Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ARBIND KUMAR SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NAND KISHORE PRASAD & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/02/1968
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 1227 1968 SCR (3) 322
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1986 SC1272 (100)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 133-’Civil Proceeding’,
Scope of.
Motor Vehicles Act (4 of 1939), ss. 47, 48 and 64A-Scope of-
Pass ,such further order as it thinks fit’, Meaning of.
Natural Justice-Revising authority calling for additional
evidence Duty to disclose to parties.
HEADNOTE:
In 1950-51, the appellant was plying his motor buses in
Bihar. Bihar Act 17 of 1950 imposed a tax on passengers and
goods carried by public service motor vehicles. As the
imposition of the tax was found to be invalid the appellant
did not pay the tax. In 1961, the tax was reimposed by Act
17 of 1961 with effect from 1st April 1950 and the
imposition was found to be valid. Therefore, the appellant
was liable to pay the transport tax for 1950-51. This
liability was outsanding on 15th January 1965, on which
date, the Regional Transport Authority ordered that a permit
to ply a stage carriage be granted to him on condition that
he produced a clearance certificate of transport tax within
one month from the date of the order failing which the grant
will stand automatically cancelled and the permit will be
granted to the first respondent. As the appellant failed to
carry out the condition the permit was cancelled and given
to the first respondent. The order was confirmed by the
Government, in revision, under s. 64A of the Motor Vehicles
Act, 1939, as amended by the Bihar Motor Vehicles
(Amendment) Act, 1950, after calling for and considering a
report from the Dy. Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, that
the transport tax was due from the appellant for 1950-51.
The writ petition in the High Court to quash the Government
order was dismissed. The appellant appealed to this Court
with certificate granted by the High COurt under Art. 133 of
the Constitution.
The respondent contended that the High Court was not
competent to grant the certificate in proceedings under Art.
226; and the appellant contended that : (1) on the date of
the order granting the permit there was no liability to pay
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the tax as there was no assessment; (2) the condition
regarding payment of tax was invalid; (3) the Minister of
Transport who disposed of the revision to the Government had
no right to call for any additional evidence; and (4) the
report of the Dy. Commissioner of Commercial Taxes should
have been disclosed by the Minister to the appellant.
HELD : (1) The words ’civil proceedings’ in Art. 133 cover
all proceedings which directly affect civil rights, and
therefore the High Court was competent to grant the
certificate in a proceeding under Art. 226 involving civil
rights. [324 E-F]
S. A. L. Narayan Row v. Ishwar Lal Bhagwandas, [1966] 1
S.C.R. 190 and Ramesh v. Seth Gendalal Motilal Patni, [1966]
3 S.C.R. 198, followed.
(2) Under the scheme of the Act the liability to pay tax
arises by statutory injunction and not from any order of
assessment. Therefore, there was a liability to pay the
transport tax outstanding, against the appellant, on the
date of the order granting him the permit and failure to
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produce the clearance certificate in respect of the tax
disentitled him to the sant of a permit. [326 H; 327 C]
Raipur Transport Co. (P.) v. M. P. Singh, A.I.R. 1968 M.P.
36 distinguished
(3) If it be held that the grant of a permit was to be
subject only to such of the matters specified under s. 47(1)
(a) to (f) and to such of the conditions as may be
prescribed under s. 48, the order of the Regional Transport
Authority in the present case must be deemed to be an order
refusing the permit, and, the appellant should have
challenged, by way of appeal, the validity of the imposition
of the condition relating to payment of tax; he could not
ignore the condition subject to which the permit was
granted. [328 D-E]
(4) The expression ’pass such order as it thinks fit’ in s
64A, as amended by the Bihar Act, is not restricted to the
passing of final orders. If for the purpose of doing
complete justice between the parties, the authority who
hears the revision petition is satisfied that it is
necessary to call for additional evidence, he may do so.
There is no bar in the Act or the Rules against an appellate
or revising authority taking into consideration the
additional evidence brought on record. [328 G-H]
(5) Such additional evidence must undoubtedly be disclosed
to the parties and they must be given an opportunity to meet
an inference that may arise from it. In the present case,
the High Court, on a consideration of the evidence came to
the conclusion that the additional evidence called for by
the Minister of Transport was disclosed by him, at the
hearing, to the appellant’s counsel and there was no reason
for this Court to disagree with that view. [329 A-B, H]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1943 of 1967.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated October 24, 1967 of
the Patna High Court in Civil Writ Jurisdiction Case No. 283
of 1966.
Basudev Prasad and S. N. Prasad, for the appellant.
M. C. Chagla, Saptmi Jha and B. P. Jha, for respondent No.
1.
U. P. Singh, for respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. On January 15, 1965, the South Bihar Regional
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Transport Authority, Patna, ordered that a permit to ply a
stage carriage on Dehri Bhabua route be granted to Arbind
Kumar Singh-hereinafter called ’the appellant on production
of all valid documents of 1964 model bus along with
clearance certificate of transport tax within one month from
the date of order, failing which the sanction of permit in
his favour would stand automatically revoked, and permit
will then be given to the next deserving candidate Nand
Kishore Prasad........... On application submitted by Nand
Kishore Prasad-who will . hereinafter be referred to as ’the
respondent that the appellant had failed to
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carry out the condition relating to the grant of permit, the
Chairman of the Regional Transport Authority by order dated
February 20, 1965, cancelled the permit and directed that a
permit be given to the respondent. The order of the
Chairman was reversed in appeal by the Appellate Board. In
the view of the Board "the clearance certificate" filed by
the appellant showed that all the taxes due by him were
paid.
The respondent then moved the State Government of Bihar
under s. 64-A of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 as amended by
the Bihar Motor Vehicles (Amendment) Act 17 of 1950. The
Minister of Transport who heard the petition reversed the
order of the Appellate Board, holding that the appellant had
failed to carry out the conditions subject to which the
Regional Transport Authority had ordered that the permit be
given to him. A petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution
moved by the appellant in the High Court of Patna against
the order of the Minister of Transport was dismissed. The
appellant has appealed to this Court with certificate
granted by the High Court.
The plea raised by counsel for the respondent that the
appeal was liable to be dismissed because the High Court
was incompetent to grant a certificate of fitness under Art.
133(1)(a) or Art. 1 3 3 ( 1 ) (b) of the Constitution
against the judgment of the High Court exercising
extraordinary original jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the
Constitution is without substance. This Court has held in
S. A. L. Narayan Row & Anr. v. Ishwarlal Bhagwandas & Anr.
(1) that the words "civil proceeding" used in Art. 133 of
the Constitution cover all proceedings which directly affect
civil rights. A proceeding under Art. 226 of the
Constitution for a writ to bring up a proceeding for
consideration concerning civil rights is therefore a civil
proceeding. This Court has further held in Ramesh and A nr.
v. Seth Gendalal Motilal Patni and Ors. (2) that the High
Court is competent to certify on appeal against an order
passed by a Division Bench of a High Court in exercise of
extraordinary original jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the
Constitution if the dispute decided thereby concerns civil
rights of the parties. Hidayatullah, J., speaking for the
Court observed at p. 203
"Mr. Gupta’s contention that under that
article (Art. 133) an appeal can only lie in
respect of a judgment or decree or final order
passed in the exercise of appellate or
ordinary original civil jurisdiction but not
of extraordinary original civil jurisdiction,
is not right. . . . Article 133 not only
discards the distinction between appellate and
original jurisdiction but deliberately used
words which are as wide as language can
(1) [1966] 1 S.C.R. 190.
(2) [1966]3 S.C.R. 198
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325
make them. The intention is not only to
include all judgments, decrees and orders
passed in the exercise of appellate and
ordinary original civil jurisdiction but also
to make the language wide enough to cover
other jurisdictions under which civil rights
would come before the High Court for
decision."
The plea raised by counsel for the respondent that the High
Court was not competent to grant the certificate must
therefore be rejected.
The Bihar Legislature enacted Bihar Act 17 of 1950, imposing
tax on passengers and goods carried by public service motor
vehicles in Bihar. Validity of this levy was upheld by the
High Court of Patna. But after the decision of this Court in
Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd. v. State of Assam(1), the appeals
filed by the operators who challenged the levy were allowed
by this Court. The State of Bihar thereafter issued Bihar
Ordinance 11 of 1961 which was replaced by Bihar Act 17 of
1961 By that Act the tax was reimposed with effect from the
1st day of April, 1950. That imposition of tax was again
challenged in writ petitions filed before the High Court of
Patna, but without success, and the order of the High Court
was confirmed by this Court in Rai Ramkrishna and Ors. v.
State of Bihar(1). Section 1(3) of Act 17 of 1961 declares
that the Act shall be deemed to have come into forced on the
first day of April, 1950. By s. 2(i) ’tax’ means tax
payable under the Act and includes the fixed amount
determined under s. 8. By s. 3 charge of tax is imposed. It
provides by sub-s. (1) :
"On and from the date on which this Act is
deemed to have come into force under sub-
section (3) of section 1, there shall be
levied and paid to the State Government a tax
on all passengers and goods carried by a
public service motor vehicle; such tax shall
be levied and paid at the rate of twelve and a
half per centum of the fares and freights
payable to the owner of such vehicles
Provided............."
Section 6 requires the owner of the vehicle to make
prescribed return to the prescribed authority within such
period as may be prescribed. Section 7 prescribes the
machinery for assessment of tax. Section 9(1) provides that
the amount of tax or penalty. if any, payable by an owner
under the Act shall be paid in the manner hereinafter
provided. Sub-section (2) of s. 9 provides that before any
owner furnishes any return under the Act he shall. in the
prescribed manner pay into the Government Treasury the full
amount of tax due from him under the Act according to such
return and shall furnish along with the return a receipt
from the
(1) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 809.
(2) A.I.R. 19463 S.C. 1667.
326
treasury showing payment of the said amount. By s. 22 power
is conferred upon the State Government to make rules not
inconsistent with the Act for all matters expressly required
or allowed by the Act to be prescribed and generally for
carrying out the purposes of The Act and regulating the
procedure to be followed, forms to be adopted and fees to be
paid in connection with proceedings under the Act and all
other matters ancillary or incidental thereto. In exercise
of the power conferred by s. 22, the State of Bihar has
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framed the Bihar Taxation on Passengers and Goods (Carried
by Public Service Motor Vehicles) Rules, 1966. Rule 11
provided that every owner shall furnish to the authority
prescribed in r. 16, a monthly return, in Form V within a
period of fifteen days of the close of the month to which
such return relates. Rule 18 provides that where any sum is
payable by an owner under the Act or the rules or any amount
due for which a notice is to be given under sub-section (4)
of s. 9, the authority prescribed in r. 16 shall serve
notice in Form XI, and shall also fix a date by which the
owner shall produce a receipted challan in proof of such
payment. It is clear from the scheme of the Act and the
rules that by s. 3 a charge is imposed upon an owner of the
vehicle to pay tax to the State Government on all passengers
and goods carried by a public service motor vehicle at the
rates fixed by the statute and the owner must make monthly
returns within fifteen days from the expiry of the month to
which the return relates
The decision of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Raipur
Transport Co., Private Ltd., Raipur v. M. P. Singh and Ors.
(1) on which reliance was placed by counsel for the
appellant has, in our judgment, no bearing on the question
which falls to be determined in this appeal. Section 10 of
the Motor Vehicles (Taxation of Passengers) Act, 1959,
passed by the State of Madhya Pradesh provided that in cases
referred to in ss. 7, 8 and 9, the Tax Officer shall serve
on the operator a notice of demand for the sums payable to
the State Government. That in the view of the High Court
pre-supposes that an order of assessment has been made under
the earlier provisions of the Act, and therefore an order of
assessment was necessary not only for the validity of the
notice of demand, but also for enabling the appellate
authority to see whether the tax had been correctly assessed
or not and the demand made against the operator was or was
not justified. We are in the present case not concerned to
determine the validity of a notice of demand. The liability
to pay tax under Bihar Act 17 of 1961 clearly arises by
statutory injunction and not from the order of assessment.
In terms s. 3 says that there shall be levied and paid to
the State Government a tax on all passengers and goods
carried by a public service motor vehicle.
(1) A.I.R. 1968 M.P. 36.
327
The appellant plied his motor buses in 1950-51 and on the
plea that the tax was invalid did not pay the tax levied
under Act 17 of 1950. After the reimposition of the tax by
Act 17 of 1961, there survived no ground on which the
liability to pay tax could be resisted. On January 15,
1965, a condition had been imposed upon the appellant that a
permit would be granted to him provided he produced a
clearance certificate. Liability to pay transport tax
amounting to Rs. 1,675/- was outstanding against the
appellant for nearly fifteen years and that liability was
discharged by payment on March 5, 1965. it cannot, in the
circumstances, be contended that there was no liability to
pay transport tax outstanding against the appellant on the
date of the order granting him the permit. Failure to
produce the clearance certificate in respect of the
transport tax clearly disentitled the appellant to the grant
of a permit.
Counsel for the appellant, however, contended that the impo-
sition of a condition that the appellant shall produce a
clearance certificate in respect of the transport tax was
invalid and the condition was liable to be ignored by the
appellant. Section 47(1) of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939,
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insofar as it is material provides :
"A Regional Transport Authority shall, in
considering an application for a stage
carriage permit, have regard to the following
matters, namely :-
(a) the interests of the public generally;
(b) the advantages to the public of the
service to be provided, including the saving
of time likely to be effected thereby and any
convenience arising, from journeys not being
broken;
(c) the adequacy of other passenger
transport services operating or likely to
operate in the near future, whether by road or
other means, between the places to be served;
(d) the benefit to any particular locality
or localities likely to be afforded by the
service;
(e) the operation by the applicant of other
transport services, including those in respect
of which applications from him for permits are
pending;
(f) the condition of the roads included in
the proposed route or area;
and shall also take into consideration any representation
made by persons already providing passenger transport
facilities by any means along or near the proposed route
sup. Cl/68-8
328
or area, or by any association representing persons inte-
rested in the provision of road transport facilities recog-
nised in this behalf by the State Government, or by any
local authority or police authority within whose juris-
diction any part of the proposed route or area lies
Provided..........................."
Sub-section (2) of s. 47 sets out the conditions under which
the Regional Transport Authority may refuse to grant a stage
carriage permit; and sub-s. (3) provides for the conditions
in which, having regard to the matters specified in sub-s.
(1), the Regional Transport Authority may limit the number
of stage carriages generally or of any specified type for
which stage carriage permit may be granted in the region or
in any specified area or on any specified route within the
region. It was urged that under s. 47 the Regional
Transport Authority is bound to consider only the matters
which are specified in cls. (a) to (f) of sub-s. (1) of s.
47, Ind if the applicant is found qualified for a permit no
conditions may be imposed by the Regional Transport
Authority. We need express no opinion on that argument. If
the argument raised by counsel for the appellant has any
substance, and if it be held that the grant of a permit is
to be subject only to such of the conditions as may be
prescribed under s. 48, the order made by the Regional
Transport Authority must be deemed to be an order refusing
the permit. The appellant could, if so advised, have
challenged the validity of the imposition of the condition
relating to the payment of tax, but he could not ignore the
conditions subject to which the permit was granted.
Finally, it was urged that the Minister of Transport acted
illegally in taking into account evidence which was not on
the record of the Regional Transport Authority, and
alternatively, that the Minister violated the fundamental
rules of natural justice in basin,, his judgment upon a
document received from the Deputy Commmissioner of
Commercial Taxes, intimating that the transport tax was due
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by the appellant without bringing it to the notice of the
appellant and calling for an explanation. Section 64-A of
the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, as amended by Bihar Act 17 of
195( authorises the State Government to call for, in the
course of any proceedings taken under the Chapter, from any
authority or office) subordinate to it, the records of such
proceedings, and after exa, mining such records pass such
order as it thinks fit. The expressior "pass such order as
it thinks fit" is not restricted to the passini of orders
which are final in character. If for the purposes of. doing
complete justice between the parties, the authority who
heare the revision petition is satisfied that it is
necessary to call for addi tional evidence, he may call for
such evidence. There, is no bar in the Act or the rules
against an appellate or the revising authority
329
taking into consideration additional evidence brouaht on the
record, if the authority requires additional evidence to be
brought on the record or allows it to be brought on the
record to do complete. justice between the parties. The
evidence must undoubtedly be disclosed to the parties and
they must be given an opportunity to meet an inference that
may arise from such additional evidence. We are unable to
hold that the Minister of Transport in taking into
consideration the report received from the Deputy Commi-
sioner of Commercial Taxes, Intelligence Branch, that an
amount of Rs. 1,675/- was outstanding on February 16, 1965,
against the appellant in respect of the two buses plied in
the year 1950-51 acted in violation of the rules of natural
justice. The circumstance,-, in which this document was
brought on the file of the Minister are not clear on the
record. But, as stated by the Minister, the document was
disclosed to counsel for the appellant and counsel was asked
to give a reply thereto. The Minister also recorded in his
judgment that counsel for the appellant explained that since
there was no demand for payment of the dues, it was not
correct to say that the amount of Rs. 1,675/- was due
against the appellant on February 16, 1965. The Minister of
Transport rejected that argument. Before us it was
contended that the document was never shown to the
appellant’s counsel and he was never asked to render his
explanation in that behalf. If this were true, the
appellant would, we have no doubt, have approached the
Minister who was exercising quasi-judicial functions, and
would have asked him to review his order. This admittedly
has not been done. Again, if the grievance now raised were
true, the averments made in paragraph-19 of the petition
before the High Court would not have taken the form which
they have taken. In paragraph-19 it is stated that "the so-
called report of the Deputy Commissioner, Commercial Taxes,
Intelligence Branch, Patna, under Memo No. 8527 dated 24-7-
1965 was never shown to the petitioner and the petitioner
had no opportunity to meet the said report." Whereas the
Minister of Transport had recorded that the report of the
Deputy Commissioner, Commercial Taxes, was shown to counsel
for the appellant and the counsel had given certain
information the petition before the High Court merely stated
that the appellant was not shown the report of the Deputy
Commissioner.
The High Court on a consideration of the evidence has come
to the conclusion that the claim made by the appellant that
the document was not disclosed at the hearing before the
Minister of Transport, and the Minister acted upon that
document without informing the appellant, cannot be
accepted, and we do not see any reason to disagree with the
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view expressed by the High Court.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
V.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
330