Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/s. Real Food Products Ltd. & Ors etc.etc.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
A.P. State Electricity Board & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/03/1995
BENCH:
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
BENCH:
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
PARIPOORNAN, K.S.(J)
MAJMUDAR S.B. (J)
CITATION:
1995 AIR 2234 1995 SCC (3) 295
JT 1995 (3) 88 1995 SCALE (2)91
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J.S. VERMA, J.:
1.These appeals and the connected matters arise out of the
common judgment of a Division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh
High Court in certain writ appeals, reported in AIR 1991 AP
141 (Andhra Pradesh State Electricity Board vidyut Soudha
and others vs. The Gowthami Solvent Oils and Another),
preferred against the decision of a learned Single Judge.
High Tension (Industrial) Consumers, who are the appellants
in this Court filed writ petitions in the Andhra Pradesh
High Court challenging the revision of tariffs in B.P.Ms.
No. 671 dated 10.6.1987 (w.e.f 15.7.1987) as well as the
further revision of tariffs in B.P.Ms. No.353 dated
15.4.1989 (given effect from 1.6.1989). The history of
revision of tariffs by the Andhra Pradesh State Electricity
Board (for short "the Board") in the background of which the
challenge to these B.P.Ms. has to be examined, is mentioned
in the impugned judgment. Accordingly, the facts material
for consideration of the points required to be decided are
alone mentioned herein.
2.Two questions alone arise for consideration in all these
matters by virtue of the order dated 10.9.1992 made by this
Court, which is as under:-
"In these 78 petitions under Article 136
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of the Constitution, certain consumers of High
Tension electricity in the State of Andhra
Pradesh, whose writ petitions assailing the
upward revision of the Tariffs by the State
Electricity Board effective from 10.6.1987 and
15.4.1989 respectively were dismissed by the
High Court, sock leave to appeal to this Court
from the common order dated 2.4.1990 made by
the Division Bench. A leamed Single Judge had
granted prayer in the writ petitions. But the
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Division Bench, in appeal, dismissed the
petitions.
(2), We have heard leamed counsel on both
sides. There are several contentions raised
in support of these petitions. Two of them
prima facie, bear examination and its appears
appropriate that on these two questions the
special Leave Petitions be disposed of after
hearing the parties.
(3)The two points to which the Special Leave
Petitions should be confined are:
(1) Whether a direction under section 784 of
the Electricity (supply) Act, 1948 by the
State Government is binding on the Electricity
Board: or whether such directions are merely
of guidance and the Board in formulating
tariffs would yet to be required to apply its
mind independently to all the relevant
criterion. In the two impugned revisions
there is no -such application of mind by the
Board which has abdicated its statutor
y
functions and obligations.
(i) Petitions say that while their class of
consumers account for consumption of 35% of
the electrical energy and the class of
agricultural consumers favourably created
under the revisions also consume a like
percentage. the former is called upon to pay
106 paise for unit (plus FCA)while the
agricultural consumers arc required to pay a
fixed 5.04 paise per unit; and that this
preferred agricultural sector which was paying
12 paise per unit in the year 1971, 23.4 paise
per unit in 1976, now pays only 5.04 paise per
unit while the petitions who were paying 16.1
paise per unit in the year 1971 are asked to
pay 106 paise per unit (plus FCA). The cost
of production being 71 paise per unit the
whole of the burden of the difference on
account the subsidised supply to this
agricultural sector is cast on the High
Tension consumers.
It is urged that - whether the fixation of the
tariff is an administrative function or a
legislative function -- this discrimination is
arbitrary and irrational and is clearly
violative of the constitutional pledge of
equality under Article 14.
(4) All other contentions in these special
leave petitions, in our opinion, are covered
by earlier pronouncements of this Court and we
confine the hearing of the special leave
petitions, which shall be disposed of at the
SLP stage, to the foregoing two questions
alone."
3. The two questions, therefore, are : (1) Nature and
effect of the direction given by the State Government under
Section 78A of the Electricity (Supply) Act. 1948 (here-
inafter referred to as " the Act"); and (2) Is the
preferential treatment of agricultural consumers violative
of Article 14.
4. By virtue of a direction given by the State Government
to the Board under Section 78A of the Act, the flat rate
tariff system for agricultural pump-sets was introduced, the
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rate being varied from time to time. This direction was
given first in 1981 and laterrevised w.e.f 1.11.1990 and
then from 1.1.1992 and 1.12.1992. The rea-
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sons together with the direction contained in the letter
dated 15.12.1982 of the State Government to the Board is
quoted in the impugned judgment of the High Court, as
under:-
"While agriculturists owning lands under flow
irrigation from major projects for both
reliable and cheap irrigation, farmers
depending on ground water based irrigation,
most of whom are small and marginal farmers,
have to incur relatively higher expenditure in
lifting water, besides being vulnerable to
recurring drought resulting in lowering of the
water table in the wells. Moreover, in rural
areas maintenance of electricity meters and
the billings of individual farmers based on
meter reading is be set with administrative
defects leading to loss of revenue, hardship
to the farmers and high collection cost.
Keeping all the above factors in view, the
Government feel that the present power tariff
for agricultural pump sets needs
rationalisation and that a flat rate system
based on the horse-power of each pumpset would
be more appropriate in such cases. Government
have therefore, decided that with effect from
1st November, 1982 the revised power tariff
for agricultural pumpsets in the State should
be a flat rate of Rs.50/- per H.P. per annum.
2. With a view to mitigating hardship to small
and marginal farmers depending solely on well
irrigation and to give a fillip to
agricultural production in the State, the
Government under Section 78-A of the
Electricity (Supply) Act, 1948 direct that,
supersession of the instructions issued in the
letter cited (dated 201-1982), the APSEB shall
revise the elcctricity tariff for irrigation
wells to Rs.50/ - per H.P. per annum, and that
this rate shall take effect from 1-11-1982.
3. The A.P. State Electricity Board is
requested to take immediate necessary action
accordingly."
5. The variation was made later in the flat rate Rs.50/-
per H.P. annum from time to time which is not material for
decision of the points involved.
6. The Board then introduced the concept of
"FuelAdjustment Cost" (FCA) by amending the H.T. tariffs,
the details of which are not material for the present pur-
pose. The concept of FCA and the flat rate tariff system
was then made a permanent feature by the Board. A batch of
writ petitions was filed in the Andhra Pradesh High Court in
1984 questioning inter alia the levy of FCA only upon H.T.
consumers and the fixation of flat rate tariff for
agriculturists, by certain "power intensive units". The
High Court rejected the challenge and dismissed the writ
petitions. It was held that it was neither irrational nor
unreasonable to pass on the burden of rise in fuel cost only
to H.T. consumers; and the flat rate tariff system for
agricultural pump sets being a concession in favour of an
under-privileged category of consumers was a policy decision
which was not open to challenge. The decision was upheld by
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this Court in Hindustan Zinc Ltd. etc.etc. v. Andhra Pradesh
State Electricity Board and Others
(1991) 3 S.C.C. 299.
7. In Hindustan Zinc Ltd. etc. etc.(supra), a similar
challenge on the ground of discrimination between H.T.
consumers, including the power intensive consumers, and
other like L.T. consumers and agriculturists was repelled.
It was held that the H.T. consumers form a distinct class
separate from the L.T. consumers; and that concessional
tariffs to the agriculturists does not violate Article 14 of
the Consti-
92
tution of India. In our opinion, the claim of the H.T.
consumers to be classified along with agriculturists is
untenable. This question being concluded by the earlier
decision of this Court, does not require any further
consideration.
8.The only surviving question is with regard to the nature
and effect of the direction given by the State Government
under Section 78A of the Act. The question has to be
examined in the context of the facts of the present case
which is confined to the charging of the flat rate per H.P.
for agricultural pump sets. The nature of the function of
the Board in fixing the tariffs and the manner of its
exercise has been considered at length in the earlier deci-
sions of this Court and it does not require any further
elaboration in the present case. Section 78A uses the
expression "the Board shall be guided by such directions on
questions of policy as may be given to it by the State
Government." It does appear that the view expressed by the
State Government on a question of policy is in the nature of
a direction to be followed by the Board in the area of the
policy to which it relates. In the context of the function
of the Board of fixing the tariffs in accordance Section 49
read with Section 59 and other provisions the Act, the Board
is to be guided by any such direction of the State
Government. Where the direction of the State Government, as
in the present case, was to fix a concessional tariff for
agricultural pump sets at a flat rate per H.P., it does
relate to a question of Policy which the Board must follow.
However, in indicating the specific rate in a given case,
the action of the State Government may be in excess of the
power of giving direction on the question of policy, which
the Board, if its conclusion be different may not be obliged
to be bound by. But where the Board considers even the rate
suggested by the State Government and finds it to be
acceptable in the discharge of its function of fixing the
tariffs, the ultimate decision of the Board would not be
vitiated merely because it has accepted the opinion of the
State Government even about the specific rate. In such a
case the Board accepts the suggested rate because that
appears to be appropriate on its own view. If the view
expressed by the, State Government in its direction exceeds
the area of policy, the Board may not be bound by it unless
it takes the same view on merits itself
9.In the present case, the flat rate per H.P. for the
agricultural pump sets indicated by the State Government,
appears to have been found acceptable by the Board as
appropriate particularly because it is related to the policy
of concessional tariff for the agriculturists as a part of
the economic programme. At any rate, there is no material
in the present case to indicate that the flat rate indicated
by the State Government for the agricultural pump sets was
so unreasonable that it could not have been considered
appropriate by the Board. We do not consider it necessary
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to go into the larger question of the exact area of policy
in the context of Section 78A except to indicate broadly as
we have already done. We do not find any merit even in this
point urged on behalf of the appellants.
10.Consequently, the appeals are dismissed.
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