15 October 1976
Supreme Court
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LAKHANLAL ETC. Vs THE STATE OF ORISSA & ORS.(with connected appeals)

Bench: SHINGAL,P.N.
Case number: Appeal Civil 351 of 1972


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PETITIONER: LAKHANLAL ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE STATE OF ORISSA & ORS.(with connected appeals)

DATE OF JUDGMENT15/10/1976

BENCH: SHINGAL, P.N. BENCH: SHINGAL, P.N. BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH

CITATION:  1977 AIR  722            1977 SCR  (1) 811  1976 SCC  (4) 660

ACT:               Bihar and Orissa Excise Act, 1915 as amended by  Amend-         ing Acts of 1970 and 1971--ss. 22 and 29--Power of State  to         auction  exclusive  privilege  to  vend    liquor--Nature  of         payment received.

HEADNOTE:             Section  22(1) of the Bihar & Orissa Excise  Act,  1915,         provides   that  the States may grant to any person on  such         conditions  and  for such periods as it may think  fit,  the         exclusive  privilege of manufacturing or selling  in  retail         count    try  liquor.  The proviso provides  that  a  public         notice shall be given of the intention to grant such  exclu-         sive  privilege  and that a decision would  be  taken  after         considering  objections.  Sub-section (2) provides  that  no         grantee   of  such  a privilege shall exercise it unless  or         until  he  has received a licence in that  behalf  from  the         Collector or the Excise Commissioner.             In  the  present case the Collector issued a  notice  in         form  GL 10 relating to the auction of the right to  open  a         liquor shop at the site named in the notice and the  payment         of the licence fee therefor.  The respondent was a  success-         ful bidder at the auction.  He deposited the money under  r.         103  of  the  Excise Rules but the Government did not  grant         him the licences.  In a writ  petition filed by the respond-         ent  the State Government alleged that the bids at the  auc-         tion  were  not  satisfactory and that in  the  interest  of         revenue  the State Government did not accept the bids.   The         High  Court held (i) that the State Government had no  power         to interfere with the auction held by the Collector after it         had  become  final and could not direct reauction  and  (ii)         that the realisation at the auction was not a fee but a  tax         not contemplated by the Act and that  the auction price  for         a licence was not excise duty within the meaning of Entry 51         of  List II and hence r. 103(1) of the Rules  providing  for         fixation  of  licence fee by auction was in  excess  of  the         rule-making  power of the Board.  The  High Court also  held         that what was-purported to be given under the sale notice of         the Collector was not the grant of exclusive privilege under         s. 22.             By  the  Bihar & Orissa Excise (Orissa  Amendment  Ordi-         nance) 1970 which later became the Act, s. 29(2) was  amend-

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       ed.  The State Government issued an order for fresh  settle-         ment  of the shops and the Collector accordingly called  for         tenders.             In  the respondent’s writ petition the High  Court  held         that the State Government’s order was invalid as the author-         ities for fixing the  procedure.  under s. 29(2) as  amended         had  not been specified and the order left it to the  uncon-         trolled  discretion of the authority concerned to accept  or         reject  any  tender  and  to determine the adequacy  of  the         amount offered in the tender.  The State Government’s  order         and  the  Collector’s  tender notice were  quashed  and  the         Collector  was directed to issue licence to the  respondent.         The  High  Court  accordingly held that the  respondent  was         entitled to the grant of the exclusive privilege under s. 22         because he was the highest bidder in the auction.             The High Court also held in a petition filed by  another         respondent, that in so far as s. 29(2) provided that the sum         payable under sub-s. (1) thereof shall be determined "other-         wise" than by calling tenders or by auction it  was   uncon-         stitutional; that portion of s. 29(2). should, therefore, be         struck  down: that s. 6 of the Amending Act, 1970 was  ultra         vires as there was exercise of judicial power by the  legis-         lature  and,  therefore, the licence fee  collected  by  the         State  was illegal; but that as the respondent  had  already         enjoyed the benefit of the licence and voluntarily  partici-         pated in the auction he wag not entitled to its refund.         3--1338S.C.I./76         812         Therefore  the  Second Amendment Act, 1971 was  passed.  The         vires  of the amended sections 21 and 29 was  challenged  in         writ petitions  but  the  High Court dismissed them.         In appeals to this Court,             HELD:  (1)  The provisions of the Act  and  the  express         declarations   make clear that the State Government had  the         power to reject a bid.  In any event no right is created  in         the  bidder  by  making a bid.  The  administration  of  the         Excise  Department and the collection of revenue within  the         district  vest in the Collector.  It is not correct  to  say         that  the notice issued by the Collector in form GL  10  was         sufficient  to show that the exclusive privilege for  retail         sale  of country liquor was not proposed to be given to  the         successful bidders at the auction.  The High Court erred  in         holding that a condition regarding the opening of additional         shops was inserted in the Form. [821 F; 819D; 820E]             (b)  It has been held by this Court that the  State  has         the exclusive right or privilege of manufacturing and  sell-         ing liquor.  The State grants such right or privilege in the         shape  of a licence or a lease.  The State has the power  to         hold, a public auction for grant of such right or  privilege         and  accept payment  of  a sum in consideration of grant  of         lease,  that the amount payable by the bidders as  licensees         was neither a fee in the technical sense nor a tax, but  was         in  the.  nature of price of a privilege and  that  auctions         were  only a mode or medium for ascertaining the best  price         obtainable  thereof.   Therefore, the right granted  to  the         bidders  by public auction and the licences issued  to  them         was clearly an exclusive privilege within the meaning of  s.         22(1 ) of the Bihar Act and it was expressly provided in  s.         29  that  it would be permissible for the   State   not   to         accept payment of a sum in consideration of the grant of the         exclusive privilege. [819 H; 820A-D]             Nashirwar  etc. v. The State of Madhya Pradesh [1975]  2         S.C.R.  861; Hat Shankar & ors. v. The Dy. Excise and  Taxa-         tion Commissioner & ors. [1975] 3 S.C.R. 254; Thakur  Prasad         Sac  & ors. v. The Member, Board of Revenue & ors. [1976]  2

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       S.C.R. 850; State of Orissa & ors. v. Harinarayan Jaiswal  &         ors.. [1972] 3 S.C.R. 784 applied.             (c) The view of High Court that after the acceptance  of         the  bid  the Collector should have issued the  licence  and         that  he committed an illegality in ordering reauction  pre-         supposes  that a binding obligation had come into  existence         in favour of the bidder by accepting a deposit from him even         though  this  was done on the express condition that it  was         tentative  and  was not an acceptance of his  bid.   In  the         peculiar  facts and circumstances of the auction,  the  bids         were  nothing more than offers in response to an  invitation         to  make tenders and such auctions were the mode. of  ascer-         taining  the highest offers.  The basic  conditions for  the         emergence  of rights through offers or conditions  made  and         accepted  and acted upon by paying any specified  or  agreed         price  as  consideration  were wanting in  this  case.   The         express  and advertised terms of. the auction made it  clear         that  the money tendered was to be deemed to  be   deposited         tentatively,  pending the acceptance of the bid.   The  bids         were neither offers nor acceptance’ by the Government.  They         were only offers by the bidders.to purchase the rights.  The         essentials of an agreement and mutuality of obligations were         absent  altogether.  Since auction is only a mode of  ascer-         taining  the highest offer, the State Government can  deter-         mine the sum payable by any other method and hence. the High         Court was wrong in striking  down  the  expression   "other-         wise"  from s. 29(2)(a). [820 H; 821 A-C]             (d)  These  auctions are not ordinary auctions  where  a         binding   agreement could be deemed to be concluded  at  the         fall  of the.hammer, creating mutually  enforceable  obliga-         tions  but. are a means for ascertaining the highest  offers         for  the  exclusive privileges which  the  Government  alone         could  grant for carrying on a trade or business  considered         noxious  under  the law, and which, because of  its  special         character, could be regulated m any way or even   prohibited         altogether by the Government.  This special character of the         trade  or  business would appear from the power of the State         Government  to  grant the exclusive privilege  to  carry  on         trade m the manufacture and sale of liquor. [821 F-G]             (e)  There is no justification for the argument of  the.         respondents  that it was not permissible for the State  Gov-         ernment to issue directions for reauction even when it found         that  the bids at the auction were unsatisfactory.  So  long         as the powers of the Government to reject a bid are not used         in  an  unreasonable  or mala fide  manner,  their  exercise         cannot be questioned [821 G]             2(a)  The  High Court’s view that r. 103(1)  was  ultra.         vires was taken under the mistaken impression that the State         was  collecting a tax under the garb of a fee and  that  the         auction  price  for a licence could not be treated  as  duty         within  the  meaning  of Entry 51, List II  of  the  Seventh         Schedule.   But what was sought to be raised was  considera-         tion and not fee.  The use of the expression "’fees" in  the         rule  is  inaccurate but that:cannot detract from  the  real         nature  of  the recovery. [822 A-B]             (b) The argument of the respondent that r. 103 continued         to remain invalid even after the promulgation of the  Amend-         ment Act is not correct because s. 5 of the Second Amendment         Act  has substituted a new sub-s. (2)for the old  subsection         providing  for auction and this sub-section stated  that  it         shall  be deemed always to have been substituted".   Section         17  has  validated all grants made by way  of  licences  for         manufacture  and  retail  sale of  country  liquor  and  the         amounts paid or payable therefor. [824 G-H; 825 C]             (c)  The  power  to accept or reject  a  tender  without

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       assigning  any  reason cannot be said to be arbitrary as  s.         29(2)  (which  has been amended with  retrospective  effect)         itself provides that (i) it shall be exercised in the inter-         est  of the Excise revenue, (ii) by the specified  authority         and  (iii) under such control as may be specified.   In  the         instant  case  the ’State Government retained the  power  of         accepting or rejecting the tender or for calling of a  fresh         tender, to itself, and such an order cannot be said to be an         absolute  or naked power of  the  nature apprehended by  the         High  Court.   Moreover, the power to accept or  reject  the         highest  o,r  any bid was expressly reserved under  the  im-         pugned sale notification. [823 A-C]             (3)  Even though no authority was specified  for  taking         action under s. 29(1) it was the Collector who is in  charge         of  the  Excise  Administration  that  took  action  in  the         present  case and his action was approved by the State  Gov-         ernment.  Moreover, the State Government issued  a  modified         order  under  s. 29 nominating itself as  the  authority  to         determine the sufficiency of the. sum payable. [822 D]             (4)  It  has been held by this Court that  there  is  no         fundamental right to do trade or business in intoxicants and         that in all their manifestations these rights are vested  in         the State and without such vesting there can be no effective         regulation  of  various forms of activities in  relation  to         intoxicants.   There  is  no inherent right in a citizen  to         sell intoxicating liquors by retail.  [823 H]             Krishan  Kumar Narula etc. v. The State of J & K  &  ors         [1967]  3   S.C.R. 50; Nashirwar etc. v. The State  of  M.P.         [1975] 2 S.C.R. 861; Har Shankar & ors. v. The Dy. Excise  &         Taxation Commissioner & ors. [1975] 3 S.C.R. 254;  Coovetlee         Bharucha  v. The Excise Commissioner [1954] S.C.R. 873  fol-         lowed.             (5)  Since  the  Bihar & Orissa  Excise  (Second  Orissa         Amendment)  Act, 1971 has made good the deficiency, if  any,         by stating that the amending provisions in ss. 2 to 5 of the         Amending  Act, 1970 shall be deemed always to have  been  so         added  or inserted or substituted, the High Court was  wrong         in holding that there was any exercise of judicial power  by         ’the Legislature. [824 C-D]

JUDGMENT:         CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 351-359/72.             Appeals from the Judgment and  Order  dated  7-5-1971 of         the Orissa High Court in O.J.C. Nos. 1185 to 1190, 1223  and         1224 of 1970 and 41/71 and         CiviI AppeaI Nos. 1855-1863, 2091/72 and 1802/74.             Appeals by Certificate/Appeals by Special Leave from the         Judgments and Orders dated 7-5-1971, 3-2-1971 and  28-3-1974         of  the         814         Orissa  High Court in O.J.C. Nos. 1185-1190, 1223, 1224  and         1226/ 70, 850/70, 589/72 and              Civil  Appeals Nos. 1892-1893 of 1971, 1302,  2071  and         12351236 of 1972.              Appeals  from the Judgment and Orders dated  15-5-1970,         16-41971,  and 6-9-1971 of the Orissa High Court  in  O.J.C.         Nos. 329 and 357/70, 786/.70, 242/67, 859 and 863/70.              Vinoo Bhagat for the Appellants in CAs. 351-359/72  and         RR. in CAs. 1859-1862/72.              Gobind  Das and G.S. Chatterjee for the  Appellants  in         rest  of  the Appeals, except 1802/74 and RR. in  CAs.  351-         359/72.              R.K. Garg and S.C. Agarwal for Appellants in CA 1802/74

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       and B.P. Maheshwari and Suresh Sethi for Respondents in CAs.         12351236/72.         B. Parthasarthy for RR in CA. 1802/74.         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by                   J.---These  appeals  by  certificate  or   special         leave   are  directed against judgments of the  Orissa  High         Court dated May 15, 1970, February 3, 1971, April 16,  1971,         May  7,  1971, September 6, 1971 and March 28,  1974.   They         arise  out of several writ petitions. The facts  which  gave         rise  to  the petitions changed from time  to  time  largely         because  of amendments in the law, and that was  the  reason         for  the filing of separate writ petitions resulting in  the         impugned judgments of the High Court, but we have heard them         together  at  the instance of the learned  counsel  for  the         parties and will dispose them of by a common judgment.   The         nature  of  the controversy in these cases is such  that  it         will  be enough to state the basic facts for the purpose  of         appreciating the arguments of counsel for the parties.             The Collector of Mayurbhanj issued a notice on  February         3,  1970  by which he invited tenders for the grant  of  li-         cences  for  establishing  70 outstill  shops  for  1970-71.         Ajodhya  Prasad  Shah gave the highest bid for  a  group  of         seven shops, in one lot, for Rs. 34,000/-per month.  His bid         was  accepted  and his name was entered  in  the  prescribed         register, and the entry was signed by the successful  bidder         and the Collector.  Ajodhya Prasad accordingly deposited Rs.         68,000/-  on   account  of  two  months’  "fees",   in   ad-         vance,   as   required  by  rule 103 of the  Board’s  Excise         Rules,  1965.   Raghunandan Saha, who was  the  unsuccessful         bidder,  felt  aggrieved  and filed an appeal,  but  it  was         dismissed by the Excise Commissioner on March 16, 1970.  The         Board of Revenue also refused to interfere.  Ajodhya  Prasad         claimed  that  in  the mean time he  made  arrangements  for         establishing his shops and incurred an expenditure of  about         Rs.  1,50,000/-.   He therefore approached  the  authorities         concerned  for  the issue of  the licenses for  running  the         shops from April 1, 1970.  He approached , the  Superintend-         ent of Excise for depositing Rs. 34,000/-  for  the month of         April,  but the Superintendent did not  pass   the   deposit         challan.   Ajodhya  Prasad thereupon filed a  writ  petition         (O.I.C. No. 329 of 1970) in the High Court with the  allega-         tion that the Collector         815         was not acting according to the law as the State  Government         had  issued instructions to him not to. issue the  licenses.         Ajodhya  Prasad  prayed  in his petition for  the  issue  of         directions for’ the issue of licenses and quashing the State         Government’s instructions to the contrary. Raghunandan  Saha         also filed a petition (O.J.C. No. 357 of 1970) on April  13,         1970.  The Collector issued a notice for reauction on May 1,         1970  and Ajodhya Prasad amended his petition  for  quashing         the notice also.             The State Government and the other respondents traversed         the  claim  in Ajodhya Prasad’s writ petition  and  pleaded,         inter alia, that the bids at the auction were not  satisfac-         tory  and, in the interest of the State revenue,  the  State         Government  had passed the orders for not accepting  Ajodhya         Prasad’s  bids.   The  High Court  examined   the  questions         whether  Ajodhya  Prasad was entitled to the  issue  of  the         licenses  for the seven shops and whether the State  Govern-         ment had the authority to direct the withholding and  reauc-         tioning  of  the licenses, and held, inter  alia,  that  the         State Government had no power to interfere with the  auction         held  by the Collector after it had "become final in  appeal         and  revision", and could not direct a reauction.  The  High

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       Court examined the nature of the realisation at the  auction         and  held  that it was a tax which was not  contemplated  by         section 38 of the Bihar and Orissa Excise Act, 1915, herein-         after  referred to  as the Act, and that rule 103(1) of  the         Board’s Excise Rules in regard to the fees for the  licenses         was  not  authorised  by the Act and was in  excess  of  the         rule-making  power of the Board.  The High Court  also  held         that  the  "auction price for a license is not  excise  duty         within  the  meaning of Entry 51 of List II of  the  Seventh         Schedule  to the Constitution" and it was not open  to.  the         Collector  "to follow  the process of auctioning for  deter-         mining  the license fee" which was really a tax in the  garb         of a fee.  It held that the aforesaid rule 103 was  incompe-         tent  and ultra vires the Act.  On the question of grant  of         the  "exclusive privilege" under section 22 of the Act,  the         High  Court held that what was purported to be  given  under         the  sale notice was not the grant of .an  exclusive  privi-         lege.   In  taking  that view  the High  Court  stated  that         notice  had not been issued under section 22 (1) of the  Act         and the Collector had no authority to issue such a notice In         that view of the matter, the High Court did not express  any         final  opinion as to whether the licence was to  be  granted         for an exclusive privilege to manufacture and sell  ’liquor.         The  High  Court accordingly quashed the  direction  of  the         State  Government dated April 15, 1970 for reauctioning  the         license and declared that rule 103(1)  of the Board’s Excise         Rules  was ultra vires the Act.  Appeals Nos. 1892 and  1893         of  1971  are directed against that judgment  of  the   High         Court dated May 15, 1970, on certificates.             The State Government issued the Bihar and Orissa  Excise         (Orissa  Amendment) Ordinance of 1970 and the State  Govern-         ment  issued a fresh order dated August 19, 1970  under  the         provisions of the amended section 29(2) of the Act for fresh         settlement  of  the  shops, and wrote to  the  Collector  of         Mayurbhanj  to  call  for tenders in  accordance  with  that         order.  The Collector called for tenders within a week.         816             Ajodhya  Prasad  thereupon filed another  writ  petition         (O.J.C.  ’No.  850  of 1970) for  quashing  the  Collector’s         tender  notices and for a direction to the authorities  con-         cerned to grant a license to him on the basis of the earlier         auction.             The Bihar and Orissa Excise (Orissa Amendment) Act, 1970         was  passed  on October 5, 1970 and the  ordinance  was  re-         pealed.  That was followed by the Orissa  Excise  (Exclusive         Privilege) Rules, 1970, which were made under section 89  of         the Act.             The  respondents in Ajodhya Prasad’s writ  petition  No.         850   of  1970 pleaded that the amendments to the  Act  were         valid and  that the State Government had the right to  grant         an exclusive privilege for the purposes mentioned in section         22 of the Act.  The money so realised was consideration  for         the exclusive privilege under section 22 and was neither  an         excise  duty nor a tax nor a fee.  It was also pleaded  that         the tender was in accordance with the rules as the authority         to accept the tender was the State Government.             The  High Court examined Ajodhya Prasad’s writ  petition         (No. 850 of 1970 in its Judgment dated February 3, 1971.  It         held that the order of the State Government dated August 19,         1970 for inviting tenders was invalid as the authorities for         fixing the procedure under the amended section 29(2)(b)  had         not  been specified,  the Government had  "appropriated  for         itself absolute and naked and arbitrary power’ to accept any         tender  or reject any tender for  any reason  whatsoever  or         without  any rhyme or reason" and the order left it  to  the

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       uncontrolled  discretion  of  the  authority  concerned   to         determine the adequacy of the amount offered in the  tender.         As  regards the claim for the issue of a license under  sec-         tion  6, the High Court held that as the petitioner was  the         highest bidder on February 20, 1970 and his name was entered         in the bid register and  the entry was signed, the petition-         er  was  entitled to the grant of  the  exclusive  privilege         under  section 22 by virtue of section 6(a) of the  Amending         Ordinance  irrespective of the validity of rule 103  (1)  of         the Board’s Excise Rules.   The High Court accordingly  held         that  section 6(a) of the Amending Ordinance was  valid  and         the  grant of seven’ shops to the petitioner, for the  manu-         facture  and  retail sale of country  liquor  was  therefore         validated  "as  the grant of an  exclusive  privilege  under         section 22 of the Act" and he was entitled to license  under         sub-section (2) of that section..  The  Order of the   State         Government dated August 19, 1970 and the Collector’s  tender         notice were quashed and the Collector was directed to  issue         the license for the seven shops to him.             Siba Prasad Saha who filed the writ petition (No. 786 of         1970)  in August 1970, after the first judgment of the  High         Court  dated May 15, 1970 for refund of the license fee  and         for non-payment of any fee in the future, as he was a licen-         see for several liquor shops, amended it in the light of the         subsequent  developments.   The High Court took the view  in         its  judgment dated April 16, 1971 that sections 2 to  5  of         the  Amending  Ordinance, or the Amending Act (17  of  1970)         were not made retrospective.   It took note of this Court’s         817         decision  in  Krishna Kumar Narula etc.   v.  The  State  of         Jammu  and  Kashmir  and others(1) that a  citizen  had  the         fundamental  right  to carry on business in liquor  and  all         that  the State could do. was to impose reasonable  restric-         tion thereon.   It also held that in so far as section 29(2)         of  the Act provided that the sum payable under  sub-section         (1) thereof shall be determined "otherwise" than by         calling  tenders  or  by auction,  it  was  unconstitutional         That  portion  ,of sub-section (2)(a) was  therefore  struck         off.  The High Court held further that what was realised  by         the  State was not a fee or tax, as the primary  purpose  of         the Act was to. restrict the manufacture and sale of country         liquor.   It accordingly held as follows,---                       "We are, therefore, satisfied that the  provi-                       sion in Section 22 of the Act for grant to any                       person of the exclusive privilege of  manufac-                       ture and sale of country liquor for a sum, the                       method  of determination of which is  provided                       in Section 29, are provisions which are calcu-                       lated to restrict and control trade in  liquor                       although  incidentally revenue is  earned  for                       the  State thereby and that Entry in  List  II                       of  the Seventh Schedule confers power on  the                       State  Legislature to enact such a  regulatory                       measure and consequently the State Legislature                       has  legislative competence to enact  Sections                       22 and 29."                       The  High Court accordingly held that  section                       22  and section 29 without the expression  "or                       otherwise" in clause (a) of sub-section 2 were                       valid and constitutional.  The High Court then                       examined the effect of section 6 of the Amend-                       ing  Act of 1970, and held that as  retrospec-                       tive  effect was not given to sections 2 to  5                       of  that Act, the validity of the  money  rea-                       lised  by  the  State had to  be  judged  with

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                     reference  to  the unamended  provisions,  and                       held as follows,--                       "It, therefore, follows that by reason of  the                       fact that Sections 2 to 5 of the Amending  Act                       were not made retrospective in operation,  the                       effect of Section 6 is that thereby the Legis-                       lature had directed the State to disregard the                       decision  given by this Court in Ajodhya  Pra-                       sad’s  case (I.L.R. 1971 Curt. 51 )  that  the                       amount  realised  by the auction  is  illegal.                       This virtually amounts to judicial exercise of                       power  by  the legislature a power  which  the                       Legislature  does not possess.  We,  therefore                       hold that Sections 2 to 5 of the Amending  Act                       having not been made retrospective, Section  6                       is ultra vires the powers of the Legislature."         The  High Court however held that although the’ license  fee         collected  by  the  State was illegal,  the  petitioner  had         already enjoyed the benefit under the license and had volun-         tarily participated in the auction, and was not entitled  to         an order for its refund.             A  similar  view was taken in the judgment  dated  April         16,1971 in O.J.C. No. 242 of 1967 and the judgment dated May         7, 1971 in         (1) [1967] 3 S.C.R. 50.         818         O.J.C. NOS. 1185-1190, 1223, 1224 and 1226 of 1970.    Those         judgments have given rise to civil appeals Nos. 2071,  1855-         1863 and 351-359 Of 1972 (cross-appeals). O.J. Cs. Nos.  859         and  863    of 1970 were diposed of  by  separate  judgments         dated September 6, 1971 which followed the earlier  judgment         dated April 16, 1971 in Siba Prasad Saha’s case and that has         given rise to appeals Nos. 1235 and 1236 of 1972.             The  Bihar and Orissa Excise (Orissa  Second  Amendment)         Act,  1971 (10 of 1971) was passed to set right the  defects         in  the law. Stated briefly that Act made the amendments  to         sections  2, 7, 29, 37’ and 90 retrospective  and  validated         the earlier acts.             A  writ petition (O. J.C. No. 589 of 1972) was filed  to         challenge  the vires of section 22 and 29 of the Act.    The         main judgment in the matter was delivered in O.J.C. No. 1036         of  1971,  on January 3, 1974.   In that judgment  the  High         Court examined the challenge to the vires of sections 22 and         29 of the Act and the claim for refund of the money  already         paid  with reference to the amendments to the Act.  It  fol-         lowed  the  earlier decision in Siba Prasad Saha’s  case  of         April  16, 1971 (I. L.R.1971 Cuttack 777) and dismissed  the         writ  petitions and that/ms led to the filing of  civil  ap-         peals Nos. 1235 and 1236 of 1972.             The  last  judgment was delivered on March 28,  1974  in         O.J.C.  No. 589 of 1972, in Siba Prasad saha’s  case.    The         petitioner there was the grantee of the exclusive  privilege         for sale of country liquor: during the year 1972-73 for some         shops in Mayurbhanj district. The’ petitioner challenged the         vires  of sections 22 and 29(2) as amended, and  prayed  for         the  consequential reliefs.   The High Court held  that  the         case  was completely covered by its decision  dated  January         3,  1974 in O.J.C. No. 1036 of 1971 and dismissed the  peti-         tion.             It  will tires appear that these appeals are  inter-con-         nected  and  that  is why we have thought  it  desirable  to         examine them in a common, judgment.             As has been stated, Civil Appeals Nos. 1892 and  1893 of         1971  arise out of’ O.J. Cs. Nos. 392 and 357 of 1970  which         have  been decided by the judgment of the High  Court  dated

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       May  15,  1970.   It has been argued by Mr.  Govind  Das  on         behalf of the appellants that the High Court erred in  hold-         ing that the sale notice issued by the Collector was not for         the grant of an exclusive .privilege under subsection (1) of         section 22 of the Act because the Collector had no authority         to  issue a notice under that sub-section, as the  power  of         the’ State Government in that respect had been delegated  to         the Board of Revenue.             Sub-section  (1) of section 22 of the Act provides  that         the State Government may grant to any person, On such condi-         tions  and for such periods as it may think fit, the  exclu-         sive  privilege,  inter alia, of  manufacturing  or  selling         retail any country liquor.   The proviso to the  sub-section         requires that public notice shall be given of the intention          819         to grant any exclusive privilege of that nature  and that a.         decision  would  be taken after considering  the  objections         made  in that respect. Once a decision is taken under  ,sub-         section  (1)  to grant the exclusive  privilege  within  any         specified area, sub-section (2) provides that no grantee  of         such a privilege shall exercise the same "unless or until he         has received a license in that behalf from the Collector  or         the  Excise Commissioner." It has been stated at the Bar  by         Mr. Govind Das, and has not been controverted that, as.  had         been  averted in’ the memorandum of appeal, the  requirement         of  sub-section (1) of section 22 had already been  complied         with   by the State Government, and that the  Collector  was         not  concerned and did not in fact issue any  public  notice         for  purposes of sub-section (1) of section 22.   A  reading         of the Collector’s notice, which admittedly was in Form G.L.         10,  shows  that it related to the auction of the  right  to         open a shop at the site named in the notice and the  payment         of the license fee therefor.   The High Court therefore went         wrong  in holding that the issue of the notice in Form  G.L.         10  negatived  the contention that what was proposed  to  be         given  was the exclusive privilege to manufacture  and  sell         country liquor.   By virtue of section 7(1), the administra-         tion  of the Excise Department and the collection of  excise         revenue within the district vested in the Collector, and  we         are  unable  to think, that his notice in Form G.L.  10  was         sufficient  to show that the exclusive privilege for  retail         sale  of country liquor, under the outstill system, was  not         proposed  to be given to the successful bidders at the  auc-         tion.             The  true nature of the proceeds of the auction held  by         the Collector in such a case has been examined by this Court         in  Nashirwar etc. etc. v. The Slate of Madhya  Pradesh,  C)         Har  Shankar and others v. The Dy. Excise and Taxation  Com-         missioner and others(2) and Thakur Prasad Sao and others  v.         The  Member, Board of Revenue and others etc.(?’).   In  Na-         shirwar’s case (supra) this Court examined the constitution-         al  validity  of  the provisions in  the  Central  Provinces         Excise  Act  for  granting leases in respect  of  liquor  by         public  auction, and of  the Abkari Act of the Kerala  State         placing  restrictions  on the manufacture and sale  etc.  of         liquor.  After considering all  the  decided  cases  includ-         ing  Narula’s  case  (supra) in which it  was  held  that  a         citizen had a fundamental right to. do business and deal  in         liquor,  this  Court referred to its decision  in  State  of         Orissa  and others v.  Harinarayan Jaiswal and others(4)  in         which Narula’s case was explained, and held as follows,-                             "For  these  reasons we  hold  that  the                       State has the exclusive right or privilege  of                       manufacturing  and selling liquor.  The  State                       grants such right or privilege in the shape of

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                     a licence or a lease.  The State has the power                       to  hold  a                       (1) [1975] 2 S.C.R. 861.                       (2) [1975] 3 S.C.R. 254.                       (3) [1976] 2 S.C.C. 850.                       (4) [1972].3 S.C.R. 784.                       820                       public  auction  for grant of  such  right  or                       privilege  and  accept  payment of  a  sum  in                       consideration of grant of lease."                       While  taking this view this Court  held  that                       the State Legislature was authorised to make a                       provision for public auction by reason of  the                       power  contained  in Entry 8 List  II  of  the                       Seventh  Schedule   to the   Constitution  and                       that there was "no fundamental right of  citi-                       zens  to  carry on trade or to do business  in                       liquor."              The  matter  again came up for consideration   in   Har         Shankar’s  case (supra) with reference to the provisions  of         sections 27 and 34 of the Punjab Excise Act, 1914, where the         appellants gave  bids  at public auctions.  It was held that         the amount payable by them,  as licensees, was neither a fee         in the technical sense nor a tax, but was in’ the nature  of         "price of a privilege" and that auctions were only a mode or         medium for ascertaining the best price obtainable therefor.             Thakur  Prasad’s  (supra)was a case directly  under  the         provisions  of  the Act.  It also related  to  the  outstill         system.   It  was held  that "the State  has  the  exclusive         right and privilege of manufacturing and selling liquor" and         that  it  has the "power to hold a public  auction  for  the         grant of such a right or privilege and to accept payment  of         a  sum  therefor."  It was accordingly held that  the  right         granted   to  the appellants by public auction and  the  li-         censes issued  to  them  was "clearly an exclusive privilege         within the meaning of section  22(1) of the Act" and that it         has  expressly been provided in section 29 that it would  be         permissible for the State Government to accept payment of  a         sum  in "conSideration" of the exclusive   privilege   under         section 22.             There  can  be no doubt therefore that  the  High  Court         erred in taking a contrary view.             The  High Court has tried to support its view by  refer-         ring to the condition stated in Form G.L. 10 for the opening         of additional shops during the currency of the license,  and         has   stated  that  an exclusive privilege under section  22         "cannot   comprehend   exercise  o[ such power  once  it  is         granted  for  a  specified period."  This   was  clearly  an         erroneous view because it is not disputed before us that  no         such condition was inserted in the license at all.  What the         licensee therefore received under the license was an  exclu-         sive   privilege  of manufacturing and selling liquor  under         the outstill system within the meaning of section 22 of  the         Act.             The High Court has held that after the acceptance of the         bid  all that remained was to issue a license and  that  the         Collector  committed an illegality in ordering  a  reauction         under  the directions of the State Government.  Such a  view         presupposes  that  a   binding,  obligation  had  come  into         existence  in  favour of the bidder by accepting  a  deposit         from him even though this was done on the express  condition         that it was tentative and was not an acceptance of his  bid.         We  do  not  think that what the High Court held  to  be  an         "acceptance  of  the bid" at the "auction", even  after  the         announcement of an express condition

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       821         attached  to it that the knocking down of the bid would  not         really be an acceptance of it by the Government, could be an         acceptance  of  the bid at all.  In the peculiar  facts  and         circumstances  of  the auction, the bids  were,  apparently,         nothing more than offers in  response  to invitation to make         tenders, and such auctions were the mode of ascertaining the         highest  offers.  The basic conditions for the emergence  of         rights  through offers or conditions made and accepted,  and         acted  upon,  by  paying any specified or  agreed  price  as         consideration, were thus wanting in this case.  In fact  the         express  and advertised terms of the auction made  it  clear         that  the  money tendered was to be deemed to  be  deposited         tentatively, pending the acceptance of the  bid.  So what we         have  before us are neither offers nor acceptance   by   the         Government.   There were only offers by the bidders to  pur-         chase  the rights, subject expressly to their acceptance  or         rejection  by the State Government.  The essentials  of  any         agreement and the mutuality  of obligations were thus absent         altogether.             Moreover  it was not an ordinary auction  where  binding         agreement could be deemed to be concluded at the fall of the         hammer,  creating mutually enforceable  obligations.   Those         were  only so called auctions, adopted as means  for  ascer-         taining  the  highest offers  for the  exclusive  privileges         which  the Government alone  could  grant for carrying on  a         trade  or  business. considered noxious, under the  law  and         which, because of its special character, could be  regulated         in  any way, or even prohibited altogether, by  the  Govern-         ment.  This special character of the trade or business would         appear from the power  of the State Government to grant  the         exclusive  privilege to. carry  on trade in the  manufacture         and sale of liquor.  It will be recalled that section  22(1)         provides that the State Government "may grant to any person,         on such conditions and for such periods as it may think fit,         the  exclusive privilege" in question:  Sub-section  (2)  of         section  22 enacts that a grantee of such a  privilege  shah         not  exercise it "unless or until he has received a  license         in that behalf from the Collector or the Excise  Commission-         er."             The  powers of the Government to reject a bid were  thus         reserved both under the provisions of law and by the express         declarations made before the auction.  At any rate we do not         find any basis for the creation of a right merely by  making         a  bid.  The extent of the powers of the government in  such         matters has been indicated by this Court in State of  Orissa         and others vs..Harinarayan  Jaiswal  and  others (supra). So         long as these powers are not used in an unreasonable or mala         fide  manner, their exercise cannot be questioned.   In  the         cases  before us, it could not be said that either the  Gov-         ernment  or any of its officers abused the power  by  acting         either  unreasonably or in  a mala fide manner, and we  find         no justification for the argument that it was not  permissi-         ble  for the State Government to issue.the   directions  for         reauction  even when it found that the bids at the   auction         were unsatisfactory.             The  High Court has taken the view that rule 103(1)   of         the  Board’s Excise Rules regarding the manner  of  fixation         and realisation         822         of  the  consideration for the grant of a  license  for  the         exclusive  privilege  of retail vend of country  spirit  was         "incompetent and ultra vires the act."  The High Court  took         that  view under the mistaken impression that the State  was         not entitled to collect a tax "under the garb of a fee"  and

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       the  "auction  price for a license is not  duty  within  the         meaning  of Entry 51 of List 11 of the Seventh  Schedule  to         the Constitution."  But, as has been shown, what was  sought         to  be raised was consideration and not "fee".  The  use  of         the expression "fees" in  the rule is therefore  inaccurate,         but that cannot detract from  the  real nature of the recov-         ery.  Mr. S.C.. Agarwal has challenged the validity of  rule         103  on another ground, and we shall deal with  it  when  we         come to the judgment of the High Court dated April 16, 1971.              The  next  judgment  of the High Court  is  that  dated         February 3, 1971, in O.J.C. No. 850 of 1970, which has given         rise to civil appeal No. 209/of 1972 by the State of Orissa.         We  have  already stated the findings of the High  Court  in         regard to it.         It  has  been  argued by Mr. Govind Das that  even  if   the         State  Government failed to specify the authority which  was         to  determine the mode of determining the sum payable  under         sub-section  (1)  of section 29, that could not be  said  to         matter because it was the Collector, who was incharge of the         administration  of the Excise  Department and Collection  of         the excise-revenue under section 7 of the Act, who took  the         action  to  issue the auction notice for the  grant  of  the         license.  for the retail sale of country liquor.   Moreover,         the  State Government did not object to his authority to  do         so. and, on the other hand, directed him to make a reauction         merely on the ground of the insufficiency of the bids.   The         Collector called for fresh. tenders.  It was not in  dispute         before  the  High Court that the State Government  issued  a         special order under section 29 by which it nominated itself         to be   the authority to determine the sufficiency of the         sum  payable   under  section 29(1) of the  Act.   There  is         nothing  in   sub-section (2)(b) to show that that  was  not         permissible.             The  other question in this respect is whether the  fol-         lowing  direction  in  the State  Government’s  order  dated         August 19,  1970  was valid, ---                              "It  shall be at the discretion of  the                       State  Government  to  accept  or  reject  any                       tender without assigning  any  reason therefor                       to order for calling of fresh tender or other-                       wise as the case may be."         It  will be recalled that the High Court has taken the  view         that  the order dated August 19, 1970 and the tender  notice         issued in pursuance thereof were bad in law and were  liable         to  be  quashed.   The High Court has taken  the  view  that         section  29(2)(a)  did not authorise the exercise  of  "such         absolute and naked power in determining the sum of money" as         was sought to be done by the  order  dated August 19,  1970.         It appears to us however that the power to accept or  reject         a tender without assigning any reason cannot be said to be         823         arbitrary  as  section 29(2) (which has  been  amended  with         retrospective effect) itself provides. that (i) it shall  be         exercised  in the interest of the Excise revenue",  (ii)  by         the  specified authority,  and (iii) under such  control  as         may be specified.  As  has  been  stated, the State  Govern-         ment  retained  the power of  accepting  or   rejecting  the         tender,  or  for calling of a fresh tender, to  itself,  and         such  an order cannot be said to be an "absolute" or "naked"         power of  the nature apprehended by the High Court.   Refer-         ence  in  this  connection may be made to  the  decision  in         Jaiswal’s  case  (supra)  mentioned above.  Moreover  it  is         not disputed before us that  the  power  to accept or not to         accept the highest or any bid was expressly  reserved  under         the impugned sale notification.  Sub-section (2) of  section

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       79  of  the  Act was also amended by the  Bihar  and  Orissa         Excise  (Second Orissa Amendment) Act 1971 (Act 10 of  1971)         with  full  retrospective  effect.  Section 17  of  the  Act         validated  both  the licenses granted and  amounts  paid  or         payable therefor, and its validity has not  been  challenged         before us.             It  will be remembered that Siba Prasad Saha  had  filed         O.J.C. No. 786 of 1970 after the first judgment of the  High         Court  dated May 15,1970, for refund of the license fee  and         for  non-payment of the fee in future.  The State of  Orissa         feels  aggrieved against the decision of the High  Court  in         that case dated April 16,1971 that a citizen has a fundamen-         tal  right to deal in liquor.  In taking that view the  High         Court  relied  on  this Court’s decision  in  Narula’s  case         (supra).   The decision in Narula’s case was considered  and         explained  by this Court in Nashirwar’s care (supra) and  it         has been held as follows,--                             "It is not correct to read in the  deci-                       sion  in Narula’s case that there is a  funda-                       mental  right  to do business in  liquor.  The                       decision is that dealing in  liquor is   busi-                       ness and a citizen has a right to do  business                       in  that  commodity and the State  can  impose                       reasonable  restrictions   on  the   right  in                       public  interest.  If the State  can  prohibit                       bussiness  in  liquor as is held in  State  of                       Bombay   and  Another  v.F.N.  Balsara   (1951                       S.C.R.682) this  establishes  that the   State                       has  exclusive right of privilege of  manufac-                       ture, possession, sales of intoxicating liquor                       and therefore the Slate grants such a right of                       privilege  to persons in the shape of  license                       or lease."         In  reaching  this conclusion this Court took note  of   the         decision  in Bharucha’s case(1) that there was  no  inherent         right  in a citizen to sell intoxicating liquors by  retail,         and  that it is not a privilege of a citizen of  the  State,         and  observed  that as Bharucha’s case  was  a  Constitution         Bench decision like Narula’s case, the latter  could not  be         said to have overruled the former.  As has been stated,  the         matter again came up for consideration in Har Shankar’s case         (supra) with specific reference to Narula’s case, and it was         reiterated  that "there is no fundamental right to do  trade         or  business  in intoxicants"  and that "in all their  mani-         festations, these rights are vested in the State and  indeed         without such vesting there can be no effective regulation of         824         various  forms  of activities in relation  to  intoxicants."         The contrary view of the High Court in impugned judgment  is         incorrect and must be set aside.             The  other grievance of the appellant State is that  the         High  Court struck down the expression "or  otherwise"  from         clause (a) of subsection (2) of 29 of the Act as unconstitu-         tional.   We have given our reasons for the  contrary  view,         and the High Court therefore went wrong in striking down the         expression "or otherwise".             The High Court has also held that as sections 2 to 5  of         the  Amending   Act of 1970 were not made  retrospective  in         operation,  the effect of section 6 amounted to a  direction         by the Legislature to the State to disregard the decision in         Ajodhya  Prasad’s case that the amount realised  by  auction         was illegal and that section 6 was therefore ultra vires the         powers of the Legislature.  It will be sufficient to say  in         this  connection  that the Bihar and Orissa  Excise  (Second         Orissa  Amendment) Act, 1971 (Act 10 of 1971) has made  good

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       the deficiency, if any, by stating that the amending  provi-         sions  shall  be  deemed always to have been  so   added  or         inserted or substituted.  In this respect also, the impugned         judgment of the High Court must be rectified.             Mr. S.C. Agarwal has argued that the amount realised  by         the  State for grant of the exclusive privilege  under  sec-         tions  22 and 29 was nothing but a tax and no such  tax  was         permissible under Entries 45 to 63 of List II of the Seventh         Schedule to the Constitution and that it was not excise duty         within the meaning of Entry 51 or a fee under Entry 66.   It         has  also  been  argued that Entry 8  embodying  the  Police         powers of the State could not be invoked to sustain such  an         imposition.  Mr. Bhagat has also argued that the  collection         was in the nature  of a tax  and section  29 was   therefore         ultra  vires  the Constitution.  Mr. Bhagat has  also  urged         that the State was not the owner of the exclusive  privilege         to  manufacture  or  sell liquor and that the  Act  did  not         empower it to part with that right on payment. We have given         our reasons already for taking a contrary view, with  refer-         ence to. the decisions in Nashirwar’s case and Har Shankar’s         case.  The  State has the exclusive right  or  privilege  to         manufacture,  store and sell liquor and to grant that  right         to  its  license holders on payment of  consideration,  with         such  conditions and restrictions for its regulation as  may         be  necessary in the public interest.  The argument  to  the         contrary is futile and is rejected.             It  has  been argued by Mr. Agarwal  that  although  the         Amending  Act of 1970 (Act 17 of 1970) was enacted  for  the         purpose  of  getting over the High  Court’s  declaration  in         O.J.C.No.  357 of 1970 that rule 103 of the Board’s   Excise         Rules,  1965, in so  far as it directs that fees for license         for the retail vend of excisable articles shall be fixed  by         auction,  was  ultra vires the Act, rule  103  continued  to         remain  invalid  even  after the promulgation  of  that  Act         because.  such a rule could not be made under section  90(7)         of’  the Act.  Counsel has argued that as the rule  was  in-         valid,  it was not permissible to hold the  impugned  public         auction  because  that was not permissible under  any  other         provision of the Act.  This argument is also futile  because         section  5  of the Bihar and Orissa  Excise  (Second  Orissa         Amendment)         825         Act, 1971 (Act 10 of 1971) has substituted a new sub-section         (2)   for  the  old sub-section as  follows,  providing  for         auction,  and  it has been stated that it shall  be  "deemed         always to have been substituted".-                             "(2) The sum payable  under  sub-section                       (1) shall be determined as follows,-                       (a) by auction or by calling tenders or other-                       wise  as  the  State Government  may,  in  the                       interest  of  excise  revenue  by  general  or                       special order direct."         Then  follow other clauses with which we are not  concerned.         Moreover  section  17 of that Act has validated  all  grants         made  by way of licenses for manufacture and retail sale  of         country  liquor in respect    of any place on or  after  the         7th  day of August, 1965, on which date the  Board’s  Excise         Rules  (including rule 103) admittedly came into force.   In         this  view  of  the matter, it is not necessary  for  us  to         examine  the other arguments of Mr. Agarwal Which have  been         adopted by Mr. Bhagat regarding the invalidity of rule 103.             It is not necessary to deal separately with the judgment         of the High Court dated April 16, 1971 in O.J.C. No. 242  of         1967, which has given rise to civil appeal No. 2071 of 1972,         or with its decision dated May 7, 1971 in O.J.Cs. No.  1185-

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       1190, 1223, .1224 and 1226 of 1970 (which has given rise  to         civil  appeals  Nos. 1855-1863   of 1972  and  cross-appeals         Nos.  351-359 of 1972) because they are based on the  afore-         said  decision  dated April 16, 1971 in O.J.C.  No.  786  of         1970.  So also, it is not necessary to deal separately  with         the decision dated September 6,1971 in O.J.C.No. 859 of 1970         and 863 of 1970 which have given rise to civil appeals  Nos.         1235 and 1236 of 1972, for the same reason.             This  takes us to the judgment of the High  Court  dated         March 28, 1974 in O.J.C.No.589 of 1972 which has given  rise         to civil appeal No. 1802 of 1974.  That decision is based on         the decision dated January 3,1974 in O.J.C.No. 1036 of 1971.         The  petitioner in that case was a licensee for  the  retail         sale  of  country liquor in Mayurbhanj district.   He  chal-         lenged  the  vires  of sections 22 and 29  of  the  Act  and         claimed  that the monthly consideration for the license  was         not  due from him and that he was  entitled to a refund   of         the   money  already paid by him.  The High  Court  followed         that decision and dismissed the writ petition.  In doing  so         it  relied  on  its decision dated April 16,  1971  in  Siba         Prasad  Saha v. State of Orissa and other (I.L.R. 1971  Cut-         tack  777) and the decision of this Court in Jaiswal’s  case         (supra)  and dismissed the petition.  We have already  dealt         with  the points which arise for consideration in this  case         while  examining the earlier cases and we see nothing  wrong         with  the impugned judgment of the High Court by  which  the         writ petition has been dismissed.         In the result, we order as follows,-             Civil  Appeals Nos. 1892 and 1893 of 1971  are  allowed,         the impugned judgment of the High Court dated May 15,1970 is         set aside and writ petitions Nos. O.J.C. 329 and 357 of 1970         are dismissed.         826             Civil Appeal No. 2091 is allowed, the impugned  judgment         of  the High Court dated February 3, 1971 is set  aside  and         the writ petition No. 850 of 1970 is dismissed.             Civil Appeal No. 1302 of 1972 is allowed, the  ’impugned         judgment of the High Court dated April 16, 1971 is set aside         and the writ petition No. 786 of 1970 is dismissed.             Civil  Appeal No. 2071 of 1972 is allowed, the  impugned         judgment of the High Court dated April 16, 1971 is set aside         and the writ petition No. O.J.C. 242 of 1967 is dismissed.             Civil  Appeals Nos. 1855-1863 of 1972 are  allowed,  the         impugned  judgments of the High Court dated May 7, 1971  are         set  aside and O.J. Cs. Nos. 1185-1190, 1223, 1224 and  1226         of  1970 are dismissed.  Cross-appeals Nos. 351-359 of  1972         are dismissed.             Civil  Appeals Nos. 1235 and 1236 of 1972  are  allowed,         the impugned judgments of the High Court dated September  6,         1971 are set aside and O.J. Cs. Nos. 859 and 863 of 1970 are         dismissed.         Civil Appeal No. 1802 of 1974 fails and is dismissed.             In  the  circumstances of these cases there will  be  no         order as to he costs.         P.B.R.         827