Union of India & Ors Vs. Hindustan Development Corpn. & Ors [1993]
INSC 222 (15 April 1993)
Reddy,
K. Jayachandra (J) Reddy, K. Jayachandra (J) Ray, G.N. (J)
CITATION:
1994 AIR 988 1993 SCR (3) 128 1993 SCC (3) 499 JT 1993 (3) 15 1993 SCALE (2)506
ACT:
Constitution
of India, 1950:
Articles
12, 14, 19, 32, 136, 226, 298. 299-Government Contracts.-Railway Board-Tender
to supply, cast steel bogies-Three of the tenderers quoting identical price-
Inference of formation of cartel-Board's decision of dual pricing to control
unfair trade practice and not to accept lowest price-Held, dual pricing under
certain circumstances may be reasonable-Railways decision to adopt dual pricing
under the circumstances was bonafide.
Administrative
Law:
Government
contracts-Judicial review of.
Doctrine
of Legitimate Expectation-Concept,scope and applicability of.
Words
and Phrases.- "Cartel ", "predatory. "-Meaning of.
HEAD NOTE:
These
special leave petitions were disposed of by this Court's order dated
14.1.1993.By the said order the Court gave its conclusions and certain
directions observing that reasons In support thereof would be given at a later
stage.
Giving
the reasons in support of the conclusions, this Court,
HELD:
1.1
The Government in a Welfare State has the wide powers in regulating and
dispensing of special services like leases, licences, and contracts etc. The
Government while entering Into contracts or issuing quotas is expected not to
act like a private individual but should act in conformity with certain healthy
stan- 129 dards and norms. Such actions should not be arbitrary, irrational or
irrelevant. In the matter of awarding contracts, inviting tenders is considered
to be one of the fair ways. If there are any reservations or restrictions then
they should not be arbitrary and must be justifiable on the basis of some
policy or valid principles which by themselves are reasonable and not
discriminatory. (144-G-H, 145-A) Erusian Equipment and Chemicals Ltd. v. State
of West Bengal [1975] 2 SCR 674, Ramana Dayaram Shety
v. The International Airport Authority of India and Ors. [1979] 3 SCR 1014, and Kasturi Lal Lakshmi Reddy v. State of Jammu and Kashmir and Anr. [1980] 3 SCR 1338, relied
on.
1.2
The concept of reasonableness rinds its positive manifestation and expression
in the lofty ideal of social and economic justice which inspires and animates
the Directive Principles, and Article 14 strikes at arbitrariness In State
action. (149-C) Maneka Gandhi v. Union
of India. [1978] 2 SCR 621, and E.P. Royappa
v. State of Tamil Nadu & Anr. [1974] 2 SCR 348,
relied on.
1.3
The policy of the Government is to promote efficiency in the administration, to
provide an incentive to the uneconomic units to achieve efficiency, to prohibit
concentration of economic power and to control monopolies so that the ownership
and control of the material resources of the community are so distributed as
best to subserve the common good, and to ensure that while promoting industrial
growth there is reduction in concentration of wealth and that the economic
power is brought about to secure social and economic justice. (159-F, 161-C)
Monopolies Inquiry Commission's Report, referred to.
American
Jurisprudence 2 vol. 54. p. 668, referred to.
1.4 In
view of the conditions in the tender notice, validity whereof was not
questioned, the Government had the right to either accept or 130 reject the
lowest offer. From a perusal of the proceedings of the Tender Committee as well
as the opinion expressed by the Financial Commissioner and the other members of
Railway Board, it is clear that Rs. 76,000 per bogie could be the reasonable
price and the post tender offer at a lower price was made with the hope that
the three big manufacturers would get the entire or larger quantity
allotted,-which, if accepted, would result in monopoly extinguishing the
smaller manufacturers. (46 D-G) State of Uttar Pradesh and others v. Vijay Bahadur
Singh and others [1982]2 SCC365, State of Orissa and Ors. v. Harinarayan Jaiswal and Ors. [1972] 3 SCR 784, G.B. Mahajan
and others V. Jalgaon Municipal Council and others [1991] 3 SCC 91, State of Madhya Pradesh & ors. v. Nandial Jaiswal &
Ors. [1987] 1 SCR 1, Shri Sitaram Sugar Co. Ltd. V. Union of India [1990] 3 SCC
223, R.K. Garg v. Union of India [1981] 4 SCC 675, and Peerless General Finance
and Investment Co. Limited and another etc. v. Reserve Bank of India etc.
[1992] 2 SCC 348, relied on.
2.1
The cartel is an association of producers who by agreement among themselves
attempt to control production, sale and prices of the product to obtain a
monopoly in any particular, industry or commodity. It amounts to an unfair
trade practice which is not in the public interest. The intention to acquire
monopoly power can be spelt out from formation of such a cartel by some of the
producers.(167B-C) Collins English Dictionary; Webster comprehensive Dictionary
International Edition; chamber's English Dictionary; Black's Law Dictionary: A
Dictionary of Modern Legal Usage by Bryan A. Garner; American Jurisprudence 2d
Vol. 54, page 677- referred to.
2.2
However, the determination whether an agreement unrea- sonably restrains the
trade depends on the nature of the agreement and on the surrounding
circumstances that give rise to an inference that the parties intended to
restrain the trade and monopolise the same. (167 C-D) 131 National Electrical
contractors Associations, Inc, et, at, National constructors Associations et.
al., Federal Reporter 2d Series, 678 page 492, Matsushita Electric Industrial
Co. Ltd., et. at v. Zenith Radio Corporation et al, 89 L.Ed. 2d 538, referred
to.
2.3
Monopoly is the power to control prices or exclude competition from any part of
the trade or commerce among the producers. The price fixation is one of the
essential factors. (171-E) American Jurisprudence 2d Vol. 54, referred to.
2.4 A
mere offer of a lower price by itself though may appear to be predatory, does
not manifest the requiste intent to gain monopoly and in the absence of a
specific agreement by way of a concerted action suggesting conspiracy, the
formation of a cartel among the producers who offered such lower price cannot
readily be inferred.
(172
B-C) Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd. et. al. v. Zenith Radio
Corporation et. al. 89 L.Ed. 2d 538, referred to.
Webster
Comprehensive Dictionary, International Edition; A dictionary of Modern Legal
Usage by Bryan A. Garner; Collins English Dictionary Black's Law Dictionary;
The oxford English Dictionary Vol. VIII, referred to.
2.5
The opinion of the Tender Committee that the identical price quoted by the
three big manufacturers was a cartel price, was only a suspicion which got
strengthened by post- tender attitude of the said manufacturers who quoted a
much lesser price, and cannot positively be concluded on the basis of these two
circumstances alone. There is not enough material to conclude that in fact
there was formation of a cartel. (173 B-C)
2.6 A
mere quotation of identical price and an offer of further reduction by
themselves could not entitle the said manufacturers automatically to corner the
entire market by way of monopoly since the final allotment of quantities vested
in the authorities who in their 132 discretion can distribute the same to all
the manufacturers including these three big manufacturers on certain basis.
Besides.
the authorities reserved a right to reject a lower price. (172-F, 173-A-B)
2.7
However, the opinion regarding formation of a cartel entertained by the
concerned authorities including the Minister was not malicious nor was actuated
by any extraneous considerations. They entertained a reasonable suspicion based
on the record and other surrounding circumstances and only acted in a bonafide
manner in taking the stand that the three big manufacturers formed a cartel.
(173-C)
3.1
The legitimacy of an expectation can be Inferred only if it is founded on the
sanction of law or custom or an established procedure followed in regular and
natural sequence. It Is distinguishable from a genuine expectation.
Such
expectation should be justifiably legitimate and protectable. Every such
legitimate expectation does not by itself fructify into a right and therefore
it does not amount to a right in the conventional sense, A case of legitimate
expectation would arise when a body by representation or by past practice
aroused expectation which it would be within its powers to fulfil. The claim
based on the principle of legitimate expectation can be sustained and the
decision resulting in denial of such expectation can be quashed provided the
same is found to be unfair, unreasonable, arbitracy and violative of principle
of natural justice. (182-C, 192-A) Food Corporation of India v. M/s Kamdhenu Cattle Feed
Industries JT (1992) 6 S.C. 259, relied on.
Halsbury's
Law of England. fourth Edition, vol. 1 (1) 151,
Administrative Laws of England, Sixth Edition by H.W.R. Wade, page 424, 522,
referred to.
Schmidt
v. Secretary of State for Home Affairs (1969) 2 Ch. 149;A.G. of Hong Kong v. Ng Yeun Shiu (1983) 2A.C.629;In Council of
Civil Service Unions and others v. Minister for the Civil Service (1984) Vol.3
All E.R. 935, Amarjit Singh Ahluwalia v. The State of Punjab & Ors. [1975] 3 SCR 82; Att.
Getz. for New South Wales v. Ouin [1990] Vol. 64 Australian Law 133 Journal
Reports 327; 'R. v. Secretary of State for the Home Department ex parte Ruddock
& Ors. (1987)2 All E R 518, Breen v. Amalcamated Engineering Union &
Ors. (1971) 2 Law Reports Queen Bench Division 173, referred to.
3.2
Legitimate expectation gives the applicant sufficient locus standi for judicial
review and the doctrine of legitimate expectation is to be confined mostly to,
right of a fair hearing before a decision which results in negativing a promise
or withdrawing an undertaking is taken. The doctrine does not give scope to
claim relief straightaway from the administrative authorities as no crystalised
right as such is involved. (191-F) Navyoti Coo-Group Housing Society etc. v.
Union of India & Others (1992) 2 Scale 548; Findlay v. Secretary of State
for the Home Department (1984) 3 All E R801 and Council of Civil Service Unions
case Lord diplock--
3.3
Legitimate expectation being less then right operate in the field of public and
not private law and to some extent ought to be protected thought not
guaranteed. (193-C)
3.4
Legitimate expectations may come in various forms and owe their existence to
different kind of circumstances. By and large they arise in cases of promotions
which are in normal course expected, though not guaranteed by way of a
statutory right, in cases of contracts, distribution of largess by the
Government and in somewhat similar situations. (193-D)
3.5
Protection of legitimate expectation would not be available where an overriding
public interest requires otherwise. The protection is limited to that extent
and a judicial review can be within those limits. (191-H; 192-A- B).
3.6 A
person who bases his claim on the doctrine of legitimate expectation, in the
first instance, must satisfy that there is a foundation and thus has locus standi
to make such a claim. The decision taken 134 by the authority must be found to
be arbitrary, unreasonable and not taken in public interest. It that be so then
what should be the relief is again a matter which depends on several factors.
(192-C-D-E)
3.7
The courts jurisdiction to interfere is very Much limited and much less in
granting any relief in a claim based purely on the ground of 'legitimate
expectation'. A decision denying a legitimate expectation based on a policy or
change of an old policy, or in the public interest either by way of G.O., rule
or is made by way of a legislation does not qualify for interference unless in
a given case, the decision or action taken amounts to an abuse of power. (193-
E-F) Att. Gen. for New South Wales v. Quin [1990] Vol. 64 Australian Law
Journal Reports 327, referred to.
Public
Law and Politics-edited by Carol Harlow, referred to.
3.8
Therefore the limitation is extremely confined and if the according of natural
justice does not condition the exercise of the power. The concept of legitimate
expectation can have no role to plan and the Court must not usurp the
discretion of the public authority which is empowered to take the decisions
under law and the court is expected to apply an objective standard which leaves
to the deciding authority the full range of choice which the legislature is presumed
to have intended. Even in a case where the decision is left entirely to the
discretion of the deciding authority without any such legal bounds and if the
decision is taken fairly and objectively, the court will not interfere on the
ground of procedural fairness to a person whose interest based on legitimate
expectation might be affected. (193-G-A; 194-A)
3.9 If
a denial of legitimate expectation in a given case amounts to denial of right
guaranteed or is arbitrary,discriminatory, unfair or based, gross abuse of
power or violation of principles of natural justice, the same can be questioned
on' the well-known grounds attracting Article 14 but a claim based on mere
legitimate expectation without anything more cannot ipso facto give a right to
invoke these principles. It can be one of the grounds to consider but the court
must lift the veil and see whether the decision is violative of these
principles warranting interference. (194-E-F) 135 3.10 The concept of
legitimate expectation is "not the key which unlocks the treasury of
natural justice and it ought not to unlock the gates which shuts the court out
of review on the merits," particularly when the element of speculation and
uncertainty is inherent in that very concept. The courts would restrain themselves
and restrict such claims duly to the legal limitations. It is a well-meant
caution.
Otherwise
a resourceful litigant having vested interests in contracts, licences etc. can
successfully indulge In getting welfare activities mandated by directive
principles thwarted to further is own interests. The caution, particularly in
the changing scenario, becomes all the more important. (194- G-H; 195-A-B) Att.
Gen. for New South Wales v. Quin 1990 Vol. 64 Austraian Law Journal Reports
327, referred to.
3.11
In the instant case, the Rules for entering into contracts lay down certain
norms and contain guidelines.
They
provide for constitution of Tender Committee and the procedure to be followed
in the matter of inviting tenders.
They
also provide for negotiations but lay down that selection of contracts by
negotiations is an exception rather than a rule and can be resorted to only
under certain circumstances. As per the notice inviting tender, the price
quoted is subject to price variation clause and the Railways reserved a right
to accept the lowest price or accept the whole or any part or the tender or
portion of the quantity offered. The tenderer cannot expect that his entire
tender should be accepted in respect of the quantity. In the past also there
were man-,, instances where the Railways as per the procedure followed, arrived
at decisions in respect of both price and quantity for good and justifiable
reasons. (178-A-B-C)
3.12
There is no legally fixed procedure regarding fixation of price and
particularly regarding allotment giving scope to a legitimate expectation. The
Tender Committee is not a statutory authority and its proposals are
recommendatory in nature and have to be considered in the distribution
procedure culminating in the decision of the approving authority who as a
matter of fact, also can take decisions in respect of price and allotment of
quantities taking into consideration various other aspects from the point of
view of public interest. (178-D-E) 136
4. The
modifications In the decision of the Railways by way of judicial review are not
on the ground of legitimate expectation and violation of principles of natural
justice but on the other ground namely the decision of the authorities was
based on wrong assumption of formation of Cartel. (195 F-G) 5.The status of a
manufacturer being a BIFR company or a small manufacturer was not taken Into
account so far as the fixation of the price is concerned and these
considerations were deemed relevant only for the purpose of allocation of
quantities. The stand taken by the Railways is that smaller manufacturers
should survive from the point of view of arresting monopolistic tendencies and
from the point of view of public interest. The Tender Committee proceedings
would indicate that on the basis of certain formulae namely the past
performance, capacity etc, the allotment was being made. Therefore, these
cannot be said to be irrelevant considerations and as a matter of fact they had
been duly given effect to and weightage was given accordingly in respect of allotment
of quantities to various manufacturers within the four corners of the limited
tender. (196 C-E)
CIVIL
APPELLATE JURISDICTION: S.L.P. (C) Nos. 1189798/92 etc. etc.
From
the Judgment and Order dated 28.8.1992 of the Delhi High Court in Civil Writ Petition
Nos. 1152 & 1157 of 1992. V.R. Reddy, Addl. Solicitor General,, Kapil Sibbal,
P.P. Rao, Rama Jois, A. Temton, Dr. Shankar Ghosh K. K. Venugopal, Harish
Salve, F.S. Nariman, A.N. Haksar, Shanti Bhushan, K.N Bhat, T.R. Andhyarujina,
C.V Subba Rao, P.P. Singh, Mrs. B. Sunita Rao, Sudhir Kulshreshtha, Rohit Tandon,
Parijat Sinha, Ms. Sunanda Roy, Ms. S. Bhattacharya, B.D. Ahmed, Man Mohan
Singh, Gopal Subramanium, D.N. Mishra, A.M. Dittia, P.K. Ganguli, Manoj K. Das.
Amit Prabhat, Tripurary Roy. K.L. Mehta, S. Ganesh, Pratap Venugopal, K.J.
John, Pramod Dayal, Ajay K. Jain and D.N Nanjunda Reddy for the appearing
parties.
The
judgment of the Court was delivered by 137 K. JAYACHANDRA REDDY, J. By our
order dated 14th January, 1993 while disposing of these special leave petitions
we gave our conclusions and we proposed to deliver the detailed judgment at a
later stage giving all the reasons in support of those conclusions. We hereby
deliver the detailed judgment In our earlier order we stated the relevant facts
and the issues involved in a concised form. However, we think it appropriate
and necessary to refer to some of them for a better appreciation of the reasons
in their proper perspective.
Every
year the Railway Board enters into contracts with the manufacturers for the
supply of cast steel bogies which are used in turn for building the wagons.
Cast steel bogies come under a specialised item procured by the Railways from
the established sources of proven ability. There are 12 suppliers in the field
who have been regularly supplying these items. Two new firms Simplex and Beekay
also entered the field. Among them admittedly M/s H.D.C., Mukand and Bharatiya
are bigger manufacturers having capacity to manufacture larger quantities. On
25.10.91 a Iimited tender notice for procurement of 19000 cast steel bogies was
issued to the regular suppliers as well is the above two new entrants for the
year namely from 1.4.92 to 31.3.93. The last date for submission of offers to
the Ministry of Railways was 27.11.91 by 2.30 P.M. and the tenders were to be
opened on the same day at 3 P.M. It was also stated therein that the price was
subject to the price variation clause and the base date for the purpose of
escalation was 1.9.91 and that the Railways reserved the right to order
additional quantity upto 30% of the ordered quantity during the currency of the
contract on the same price and terms and conditions with suitable extensions in
delivery period. The offers were to remain open for a period of 90 days. On
that day the tenders were opened in the presence of all parties.
The
price quoted by the three manufacturers i.e. M/s H.D.C., Mukand and Bharatiya
was an identical price of Rs. 77,666 per bogie while other tenders quoted
between 83,000 and 84.500 per bogies After the tenders were opened and before
the same could be finalised, the Government of India announced two major
concessions namely reduction of custom duty on the import of steel scrap and
dispensation of freight equalisation fund for steel. The tenders were put up
and placed before the Tender Committee of the Railways which considered all the
aspects. The Committee concluded 138 that three of the tenderers namely M/s
H.D.C., Mukand and Bharatiya who had quoted identical rates without any cushion
for escalation between 1.7.91 and 1.9.91, have apparently formed a cartel. The
Tender Committee also noted that the rates quoted by them were the lowest.
Taking
into consideration the reduction of Rs. 1500 as result of the concessions in
respect of the reduction of customs duty on the import of steel scrap and
dispensation of the freight equalisation fund for steel. The Tender Committee
concluded that the reasonable rate would be Rs. 76,000 per bogie. On the
question of distribution of quantities to the various manufacturers the Tender
Committee decided to follow the existing procedure. The Tender Committee signed
these recommendations on 4.2.92 but on the same day the Member (Mechanical) of
the Committee received letters from M/s H.D.C. and Mukand. M/s H.D.C. in its
letter stated that in view of the concessions and also on the basis that per
Kg. rate of casting per bogie could be reduced from Rs. 37.50 to Rs. 29 the
cost of casting can also be reduced and therefore they would be in a position
to supply the bogies at a lesser rate, in case a negotiation meeting is called.
M/s Mukand in its letter also offered to substantially reduce (he prices and
they would like to co-operate with the Railways and the Government and brings
down the prices as low is possible and asked for negotiations.
Though
this was post- tender correspondence the Department felt that the offers made
by M/s H.D.C. and Mukand could be considered. The whole matter was examined by
the Advisor (Finance) in the first instance and by an collaborate note lie
observed that the need for encouraging open competition to improve quality and
brings down costs his been recommended by the government and if it is intended
to continue the existing policy of fixing a rate and distributing the order
among all the manufacturers, then negotiations may not he useful as uniform
prices offered to all manufacturers have to be sufficient even for the smaller
and less economical units and that as any review of the existing policy would
take time, the present tender can be decided on the basis of the existing
policy. With this noting the file was immediately sent to the Member
(Mechanical), the net higher authority, The, with some observations however
recommended the acceptance of the Tender Committee's recommendations. The file
was then put up to Financial Commissioner. He noted that the Tender Committee
was convinced that the three manufacturers who quoted identical price of Rs.
77,666 had formed a cartel. He also considered the offers made by M/s H.D.C.
and Mukand and observed that these three manufacturers who quoted 139 a cartel
price intended to get a larger order on the basis of such negotiated price
which would eventually nullify the competition from the other manufacturers and
lead to their industrial sickness and subsequently to monopolistic price
situation. He, however, approved the Tender Committee's recommendations that a
counter-offer of Rs. 76,000 may he accepted but in the case of M/s H.D.C. a
price lower by Rs. 11,000 may be offered as per their letter dated 4.2.92. He
also recommended that the two manufacturers M/s Cimmco and Texmaco may be given
orders to the extent of their capacity or quantity offered by them whichever is
lower in view of the fact that they are wagon builders and the present formula
regarding the distribution of quantities may be applied to all manufacturers
except the three who have formed a cartel. The also recommended some recoveries
from these three manufacturers who are alleged to have formed a cartel on the
basis of their letters wherein they have quoted prices which were much less
than the updated price as on 1.9.91 of Rs. 79,305. He also made certain other
recommendations and finally concluded that the post tender letters may be
ignored and that for short-term gains the Department can not sacrifice long-term
healthy competition.
After
these recommendations of the Financial Commissioner the file was put up to the
approving authority i.e. the Minister for Railways, who in general agreed with
the recommendations of the Financial Advisor. He also noted that these three
manufacturers have formed a cartel. lie also noted that subsequent to the
Financial Commissioner's note, besides M/s 1 1. D. C. and Mukand has also
offered to reduce the price by 10% or more vide their letter dated 19.2.92 if
called for negotiations. Taking these circumstances into consideration the
Minister ordered that all these three firms may he offered a price lower by Rs.
11,000 with reference to the counter-offer recommended by the Tender Committee
and the quantities also be suitably adjusted so that the cartel is broken, The
Minister also noted that as a result of this a saving of about Rs. 11 crores
would be effected. In his note, the Minister also ordered redistribution of the
quantities. The also ordered that 30% option should straightaway be exercised.
After the approving authority took these decisions, the file went to the
Chairman. Railway Board for implementing the decisions.
The
noted that action will be taken as decided by the Minister but added that it
results in dual-pricing namely one to the three manufacturers and the higher
one to the others and therefore the Minister may consider whether they could
counter-offer the lower price to all the manufacturers as that would result in
saving much more.
140
The file was then again sent to and was considered by the Financial
Commissioner who noticed this endorsement made by the Chairman, Railway Board.
The however noted that so far all the other firms are concerned it is Rs. 3305
less than the present contract price but it would not be equitable to offer the
lower price put forward by the three manufacturers as it Would make the other
units unviable and that incidentally the price of Rs. 76,000 now proposed to be
counteroffered to the other firms is also in line with the recommendations of
the Tender Committee. The, however, noted that some of the units were sick
units and owe a lot of money to the nationalised banks and it would therefore
be in the national interest to accept dual-pricing Therefore the file was again
put up to the approving authority who agreed with the recommendations of the
Financial Commissioner and the Tender Committee and directed that the same may
be implemented. In view of this final decision taken by the approving authority
a telegram was issued to the three manufacturers giving them a Counter-offer of
Rs.65,000 per bogie. The counter-offer was also made to the other nine
manufacturers at the rate of Rs 76,000 per bogie namely the price worked out by
the Tender Committee. Soon after the receipt of this telegram dated 18.3.92 M/s
H.D.C. and Mukand filed writ petitions in the Delhi high Court challenging the so-called discriminatory
counteroffer. M/s Bharatiya also filed a similar petition in Calcutta High
Court but the same was withdrawn but another writ petition was filed later in
the Delhi High Court. In the writ petitions filed by M/s H.D.C. and Mukund the
High Court stayed the operation of the telegram dated 18.3.92 and issued notice
to the Union of India and to the Executive Director and Director of the Railways
(Stores) who figured as respondents in those writ petitions. M/s M. D.C. and Mukand
also wrote to the Minister of Railways in reply to the telegram that they were
not prepared to accept the counter-offer at the rate of' Rs. 65,000 and instead
they offered lo supply the bogies at the rate of Rs. 67,000 per bogie. The
Railways accepted this offer and intimated M/s H.D.C. and Mukand accordingly. The
High Court. at an interlocutory stage pending the writ petitions. passed an
order on 2.4.92. directing the Ministry to accept the allocation of bogies
recommended by the Tender Committee and to pay a price at the rate of Rs.
67,000 only per bogie and that would be subject to the final decision of the
writ petitions. Being aggrieved by this order, the Railways filed a petition
for special leave to appeal no. 5512/92 and this Court while refusing to
interfere at that interlocutory stage made the following observations 141 on
28.4.92:
"However,
we may observe-and so direct that during the pendency of the writ petition if
any of the suppliers in terms of the package of distribution indicated by the
High Court (including the petitioners in the High Court in the writ petition)
seek an "on account" payment representing the difference between the
sum of Rs. 67,000 indicated as price by the High Court and the sum of Rs.
76,000 contemplated by the Railways; the order of the High Court shall not
prohibit the government making such on-account payment to such suppliers on
each wagon on the condition that the said on-account payment of Rs.9.0000) per
bogie should he covered by a bank guarantee for its prompt repayment together
with interest at 20% per annum in the event the on- account payment cannon( be
observed in the price structure that may ultimately come to be determined pursuant
to the final decision in the writ petitions.
The
special leave petitions are disposed of accordingly." Thereafter the High
Court took up the writ petitions for final hearings any by the impugned
judgment allowed the writ petitions filed by M/s H.D.C. and Mukand and directed
that all the suppliers should make the supplies at the rate of Rs. 67,000 per
bogie and also set aside the quantity allocation and directed that the same
should he considered afresh on a reasonable basis and pending such fresh consideration
future supplies should be made on the basis of the recommendations of the
Tender Committee. In the course of the judgment, the High Court also made
certain observations to the effect that the decision of the approving authority
is arbitrary and that the Government has no justification to offer a higher
price than the market price to any supplier to rehabilitate it. It was further
observed that the stand of the Railways that those three manufacturers formed a
cartel is based on extraneous considerations. The learned judges of the High
Court also observed that they failed to understand as to why the Railway
authorities could 142 not initiate negotiations with those manufacturers who
had offered to reduce their offer which could result in saving crores of
'rupees to the Railways. Aggrieved by this judgment of the High Court the Union of India filed
S.L.P. (Civil) Nos. 11897-98/02. Before the High Court in the two writ
petitions filed by M/s H.D.C and Mukand the other manufacturers figured as
respondents Nos. 4 to 12 and M/s Bharatiya otherwise known as Besco figured as
respondent No. 13. The other S.L.Ps. are filed by those nine manufacturers. M/s
Bharatiya, respondent No. 13, has not questioned the judgment of the High
Court. As mentioned above M/s Bharatiya filed a separate writ petition No.
1753/ 92 in the Delhi High Court after withdrawing an earlier writ petition
filed in the Calcutta High Court. The same also was disposed of in terms of the
judgment in the other two writ petitions Nos. 1152 and 1157/92. But they have
not questioned the same. Consequently M/s Bharatiya figures as a respondent
before us in the SLP filed by the Union of India.
In our
earlier order we have already referred to the various Submissions made by the
learned counsel on behalf of Union of India and on behalf of the respondents
particularly M/s H.D.C. Mukand and Bharatiya and other smaller manufacturers.
After considering the various submissions and issues involved we have given our
conclusions in our earlier order which briefly stated are as follows:
1)There
is no enough of material to conclude that M/s. H.D.C., Mukand and Bhartiya
formed a cartel. However. there was scope for enter training suspicion by the
Tender Committee that they formed a cartel since all the three of them quoted
identical price and the opinion entertained by the concerned authorities
including the Minister that these three big manufacturers formed a cartel was
not per se malicious or was actuated by any extraneous considerations and the
authorities acted in a bonafide manner in taking the stand that the three big
manufacturers formed a cartel.
2)The
direction of the High Court that the supply of bogie should be at Rs.67000 by
every manufacturer can not he sustained and that a fresh consideration of a reasonable
price is called for. The Tender Committee shall reconsider the question of
fixation of reasonable price. While doing so it shall consider the offer of Rs.
67,000 made by 143 M/s H.D.C. and Mukand alongwith the data that would given by
them in support of their offer and the percentage of profits available to all
the manufacturers and other relevant aspects and then fix a reasonable price at
which the manufacturers would be able to supply.
3)
Dual pricing under certain circumstances may be reasonable and the stand of the
railways to adopt dual pricing under the circumstances is bonafide and not malafide.
M/s H.D.C., Mukand and Bharatiya must be deemed to be in a position to supply
at the rate of Rs. 67,000 per bogie and thus they form a distinct category. The
smaller manufacturers belong to a different category and if a different price
is fixed for them it is not discriminatory.
4) If
the price that to be fixed by the Tender Committee as directed by us happens to
be more than Rs. 67,000 than that would be applicable to the smaller
manufacturers only and not to M/s H.D.C., Mukand and Bharatiya who on their own
commitment have to supply at the rate of Rs. 67,000.
(5)
The price thus fixed by the Tender Committee which applies only to the smaller
manufacturers shall he deemed to be final and the respective contracts shall be
deemed to be concluded so for the price is concerned.
(6)
Coming to the allotment of quota of bogies the Tender Committee made
recommendations on the basis of the existing practice. The Minister of Railways
in his ultimate decision has made some variations taking into consideration the
recommendations of the Financial Commissioner and other authorities. In making
these variations, the Minister accepting the suggestion that a cartel was
formed by the three manufacturers reduced the allotment of quota to them by way
of reprisal. Since we are of the view that formation of a cartel is not
established, such a reduction of quota can not be justified. The Minister of
Railways as the final authority as be justified in takings a particular
decision in the matter of allotment of quota but such decision must be taken on
objective basis. In allotting these quotas the Government is expected to be
just and fair to one and all.
7)The
three big manufacturers M/s H.D.C.,Mukandand Bharatiya 144 should be allotted
the quantities as per the recommendations of the Tender Committee.However, the
quantities finally allotted by the competent authority to the smaller
manufacturers need not be disturbed and the railway authorities may make
necessary adjustments next year in the matter of allocation of quantities to
them takings into consideration the allotments given to them this year;
(8)It
will be open to the Railways to exercise 30% option, if not already exercised.
(9)Taking
all the circumstances and the time factor into consideration the time to
complete the supply is extended upto 31.3.1993.
Before
we proceed to consider each of these issues and give our reasons, we shall deal
with few general submissions regarding the tender system and the economic
policy of the Government in the matter of stopping monopolistic tendencies.
Shri
K.K. Venugopal, learned counsel appearing for M/s H.D.C. at the outset
submitted that in a case of this nature the Government must either by way of
public auction or by way of inviting tenders work out (he lowest price and
award the contract accordingly, as that would safeguard the interests of the
public exchequer. The further submission in this regard is that the Railways
having invited tenders and having further entertained post-tender
correspondence offering the lower price, should have accepted the price quoted
by the three big manufacturers. Shri Sibal, learned counsel appearing for the
Union of India, however, contended that it is a matter of policy decision by
the Government and that where the Government realises that the lowest ,)rice
offered is not reasonable and realistic, it may for a variety of good and
sufficient reasons reject the same.
It is
true, as it is today, that the Government in a welfare State has the wide
powers in regulating and dispensing of special services like leases, licences. and
contracts etc. The magnitude and range of such Governmental function is great. The
Government while entering into contracts or issuing quotas is expected not to
act like private individual but should act in conformity with certain healthy
standards and norms. Such actions should not be-arbitrary, irrational or
irrelevant. In the 145 matter of awarding contracts inviting tenders is
considered to be one of the fair ways. If there are any reservations or
restrictions then they should not be arbitrary and must be justifiable on the
basis of some policy or valid principles which by themselves are reasonable and
not discriminatory. In the instant case the Railways every year used to enter
into contracts with the established manufacturers for the supply of cast steel
bogies and there are 12 such suppliers. On 25.10.91 a limited tender notice for
the procurement of steel bogies was issued to these suppliers. Under Clause 5
of the Tender notice the Railways reserved the right to order additional
quantity of 30% of the ordered quantity during the currency of the contract on
the same price and term: with suitable extension in delivery period. Clause 7
is to the effect that the tender will be governed by the IRS conditions of the
contract. In the instructions appended to the Tender notice it is again
reiterated that the contracts made under the tender would be governed by the
IRS conditions of contract and also the instructions in the invitation of
tender. Clause 9.3 of the instructions lays down that the price is subject to
price variation clause and the base date for the purpose of escalation is
1.9.91. Under Clause 23 it is made clear that the Department does not pledge
itself to accept the lowest or any tender and reserves to itself the right of
acceptance of the whole or any part of the tender. Pursuant to this notice and
subject to (lie conditions mentioned therein, 12 manufacturers in the field a
well as two new manufacturers M/s Simplex and Beekay submitted their offers and
they are as follows:
NAME
OF THE FIRMS PRICE QUOTED FOR 20.3.T AXLE LOAD
1. Himmat
84,510
2. Texmaco
83,950
3. Titaoarh
84,100
4.
BECO Ltd. 83,350 5, Anup 84,980
6. Sri
Ranga 84,600
7.
Orient 84,750 146
8. Bum
Standard 83,000
9.
CIMMCO 84,800
10. Mukand
77,666 II. Bharatiya 77,666
12.
HDC 77,666
13.
Simplex 78,100
14.
BEEKAY 75,000"
These
offers were got technically evaluated by the Research, Development and Standard
Organisation (RDSO' for short).
Thereafter
a three-men Tender Committee comprising the officers of the rank of Joint
Secretary designated as Executive Directors in the Railways Board considered
the offers. Since the three big suppliers namely M/s H.D.C., Mukand and Bharatiya
quoted an identical price of Rs. 77,666 which was lower than the updated price
of the previous contract, the base date of which was 1.9,91, the Tender
Committee formed an opinion that they have formed law carte
1. The
offers made by the two new firms, however, were not accepted. The Tender
Committee made their own recommendations and fixed Rs. 76,000 as a reasonable
price at which counter offer could be made. Then as already mentioned there was
post-tender correspondence and ultimately a dual price was fixed. In this
regard the submission is that having entertained post-tender correspondence,
the Government either should have accepted the same or rejected the same and in
any event the lowest offer should have been accepted. From a perusal of the
proceedings of the Tender Committee as well as the opinion expressed by the
Financial Commissioner and the other members of the Board, it is clear that Rs.
76,000 per bogie can be the reasonable price and Rs. 67,000 was not a reasonable
price. It is also clear that the post-tender offer at a lower price was made
with the hope that they would get the entire or larger quantity allotted. The
stand taken by the Railways is that the three big manufacturers originally
formed a cartel and the post-tender offers at least by two of them confirmed
the same and if these three big manufacturers are allotted entire or larger
quantity that would result in monopoly extinguishing the smaller manufacturers.
The question is whether such a stand taken by the Government as a policy, is
unfair and arbitrary as to warrant interference by the courts.
147 It
must be mentioned at this stage that the validity of the conditions in the
tender as such are not questioned.
Consequently
the Government had the right to either accept or reject the lowest offer but
that of course, if done on a policy, should he on some rational and reasonable
grounds.
In
Eurasian Equipment and Chemicals Ltd. v. State of West Bengal [1975] 2 SCR 674, this court
observed as under:
"When
the Government is trading with the public, " the democratic form of
Government demands equality and absence of arbitrariness and discrimination in
such transactions. The activities of the government have a public element and,
therefore, there should be fairness and equality. The State need not enter into
any contract with anyone, hut if it does so, it must so fairly without
discrimination and without unfair procedure.
Approving
these principles, a Bench of this Court in Ramana Dayaram Shetty v. The International
Air-port Authority of India and Ors[1979] 3 SCR 10 14, held thus:
"This
proposition would hold good in all cases of dealing by the Government with the
public, where the interest sought to be protected is a privilege. It must,
therefore, be taken to be the law that where the Government is dealing with the
public, whether by way of giving job so entering into contracts or issuing
quotas or licences or granting other forms of largess, the Government cannot
act arbitrarily at its sweet will and, like a private individual, deal with any
person it pleases, but its action must be in conformity with standard or norms
which is not arbitrary, irrational or irrelevant. The power or discretion or
the Government in the matter of grant of largess including award of jobs,
contracts, quotas, licences etc. must be con- fined and structured by rational,
relevant and nondiscriminatory standard or norm and if the Government departs
from such standard or norm in any particular case or cases, the action of the
Government 148 would be liable to be struck down, unless it can he shown by the
Government that the departure %%,as not arbitrary, but was based on some valid
principle which in itself was not irrational, unreasonable or
discriminatory." ln Kasturi Lal Lakshmi Reddy v. State of Jammu and
Kashmir and Anr. [1980] 3 SCR 1338 an order awarding contract by the Government
to a party was questioned on the ground that it was arbitrary, malafide and not
in public interest and the same created monopoly in favour of that party and
that the contract was awarded without affording an opportunity to others to
compete and the same is not based on any rational or relevant principle and
therefore was violative of Article 14 of the Constitution and also the rule of
administrative law which inhibits the arbitrary action by the State. A Bench of
this Court while approving the principles laid down in the above cases further
observed thus:
"Though
ordinarily a private individual would be guided by economic considerations of
self- gain any action taken by him, it is always open to under the law to act
contrary to his self-interest or to oblige another in entering into a contract
or dealing with his property.
But
the Government is not free to act is it likes in granting largess such as
awarding a contractor selling or leasing out its property. Whatever be its
activity, the Government is still the Government and is, subject to restraints
inherent in its position in a democratic society. The constitutional power
conferred on the Government cannot be exercised by it arbitrarily or
capriciously or in an unprincipled manner; it has to be exercised for the
public good. Every activity of the Government has a public element in it and it
must therefore, be informed with reason and guided by public interest. Every
action taken by the Government must be in public interest; the Government
cannot act arbitrarily and without reason and if it does, its action would be
liable to be invalidated.
If the
Government awards a contract of leases out or 149 otherwise deals with its
property or grants any other largess, it would be liable to be tested for its
validity on the touch-stone of reasonableness and public interest and if it
fails to satisfy either test, it would be unconstitutional and invalid."
Now coming to the test of reasonableness which pervades the constitutional
scheme, this Court in several cases particularly with reference to Articles 14,
19 and 21 has considered this concept of reasonableness and has held that the
same finds its positive manifestation and expression in the lofty ideal of
social and economic justice which inspires and animates the Directive
Principles and that Article 14 strikes at arbitrariness in State action. (vide Maneka
Gandhi v. Union of India, [1978] 2 SCR 621 and E.P. Royappa v. State of Tamil Nadu
& Anr. f 1974 12 SCR 348.
After
referring to these decisions it was further held in Kasturi Lal Lakshmi Reddy's
case (supra) as under:
"Any
action taken by the Government with a view to giving effect to any one or more
of the Directive Principles would ordinarily, subject to any constitutional or
legal inhibitions or other over-riding- consid- erations qualify for being
regarded as reasonable, while an action which is inconsistent with or runs
counter to a Directive Principle would incur the reproach of being
unreasonable. So also the concept of public interest must as far as possible
receive its orientation from the Directive Principles. What according to the
founding fathers constitutes the plainest requirement of public interest is set
out in the Directive Principles and they embody par excellence the
constitutional concept of public interest.
If,
therefore, any governmental action is calculated to implement or give effect to
a Directive Principle, it would ordinarily, subject to any other overriding
considerations be informed with public interest. Where any government action
fails to satisfy the test of reasonableness and public interest discussed above
and is found to be wanting in the quality of reasonableness or lacking in the element
of public interest, it would be liable to be 150 struck down as invalid. It
must follow as a necessary corollary from this proposition that the Government
cannot act in a manner which would benefit a private party at the cost of the
State; such an action would be both unreasonable and contrary to public
interest.
The
Government therefore, cannot, for example give a contract or sell or lease out
its property for a consideration less than the highest that can be obtained for
it, unless of course there are other considerations which render it reasonable
and in public interest t o do so. Such considerations many that some Directive
Principle is sought to be advanced or implemented or that the contract or the
property is given not with a view to earning revenue but for the purpose of
carrying out a welfare scheme for the benefit of a particular group or
secretion of people deserving it or that the person who has offered a higher
consideration is not otherwise fit to be given the contract or the property. We
have referred to these considerations only illustratively, for there may be an
infinite variety of considerations which may have to be taken into account by
the Government in formulating its policies and it is on a total evaluation of
various considerations which have weighed with the Government in taking a
particular action, that the Court would have to decide whether the action of
the Government is reasonable and in public interest." (emphasis supplied)
On the question of courts interference in an action taken by the Government, it
was further observed as under:
"But
one basic principle which must guide the Court in arriving at its determination
on this question is that there is always a presumption that the Governmental
action is reasonable and in public interest and it is for the party challenging
its validity to show that it is wanting in reasonableness or is not informed
with public interest. This burden is a heavy one and it has 151 to be
discharged to the satisfaction of the Court by proper and adequate material.
The Court cannot lightly assume that the action taken by the Government is
unreasonable or without public interest because as we said above, there are a
large number of policy considerations which must necessarily weigh with the
Government in taking action and therefore the Court would not strike down
government action as invalid on this ground, unless it is clearly satisfied
that the action is unreasonable or not in public interest.
But
where it is so satisfied, it would be the plainest duty of the Court under the
Constitution to invalidate the governmental action. 'I-his is one of the most
important functions of the Court and also one of the most essential for
preservation of the rule of law." (emphasis supplied) On the question of
the power of the Government in granting largess, it was also observed that:
"The
second limitation on the discretion of the Government in grant of largess is in
regard to the persons to whom such largess may be granted. It is now well
settled as a result of the decision of this Court in Ramanad Shetty v.International Airport Authority of India & Ors. (supra) that the Government is not free like an ordinary
individual, in selecting the recipients for its largess and it cannot choose to
deal with any person it pleases in its absolute and unfettered discretion. The
law is now well established that the Government need not deal with anyone, but
if it does so, it must do so fairly without discrimination and without unfair
procedure. where the Government is dealing with the public, whether by way of
giving jobs or entering into contracts or granting other forms of largess, the
Government cannot act arbitrarily at its sweet will and, like a private
individual, deal with any person it pleases, but its action must be in conformity
with some standard or norm which is not arbitrary, irrational or 152
irrelevant. The governmental action must not be arbitrary or capricious, but
must be based on some principle which meets the test of reason and relevance.
This rule was enunciated by the Court as a rule of administrative law and it
was also validated by the Court as an emanation flowing directly from the
doctrine of equality embodied in Art.
14."
(emphasis supplied) In State of Uttar Pradesh and others v. Vijay Bahadur Singh
and others [1982] 2 SCC 365 this Court considered the circumstances under which
the Government is not always bound to accept the highest bid offered in a
public auction under which a contract was to be awarded to fell trees and
exploit forest produce and held as under:
"It
appears to us that the High Court had clearly misdirected itself. The
Conditions of Auction made it perfectly clear that (lie Government was under no
obligation to accept the highest bid and that no rights accrued to the bidder
merely because his bid happened to he the highest. Under condition 10 it was
expressly provided that the acceptance of bid at the time of auction was
entirely provisional and was subject to ratification by the competent
authority, namely, the State Government. Therefore, the Government had the
right, for good and sufficient reason, we may say, not to accept the highest
bid but even to prefer a tenderer- other than the highest bidder. The High
Court was clearly in error in holding that the Government could not refuse to
accept the highest bid except on the ground of inadequacy of the bid. Condition
10 does not so restrict the power of the Government not to accept the bid.
There is no reason why the, power vested in the Government to refuse to accept
the highest bid should be confined to inadequacy of bid only. There may be a
variety of good and sufficient reasons, apart from inadequacy of bids, which
may impel the Government not to accept the highest bid.
In
fact, to give an antithetic illustration, the very enormity of a bid may make
153 it suspect. It may lead the Government to realise that no bonafide bidder
could possibly offer such a bid if he meant to do honest business. Again the
Government may change or refuse its policy from time to time and we see no
reason why change of policy by the Govern- ment, subsequent to the auction but
before its confirmation, may not be a sufficient justification for the refusal
to accept the highest bid. It cannot be dispute that the Government has the
right to change its policy from time to time, according to the demands of the
time and situation and in the public interest. If the government has the power
to accept or not to accept the highest hid and if the Government has also the
power to change its policy from time to time. it must follow that a change or
revision of policy subsequent to the provisional acceptance of the bid but
before its final acceptance is a sound enough reason for the Government's
refusal to accept the highest bid at an auction. that is precisely what has
happened here." (emphasis supplied) In State of Orissa and Ors. v. Harinarayan Jaiswal and
Ors. [1972] 3 SCR 784 it was observed as under:
"It
is for the Government to decide whether the pi-ice offered in an auction sale
is adequate. While accepting or rejecting a bid, it is merely performed and
executive function.
The
correctness of its conclusion is not open 'to judicial review. We fail to see
how the plea of contravention of Art. 19 (1) (g) or Art. 14 can arise in these
cases. The Government's power to sell the exclusive privileges set out in s. 22
was not denied.
It was
also not disputed that those privileges could be sold by public auction. Public
auctions are held to get the best possible price. Once these aspects are recognised,
there appears to be no basis for contending that the owner of the privileges in
question who had offered to sell then cannot decline to accept the highest bid
if he thinks that the price offered is inadequate. There is no 154 concluded contract
till the bid is accepted.
Before
there was a concluded contract, it was open to the bidders to withdraw their
bids-see Union of India and ors. v. M/s Bhimsen Walaiti Rani [1970] 2 SCR 594.
By merely giving bids, the bidders had not acquired any vested rights. The fact
that the Government was the seller does not change the legal position once its
exclusive right to deal with those privileges is conceded. If the Government is
the exclusive owner of those privileges, reliance on Art. 19 (1) (g) or Art. 14
becomes irrelevant. Citizens cannot have any funda- mental right to trade or
carry on business in the properties or rights belonging to the Government, nor
can there he any infringement of Art. 14, if the Government tries to get the
best available price for its valuable rights." emphasis supplied) In G.B. Mahajan
and others v. Jalgaon Municipal Council and others [1991] 3 SCC 91 it was
observed thus:
"
The reasonableness' in administrative law must, therefore, distinguish between
proper use and improper abuse of power. Nor is the test the court's own
standard of 'reasonableness' as it might conceive it in a given
situation." In State of Madhay Pradesh
& ors v. Nandlal Jaiswal & ors.
[1987]
1 SCR 1 it was observed thus:
"
We must not forget that in complex economic matters every decision is necessarily
empiric and it is based on experimentation or what one may call 'trial and
error method' and, therefore, its validity cannot be tested on any rigid a
priori' considerations or on the application of any straight-jacket formula.
The
court must while adjudging the constitutional validity of an executive decision
relating to economic matters grant a certain measure of freedom or play in the
155 'joints' to the executive.
xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx The Court cannot strike down a policy
decision taken by the State Government merely because it feels that another
policy decision would have been fairer or wiser or more scientific or logical.
The Court can interfere only if the policy decision is patently arbitrary,
discriminatory or mala fide. It is against the back-round of these observations
and keeping the mind that we must now proceed to deal with the contention of
the petitioners based on article 14 of the Constitution." In India Cement
Ltd. and others v. Union of India and others[1990] 4SCC 356 a question arose
whether the fixation of Rs. 100 per tonne of cement as the uniform retention
price for the entire industry with the exception of M/s Travancore Cement Ltd.
was rational and reasonable. This Court held as under:
"It
is. therefore, clear that fixation of Rs.100 per tonne as die uniform retention
price for the entire industry with the solitary exception of M/s. Travancore
Cement Ltd.
Kottayam
for which justification has been shown. was on a rational basis taking into
account all relevant data and factors including the cement industry's
acceptance of the principle of a uniform retention price for the entire
industry. the only difference being in die price actually fixed it Rs. 100 per tonne
instead of Rs. 104 per tonne claimed by the cement industry. It is obvious that
the fixation of Rs. 100 per tonne being shown to be made on a principle which
has not been faulted. the actual fixation of Rs. 100 instead of Rs. 104 to be
received by the industry is not within the domain of permissible judicial
review, if the principle of a Uniform retention price for the entire industry
cannot be faulted.
(emphasis
supplied) The Bench in die above case, after referring to die decision of the
Constitution 156 Bench in Shri Sitaram Sugar Co. Lid. v. Union of India [1990] 3
SCC 223, observed thus:
"
It was pointed out that what is best for the industry and in what manner the
policy should be formulated and implemented. hearing in mind the object of
supply and equitable distribution of the commodity at a fair price in the best
interest of the general public, is a matter for decision exclusively within the
province of the Central Government and such matters do not ordinarily attract
the power of judicial review. It was also held (hit even if some persons are at
a disadvantage and have suffered losses on account of the formulation and
implementation of the government policy.
that
is not by itself' sufficient ground for interference with the governmental
action.
Rejection
of the principle of fixation of price unit wise on actual cost basis of' each
unit was reiterated and it was pointed out that such a policy promotes
efficiency and provides and incentive to cut down the cost introducing an
element of healthy competition among the units.
xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx It is. therefore. clear that the
principle of fixation of uniform price for the industry is an accepted
principle and this has to be done by fixing a uniform price on the basis of the
cost of a reasonably efficient and economic representative cross-section of
manufacturing units and not with reference to the cost in relation to each
unit. Obviously, such a practice is in larger public interest and also promotes
efficiency in the industry providing an incentive to the uneconomic units to
achieve efficiency and to reduce their cost." Regarding the differential
treatment given to M/s Travancore Cement Ltd. this Court held that:
157
The only surviving question for consideration is the argument in Civil Appeal
No. 2193 of 1972 for a differential treatment to the appellant, M/s Chettinad
cement Limited, on the anology of M/s Travancore Cement Ltd., Kottayam. In the
counter-affidavit of Shri G. Ramanathan Under Secretary to the Government of
India, the reason for treating. Travancore Cement Limited differently has been
clearly stated. It has been stated that it is a sub- standard unit with a
capacity of 50,000 tonnes `per annum only without any scope for expansion while
the standard capacity for a unit is two lakh tonnes per annum; so that this
unit is not capable of expanding the capacity and it is on the whole an
uneconomic unit deserving a special consideration. No material has been
produced by the appellant.
M/s Chettinad
Cement Corporation Limited. to show that it is a similar substandard uni t
without any capacity for expansion. so that it too must continue to be an
uneconomic unit like M/s Travancore Cement Limited, Kottayam deserving, a
similar treatment. The counter affidavit. therefore. shows a rational basis for
classifying M/s Travancore Cement Limited, Kottayam differently as a
sub-standard and an uneconomic unit without any scope for improvement in
comparison to other units.
This
argument also is untenable." In R.K. Garg v. Union of India, [1981]4 SCC
675, a Constitution Bench of this Court observed as under:
"
Another rule of equal importance is that laws relating to economic activities
should be viewed with greater latitude. than laws touching the civil rights
such as freedom of speech religion etc. It has been said by no less a person
than Holmes, J. that the legislature should be allowed some play in the joints,
because it has to deal with complex problems which do not admit of solution
through any doctrinaire or strait-.jacket formula and this is particularly true
in case of legisla- 158 (ion dealing with economic matters, where having regard
to the nature of the problems required to be dealt with. greater play in the
joints has to he allowed to tile legislature.
The
Court should feel more inclined to give judicial deference to legislative
judgment in the field of economic regulation then in other areas where
fundamental human rights are involved. Nowhere has this admonition been more
felicitously expressed than in Morey v. Doud 354 US 457 where Frankfurter, J
said in his inimitable style:
In the
utilities, tax and economic regulation cases, there are good reasons for
judicial self-restraint if not judicial deference to legislative judgment. The
legislature after all has the affirmative responsibility the courts have only
the power to destroy not to reconstruct. When these are added to the complesity
of economic regulation, the uncertainty, the liability to error. the
bewildering conflict of the experts, and the number of times the judges have
been overruled by events--self-limitation can be seen to be the path of
judicial wisdom and institutional prestige and stability." (emphasis
supplied) In Peerless General Finance and Investment Co. Limited and Another v.
Reserve Bank of India etc. [1992] 2 SCC 343 the accent of power of the Courts
interfering. in such economic policy matters was considered and it was held as
under:
"The
function of the Court is to see that lawful authority is not abused but not to
appropriate to itself' the task entrusted to that authority. It is well settled
that a public body invested with statutory powers must take care not exceed or
abuse its power.
It
must keep within the limits of the authority committed to it. It must act in
good faith and it must act reasonably. Courts are not to interfere with
economic policy which is the function of experts. It is not the function 159 of
the courts to sit in judgment over matters of economic policy and it must
necessarily be left to the expert bodies. In such matters even expert can
seriously and doubtlessly differ. Courts cannot be expected to decide them
without even the aid of experts." It was further observed thus:
"
The function of the Court is not to advise in matters relating to financial and
economic policies for which bodies like Reserve Bank are fully competent. The
Court can only strike some or entire directions issued by the Reserve Bank in
case the Court is satisfied that the directions were wholly unreasonable or violative
of any Provisions of the Constitution or any statute. It would be hazardous and
risky for the courts to tread an unknown path and should leave such task to the
expert bodies. This Court has repeatedly said that matters of economic policy
ought to be left to the government." At this juncture it is also necessary
to consider whether the policy of the Government in the matter of fixation of
price and in allotment of the largess from the point of' view of prohibiting
monopolistic tendencies and encouraging healthy competition among the units, is
in any manner unreasonable or arbitrary. As submitted by the learned counsel,
the policy of the Government is to promote efficiency in the administration and
to provide an incentive to the uneconomic units to achieve efficiency. The
object underlying the Monopolies and Restrictive Trade Practices Act, 1969
C'MRTP Act' for short ) is to prevent the concentration of economic power and
to provide for a control on monopolies prohibition of monopolistic trade
practices and restrictive trade practices. The Monopolies Inquiry Commission in
its report stated that:
"There
are different manifestations of economic power in different fields of economic
activity. One such manifestation is the achievement by one or more units in an
industry of such a dominant position that they are able to control the market
by regulating prices 160 or output or eliminating competition. Another is the
adoption by some producers and distributors, even though they do not enjoy such
a dominant position. of practices which restrain competition and thereby
deprive the community of the beneficent effects of the rivalry between
producers and producers, and distributors and distributors to give the best
service. It is needless to say that such practices must inevitably impede the
best utilisation of the nation's means of production economic power may also
manifest itself' in obtaining control of large areas of economic activity by a
few industrialists by diverse means. Apart from affecting the economy of the
country, this often results in the creation of industrial empires, tending to
cast their shadows over political democracy and social values." In U.S.A.
under the Sherman Act of 1890. every contract or combination in the form of
trust or otherwise or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce is declared
to be illegal.
By
that at every person who monopolised or attempted to monopolise or combined or
conspired with any other person or persons to monopolise any part of the trade
or commerce was guilty of mis-demeanour.
Regarding
the constitutionality of the said Act. a passage in American jurisprudence 2d,
vol. 54 pages 668-669 reads thus:
2.
Constitutionality.
The
Sherman Act (15 USCSS 1-7) is a constitutional exercise of the commerce power.
Its
general language does not render it invalid as an unconstitutional delegation
of legislative power to the courts or as an unconstitutionally vague criminal
statue. Its application to a monopolistic association of newspaper publisher
does not abridge freedom of the press: nor does its application to the
continuance, after its enactment, of a contract made previously subject it to
attack as ex post facto legislation." 161 In England, the Competition Act,
1980 controls anti- competitive practices and if a person in the course of his
business pursues a course of conduct which has or is intended to have or it
likely to have the effect of restricting, distorting or preventing competition
in connection with the production, supply or acquisition of goods is deemed to
engage in anti-competition practices, which is illegal.
Therefore,
the avowed policy of the Government particularly from the point of view of
public interest is to prohibit concentration of economic power and to control
monopolies so that the ownership and control of the material resources of the
Community are so distributed as best to subserve the common good and to ensure
that while promoting industrial growth there is reduction in concentration of
wealth and that the economic power is brought about to secure social and
economic justice.
Bearing
the above principles in mind, we shall now proceed to examine the action taken
by the Railways in the matter of fixation of the price and distribution of
quantities and see whether the same has been done pursuant to a policy and thus
reasonable or whether there has been an arbitrary exercise of power. We have
already noted that it is a case of limited tender meant for the 12
manufacturers who have been supplying the railway bogies. The offers made by
the tenders were got technically evaluated by the RDSO and thereafter they were
examined by the-render Committee as well as by the Railways Board and finally
by competent authority. The assessed capacity of each manufacturer is the one
assessed by the RDSO, a wing of the Railways and the same is based on the
molten capacity of the manufacturers and other relevant factors. After fixing
the reasonable price, the quantity distribution can be determined based on the
assessed actual capacity of the manufacturers, best performance, outstanding
orders to be executed and on the average of previous four years' performance.
It is not in dispute that this formula was evolved in 1983. Later, to avoid
certain inequalities and better utilisation of the installed capacity by larger
units and uneconomic ordered quantity and under utilisation of capacity by
smaller units, it was felt that in the interest of the economy, an equitable
distribution has to he effected. A perusal of the Tender Committee's
recommendations, the enclorsements made by the members of the Railway Board and
the views expressed by the competent authority 162 could show that for the year
in question they want to bring about some changes in the policy of distribution
pending a permanent policy being evolved. The 'render Committee in the first
instance examined the prices quoted-by the tenderers. The Committee decided
that while placing orders, only the RDSO permitted deviations will be allowed
and the suppliers have to adhere to rest of the specifications as was being
done in the earlier years. Then coming to the prices, the Tender committee
noted that the three big manufacturers quoted identical price in terms by
forming a cartel among themselves. Having applied the price variation formula,
the updated price was fixed at Rs. 79,305 as on 1.
9.91.
However, taking into consideration the two concessions is respect of import
duty and (fie freight equalisation the Committee ultimately recommended the
price of Rs. 76.000.
The
Tender Committee also noted that this price is very near to the lowest among
the updated price. Regarding the distribution of quantities the Tender
committee recommended that the same may be distributed among the various
manufacturers as shown in (he annexure to their recommenda- tions. In
recommending such distribution to various manufacturers the Tender committee
has taken into consideration the fact that the four wagon builders namely M/s
H.D.C. Texmaco, Cimmco and Burn should be given weightage. The Tender Committee
ultimately recommended that a counter-offer at the price of Rs. 76,000 for 20.3
T bogies can be made and the quantities can be distributed as indicated in the
be annexure. This was done on 4. 2. 92 and then the post- tender correspondence
was there %%,hereby two of the three big manufacturers offered to reduce their
price if negotiations be held. Then the file went to the Railway Board. Advisor
(Finance) particularly indicated that a view has to be taken whether a large
number of manufacturers should be continued manufacturing these bogies in small
quantities as at present or to permit a small number of manufacturers to expand
their production at the cost of other prices and that the policy which has been
followed by the Railways so far is to encourage a large number of parties to
manufacture the bogies, with the idea of generation competition as also by way
of encouraging small scale industries. fie, however, pointed out that since the
review of policy would take time, the tender could be decided on the basis of
the existing policy. The Member (Mechanical) agreed with this recommendation.
Then the file went to Financial Commissioner. He noted that the three big
manufacturers have formed a cartel and they have given offer to reduce their
price if negotiations are held and their intention apparently is to get a 163
larger share on the basis of such negotiated price which would eventually
nullify the competion from the other manufacturers and Subsequently to
monopolistic price situation. Having stated so he recommended that the wagon
builders and other smaller manufacturers must he given larger quantities and
that the three big manufacturers should be given the balance. In the last
paragraph. the Financial Commissioner noted thus:
"
Now, due to the new economic policy, the structural changes are in a flux and
as a monopoly buyer it is incumbent on the part of the Railway not to
precipitate any crisis by resorting to negotiation on the basis of II DC's
letter at SN 26 but treat carefully and protect smaller firms from being
gobbled up.
In
other words, for short-term gains, we may be sacrificing, long-term healthy
competition.
1,
therefore, advocate that this post-tender letter may be ignored as the prices
quoted by firms are in the close range or prices updated by Tender Committee
for counter-offer." With these nothings, the file went to the Railway
Minister and in his order, he noted that the three big manufacturers have
formed a cartel and that under the circumstances all the three of them may be
offered a price lower by Rs. 11.000 and the quantities also should be suitably
adjusted so that the cartel is broken and he ordered 1795, 2376 and 2500 number
of bogies to M/s H. D.C., Mukandand Bharativa respectively. The Minister
further observed that since the present formula suffers from serious blemishes
as pointed out by the Financial Commissioner, a judicious distribution of order
is called for between the other suppliers and that some of them are sick units
and owe a lot of money to the nationalised banks and their cases are pending
before BIFR.
and
that it would be in the national interest to give them sufficient order so that
they are able to rehabilitate themselves and repay the loans. In this view of
the matter, he ordered redistribution of the balance quantities as follows:
Bum
500 Cimmco 1200 Texmaco 1200 164 Sri Ranga 1560 Anup 1136 Orient 1050 TSL 1400 Himmat
1150 BECO 1600" The Minister also ordered that straight away 30% option
should be exercised. The further noted that as a result of this policy, the
Railways would be effecting a saving of about Rs. 11 crores. Then the file with
this order went back to the Member (Mechanical) and others for being
implemented. he, however. noted that the Minister for Railways may consider
whether the lower price could be counter offered to all the companies. The
Financial Commissioner again noted that dual pricing would be in the national
interest and finally the Minister having noted these endorsements of the Member
(Mechanical) as well as the Financial Commissioner made an endorsement that if
some are allowed to hold monopoly instead of giving protection to smaller
units, who have formed a cartel, they may gang up and fight and fritter the
smaller ones and that Railways should always demonstrate of its own vision of
long term Railway interest and not short-terms gains and finally agreed with
the recommendations of the Financial commis- sioners and also the
recommendation of the 'Fender Committee and directed the implementation of the
same without further delay. The above documents would show that a particular
policy has been adopted by the Government, though it resulted in a change as
compared to the previous one. As held by the courts, change of policy by it
self does not affect the pursuant action provided it is rational and reasonable
However, the submission is that the decision taken pursuant to this policy in
the matter of fixation of price and distribution of quantities is based on
wrong grounds and suffers from the vice of unreasonableness. S/Shri Nariman, Venugopal
and Shanti Bhushan, learned counsel appearing for M/s Mukand, H.D.C. and Bharatiya
respectively submitted in this context that the grounds namely that the three
big manufacturers formed a cartel and that the post-tender price offered by
them was predatory are unfounded and that dual pricing and the ultimate
allotment of the quantities in a punitive manner are based 165 on a wrong
premise and the final decision arrived at is consequently unreasonable and
arbitrary. The further submission is that these manufacturers have a legitimate
expectation of being treated in certain ways by the administrative authorities
on the basis of practice and policy of the previous years and such a decision,
which is punitive and which defeats such legitimate expectation and which is
taken without affording an opportunity to these manufacturers to explain, is violative
of principles of natural justice.
First
we shall consider the submissions regarding the formation of cartel by these
big manufacturers, The word "Cartel" has a particular meaning with
reference to monopolistic control of the market. In collins English Dictionary,
the meaning of the word "Cartel" is given as under:
"
cartel I also called: trust, a collusive international association of
independent enterprises formed to monopolize production and distribution of a
product or service, control prices etc.------------------------" In
Webster Comprehensive Dictionary, International Edition, the meaning of the
word "Cartel" is given thus:
"cartel-------------------------
xx-----------
3. An
international combination of independent enterprises in the same branch of
production, aiming at a monopolistic control of the market by means of weaking
or eliminating competition.-------- xx---------- In Chambers' English
Dictionary the word "Cartel" is defined thus:
"Cartel-A
combination of firms for certain purposes especially to keep up prices and kill
competition------------XX--------------- In Black's Law Dictionary, fifth
edition the meaning of the word "Cartel" is given thus:
166
"Cartel-A combination of producers of any product joined together to
control its production, sale, and price, and to obtain a monopoly in any
particular industry or commodity.Also, an association by agreement of companies
or sections of companies having common interests, designed,, to prevent extreme
or unfair competition and allocate markets, and to promote the interchange of
knowledge resulting from scientific and technical research, exchange of patent
rights, and standardization of products." In American Jurisprudence 2d
Vol. 54 page 677 it is mentioned thus:
"A
cartel is an association by agreement of companies or sections of companies
having common interests, designed to prevent extreme or unfair competition and
to allocate markets, and perhaps also to exchange scientific or technical
knowledge or patent rights and to standardize products, with competition
regulated but not eliminated by substituting computational in quality,
efficiency, and service for price-cutting. An international cartel arrangement
providing for a worldwide division of a market has been held a per se violation
of 15 USC S 1. An American corporation violates the Sherman Act by entering
into agreements with English and French companies to (1) allocate world trade
territories among themselves; (2) fix prices on products of one sold in the
territory of the others; (3) co-operate to protect each other's markets and
eliminate outside competition; and (4) participate in cartels to restrict
imports to and exports from the United States.' In a Dictionary of Modern Legal
Usage by Bryian A.Gemer,it is noted thus:
"cartlize=to
organize into a cartel. See- IZE. Yet cartel has three quite different
meanings; (1) " an 167 agreement between hostile nations"' (2)
"an anticompetitive combination usu. that fixes commercial prices";
and (3) "a combination of political groups that work toward common
goals." Modern usage favours sense (2)." The cartel therefore is an
association of producers who by agreement among themselves attempt to control
production, sale and prices of the product to obtain a monopoly in any
particular industry or commodity. Analysing the object of formation of a cartel
in other words, it amounts to an unfair trade practice which is not in the
public interest.
The
intention to acquire monopoly power can be spelt out from formation of such a
cartel by some of the producers.
However,
the determination whether such agreement unreasonably restrains the trade
depends on the nature of the agreement and on the surrounding circumstances
that give rise to an inference that the parties intended to restrain the trade
and monopolise the same. Dealing with the provi- sions of Sherman Anti-Trust
Act, in National Electrical Contractors Associations, Inc. etal. v. National
Contractors Association etal Federal Reporter 2d Series, 678 page 492 it was
observed as under:
"We
know of no better statement of the rule than that of this court in United States v. Society, of Ind. Gasoline
Marketers, 624 F. 2d 461, 465 (4th Cir. 1979) cert. den. 101 S.Ct. 859,449, U.S. 1078, 66 L.Ed. 2d 801, where stated: "Since in
a price-fixing conspiracy the conduct is illegal per se further inquiry on the
issues of intent or the anti-competitive effect is not required. The mere
existence of a price-fixing agreement establishes the defendants' illegal
purpose since the aim and result of every price-fixing agreement, if effective,
is the elimination of one form of competition." It was also observed that:
"The
critical analysis in determining whether a particular activity constitutes a
per se violation is whether the activity on its face seems to be such that it
would always or almost always restrict competition and 168 decrease output
instead of being designed to increase economic efficiency and make the market
more rather than less competitive."
Matsushita
Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. et al v. Zenith Radio Corporation et al 89 L.Ed.
2d 538 is a case where American manufacturers of consumer electronic products
brought suit against a group of their Japanese competitors in the United States
District Court alleging that these competitors had violated Sections 1 and 2 of
the Sherman Act and other federal statutes. It was alleged that the Japanese
companies had conspired since 1950 to drive domestic firms from the American
Market, by maintaining artificially high prices for these products in Japan while selling them at a loss in the
United States. The District Court after excluding
bulk of evidence, finally granted the Japanese companies' motion for summary
judgment dismissing the claims. The United States Court of Appeal reversed and
remanded for further proceeding. On a certiorari, the United States Supreme
Court while considering the standards supplied by the Court of Appeals in
evaluating the summary judgment, observed thus:
"To
survive petitioners motion for summary judgment respondents must establish that
there is a genuine issue of material (475 US
586) fact as to whether petitioners entered into an illegal conspiracy that
caused respondents to. suffer a cognizable injury." It was further
observed that:
A
predatory pricing conspiracy by nature speculative. Any agreement to price below
the competitive level requires the conspirators to forgo profits that free
competition would offer them. The forgone profits may be considered an
investment in the future. For the investment to be rational (475 US 589) the conspirators must have a reasonable
expectations of recovering, in the form of later monopoly profits, more than
the losses suffered.
169 xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx The alleged conspiracy's failure
to achieve its ends in the two decades of its asserted operation is strong
evidence that the conspiracy does not in fact exist. Since the losses in such a
conspiracy accrue before the gains, they must be "repaid" with
interest.
And
because the alleged losses have accrued over the course of two decades, the
conspirators could well require a correspondingly long time to recoup.
Maintaining
supra competitive prices turn depends on the continued cooperation of the
conspirators, an the inability of other would- be competitors to enter the
market, and not incidentally on the conspirator; ability to escape antitrustliability
for their minimum price-fixing cartel. Each of these factors weighs more
heavily as the time needed to recoup losses grows. If the losses have been
substantial as would likely be necessary (475 US 593) in order to drive out the
competition- petitioners would most likely have to sustain their cartel for
years simply to break even." (emphasis supplied) In this context, one of
the submissions is that the price of Rs. 67,000 offered by these manufacturers
during the post- tender stage was not predatory and that the view taken by the
authorities that such an offer of lower price was predatory one confirming the
formation of a cartel, is also unwarranted. In Matsushita's case (supra) it was
observed that predatory pricing conspiracies are by nature speculative and that
the agreement to price below the competition level requires the conspirators to
forgo profits that free competition would offer them. It was also held therein
as under:
"To
survive a motion for a summary judgment, a plaintiff seeking damages for a
violation of S 1 of the Sherman Act must present evidence "that tends to
170 exclude the possibility" that the alleged conspirators acted
independently. Thus, respondents here must show that the inference of a
conspiracy is reasonable in light of the competing inferences of independent
action or collusive action that could not have harmed respondents.
(emphasis
supplied) Therefore mere offering of a lower price by itself, though appears to
be predatory, can not be a factor for inferring formation of a cartel unless an
agreement amounting to conspiracy is also proved.
In webster
Comprehensive Dictionary International Edition.
The
meaning of the word "Predatory" is given as under:
"predatory-1.
characterized by or under taken for plun- dering. 2. Addicted to pillaging: 3.
Constituted for living by preying upon others, as a beast or bird; raptorial. "
In A Dictionary of Modern Legal Usage by Bryan A. Garner, "predatory"
is defined thus:
"Predatory
preying on other animals. The word is applied figuratively in the phrase from
antitrust law, predatory pricing. The forms predaceous, predatorial, and predative
are needless variants. The spelling predacious has undergone differentiation
and means" devouring; rapacious." In collins English Dictionary,
"Predatory" is defined thus:
"predatory-
1. another word for predacious (sense 12. of, involving, or characterized by
plundering, robbing, etc.............
xxxx......................
In
Black's Law Dictionary, "Predatory intent" is defined asunder:
"Predatory
intent. "predatory intent," in purview of Robinson-patmen Act, means
that alleged price dis- 171 criminator must have at least sacrificed present
revenues for purpose of driving competitor out of market. with hope of
recouping losses through subsequent higher prices. International Air
Industries, Inc. v. American Excelsior Co., C.A.
Tex. 517 F. 2d 714, 723." In The
oxford English Dictionary Vol. VIII, "predatory" is defined
thus" "Predatory 1. Of, pertaining to, characterized by, or
consisting in plundering, pillaging, or robbery-xx - 2. Addicted to, or living
by, plunder; plundering, marauding, thieving, in modern use sometimes applied
to the criminal classes of great cities.- xx- 3. Destructive, consuming,
wasteful, deleterious,- xx 4. Of an animal; That preys upon other animals; that
is a beast, bird, or other creature of prey;
carnivorous.
Also, of its organs of capture, xx We have noticed that monopoly is the power
to control prices or exclude competition from any part of the trade or commerce
among the producers. The price fixation is one of the essential factors. In
American jurisprudence. 2d Volume 54, a passage at page 695 reads thus:
"The
Sherman Act does not out law price uniformity. An accidental or incidental
price uniformity or even pure conscious price parallelism, is not itself
unlawful. Moreover, a competitor's sole decision to follow price leadership- is
not a violation of 15 USC S 1.
On the
other hand, a price- fixing conspiracy does not necessarily involve an express
agreement, oral or written. It is sufficient that a concert of action is
contemplated and that the defendants conform to the arrangement. The fixing of
prices by one member of 172 a group pursuant to express delegation, acquiescence,
or under standing is just as illegal as the fixing of prices by direct joint
action. A price-fixing combination is illegal even though the prices are fixed
only by one member and without consultation with the others." (emphasisd
supplied) A mere offer of a lower price by itself does not manifest the
requisite intent to gain monopoly and in the absence of a specific agreement by
way of a concerted action suggesting conspiracy, the formation of a cartel
among the producers who offered such lower price can not readily be inferred.
In the
instant case, the fact that two of the three big manufacturers entered into
post-tender correspondence and also offered a lower price of Rs. 67,000 is not
dispute.
Though
they did not place the necessary material in support of their offer as to how
it is viable and workable, they, however, sought to contend before us that the
price offered by them is not predatory and is only a reasonable price. By our
earlier order dated 14th January, 1993 we directed the Tender Committee to
examine the matter afresh regarding the reasonable price on the basis of the
data that may be placed by these big manufacturers in support of their offer of
Rs.67,000. Therefore no conclusion can be reached definitely that offer of the
price of Rs. 67,000 by itself was predatory and the manufacturers who offered
such a price consequently formed a cartel.
Therefore,
whether in a given case, there was formation of a cartel by some of the
manufacturers which amounts to an unfair trade practice, depends upon the
available evidence and the surrounding circumstances. In the instant case,
initially the Tender Committee formed the opinion that the three big
manufacturers formed a cartel on the ground that the price initially quoted by
them was identical and was only a cartel price. This, in our view, was only a
suspicion which of course got strengthened by post-tender attitude of the said
manufacturers who quoted a much lesser price. As noticed above it can not
positively be concluded on the basis of these two circumstances alone. In the
past these three big manufacturers also offered their own quotations and they
were allotted quantities on the basis of the existing practice. However a mere
quotation of identical price and an offer of further reduction by themselves
would not entitle them automatically 173 to comer the entire market by way of
monopoly since the final allotment of quantities vested in the authorities who
in their discretion can distribute the same to all the manufacturers including
these three big manufacturers on certain basis. No doubt there was an
apprehension that if such predatory price has to be accepted the smaller
manufacturers will not be in a position to compete and may result in
elimination of free competition. But there again the authorities reserved a
right to reject such lower price.
Under
these circumstances though the attitude of these three big manufacturers gave
rise to a suspicion that they formed a cartel but there is not enough of
material to conclude that in fact there was such formation of a cartel.
However, such an opinion entertained by the concerned authorities including the
Minister was not malicious nor was actuated by any extraneous considerations.
They entertained a reasonable suspicion based on the record and other
surrounding circumstances and only acted in a bonafide manner in taking the
stand that the three big manufacturers formed a cartel.
S/Shri
Nariman, Venugopal and Shanti Bhushan, learned counsel appearing for M/s Mukand,
H.D.C. and Bharatiya respectively. contended that the Railways were bound to
follow the rules and standards pertaining to the tender system and on the basis
of these provisions and the course of conduct followed by the Railways in the
matter of fixation of price and allotment of quota in the past let the
manufacturers believe that the same course of conduct would be followed and the
manufacturers legitimately expected that they would be treated equally and in a
non-arbitrary manner and such legitimate expectation is a right guaranteed under
Article 14.
In
Food Corporation of India v. M/s Kamdhenu Cattle Feed
Industries JT (1992) 6 S.C. 259 Justice J.S. Verma Speaking for the Bench
observed as under:
"In
contractual sphere as in all other State actions, the State and all its
instrumentalities have to conform to Article 14 of the Constitution of which
non-arbitrari- ness is a significant facet. There is no unfettered discretion
in public law. A public authority possesses powers only to use them for public
good. This imposes 174 the duty to act fairly and to adopt a procedure which is
fairplay in action'. Due observance of this obligation as a part of good
administration raises a reasonable or legitimate expectation in every citizen
to be treated fairly in his interaction with the state and its
instrumentalities, with this element forming a necessary component of the
decision making process in all State actions.
To
satisfy this requirement of non- arbitrariness in a State action, it is
therefore, necessary to consider and give due weight to the reasonable or
legitimate expectations of the persons likely to be affected by the decision or
else that unfairness in the exercise of the power may amount to an abuse or
excess of power apart from affecting the bonafides of the decision in a given
case. The decision so made would be exposed to challenge on the ground of
arbitrariness. Rule of law does not completely eliminate discretion in the
exercise of power, as it is unrealistic, but provides for control of its
exercise by judicial review.
The
mere reasonable or legitimate expectation of a citizen, in such a situation,
may not by it self be a distinct enforceable right; but failure to consider and
give due weight to it may render the decision arbitrary and this is how the
requirement of due consideration of a legitimate expectation forms part of the
principle of non-arbitrariness, a necessary concomitant of the rule of law.
Every legitimate expectation is a relevant factor requiring due consideration
in a fair decision making process. Whether the expectation of the claimant is
reasonable or Legitimate in the context is a question of fact in each case.
Whenever the question arises, it is to be determined not according to the
claimant's perception but in larger public interest wherein other more important
considerations, may outweigh what would otherwise have been the legitimate
expectation of the claimant. A bonafide decision of the public authority
reached in this manner would 175 satisfy the requirement of non-arbitrariness
and withstand judicial scrutiny. The doctrine of legitimate expectation gets
assimilated in the rule of law and operates in. our legal system in this manner
and to this extent." (emphasis supplied) In Navjoti coo-Group Housing
Society etc. v. Union of India & Others (1992) 2 SCALE 548,justice G.N. Ray
speaking for the Bench observed as under:
"In
the aforesaid facts, the Group Housing Societies were entitled to legitimate
expectation of following consistent past practice in the matter of allotment,
even though they may not have any legal right in private law to receive such
treatment. The existence of legitimate expectation' may have a number of
different consequences and one of such consequences is that the authority ought
not to act to defeat the 'legitimate expectation without some overriding reason
of public policy to justify its doing so. In a case of 'legitimate expectation'
if the authority proposes to defeat a person's 'legitimate expectation' it
should afford him an opportunity to make representations in the matter. In this
connection reference may be made to the discussions on 'legitimate expectation'
it page 151 of volume 1(1) of Halsbury's Laws of England Fourth Edition (Re-
issue). We may also refer to a decision of the House of Lords in Council of
civil Service Union and others versus Minister for- Civil Service reported in
[1985] 3 All England Reporter page 935. It has been held in the said decision
that an aggrieved person was entitled to judicial review if he could show that
a decision of the public authority affected him of some benefit or advantage
which in the past he had been permitted to enjoy and which he legitimately
expected to be permitted to continue to enjoy either until he was given reasons
for withdrawal and the opportunity to comment on such reasons.
176 It
may be indicated here that the doctrine of 'legitimate expectation imposes in
essence a dun, on-public authority to act fairly, by taking into consideration
all relevant factors relating to such 'legitimate expectation'.
Within
the conspectus of fair dealing in case of 'legitimate expectation', the
reasonable opportunities to make representation by the parties likely to be
affected by any change of consistent passed policy, come in. We have not been
shown any compelling reasons taken into consideration by the Central Government
to make a departure from the existing policy of allotment with reference to
seniority in Registration by introducing a new guideline." (emphasis
supplied) Relying on these decisions, it was contended that the decision of the
Railways in fixing the price and in allotment of the quantities is arbitrary
and unreasonable affecting the right to such legitimate expectation.
To
appreciate these contentions, it becomes necessary to refer to some of the
rules governing these contracts and followed by the Railways, before we examine
the impact of the doctrine of 'legitimate expectation'. The Rules prescribed by
the Minister for Railways for entering into contracts lay down certain norms
and contains guidelines.
The
rules provide for constitution of Tender Committee and the Procedure to be
followed in the matter of inviting tenders. They also provide for negotiations
but lays down that selection of contracts by negotiations is an exception
rather than a rule and can be resorted to only under certain circumstances.
Regarding splitting of tendered quantity in more than one form, we find some
guidelines in Annexure 50 which reads as under:
"3.0.
Where warranted, the tendered quantity may be split and tender decided in favour
of one or more firms on merits of each case, in consultation with Associate
Finance and with the approval of the authority competent to accept the tender
having due regard to the following factors:- (i) Vital/Critical nature of the
items;
(ii)Quantity
to be procured;
(iii)Delivery
requirements;
(iv)Capacity
of the firms in the zone of consideration;
(v)
Past performance of firms.
xxxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx
5.0 Splitting
should not be done merely with a view to utilising developed capacity of the
different sources but should be for valid reasons to be recorded in writing for
splitting the tendered quantity." Annexure 213 contains the Railway Board
letter dated 19.4.90 addressed to General Managers, All Indian Railways and
others dealing with the subject of Non-acceptance of late/delayed/post/
Tender-offers. The relevant portion reads thus:
"2.
Instances have come to notice of the Board where on a strict application of the
above instructions even late Tenders submitted by Public Sector firms for
highly specialised equipments have been rejected.
3.The
matter, has therefore been reconsidered by the Board and it has been decided
that where late Tenders from established/reliable suppliers and conferring a
substantial financial advantage is to be considered, notwithstanding the general
ban, it will be open to the Railways to seek the Board's approval for the
consideration of such Tenders, since this should be a very exceptional
situation, such cases should be recommended for consideration of the Board with
the personal approval of the General Manager, duty concuffed in by the F.A.
& C.A.O.
4.The
Railways should not enter into any dialogue with the agency submitting a
delayed Tender without obtaining Board's prior clearance".
178
Now coming to the notice inviting tender in the instant case, we have already
noted that the price quoted is subject to price variation clause and the
Railways reserved a right to accept the lowest price or accept the whole or any
part of the tender of portion of the quantity offered. The notice however, mentioned
that the tenderer is at liberty to tender for the whole or any portion or to
state in the tender that the rate quoted shall apply only if the entire
quantity is taken from him. From these provisions it becomes clear that the tenderer
can not expect that his entire tender should be accepted in respect of the
quantity and that the Railways have a night to accept the tender as a whole or
a part of it or portion of the quantity offered.
It is
not in dispute that in the past also there were many instances where the
Railways as per the procedure followed, arrived at decisions in respect of both
price and quantity for good and justifiable reasons. In the year 1991 the
quantities of M/s H.D.C. and Bharatiya were in fact reduce from the allocations
made by the Tender Committee which made its recommendations on the basis of
certain data. It has to be noted that the Tender Committee is not a statutory
authority and its proposals are recommendatory in nature and have to be
considered in the distribution procedure culminating in the decision of the
approving authority who as a matter of fact, also can take decisions in respect
of price and allotment of quantities taking into consideration various other
aspects from the point of view of public interest. Therefore it is evident that
there is no legally fixed procedure regarding fixation of price and
particularly regarding allotment giving scope to a legitimate expectation.
However, with this facture background, we shall consider the contention
regarding 'legitimate expectation'.
In Halsbury's
Laws of England, Fourth Edition, Volume 1(1) 151 a passage explaining the scope
of "legitimate expectations" runs thus:
"81.
Legitimate expectations. A person may have a legitimate expectation of being
treated in a certain way by an administrative authority even though he has no
legal right in private law to receive such treatment. The expectation may arise
either from a representation or promise made by the authority, including an
implied representation, or from consistent past prac- tice.
179
The existence of a legitimate expectation may have a number of different
consequences'; it may give locus standi to seek leave to apply for `judicial
review; it may mean that the authority ought not to act so as to defeat the
expectation without some overriding reason of public policy to justify its
doing so; or it may mean that, if the authority proposes to defeat a person's
legitimate expectations, it must afford him an opportunity to make
representation on the matter. The courts also distinguish, for example in
licensing cases, between original applications, to renew and revocations; a
party who has been granted a licence may have legitimate expectation that it
will be renewed unless there is some good reason not to do so, and may therefore
be entitled to greater procedural protection than a mere applicant for a
grant." (emphasis supplied) We find that the concept of legitimate
expectation first stepped into the English Law in Schmidt v. Secretary, of
State for Home Affairs (1969) 2 Ch. 149 wherein it was observed that an alien
who had been given leave' to enter the United Kingdom for a limited period had
a legitimate expectation of being allowed to stay for the permitted time and if
that permission was revoked before the time expires, that alien ought to be
given an opportunity of making representations.
Thereafter
the concept has been Considered in a number of cases. In A.G. of Hong Kong v.
Ng Yeun shiu, [1983] 2 A.C. 629 Lord Fraser said that "the principle that
public authority is bound by its undertakings as to the procedure it will
follow, provided they do not conflict with its duty, is applicable to the
undertaking given by the government of Hong Kong to the respondent.........
that each case- would be considered on its merits." In Council of Civil
Service Unions and others v. Minister for the Civil Service (1984) Vol. 3 All
E.R. 359, a question arose whether the decision of the Minister withdrawing the
right to trade union member- 180 ship without consulting the staff which
according to the appellant was his legitimate expectation arising from the
existence of a regular practice of consultation was valid.
It was
contended that the Minister had a duty to consult the staff as per the existing
practice and that though the employee did not have a legal right, he had a
legitimate expectation that the existing practice would be followed.
On
behalf of the Minister on the basis of the evidence produced, it was contended
that the decision not to consult was taken for reasons of national security.
The Court held as under:
"An
aggrieved person was entitled to invoke judicial review if he showed that a
decision of a public authority affected him by depriving him of some benefit or
advantage which in the past he had been permitted to enjoy and which he could
legitimately expect to be permitted to continue to enjoy either until he was
given reasons for its withdrawal and the opportunity to comment on those
reasons or because he had received an assurance that it would not be withdrawn
before he had been given the opportunity of making representations against the
withdrawal.
The
appellants legitimate expectation arising from the existence of a regular
practice of consultation appellants could reasonably expect to continue gave
rise to an implied limitation on the Minister's exercise of the power contained
in Art. 4 of the 1982 order, namely an obligation to act fairly by consulting
the GCHQ staff before withdrawing the benefit of trade union membership.
xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx Once the Minister produced evidence that her decision not to
consult the staff before withdrawing the right to trade union membership was
taken for reasons, of national security, that overrode any right to judicial
review which the appellants had arising out of the denial of their legitimate
expectation of consultation. The appeal would therefore be dismissed.
xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx 181 Administrative action is subject to control by judicial
review under three heads: (1) illegality where the decision making authority
has been guilty of an error of law, e g by purporting to exercise a power it
does not possess; (2) irrationality where the decision-making authority has
acted so unreasonably that no reasonable authority, would have made the
decision, (3) procedural impropriety, where the decision making authority has
failed in its duty to act fairly.
(emphasis
supplied) Therefore the claim based on the principle of legitimate expectation
can be sustained and the decision resulting in denial of such expectation can
be questioned provided the same is found to be unfair, unreasonable, arbitrary
and violative of principles of natural justice. (vide Food Corporation of India's case and Navjyoti Coo-Group
Housing Society's case (supra).
The
learned counsel for these three big manufacturers, however, relied on various decision
in Amarjit Singh Ahluwalia v. The State of Punjab & Ors. [1975] 3 SCR 82, Ramana Dayaram Shetty's case and Peerless
General Finance and Investment Co. Limited's case (supra) and contended that
failure to follow the existing procedure resulting in denial of a right
directly arising out of legitimate expectation is per se arbitrary and
unreasonable and therefore illegal and consequently violative of Article 14 of
the constitution.
Of
late the doctrine of legitimate expectation is being pressed into service in
many cases particularly in contractual sphere while canvassing the implications
underlying the administrative law. Since we have not come across any
pronouncement. of this court on this subject explaining the meaning and scope
of the doctrine of legitimate expectation, we would like to examine the same a
little more elaborately at this stage. Who is the expectant and what is the
nature of the expectation? When does such an expectation become a legitimate
one and what is the foundation for the same? What are the duties of the
administrative authorities while taking a decision in cases attracting the
doctrine of legitimate expectation.
Time
is a three-fold present: the present as we experience it, the 182 past as a
present memory and future as a present expectation. For legal purposes, the
expectation can not be the same as anticipation. It is different from a wish, a
desire or a hope nor can it amount to a claim or demand on the ground of a
right. However earnest and sincere a wish, a desire or a hope may be and
however confidently one may look to them to be fulfilled, they by themselves
can not amount to an assertable expectation and a mere disappointment does not
attract legal consequences. A pious hope even leading to a moral obligation can
not amount to a legitimate expectation. The legitimacy of an expectation can be
inferred only if it is founded on the sanction of law or custom or an
established procedure followed in regular and natural sequence. Again it is
distinguishable from a genuine expectation. Such expectation should be
justifiably legitimate and protectable. Every such legitimate expectation does
not by itself fructify into a right and therefore it does not amount to a right
in the conventional sense.
It has
to be noticed that the concept of legitimate expectation in administrative law
has now, undoubtedly, gained sufficient importance. It is stated that
"Legitimate expectation" is the latest recruit to a long list of
concepts fashioned by the courts for the review of administrative action and
this creation takes its place beside such principles as the rules of natural
justice, unreasonableness, the fiduciary duty of local authorities and "in
future, perhaps, the principle of proportionality." A passage in
Administrative Law, Sixth edition by H.W.R. Wade page 424 reads thus:
"These
are revealing decisions. They show that the courts now expect government
departments to honour their published statements or else to treat the citizen
with the fullest personal consideration. Unfairness in the form of
unreasonableness here comes close to unfairness in the form of violation of
natural justice, and the doctrine of legitimate expectation can operate in both
contexts. It is obvious, furthermore, that this principle of substantive, as
opposed to procedural, fairness may undermine some of the established rules
about estoppel and misleading advice, which tend to operate unfairly. Lord Scarman
has stated emphatically that unfairness in the purported exercise of a power
can amount to an abuse or excess of power, and this seems likely to develop
into an important general doctrine." Another passage at page 522 in the
above book reads thus:
"It
was in fact for the purpose of restricting the right to be heard that legitimate
expectation was introduced into the law. It made its first appearance in a case
where alien students of 'scientology were refused extension of their entry
permits as an act of policy by the Home Secretary, who had announced that no
discretionary benefits would be granted to this Sect, The Court of Appeal held
that they had no legitimate expectation of extension beyond the permitted time,
and so no right to a hearing, though revocation of their permits within that
time would have been contrary to legitimate expectation. Official statements of
policy, therefore, may cancel legitimate expectation, just as they may create
it, as seen above. In a different context, where car-hire drivers had
habitually offended against airport bye-laws, with many convictions and unpaid
fines, it was held that they had no legitimate expectation of being heard
before being banned by the airport authority.
There
is some ambiguity in the dicta about legitimate expectation, which may mean
either expectation of a fair hearing or expectation of the licence or other
benefit which is being sought. But the result is the same in either case;
absence of legitimate expectation will absolve the public authority from
affording a hearing.
(emphasis
supplied) In some cases a question arose whether the concept of legitimate
expectation is an impact only on the procedure or whether it also can have a
substantive impact and if so to what extent. Att. Gen. For New South Wales v. Quin
(1990) Vol. 64 Australian Law Journal Reports 327 is a case from Australia in which this aspect is dealt with.
In that case the Local Courts Act abolished Courts of Petty Sessions and 184
replaced them by Local Courts. Section 12 of the Act empowered the Governor to
appoint any qualified person to be a magistrate in the new Courts System, Mr. Quin,
who had been a Stipendiary Magistrate in charge of a Court of petty Sessions
under the old system, applied for, but was refused, an appointment under the
new system. That was challenged.
The
challenge was upheld by the appellate court on the ground that the selection
committee had taken into account an adverse report on him without giving a
notice to him of the contents of the same. In the appeal by the Attorney
General against that order before the High Court it was argued on behalf of Mr.
Quin that he had a legitimate expectation that he would be treated in the same
way as his former colleagues considering his application on its own merits.
Coming to the nature of the substantive impact of the doctrine, Brennan, J.
observed that the doctrine of legitimate expectations ought not to "
unlock the gate which shuts the court out of review on the merits," and
that the Courts should not trespass "into the forbidden field of the
merits" by striking down administrative acts or decisions which failed to
fulfill the expectations. In the same case Mason, C.J. was of the view that if
substantive protection is to be accorded to legitimate expectations that would
encounter the objection of entailing "curial interference with administrative
decisions on the merits by precluding the decision-maker from ultimately making
the decision which he or she considers most appropriate in the
circumstances." In R v. Secretary of State for the Home Department. ex parte
Ruddock and others [1987] 2 All E R 518, Taylor, J. after referring to the
ratio laid down in some of the above cases held thus:
"On
these authorities I conclude that the doctrine of legitimate expectation in
essence imposes a duty to act fairly. Whilst most of the cases are concerned,
as Lord Roskill said, with a right to be heard, I do not think the doctrine is
so confined. Indeed, in a case where ex hypothesis there is no right to be
heard, it may be thought the more important to fair dealing that a promise or
undertaking given by a minister as to how he will proceed should be kept. Of
course such promise or undertaking must not conflict with his statutory duty,
or her duty as here, in the exercise of a preroga- 185 tive power. I accept the
submission of counsel for the Secretary of State that the respondent cannot
fetter his discretion. By declaring a policy he does not preclude any possible
need to change it. But then if the practice has been to publish the current
policy, it would be incumbent on him in dealing fairly to publish the new policy,
unless again that would conflict with his duties. Had the criteria here needed
changing for national security reasons, no doubt the respondent could have
changed them. Had those reasons prevented him also from publishing the new
criteria, no doubt he could have refrained from doing so. Had he even decided
to keep the criteria but depart from them in this single case for national
security reasons, no doubt those reasons would have afforded him a defence to
judicial review as in the GCHQ case." (emphasis supplied) In Breen v.
Amalgamated Engineering Union and Others [1971] 2 Law Reports Queen Bench
Division 175, Lord Denning observed as under:
"if
a man seeks a privilege to which he has no particular claim such as an
appointment to some post or other-then he can be turned away without a word. He
need not be heard. No explanation need be given; see the cases cited in Schmidt
v. Secretary of State for Home Affairs (1969) 2 Ch. 149, 170-171. But if he is a man whose property is at stake, or who is
being deprived of his livelihood, then reasons should be given why he is being
turned down, and he should be given a chance to be heard.
I go
further If he is a man who has some right or interest, or some legitimate
expectation, of which it would not be fair to deprive him without a hearing, or
reasons given, then these should he afforded hint, according as the case may
demand".
(emphasis
supplied) At this stage it is necessary to consider the scope of judicial
review when a challenge is made on the basis of the doctrine of legitimate 186 expectation.
In Findlay v. Secretary of State for the Home
Department, 19841 3 All E R 801 it was observed as under:
"The
doctrine of legitimate expectation has an important place in the developing law
of judicial review. It is, however, not necessary to explore the doctrine in
this case, it is enough merely to note that a legitimate expectation can
provide a sufficient interest to enable one who cannot point to the existence
of a substantive right to obtain the leave of the court to apply for judicial
review. These two applicants obtained leave. But their submission goes further.
It is said that the refusal to accept them from the new policy was an unlawful
act on the part of the Secretary of State in that his decision frustrated their
expectation. But what was their legitimate expectation? Given the substance and
purpose of the legislative provisions governing parole, the most that a
convicted prisoner can legitimately expect is that his case will he examined
individually in the light of whatever policy the State sees fit to adopt,
provided always that the adopted policy is a lawful exercise of the discretion
conferred on him by the statute. Any other view would entail the conclusion
that the unfettered discretion conferred by the Statute on the minister can in
some cases be restricted so as to hamper, or even prevent. changes of policy.
Bearing in mind the complexity of the issues which the Secretary of State has
to consider and th e importance of the public interest in the administration of
parole, I cannot think that Parliament intended the desecration to be
restricted in this way." In Council of Civil Service Unions case Lord Diplock
observed thus:
"To
qualify as a subject for judicial review the decision must have consequences
which affect some person (or body of persons ) other than the decisions,
although it may affect him too. It must affect such other person either (a) by
altering rights or 187 obligations of that person which are enforceable by or
against him in private law or (b) by depriving him of some benefit or advantage
which either (i) he has in the past been permitted by the decision-maker to
enjoy and which he can legitimately expect to be permitted to continue to do
until there has been communicated to him some rational ground for withdrawing
it on which he has been given an opportunity to comment or (ii) lie has
received assurance from the decision-maker will not be withdrawn without giving
him first an opportunity of advancing reasons for contending that they should
not be withdrawn.
(1)
prefer to continue to call the kind of expectation that qualifies a decision
for inclusion in class (b) a 'legitimate expectation' rather than a 'reasonable
expectation in order thereby to indicate that it has consequences to which
effect will be given in public law, whereas an expectation or hope that some
benefit or advantage would continue to he enjoyed, although it might well be
entertained by a 'reasonable' man, would not necessarily have such
consequences." In Attorney General for New South Wales case it is observed as under:
"Some
advocates of judicial intervention would encourage the courts to expand the
scope and purpose of judicial review, especially to provide some check on the
Executive Government which nowadays exercises enormous powers beyond the
capacity of the parliament to supervise effectively. Such advocacy is
misplaced. If the courts were to assume a jurisdiction to review administrative
acts or decisions which are "unfair" in the opinion of the court not
to product of procedural fairness, but unfair on the merits- the courts would
be assuming a jurisdiction to do the very thing which is to be done by the
repository of an administrative power, namely, choosing among the courses of
action upon which reasonable minds might differ.
188 xxxxxx
xxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxx If judicial review were to trespass on the
merits of the exercise of administrative power, it would put its own legitimacy
at risk. The risk must be acknowledged for a reason which Frankfurter J. stated
in Trop v. Dulles [ 1958] 356 US 86 at 119:
All
power is .in Madison's phrase of an encroaching
nature.......... Judicial power is not immune against this human weakness. It
also must he on guard against encroaching beyond its proper bounds and not he
less so since the only restraint upon it is sell- restraint.
If the
courts were to postulate rules ostensibly related to limitations on
administrative power but in reality calculated to open to the gate into the
forbidden field of the merits of its exercise, the function of the courts would
be exceeded of R v. Nat Bell Liquors Ltd. [1992] 2 A C 128 at 156. If the
courts were to define the destine of legitimate expectations as something less
than a legal right and were to protect what would be thus defined by striking
down administrative acts or decisions which failed to fulfil the expectations,
the courts would be truncating the power which are naturally apt to affect
those expectations. 7o strike down the exercise of administrative power solely
on the ground of avoiding the disappointment of the legitimate expectations of
an individual would be to set the courts adript on a featureless sea of
pragmatism.
Moreover
the notion of a legitimate expectation (falling short o a legal right) is too
nebulous to form a basis for invalidating the exercise of a power when its
exercise otherwise accords with law. The authority of the courts and their
salutary capacity judicially to review the exercise of' administrative power
depend in the last analysis on their fidelity to the rule of law, exhibited by
the articulation of general principles.
189 To
lie within the limits of judicial power the nation of "legitimate expectation
" must be restricted to the illumination of what is the legal limitation
on the exercise of administrative power tit a particular case. of course, if a
legitimate expectation were to amount to a legal right, the court would define
the respective limits of the right and any power which might be exercised to
infringe it so as to accommodate in part both the right and the power or so as
to accord to one priority over the other (That is a common place of cruial
declarations.) but a power which might be so exercised as to affect a
legitimate expectation falling short of a legal right cannot be truncated to
accommodate the expectation.
So
long as the notion of legitimate expectation is seen merely as indicating
"the factors and kinds of factors which are relevant to any consideration
of what are the things which must be done or afforded" to accord procedural
fairness to an applicant for the exercise of an administrative power (see per
Mahoney IA in Macrae, at 285), the notion can, with one important proviso, be
useful.
If.
but only if, the power is so created that the according of natural justice conditions
its exercise, the notion of legitimate expec- tation may useful focus attention
on the content of natural justice in a particular case; that is, on what must
be done to give procedural fairness to a person whose interests might he
affected by an exercise of the power. But if the according of natural justice
does not condition the exercise of the power, the notion of legitimate
expectation can have no role to play. If it were otherwise, the notion would
become a stalking horse for excesses of judicial review." (emphasis
supplied) In this very case, Brennan J. after referring to Schmidt's case
(supra) observed thus:
190
"Again, when a court is decidsing what must be done in order to accord
procedural fairness in a particular case it has regard to precisely the same
circumstances as those to which the court might refer in considering whether
the applicant entertains a legitimate expectation, but the inquiry whether the,
applicant entertains a legitimate expectation is superfluous. Again if an
express promise be given or a regular practice be adopted by a public
authority, and the promise or practice is the source of a legitimate
expectation, the repository is bound to have regard to the promise or practice
in exercising the power, and it is unnecessary to inquire whether those factors
give rise to a legitimate expectation.
But
the Court must stop short of compelling fulfillment of the promise or practice
unless the statute so requires or the statute permits the repostitory of the
power to hind itself as to the manner of the future exercise of the power. It
follows that the notion of legitimate expectation is not the key which unlocks
the treasury of natural justice and it ought not unlock the gate which shuts
the court out of review on the merits. The notion of legitimate expectation
wits introduced at a time when the courts were developing the common law to
suit modern conditions and were sweeping away the unnecessary archaisms of the
prerogative writs, but it should not be used to subvert the principled
justification I-or curial intervention in the exercise of administrative
power." (emphasis supplied) In the same case, Dawsom. J. observed thus:
"It
also follows that the required procedure may very according to the dictates of
fairness in the particular case.
Thus,
in order to succeed. the respondent must be able to point to something in the
circumstances of the case which would make it unfair not to extend to him 191
the procedure which he seeks. There is no doubt that the respondent had a
legitimate expectation of continuing in his position as a stipendiary
magistrate such that it should, apart from statute, have been unfair to remove
him from that position without according him a hearing. If the principle of
judicial independence expended to a stipendiary magistrate, then, no doubt,
that would have strengthened his expectation. But the respondent was not
removed from his position of stipendiary magistrate by administrative decision.
He was removed by a statute which abolished the position of stipendiary
magistrate and established the new position of magistrate. Not only that, the
statute, the Local Courts Act. clearly contemplated that not all the former
stipendiary magistrates would be appointed as magistrates pursuant to its
terms. Accordingly it made provision for those who where not so appointed. It
may be possible to deprecate the manner in which the statute removed the
respondent from office, but it is not possible to deny its effect.
Any
unfairness was the product of the legislation which conferred no right upon the
respondent to a procedure other than that which it laid down." (emphasis
supplied) On examination of some of these important decisions it is generally
agreed that legitimate expectation gives the applicant sufficient locus standi
for judicial review and that the doctrine of legitimate expectation is to be
confined mostly to right of a fair hearing before a decision which results in negativing
a promise or withdrawing an undertaking is taken. The doctrine does not give
scope to claim relief straightaway from the administrative authorities as no crystallised
right as such is involved.
The
protection of such legitimate expectation does not require the fulfillment of
the expectation where an overriding public interest requires otherwise. In
other words where a person's legitimate expectation is not fulfilled by taking
a particular then decision-maker should justify the denial of such expectation
by showing some overriding public interest. Therefore even if substantive
protection of such expectation is contemplated that does not grant 192 an
absolute right to a particular person. It simply ensures the circumstances in
which that expectation may be denied or restricted. A case of legitimate
expectation would arise when a body by representation or by past practice
aroused expectation which it would be within its powers to fulfill.
The
protection is limited to that extent and a judicial review can be within those
limits. But as discussed above a person who bases his claim on the doctrine of
legitimate expectation, in the first instance, must satisfy that there is a
foundation and thus has locus standi to make such a claim. In considering the
same several factors which give rise to such legitimate expectation must be
present. The decision taken by the authority must be found to be arbitrary,
unreasonable and not taken in public interest.
If it
is a question of policy, even by way of change of old policy, the courts cannot
interfere with a decision. In a given case whether there are such facts and circumstances
giving rise to a legitimate expectation, it would primarily be a question of
fact. If these tests are satisfied and if the court is satisfied that a case of
legitimate expectation is made out then the next question Would be whether
failure to give an opportunity of hearing before the decision affect such
legitimate expectation is taken has resulted in failure of' justice and whether
on that ground the decision should he quashed. If that be so then what should
be the relief is again a matter which depends on several factors.
We
find in Attorney General for New South wales'
case that the entire case law on the doctrine of legitimate expectation has
been considered. We also find that on an elaborate an erudite discussion it is
held that the courts' jurisdiction to interfere is very much limited and much
less in granting any relief in a claim based purely on the ground of
'legitimate expectation'. In Public Law and Politics edited by Carol Harlow, we
find an article by Gabriele Ganz in which the learned author after examining
the views expressed in the cases decided by eminent judges to whom we have
referred to above, concluded thus:
"The
confusion and uncertainty at the heart of the concept stems from its origin. It
has grown from two separate roots, natural justice or fairness and estoppel.,
but the stems have become entwined to such an extent that it is impossible to
disentangle them. This makes it that it is very difficult to predict how the
hybrid will 193 develop in future. This could be regarded as giving the concept
a healthy flexibility, for the intention behind it is being it has been
fashioned to protect the individual against administrative action which is
against his interest. On the other hand, the uncertainty of the concept has led
to conflicting decisions and conflicting interpretations in the same
decision." However, it is generally accepted and also clear that
legitimate expectation beings less than right operate in the field of public
and not private law and that to some extent such legitimate expectation ought
to be protected though not guaranteed.
Legitimate
expectations may come in various forms and owe their existence to different
kind of circumstances and it is not possible to give an exhaustive list in the
context of vast and fast expansion of the governmental activities.
They
shift and change so fast that the start of our list would be obsolete before we
reached the middle. By and large they arise in cases of promotions which are in
normal course expected, though not guaranteed by way of a statutory right, in
cases of contracts, distribution of largest by the Government and in somewhat
similar situations. For instance in cases of discretionary grant of licences,
permits or the like, carries with it a reasonable expectation, though not a
legal right to renewal or non-revocation, but to summarily disappoint that
expectation may be seen as unfair without the expectant person being heard. But
there again the court has to see whether it was done as a policy or in the
public interest either by way of G.O., rule or by way of a legislation. If that
be so. a decision denying a legitimate expectation based on such (,rounds does
not qualify for interference unless in a given case, the decision or action
taken amounts to an abuse of power. Therefore the limitation is extremely
confined and if the according of natural justice does not condition the
exercise of the power, the concept of legitimate expectation can have no role
to play and the court must not usurp the discretion of the public authority
which is empowered to take the decisions under law and the court is expected to
apply and objective standard which leaves to the decising authority the full
range of choice which the legislature is presumed to have intended. Even in a
case where the decision is left entirely to the discretion of the deciding
authority without any such legal bounds and if the decision is 194 .
taken
fairly and objectively, the court will not interfere on the ground of
procedural fairness to a person whose interest based on legitimate expectation
might be affected.
For
instance if an authority who has full discretion to grant a licence and if he
prefers an existing licence holder to a new applicant, the decision can not be
interfered with on the ground of legitimate expectation entertained by the new
applicant applying the principles of natural justice.
It can
therefore be seen that legitimate expectation can at the most be one of the
grounds which may give rise to judicial review but the granting of relief is
very much limited. It would thus appear that there are stronger reasons as to
why the legitimate expectation should not be substantively protected than the
reasons as to why it should be protected. In other words such a legal
obligation exists whenever the case supporting the same in terms of legal
principles of different sorts, is stronger than the case against it. As
observed in Attornry General for New South Wales' case "To strike down the
exercise of administrative power solely on the ground of avoiding the disappointment
of the legitimate expectations of an individual would be to set the courts
adrift on a featureless sea of pragmatism.
Moreover,
the notion of a legitimate expectation (falling short of a legal right) is too
nebulous to form a basis for invalidating the exercise of power when its
exercise otherwise accords with law." If a denial of legitimate
expectation in a given case amounts to denial of right guaranteed or is
arbitrary, discriminatory unfair or based, gross abuse of power or violation of
principles of natural justice, the same can be questioned on the well-known
grounds attracting Article 14 but a claim biased on mere legitimate expectation
without anything more cannot ipso facto give a right to invoke these
principles. It can be one of the ground to consider but the court must lift the
veil and see whether the decision is violative of these principles warranting
interference. It depends very much on the facts and the recognised general
principles of administrative law applicable to such facts and the concept of
legitimate expectation which is the latest recruit to a long list of concepts
fashioned by the courts for the review of administrative action, must be
restricted to the general legal limitations applicable and binding the manner
of the future exercise of administrative power in a particular case. It follows
that the concept of legitimate expectation is "not the key which unlocks
the treasury of natural justice and it ought not to unlock the gates which
shuts the court out of review on the merits," particularly when the
element of speculation and uncertainty is inherent in that very concept. As
cautioned in Attorney General for 195 New South Wales' case the courts should restrain themselves and restrict
such claims duty to the legal limitations. It is a well-meant caution. Otherwise
a resourceful litigant having vested interests in contracts. licences etc,. can
successfully indulge in getting welfare activities mandated by directive
principles thwarted to further his own interests. The caution, particularly in
the changing scenario, becomes all the more important.
In
view of our conclusions in respect of the quantities allotted and the price
fixed it may not be necessary for us to enter into further discussion on this
aspect. We have already directed 0that the Tender Committee should consider
afresh as to what should be the reasonable price and to that extent the price
of Rs. 67,000 fixed in respect of smaller manufacturers is set aside and
directed to be revised. So far these three big manufacturers are concerned, we
held that on their own commitment they are bound to supply at the rate of Rs.
67,000 per bogie. So far the quantities are concerned, we held that these three
big manufacturers should be allotted the quantities as per the recommendations
of the Tender Committee. However, we considered this aspect to some extent only
to show that the decision in respect of price fixation as well as allotment of
quantities even though to some extent at variation with the procedure followed
during the previous years, was not based on any irrelevant consideration. The
Railways particularly the Financial Commissioner as well as the Minister and
initially the Tender Committee formed an opinion that these three big
manufacturers formed a cartel and also quoted and unworkable predatory price at
the post-tender stage. Therefore from the point of view of preventing monopoly
in the public interest the decision in question was taken in a bonafide manner.
However, on a factual basis we held that the alleged formation of cartel was
only in the realm of suspicion and in that view the decision was modified, as
already indicated. However, we make it clear that the said modifications by way
of judicial review is not on the ground of legitimate expectation and violative
of principles of natural justice but on the other ground namely the decision of
the authorities was based on wrong assumption of formation of a cartel.
The
next submission is that the decision taken by the Railways resulting in
reduction of the quantities and making a counter-offer of Rs. 65,000 to these
three big manufacturers is punitive in nature 196 visiting with civil
consequences and such a decision taken without giving an opportunity to these
manufacturers is violative of principles of natural justice. In view of our
above mentioned conclusions resulting in modification of the decision of the
authorities both in respect of price fixation and in allotment of quantities,
there is no necessity to consider this aspect again in detail.
It was
next contended that the consideration that some manufacturers are small and
others are BIFR companies taken into account by the approving authority for
deviating from the age-old practice in allocation of quantities is irrelevant
and discriminatory and therefore the decision is bad. It may be mentioned that
status of a manufacturers being a BIFR company or a small manufacturers was not
taken into account so far as the fixation of the price is concerned and these
considerations were deemed relevant only for the purpose of allocation of
quantities. The stand taken by the Railways is that smaller manufacturers
should survive from the point of view of arresting monopolistic tendencies and
from the point of view of public interest. The Tender Committee proceedings
would indicate that on the basis of certain formulae namely the past
performance, capacity etc.
the
allotment was being made. Therefore these can not be said to be irrelevant
considerations and as a matter of fact they had been duly given effect to and weightage
was given accordingly in respect of allotment of quantities to various
manufacturers within the four corners of the limited tender.
The
learned counsel, however, contended that the allotment of the quantities to the
smaller manufacturers also is not based on any acceptable principle and that
some of them are given larger quantities without any justification rendering
the decision bad because of arbitrariness. The proceedings mentioned above
particularly the nothings of the Financial commissioner as well as the
competent authority would show that some of the smaller manufacturers namely
M/s Himmat, Texmaco and Sri Ranga were BIFR companies. As no price preferential
treatment was given to any one of them. the approving authority considered that
enhancement in allocation of quantities was necessary. Likewise M/s. Cimmco and
Texmaco who are wagon builders and whose business in entirely with the Railways
were also given some weightage. We can not say that these are irrelevant
considerations for 197 the purpose of arriving at a decision. In the past also
there were such variations based on these circumstances. In any event for
different reasons we have varied this decision and directed that the three big
manufacturers should be given allotment as per the recommendations of the
Tender Committee. In our earlier order we have noticed that there has been some
departure in respect of one or two smaller manufacturers in allotting the
quantities. We have already indicated that the Railways authorities should in
future make a proper consideration of the relevant factors in respect of each tenderer
in an objective manner in allotting the quantities.
Now
coming to the question of dual pricing, the submission is that in respect of
same set of manufacturers, some of them can not be made to supply at a lower
price and the others namely smaller manufacturers can not be given advantage to
supply at a higher price and such dual pricing is unreasonable and arbitrary.
As already noted, the Tender Committee worked out an upgraded price and taking
into other relevant factors like cost of the material etc. into consideration
and applying the formula as was being done in the past and particularly taking
into consideration the two concessions in respect of custom and freight fixed
Rs.76,000 as the reasonable price. This was very close to the price quoted by
the three big manufacturers. But at a post- tender stage, they entered into
correspondence offering a lower price and ultimately the three big
manufacturers committed themselves to supply at the rate of Rs. 67,000 per
bogie. In our earlier order we indicated that these big manufacturers formed a
different category namely that they may be in a position to supply at that rate
as is evident from their own commitment but to apply the same price which is
much lower than the reasonable and workable price fixed by the Tender Committee
to other smaller manufacturers would again result in ending the competition
between the big and the small which ultimately would result in monopoly of the
market by the three big manufacturers. That is a very important consideration
from the point of view of public interest. However, as already mentioned we
directed the 'render Committee to consider the matter afresh an even if it
results in dual pricing, it would not be had in the circumstances mentioned
above.
198
These are all the reasons in support of our conclusions given in our order
dated 14th January,
1993.
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