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[Cites 3, Cited by 183]

Supreme Court of India

J. Mohapatra & Co And Another vs State Of Orissa And Another on 10 August, 1984

Equivalent citations: 1984 AIR 1572, 1985 SCR (1) 322, AIR 1984 SUPREME COURT 1572, (1984) 1 ORISSA LR 65, (1984) 58 CUT LT 568, 1984 (4) SCC 103

Author: D.P. Madon

Bench: D.P. Madon, P.N. Bhagwati

           PETITIONER:
J. MOHAPATRA & CO AND ANOTHER

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ORISSA AND ANOTHER

DATE OF JUDGMENT10/08/1984

BENCH:
MADON, D.P.
BENCH:
MADON, D.P.
BHAGWATI, P.N.

CITATION:
 1984 AIR 1572		  1985 SCR  (1) 322
 1984 SCC  (4) 103	  1984 SCALE  (2)191
 CITATOR INFO :
 F	    1985 SC1416	 (101)
 RF	    1986 SC 555	 (6)
 F	    1990 SC1480	 (75)


ACT:
     Education laws  and rules-Books  for general reading in
Schools and  colleges libraries, and text books selection of
by administrative instructions-Challenge to the Constitution
of Sub-Committee and the method of selection adopted-Whether
can be	made by	 a person who has neither submitted any book
or by  a person	 who has  submitted his books for selection,
out of	which a few books only has been selected-Doctrine of
locus standi-Justification of State's action in constituting
a Committee-Doctrine of bias-Whether an author-member can be
a member  of any  such committee  or sub  committee-Rule  of
Doctrine of  necessity, explained-Sufficiency  of guidelines
continued Contained  in-Resolution of  the Government  dated
November  24,  1983-Guidelines	prescribed  by	the  Supreme
Court.



HEADNOTE:
     Selection of  text-books and  books for  reading to  be
kept in	 school and  college libraries	is a matter of vital
importance  to	the  imparting	of  proper  education.	Such
selection must	depend upon  the ability and fitness for the
purpose of  those who  are charged with that responsibility.
In the	State of  Orissa, there	 was no	 statutory  rule  or
regulation prescribing	the procedure for selection of books
for general  reading  to  be  kept  in	school	and  college
libraries,  except   the   State   Government's	  periodical
administrative	instructions  in  the  form  of	 resolutions
constituting committees namely, an Assessment Sub-Committee,
a Distribution	Sub-Committee and  a Purchase  Committee  to
which Government  officials as	well as	 non-officials	were
appointed as  members. The  procedure followed was that each
year the  Member-Secretary of  the Purchase  Committee would
call upon  publishers and authors by advertisements given in
local newspapers  to submit  books  for	 consideration.	 The
Assessment Sub-Committee  could than  consider the  books so
submitted and  thereafter recommend  a list  of books which,
according to it, were suitable for general reading by school
and college  students. The Purchase Committee would consider
the recommendations  made by  the  Assessment  Sub-Committee
prepares a  final list	and submit  it for  approval to	 the
State Government which could reject any book out of the list
so submitted  without giving any reason. The decision of the
State
323
Government regarding  the assessment, selection purchase and
distribution of books was made final.
     The selection of the books for the years 1980, 1981 and
1982 was  made in  this fashion.  Admittedly,  some  of	 the
members of  the	 Assessment  Sub-Committee  were  themselves
authors of  books and some of the books written by them were
selected and  purchased. The  Purchase Committee  restricted
the list  for the years 1980, 1981 and 1982 to 466 books out
of 1,718 books submitted for selection, but as further funds
became available the Government decided to select more books
and  accordingly   a   committee   constituted	 under	 the
Chairmanship of	 Director of  Public Instruction  (Schools),
Orissa, selected  a supplementary  list of  105 books out of
the said 1,718 books which had been submitted for selection.
     Before  further   steps  could   be   taken,   in	 the
unprecedented fiords  and cyclones of August/September 1982,
number of  schools and colleges suffered in the calamity and
the libraries of many schools and colleges were washed away.
The Central  Government thereupon,  as part  of	 its  relief
programme for  the State,  gave grants	to the	State during
February and March, 1983 aggregating to Rs. 45 lakhs for the
purchase of  books for	the  libraries	of  non-governmental
schools and  colleges and  to be  utilised before June 1983.
Due to	Paucity of  time and  delay in the normal process of
selection of  books, the State Government took a decision or
April 5,  1983 to  utilise the	grant made  by	the  Central
Government by purchasing books out of the books selected for
the years  1980, 1981  and 1982	 and the  said supplementary
list of	 105 books.  In the  meeting convened  on April	 13,
1983, to  consider the	selection of  books to be purchased,
all the 466 books selected for the years 1980, 1981 and 1982
together with  the 105	supplementary  list  of	 books	were
approved.
     Thereupon, the  appellants who  were publishers filed a
Writ Petition  under Article 226 of the Constitution against
the State  of Orissa and the Director of Public Instruction,
Orissa to  quash the  list of  books selected  for the years
1980, 1981 and 1982 and the State Government's said decision
with respect  to purchasing  books out	of the	cyclone	 and
flood relief  grant made  by the  Central Government,  inter
alia on	 the ground  of bias  on the  part of  some  of	 the
members of  the Assessment  Sub-Committee whose	 books	were
submitted for  selection. This Writ Petition was heard along
with a	similar Writ Petition filed by the Orissa Publishers
and Book  Sellers Association.	The High  Court by  a common
judgment delivered  on August  10, 1983 dismissed both these
Writ Petitions.	 Hence the  appeals by	Special Leave of the
Court.
     Allowing the appeal, the Court
324
^
     HELD :  1. The  law with  respect to  locus standi	 has
considerably advanced  both in	this country  and in England
and in	the case  of public  interest litigation  it is	 not
necessary that	a petitioner  should himself have a personal
interest in  the matter.  Merely  by  submitting  books	 for
selection, of  which some might have been selected, a person
cannot be  said to  have waived	 the objection	which he may
have to	 the constitution of the committee which selects the
books. Similarly,  merely because  a person  does not submit
any book  for selection, it cannot, be said that he is not a
person aggrieved. [331 E; D]
     2. In  the absence	 of any statutory rule or regulation
with respect  to selection  of books and the selection being
made each  year as  an administrative measure it was open to
the State  Government to change both the constitution of the
committee and  sub-committees  as  also	 the  procedure	 for
selecting  books   to  be  purchased.  Since  the  procedure
normally adopted  by the  State Government  would have taken
more time  than what  the time	bound grant  of the  Central
Government would  have permitted,  the State  Government was
justified in  convening the  meeting on	 April 13,  1983 and
selecting  the	books  to  be  purchased  from	the  Central
Government grant. [331 G-H]
     3:1. Nemo	judex in causa sua, that is, no man shall be
a judge	 in his own cause, is a principle firmly established
in  law.   Justice  should  not	 only  be  done	 but  should
manifestly be  seen to be done. It is on this principle that
the proceedings	 in courts  of law  are open  to the  public
except in  those cases	where for  special  reason  the	 law
requires or  authorizes a  hearing in  camera.	Justice	 can
never be seen to be done if a man acts as a judge in his own
cause or is himself interested in its outcome. The principle
applies not  only to judicial proceedings but also to quasi-
judicial and administrative proceedings. [332 G-H]
     A. K.  Kraipak and others v. Union of India and others,
[1970] 1. S.C.R. 457, followed.
     3:2. A person who has written a book which is submitted
for selection  either by  himself or  by his  publishers, is
interested in  the matter  of  selection  and  therefore  an
author-member should  not be  a member of any such committee
or sub-committee  for several  considerations namely  :	 (a)
Authors stand  to benefit  financially in  several  ways  by
getting either	royalty from  the publishers  or  by  direct
sales; (b)  Though an  author-member may  be only one of the
members	 of  the  Assessment  Sub-Committees  and  that	 the
ultimate decision  of selection	 may  rest  with  the  State
Government which  may reject any book out of the list of the
approved books,	 normally the  State would  be guided by the
list of books approved by the Assessment Committee ; (c) The
author-member can certainly influence the minds of the other
members	 against   selecting  books   by  other	 authors  in
preference
325
to his own ; (d) Books by some of the other members may also
have been  submitted for  selection and there can be between
them a	quid pro quo or, in other words you see that my book
is selected  and in  return I  will do	the same for you. In
either case,  when a  book of  an author-member comes up for
consideration,	the  other  members  would  feel  themselves
embrassed in  frankly  discussing  its	merits	;  (e)	Such
author-member may  also be  a person holding a high official
position whom  the other members may not want to displease ;
and (f)	 Though it  may be that the other members may not be
influenced  by	the  fact  that	 the  book  which  they	 are
considering  for  approval  was	 written  by  one  of  their
members, whether  they were  so	 influenced  or	 not  would,
however, be  a matter  impossible to  determine. It  is not,
therefore, the	actual bias  in favour	of the author-member
that is material but the possibility of such bias. [333 F-H;
334A-G]
     4 :  1. The  doctrine  of	necessity  is,	however,  an
exception to  the doctrine  of bias,  that no man shall be a
judge in  his own  cause. An  adjudicator, who is subject to
disqualification on  the ground	 of bias  or interest in the
matter which he has to decide, may be required to adjudicate
if there  is no	 other person who is competent or authorized
to adjudicate or if a quorum cannot be formed without him or
if no  other competent	tribunal can be constituted. In such
cases, the  principal of  natural justice would have to give
way to	necessity for  otherwise there	would be no means of
deciding  the	matter	and  the  machinery  of	 justice  or
administration would break down. [334 H; 335 A-B]
     The Judges v. Attorney-General for Saskatchewan, 53 The
Times Law Reports 464 (1937) quoted with approval.
     4:2. In  the  instant  case,  the	High  Court  wrongly
applied the  doctrine of  necessity to	the author-member of
the Assessment	Sub-Committee. Though  the members  of	this
Sub-Committee were  appointed by a Government resolution and
some of	 them were  appointed  by  virtue  of  the  official
position  they	 were  holding,	  such	as,  the  Secretary,
Education Department  of the  Government of  Orissa, and the
Director, Higher  Education, etc.,  there  was,	 nothing  to
prevent those  whose books were submitted for selection from
pointing out  this fact	 to the	 State Government so that it
could amend  its resolution  by appointing  a substitute  or
substitutes, as	 the case  may be. There was equally nothing
to prevent  such non-official  author-members from resigning
from the  committee on	the ground  of their interest in the
matter. [335 C-E]
     5:1. The High Court, however, was justified in refusing
to grant any relief in respect of the books selected for the
year 1980, 1981 and
326
1982 inasmuch  as the  books selected  for those  years	 had
already been purchased. Since a similar fait accompli stared
at the	Supreme Court  not only	 in  respect  of  the  books
selected and  purchased	 for  those  years,  but  also	with
respect to  the books  selected to  be	purchased  from	 the
Central Government  grant, in  the instant  fase, the  Court
could lay  down only  certain guide-lines  to be followed in
future	in   selecting	not  only  books  for  libraries  in
educational institutions  but also in prescribing text-books
and in	constituting  committees  for  these  purposes.	 The
Supreme Court accordingly laid down such guidelines. [335 F-
H]
     5:2. However,  the guide-lines laid down by a court can
only ensure  the selection  of worthwhile  books. This	must
necessarily depend  upon the  social consciousness and moral
fibre of  the members of the committee. Further, no judgment
of a  court can	 eliminate  the	 evil  of  behind-the  scene
influence. Here,  one  must  perforce  trust  the  sense  of
responsibility of  the	members	 of  the  committee  in	 the
discharge  of	the  important	duty  with  which  they	 are
entrusted. [338 B-C]
     6:1.  Clause  8  of  the  Government  resolution  dated
November 24,  1983, issued  after the grant of Special Leave
Petition to Appeal does not satisfy the principle of natural
justice and fair play. Since several books would come up for
consideration before  the committee,  one or more of them by
one of	the member  and the  other or  others by some of the
other members,	mere non-participation	in the discussion by
the member  concerned  or  even	 his  withdrawing  from	 the
deliberations of  the committee	 while his  or her  book  or
books are  being considered  is not  sufficient because	 the
evil of	 quid  pro  quo	 cannot	 be  eliminated	 by  such  a
resolution. Members deliberating would bear in mind that the
turn for  selecting their  books would	also  come  and	 the
concerned member  who had  not participated or had withdrawn
would not then be favourably inclined to select their books.
						[336 B; E-G]
     6:2. Many a person falls a victim to the disease called
cacoethes scribendi.  It  would,  therefore,  be  unfair  to
prohibit publishers  from  submitting  books  for  selection
merely because they had at one time published a book written
by any	one of the members of the committee or sub-committee
concerned  with	 the  selection	 of  books.  The  number  of
publishers is  large but  good publishers  are few  and such
publishers will,  therefore, be	 publishing the	 majority of
books. To lay down such a guide-line would be to eliminate a
large number of books which may be worthy of selection.
						   [337 A-C]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 10026 of 1983.

327

From the Judgment and Order dated the 10th August, 1983 of the Orissa High Court in O. J. C. No. 1239 of 1983.

Vinoo Bhagat for the appellants.

K. Parasaran, Attorney General and R. K. Mehta for the respondents.

Bharati Anand for the respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by MADON, J. The destiny of a nation rests with its youth. As we shape its mind and mould its character, so do we fashion our country's progress, prestige and prosperity. Wordsworth truly said, "The Child is father of the Man", and Alexander Pope was equally right in saying in the first of his 'Moral Essays'-'Epistle I to Sir Richard Temple, Lord Cobham':

"Tis Education forms the common mind, Just as the Twig is bent, the Tree's inclin'd."

It is, therefore, essential for a country to have a proper educational system. The general pattern of education in our country is, however, the traditional one of studying from prescribed text-books, attending lectures based on such books and answering questions in examinations set from them. The study of text-books is often supplemented by reading books which are kept in school and college libraries. These books may be on various subjects-literature, history, art, science, geography, and even works of fiction. General reading is as essential for a student as it is for any man, for it is reading which broadens the mind and widens the horizon. It was for this reason that Bacon said in his essay, 'Of Studies', "Reading maketh a full man", General reading is, therefore, as important as studying from prescribed text-books if the students of today are to become worthy citizens of tomorrow.

The selection of these books-both text-books and books for general reading to be kept in school and college libraries-is thus a matter of vital importance to the imparting of proper education. Such selection must necessarily depend upon the ability and fitness for the purpose of those who are charged with that responsibility. This question has come up for our consideration in this Appeal by Special Leave from the judgment and order of the High Court of 328 Orissa dismissing, with no order as to costs, the petition under Article 226 of the Constitution filed by the Appellants.

There does not exist any statutory rule or regulation in the State of Orissa prescribing the method for selection of books for general reading to be kept in school and college libraries. The State Government, however, periodically issues administrative instructions in the form of Government Resolutions constituting committees and laying down the procedure for selecting books. Broadly speaking, three committees are constituted, namely, an Assessment Sub- Committee, a Distribution Sub-Committee and a Purchase Committee. Government officials as well as non-officials are appointed as members on these committees and sub-committees. Each year the State Government makes available a specific sum for purchase of books for libraries to be distributed among individual schools and colleges. The procedure followed is that each year the Member-Secretary of the Purchase Committee calls upon publishers and authors by advertisements given in local newspapers to submit books for consideration. The Assessment Sub-Committee then considers the books so submitted and thereafter recommends a list of books which, according to it, are suitable for general reading by school and college students. The Purchase Committee considers the recommendations made by the Assessment Sub-Committee and prepares a final list. It is open to the State Government to reject any book out of the list so submitted without giving any reason and the decision of the State Government regarding the assessment, selection, purchase and distribution of books is made final. Though a separate Government Resolution is issued each year, by and large the same pattern and procedure are maintained and only a few committee and sub-committee members are changed and new members appointed in their place. The selection of books for the years 1980, 1981 and 1982 was made in this fashion. Admittedly, some of the members of the Assessment Sub- Committee were themselves authors of books and some of the books written by them were selected and purchased. The annual grant sanctioned by the State Government for this purpose for the years 1980, 1981 and 1982 was Rs. 5,00,000. So far as the year 1982 was concerned, this annual grant fell short of the requirement by almost 50 per cent. Accordingly the Purchase Committee restricted the list of 466 books out of 1,718 books submitted for selection, but as further funds became available the Government decided to select more books and accordingly constituted a Committee under the Chairmanship of Director of Public Instruction (Schools), Orissa.

329

This Committee selected a supplementary list of 105 books out of the said 1,718 books which had been submitted for selection.

There were unprecedented floods and cyclones in the months of August and September 1982 and a large number of schools and colleges suffered in this calamity and the libraries of many schools and colleges were washed away. The Central Government thereupon, as part of its relief programme for the State, gave grants to the State during February and March 1983 aggregating to Rs. 45,00,000 for the purchase of books for the libraries of non-governmental schools and colleges. This was a time-bound grant to be utilized by June 1983. For this reason, the State Government felt that it was not feasible to adopt for selection of books the procedure usually followed as it took a considerable time and, therefore, took a decision on April 5, 1983, to utilize the grant made by Central Government in purchasing books out of the books selected for the years 1980, 1981 and 1982 and the said supplementary list of 105 books. Accordingly, a meeting was convened on April 13, 1983, to consider the selection of books to be purchased. There is some controversy with respect to who convened the said meeting, who were present at that meeting and what transpired in that meeting, but we find it unnecessary to go into this controversy. Suffice it to say that books out of those selected for the years 1980, 1981 and 1982 and the said supplementary list were selected at this meeting.

Thereupon the Appellants who are publishers filed a petition under Article 226 of the Constitution against the State of orissa and the Director of Public Instruction, Orissa, to quash the lists of books selected for the years 1980, 1981 and 1982 and the State Government's said decision with respect to purchasing books out of the cyclone and flood relief grant made by the Central Government inter alia on the ground of bias on the part of some of the members of the Assessment Sub-Committee whose books were submitted for selection. This writ petition was heard along with a similar writ petition filed by the Orissa Publishers and Book Sellers Association. The High Court by a common judgment delivered on August 10, 1983, dismissed both these writ petitions and made no order as to the costs thereof. It is against this judgment and order of the Orissa High Court that the Appellants have approached this Court by way of Appeal by Special Leave.

The High Court rested its decision on the following five 330 grounds, namely:

(1) For the year 1980-81, the First Appellants, a partnership firm, had not submitted any book pursuant to the advertisement issued by the State Government. For the year 1981-82, it had submitted twenty-four books out of which one was selected. For the year 1982-83, it had submitted twenty-

nine books out of which six were selected. Having submitted books for selection and after being either partially successful in getting some books selected or having failed in getting books submitted by it selected, the First Appellant could not impugn the selection of books on the ground of bias on the part of the members of the Assessment Sub-Committee. The Second Appellant had not submitted any book for selection pursuant to the advertisement in this behalf issued by the State Government for any of the years in question and, therefore, was not a "person aggrieved" by any of the selections made for those years (2) Considering the exigency of the situation, the procedure followed by the State Government in setting up a committee for the selection to be made for purchase of books from the grant made by the Central Government was neither arbitrary nor against public interest inasmuch as the procedure usually followed was laid down only by executive directions and was not a statutory procedure and could, therefore, be changed by the State Government.

(3) The final decision approving the selection of books was that of the State Government for it had the right to reject any book recommended by the Assessment Sub-Committee and, therefore, the fact that some members of the Assessment Sub-Committee had also submitted their books for approval did not matter for the role played by an individual member of the Assessment Sub-Committee was insignificant and did not and could not influence the decision either of that Sub- Committee or of the State Government.

(4) The presence of Government officials as members of the Purchase Committee and the two Sub-Committees was required by the Government Resolution constituting the Committees and Sub-Committees and the fact that some of these Governmental officials had also submitted books for selection could not invalidate the selection made on the ground of bias for the doctrine of necessity applied in their case.

(5) No relief could be granted in respect of the books selected 331 for the years 1980, 1981 and 1982 inasmuch as the books selected for those years had already been purchased.

We are unable to follow the reasoning behind the first ground upon which the High Court rested its decision. It appears to us paradoxical that when a person has submitted books for selection, it is to be said that he has waived the objection which he had to the constitution of the Sub- Committee and that when a person had not submitted any books for selection it is to be said that he is not a 'person aggrieved'. To say so would be a contradiction in terms. If the reasoning of the High Court were correct, the sequitur would be that nobody would be able to challenge any selection of books, for a person who challenges the selection must either be one who has submitted a book or books for selection or one who has not submitted any book for selection. In our opinion, the High Court was not right in the view it took. Merely by submitting books for selection of which some might have been selected, a person cannot be said to have waived the objection which he may have to the constitution of the committee which selects the books. Similarly, merely because a person does not submit any book for selection, it cannot be said that he is not a person aggrieved. Today, the law with respect to locus standi has considerably advanced both in this country and in England and in the case of public interest litigation it is not necessary that a petitioner should himself have a personal interest in the matter. It is unnecessary to refer to the decisions of this Court on the point or to dilate further upon it. We may, however, mention that at the hearing of this Appeal before us this contention was not raised on behalf of the Respondents.

So far as the second ground given by the High Court for arriving at its decision is concerned, we are in agreement with the view which it took. There were no statutory rules or regulations with respect to selection of books and the selection was done each year as an administrative measure. It was, therefore, open to the State Government to change both the constitution of the committee and sub-committees as also the procedure for selecting books when books had to be purchased from the grant given by the Central Government. The grant given by the Central Government had to be expended within a particular period. The procedure normally adopted by the State Government would have taken more time than what the time-bound grant of the Central Government would have permitted. The State Government was, therefore, justified in setting up a committee for selecting books to be purchased from 332 the Central Government grant in the manner in which it did. There is, however, some controversy as regards the fact whether any publishers were present at the meeting of that committee. According to the Appellants, some publishers were present at that meeting and took part in the deliberations. According to the counter affidavit filed by the President of the Orissa Publishers and Book-Sellers Association, a representative of that Association was called in at the end of that meeting to ascertain whether the said Association was prepared to shoulder the responsibility for arranging the timely supply of books and the said representative did not take part in the proceedings of the said meeting nor was he present at the deliberations thereof. A copy of the minutes of the said meeting which has been annexed to the Petition for Special Leave to Appeal filed by the Appellants bears out this fact. According to the said minutes, it was decided at the said meeting that the publishers would prepare a list of books to be supplied to different schools in different lots within the amount sanctioned for each category of schools and that the total number of books for each title would be almost equal and that the publishers would submit the list of such books for approval at the level of the directorate. It is further recorded in the said minutes that the said Association would take the responsibility of supplying the books in packets in the office of the concerned authorities by the specified dates. The urgency of the situation demanded that the books which were selected should be available for supply and, therefore, there could not be anything wrong in asking a representative of the said Association to remain present.

It is, however, unnecessary to go further into this controversy for the real question in this Appeal is of far greater importance. That is the question of bias on the part of some of the members of the Assessment Sub-Committee. This question has been answered against the Appellants and forms the subject-matter of the third and fourth grounds on which the High Court rested its decision. Nemo judex in causa sua, that is, no man shall be a judge in his own cause, is a principle firmly established in law. Justice should not only be done but should manifestly be seen to be done. It is on this principle that the proceedings in courts of law are open to the public except in those cases where for special reason the law requires or authorizes a hearing in camera. Justice can never be seen to be done if a man acts as a judge in his own cause or is himself interested in its outcome. This principle applies not only to judicial proceedings but also to quasi-judicial and administrative proceedings. The position in law has been succinctly stated in 333 Halsbury's Laws of England, Fourth Edition, Volume I, Para 68, as follows :

"Disqualification for financial interest-There is a presumption that any direct financial interest, however small, in the matter in dispute disqualifies a person from adjudicating. Membership of a company, association or other organization which is financially interested may operate as a bar to adjudicating, as may a bare liability to costs where the decision itself will involve no pecuniary loss."

In the case of A.K. Kraipak and others v. Union of India and Others,(1) a list of State Forest Officers prepared by the Selection Board for appointment to posts in the senior and junior scales in the Indian Forest Service was set aside by this Court on the ground that the officiating Chief Conservator of forests, whose name was placed at the top of the list, was a member of the Selection Board even though he was not present at the time his name was considered for selection and even though the Selection Board was a recommendatory body and the list prepared by it was to be considered first by the Home Ministry and then by the Union Public Service Commission by whom the final recommendations were to be made. The Court held that the rule that no man should be a judge in his own cause was a principle of natural justice and applied equally to the exercise of qashi-judicial as well as administrative powers.

In hardly requires any argument to show that a person who has written a book which is submitted for selection, either by himself or by his publisher, interested in the matter of selection. Authors get their books published by publishers or may themselves publish them. In either case, they stand to benefit financially. In the first case, by getting royalty from publishers and in the second case, by making profits on the sale of books if the amount realized exceeds the cost of publication, or if the sales are not to that extent, by reducing the cost incurred in the publication of the book. The Appellants have filed statements showing the financial benefit which accrued to those members of the Assessment Sub-Committee whose books were selected. To give one instance from these statements, in the case of a member of the Assessment Sub-Committee who was a Government official and whose books were selected, books of the 334 aggregate value of Rs. 4,000 were purchased in the year 1980, of the aggregate value of Rs. 6,500 in the year 1981, and of the aggregate value of Rs. 72,500 in the year 1982. It was contended in the counter affidavit filed on behalf of the Respondents that the amount of royalty received by these member-authors was not much. This fact is immaterial. The amount of royalty depends on the agreement between the author and the publisher as also upon the sale price of the book. The fact, however, remains that by the books being selected and purchased for distribution to school and college libraries the sales of those books had gone up and correspondingly the royalty received by the author-members also went up and such author-members thus received financial benefit. It is no answer to say that an author-member is only one of the members of the Assessment Sub-Committee and that the ultimate decision rests with the State Government which may reject any book out of the list of approved books. A similar argument was rejected by this Court in Kraipak's case. The State Government would normally be guided by the list approved by the Assessment Sub-Committee. Further, to say that such author-member is only one of the members of the Assessment Sub-Committee is to overlook the fact that the author-member can subtly influence the minds of the other members against selecting books by other authors in preference to his own. It can also be that books by some of the other members may also have been submitted for selection and there can be between them a quid pro quo or, in other words, you see that my book is selected and in return I will do the same for you. In either case, when a book of an author-member comes up for consideration, the other members would feel themselves embarrassed in frankly discussing its merits. Such author-member may also be a person holding a high official position whom the other members may not want to displease. It can be that the other members may not be influenced by the fact that the book which they are considering for approval was written by one of their members. Whether they were so influenced or not is, however, a matter impossible to determine. It is not, therefore, the actual bias in favour of the author-member that is material but the possibility of such bias. All these considerations require that an author-member should not be a member of any such committee or sub-committee.

There is, however, an exception to the above rule that no men shall be a judge in his own cause, namely, the doctrine of necessity. An adjudicator, who is subject to disqualification on the 335 ground of bias or interest in the matter which he has to decide, may be required to adjudicate if there is no other person who is competent or authorized to adjudicate or if a quorum cannot be formed without him or if no other competent tribunal can be constituted. In such cases the principle of natural justice would have to give way to necessity for otherwise there would be no means of deciding the matter and the machinery of justice or administration would break down. Thus, in The Judges v. Attorney-General for Saskatchewan,(1) the Judges of the Court of Appeal were held competent to decide the question whether Judges of the Court of Appeal, of the Court of King's Bench and of the District Courts of the Province of Saskatchewan were subject to taxation under the Income-tax Act, 1932, of Saskatchewan on the ground that they were bound to act exnecessitate. The doctrine of necessity applies not only to judicial matters but also to quasi-judicial and administrative matters. The High Court, however, wrongly applied this doctrine to the author-members of the Assessment Sub-Committee. It is true, the members of this Sub-Committee were appointed by a Government Resolution and some of them were appointed by virtue of the official position they were holding, such as, the Secretary, Education Department of the Government of Orissa, and the Director, Higher Education, etc. There was, however, nothing to prevent those whose books were submitted for selection from pointing out this fact to the State Government so that it could amend its Resolution by appointing a substitute or substitutes, as the case may be. There was equally nothing to prevent such non-official author-members from resigning from the committee on the ground of their interest in the matter.

So far as the fifth and last ground on which the High Court rested its decision is concerned, it must be held that the High Court was justified in refusing to grant relief on this ground in respect of the books selected for the years 1980, 1981 and 1982. We are also faced with a similar fait accompli as the High Court was, not only in respect of the books selected and purchased for those years but also with respect to the books selected and to be purchased from the Central Government grant because these books have also by now been purchased and distributed among the various school and college libraries. All that we can, therefore, do in this Appeal is to lay down guide-lines which should be followed in the future in selecting not only books for libraries in educational institutions but 336 also in prescribing text-books and in constituting committees for these purposes.

It was, however, submitted on behalf of the Respondents that it was not necessary for this Court to lay down any guide-lines inasmuch as after the Special Leave to Appeal was granted in this case, the State Government had issued a fresh Government Resolution dated November 24, 1983, whereby it constituted a new Purchase Committee and Assessment Committee consisting of Government officials and non- official members, clause (8) of which Resolution satisfied the principles of fair play and natural justice by eliminating the possibility of any author-member of the committee influencing author-members in selecting his book. Clause (8) of the said Resolution reads as follows :

"No member of the Purchase/Assessment Committee shall remain present in discussion while considering a book in which he/she is interested as author/editor/publisher."

In the alternative, it was submitted that if the Court desires to lay down guide-lines, it should do so by adopting clause (8) of the said Government Resolution dated November 24, 1983.

We are unable to accept either of the above two submissions. Several books would come up for consideration before the committee, one or more of them by one of the members and the other or others by some of the other members. Mere non-participation in the discussion by the member concerned or even his withdrawing from the deliberations of the committee while his or her book or books are being considered is not sufficient because the evil of quid pro quo cannot be eliminated by this. Members deliberating would bear in mind that the turn for selecting their books would also come and the concerned member who had not participated or had withdrawn would not then be favourably inclined to select their books.

It was suggested on behalf of the Appellants that in laying down the guide-lines we should provide that if a publisher has published a book written by one of the members of the committee or sub-committee concerned with the selection of books, such publisher should not be permitted to submit any book for selection even though no book by that author-member had been submitted for selection. It was urged that in such a case the author-member would be favourably inclined to select or approve the book of that publisher in order 337 to maintain good relations with him. We find this suggestion to be unrealistic. Many a person falls a victim to that disease which Jnvenal called cacoethes scribendi(the writer's itch), for as Byron said in his 'English Bards and Scottish Reviewers' :

"'Tis pleasant, sure, to see one's name in print; A book's a book, although there's nothing in't."

It would, therefore, be unfair to prohibit publishers from submitting books for selection merely because they had at one time published a book written by one of the members of the committee or sub-committee concerned with the selection of books The number of publishers is large but good publishers are few and such publishers will, therefore, be publishing the majority of books. To lay down such a guide-line would be to eliminate a large number of books which may be worthy of selection.

In the light of the above discussion we lay down the following guide-lines to be adopted by the State Government, governmental authorities and all committees constituted for the selection to textbooks as also books for libraries of educational institutions whether such committee be called a committee or sub-committee or be described by some other nomenclature :

(1) The committee should not consist merely of Government officials or have a preponderance of Government officials on it, for Government officials, with few exceptions, have by and large only administrative experience. In addition to Government officials, therefore, the committee should also consist of men eminent in the particular fields of knowledge for which the books are to be selected. Non-official members should not be appointed as a matter of political considerations or on party lines but should be appointed only on merit.
(2) No member of the committee, a book written or edited by whom is submitted either by himself or his publisher for approval or selection; should continue to remain a member of the committee. If he is a non-official member, he should submit his resignation from the committee on this ground. If he is a Government official, he should intimate to the Government or the authority appointing him on that committee the fact that a book written or edited by him has been submitted for approval or selection and the Government or the concerned authority should substitute in place 338 of such member another person, whether official or non-

official, none of whose books has been submitted for approval or selection.

(3) No publisher of books or his representative should be appointed a member of the committee or be allowed to remain present at or participate in the deliberations of the committee.

The guide-lines we have laid down above are not intended to be exhaustive but contain the bare essentials of what is required. We are conscious that no guide-lines laid down by a court can ensure the selection of really worthwhile books. This must necessarily depend upon the social consciousness and moral fibre of the members of the committee. Similarly, no judgment of a court can eliminate the evil of behind-the-scene influence. Here, one must perforce trust the sense of responsibility of the members of the committee in the discharge of the important duty with which they are entrusted.

For the reasons mentioned above, we allow this Appeal and direct the State of Orissa to amend suitably the Government Resolution dated November 24, 1983, or to issue a fresh notification in supersession of that notification, incorporating the guide-lines laid down by us above, as expeditiously as possible and in any event before the next selection of books is made, without affecting any selection already made.

In the particular facts and circumstances of this case there will be no order as to the costs of this Appeal. S.R. Appeal allowed.

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