Legal Document View

Unlock Advanced Research with PRISMAI

- Know your Kanoon - Doc Gen Hub - Counter Argument - Case Predict AI - Talk with IK Doc - ...
Upgrade to Premium
[Cites 4, Cited by 10]

Supreme Court of India

Kundur Rudrappa vs The Mysore Revenue Appellate Tribunal & ... on 31 July, 1975

Equivalent citations: 1975 AIR 1807, 1975 SCC (2) 590, AIR 1975 SUPREME COURT 1805, 1975 2 SCC 411, 1976 (1) SCR 188, 1976 (1) SCWR 121, ILR 1975 KANT 1814

Author: N.L. Untwalia

Bench: N.L. Untwalia, P.K. Goswami, A. Alagiriswami, Syed Murtaza Fazalali

           PETITIONER:
KUNDUR RUDRAPPA

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE MYSORE REVENUE APPELLATE TRIBUNAL & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT31/07/1975

BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
GOSWAMI, P.K.
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
GOSWAMI, P.K.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA

CITATION:
 1975 AIR 1807		  1975 SCC  (2) 590
 CITATOR INFO :
 F	    1976 SC 734	 (2)


ACT:
     Motor Vehicles  Act, 1939, s. 64 order granting permit-
Issue of permit in pursuance of the order-If appealable.



HEADNOTE:
     The appellant  was granted	 a stage  carriage permit by
the Regional  Transport	 Authority  in	May,  1963.  Appeals
against the  grant to the State Transport Appellate Tribunal
and further appeals to the Mysore Revenue Appellate Tribunal
were dismissed. Thereafter, in April, 1967, the Secretary of
the Regional  Transport Authority  after  calling  upon	 the
appellant to  produce the  relevant  documents,	 issued	 the
permit. Appeals	 by the	 respondents of	 the State Transport
Appellate Tribunal  against the	 issue of  the permit to the
appellant were	allowed on  the ground	of  limitation.	 The
appeal of  the appellant  to the  Revenue Appellate Tribunal
was dismissed.	The appellant's	 writ petition	to the	High
Court was also dismissed.
     Allowing the appeal to this Court,
^
     HELD: There  was a	  clear error of jurisdiction on the
part of	 the State  Transport  Appellate  Tribunal  and	 the
Revenue Appellate  Tribunal in interfering with the issue of
permit to  the appellant. The High Court was, therefore, not
right in dismissing the writ application. [190D-E]
     Appeal is	a creature of the statute. Section 64 of the
Motor Vehicles	Act, 1939,  is	the  only  section  creating
rights of  appeal against  the grant  of  permit  and  other
matters. But  there is	no appeal  provided against an order
issuing a  permit in  pursuance of  an	order  granting	 the
permit. Issuance  of the  permit is  only a  ministerial act
necessarily following  the grant  of the  permit. Hence, the
appeal to  the State  Transport Appellate  Tribunal and	 the
further appeal are not competent under the section. [190B-D]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 481 of 1973.

From the Judgment and order dated the 9th February 1973 of the Mysore High Court at Bangalore in W.P. No. 1922 of 1970.

H. B. Datar and K. N. Bhat, for the appellant. S. S. Javali and B. P. Singh, for the respondents Nos. 1, 3-13 The Judgment of the Court was delivered by GOSWAMI, J. This appeal by special leave is directed against the judgment of the Mysore High Court (now High Court of Karnataka) of February 9" 1973, rejecting the appellant's writ petition under article 226 of the Constitution by which the orders of the State Transport Appellate Tribunal and the Mysore Revenue Appellate Tribunal had been challenged.

189

Briefly the facts are as follows :-

The appellant was granted a stage carriage permit under section 48 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (briefly the Act) for the route Devenagere to Shimoga via Honnali by the Regional Transport Authority, Shimoga, by its order dated May 3/4, 1963. Some of the respondents preferred appeals against the said order to the State Transport Appellate Tribunal and obtained stay of the order The appeals were, however, dismissed on September 27, 1963. Again, some of the respondents preferred further appeals to the Mysore Revenue Appellate Tribunal against the order of the State Transport Appellate Tribunal. This time also the appeals met with the same fate and were dismissed on February 27, 1967. It appears, however, that c no order of stay was granted by the Mysore Revenue Appellate Tribunal.
On April 25, 1967, the Secretary to the Regional Transport Authority, Shimoga, called upon the appellant to produce the relevant documents and the certificate of registration for making necessary entry in the permit. The appellant produced the same on April 26, 1967, and the permit was issued on the same day. Against the order of the issue of the permit, respondents 4 to 13 preferred appeals to the State Transport Appellate Tribunal on the ground that the Secretary to the Regional Transport Authority, Shimoga, had no jurisdiction to issue a permit under rule 119 of the Mysore Motor Vehicles Rules, 1963 (briefly the Rules) after a lapse of such a long time from the date of the grant of the permit. It was contended that the issue of the permit was made beyond the prescribed period of limitation under rule 119. It may be mentioned that at the time of the grant of the permit the Mysore Motor Vehicles Rules, 1945 (old Rules) were in force and rule 151 of the old Rules was replaced by rule 119 with effect from July 1, 1963. It was contended by the appellant before the appellate authorities that there was no period of limitation under rule 151 of the old Rules, which was applicable to his case, for the issue of a permit. The appeals of the respondents were allowed by the State Transport Appellate Tribunal by majority on January 29, 1969. The District Judge Member, however, dissented. An appeal filed by the appellant to the Revenue Appellate Tribunal against the order of the State Transport Appellate Tribunal was dismissed which led to the unsuccessful writ application in the High Court and hence this appeal.

The point that arises for consideration is whether any appeal lay under section 64 of the Act to the State Transport Appellate Tribunal against the issue of a permit in pursuance of an earlier resolution of the Regional Transport Authority granting the permit. It is only necessary to read section 64(1) (a) which is material for the purpose of this appeal:

64(11 (a): "Any person aggrieved by the refusal of the State or a Regional Transport Authority to grant a permit, or by any condition attached to a permit granted to him may within the prescribed time and in the prescribed man-
190
ner, appeal to the State Transport Appellate Tribunal constituted under sub-section (2), who shall, after giving such person and the original authority an opportunity of being heard, give a decision thereon which shall be final".
We are not required to consider the other clauses of section 64(1) which are admittedly not relevant. Section 64 has to be read with rule 178 of the Rules which prescribes the procedure for appeal to the various authorities Appeal is a creature of the statute. There is no dispute that section 64 of the Act is the only section creating rights of appeal against the grant of permit and other matters with which we are not concerned here. There is no appeal provided for under section 64 against an order issuing a permit in pursuance of the order granting the permit. Issuance of the permit is only a ministerial act necessarily following the grant of the permit. The appeals before the State Transport Appellate Tribunal and the further appeal to the Mysore Revenue Appellate Tribunal are, therefore, not competent under section 64 of the Act and both the Tribunals had no jurisdiction to entertain the appeals and to interfere with the order of the Regional Transport Authority granting the permit which had already been affirmed in appeal by the State Transport Appellate Tribunal and further in second appeal by the Mysore Revenue Appellate Tribunal. There was, therefore, a clear error of jurisdiction on the part of both the Tribunals in interfering with the grant of the permit to the appellant. The High Court was, therefore, not right in dismissing the writ application of the appellant which ought to have been allowed.
Although arguments were addressed by counsel with regard to old rule 151 and rule 119 of the Mysore Motor Vehicles Rules, 1963 we do not feel called upon to pronounce upon the legal effect of these rules in this appeal.
In the result the appeal is allowed. The order of the High Court is set aside and necessarily the order of the State Transport Appellate. Tribunal of January 29, 1969 and the order of the Mysore Revenue Appellate Tribunal of May 8, 1970, also fall. The order granting the permit to the appellant stands restored There will be no order as to costs .
V.P.S.					     Appeal allowed.
191