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[Cites 25, Cited by 141]

Supreme Court of India

Sher Singh & Ors vs Union Of India And Others on 21 October, 1983

Equivalent citations: 1984 AIR 200, 1984 SCR (1) 464, AIR 1984 SUPREME COURT 200, 1984 UJ (SC) 118, (1984) 1 APLJ 9, (1984) 1 ACC 93, 1984 (1) SCC 107, (1983) 96 MAD LW 189, (1984) 1 TAC 340

Author: D.A. Desai

Bench: D.A. Desai, O. Chinnappa Reddy, A. Varadarajan

           PETITIONER:
SHER SINGH & ORS

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT21/10/1983

BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)

CITATION:
 1984 AIR  200		  1984 SCR  (1) 464
 1984 SCC  (1) 107	  1983 SCALE  (2)531
 CITATOR INFO :
 RF	    1986 SC1541	 (9)
 R	    1986 SC2039	 (2,3,5,6)
 R	    1988 SC  18	 (11)


ACT:
     Constitution of India 1950 Article 14 & 19 (1) (g)
     Motor Vehicles  Act-1939-Section 47 (1-H) Preference to
State Transport Corporations for grant of inter-state permit
over private  operators-Whether denial	of  equality  before
law-Denial of right to carry on trade.
     Motor Vehicles  Act, 1939	Sections 47  (1-H) & 58 (2)-
Grant of  Inter-state permit-Preference	 to State  transport
Corporations-Whether violative of Articles 14 and 19 (1) (g)
of the Constitution.
     Application for  renewal of  existing permit by private
operator-Whether   entitled   to   preference	over   fresh
application of a State Transport Undertaking-
     Tamilnadu Motor  Vehicles Rules  155 A-Assignment	of 5
marks to State Transport Undertaking-Whether valid.
     Words & Phrases.
	  "as if"-Meaning  of-Section 58  (2) Motor Vehicles
     Act 1939.



HEADNOTE:
     The petitioner  in the  Special Leave  Petition was the
holder of a Stage carriage permit on an inter-State route He
held several  permits for operation of the said route and as
the period  prescribed for  a few  of them  had expired,  he
applied for  renewal under  section 58 of the Motor Vehicles
Act, 1939  to the Regional Transport Authority which granted
renewal.  In   the  meanwhile,	 the  State  Road  Transport
Corporation the	 5th  respondent  made	an  application	 for
grant of  a stage  carriage permit for operation on the said
route. This  application was  advertised and  the matter was
taken up  for consideration.  During the  pendency  of	this
application the	 petitioner was	 granted  temporary  permits
under section 62 which were renewed from time to time.
     When the  application of  the petitioner for renewal of
permits and  the application  of the  State  Road  Transport
Corporation for	 allotment of  new permit  were taken up for
consideration, an  objection was  raised on  behalf  of	 the
Corporation that  as the  route was  an inter-State route it
was entitled  to the  permit in preference to the petitioner
in view	 of section 47 (1-H). On behalf of the petitioner it
was contended  that section  58 entitled  the petitioner  to
renewal of  permit in  preference to  the  Corporation.	 The
Regional  Transport  Authority	negatived  the	petitioner's
contention and	allotted the  permit to	 the Road  Transport
Corporation.
465
     The petitioner  in his  writ petition to the High Court
contended that section 47 (1-H) was constitutionally invalid
and no	preference could  be granted  in favour of the State
Road Transport	Corporation. The  Single Judge dismissed the
writ petition and the Division Bench upheld the order.
     In the  Special Leave  Petitions to  this Court  it was
contended on  behalf of	 the petitioners that the State Road
Transport Corporation  must  either  take  recourse  to	 the
provisions contained in Chapter IV-A of the Act, which makes
special provisions  relating to	 State Transport Undertaking
or otherwise  if it  wants to  compete without	recourse  to
chapter	 IV-A  it  must	 stand	in  competition	 with  other
applicants for	allotment of  stage  carriage  permits.	 Any
preference that	 the State  Road Transport  Corporation	 may
enjoy in  respect of  an interstate  route under sub-section
(1-H) is violative of Article 14 and the fundamental freedom
to carry  on trade  under Article  19 (1)  (g).	 Section  58
entitled the  petitioners to renewal of permit in preference
to the	application for	 grant of  a new  permit made by the
State Transport Undertaking.
     In	 the  connected	 Special  Leave	 Petitions,  it	 was
contended on behalf of the petitioner that Rule 155-A of the
Tamilnadu Motor Vehicles Rules provides for a marking system
under different	 heads to objectively assess who is the best
suited for  grant of  the permit, and consequently an ad hoc
assignment of  marks and failure to weed out the application
of  the	  State	 Transport  Corporation	 on  the  ground  of
disqualification  for	not  providing	night-halt  cleaners
vitiated the decision of the Transport Authority.
Dismissing the Petitions.
^
     HELD: 1.(i)  Section 47  (1-H) would  not deny equality
before law and hence would not offend Article 14. [474-E]
     (ii) The  Regional Transport Authority under section 47
upon a	judicious consideration	 of merits  and demerits  of
every applicant	 must in a fair and reasonable manner decide
who amongst  the applicants would perform the duty and carry
out the	 obligations under  the permit. However, sub-section
(1-H) carves out an exception, that where an application for
stage carriage	permit on  an inter-state route is made by a
State Transport	 Undertaking it must be accorded preference.
But  while   granting  preference,  the	 Regional  Transport
Authority must	satisfy itself that the Corporation would be
able to	 operate on  the inter-state route without detriment
to its	responsibility for  providing efficient and adequate
road transport service. [471 C-D]
     Dosa Satyanarayanamurty  etc.  v.	The  Andhra  Pradesh
State Road Transport Corporation [1961]1 S.C.R. 642 referred
to.
     (iii)  While  considering	the  application  for  stage
carriage permit	 under section	47, the private operator has
an equal chance to get a permit even on an inter-State route
if it shows that the Undertaking is either unable to provide
efficient  and	 economical  service  or  that	the  private
operator is  better equipped  to render the same. Preference
in this context would mean that other things
466
generally appearing  to be  qualitatively and quantitatively
equal  though  not  with  mathematical	accuracy,  statutory
provision  will	  tilt	the   balance  in   favour  of	 the
Undertaking. [474 D]
     (iv) Section  47 (1-H)  provides that  in the  case  of
inter-State route,  the Undertaking  will have preference in
the  matter   of  stage	  carriage  permit.  The  expression
`preference' amongst  others, means  prior right, advantage,
precedence etc.	 It signifies that other things being equal,
one will have preference over the other. [473 B]
     (v) When  an application  for the stage carriage permit
is being  processed as	required by sec. 47, the application
of  the	 Undertaking  for  an  inter-State  route  shall  be
examined as  an application  of any  other private operator.
Their merits  and demerits  must be  ascertained keeping  in
view the  requirements of  clauses (a) to (f) of sec. 47 (1)
and after  comparing the  merits and  demerits of  both	 the
application of	the Undertaking	 will have  preference	over
others. [473 C-D]
     (vi) Qualitative  and quantitative	 comparison on broad
features of  passenger transport  facility  such  as  fleet,
facilities  to	 travelling  public   and   other   relevant
consideration may  be undertaken  and after  balancing these
factors other  things being  equal, the	 application of	 the
Undertaking shall be given preference over other applicants.
There is no question of eliminating private operators merely
because the  Undertaking applies for a stage carriage permit
under Chapter IV. [473 E]
     (vii)  In	 an  application   under  Chapter   IV,	 the
Corporation has to enter the arena like any other applicant,
face the  competition and  come-up to  the  level  of  other
Private operators intending to obtain stage carriage permits
and  then   in	respect	 of  the  route	 in  question  claim
preference.  Competition   is  the   essence   of   improved
commercial Service. [473 F]
     2. (i)  There is  no substance in the contention of the
petitioner that sec. 47(1-H) is violative of Art. 19 (1) (g)
in that	 it denies the fundamental freedom to carry on trade
because the  petitioner has  not been denied his free dom to
carry on  trade. The  petitioner  is  entitled	to  make  an
application under Chapter IV for a stage carriage permit and
must compete  with  other  private  operators  as  also	 the
Undertaking. [474 F]
     (ii) The Undertaking whose nett profits are required to
be spent  for the  provision of	 amenities to the passengers
using road transport services, welfare of labour employed by
the Undertaking,  for financing	 the expansion programmes of
the Undertaking,  and the  balance to  be made	over to	 the
State Government  for the  purpose of  road development must
receive in  larger public  interest preference	for a permit
compared to  a private	operator whose	profits would  go to
argument his private income. [475 A-B]
     Lachhman Das  v. State  of Punjab & Ors.[1963] 2 S.C.R.
353; Mannalal  & Anr.  v. Collector  of	 Jhalawar  and	Ors.
[1961] 2 S.C.R. 962 referred to.
467
     3 (i)  If an application for renewal of a permit was to
be trated differently than the application for a permit made
under section  45 and  perocessed under section 47 and other
connected provisions,  it was absolutely unnecessary for the
legislature to	provide that an application for renewal of a
permit shall  be made  and disposed  of as  if	it  were  an
application for a fresh permit. [476 E]
     (ii) The expression "as if" occurring in Section 58 (2)
in the phrase "as if it were an application for a permit .."
would mean  and imply  that the application for renewal must
be made	 in the	 same manner  and to  the same	extent as an
application for	 a fresh  permit and  must be  processed  as
such. This  means that	even where an existing permit holder
applies for  renewal, it  has to  be  advertised  and  fresh
applicants can apply for a permit. [476F]
     (iii) Section  47 (1-H)  would also came into play when
an application	is for renewal of a permit on an inter-State
route. There  is no  conflict between  Section 47  (1-H) and
Section 58 (2). [476 G]
     4.	 Once  the  assignment	of  5  marks  to  the  State
Transport Undertaking,	is held	 to be	valid the  Transport
Authority was  perfectly justified  in refusing	 renewal  of
permits to  the petitioners.  Regarding failure	 to  explain
absence of  nighthalt cleaners,	 in the	 absence of concrete
evidence, no inference can be drawn. [478 G-H]
     D.R. Venkatachalam	 & Ors. v. Dy Transport Commissioner
JUDGMENT:

& CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 6605 of 1983.

From the Judgment and Order dated the 6.4.1983 of the Rajasthan High Court in D.B. Special Appeal No. 74 of 1983.

WITH Special Leave Petition Nos. 9678-9680 of 1982. From the Judgment and Order dated the 4th October, 1982 of the Madras High Court in C.R.P. No. 2880-82/1978.

AND Write Petition Nos. 9600-9601 & 9759-9760 of 1983. Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India.

468

K.K.Venugopal and Mukul Mudgal for the Petitioner in SLP. 6605/83.

Shanti Bhushan, S.K. Jain and B.M. Mathur for the Respondents in SLP. 6605/83.

C.S. Vaidyanathan for the Petitioner in SLP (Civil) Nos. 9678-9680 of 1982.

Dr. Y.S. Chitale and A.V. Rangam for the Respondents in SLP (Civil) Nos. 9678-9680 of 1982.

S.N. Kacker and A.K. Panda for the Petitioners in Writ Petitions.

Shanti Bhushan and B.N. Mathur, S.K.Jain & S.D. Sharma for the Respondents in Writ Petitions.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by DESAI, J. In this group of special leave petitions and writ petitions, constitutional validity of Sec. 47 (I-H) of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (`Act' for short) directly or indirectly figures. With a view to focussing attention on the context in which the question is raised, it may be advantageous to refer to the factual matrix in S.L.P. 6605/83, in which the learned Single Judge and the Division Bench of the High Court repelled the challenge. We would first deal with the principal challenge common to all petitions and then dispose of specific contention raised in other petitions clubbed together here. For representative facts we would refer to S.L.P. 6605/83.

Re: S.L.P. No. 6605/83: Petitioner Sher Singh is the holder of a stage carriage permit on Behror-Rewari via Barrod, Shahjahanpur inter-State route. A portion of the route from Bahror to National Highway No. 8 via Barrod and Shahjahanpur 28 k.ms. in length passes through Rajasthan State and the rest of the portion of the route 22 K.ms. in length lies in Haryana State. It is thus an inter-State route. Petitioner holds 12 permits, for operating on the aforementioned route. Of the 12 permits, the period prescribed under 8 permits expired and the petitioner applied for the renewal of the permits under Sec. 58 of the Act. Regional Transport Authority granted renewal of the permits upto and inclusive of January 20, 469 1981. The petitioner again applied for renewal of the permits on December 29, 1980. The Rajasthan State Road Transport Corporation, fifth respondent (`Corporation' for short) made an application to the Regional Transport Authority on April 20, 1981 for stage carriage permit on the aforementioned route. This application was as usual advertised. The application of the petitioner for the renewal of his permits accordingly was taken up for consideration on April 30, 1981. Pending the consideration of the application for renewal of permits, petitioner was granted temporary permits under Sec. 62 for a period of four months commencing from the date of the expiry of the earlier permit. The temporary permits were thus to expire on May 20, 1981. And these temporary permits were further renewed for a period of 4 months Thereafter the application of the petitioner for renewal of his permits and the application for stage carriage permit made by the Corporation were taken up for consideration. An objection was raised by the Corporation that as the route in question is an inter-State route, it is entitled to permit in preference to the petitioner in view of the provision contained in Sec. 47 (I- H) of the Act. On the other hand, it was contended on behalf of the petitioner that in view of the provision contained in Sec. 58, the petitioner is entitled to renewal of his permits in preference to the Corporation, which has made an application for a fresh permit. This contention found favour with the Regional Transport Authority and the renewal of permits was refused to the petitioner and the permits were granted to the Corporation. This decision was questioned in a writ petition filed by the present petitioner in which the only contention raised was that the preference was accorded to the Corporation for grant of a permit under Sec. 47 (I-H) of the Act which is constitutionally invalid, and once no such preference could be granted, the preference in favour of a renewal of permit under Sec. 58 should have a precedence and the renewal ought to have been granted.

It was contended before the learned Single Judge of the High Court that Sec. 47 (1-H) is violative both of Art. 14 and Art. 19 (1) (g) and is thus constitutionally invalid. That was the only contention canvassed before the learned Single Judge which did not find favour with him as well as the Division Bench of the Rajasthan High Court. Hence the petitioner filed this petition for special leave. A notice was ordered to be issued to the respondent and it was directed that the petition be finally disposed of at this stage as the only question raised is one of law and no investigation of facts is necessary.

470

A brief reference to the relevant provisions of the Act may help us in demarcating the contours of controversy with precision. Chapter IV of the Act contains provisions for control of transport vehicles. For regulating the transport business, a scheme for granting different types of permits has been statutorily prescribed. There are various kinds of permits contemplated by the Act such as stage carriage permit, contract carriage permit, all India tourist permit, special permit, permits for transport of goods etc. Various authorities have been constituted under the Act for the purpose of implementing the Act. Power has been conferred upon specific authorities for granting different kinds of permits. Sec. 47 prescribes procedure which the Regional Transport Authority has to follow while examining and deciding an application for stage carriage permit. Sec. 47 was specifically amended by Act 47 of 1978 which came into force on January 16,1979 By the Amending Act, sub-secs (1-A) to (1-H) were added to Sec. 47. The focus of controversy is on subsec. (1-H). Sub-sec. (1-H) reads as under:

"(1-H): Notwithstanding anything contained in this section, an application for stage carriage permit from a State Transport undertaking for operating in any inter-State route shall be given preference over all other applications:
Provided that the authority shall not grant a permit under this sub-section unless it is satisfied that the State transport undertaking would be able to operate in the inter-State route without detriment to its responsibility for providing efficient and adequate road transport service in any notified area or notified route as is referred to in sub-section (3) of Section 68-D where the undertaking operates the service. Explanation:-For the purposes of this sub-section, 'inter-State route' means any route lying contiguously in two or more States.'.
A bare reading of the provision contained in sub-sec. (1-H) shows that where a Corporation set up under the Road Transport Corporations Act, 1950 is one of the applicants for a stage carriage permit on an inter-State route, then as between other applicants and a State Transport Undertaking ('Undertaking' for short), the latter 471 will have preference over others. Routine statutory procedure prescribed in Sec. 47 for grant of a stage carriage permit requires the Regional Transport Authority which has the power to grant permit before selecting who amongst the numerous applicants should be granted the permit must take into consideration various things that are enumerated in Sec. 47. Fair approach would be that after examining the credentials of every applicant, the Regional Transport Authority shall grant permit to the person who in its opinion would best serve the travelling public. The Regional Transport Authority upon a judicious consideration of merits and demerits of every applicant must in a fair and reasonable manner decide who amongst the applicants would perform the duty and carry out the obligations under the permit. However, sub-sec. (1-H) carves out an exception to this generally well-recognised principle that an administrative authority has to adopt while exercising the power conferred upon it by the statute, that where an application for a stage carriage permit on an inter-State route is made by all intending applicants which includes a State Transport undertaking, its application must be accorded preference. But while granting preference, the Regional Transport Authority must satisfy itself that the Corporation would be able to operate on the inter-State route without detriment to its responsibility for providing efficient and adequate road transport service in any notified area or notified route as is referred to in sub- sec. (3) of Sec. 68-D where the undertaking operates the service.
At this stage, a reference to Sec. 58 would be useful. It provides for duration and renewal of stage carriage and contract carriage permits other than temporary permit granted under Sec. 62. An existing holder of permit may apply for renewal of permit. Sub-sec. (2) of Sec. 58 requires that a permit may be renewed on an application made and disposed of as if it were an application for a permit. There is a proviso to sub-sec. (2) which prescribes the time limit within which an application for renewal of different kinds of permits may be made. There is a second proviso which is material and which may be extracted: "Provided further that other conditions being equal, an application for renewal shall be given preference over new applications for permits."

Chapter IV-A was introduced in the Act by Amending Act 100 of 1956 which came into force on February 2, 1957. Chapter IV-A makes special provisions relating to State Transport Undertaking.

472

The broad scheme of Chapter IV-A is that a State Transport Under taking may prepare and publish a scheme on road transport service. On the publication of the scheme, objections can be filed as provided in Sec. 68-D. Sec. 68-E confers powers for modification and cancellation of the Scheme. Then comes Sec. 68-F which provides that where, in pursuance of an approved scheme, any State transport undertaking applies, in such a manner as may be prescribed by the State Government in this behalf, for a stage carriage permit or a contract carriage permit in respect of a notified area or notified route, the State Transport Authority in any case where the said area or route lies in more than one region and the Regional Transport Authority in any other case shall issue permit to the State Transport undertaking, notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in Chapter IV. In short in respect of a notified area or a notified route, an application for permit by State Transport undertaking shall be granted to the exclusion of any other operator. Apart from this specific provision in Sec. 68-F, this outcome to some extent also emerges from the provision contained in Sec. 68-B which provides that the provisions of Chapter IV-A and the rules and orders made thereunder shall have effect notwithstanding anything inconsistent there with contained in Chapter IV of the Act or any other law for the time being in force or in any instrument having effect by virtue of any such law.

The first contention raised on behalf of the petitioner was that the State Transport Undertaking must either take recourse to provision in Chapter IV-A or otherwise if it wants to compete without recourse to Chapter IV-A, it must stand in competition with other applicants for stage carriage permit and any preference that it may enjoy in respect of inter-State route under sub-sec. (1-H) of Sec. 47 is violative of Art. 14 and is denial of fundamental freedom to carry on trade guaranteed to petitioners by Art. 19 (1)

(g).

At the outset it is necessary to bear in mind the legal position of a State Transport Undertaking when dealt with under Chapter IV-A and Chapter IV of the Act. If an approved scheme in respect of a notified area or a notified route is in force, State Transport Undertaking alone is entitled to operate vehicles and therefore is entitled to obtain stage carriage permits both regular and temporary depending upon whether the scheme provides for total or partial exclusion of private operators. However, when an application for a permit is made under Chapter IV, the Undertaking has to compete 473 with private operators who may as well make an application for permit. When the Undertaking applies for permit under Chapter IV, it must satisfy the Regional Transport Authority that it is better suited than the private operator to render transport facility to the travelling public. Sec. 47 (1-H) however, provides that in the case of inter-State route, the Undertaking will have preference in the matter of stage carriage permit. Does preference of this nature deny equality guaranteed by Art. 14 ? The expression 'preference' amongst others means prior right, advantage, precedence etc. But how would it be possible to give precedence one over the other. It signifies that other things being equal, one will have preference over the others. When an application for a stage carriage permit is being processed as required by Sec. 47, the application of the Undertaking for an inter-State route shall be examined as application of any other private operator. Their merits and demerits must be ascertained keeping in view the requirements of (a) to (f) of Sec. 47 (1) and after comparing the merits and demerits of both, not with the yardstick of mathematical accuracy, but other things being equal, the application of the Undertaking will have preference over others. Qualitative and quantitative comparison on broad features of passenger transport facility such as fleet, facilities to travelling public and other relevant consideration may be undertaken and after balancing these factors other things being equal, the application of the Undertaking shall be given preference over other applicants. There is no question of eliminating private operators merely because the Undertaking applies for a stage carriage permit under Chapter IV. That situation is catered to under Chapter IV-A. In an application under Chapter IV, Corporation has to enter the arena like any other applicant, face the competition and come-up to the level of other private operators intending to obtain stage carriage permits and then in respect of the route in question claim preference. Would this statutory provision violate equality guaranteed by Art. 14 ? The answer is obviously in the negative. Competition is the essence of improved commercial service. After ensuing competition in matter of rendering more efficient transport service a public sector undertaking is assured statutory preference, remember no monopoly, there is no denial of equality guaranteed by Art. 14 ? A similar argument when the vires of the provisions contained in Chapter IV-A were questioned in Dosa Satyanarayanamurty etc. v. The Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation (1) did not commend to the Constitution Bench when it repelled the challenge observing as under:

474
"Ordinarily a State Transport Undertaking should be in a better position than others to carry on the said services for the benefit of the public; administratively, financially and technically it can be expected to be in a far better position than others. It can provide more well equipped buses, give better amenities to the travelling public, keep regular timings repair or replace the buses in emergencies. It may also employ efficient supervisory staff to keep things going at an appreciably high standard."

This would apply mutatis mutandis to the present situation. But let it be made clear that while considering the application for stage carriage permit under Sec. 47, the private operator has an equal chance to get a permit even on inter-State route if it shows that the Undertaking is either unable to provide efficient and economical service or that the private operator is better equipped to render the same. Preference in this context would mean that other things generally appearing to be qualitatively and quantitatively equal though not with mathematical accuracy, statutory provision will tilt the balance in favour of the Undertaking. Viewed from this perspective the provision contained in Sec. 47 (1-H) would not deny equality before law and hence would not effend Art. 14.

The next contention was that Sec. 47 (1-H) is violative of Art. 19 (1) (g) in that it denies to the petitioner the fundamental freedom to carry on trade. There is no substance in this contention because the petitioner has not been denied his freedom to carry on trade. The petitioner is entitled to make an application under Chapter IV for a stage carriage permit and must compete with other private operators as also the Undertaking. It is too late in the day to contend that a preference in favour of the Undertaking would be violative of Art. 19 (1) (g) for the obvious reason that Undertaking like all other applicants for permit has to compete for a permit. It may be recalled that when it came to the provisions of Chapter IV-A, this Court has more often than once upheld the validity of the provisions contained in Chapter IV-A and repelled the challenge of its being violative of Art. 19 (1) (g), even though the private operator may be wholly excluded from even applying for a permit in respect of a notified area or a notified route being part of an approved scheme. From a slightly different angle, the challenge may be repelled in that other things 475 being equal, even apart from the statutory preference, the Undertaking whose net profits are required to be spent for the provision of amenities to the passengers using road transport services, welfare of labour employed by the Undertaking, for financing the expansion programmes of the Undertaking, and the balance to be made over to the State Government for the purpose of road development must receive in larger public interest preference for a permit compared to a private operator whose profits would go to augment his private income. Sec. 30 of the Road Transport Corporation Act, 1950 makes statutory provision for disposal of net profits of a State Transport Undertaking. In a slightly different context, this Court in Lachman Das v. State of Punjab & Ors. while repelling the challenge to the validity of Patiala Recovery of State Dues Act, IV of 2002 BD approved the ratio in Mannalal & Anr. v. Collector Of Jhalawar and Ors.(2) in which it was held that the dues of the Government of a State are the dues of the entire people of the State. This being the position, a law giving special facility for the recovery of such dues cannot, in any event, be said to offend Art. 14 of the Constitution.' This very approach requires to be adopted while examining the challenge under Art. 19 (1) (g).

It was next contended that petitioner was an existing permit holder and therefore, under Sec. 58 it was entitled to renewal of its permits in preference to the applications for new permits made by the Undertaking. The second proviso to Sec. 58 (2) does provide that 'other conditions being equal, an application for renewal shall be given preference over new applications for permits.' What has surprised us the most is that while the petitioners have a serious grievance against the preference accorded to the Undertaking for a permit on the inter-State route under Sec. 47 (1-H), the same petitioner is keen to protect preference in favour of the renewal of a permit against a new applicant statutorily provided in Sec. 58. But Sec. 58 also manifests the legislative intention when it uses the expression preference with an adjectival clause 'that other conditions being equal', an application for renewal will have a preference over the new applications.

The first submission in this behalf is that when an application is made for a renewal of a permit, it has to be considered only under 476 Sec. 58 and the preference therein provided excludes any consideration of an application for a permit under Sec. 47. Approaching the matter from this angle, it was contended that as the present petitioner has made an application for the renewal of the permit, he should have been accorded preference as mandated by the second proviso to Sec. 58(2) over the fresh application of the Undertaking and consideration of the application of the renewal of the permit under Sec. 58 excludes importing of the provisions of Sec. 47. This approach overlooks a specific provision enacted in sub-sec. (2) of Sec. 58 which provides as under:

"58 (2) A permit may be renewed on an application made and disposed of as if it were an application for a permit .."

When a statute prescribes that an application for renewal of a permit shall be made and disposed of as if it were an application for a permit, the legislature incorporated by pen and ink all those provisions which are applicable for grant of a permit upon a fresh application made in this behalf. If an application for renewal of a permit was to be treated differently than the application for a permit made under Sec. 45 and processed under Sec. 47 and other connected provisions, it was absolutely unnecessary for the legislature to provide that an application for renewal of a permit shall be made and disposed of as if it were an application for a fresh permit. The expression 'as if' is used to make one applicable in respect of other. Therefore, the expression 'as if' used in Sec. 58 (2) would mean and imply that the application for renewal must be made in the same manner and to same extent an application for a fresh permit and must be processed as such. This would mean that even where an existing permit holder applies for a renewal of his permit, it has to be advertised and fresh applicants can as well apply for a permit to ply vehicles on the same route for which the previous holder of permit has applied for renewal of his permit. After considering all such applications, other conditions being equal, an existing operator who has applied for renewal will have preference. Therefore, by necessary interpretation, Sec. 47 (1-H) would also come into play when an application is for renewal of a permit on an inter-State route. There is no conflict between Sec. 47 (1-H) and Sec. 58 (2). It is therefore, not possible to accept the submission that while considering the application for renewal of a permit, Sec. 47 (1-H) is not attracted.

477

It appears that the State of Rajasthan had amended Sec. 58 (2) in its application to that State by engrafting a third proviso to sub-sec. (2) of Sec. 58 by Rajasthan Act 8 of 1973, which reads as under:

"Provided also that other conditions being equal, an application for stage carriage permit by a State Transport Undertakings, as defined in Section 68-A, whether an application for renewal or a new application shall be given preference over all other applications for renewal."

Addition of this proviso merely makes explicit what was implicit in sub-sec. (2) of Sec. 58. Nothing was pointed out to us to hold that the Rajasthan State Legislature lacked competence to add the aforementioned proviso to sub-sec. (2) of Sec. 58.

Re: S.L.Ps. Nos. 9678 to 9680/82:

In this group of petitions for special leave, it was contended before the High Court that as Pallavan Transport Corporation Ltd., the first respondent, did not make provision for night halt cleaners, the application for permits made by them were liable to be screened. The High Court declined to examine this contention on the short ground that this contention was not raised before the State Transport Appellate Tribunal. For the same reason, we could as well have declined to examine this contention. However, it may as well be pointed out that even if the contention is to be examined on merits, there is no substance in it. The State of Tamil Nadu has framed what are styled as Tamil Nadu Motor Vehicles Rules. Rule 155-A provides for a marking system under different heads to rival claimants for permit to objectively assess who amongst them is the best to whom permit should be granted. Before proceeding to assign marks under different heads, the Transport Authority has to screen applications so as to weed out those unsuitable on one or the other ground mentioned in the rule. One such disqualification is the failure to provide for night halt cleaners. It was urged that after the Transport Authority made the enquiry from the first respondent-Corporation whether it has provision for night halt cleaners, without waiting for the clarification, the Transport Authority proceeded to dispose of the application. It was next pointed out that Rule 155-A (3) (d) provides that 5 marks shall be awarded to the applicant falling within the proviso to cl.
(c) of Sec. 62 of the Act which means and implies a State Transport Undertaking. The 478 grievance is that such adhoc assignment of marks and failure to weed out the application on the ground of disqualification for not providing night halt cleaners has vitiated the decision of the Transport Authority. The validity of Rule 155-A and its various sub clauses came up for consideration of this Court in D.R. Venkachalam & Ors.

vs. Dy. Transport Commissioner & Ors.(1) This Court repelled the challenge especially to the provision for assigning 5 marks to a State Transport Undertaking observing as under:

"A State enterprise, in a truly Welfare State, is charged with a social consciousness and responsibility for its citizens, an attention to serve them and a willingness to embark on public utility undertakings better to fulfil people's demands. The public sector enterprises are expected to be model employers and model servants planning their budgets, subjecting themselves to public audit and criticism and inquest by legislative committees and the Houses of the legislature. Profits are their concern but, more importantly, public weal is their commitment. Such is the philosophy of the State sector in our socialistic pattern of society."

On the question of assignment of 5 marks to State Transport Undertaking this Court held that 'this is not an arbitrary stroke of favouritism because there are many promotional factors bearing on the interest of the travelling public which a State enterprise qua State enterprise will, but a private enterprise qua private enterprise will not, take care of. After all, private enterprise has its primary motivation in profit'. The Court further observed that 'the superiority in many respects of State Transport Undertakings, in the legislative judgment, has led to r. 155-A'. The Court ultimately held that the assignment of marks under r. 155-A is geared to public interest, which is the desideratum of s. 47 (1) of the Act. Once the assignment of 5 marks to State Transport Authority Undertaking is held to be valid, the Transport Authority was perfectly justified in refusing renewal of permits to the petitioners in comparison to the State Transport Undertaking. As for failure to explain absence of night halt cleaners, in the absence of concerte evidence, no inference can be drawn. This was the only additional contention in this group of petitions and we find no substance in it.

479

These are all the contentions in this group of petitions and as we find no substance in any of them, all the petitions are dismissed with no order as to costs.

N. V. K.				Petitions dismissed.
480