16 March 1962
Supreme Court
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MADAN GOPAL RUNGTA Vs SECRETARY TO THE GOVERNMENT OFORISSA

Bench: SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ),GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.,WANCHOO, K.N.,AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA,AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
Case number: Appeal (civil) 407 of 1961


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PETITIONER: MADAN GOPAL RUNGTA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SECRETARY TO THE GOVERNMENT OFORISSA

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 16/03/1962

BENCH: WANCHOO, K.N. BENCH: WANCHOO, K.N. AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA

CITATION:  1962 AIR 1513            1962 SCR  Supl. (3) 906  CITATOR INFO :  D          1963 SC1124  (6,7)  R          1964 SC1473  (12)  R          1965 SC 458  (29)  R          1970 SC   1  (4)  RF         1974 SC1380  (22,30)  RF         1987 SC2111  (13)  F          1990 SC  10  (11)

ACT: Writ-High  Court-If can issue writs beyond  its  territorial jurisdiction-Mineral  Concession  Rules,  1949,  6,57,59,60- Constitution of India Art. 226.

HEADNOTE: The  State Government of Orissa rejected the application  of the appellant who had applied for grant of a mining lease in December  1957  on  the ground  that  the  State  Government proposed to arrange for the exploitation of the area in  the public sector.  The appellant made an application for review to  the  Central  Government under r. 57  of  the  rules  of Mineral  Concession  Rules,  1949.   This  application   was rejected  by the Central Government in June 1959.  Thereupon the  appellant  filed  a  petition under  Art.  226  of  the Constitution in the High Court of Orissa.  This petition was dismissed  by  the High Court on the ground that it  had  no jurisdiction  to deal with the matter under Art. 226 as  the final  order in the case was passed by the  Central  Govern- ment, which was located beyond the territorial  jurisdiction of  the High Court.  The appellant came up by special  leave to appeal to the Supreme Court.  The main question is as  to the  limit of the jurisdiction of the High Court under  Art. 226.  The appellant contended that as the Central Government had merely dismissed the review petition, the effective                             907 order rejecting the, appellant’s application for the  mining lease  was  that of the State Government and  therefore  the High  Court  would have jurisdiction to grant a  writ  under Art. 226. Held.  that the High Court was right in holding that it  had

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no  Jurisdiction  to  issue a writ under  Art.  226  in  the present case as the final order in this case was that of the Central  Government which was not situate within the  terri- tories  over  which the High Court had  jurisdiction.   This order  of  the Central Government in  effect  rejecting  the application  of the appellant. for the grant of  the  mining lease to him and confirming the rejection of the application of  the  appellant by the Orissa Government is  clearly  not amenable  to  the jurisdiction of the High Court  of  Orissa under  Art.  226  in  view of  the  fact  that  the  Central Government is not located within the territories subject  to the  jurisdiction  of  the  Orissa  High  Court.   It  would therefore  have  been useless for the Orissa High  Court  to issue  a writ against the Orissa Government for the  Central Government’s   Order  rejecting  the  application   of   the appellant  for  the grant of the mining  lease  would  still stand. Held, further that quite apart from the theoretical question of  the  merger  of the State Government’s  Order  with  the Central  Government’s  Order,  the terms of  r.  60  of  the Mineral  Concession Rule 1949 make it perfectly  clear  that whenever  the  matter is brought to the  Central  Government under r. 59, it is the order of the Central Government which is effective and final.  So where there is a review petition and the Central Government passes an order on such  petition one  way or the other it is the Central  Government’s  Order that prevails and the State Government’s Order must in those circumstances merge in the order of the Central Government. Election Commission India v. Saka Venkata Subba Rao,  (1953) S.C.R.  1144,  Lt.  Col.  Khajoor Singh v. Union  of  India, (1961)  2  S.C.R.  828,  A. Thangal  Kunju  Musaliar  v.  M. Venkitachalam Potti (1955) 2 S.C.R. 1196 relied on. Shivji Nathubhai v. The Union of India, (1960) 2 S.C.R. 775, referred to. The  State of Uttar Pradesh v. Mohammad Nooh  (1958)  S.C.R. 595, not applicable.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 407/61. 908 Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated August 23, 1960, of the Orissa High Court in O.J.C. No.  103 of 1959. N.O. Chatterjee and P. K. Chatterjee, for the appellant, C.   K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, B.  R.      L. Iyengar and P. D. Menon, for the respondents. B.M.  Patnaik,  S. N. Andley, Rameshwar Nath  and  P.  L. Vohra, for the Intervener. 1962.  March 16.  The Judgment of the Court was delivered by WANCHOO, J.-- This is an appeal by special leave against the judgment  of  the  Orissa  High  Court.   The  brief   facts necessary  for  present purposes are these.   The  appellant made  an  application to the State Government of  Orissa  in 1949  for grant of a mining lease for manganese ore over  an area  comprising  5400  acres situated in  the  district  of Keonjhar.   The  appellant was the first applicant  for  the lease of the aforesaid area, and subsequently other  persons applied  for lease of the same area including Messrs.   Tata from  and Steel Company Limited hereinafter referred  to  as Tatas),   the  intervener  in  the  present   appeal.    The Government  of  Orissa decided to grant the   in  favour  of Tattas  and  in  January 1956 referred  the  matter  to  the Central  Government  for  its approval under r.  32  of  the

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Mineral  Concession Rules, 1949 hereinafter referred  to  as the   Rules),  which  lays  down  that  if  more  than   one application regarding the same, land is received, preference shall be given to the application received first, unless the State Government, for any special reason, and with the prior approval of the Central Government decides to the  contrary. The   appellant  made  a  representation  to   the   Central Government against the recommendation of the 909 State Government.  Eventually, on April 9, 1957, the Central Government  turned  down  the recommendation  of  the  State Government about the grant of the mining lease to Tatas.  It also  directed that the applications received prior  to  the application  of Tatas should be considered according to  the Rules  but  added  that in case  the  Government  of  Orissa desired  to  work  the area on  a  departmental  basis,  the Central  Government  would have no objection to  consider  a proposal for that purpose.  Thereafter the State  Government rejected  the application of the appellant in December  1957 on the ground that the State Government proposed to  arrange for the exploitation of the area in the public sector. This  was  followed   by an application for  review  to  the ’Central  Government  under  r.  57  of  the  Rules.    This application  was rejected by the Central Government in  June 1969.   Thereupon the appellant filed a petition under  Art. 226  of  the Constitution in the High Court  in  July  1959. This petition was dismissed by the High Court on the  ground that  it had no jurisdiction to deal with the  matter  under Art.  226 as the final order in the case was passed  by  the Central Government which was located beyond the  territorial jurisdiction of the High Court.  The appellant then  applied to the High Court for a certificate to appeal to this Court, which  was rejected.  He then asked for special  leave  from this  Court, which was granted; and that how the matter  has come up before us. The  main  question  raised before us is the  limit  of  the jurisdiction   of   the  High  Court  under  Art.   226   in circumstances   like  those  in  the  present   case.    The contention on behalf of the appellant is that as the Central Government  bad  merely dismissed the review  petition,  the effective  order rejecting the appellant’s  application  for the  mining  lease  was that of  the  State  Government  and therefore the High Court would have jurisdiction to grant  a writ 910 under Art. 226, and that the principle laid down in Election Commission  India  v. Saka Venkata Subba  Rao(l)  would  not apply.   Reliance in this connection has been placed on  the decision  of  this Court in The State of  Uttar  Pradesh  v. Mohammed Nooh(2). It  is well settled by a series of decisions of  this  Court beginning  with Saka Venkata Subba Rao’s case(1) that  there is  two-fold  limitation on the power of the High  Court  to grant  a writ under Art. 226.  These limitation are  firstly that the power is to be exercised throughout the territories in  relation to which the High Court exercise  jurisdiction, that  is to say, the writs issued by the High  Court  cannot run beyond the territories subject to its jurisdiction,  and secondly,  that  the person or authority to  whom  the  High Court is empowered to issue such writs must be within  those territories,  which  clearly  implies  that  they  must   be amenable to its jurisdiction either by residence or location within  those territories.  The view taken in this case  has been recently reaffirmed by this Court in Lt.  Col.  Khajoor Singh v. Union of India. (3) Prima facie, therefore, as  the

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final  order  in  this  case  was  passed  by  the   Central Government which is not located within the territories  over which  the High Court has jurisdiction, the High Court  will have no power to grant a writ in this case. Learned  counsel  for the appellant however  relies  on  the decision in Mohd.  Nooh’s case (2) where it was held that it was not correct to say that an order of dismissal passed  on April  20,  1948, merged in the order  in  appeal  therefrom passed in May 1949, and the two orders in turn merged in the order  passed  in revision on April 22, 1,950, or  that  the original order of dismissal only became final on the passing of  the  order in revision.  It was further  held  that  the order of dismissal was operative on its 1. [1953] S.C.R. 1144.        2. [1958] S.C.R. 595. 3.   [1961] 2 S.C.R. 828.  911 own strength and therefore no relief under Art. 226 could be granted  against  the order of dismissal passed in  1948  as Art.  226 was not retrospective in operation.  It  is  urged that if the order of dismissal in that case did not merge in the final order of revision which was passed in April  1950, after the Constitution came into force, there was no  reason why  the  order of the State Government should be  taken  to have  merged in the order of the Central Government in  this case  so  as to deprive the appellant of his remedy  in  the High  Court  under  Art. 226.  We are of  opinion  that  the principle  of  Mohd.   Nooh’s Case(1) cannot  apply  in  the circumstances  of the present case.  The question there  was whether  the  High Court would have power to  issue  a  writ under Art. 226 in respect of a dismissal which was effective from 1948, simply because the revision against the order  of dismissal  was  dismissed by the State Government  in  April 1950  after  the Constitution came into force.   It  was  in those circumstances that this Court held that the  dismissal having  taken place in 1948 could not be the  subject-matter of  an  application under Art. 226 of the  Constitution  for that  would be giving retrospective effect to that  Article. The argument that the order of dismissal merged in the order passed  in  appeal  therefrom  and in  the  final  order  of revision was repelled by this Court on two grounds.  It  was held  (firstly) that the principle of merger  applicable  to decrees of courts would not apply to orders of  departmental tribunals,  and  (secondly)  that  the  original  order   of dismissal would be operative on its own strength and did not gain  greater efficacy by the subsequent order of  dismissal of  the  appeal  or revision, and  therefore  the  order  of dismissal  having been passed before the Constitution  would not  be open to attack under Art. 226 of  the  Constitution. We  are of opinion that the facts in Mohd.  Nooh’s case  (1) were of a special kind and (1)  [1958] S.C.R. 595. 912 the  reasoning in that case would not apply to the facts  of the present case. Further,  in A. Thangal Kunju Musaliar v.  M.  Venkitachalam Potti  (1),  though this Court was considering a  matter  in which  the question which is before us was not  directly  in issue,  it  had occasion to consider  certain  decisions  of certain  High Courts which dealt with oases similar  to  the present case : (see p. 1213).  In those decisions orders had been  passed  by  certain inferior  authorities  within  the territories  subject to the jurisdiction of the High  Courts concerned, but they had been taken in appeal before superior authorities  which  were located out. side  the  territories subject  to the jurisdiction of the High  Courts  concerned.

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In  those  circumstances the High Courts had held  that  the order  of the inferior authorities had merged in the  orders of  the authorities.  This Court apparently approved of  the view  taken by the High Courts in those cases on the  ground that  a  writ  against the  inferior  authority  within  the territories  could  not be of any avail to  the  petitioners concerned  in those oases and could give them no relief  for the   orders   of  the  superior   authority   outside   the jurisdiction would remain outstanding and operative  against them.   Therefore, as no writs could be issued  against  the outside  authorities,  this Court was of the view  that  the High  Courts were right in dismissing the petitions, as  any writ  against  the inferior authority which  is  within  the jurisdiction of the High Court, in view of the orders of the superior  authority, would be infructuous.  The position  in the  present case is similar to that envisaged  above.   The Orissa Government rejected the application of the  appellant for  grant  of  the  mining  lease.   The  appellant   being aggrieved  by  that  order went in  review  to  the  Central Government  under  the Rules and that  review  petition  was dismissed so that in effect the Central (1)[1955] 2 S.C.R. 1196, 913 Government  also rejected the application of the  ,appellant for grant of the mining lease to him.  It is not in  dispute that  if the Central Government was so minded it could  have allowed  the  review and directed the Orissa  Government  to grant  mining  lease to the appellant.  Therefore  when  the Central  Government  rejected  the review  petition,  it  in effect  rejected  the application of the appellant  for  the grant of the mining lease to him.  This order of the Central Government  in  effect  rejecting  the  application  of  the appellant  for  the  grant of the mining lease  to  him  and confirming the rejection of the application of the appellant by  the  Orissa Government is clearly not  amenable  to  the jurisdiction  of the High Court of Orissa under  Art-226  in view of the fact that the Central Government is not  located within  the territories subject to the jurisdiction  of  the Orissa High Court.  It would therefore have been useless for the  Orissa  High Court to issue a writ against  the  Orissa Government  for the Central Governments order rejecting  the review  petition  and  therefore  in  effect  rejecting  the application  of the appellant for grant of the mining  lease would still stand This is made clear by r. 60 of the  Rules, which  provides  that "the order of the  Central  Government under Rule 59 and subject only to such order, any order of a State  Government  under  these  rules,  shall  be   final". Clearly  therefore  r.  60 provides that where  there  is  a review  petition  against  the order  passed  in  the  first instance  by the State Government, the order of the  Central Government  passed in review would prevail and would be  the final  order dealing with an application for a mining  lease under   the   Rules.   Therefore,  quite  apart   from   the theoretical question of the merger of the State Government’s order with the Central Government’s order, the terms of r.60 make it perfectly clear that whenever the matter is  brought to  the Central Government under r. 59, it is the  order  of the  Central  Government which is effective and  final.   In these 914 circumstances  we  are of opinion that the  High  Court  was right in holding that it had no jurisdiction to issue a writ under  Art.  226 in the present case as the final  order  in this  case was that of the Central Government which was  not situate within the territories over which the High Court has

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jurisdiction. Our  attention  in  this  connection  was  drawn  to  Shivji Nathubhai v. The Union of India (1).  In that case a  mining lease  had  been  granted  by  the  State  Government  to  a particular  person and there was a review  petition  against the  grant  of that mining lease.  The  order  granting  the mining  lease was set aside on review without notice to  the person to whom the lease had been granted.  In that  connec- tion  a question arose whether the person to whom the  State Government had granted the lease had any interest to  enable him  to  make an application under Art. 226.   It  was  then pointed out by this Court that under the Rules the order  of the State Government would be effective as there was no  re- quirement  that it was not final until confirmation  by  the Central  Government.  That case however is of no  assistance to  the appellant for where there is a review  petition  and the Central Government passes an order on such petition  one way  or the other it is the Central Government’s order  that prevails  and  the State Government’s order  must  in  those circumstances merge in the order of the Central  Government. The observations in that case on which the appellant  relies were  made in another connection and can have no bearing  on the  question before us, where an order has been  passed  by the Central Government on review and it is that order  which is  made final by r. 60 and which stands in the way  of  the appellant.   There is therefore no force in this appeal  and it is hereby dismissed with costs. Appeal dismissed. (1)  [1960] 2 S.C.R. 77S. 915