S.Shamshuddin & Ors Etc Vs. State of
Karnataka & Ors [1984] INSC 86 (18 April 1984)
DESAI, D.A.
DESAI, D.A.
MISRA RANGNATH
CITATION: 1984 AIR 1244 1984 SCR (3) 522 1984
SCC (3) 583 1984 SCALE (1)709
ACT:
Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 as amended by Motor
Vehicles (Amendment) Act 56 of 1969 s.63(7)-Interpretation of. Quota of 50 all
India tourist permits fixed by Central Government by Notification No. S.O.22
dated December 19, 1977-Whether valid. Power to fix quota and power to grant
all India permits-Whether separable. The expression in respect of such number
of tourist vehicles as the Central Government may, in respect of that State,
specify in this behalf-Whether severable.
HEADNOTE:
In order to promote tourism, the Motor
Vehicles Act, 1939 was amended by the Motor Vehicles (Amendment) Act 56 of 1969.
Sub-s.(7) which was introduced in s. 63 by the Amending Act provided that
notwithstanding anything contained in Sub-s. (1) but subject to any rules that
may be made under this Act, any State Transport Authority may, for the purpose
of promoting tourism, grant permits valid for the whole or any part of India,
in respect of such number of tourist Vehicles as the Central Government may, in
respect of that State, specify in this behalf. In exercise of this power the
Central Government by its notification No. S. O 22 dated December 19, 1977
fixed a quota of 50 as the all India tourist permits for each State. The
petitioners challenged this quota as discriminatory and violative of Art. 14 of
the Constitution.
Dismissing the writ petitions, ^
HELD: It appears that s. 63 (7) was
introduced after ascertaining the needs of developing tourist trade. The
Central Government fixed quota of 50 permits for each State.
It may be that a smaller State like Himachal
Pradesh or Jammu and Kashmir may have larger number of places of tourist
interest. Equally area-wise the biggest State Madhya Pradesh may have few spots
of tourist interest. Therefore, unless all the relevant fact are placed on
record which may point to the invidiousness of fixing a flat quota, the
petitioners contention that the quota is arbitrary and violative of Art. 14 of
the Constitution has no force.
[528D-F, 525E] 523 The Parliament enacted
Sub-s.(7) of s. 63 conferring an enabling power or State Transport Authority to
grant a permit valid for the whole of India which but for the provision
contained in Sub-s. (7) of s. 63 it was not entitled to grant and that this
power to grant was subject to the condition that the Central Government will
specify the quota. Therefore, the quota is not severable from the power to
grant the permit. Assuming that the quota is severable from the enabling
provision, no material has been placed on record to point out the needs of each
State, the places of tourist interest, the influx of tourists, the facility for
their boarding and lodging and the condition of roads in respect of each State.
In the absence of this fact situation, the petitioners' submission that the
expression, in respect of such number of tourist vehicles as the Central
Government may, in respect of that State specify in this behalf' is severable
and therefore the enabling part of sub- s. (7) will permit State Transport
Authority in each State to grant all India tourist permit keeping in view the
need of the tourists and the needs of the State, cannot be examined on merits.
[527H, 528A-B, 527G] It is recommended that in view of the vast expanding
tourist traffic the Central Government must undertake an exercise within a
reasonable time and at regular intervals to reevaluate the quota of all India
tourist permits to keep pace with developing notion of attracting tourists.
[529C-D]
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petitions Nos.
13033-38 13650-52, 13197, 13355-58, 13389, 13393-97, 13003-08, 13488,13654-67,
13850-58, 13790 to 13801, 13836-49, of 1983, 8-22.24-30, 34-35, 126-130 and
223-26 of 1984 (Under article 32 of the Constitution of India) Advocates for
the appearing parties:
S.S. Javali, Mr. B.P. Singh, Ranjit Kumar,
Shanti Bhushan, K.R. Nagaraja, K.S, Hedge, S.K. Prasad, K.N. Bhatt, Ms. Madhu
Mulchandani, R.B. Datar, N.K.Sharma, P.N. Ramalingam, R. Ramachandran, V.K.
Verma, K.G. Bhagat, Addl.
Sol. General, M.N. Shroff, P.K. Pillai, Mrs.
H. Wahi, M. Veeroppa, Swaraj Kaushal, Vineet Kumar, S. Chatterjee and J.R. Das.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DESAI, J. The intrepid albeit affluent transport operators again succeeded in
their none-too-legal designs to operate vehicles not by obtaining statutory
permits but to put it mildly by abuse of the court's process.
524 By a judgment rendered by this Court in
S. Kannan and Ors. v. Secretary, Karnataka State Road Transport Authority
etc.(') on August 29, 1983, this Court held that grant of a temporary all India
tourist permit is foreign to the very concept of all-India tourist permit as
envisaged by sub-s (7) of Sec.63 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 and
accordingly an unusually large number of temporary all-India tourist permits
obtained pursuant to the interim relief granted by this Court were set at
naught. Some of the present petitioners were directly parties to the petitions
disposed of by that judgment. Indefatigueable as they are, they again
approached this Court by a camouflage of challenging the validity of quota of
fifty such permits fixed by the Central Government in respect of all-India
tourist permit for each State as per Notification No. S.O.
22 dated December 19, 1977 as also failure to
fill-in the vacancies by the State Transport Authority in Karnataka State to
the extent of the sanctioned quota. The challenge was a clever camouflage, the
sole, underlying motive being to obtain some interim relief by which again
temporary permits in compliance with the interim relief granted by this Court
may be obtained and the impermissible trade being carried on without a break.
To unravel this plot engineered by the petitioners, it may be mentioned that
even though the Court by the judgment in the case of S. Kannan & Ors.
rendered on August 29, 1983 set at naught all
temporary all- India tourist permits obtained as a consequence of the interim
relief granted by this Court, at the special request of some of the
petitioners, the Court keeping in view the investment made by the petitioners,
in providing tourist vehicles continued the interim relief which kept operative
the temporary permits till December 31, 1983. The present petitions were filed
somewhere in November, 1983. By the order dated November 23, 1983 notice
directed to be issued both on the main petition as well as on the stay application
was made returnable on December 6, 1983. The petitioners were in no hurry to
snatch the interim relief because the order made earlier had infused life into
their so-called temporary permits and kept them operative upto December 31,
1983. On December 16, 1983 in the renewed attempt the Court granted interim
relief to the effect that those operators of vehicles who had held all-India
tourist permit on October 23, 1983 and who were plying their vehicles shall be
permitted to ply the vehicles until April 30, 1984. It is necessary to point
out that the petitioners who obtained this interim relief were plying their
vehicles on October 525 23, 1983 under an earlier interim relief which had
exhausted itself on August 29, 1983 and this very relevant aspect which would
be determinative of the issues involved in the matter appeared not to have been
brought even to the notice of the Court which granted interim relief.
The respondents appeared and pointed out the
facts herein above delineated with the result that the petitions were set down
for hearing on March 23, 1984.
Mr. Shanti Bhushan who led on behalf of the
petitioners raised three contentions. It was urged that even though a quota of
50 tourist permits has been sanctioned by the Central Government for each State,
the State of Karnataka has not utilised the quota to the maximum and there are
either 25 or 14 vacancies which have been kept unfilled for a long time and
therefore, a mandamus must be issued directing the State Transport Authority,
Karnataka to perform its statutory duty by considering the applications
received for all-India tourist permits and dispose of the same within a
reasonable time. It was next contended that if the object underlying the
enactment of Sec.63(7) was to promote tourism and facilitate movement of
tourists, a flat quota of 50 permits for each State completely ignoring the
needs of the State, capacity to cater to the tourist traffic, significant
number of places of tourist interest, the local population and other relevant
factors, is violative of Art. 14 of the Constitution and the Central Government
must be directed to refix the quota. The last submission specifically referring
to the State Transport Authority of Karnataka was that it has failed to perform
its statutory duty by not granting all-India tourist permit in existing 14
vacancies according to the State Transport Authority and 25 vacancies according
to the petitioners, and that by a mandamus the State Transport Authority should
be directed to examine all the applications received for the same and to grant
permits and thereby perform its statutory duty.
The mere enumeration of the contentions
raised by Mr. Shanti Bhushan shows that the first and the third contentions are
almost identical except that the fact situation with regard to the existing
number of vacancies in the sanctioned quota of all-India tourist permit for
Karnataka State is in controversy. It would have been necessary to probe in
depth the statutory duty or State Transport Authority on whom power is
conferred by Sec.63(7) to grant permit valid for the whole or any part of India
for the 526 purpose of promoting tourism. But we are spared this exercise
because Mr. Swaraj Kaushal, learned counsel who appeared for the State of
Karnataka undertook that the State Transport Authority would dispose of all
applications pending before it for a permit as contemplated by Sec.63(7) by
April 30, 1984. He also stated that the State Transport Authority of Karnataka
State will as far as possible fill in all the vacancies if sufficient number of
applications are pending before it and there are eligible applicants among
them. We leave it to the State Transport Authority to determine how many
vacancies at present exist and- fill in the same by considering the
applications pending with it for the type of permit as contemplated by
Sec.63(7).
Therefore, there remains one contention to be
examined by us. It was urged that Regional Transport Authority can grant a
stage carriage or a contract carriage permit, as the case may be, valid for operation
in the region and when countersigned by the State Transport Authority valid for
contiguous regions in the same State. A necessity was felt that tourist
vehicles having an inter State and intra-state operational area throughout the
country, may be licensed by all-India tourist permits so that facility of easy
road transport is available to both the domestic and foreign tourists. To
achieve this end and with a view to promoting tourism, sub-s.(7) was introduced
in Sec. 63 of Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 by Motor Vehicles (Amendment) Act 56 of
1969 which reads as under:
"63(7): Notwithstanding anything
contained in sub section (1) but subject to any rules that may be made under
this Act, any State Transport Authority may, for the purpose of promoting
tourism, grant permits valid for the whole or any part of India, in respect of
such number of tourist vehicles as the Central Government may, in respect of
that State, specify in this behalf, and the provisions of Sections 49, 50, 51,
57, 58, 59, 59-A, 60, 61 and 64 shall, as far as may be apply in relation to
such permits:
Provided that preference shall be given to
applications for permits from- (i) the India Tourism Development Corporation;
(ii) a State Tourism Development Corporation;
(iii) a State Tourist Department;
527 (iv) such operators of tourist cars or
such travel agents as may be approved in this behalf by the Ministry of the
Central Government dealing in tourism." The power to grant permit valid
for the whole or any part of India was conferred on the State Transport
Authority of each State. To guard against the big fish not swallowing the
smaller one, Parliament took care to statutorily provide that the Central
Government will have power to fix quota of such permits that can be granted by
State Transport Authority in each State. In exercise of this power, the Central
Government has fixed a quota of 50, euphemistically called, all-India tourist
permit, but statutorily described as permit valid for whole of India for each
State by the Notification No.S.O.22 dated December 19, 1977.
Mr. Shanti Bhushan pointed out that the large
and sprawling States like Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu
and Uttar Pradesh each have a quota of 50 permits and also Assam, Nagaland,
Manipur, etc. which are geographically and populationwise small States have the
same quota. It was urged that this equal treatment of unequals is clearly
arbitrary and violative of Art.14. It was submitted that quota can be fixed
with a view to promoting tourism by keeping in view the population, places of
tourist interest, facility for tourist halt, conditions of roads etc. and that
having not been done the fixation of flat quota of 50 permits for each State
must be struck down as discriminatory and arbitrary.
While hearing this argument, a question was
posed to Mr. Shanti Bhushan that if the quota of 50 permits for each State is
struck down, not a single State Transport Authority in any State will be
entitled to grant a single tourist permit because fixation of quota is an
integral part of Sec.
63(7). Mr. Shanti Bhushan urged that the
expression in respect of such number of tourist vehicles as the Central
Government may, in respect of that State, specify in this behalf is severable
and therefore, the enabling part of Sub- s.(7) will permit State Transport
Authority in each State to grant the all-India tourist permit keeping in view
the needs of the tourists and the needs of the State. We are not persuaded to
accept this submission. The Parliament enacted sub-s(7) conferring an enabling
power on State Transport Authority 528 to grant a permit valid for the whole of
India which but for the provision contained in sub-s.(7) of Sec.63 it was not
entitled to grant and that this power to grant was subject to the condition
that the Central Government will specify the quota. Therefore, the quota is not
severable from the power to grant the permit.
Assuming that the quota is severable from the
enabling provision, no material has been placed on record to point out the
needs of each State, the places of tourist, interest the influx of tourists,
the facility for their boarding and lodging and the condition of "roads in
respect of each State. In the absence of this fact situation, the contention
cannot be examined on merits.
It may be pointed out that Sec. 63-A
envisages setting up of an Inter-State Transport Commission for the purpose of
developing, coordinating and regulating the operation of transport vehicles in
respect of any area or route common to two or more States (hereinafter referred
to as inter-State region) and performing such other functions as may be
prescribed under sec. 63-C. It was not made clear whether the Inter-State
Transport Commission has been set up but it appears that Sec. 63(7) was
introduced after ascertaining the needs of developing tourist trade. The
Central Government fixed quota of 50 permits for each State. It may be that a smaller
State like Himachal Pradesh or Jammu and Kashmir may have larger number of
places of tourist interest. Equally area-wise the biggest State Madhya Pradesh
may have few spots of tourist interest. Therefore, unless all the relevant
facts are placed on record, which may point to the invidiousness of fixing a
flat quota, the contention of Mr. Shanti Bhushan does not commend to us and it
may be rejected.
Mr. Javali, learned counsel in some of the
petitions urged that notification No.S.O.22 dated December 19, 1977 specifying
the number of tourist vehicle of all States at 50 each suffers from the vice of
non-application of mind. It was said that the notification does not disclose as
to what relevant factors were taken into consideration for fixing the quota. The
contention thus raised is the same contention raised by Mr. Shanti Bhushan
under a different garb and must be rejected for the same reasons.
It was urged that the Central Government
should be asked to refix the quota keeping in view the change in the steep rise
in 529 the influx of tourists from 1977 to 1984. It was submitted that with the
rapid increase in tourist traffic, cheaper and speedy air transport and a new
culture of augmenting knowledge by visit to places of historical interest has
increased manifold tourist traffic. It was urged that tourism is a
well-recognised mode for earning foreign exchange badly needed for economic
development. It was then urged that better facilities would attract more
tourists. It was urged that a period of 7 years provides a water-shed re-
evaluating the demands of time and needs for augmenting the quota fixed
way-back in December, 1977. There is considerable force in this submission. We
are of the opinion that in view of the fast expanding tourist traffic, the Central
Government must undertake an exercise at regular intervals to re-evaluate the
quota of all-India tourist permits to keep pace with developing notion of
attracting tourists. We therefore, recommend to the Central Government to
undertake this exercise within a reasonable time:
As we find no merit in any of the contention,
all petitions fail and are dismissed with costs.
H.S.K. Petitions dismissed.
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