09 December 1960
Supreme Court
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KISHAN CHAND ARORA Vs COMMISSIONER OF POLICE, CALCUTTA

Bench: SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ),KAPUR, J.L.,GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.,SUBBARAO, K.,WANCHOO, K.N.
Case number: Writ Petition (Civil) 22 of 1960


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PETITIONER: KISHAN CHAND ARORA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COMMISSIONER OF POLICE, CALCUTTA

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/12/1960

BENCH: WANCHOO, K.N. BENCH: WANCHOO, K.N. SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) KAPUR, J.L. GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. SUBBARAO, K.

CITATION:  1961 AIR  705            1961 SCR  (3) 135  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1967 SC 829  (6)  R          1984 SC1030  (37)

ACT: Eating  House-Power  to grant license-Discretion  vested  in Police  Commissioner -- Constitutionality  Calcutta  Police Act,  1866 (IV of 1866), s. 39-Constitution of India,  Arts. 19(1)(g), 19(6).

HEADNOTE: By s. 39 of the Calcutta Police Act, 1866, "The Commissioner of  Police, may, at his discretion from time to time,  grant licenses  to the keepers of such houses or places of  public resort  and entertainment as aforesaid for which no  licence as  is specified in the Bengal Excise Act, 1909 is  required upon such conditions, (1)  (1934) L.R. 61 I.A. 398. 136 to  be  inserted  in every such license,  as  he,  with  the sanction  of  the said State Government from  time  to  time shall order, for securing the good behaviour of the  keepers of   the  said  houses  or  places  of  public   resort   or entertainment,   and  the  prevention  of  drunkenness   and disorder  among the persons frequenting or using  the  same; and   the  said  licenses  may  be  granted  by   the   said Commissioner, for any time not exceeding one year". The  petitioner, whose application for a license in  respect of  an  eating  house was refused  by  the  Commissioner  of Police,   Calcutta,  under  the  section,   challenged   its constitutional  validity  on the ground  that  it  conferred arbitrary  and unguided powers on the Commissioner to  grant or  refuse a license without hearing the applicant and  was, therefore,  an unreasonable restriction on  his  fundamental right  to carry on his trade guaranteed by Art. 19(1)(g)  of the Constitution. Held, (per Kapur, Gajendragadkar and Wanchoo, JJ.), that  in order  to decide whether a provision in  a  pre-Constitution statute,  like the one in question, satisfies. the  test  of constitutionality laid down by Art. 19(i)(g) read with  Art.

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19(6)  of the Constitution, the impugned section has  to  be read  as  a  whole in a fair and reasonable  manner  and  it should   not   be   declared   void   simply   because   the considerations   relevant   to  those   Articles   are   not immediately  apparent from its language.  It is not  correct to say that the discretion conferred on the Commissioner  by the  first  part  of the section is absolute  and  that  the question  of  imposing the two conditions mentioned  by  the second  part can arise only after the grant of the  license. The  two  parts,  read  together,  can  lead  only  to   the conclusion that the discretion vested in the Commissioner is guided  by  the  two conditions mentioned  in  the  section, namely, the securing of good behaviour and the prevention of drunkenness  and  disorder and a third by  necessary  impli- cation,  that the applicant must have actual  and  effective control  and  possession  of the place where  he  keeps  the eating house. Section 39 of the Calcutta Police Act, 1866, therefore, con- fers   no  arbitrary  or  uncanalised  discretion   on   the Commissioner,  unguided  by  any  criteria,  and  does   not constitute  an unreasonable restriction on  the  fundamental right  to  carry  on  trade  under  Art.  19(i)(g)  of   the Constitution. Rustom  jamshed  Irani v. Harley Kennedy, (1901)  I.L.R.  26 Bom. 386, inapplicable. Although there can be no doubt that procedural provisions of a   statute   also  enter  into  the  verdict  as   to   its reasonableness,  it  cannot  be  laid  down  as  a   general proposition that if a licensing statute omits to provide for a  hearing  or for the giving of reasons for  refusal,  such omission   must  necessarily  constitute   an   unreasonable restriction  on  a fundamental right.  The  Commissioner  in passing an order under the section acts administratively and although  he must act reasonably, there is no duty  cast  on him                             137 to act judicially.  Regard being had to the setting in which the   impugned   section  appears  in  the   Act   and   the circumstances  of ,.this case, it could not be said that  s. 39 of the Act was such a restriction. State  of Madras v. V. G. Row, [1952] S.C.R.  597,  Nagendra Nath Bora v. The Commissioner of Hills Division and Appeals, Assam,  [1958]  S.C.R.  1240, Nakkuda Ali v.  M.  F.  De  S. jayaratne, 1951 A.C. 66 and Express Newspapers (P.) Ltd.  v. The Union of India, [1959] S.C.R. 12, relied on. If an applicant thinks that he has fulfilled the three  con- ditions  and the Commissioner has unreasonably rejected  his application,  he  has  his  remedy under  Art.  226  of  the Constitution. Per  Subba Rao, J.-It is well settled that  restrictions  on fundamental  rights  must not be arbitrary or  excessive  or beyond  what  is  required in the interest  of  the  general public.   Such restrictions have to be tested both from  the substantive and the procedural aspects.  An uncontrolled  or uncanalised  power constitutes an unreasonable  restriction. Even though the statute may clearly express the  legislative policy  that cannot be enough unless it provides a  suitable machinery  for implementation of that policy  in  accordance with  the principles of natural justice.   Restrictions  are justifiable  and  in  deciding  whether  a  restriction   is reasonable  or not, the Court cannot attach much  importance to  the fact that the impugned statute vests  discretion  in the  State  Government  or  a high  officer.   Nor  can  the distinction  between  an  administrative  authority  and   a judicial  one have much relevance except that the Court  may

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be  more inclined to uphold the discretion if vested  in  an impartial    judicial   authority   rather   than   in    an administrative one. State  of  Madras v. V. G. Row, [1952]  S.C.R.  597,  Thakur Raghubir Singh v. Court of Wards, Ajmer, [1953] S.C.R.  1049 and  M/s.  Dwarka Prasad Laxmi Narain v. The State of  Uttar Pradesh, [1954] S.C.R. 803, relied on. Babulal  Chandra v. Chief justice and judges, High Court  of Patna, A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 524, Harishankar Bagla v. The  State Of  Madhya Pradesh, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 380, Union of  India  v. Bhana  Mal Gulzarimal Ltd., [1960] 2 S.C.R. 627 and  Mineral Development  Ltd.,  State  of Bihar,  [1960]  2  S.C.R.  609 considered. Thus viewed, the plain words of the impugned section  cannot be  said  to  lay  down any  policy  reasonably  capable  of controlling the discretion vested in the Commissioner. The word ’may’ coupled with the words ’at his discretion’ in the  first  part  of  the  section  clearly  emphasises  the intention of the Legislature to confer absolute power on the Commissioner.  The second part deals with the nature of  the conditions to be inserted in the license.  But the scope  of the discretion to issue 18 138 the license and the power to impose conditions in a  license are two different matters. Even  if  the two conditions mentioned in  the  second  part could  be read into the first, the discretion  conferred  by the  section  would  still be arbitrary  since  the  section neither   requires   that  the  Commissioner   should   give reasonable  opportunity  to the applicant to prove  that  he satisfies both the tests prescribed by it nor that he should give  reasons  for  refusing the license and  no  appeal  is provided for. Consequently   , from the substantive as much as the  proce- dural  aspect,  s. 39 of the Act infringes  the  fundamental right  of the petitioner guaranteed by Art. 19(i)(g) of  the Constitution.

JUDGMENT: ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 22 of 1960. Petition  under  Art. 32 of the Constitution  of  India  for enforcement of Fundamental Rights. H.J. Umrigar and B. P. Maheshwari, for the petitioner. A.C.  Mitra, B. Das and P. K. Bose, for  the  respondents Nos. 1 and 2. P. K. Mukherjee, for respondent No. 3. 1960, December 9. The Judgment of Kapur, Gajendragadkar  and Wanchoo,  JJ.,  was delivered by Wanchoo, J.,  and  that  of Sinha, C.J., and Subba Rao, J., was delivered by Subba  Rao, J. WANCHOO, J.-This petition under Art. 32 of the  Constitution challenges  the constitutionality of s. 39 of  the  Calcutta Police  Act, No. IV of 1866, (hereinafter called  the  Act). The  facts necessary for our purpose are these.   On  August 11, 1954, the petitioner entered into an agreement with  one Haripada  Bhowmick, who is respondent No. 3 with respect  to an eating house named ’Kalpatoru Cafeteria’, situate in  No. 2 Chowranghee Road, Calcutta.  The petitioner was  appointed a  contractor by this agreement and was given the  exclusive use  and  occupation of the said eating house  upon  certain terms  and conditions.  A licence has to be taken  out  with respect  to  an  eating house under s. 39 of  the  Act.   It

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appears  that  originally  the licence was in  the  name  of Bhowmick, and one of the conditions of the licence was  that the eating house should not be sublet 139 without   permission   of the   Commissioner   of   Police (hereinafter referred to as the Commissioner).  On the  date of  the  agreement, Bhowmick held a licence for  the  eating house,  which was to expire on March 31, 1955.  It  is  said that  under the agreement the licence was to remain  in  the name  of Bhowmick while the petitioner was to carry  on  the business  as  a contractor.  The petitioner carried  on  the business  from  after  the  date of  the  agreement  and  no application for a fresh licence was made by him before March 31,  1955, when the licence in the name of Bhowmick  was  to expire.  It was only on August 8, 1955, that an  application for licence was made by the petitioner on behalf and in  the name  of Bhowmick, though the business was continued  to  be run  by him all the time after March 31, 1955.   It  appears that  the  application  made in the  name  of  Bhowmick  was rejected on December 27, 1956; but in the meantime  Bhowmick was prosecuted on September 10, 1955, for running the eating house without a licence and was fined on December 12,  1955. Thereafter  a notice was issued to Bhowmick on September  7, 1956,  to show cause why his application for licence  should not  be refused inasmuch as he had not applied in  time  and violated  the  condition of the licence by  sub-letting  the eating  house to the petitioner.  Thereafter the  petitioner applied on September 21, 1956, for the issue of a licence in his  own  name.  It may be mentioned that  in  the  meantime there had been disputes between Bhowmick and the  petitioner and a suit had been filed by Bhowmick against the petitioner in  October  1956  in  that  connection.   It  may  also  be mentioned  that though the petitioner applied for the  first time on September 21, 1956, for licence he had already  been prosecuted  in  October, 1955, for keeping an  eating  house without  a  licence  and convicted in  November  1955.   The application  made by the petitioner on September  21,  1956, was  eventually  rejected on March 30, 1958, though  in  the meantime  the  petitioner  was  all  along  continuing   the business  of  the  eating house without  having  obtained  a licence.   After  the  rejection  of  his  application   the petitioner applied to the High 140 Court  under  Art. 226 of the Constitution  challenging  the constitutionality of s. 39 and also challenging the order of the  Commissioner rejecting his licence on various  grounds. This application was dismissed on August 7, 1958.  Thereupon the petitioner went up in appeal to a Division Bench of  the High  Court  which was disposed of on March  4,  1959.   The Division Bench held s. 39 to be constitutional.  It  further held that as extraneous matters had been taken into  account in rejecting the application of the petitioner for a licence the  rejection was not in accordance with law.  However,  as the period of one year for which a licence is valid under s. 39 had expired in September 1957, and the judgment was being delivered  in  March 1959, the appeal was dismissed  on  the ground  that  application could not be considered  in  1959. Thereupon  the  petitioner made another application  to  the Commissioner on March 30, 1959, for the period from April 1, 1959 to March 31, 1960.  During all this time the petitioner was carrying on his business as a keeper of the eating house without a licence.  This application was found defective and another  application  was  made on May  14,  1959.   In  the meantime, the petitioner again applied to the High Court  on or about May 8, 1959, under Art. 226 of the Constitution  in

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order  to compel the Commissioner to issue him a licence  or in  the alternative to compel him not to prosecute  him  for keeping an eating house without a licence and for such other orders as the High Court might deem fit to pass.  It may  be mentioned that day to day prosecution of the petitioner  had begun  from  February  1956  under s.  40  of  the  Act  for continuing to keep an eating house without a licence.   This writ  application filed in the High Court was  withdrawn  by the  petitioner on May 13, 1959, as his application  to  the Commissioner  of March 30, was defective.  On May 30,  1959, the Commissioner rejected the application of the  petitioner for  a  licence on the ground that his antecedents  and  his present conduct showed that he would not keep good  behavior and further that he would not be able to prevent drunkenness or  disorder  among  the persons frequenting  or  using  the eating 141 house’  The petitioner’s complaint is that he was not  heard before the order rejecting his application was passed.  Then on  June 15, 1959, the petitioner again applied  under  Art. 226  of  the  Constitution to the  High  Court  against  the rejection  of  his application on May 30.  On  February  11, 1960, the High Court allowed the petitioner to withdraw  the application with liberty to move such application as he  may be  advised  before, this Court, in case  such  liberty  was necessary.   Thereafter the petitioner moved this  Court  by his present application on February 15, 1960. His  main  contention  before us is that s. 39  of  the  Act confers naked and uncanalised powers on the Commissioner  to grant  or  refuse a licence and that no criteria  have  been laid down anywhere in the Act to guide the discretion of the Commissioner.   Further,  no opportunity is provided  to  an applicant  for  a licence to be heard either  orally  or  in writing before passing orders on an application for licence; in  consequence, the Commissioner has been given  completely arbitrary powers either to grant or to refuse a licence  and this   amounts  to  an  unreasonable  restriction   on   the fundamental right of the petitioner to carry on the trade of eating   house   keeper.   Besides  this   attack   on   the constitutionality of s. 39 the petitioner also contends that the  order  is mala fide and should be struck down  on  this ground.   There are some other grounds in the  petition  but they  have  not been pressed before us and it  will  not  be necessary to consider them. The first question therefore that falls for consideration is whether s. 39 of the Act is a reasonable restriction  within the  meaning  of  Art. 19(6) on  the  fundamental  right  to practise any profession or to carry on any occupation, trade or  business  contained in Art. 19 (1)(g).  Sec.  39  is  in these terms:-               "The  Commissioner  of  Police,  may,  at  his               discretion, from time to time, grant  licences               to  the  keepers of such houses or  places  of               public  resort and entertainment as  aforesaid               for  which no licence as is specified  in  the               Bengal Excise Act, 1909, is required upon such               conditions, to be inserted in every such               142               licence, as he, with the sanction of the  said               State  Government  from  time  to  time  shall               order, for securing the good behaviour of  the               keepers of the said houses or places of public               resort or entertainment, and the prevention of               drunkenness  and  disorder among  the  persons               frequenting  or using the same; and  the  said

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             licences   may   be  granted   by   the   said               Commissioner,  for any time not exceeding  one               year." Learned  counsel  for  the  petitioner  contends  that   the language  of  s.  39  shows  that  an  absolute  discretion; untrammelled  by  any considerations, is  conferred  on  the Commissioner by this section and there is nothing either  in the  section or anywhere in the Act to guide the  discretion of the Commissioner in the matter of granting such licences. Therefore, according to learned counsel, the power conferred on the Commissioner is arbitrary and unguided and such power is  necessarily  to  be struck down on the  ground  that  it cannot be a reasonable restriction on the fundamental  right to  carry on trade.  There is no doubt that if  the  section empowers  the  Commissioner  to grant or  refuse  a  licence without   any  criteria  to  guide  him,  it  would  be   an unreasonable restriction on the right to carry on trade.  We have  therefore to see whether there is any guidance  either in  the  section or in the Act to regulate the  exercise  of discretion  of  the Commissioner in the matter  of  granting such  licences.   In this connection it must  be  remembered that  the  Act  was  passed  in  1866  when  there  were  no fundamental rights and we cannot expect that  meticulousness of  language which should be found in statutes passed  after January  26,  1950.  It may also be mentioned that  the  Act replaced  two  earlier Acts, namely, Act XIII  of  1856  and XLVIII  of 1860.  The Act of 1860 also contained  provisions for  licences for eating houses in ss.  II and  12  thereof, though   the  language  of  those  sections   was   somewhat different.  Sec. 11 laid down that in the towns of Calcutta, Madras  and  Bombay no eating house shall  be  kept  without licence  and provided for a penalty for the same.   See.  12 then laid down that the Commissioner shall from time to time grant licences to 143 keepers of such houses upon conditions for securing the good behaviour  of  the keepers of the said houses  and  for  the prevention  of  drunkenness and disorder among  the  persons frequenting  or  using  the same.  The language  of  s.  39, however,  is  different  inasmuch as it  provides  that  the Commissioner  may at his discretion from time to time  grant licences.   The  Act of 1860 was interpreted by  the  Bombay High Court in Rustom J. Irani v. H. Kennedy (1) as giving no discretion  to the Commissioner to refuse a licence  if  the person  applying for the licence was willing to  fulfil  the conditions  imposed  thereunder.  In the case  of  Calcutta, however,  s. 39 made a change in the language  contained  in the earlier Act giving discretion to the Commissioner in the matter  of  grant of licences.  The  question  therefore  is whether  the word "discretion" introduced by s. 39 means  an absolute  and  unguided discretion and would  therefore  now become an unreasonable restriction on the fundamental  right of  a  citizen to carry on the trade of  keeping  an  eating house.   There  is no doubt, as we have  already  indicated, that  the section does not say as many of the provisions  of laws passed after January 26, 1950, do that the Commissioner would  grant  licence on certain  specified  considerations. The contention on behalf of the petitioner is that the first part  of  s.  39  confers  an  absolute  discretion  on  the Commissioner  to  grant or to refuse a licence  just  as  he pleases  and  that  the second part of  the  section  merely provides  for certain conditions to be imposed in  case  the Commissioner pleases to grant a licence.  We are however  of opinion  that  when we are judging a law passed in  1866  to decide  whether it satisfies the test  of  constitutionality

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based  on Art. 19(1)(g) and Art. 19(6), we should  take  the section as a whole and see whether on a fair reading of  the section  it  can be said that there is no guidance  for  the Commissioner in the matter of granting or refusing  licences and  his power is arbitrary.  If such guidance can be  found on  a fair reading of the section, there would be no  reason for  striking it down simply because it has not been  worded in a manner which (1)  (1901) I.L.R. 26 Bom. 396. 144 would show immediately that considerations arising from  the provisions  of  Art. 19(1)(g) and Art. 19(6) were  in  mind- naturally  those considerations could not be in the mind  of the  legislature in 1866.  We have therefore to see  whether an Act passed before the Constitution came into force can be reasonably  and  fairly read as containing guidance  in  the matter  of licensing, as in this case.  If it can be  fairly and  reasonably  read to contain guidance it should  not  be struck  down.   If,  on  the  other  hand,  on  a  fair  and reasonable  construction of the section as a whole, we  come to  the conclusion that there is no guidance in it  and  the discretion  vested  in  the  Commissioner  is  absolute  and arbitrary it will have be struck down. What  then  does the section provide?   It  certainly  gives powers  to  the  Commissioner  to  grant  licences  at   his discretion.   Those  words, however, by  themselves  do  not necessarily mean that the Commissioner has the power to  act arbitrarily  and grant licences where he pleases and  refuse where  he  does not please to do so.  The  section  provides further  that  the licence has to be  granted  upon  certain conditions and those conditions have to satisfy two objects, namely, (i) securing of the good behaviour of the keepers of the said houses or places of public resort and entertainment and  (ii) the prevention of drunkenness and  disorder  among the persons frequenting or using the same.  Of course, it is implicit in the section that a licence will only be  granted to a person who is the keeper of an eating house.  We cannot read  the  section  as laying down that  the  discretion  is absolute  and  that  the im. posing of  conditions  for  the aforesaid  two  objects  only  arises  after  that  absolute discretion  has  been exercised in favour of  the  grant  of licences.   We  see  no unfairness  or  unreasonableness  in reading  the  section to mean that  the  Commissioner  shall satisfy  himself (i) that the person applying for a  licence is  the keeper of an eating house, meaning thereby  that  he has a place where he can carry on the business or trade  and that he actually and effectively has control and  possession of  that  place, (ii) that the keeper is a  person  of  good behaviour so that the eating house may not become                             145 a  resort of criminals and persons of ill-repute, and  (iii) that the keeper is in a position to prevent drunkenness  and disorder  among  those who come to the eating  house.   This section  appears in the Police Act, the purpose of which  is to  maintain law and order and that is why we find that  the two  objects  to be secured when granting licences  are  the good  behaviour of the keeper himself and the prevention  of drunkenness and disorder among those who frequent the eating house.  It seems therefore to us that s. 39 clearly provides that  the Commissioner will use his discretion  in  deciding whether  the person applying for a licence is in actual  and effective  control  and possession of the  place  where  the eating  house is to be kept and is thus the keeper  thereof. He will also satisfy himself that the keeper is a person  of good  behaviour  and  further that he  is  able  to  prevent

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drunkenness  and  disorder in the eating house.   If  he  is satisfied  on these three matters, it seems to us  that  the section  contemplates that the discretion will be  exercised in favour of the grant of a licence.  We cannot accept  that even  though  the  Commissioner may be  satisfied  that  the person  applying  for  a licence has  actual  and  effective control  of the place where he is going to keep  the  eating house,  is  a  person  of good  behaviour  and  can  prevent drunkenness and disorder among the clientele, he will  still go  on to refuse the licence.  The discretion that is  given to him is to satisfy himself on these three points and if he is satisfied about them he has to grant the licence.  On the other  hand  if he is not satisfied on any one  or  more  of these points he will exercise the discretion by refusing the licence.   As for the conditions which will be  inserted  in the  licence, they are only for the purpose of  carrying  on the  two  objects  specified  in  the  section.   They  will naturally  be  more detailed in order to carry out  the  two objects  aforesaid.   But these two objects in  our  opinion along  with the obvious implication in the section that  the person  applying must have actual and effective  control  of the place where he is going to keep the eating house are the criteria which will govern the exercise 146 of discretion by the Commissioner in the matter of  granting or  refusing  a licence.  We cannot agree with  the  learned counsel  for  the  petitioner that the two parts  of  s.  39 should  be read separately, as if one has no effect  on  the other.  Reading them together, it is in our opinion fair and reasonable to come to the conclusion that the discretion  of the Commissioner in this matter is guided by the two objects mentioned  in the section and by the  necessary  implication contained  in it that the person applying must be in  actual and  effective control and possession of the place where  he is  going to keep the eating house.  The argument  therefore that  s.  39  confers an  arbitrary  and  uncanalised  power Without  any  criteria  for guiding the  discretion  of  the licensing authority must fail and the section cannot be held to  be an unreasonable restriction on the right to carry  on trade on this ground. Then  it  is  urged that even if there is  guidance  in  the section it provides for no hearing either oral or written of the person applying for a licence.  Further it provides  for no  grounds to be given for refusing a licence.   Therefore, though there may be some guiding principle in the matter  of granting  licences, the absence of a provision  for  hearing and  for  giving  reasons for refusal would  also  make  the provision unconstitutional as an unreasonable restriction on a fundamental right.  Reference in this connection was  made to  State of Madras v. V. G. Row (1) where it  was  observed that-               "In  considering  the reasonableness  of  laws               imposing  restrictions on  fundamental  right,               both the substantive and procedural aspects of               the  impugned law should be examined from  the               point  of view of reasonableness and the  test               of reasonableness, wherever prescribed, should               be applied to each individual statute impugned               and  no abstract standard or general pattern               of   reasonableness  can  be  laid   down   as               applicable to all cases." There  is no doubt that procedural provisions of  a  statute also enter into the verdict as to its reasonableness; but at the same time there can be no abstract or                             147

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general  principles which would govern the matter  and  each statute  has  to  be examined in its  own  setting.   It  is undoubtedly  correct  that no provision has  been  made  for giving a hearing to a person applying for a licence and  the Commissioner  has  not  to give reasons  when  refusing  the licence; but it cannot be laid down as a general proposition that where in the case of licensing statute no provision  is made  for  hearing  and there is  no  provision  for  giving reasons  for  refusal  the statute must be  struck  down  as necessarily  an  unreasonable restriction on  a  fundamental right.   No  case has been cited before us which  lays  down such  a general proposition.  We have therefore  to  examine the section in its setting to decide whether the absence  of a  provision for hearing and for requiring the  Commissioner to  give  reasons  for  refusal  would  make  this   section unconstitutional.   The section appears in the  Police  Act, which deals generally with matters of law and order and  the two  objects specified in the section are also for the  same purpose.  The discretion is vested in a high police  officer who, one would expect, would use it reasonably.  There is no provision  for  appeal and there is no lis  as  between  the person  applying  for a licence and  the  Commissioner;  the exercise  of  the  discretion depends  upon  the  subjective satisfaction  of the Commissioner as to whether  the  person applying  for  a  licence  satisfies  the  three  conditions mentioned  above.  It is true that the order when  made  one way  or the other affects the fundamental right of  carrying on  trade,  but  in the circumstances it cannot  but  be  an administrative  order  (see,  Nagendra  Nath  Bora  v.   The Commissioner of Hills Division and Appeals, Assam (1)),  and though the Commissioner is expected to act reasonably  there is no duty cast on him to act judicially.  In Nakkuda Ali v. M.  F.  De S. Jayaratne (2), the Privy Council  pointed  out that  it  was  Quite  possible  to  act  reasonably  without necessarily actinG judicially and that it was a long step in the  argument to say that because a man is expected  to  act reasonably  he  cannot  do so without a  course  of  conduct analogous  to  the  judicial  process.   The  compulsion  of hearing before (1) [1958] S.C.R. 1240,1253. (2) [1951] A.C. 66. 148 passing the order implied in the maxim ’audi alteram partem’ applies  only  to judicial  or  quasi-judicial  proceedings: (see,  Express Newspapers (P.) Ltd. v. The, Union  of  India (1)).  Therefore, the fact that no hearing is required to be given  by  the Commissioner before he decides  to  grant  or refuse  a  licence  would  not make  the  provisions  as  to licensing  in  the circumstances of this  case  unreasonable restrictions  on  the  fundamental right of  carrying  on  a trade.  For- the same reasons it cannot be said that because the  reasons for refusal are not communicated to the  person applying   that   would   make   the   licensing   provision unconstitutional.  The person applying knows that under  the law there are three conditions (already set out above) which the Commissioner has to consider in granting or refusing the licence.  If he thinks that he fulfills the three conditions and the Commissioner has acted unreasonably in rejecting his application he is not without a remedy; he can apply to  the High  Court  under Art. 226 and compel the  Commissioner  to disclose  the  reasons for refusal before the Court  and  if those reasons are extraneous or are not germane to the three matters arising under s. 39, the High Court will compel  the Commissioner  to  act  within the scope of s.  39.   We  are therefore of opinion that in the circumstances of this  case

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and  in the setting in which s. 39 appears the mere  absence of   a   provision  for  a  hearing  or  a   provision   for communicating   the  reasons  for  refusal  to  the   person applying,  does  not  make  s.  39  unconstitutional  as  an unreasonable restriction on a fundamental right.  The attack therefore on the constitutionality of s. 39 must fail. Then  we turn to the question of mala fides.  It is not  the case  of  the  petitioner  that  the  Commissioner  has  any personal  animus  against  him  or  that  he  is   favouring Bhowmick.  What he says in ground 41 of his petition in this connection is that the reasons given by the Commissioner  in his  order dated May 30, 1959, for refusing the licence  are not  correct and that the Commissioner is annoyed  with  him because  he  went  to  the High Court by  means  of  a  writ application. (1)  [1959] S.C.R. 12. 106. 149 These  in  our opinion are no grounds for holding  that  the order  of  the Commissioner passed in this case on  May  30, 1959, is malafide.  The  petition therefore fails and is hereby dismissed  with costs. SUBBA RAO, J.-We regret our inability to agree with Wanchoo, J. Our learned brother in his judgment has stated the  facts fully and it is not necessary to restate them here. The  petitioner  applied  to  the  Commissioner  of  Police, Calcutta,  for  a  licence to enable him  to  carry  on  the business of an eating house known as "Kalpatoru  Cafeteria". The  Commissioner by his order dated May 30, 1959,  rejected the application made by the petitioner for a licence on  two grounds,  namely, that he was not satisfied that  from  "the antecedents  and resent conduct" of the petitioner it  would be  reasonable to think that the petitioner would keep  good behaviour  and  would  be able  to  prevent  drunkenness  or disorder  among  the persons frequenting the  eating  house. The  application  was rejected under s. 39 of  the  Calcutta Police  Act,  No. IV of 1866 (hereinafter called  the  Act). The short question raised is whether s. 39  of  the  Act  is constitutionally valid.  Section 39 of  the Act reads:               "The  COMMISSIONER  of Police,  may,  at  his.               discretion, from time to time, grant  licenses               to  the  keepers of such houses or  places  of               public  resort and entertainment as  aforesaid               for  which no license as is specified  in  the               Bengal Excise Act, 1909, is required upon such               conditions,  to  be  inserted  in  every  such               license, as he, with the sanction of the  said               State  Government  from  time  to  time  shall               order, for securing the good behaviour of  the               keepers of the said houses or places of public               resort or entertainment, and the prevention of               drunkenness  and  disorder among  the  persons               frequenting  or using the same; and  the  said               licenses   may   be  granted   by   the   said               Commissioner,  for any time not exceeding  one               year." Learned counsel for the petitioner contends that 150 the petitioner has under Art. 19(1)(g) of the Constitution a fundamental  right  to carry on the business  of  an  eating house  and  that the provisions of s. 39 of the  Act  impose unreasonable restrictions on the exercise of his right  and, therefore, the said section is void. Before scrutinising the provisions of that section it  would be  convenient at the outset to notice the relevant  aspects

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of the law vis-a-vis the concept of reasonable  restrictions on  a fundamental right.  The concept of reasonableness  has been clearly defined by Patanjali Sastri, C. J., in State af Madras v. V. G. Row (1) thus:               "It  is important in this context to  bear  in               mind that the test of reasonableness, wherever               prescribed,   should   be  applied   to   each               individual  statute impugned, and no  abstract                             standard, or general pattern, of reasonablenes s               can  be laid down as applicable to all  cases.               The  nature of the right alleged to have  been               infringed,  the  underlying  purpose  of   the               restrictions ’imposed, the extent and  urgency               of the evil sought Co be remedied thereby, the               disproportion    of   the   imposition,    the               prevailing conditions at the time, should  all               enter into the judicial verdict". There  the  constitutional validity of s.  15(2)(b)  of  the Indian Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1908, was impugned on the ground  that  it  fell  outside  the  scope  of   authorized restrictions  in Art. 19(4) of the Constitution.  The  issue of  a  notification  by the State  Government  declaring  an association unlawful was made to depend upon its  subjective satisfaction  of  certain objective factors.  The  Act  also provided  for  an enquiry before an Advisory Board  and  the subsequent  review  of the order by the  Government  on  the basis  of the said enquiry.  It was pressed upon this  Court to hold that the said restriction passed the test laid  down in  Art. 19(4) of the Constitution.  In rejecting  the  con- tention, Patanjali Sastri, C. J., observed thus:               "The formula of subjective satisfaction of the               Government   or  of  its  officers,  with   an               Advisory               (1)[1952] S.C.R. 597, 607, 608.               151               Board  thrown  in to review the  materials  on               which the Government seeks to override a basic               freedom  guaranteed  to the  citizen,  may  be               viewed as reasonable only in very  exceptional               circumstances and within the narrowest limits,               and  cannot  receive judicial  approval  as  a               general pattern of reasonable restrictions  on               fundamental rights." The learned Chief Justice adverting to the procedural aspect of the restriction criticised the absence of a provision  in the impugned Act for personal service on the association and thus depriving its members of the opportunity to make  their representations. Compared  with s. 39 of the Act, the impugned provisions  of the Criminal Law Amendment Act impose more stringent control on   the  exercise  of  the  discretionary  power   by   the Government.  Yet the Court struck down the provisions.   The attempt made to distinguish that decision on the ground that it  related  to the fundamental right of freedom  of  speech cannot  be justified as the freedom to do business  is  also one   of   the  important  fundamental  rights   under   the Constitution, The  case of Thakur Raghubir Singh v. Court of Wards,  Ajmer (1) was concerned with the question of the reasonableness of the  provisions  of  s. 112 of the Ajmer  Tenancy  and  Land Records  Act  (XLII  of  1950) which  provided  that  "if  a landlord  habitually infringes the rights of a tenant  under this Act, he shall, notwithstanding anything in s. 7 of  the Ajmer  Government  Wards Regulation, 1888 (1  of  1888),  be

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deemed  to be a ’landlord who is disqualified to manage  his own  property’  within  the  meaning of s.  6  of  the  said Regulation  and  his property shall be liable  to  be  taken under  the  superintendence  of the  Court  of  Wards."  The determination of the question whether a landlord  habitually infringed  the rights of a tenant was left to the  Court  of Wards.   This  Court  held that section was  void  as  being unreasonable  restriction  on the right in property  as  the restriction made the enjoyment of that right to depend  upon the mere discretion of the (1)[1953] S.C.R. 1049, 1055. 152 executive.  Mahajan, J., as he then was, observed as under:               "When   a  law  deprives  a  person   of   his               possession  of his property for an  indefinite               period  of  time  merely  on  the   subjective               determination of an executive officer, such  a               law  can,  on  no  construction  of  the  word               "reasonable"  be  described as  coming  within               that   expression,   because   it   completely               negatives the fundamental right by making  its               enjoyment  depend  on the  mere  pleasure  and               discretion  of  the  executive,  the   citizen               affected having no right to have recourse  for               establishing the contrary in a, civil court." Though s. 112 of the Ajmer Tenancy and Land Records Act laid down  an  objective  test,  namely,"a  landlord   habitually infringing  the  rights  of tenants under  that  Act",  and, therefore, may be said to have laid down some policy for the exercise  of  the  discretion by the  Court  of  Wards,  the section  was struck down as the discretion  was  uncanalised and  no  effective procedure was prescribed  to  remedy  the grievance of an aggrieved party. It  cannot  be said that the Commissioner of  Police  has  a higher  status  than the Court of Wards or that  the  taking over  of the management of an estate affects a larger  right than preventing a person from doing his business. The  decision in Messrs.  Dwarka Prasad Laxmi Narain v.  The State of Uttar Pradesh (1) dealt with cl. 4(3) of the  Uttar Pradesh  Coal Control Order, 1953, whereunder the  licensing authority  was  given absolute power to grant or  refuse  to grant, renew or refuse to renew, suspend, revoke, cancel  or modify  any licence under the said Order and the only  thing he  had to do was to record reasons for the action he  took. Under  the clause the State Coal Controller  could  delegate power  to any other officer.  This Court held that the  said Order  was void as it imposed unreasonable  restrictions  on the  freedom  of trade and business  guaranteed  under  Art. 19(1)(g)  of  the  Constitution and not  coming  within  the protection afforded (1)[1954] S.C.R. 803, 811.                             153 by  cl. (6) of the Article.  Mukherjea, J., as he then  was, observed to the following effect:               "The power of granting or withholding licences               or  of  fixing the prices of the  goods  would               necessarily  have  to  be  vested  in  certain               public  officers  or  bodies  and  they  would               certainly have to be left with some amount  of               discretion  in  these  matters.   So  far   no               exception  can  be  taken;  but  the  mischief               arises  when  the  power  conferred  on   such               officers is an arbitrary power unregulated  by               any rule or principle and it is left  entirely               to the discretion of particular persons to  do

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             anything  they  like  without  any  check   or               control by any higher authority." We  shall now notice some of the decisions cited at the  Bar on behalf of the Commissioner in support of the validity  of the impugned provisions.  In Babul Chandra v. Chief  Justice and  Judges,  High Court of Patna (1) it was held  that  the proviso  to s ub-s. (1) of s. 9 of the Indian  Bar  Councils Act  was not void as being an unreasonable restriction  upon the  freedom  to practise a profession, or to  carry  on  an occupation, trade or calling.  The proviso to s. 9(1) states expressly  that  the rules "shall not limit or  in  any  way affect  the power of the High Court to refuse  admission  to any person at its discretion".  Under s. 8 of the Indian Bar Councils Act, no person is entitled as of right to  practise in any High Court, unless his name is entered in the roll of the Advocates of that Court maintained under the Act.  Under s.  9 of that Act, the Bar Council can frame rules with  the sanction  of  the High Court to regulate  the  admission  of persons  as  Advocates.  The proviso  saves  the  overriding power  of  the  High  Court  to  refuse  admission  in   its discretion.  It was contendedthat    an   unfettered    and uncontrolled discretion wasgiven  to the High  Court  and that was unreasonable. This  Court pointed out that  there could not be a better authority than the High Court in  that State  to  which  the discretion could  be  entrusted.  This decision  turned upon three considerations, namely,  (1)  no person  was  entitled  as  of right  to  practise;  (2)  the discretion to refuse was vested in the (1)A.I.R. 1954 S.C R. 524. 20 154 highest judicial body in the State; and (3) it was  implicit in  the power of discretion that the High Court  would  give notice before rejecting an application.  On that basis  this Court  held that the restrictions imposed by the proviso  to s. 9(1) were reasonable. Nor  does the decision in Harishankar Bagla v. The State  of Madhya Pradesh (1) lay down any different principle.   There this  Court was concerned with cl. 3 of the  Cotton  Textile (Control of  Movement)  Order, 1948,  promulgated  by  the Central  Government  under s. 3 of  the  Essential  Supplies (Temporary  Powers) Act, 1946, which required a  citizen  to take a permit from the Textile Commissioner to enable him to transport   cotton  textiles  purchased  by  him.   It   was contended in that case that the requirement of a permit  was an  unreasonable  restriction on the citizen’s  right  under sub-cls.  (f)  and (g) of Art. 19(1)  of  the  Constitution. This Court rejected the contention and affirmed the validity of  the law.  Mahajan, C. J., speaking for this  Court  gave four reasons in support of his conclusion and they were: (1) the  Legislature  passed the Essential  Supplies  (Temporary Powers)  Act  during  a  period of  emergency  when  it  was necessary  to impose control on the production,  supply  and distribution  of  commodities essential to the life  of  the community; (2) cl. 3 of the Control Order did not deprive  a citizen  of  the  right to dispose of  or  transport  cotton textiles  purchased by him, but only required him to take  a permit  from  the  Textile Commissioner  to  enable  him  to transport them; (3) if transport of essential commodities by rail or other means of conveyance was left uncontrolled,  it might  well  have  seriously hampered the  supply  of  these commodities to the public; and (4) the policy underlying the Order  was clearly enunciated by the provisions therein  and that  policy governed the exercise of the discretion by  the Textile  Commissioner.  On these considerations  this  Court

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maintained  the validity of that Order.  The  said  decision has  no  analogy to the provisions of s. 39 of  the  Act  in question. The decision in Union of India v. Bhana Mal Gulzarimal  Ltd. (2) related to the question of validity of (1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 380. (2) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 627, 641. 155 cl.  11B  of the Iron and Steel (Control of  Production  and Distribution)  Order, 1941.  This Court held, having  regard to  the provisions of that Order and those of the  Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act, 1946, that the  Legislature had  clearly enunciated its legislative policy and that  cl. 11B of the Order laid down the object which was intended  to be achieved.  Gajendragadkar, J., delivering the judgment of the Court, observed thus:               "Therefore reading cl. 11B by itself we do not               see how it would be possible to hold that  the               said clause is violative of Art. 19.  In fact,               if  ss.  3 and 4 are valid and  cl.  11B  does               nothing more than prescribe conditions for the               exercise of the delegate’s authority which are               consistent  with  s. 3 it is only  the  actual               price structure fixed by the Controller  which               in a given case can be successfully challenged               as violative of Art. 19." The  learned Judge considered the price structure  fixed  by the  notification and observed that the respondents  therein did not seriously challenge the validity of the notification in  respect of price structure and, that apart, it  was  not proved  that  the notification adversely  affected  a  large class of dealers taken as a whole.  The judgment, therefore, does not help the respondents. Nor  is  the decision of this Court in  Mineral  Development Ltd.  v. State of Bihar (1) of any help to the  respondents. There  the constitutional validity of s. 25(1) of the  Bihar Mica  Act  (10  of  1948)  was  impugned  as  violating  the petitioners’ fundamental right under Art. 19(1)(f) and  (g), of  the  Constitution.   Under  s.  25(1)(c)  of  that   Act discretion  was  given  to cancel a  licence  to  the  State Government,  but  cl.  (c) was hedged in  by  two  important restrictions,  namely,  (i) the failure to comply  with  the provisions  of that Act or the rules made thereunder  should be a repeated failure and not a mere sporadic one, i.e., the defaulter must be a recalcitrant one; (ii) before  canceling the  licence the State Government should  afford  reasonable opportunity to the licensee to show cause why his license (1)  [1960] 2 S.C.R. 609, 619. 156 should  not  be  cancelled.  This  Court  in  upholding  the validity of the said section observed thus:               "The  power given to the State  Government  is               only  to achieve the object of the Act,  i.e.,               to  enforce  the said provisions,  which  have               been enacted in the a interest of the  public;               and  that  power,  as we  have  indicated,  is               exercisable  on the basis of  objective  tests               and  in  accordance  with  the  principles  of               natural  justice.  We cannot, therefore,  hold               that  s.  25(1)(c)  of  the  Act  imposes   an               unreasonable  restriction on the  petitioner’s               fundamental rights under Art. 19(1)(f) and (g)               of the Constitution." This  decision far from helping the respondents is, to  some extent, against their contention.

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The  result of the discussion may briefly be  summarized  in the form of the following propositions: A fundamental  right to do business can be controlled by the State only by making a  law  imposing  in  the interest  of  the  general  public reasonable  restrictions on the exercise of the said  right; restrictions  on the exercise of a fundamental  right  shall not be arbitrary or excessive or beyond what is required  in the interest of the general public; the reasonableness of  a restriction shall be tested both from substantive and proce- dural   aspects;  an  uncontrolled  and  uncanalised   power conferred  on an officer is an unreasonable  restriction  on such  right;  though  a legislative  policy  may  have  been clearly  expressed  in a statute, it must also pro.  vide  a suitable   machinery   for  implementing  that   policy   in accordance with the principles of natural justice; whether a restriction  is reasonable or not is a  justiciable  concept and  it  is for the Court to come to one conclusion  or  the other  having  regard  to the considerations  laid  down  by Patanjali  Sastri,  C.J., in State of Madras v.  V.  G.  Row (1).and similar others; in taking an overall picture of  the relevant circumstances, the Court may legitimately take into consideration the fact that the discretion is entrusted to a State Government or a highly placed officer, but that in it- self  is of minor importance for the simple reason that  the fundamental right itself is guaranteed against the (1)[1952] S.C.R. 597. 157 action  of the State, which is defined to include  not  only the  Union  or the State Governments  but  also  Parliament, Legislatures  and all local or other authorities within  the territory    of   India;   the   distinction   between    an administrative authority and a judicial authority is not  of much  relevance in the context of a reasonable  restriction, except  perhaps  a  Court may more readily  be  inclined  to uphold  a  restriction  if  a  matter  is  entrusted  to  an impartial judicial authority than to an executive authority. Bearing the aforesaid principles in mind, let us look at the impugned  provisions  of  the Act.   The  section  has  been extracted  supra.  The first part of the section  confers  a free and unqualified discretion on the Commissioner to grant a  licence.   A  discretionary  power  to  issue  a  licence necessarily  implies a power to refuse to issue  a  licence. The word "may" is an enabling one and in its ordinary  sense means  "Permissible".  When coupled with the words  "at  his discretion" it emphasises the clear intention of the  legis- lature to confer on the Commissioner an unrestrained freedom to act according to his own judgment and conscience.  If the section stops there, it is common case that the power of the Commissioner  is.uncontrolled and uncanalised.   The  second part of the section deals with the nature of the  conditions to be inserted in the licence.  The conditions to be imposed are  for  securing the good behaviour of keepers  of  public resort  and for the prevention of drunkenness  and  disorder among  the  persons frequenting or using  such  places.   No doubt  the  said conditions must have the  sanction  of  the State   Government.   This  part,  therefore,  ensures   the peaceful  and orderly conduct of business.  The  section  is clear  and unambiguous in terms and it is not disputed  that the  plain  terms  of  the  section  will  not  enable   the conditions  of a licence to be projected into the matter  of the  exercise of the discretion.  But what is  contended  is that  the conditions laid down a precise policy for  guiding the discretion of the Commissioner to give or not to give  a licence.  There are many objections to this approach 158

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to the problem.  Firstly, it is to rewrite the section.   If the  legislature intended to guide the discretion by  laying down  objective criteria it would have stated so in  express terms;  it  would not have left the matter to  the  absolute discretion  of  the  Commissioner.   Secondly,  if  the  two conditions  only of the licence control the exercise of  the discretion,  the Commissioner cannot travel beyond the  said two conditions.  As a result the amplitude of the discretion is drastically cut down.  The Commissioner would be able  to refuse a licence only if he was satisfied that the applicant could not be relied upon to comply with the said conditions; if  he  was so satisfied, he could not refuse a  licence  in spite  of  the  fact that there were  many  other  good  and relevant  reasons for doing so.  Thirdly, if the  conditions are not exhaustive but only illustrative, the section  would continue to suffer from the same vice, as it would still  be open  to the Commissioner to refuse a licence for any  other reason.   Fourthly,  discretion based upon  an  anticipatory breach of conditions will be as arbitrary as in the case  of absolute  discretion,  particularly  in  the  case  of   new applicants,  as  more  often than not it  will  have  to  be exercised  on the basis of surmises, gossip or  information, which may be false or at any rate untested.  Lastly, by this unwarranted search for an undisclosed policy in the crevices of  the  statute,  this Court will not only  be  finding  an excuse to resuscitate an invalid law but also be encouraging the making of laws by appropriate authorities in  derogation of fundamental rights. The  provisions  of ss. 47 and 48(3) of the  Motor  Vehicles Act,  1939  (IV  of  1939), bring out  in  bold  relief  the distinction between the exercise of a discretion to issue  a licence  and  the  imposition of conditions  in  a  licence. Section  47 enjoins on the Regional Transport  Authority  in considering  an application for a stage carriage  permit  to have  regard  to  the matters enunciated  in  that  section. Section  48(3) enables the Regional Transport  Authority  to attach  to the permit the conditions detailed in  that  sub- section.  While the former section regulates the exercise 159 of  the  discretion  of  the  Regional  Transport  Authority issuing  a  permit, the latter describes the nature  of  the conditions  to be inserted in the permit.  These  provisions no doubt cannot be invoked to construe the provisions of  s. 39 of the Act, but we are referring to them only to show the legislative  practice in such matters and to  emphasize  the fact that the scope of the discretion to issue a licence and that  of  the power to impose conditions in  a  licence  are different.   Therefore, on a true construction of the  plain words  of  the  statute  we  cannot  hold  that  any  policy reasonably  capable  of controlling the  discretion  of  the Commissioner has been laid down. Even  if the two conditions can be read into the first  part of  s. 39, the arbitrariness is writ large in the manner  of exercising the so-called guided discretion.  In this context it is not necessary to come to a definite conclusion on  the question  whether the discretion is judicial  or  executive, for  whatever  be the nature of the discretion  it  must  be tested   from  the  standpoint  of  reasonableness  of   the restrictions imposed on a person’s right to do business.   A citizen  of  India,  for  the  purpose  of  eking  out   his livelihood, seeking to do an extensive business of an eating house,  applies  to  the Commissioner  for  a  licence,  for without  that licence he cannot do business, and if he  does he  will  be liable to prosecution.   The  Commissioner  can reject the application on two grounds, namely, (1) from  his

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antecedents and present conduct it would be unreasonable  to think that the petitioner would keep good behaviour, and (2) the Commissioner is not satisfied that the petitioner  would be  able  to  prevent drunkenness  and  disorder  among  the persons  frequenting or using the eating house.   Admittedly this  order  is made without giving any  opportunity  to  an applicant to prove that he would satisfy both the tests laid down  by s. 39 of the Act.  The Commissioner is not  legally bound to give any reasons for his refusal to give a licence. Even if reasons are given, there is no machinery for getting such  an  order revoked or vacated.  The  section  does  not impose  a  duty  on  the  Commissioner  to  give  reasonable opportunity to an 160 applicant  to  clear his character or to  disprove  any  un- warranted  allegations made against him or to prove that  he would satisfy both the tests laid down by s. 39 of the  Act. Nor does the section provide for an appeal against the order of  the  Commissioner  to  an  appropriate  authority.   The suggestion  that  the  authority is a high  officer  in  the police department and that he can be relied upon to exercise his  discretion  properly  does not appeal  to  us  for  two reasons,  namely,  (1) as we have already pointed  out,  the Constitution  gives  a guarantee for the  fundamental  right against the State and other authorities; and (2) the  status of  an officer is not an absolute guarantee that  the  power will never be abused.  Fundamental rights cannot be made  to depend  solely upon such presumed fairness and integrity  of officers  of  State,  though it may be a  minor  element  in considering   the  question  of  the  reasonableness  of   a restriction.   Therefore, it is clear to our mind  that  the exercise  of the power also suffers from a statutory  defect as  it is not channelled through an  appropriate  machinery. We have, therefore, no hesitation to hold that s. 39 of  the Act infringes the fundamental right of the petitioner  under Art. 19(1)(g) of the Constitution both from substantive  and procedural aspects. The  next question is whether a mandamus will issue  against the Commissioner.  The Commissioner admittedly has  launched criminal  proceedings  against  the  petitioner  under   the provisions of the Act for not taking out a licence under  s. 39  of  the Act.  As we have held that s. 39 of the  Act  is constitutionally void, a writ of mandamus will issue against the  Commissioner of Police, Calcutta, directing him not  to take any further proceedings against the petitioner for  not taking out a licence under the provisions of the Act. BY  COURT.  In accordance with the opinion of the  majority, this Petition is dismissed with costs. 161