy between the parties
and it would be used to read along, with it clause (a) as
well:
"13. The following free periods are allowed in
addition to the free periods applicable as per
description of goods:-
(a) Periods during which goods are detained by
the Collector of Customs for examination
under Section 17(3) and (4) for chemical test
under Section 144 of the Customs Act, 1962
other than the ordinary processes of
appraisement and certified by the Collector
of Customs to be not attributable to any
fault o.; negligence on the part of the
Importers plus one working day. The Customs
holidays will also be treated as free days in
addition.
(b) Where goods are detained by the Collector of
Customs, on account of Import Trade Control
formalities or for compliance of formalities
prescribed under the Drug’s Act and certified
by the Collector of Customs to be not
attributable to any fault or negligence on
the part of Importers, demurrage shall be
recovered for this period at the rate of 30
per cent of the normal rate, i.e. the rate at
which the goods would in cur demurrage had
there been no detention by the Customs. This
concession in demurrage shall be limited to a
period of 30 days plus one working day and
demurrage shall be recovered at the full rate
(i.e., third slab) for detention beyond the
above said period."
Under clauses (c) and (d) of Rule 13, period during which
the goods are detained by the Port Health Authority and the
periods during which the Board is unable to trace packages
owing lo congestion of accommodation, wrong sorting or
incorrect tallying are also treated as Free Days.
The High Court dismissed the appellants suit for the
following reasons: (1) The Scale of Rates fixed by the Board
is in the nature of Bye-Laws; (2) Bye-Laws may be treated as
ultra vires for the
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731
reasons, inter alia, that they are repugnant to the
statute under which they are made or that they are
unreasonable; (3) Viewed as a bye-law, Rule 13(b) under
which the Board can charge demurrage for the period during
which the goods are detained for no fault or negligence of
the importer or his agent, is unreasonable and therefore
void; (4) In principle, there can be no distinction between
cases falling under clause (a) and those falling under
clause (b) of Rule 13, and if no demurrage is leviable in
respect of cases falling within clause (a), no demurrage
could be charged in respect of cases falling within clause
(b). The distinction made by the Board between the two kinds
of cases is therefore arbitrary and unreasonable; (5)
’Demurrage’, being a charge for wilful failure to remove the
goods within the free period can be believed only if the
failure to remove the goods is due to the fault or
negligence of the importer or his agent; (6) Having regard
to this well accepted meaning of the word ’demurrage’, the
authority give to the Board by section 42 of the Act to
frame the scale of rates can be exercised only for the
purpose of levying charges where the importer was not
prevented by any lawful authority from clearing the goods
from the transit area and he had defaulted or was negligent
in clearing the goods; (7) Since Rule 13(b) empowers the
Board to charge demurrage even when the goods are detained
for no fault or negligence of the importer or his agent, it
is beyond the authority conferred by section 42 and is
therefore void; (8) All the same, if two views are
reasonably possible" a construction which favours the
validity of a rule or statute should be preferred to that
which renders it void Therefore, under the scale of charges
for demurrage provided in Chapter IV, the appellants can
levy demurrage only in cases where the delay in clearing
the goods is due to the fault or negligence of the importer
or his agent.
The first four of these reasons relate to the
invalidity of Rule 13(b) viewed as a bye-law while the last
four relate to its invalidity on the ground that it is in
excess of the power conferred by section 42 of the, Act.
Both of these sets of reasons appear to us unsustainable.
As stated in "Craies on Statute Law" (7th Ed., pp. 325-
326), bye-laws may be treated as ultra vires on the grounds,
amongst others, that they are repugnant to the statute under
which they are made or that they arc unreasonable. But the
error of the High Court’s judgment lies in the assumption
that the "Scale of Rates and Statement of Conditions" framed
by the appellants under sections 42, 43 and 43-A are bye-
laws. Section 42 with which we are concerned confers
authority on the Board to "frame a scale of rates at which
and a statement of the conditions under which any of the
services specified" in the section shall be performed.
Section 43 confers an identical power in the Board in regard
to certain other matters while section 43-A authorises the
Board to prescribe consolidated rates. Provision for framing
bye-laws is made in Chapter XI called "Bye-Laws" and section
95 which occurs in that Chapter mentions the various
subjects on which the Board may frame bye-laws. Under
Chapter XI, the Board has no power to frame bye-laws for
fixing scales of rates or a statement of the conditions
under which any of the services specified in sections 42, 43
and 43-A shall be performed. The nearest that section 95
touches the subject of rates is by clause (6) which refers
to the
732
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mode of the payment of the rates leviable under this Act.
The Board having expressly empowered by section 42 to frame.
I scale of rates and a statement of the conditions under
which it shall perform the services specified in the section
and the Board having in terms exercised that power under the
aforesaid section, there is no justification for supposing
that in framing the scale of rates and the statement of
conditions, the Board has purported to frame a bye-law.
What the High Court has done is to assume, in the first
place, that the Board has not exercised the power which it
undoubtedly possesses and which in fact and in terms it did
exercise. The High Court then assumed that the Board had
exercised the power which it did not possess" a power which
the Board has not even purported to exercise. Making these
unfounded assumptions, the High Court invalidated Rule 13
(b) on the basis that it was a bye-law and a bye-law could
be declared ultra vires on the ground that it is
unreasonable. We are unable to accept the High Court’s view
that the scale of rates prescribed by the Board under
sections 42, 43 and 43-A consists, as it were, of so many
bye-laws or that Rule 13 is in the nature of a bye-law.
A bye-law has been said to be an ordinance affecting
the public. Or some portion of the public, impose by same
authority clothed with statutory powers, ordering something
to be done or not to be done, and accompanied by some
sanction or penalty for its non-observance.(1) The Board’s
power to frame the scale of rates and statement of
conditions is not a regulatory power to order that something
must be done or something may not be done. The rates and
conditions govern the basis of which the Board performs the
services mentioned in sections 42, 43 and 43-A. Those who
desire to avail of the services of the Board are liable to
pay for those services at prescribed rates and to perform
the conditions framed in that behalf by the Board. Indeed,
some of the services which the Board may perform are
optional and if the importer desires to have the benefit of
those services, he has to pay the charges prescribed
therefore in the Scale of Rates. For example, any one
wanting to use the Board’s premises for any of the purposes
mentioned in clauses (a) to (d) of section 43 would have to
pay the charges prescribed by the Board for the use of its
premises. Similarly any one desiring to have the benefit of
the Boards’s services in behalf of cranage or storage as
specified in clauses (c) and (d) of section 42 shall have to
pay for these services at the prescribed rates. Whether the
services are from the importer’s point of view optional in
the sense that he may or may not require them or whether the
importer has no option save to avail himself of the basic
services of the Board as for landing and keeping the goods
in the transit area, the services have to be paid for at the
scale of rates prescribed by the Board. In such matters,
where services arc offered by a public authority on payment
of a price, conditions governing the offer and acceptance of
services are not in the nature of bye-laws. They reflect or
represent an agreement between the parties, one offering its
services at prescribed rates and the other accepting the
services as those rates.
(1)See Halsbury’s Laws of England, 3rd Ed. Vol. 24, p.
510, paragraph 940 citing Kruce v. Johnson [1898] 2
Q.B. 91 at p. 96.
733
As, generally, in the case of bye-laws framed by a local
Authority, there is in such cases no penal sanction for the
observance of the conditions on which the services are
offered and accepted. If the services are not paid for, the
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Board can exercise its statutory lien on the goods under
section 51 and enforce that lien under section 56 of the
Act; or else, the Board may take recourse to the alternative
remedy of a suit provided for by section 62.
With this, the entire reasoning of the High Court on
the first aspect of he matter must fall because Rule 13(b)
has been declared ultra vires on the basis that it is a bye-
law and, as such, it is arbitrary and unreasonable. But we
would like to point out, since the High Court has taken
pains to go into the matter quite elaborately, that even a
bye-law cannot be declared ultra vires on the ground of
unreasonableness merely because the court thinks that it
goes further than is necessary or that it does not contain
the necessary qualifications or exceptions. In Kruse v.
Johnson(1) a question was raised as to the validity of a
bye-law made by a county council for regulating street
music. I Lord Russell of Killowen observed in that case .
"When the Court is called upon to consider the
bye-laws of public representative bodies clothed with
the ample authority which I have described, accompanied
by the checks and safeguards which I have mentioned. I
think the consideration of such bye-laws ought to be
approached from a different standpoint. They ought to
be supported if possible. They ought to be, as has been
said, benevolently interpreted’ and credit ought to be
given to those who have to administer them that they
will be reasonably administered."
The learned Chief Justice said further that there may be
"dases in which it would be the duty, of the court
to condemn by-laws made under such authority as these
were made (by a county council) as invalid because
unreasonable. But unreasonable in what sense ? If, for
instance, they were found to be partial and unequal in
their operation as between different classes; if they
were manifest unjust; if they disclosed bad faith; if
they involved such oppressive or gratuitous
interference with the rights of those subject to them
as could find no justification in the minds of
reasonable men, the court might well say, ’Parliament
never intended to give authority to make such rules;
they are unreasonable and ultra vires.’ But it is in
this and this sense only, as I conceive, that the
question of reasonableness or unreasonableness can
properly be regarded. A bye-law is not unreasonable
merely because particular judges may think that it goes
further than is prudent or necessary or convenient or
because it is not accompanied by an exception which
some judges may think ought to be there."
(1) [1898] 2 Q.B, 91, at pp. 98. 99.
734
In Slattery v. Naylor(1) it was observed that when
considering whether a bye-law is reasonable or not, the
court need a strong case to be made out against it, and
decline to determine whether it would have been wiser or
more prudent to make the bye-law less absolute, nor will
they hold that it is unreasonable because considerations
which the court would itself have regarded in framing such a
bye-law have been overlooked or rejected by its framers. n
In the first place, Port Trusts are bodies of a public
representative character who are entrusted by the
legislature with authority to frame a scale of rates and
statement of conditions subject to which they shall or may
perform certain services. Port Trusts are not commercial
organisations which carry on business for their own profit.
Sections 39(1) and (2) of the Act cast on the Board an
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obligation, according to its powers, to provide all
reasonable facilities, if so required by any owner, for
various kinds of services mentioned in clauses (a), (b) and
(d) of section 39(1), which include services in regard to
landing of goods between vessels and docks in possession of
the Board and receiving, storing or delivering goods brought
within the Board’s premises. The Board under section 39(3)
shall, if required, take charge of the goods for the purpose
of performing the service. After the goods are thus taken
charge of and a receipt given for them, no liability for any
loss or damage which may occur to the goods attaches to any
person to whom the receipt has been given or to the master
or owner of the ship from which the goods have been landed.
The responsibility of the Board for the loss, destruction or
deterioration of goods of which it has taken charge is,
under section 40 of the Act, that of a bailee under sections
151, 152 and 161 of the Contract Act, subject to some
modifications. Thus rates which the Board levies are a
consolidated charge for the various services it renders and
the liability which it is compelled by statute to undertake.
The Board of Trustees is a representative body
consisting of 21 Trustees out of whom eleven are elected.
The Collector of Customs the Municipal Commissioner, the
General Managers of Railways, a representative each of the
Mercantile Marine Department and the Defence Services of the
Central Government, and two representatives of labour are
the other members of the Board. Out of the eleven elected
Trustees, one is elected by the Municipal Corporation and
the remaining by provincial or local bodies representing
commercial interests. The Board of Trustees is thus a broad-
based body representing a cross-section of variety of
interests. It is the Board thus constituted that frames the
Scale of Rates and Statement of Conditions under which the
services shall or may be performed by it. Every scale and
every statement of conditions framed by the Board has to be
submitted to the Central Government for sanction under
section 44 and it is only when it is so sanctioned that it
has the force of law. The requirement of sanction by the
Central Government is a restraint on unwise, excessive or
arbitrary fixation of rates. Section 44(2) confers on the
Board the power, in special cases and for reasons to be
record-
(1) [1888] 13 App. Cas. 446, 452.
735
ed in writing, to remit the whole or any portion of rates or
charges leviable according to any scale in force under
section 44. Thus, the statute provides for the necessary
safeguards, checks and counter checks as an insurance
against fixation and levy of harsh or unjust rates.
Section 109 of the Act provides that nothing in the Act
shall affect any power vested in the Chief officer of
Customs under any law for the time being in force. Section
49 of the Customs Act, 1962 confers power on the Assistant
Collector of Customs, if he is satisfied on the application
of the importer that the goods cannot be cleared within a
reasonable time, to permit that the goods may, pending
clearance, be stored in a public warehouse and if such a,
facility is not available, then in a private warehouse. This
provision together with section 44(2) of the Act constitutes
a measure of mitigation. In face of these considerations, it
is impossible to characterise the scheme for the levy of
rates as arbitrary or unreasonable.
The High Court contrasted clause (b) of Rule 13 with
its clause (d) and held that there is no distinction between
the two classes of cases and if cases falling under clause
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(a) are wholly exempt from the payment of demurrage, so
ought to be those falling under clause (b). The error of
this conclusion lies in equating cases falling under clause
(b) with those falling under clause (a). The two clauses
deal with different sets of cases: clause (a) deals with
cases where the goods are detained for examination under
sections 17(3) and (4) or for chemical test under section
144 of the Customs Act, other than for the ordinary
processes of appraisement; clause (b) deals with cases where
the goods are detained on account of Import Trade Control
formalities or for compliance of formalities prescribed
under the Drugs Act. We see no warrant for the court
substituting its own view as to the allowance of Free Days
in a technical matter like the fixation of rates which has
been considered by an expert Board of Trustees and whose
decision has been confirmed by the Central Government.
Equating the two classes of cases dealt with by clauses (a)
and (b) of Rule 13 may seem to the court a more prudent or
reasonable way of fixing scales of rates but that is not a
correct test for deciding the validity of the impugned
provision.
There is a fundamental aspect of the fixation of rates
which the High Court has overlooked. What is the object and
purpose of the rates which the Board charges to the importer
? Port Trusts do not do the business of warehousing goods
and the rates which the Board charges for storage of goods
are not levied as a means of collecting revenue. The Board
is under a statutory obligation to render services of
various kinds and those services have to be rendered not for
the personal benefit of this or that importer but in the
larger national interests. Congestion in the ports affects
the free movement of ships and of essential goods. The scale
of rates has therefore to be framed in a manner which will
act both as an incentive and as a compulsion for the
expeditious removal of the goods from the transit area.
Ships, like wagons, have to be kept moving and that can
happen only if there IS pressure on the importer to remove
the goods from the Board’s pre-
736
mises with the utmost expedition. The appellants in their
reply statement filed in the High Court have referred to the
Report of the Committee set up in 1967 by the Ministry of
Transport and Shipping, Government of India. The Committee
consisted of top-level experts, one each from the Ports of
New York, London and Notterdam who made a general survey of
the Ports and Harbours in India. The Committee observed in
its Report: "To effect quick clearance of the cargo from the
Harbour, the demurrage rates may be so fixed as to make it
unprofitable for importers to use the port premises as a
warehouse. "Viewed from this angle, the scale of rates
cannot be characterised as unreasonable.
That takes us to the question whether the scale of
rates fixed by the Board is beyond the power conferred on it
by section 42 of the Act. If section 42 were to authorise
the Board to fix rates of ’Demurrage’. it might perhaps have
been arguable that the Scale of Rates and the Statement of
Conditions must conform to the accepted meaning of the word
’Demurrage’. But the statute has placed no such limitation
on the power of the Board to fix the rates. By Section 42
power is conferred on the Board to frame "a scale of rates
at which and a statement of the conditions under which any
of the services 1> specified" in the section "shall be
performed". And the Board has fixed the scale of rates and
the statement of conditions for the services it may have to
perform. It is difficult to see in what manner or respect
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the Board has exceeded its power under section 42.
The High Court seems to have thought that the Board had
the limited right to fix rates of demurrage and therefore
rates could only be levied on goods which were not removed
from the Board’s premises due to some fault or negligence on
the part of the importer or his, agent. The High Court was
probably misled in this conclusion by the use of word
’demurrage’ in clause (d) of section 42. But ’demurrage’ is
surely not a service to be performed by the Board and is, on
any view, a charge leviable on goods. Clauses (a) lo (d) of
section 42 refer to various services like transshipment of
passengers and goods, landing and shipment of passengers or
goods, cranage or porterage of goods and wharfage or storage
of goods. It is these services in respect of which section
42 authorises the Board to frame a scale of rates and the
statement of conditions. The circumstances that the Board
has used the expression ’Demurrage’ as a heading for Chapter
IV of the Scale of Rates or that it has used that expression
in Rules 13(b) and (c) cannot constitute a fetter on its
powers to fix the rates. The validity of the exercise of
that power has to be judged on the language of section 42
which is the source of the power.
The High Court has cited many texts and dictionaries
bearing on the meaning of ’Demurrage’ but these have no
relevance for the reason that demurrage being a charge and
not a service, the power of the Board is not limited to
fixing rates of demurrage. Besides, it is plain that the
Board has used the expression ’Demurrage’ not in the strict
mercantile sense but merely to signify- a charge which may
be levied on goods after the expiration of Free Days Rule
13(b) itself
737
furnishes a clue to the sense in which the expression
’demurrage’ is used by the Board. It provides, inter alia,
that "demurrage" shall be recovered at a concessional rate
for a period of thirty days plus one working day where the
goods are detained for compliance with certain formalities
and where the Collector of Customs certifies that tile
detention of goods is "not attributable to any fault or
negligence on the part of Importers".
The High Court was therefore in error in holding the
scale of rates fixed by the Board as ultra vires and void on
the grounds that it is unreasonable and that it is in excess
of the power conferred by section 42 of the Act.
The only question which now remains to be considered is
whether the respondents are liable to pay the demurrage
demanded of them by the appellants. The appellants’ claim
against respondents 2 and 3 has no foundation in law and was
rightly not pressed by the appellants’ counsel. Respondent 3
is the Collector of Customs who, obviously., cannot be made
personally liable to pay the demurrage. Respondent 2 is the
Union of India against whom and respondent 3. the
appellant’s claim is said to reside partly in the region of
"contract or quasi-contract". We are unable to spell out any
such basis on which the claim of the appellants could rest.
The issuance of an incorrect ’Detention Certificate’ by the
3rd respondent cannot also help the appellants to fasten the
liability for demurrage on respondents 2 and 3 on the ground
of their negligence. As observed by the High Court, all the
relevant facts were before the appellants who could, with
reasonable care, have avoided the consequences flowing from
the Certificate issued by the 3rd respondent.
As regards the appellants’ claim against the 1st
respondent, the High Court was prepared to hold the latter
liable to pay the demur rage except for the fact that the
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scale of rates was unreasonable and beyond the power of the
Board. As we have set aside the High Court’s findings on
those points, it has to be examined whether the 1st
respondent is liable to pay the demurrage. Unfortunately,
parties fought in the High Court a legal battle and gave no
importance to facts on which the liability of the 1st
respondent may be said to rest. Facts must come before the
law for, legal principles cannot be applied in a vacuum. No
oral evidence was led by the parties and we find it
difficult on a mere Perusal of documents to say that
respondent 1 ought to be held liable to meet the appellants’
claim. Documents do not prove themselves nor indeed is the
admissibility of a document proof by itself of the truth of
its contents. Import Licence No. CL/ 53/3/02105-1 dated June
16, 1962 under which the goods were imported stood in the
name of the State Trading Corporation of India. It issued an
authorization in favour of the 1st respondent which, as the
documents go, was liable to deliver the consignment to the
nominees of the Corporation. The 1st respondent. it would
appear, was only entitled to charge a commission for the
work done by it in pursuance of the authorisation issued by
the Corporation. The 1st respondent had no title to or
interest in the goods except to deliver them
738
in accordance with the instructions of the Corporation. If
the appellants were to enforce their statutory lien, the
incidence of the demurrage would have fallen on the
Corporation in whom the title to the goods was vested. The
appellants permitted the goods to be cleared without then
demanding the demurrage which they claimed later, thereby
depriving the 1st respondent of an opportunity to reject the
goods as against the supplier unless, of course, the
Corporation was within to accept them and along with them
the liability for the payment of demurrage. In the absence
of any more facts we find it impossible on the record as it
stands, to accept the appellants’ claim against the 1st
respondent. Out of 15 issues framed in the suit, issues 1
and 10 only pertain to the liability of the 1st respondent
and on those issues, the facts appearing; on the record are
too scanty to support the appellants’ claim against the 1st
respondent. We., therefore, hold that the claim against the
1st respondent must also fail
In the result, we confirm the decree of the High Court
dismissing the appellants’ suit, though for entirely
different reasons. In the circumstances, there will be no
order as to costs.
P.H.P. Appeal dismissed .
739