Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HINDUSTAN PAPER CORPORATION LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GOVERNMENT OF KERALA & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/04/1986
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
THAKKAR, M.P. (J)
CITATION:
1986 AIR 1541 1986 SCR (2) 581
1986 SCC (3) 398 1986 SCALE (1)870
CITATOR INFO :
R 1989 SC 903 (20)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950 - Article 19(6)(ii)
Government owned industry - Necessity for grant OF
concessions.
Kerala Forest Produce (Fixation of Selling Price) Act,
1978 - Section 6 - Constitutional validity of - Action of
State Government exempting Government companies from
operation of section 5 of the Act - Whether valid and legal.
HEADNOTE:
The Kerala Forest Produce (Fixation of Selling Price)
Act, 1978 was enacted with the object of providing for the
procedure to be followed in fixing the selling prices of
certain important forest produce, for the prohibition of the
sale of such forest produce at less than the prices so fixed
and for matters incidental or ancillary thereto. The Act
governs only those forests which are considered as "reserved
forests" within the meaning of Kerala Forests Act, 1961 and
forests vested in the Government under s. 3 of the Kerala
Private Forests (Vesting and Assignment) Act 1971.
Section 6 provides that the Government may in public
interest, by Notification in the Gazette, exempt the sale of
any forest produce (a) to any company owned by the Central
Government or the Government of Kerala, and (b) not
exceeding 10 cubic meters, to any co-operative society
registered or deemed to be registered under the Kerala Co-
operative Societies Act, 1969 from the provisions of s. 5
subject to such conditions and restrictions as may be
specified in the Notification.
On March 9, 1979, the respondent-State Government
published a Notification exempting the appellant-company,
the Kerala State Bamboo Corporation Ltd. and the Travancore
Private Industries Ltd. from the provisions of s.5 and fixed
the price below which forest produce covered by the Act
could not be sold.
582
Two private sector companies filed writ petitions under
Art. 226 questioning the constitutional validity of s.6 and
the Notification granting exemption in favour of the
appellant-company and two Government owned companies. The
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petitions were opposed alleging that s.6 of the Act was
constitutionally valid. At the hearing of the petitions, the
Additional Advocate-General appearing for the respondent-
State Government conceded that s. 6 of the Act was
unconstitutional. The High Court, therefore, held that s. 6
of the Act was violative of Art. 14 and struck down the same
as well as the Notification.
The appellant-company filed appeals to this Court.
Though no appeal was filed by the State Government, at the
hearing the counsel for respondent-State Government stated
that the concession made by the counsel for the State before
the High Court, was incorrect and supported the validity of
s.6 of the Act and the Notification granting exemption.
Allowing the appeals,
^
HELD: 1. The decision of the High Court that s. 6 of
the Kerala Forest Produce (Fixation of Selling Price) Act,
1978 was violative of Art. 14 of the Constitution is liable
to be set aside. [595 C]
2. Section 6 of the Act confers the power on the State
Government to grant exemption from the provisions of s. 5 of
the Act. The power conferred under s. 6 is not unfettered.
The Government can grant the exemption only in the public
interest. Such exemption can be granted only to a company
owned by the Central Government or the Government of Kerala.
[590 D-E]
3. Under cl. (b) of s.6 any sale of forest produce not
exceeding 10 cubic meters effected in favour of any co-
operative society registered or deemed to be registered
under the Kerala Co-operative Societies Act 1969 may be
exempted from s. 5 of the Act by the State Government. [590
E]
4. While issuing the notification granting exemption it
is open to the State Government to impose appropriate
conditions and restrictions. The State Government has to
bear in mind the entire policy and the object of the Act
before exercising its power under s. 6. [590 F-G]
583
5. So far as consumers of forest produce who are not A
granted any exemption under s.6 are concerned any sale of
forest produce in their favour cannot be effected at a price
less than the price notified under s. 3 of the Act. The
notified price has to be fixed on the basis of the
recommendation of the Expert Committee constituted under s.4
and the Expert Committee is required to take into
consideration the market price of the forest produce, the
cost of regenerating and maintaining the forest produce in
cases where regeneration is necessary after selling the
forest produce and such other materials as may be
prescribed. Section 5 provides that the forest produce
covered by the Act shall not be sold at a price less than
the price which is determined on the basis of various
factors, therefore, the consumers cannot have any grievance.
They cannot claim that they must be shown any concession and
that the forest produce should be made available to them at
a price which would be lower than the market prices. Even
when it is stated that any company owned by the Central
Government or the Government of Kerala or a co-operative
society may be supplied forest produce without the
constraint contained in s.5, it does not mean that the
forest produce would be made available to them at throw-away
prices. It is reasonable to expect that the price payable
for the forest produce in question by the Government
companies or co-operative societies would be determined
after negotiations having regard to the public interest.
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[591 F-H; 592 A-C] E
6. In almost all the statutes by which the fiscal or
economic interests of the State are regulated provision for
granting exemption in appropriate cases would have
necessarily to be there and the power to grant exemption is
invariably conferred on the Government concerned. [592 C-D]
7. It has now become a well-recognised and
constitutionally accepted legislative practice to
incorporate provisions conferring the powers of exemption on
the Government in such statutes. Such exemptions cannot
ordinarily be granted secretly. A Notification would have to
be issued and published in the Gazette and it would be
subject to the scrutiny by the Legislature. The power can be
exercised only in the public interest as provided by the
section itself. The validity of provisions conferring the
power of exemption has been consistently upheld by this
Court. [592 E-F]
584
State of Bombay and Another v. F.N. Balsara [1951]
S.C.R. 682, relied upon.
8. The Government undertakings and companies form a
class by themselves since any profit that they may make
would in the end result in the benefit to the members of the
general public. The profit, if any, enriches the public
coffer and not the private coffer. The role of industries in
the public sector is very sensitive and critical from the
point of view of national economy. Their survival very often
depends upon the budgetary provision and not upon private
resources which are available to the industries in the
private sector. They are often established to break the
power of strangulation on economy which the industries in
private sector may have developed and may be using to choke
the industrial growth of the country. An exemption or a
concession might provide them some breathing time or
settling down time. It may be treated as a subsidy at the
worst. This appears to be the policy behind Article
19(6)(ii) of the Constitution. In appropriate cases in order
to place an industry owned by the Government on an enduring
basis in the national interest, some concession may have to
be shown to it. [592 H; 593 A-D]
9. The action of the State Government in exempting the
Government Companies from the operation of 8.5 does not in
the instant case amount to the exclusion of the industries
in the private sector from their business nor does it deny
the usual supplies of forest produce used as raw-materials
by these industries. The Government is not shown to be
taking any undue advantage of the monopoly it enjoys as the
owner of the forests and the position it holds as the sole
supplier in forest produce in fixing the minimum prices in
order to preserve the national wealth from being wasted
away. There fore, it cannot be said that the provision is
either arbitrary or unreasonable even though the Government
industries may be rivals in trade to the industries in the
private sector. [593 E-G]
Sher Singh v. Union of India & Ors., [1984] 1 S.C.R.
464; Viklad Coal Merchant, Patiala & Ors. v. Union of India
Ors., [1984] 1 S.C.R. 657 and Fatehchand Himmatlal & Ors. v.
State of Maharashtra etc., [1977] 2 S.C.R. 828, relied upon.
State of Rajasthan v. Mukanchand & Ors., [1964] 6
S.C.R. 903, referred to.
585
10. Preference shown to Government companies under 8. 6
A of the Act cannot be considered to be discriminatory as
they stand in a different class altogether and the
classification made between the Government companies and
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others for the purposes of the Act is a valid one. Same is
the case with the class which gives power under 8.6 of the
Act to the Government to exempt sales of forest produce in
favour of co-operative societies upto the limit mentioned
therein. [594 E-F]
P.V. Sivarajan v. The Union of India and Anr., [1959]
Suppl. 1 S.C.R. 779 and Orient Weaving Mills (P) Ltd. v. The
Union of India, [1962] Suppl. 3 S.C.R. 481, relied upon.
11. In the instant case, the writ petitioners on whom
the burden lay have not given any valid reason as to why it
should be held that impugned notification was not in the
public interest. In the absence of material it cannot be
held that the impugned notification was not in the public
interest. [595 C-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1871-76
of 1981.
From the Judgment and Order dated 15.4.1981 of the
Kerala High Court in O.P. Nos. 6, 7, l005 1153, 1154 and
1345 of 1981. E
Dr. Y.S. Chitale, M. Ramchandran, Mrs. Shanta
Vasudevan, P. Parameswaran and A.S. Nambiar for the
Appellant.
T.S. Krishnamurthy Iyer and P.K. Pillai for the
Respondents. F
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH J. In these appeals by special leave we
are concerned with the question of constitutional validity
of section 6 of the Kerala Forest Produce (Fixation of
Selling Price) Act, 1978 (Act 29 of 1978) (hereinafter
referred to as ’the Act’)
The appellant Hindustan Paper Corporation Ltd. is a
company owned by the Central Government carrying on the
586
business of manufacturing newsprint at its factory in the
State of Kerala. Before its factory was established an
agreement was entered into between the appellant Hindustan
Paper Corporation Ltd. and the Government of Kerala on
October 7, 1974 under which the Government of Kerala agreed
to grant to the appellant the right of free use of water
from the Muvattupuzha river for the purpose of manufacturing
newsprint and also to make available annually to the
appellant 1,50,000 tonnes of eucalyptus wood. The Government
of Kerala further agreed to keep reserved from the date of
agreement the State plantations of eucalyptus grandis in
Pamba, Kottayam, Punalur, Thenmalai and Trivandrum Forest
Divisions as constituted then for the appellant and not to
permit harvesting of eucalyptus wood and reeds by other
parties and for the regeneration of the forest in the areas,
the Chief Conservator of Forests, Kerala State was required
in consultation with the appellant to prepare and implement
a scientific management plan which would include
fireprotection and epidemic control programmes. The
appellant agreed to pay to the Government of Kerala royalty
for the raw materials supplied to the appellant at the rate
of Rs.11 per tonne of green wood of eucalyptus grandis and
eucalyptus tereticornis (both with 50 per cent moisture) and
at the rate of Rs.12 per tonne of green reeds with 50 per
cent moisture. There were several other conditions in the
agreement with which we are not concerned in these cases.
After the above agreement was entered into the appellant
established its factory. The Punalur Paper Mills Ltd. and
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the Gwalior Rayon Silk Manufacturing (Wvg.) Co. Ltd. which
were companies in the private sector had also established
their factories in the State of Kerala which consumed forest
produce as raw-material. The Kerala State Bamboo Corporation
Limited and the Travancore Plywood Industries Limited which
were owned by the Government of Kerala were also carrying on
business in the State of Kerala.
In the year 1978 the Act was passed by the Kerala
Legislature with the object of providing for the procedure
to be followed in fixing the selling prices of certain
important forest produce, for the prohibition of the sale of
such forest produce at less than the prices so fixed and for
matters incidental or ancillary thereto. The Act was also
intended to provide for the proper regeneration and
maintenance of the forests in the State. The Act governs
only those forests which
587
are considered as reserved forests within the meaning of A
Rerala Forest Act, 1961 and forests vested in the Government
under section 3 of the Kerala Private Forests (Vesting and
Assignment) Act, 1971. It provides for the determination of
the selling price of certain forest produce specified in
clause (c) of section 2 of the Act. Section 3 of the Act
requires the Government to notify in the Gazette before the
end of each financial year the selling price of every forest
produce for the following financial year. The notified price
has to be fixed by the Government after taking into
consideration the recommendations of the Expert Committee
consisting of the officers mentioned in section 4(2) of the
Act. Sub-section (3) of section 4 of the Act requires the
Expert Committee to make its recommendation having regard
inter alia to the market price of the forest produce, the
cost of, regenerating and maintaining the forest produce in
cases where regeneration is necessary after selling the
forest produce; and such other matters as may be prescribed.
Section 5 is the crucial section in the Act. It reads as
follows :
"5. Forest produce to be sold at price not less
than the selling price -
(1) After the date of the publication of the
notification under sub-section (2) of section 3,
no forest produce shall be sold by the Government
or any forest officer at a price which is less
than the selling price of that forest produce.
(2) The sale of any forest produce in
contravention of sub-section (1) shall be null and
void and shall not he enforceable in a court of
law."
There is no prohibition of sale of forest produce at
prices higher than the prices mentioned in the notification.
Section 7 of the Act provides that 10 per cent of the amount
obtained by the sale of forest produce after the
commencement of the Act, subject to such rules as may be
made under the Act, should be set apart for being utilised
for the development of forests. Section 8 enables the
Government to make rules for the purpose of carrying into
effect the provisions of the Art. We are concerned in these
cases with the validity of section 6 of the Act which reads
thus :
588
"6. Exemption - The Government may, in the public
interest, by notification in the Gazette, exempt
the sale of any forest produce -
(a) to any company owned by the Central Government
or the Government of Kerala;
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(b) not exceeding ten cubic meters, to any co-
operative society registered or deemed to be
registered under the Kerala Co-operative Societies
Act, 1969 (21 of 1969)
from the provisions of section 5, subject to such
conditions and restrictions as may be specified in
the notification."
The Act came into force on its publication, i.e., on
September 26, 1978. On March 9, 1979 the Government of
Kerala published a notification exempting the appellant,
i.e., Hindustan Paper Corporation Ltd., the Kerala State
Bamboo Corporation Limited and the Travancore Plywood
Industries Limited from the provisions of section 5 of the
Act. The relevant part of the Notification and the
Explanatory Note attached to it are given below:
"No. G.O. (MS) lOO/79/AD Dated, Trivandrum
9th March, 1979
S.R.O. No. 313/79:- In exercise of the powers
conferred by section 6 of the Kerala Forest Produce
(Fixation of Selling Price) Act, 1978 (29 of 1978), the
Government of Kerala, being satisfied that it is necessary
so to do in the public interest, hereby exempt the sale of
any forest produce to the Kerala Newsprint Project under the
Hindustan Paper Corporation, the Kerala State Bamboo
Corporation and the Travancore Plywood Industries, Punalur
from the provisions of section 5 of the said Act.
By order of the Governor
K.V. Vidhyadharan
Additional Secretary to Govt.
589
EXPLANATORY NOTE
After Government have notified selling price of
Forest Produce under section 3 of Act 29 of 1978,
Forest Produce cannot be sold at prices less than
the selling price. Under section 6 of the Act,
Government can exempt in public interest, by
Notification, the sale of any Forest Produce to
companies owned by the Central Government, by
Government of Kerala. As Kerala Newsprint Project,
Bamboo Corporation and the Tranvancore Plywood
Industries, Punalur are undertakings of the
Central Government and the Government of Kerala
respectively, it is considered expedient to exempt
these from the provisions of section 5 of the Act.
The Notification is intended to achieve the above
purpose."
The State Government issued the Notification under
section 3 of the Act fixing the price below which forest
produce covered by the Act could not be sold. Aggrieved by
the Notification granting exemption to the Government
companies, the two companies in the private sector, namely,
Punalur Paper Mills Limited and the Gwalior Rayon Silk
Manufacturing (Wvg.) Co. Ltd. filed writ petitions in the
High Court questioning the constitutional validity of
section 6 and the Notification granting exemption thereunder
in favour of the appellant Hindustan Paper Corporation Ltd.
and two other companies owned by the Government of Kerala.
The writ petitions were opposed by the Government of Kerala,
the appellant Hindustan Paper Corporation Ltd., the Kerala
State Bamboo Corporation Ltd. and the Tranvancore Plywood
Industries Ltd. In the counter-affidavit filed on behalf of
the Government of Kerala the contentions urged by the
petitioners in the writ petitions were refuted and the State
Government took the stand that section 6 of the Act was
constitutionally valid. At the hearing of the writ petitions
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before the High Court, the Additional Advocate General who
appeared for the State Government conceded that in his
opinion section 6 of the Act was unconstitutional. Perhaps
what he meant was that he was not able to offer any good
answer to the contentions urged by the other side in support
of the challenge to the constitutionality of the concerned
provision. A reference to
590
this concession which was neither here nor there is found at
the end of paragraph 22 of the judgment of the High Court.
The High Court held that sec. 6 of the Act was violative of
Art. 14 of the Constitution and struck it down along with
the Notification. No appeal was filed by the State Govt. The
above appeals are filed by the Hindustan Paper Corporation
Ltd. the appellant herein which is one of the beneficiaries
of the Notification granting exemption. But, at the hearing
of these appeals in this Court the learned counsel for the
Government of Kerala stated that the concession made by the
learned counsel for the State before the High Court was
incorrect, and supported the validity of section 6 of the
Act and the Notification granting exemption issued
thereunder.
These appeals are filed against the judgment of the
High Court after obtaining the leave of this Court under
Article 136 of the Constitution. Section 6 of the Act has
already been set out above. It confers the power on the
State Government to grant exemption from the provisions of
section 5 of the Act. The power conferred under section 6 of
the Act is not unfettered. The Government can grant the
exemption only in the public interest. Such exemption can be
granted only to a company owned by the Central Government or
the Government of Kerala. There is also, however, a
provision in clause (b) of section 6 of the Act, which
ununderstandably has also been struck down by the High
Court, even though its validity has not been expressly
challenged. Under this provision any sale of forest produce
not exceeding ten cubic meters effected in favour of any co-
operative society registered or deemed to be registered
under the Kerala Co-operative Societies Act, 1969 may be
exempted from section 5 of the Act by the State Government.
While issuing the notification granting exemption it is open
to the State Government to impose appropriate conditions and
restrictions. The State Government, of course, has to bear
in mind the entire policy and object of the Act before
exercising its power under section 6 of the Act. At the
outset it should be observed that the decision of the High
Court to the extent it has quashed clause (b) of section 6
of the Act which gave power to the State Government to
exempt the sale of any forest produce in small quantities
not exceeding 10 cubic meters to any co-operative society is
liable to be set aside straightaway without anything more as
there was no challenge to that part of the section at all
and the High Court has not
591
at all scrutinized the constitutional validity of this
provision.
The reasons given by the High Court for quashing
section 6 of the Act are these :
(1) if the Government is given a power to sell the
produce at a lower price than the notified rate to
the Government companies it will enable the
Government to cripple or in slow degrees to
eliminate the other consumers in the field. This
conferment of power on the state Government is
discriminatory and unreasonable,
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(2) a Government company is as such a legal entity
as any other entity. It is a commercial
corporation acting on its own behalf and all
consumers of the forest produce should have an
equal opportunity to get the goods. The Government
company could not, therefore, be given any favour,
(3) there is no nexus between the object to be
achieved by the Act and the exemption to be
granted in favour of the Government companies, and
(4) the submission made by the Additional Advocate
General to the effect that he could not support
the validity of section 6 of the Act.
We find it difficult to accept the grounds on which the
High Court has held section 6 of the Act to be
unconstitutional. So far as consumers of forest produce who
are not granted any exemption under section 6 of the Act are
concerned, any sale of forest produce in their favour cannot
be effected at a price less than the price notified under
section 3 of the Act. The notified price has to be fixed on
the basis of the recommendation to be made by the Expert
Committee constituted under section 4 of the Act and the
Expert Committee is required to take into consideration the
market price of the forest produce, the cost of regenerating
and maintaining the forest produce in cases where
regeneration is necessary after selling the forest produce
and such other matters as may be prescribed. If section 5 of
the Act provides
592
that the forest produce covered by the Act shall not be sold
at a price less than the price which is determined on the
basis of the factors referred to above which appear to
bequite relevant they cannot have any grievance. They cannot
claim that they must be shown any concession and that the
forest produce should be made available to them at a price
which would be lower than the market price. Even when it is
stated that any company owned by the Central Government or
the Government of Kerala or a co-operative society (subject
to the limit as regards the quantity of forest produce to be
supplied) may be supplied forest produce without the
constraint contained in section 5 of the Act, it does not
mean that the forest produce would be made available to them
at throw-away prices. It is reasonable to expect that the
price payable for the forest produce in question by the
Government companies or co-operative societies would be
determined after negotiations having regard to the public
interest. In almost all the statutes by which the fiscal or
economic interests of the State are regulated, provision for
granting exemption in appropriate cases would have
necessarily to be there and the power to grant exemption is
invariably conferred on the Government concerned. The
Legislature which is burdened with heavy legislative and
other types of work is not able to find time to consider in
detail the hardships and difficulties that are likely to
result by the enforcement of the statute concerned. It has,
therefore, now become a well-recognised and constitutionally
accepted legislative practice to incorporate provisions
conferring the powers of exemption on the Government in such
statutes. Such exemptions cannot ordinarily be granted
secretly. A notification would have to be issued and
published in the Gazette and in the ordinary course it would
be subject to the scrutiny by the Legislature. The power can
be exercised only in the public interest as provided by the
section itself. The validity of provisions conferring the
power of exemption has been consistently upheld by this
Court in a number of decisions commencing with the State of
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Bombay and Anr. v. F.N. Balsara, [1951] S.C.R. 682. The next
question is whether section 6 of the Act which restricts the
power of the Government to grant exemption to companies
owned by the Central Government or the Government of Kerala
and to co-operative societies only is valid. As far as
Government undertakings and companies are concerned, it has
to be held that they form a class by themselves since any
profit that
593
they may make would in the end result in the benefit to the
members of the general public. The profit, if any, enriches
the public coffer and not the private coffer. The role of
industries in the public sector is very sensitive and
critical from the point of view of national economy. Their
survival very often depends upon the budgetary provision and
not upon private resources which are available to the
industries in the private sector. They are often established
to break the power of strangulation on economy which the
industries in private sector may have developed and may be
using to choke the industrial growth of the country. An
exemption or a concession might provide them some breathing
time or settling down time. It may be treated as a subsidy
at the worst. This appears to be the policy behind Article
19(6)(ii) of the Constitution. In appropriate cases in order
to place an industry owned by the Government on an enduring
basis in the national interest, some concession may have to
be shown to it. It is neither alleged nor established that
if the exemption is annulled the petitioners will be richer
by a single paise or if it is retained they will be poorer
by a single paise. The only purpose hinted at is that if the
public sector is made to pay more, it may use less raw-
material which in turn might be available to the private
sector. Not a very laudable purpose to say the least of it.
The action of the State Government in exempting the
Government companies from the operation of section 5 of the
Act does not in the instant case amount to the exclusion of
the industries in the private sector from their business nor
does it deny the usual supplies of forest produce used as
raw-material by these industries as alleged by them. The
Government is not shown to be taking any undue advantage of
the monopoly it enjoys as the owner of the forests and the
position it holds as the sole supplier of forest produce in
fixing the minimum prices in order to preserve the national
wealth from being wasted away. In the circumstances of this
case it cannot be said that the provision is either
arbitrary or unreasonable even though the Government
industries may be rivals in trade to the industries in the
private sector. In Sher Singh v. Union of India & Ors.,
[1984] 1 S.C.R. 464 this Court has upheld section 47 (H) of
the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 under which a statutory
preference is shown to a State Transport Undertaking. In
Viklad Coal Merchant, Patiala & Ors. v. Union of India &
Ors., [1984] 1 S.C.R. 657, the preference shown to the
Government in
594
allotment of railway wagons for transporting coal has been
upheld. Learned counsel for the respondents however depended
upon the decision of this Court in State of Rajasthan v.
Mukanchand & Ors., [1964] 6 S.C.R. 903 by which an exemption
granted in respect of debts due to the State or a scheduled
bank from the operation of section 2(e) of the Jagirdar’s
Debt Reduction Act, 1937 was held to be in conformity with
the object of the Act and so violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution. That case depended on the facts and
circumstances surrounding the statute in question. We may
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refer here to the decision of this Court in Fatehchand
Himmatlal & Ors. v. State of Maharashtra etc., [1977] 2
S.C.R. 828 where it is observed at page 849 thus :
"There is no merit in the plea. Liabilities due to
government to local authorities are not tained
with exploitation of the debtor. Likewise, debts
due to banking companies do not ordinarily suffer
from the overreaching, unscrupulousness or harsh
treatment. Moreover, financial institutions have,
until recently, treated the villages and urban
worker and petty farmer as untouchables and so do
not figure in the picture. To exempt the
categories above referred to is reasonable."
Hence preference shown to Government companies under
section 6 of the Act cannot be considered discriminatory as
they stand in a different class altogether and the
classification made between Government companies and others
for the purposes of the Act is a valid one. Same is the case
with the clause which gives power under section 6 of the Act
to the Government to exempt sales of forest produce in
favour of co-operative societies upto the limit mentioned
therein. In P.V. Sivarajan, v. Union of India & Anr., [1959]
Suppl. 1 S.C.R. 779 the exemption granted in favour of
traders carrying on export business in a small scale who
formed co-operative societies was upheld. In Orient Weaving
Mills (P) Ltd. v. Union of India, [1962] Suppl. 3 S.C.R. 481
this Court upheld the exemption granted in favour of power-
loom weavers in a cooperative society from the levy of
central excise duties. We do not find any substance in the
contention that the provision granting exemption in favour
of Government companies and the co-operative societies as
stated above is
595
unconstitutional. We must, however, express our dis-approval
of one of the reasons given by the High Court for striking
down section 6 of the Act, namely, "private sector consumers
generally show more concern in the speedy production of
goods, in the finished products and in the sale of them
which is in public interest as well." The above observation
is not warranted and is presumably based on the personal
opinion of the learned judges. It is misleading and cannot
in the circumstances of the case serve as a prop to support
the contention of the respondents.
Therefore, the decision of the High Court that section
6 of the Act was violative of Article 14 of the Constitution
is liable to be set aside. We do not also approve of the
finding of the High Court that even assuming that the
section was valid, the notification issued thereunder was
invalid. It may be stated here that the writ petitioners on
whom the burden lay have not given any valid reason as to
why we should hold that the impugned notification was not in
the public interest. As mentioned earlier the appellant,
Hindustan Paper Corporation Ltd. established its factory
after entering into an agreement with the State Government
as regards the regular supply of raw-material from the
forests in the State of Kerala for production of newsprint
and that the said factory was employing a large labour
force. The other two concerns in whose favour the exemption
is granted by the impugned notification are the concerns of
Kerala Government itself. We have no material in this case
to hold that the impugned notification was not in the public
interest. We accordingly set aside the finding recorded by
the High Court on the validity of the notification also.
In the result, we allow the appeals, set aside the
judgment of the High Court and dismiss the writ petitions
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filed in the High Court. There shall, however, be no order
as to costs.
A.P.J. Appeals allowed.
596