04 May 1999
Supreme Court
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PUNJAB COMMUNICATIONS LTD. Vs UNION OF INDIA .

Bench: S.B.MAJMUDAR,,M. JAGANNADHA RAO.
Case number: C.A. No.-002685-002686 / 1999
Diary number: 8704 / 1998
Advocates: Vs ARVIND KUMAR SHARMA


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PETITIONER: PUNJAB COMMUNICATIONS LTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: UNION OF INDIA & OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       04/05/1999

BENCH: S.B.MAJMUDAR, & M. JAGANNADHA RAO.,

JUDGMENT:

M.JAGANNADHA RAO,J.

Leave granted.

These   two   appeals  have  been   filed  by   the   Punjab Communications  Ltd  (hereinafter  called   the  ‘PCL’),   a public-sector undertaking of the State of Punjab against the judgment  dated  27.2.1998  of the High Court  of  Punjab  & Haryana  in CWP No.124 of 1998 and against the order in  the review  application dated 19.3.1998 in RA 138 of 1998.   The Transfer  Petition  (C)  No.680  of 1998  is  filed  by  Sri D.P.Srivastava  for  transfer  of  a  public  interest  writ petition  No.4112 M/B of 1997 from the Allahabad High  Court to  this Court as some points are common to the appeals  and the writ petition.

Though  the  main  judgment in the writ  petition  has  been rendered  by  the High Court on 27.2.1998, the events  which have  taken place during the pendency of these appeals  have changed  the  complexion of the case and, according  to  the respondent-Union of India, the writ petition has practically become  infructuous and no relief can be granted.  We  shall narrate the facts which have given rise to the writ petition and shall also refer to the subsequent events.

              In September 1993, the Asian Development Bank          (hereinafter  called the ‘ADB’) agreed to  grant  a          soft loan of US $ 113 m to the Union of India  (1st          respondent) for funding a project meant to  provide          digital   wireless  telecom  facility   to   36,000          identified villages in Eastern U.P.  The Department          of  Tele-communications (hereinafter called  ‘DOT’)          floated a tender on 9.10.1996 inviting offers  open          to  Indian  and foreign companies.  There  were  14          offers  including  one  from  the  appellant.   The          Technical Evaluation Committee (hereinafter  called          the  ‘TEC’) examined the offers and wherever  there          were  deviations in the offers that were made,  the          TEC  sought  clarifications on  3.6.1997  from  the          bidders  to be given by 10.6.1997.   The  appellant          replied    and    resubmitted    the    "proveness"          certificates  which were included in  the  original          bid  pagers  at  pages  226 to  228.   This  was  a          certificate  dated 28.2.1997 issued by the  Chinese          Post  and  Telecommunication Department  where  the

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        technology submitted by the appellant was stated to          have  been  implemented.  After scrutiny,  the  TEC          short-listed   the  appellant  (PCL)  and  BEL   on          7.7.1997.   It  is  the appellant’s  case  that  on          account  of some pressure brought on respondents  5          (Member (P) Telecom Commission) DOT and  Respondent          6 (Advisor (T) Telecom Commission) DOT, the  matter          was referred by the 5th respondent to a High  Level          Committee,  with  a  view  to  obtain  an   opinion          disqualifying  the appellant so that the Department          could go in for an outmoded ‘analog’ system (rather          than  the current ‘digital’ system) to be  provided          by some multinational company which was wanting  to          dump its outmoded ‘analog’ system in the India.  It          is the appellant’s case that this was done with   a          view  to enable the issue of a  fresh  notification          calling  for fresh tenders pertaining  to  ‘analog’          system.    It  appears  that  on   23.9.1997,   the          abovesaid High Level Committee submitted its report          stating  that  there were two ‘deviations’  in  the          tenders  submitted by the appellant as  noticed  by          the  Technical Evaluation Committee in  respect  of          the   required   specifications.    The   Committee          required  the department to negotiate  orally  with          the  appellant.  It is the  appellant’s  contention          that at an extremely short notice of 2 days, a mock          negotiation  was held on 29.10.1997, and some  oral          questions   were  asked.   It  is  said  that   the          appellant  had answered all these questions put  by          the   respondents  by  means  of  the   appellant’s          documents  already  on record but  these  were  not          accepted.   According  to the appellant  no  agreed          minutes  were  recorded.   On  19.11.1997,  a  note          signed  by the 6th respondent, the convenor of  the          High Level Committee, was prepared stating that the          further  Technical  Evaluation of the  project  was          likely to go beyond 27.11.1997 due to  complexities          of  bids offered by manufacturers and also in  view          of  the want of  authentication of the  "proveness"          of  the system proposed by the appellant.  It  then          stated  that  a decision had been taken not  to  go          ahead  with  the  ADB loan.   The  note  stated  as          follows:

             "Department should not go in for ADB loan               as  it would result in  heavy  commitment               charges and Department must go ahead  for               implementation  of rural telecom  project               through its own resources"

        According  to  the appellant, these  minutes  dated          19.11.1997  were  back-dated inasmuch as,  even  as          late as 20.11.1997, the Chairman TC’s office  diary          recorded a note that the Chairman (TC) wanted  para          2 to be modified to say that the Department did not          have  any technically responsive bid and that  none          of  the offered systems were proven  and  therefore          Department might not go ahead with the loan and the          draft   might  be  modified  in  consulation   with          ADV(T)/DDG(LPT)  & resubmitted.  According  to  the          appellant, the convenor of the High Level Committee          created   these  imaginary  deficiencies   in   the          appellant’s bid and prepared backdated minutes  and

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        showed  that all the High Level  Committee  members          had signed the minutes on 17.11.1997 itself.  These          backdated minutes, it is alleged, were prepared  as          a  ground for rejection of the tender, in spite  of          the  fact that 5 years were spent on  drafting  the          specifications  and  in  the  evaluation  of  bids.          According  to the appellant, the Sr.DDG-TX  who  is          said  to  have signed these  "concocted  backdated"          minutes  had,  in  reality,  not  even  seen  these          minutes,  let  alone signing them.   The  appellant          stated that the said officer disowned signing  such          minutes  dated  17.11.1997. The  appellant  made  a          representation on 23.11.1997 to the 2nd  respondent          and  on 16.12.1997, the impugned order was  passed,          cancelling the tenders.

              The  appellant  then filed writ  petition  on          6.1.1998  in  the High Court of Punjab  &  Haryana.          The  High  Court  dismissed the  writ  petition  on          27.2.1998.  A review application was filed but that          was  also dismissed on 19.3.1998.  Thereafter,  the          appellant moved this Court in June, 1998.

              This  Court issued notice on 8.6.1998 in  the          application  for leave returnable by 22.6.1998  and          stated that till then the Union of India should not          return the bid papers to the appellant.

              We  shall now refer to the subsequent  events          that  have taken place after the filing of the  SLP          in this Court.

              On 2.9.1998, when the matter came before  the          Court, a copy of the communication of the  Ministry          of  Finance dated 1.9.1998 received by the DOT  was          placed  before the Court.  That letter showed  that          pursuant  to a letter of the DOT  dated  29.4.1998,          the ADB had come to know about the inability of the          DOT to avail of the ADB loan.  This Court requested          the  Additional Solicitor General of India to  take          appropriate   instructions   from   the   concerned          department and directed that an intimation be  sent          to  the ADB to keep the letter of  cancellation  of          loan in abeyance, awaiting further orders from this          Court.

              On   22.9.1998,  the   Additional   Solicitor          General of India informed this Court that the Union          of  India  had communicated to the  ADB  about  the          pendency  of  the  case.  Thereafter,  this   Court          permitted the parties to the case, if they  thought          it  fit,  to inform the ADB about the  order  which          this Court passed on that day i.e. 22.9.1998.

              Thereafter,  several  affidavits came  to  be          filed  by  the Union of India as  directed  by  the          Court.   The affidavit dated 4.1.1999  stated  that          the  DOT  had conveyed, through the  Department  of          Economic  Affairs,  to  the ADB  on  17.9.1998  for          keeping  the letter of cancellation of ADB loan  in          abeyance.  It was also stated that the ADB, in  its          letter   dated   29.10.1998,   had   informed   the          Department of Economic Affairs that it had  decided          that it was not "practical" to keep the loan  offer          open and that, in fact, formal steps had been taken

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        to  cancel  the loan-offer on 6.11.1998.   The  DOT          also   stated  that  the  ADB  had   approved   the          withdrawal of the loan on 6.11.1998.

              This Court was informed on 5.1.1999 that,  in          the meantime, the Government of India was  thinking          of  calling for fresh tenders for  installation  of          telephones  under  a  new scheme  for  rural  areas          spread   over  different  States  and  this   Court          directed  a further affidavit to be filed  in  this          behalf.

              A  fresh affidavit dated 15.1.1999 was  filed          on behalf of the Union of India to the effect  that          the  ADB  loan had a validity period  of  one  year          which had automatically lapsed on 27.11.1997,  that          there  was a time constraint in regard to  the  ADB          loan  and  that remainders were received  from  the          Department  of Economic Affairs to avail  the  loan          latest by 27.11.1997, that the DOT had informed the          Finance  Department  that it was not  availing  the          loan and that it had decided

             "to   fund  the  Rural  Telecom   Project               through its own resources"

        It was stated that this decision was taken to avoid          heavy  commitment  charges  of  ADB  loan  if   the          evaluation/decision  on  the previous  tender  went          beyond   27.11.1997.   Thereafter,   the   previous          tenders were cancelled on 16.12.1997, stating that:

             "no       bidder      qualified       the               technical/commercial evaluation"

        It was also stated that the Department of  Economic          Affairs  had,  by their  letter  dated  26.11.1998,          already   confirmed  that  the  ADB  had   approved          withdrawal  of  the loan on  6.11.1998  as  already          informed to this Court.

              In  regard  to  the  new  scheme  for   rural          telephones,  it was stated in the affidavit of  the          respondent that under the scheme of Village  Public          Telephones  (VPT), during 1997-98 42,855 VPTs  were          provided,  that for 1998-99, the target was  45,000          VPTs  and out of that 10,150 were already  provided          by   December,  1998  through  other   schemes   in          progress.   It was stated that the  Department  had          already  covered  6,100  villages  out  of   36,000          village  in Eastern Uttar Pradesh which were to  be          covered under the previous tender and that  another          5,500  VPTs would be provided by March,  1999.   It          was further clarified as follows:

             "All  the  villages  in  UP(E)  would  be               provided  Telecom facilities  during  the               9th  Plan period along with the  rest  of               the  Country.  Presently, out  of  75,000               villages  of UP(E), 32,000 villages  have               already     been     provided     Telecom               facilities."

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        It  was stated that during 1997-98, the  Department          had opened 990 new rural exchanges and had provided          7.16 lakhs new telephone connections in rural areas          and  had incurred an expenditure of Rs.1060  crores          for  rural  telephones.   So  far  as  1998-99  was          concerned,  the  Department  had  allocated   1,485          crores  for rural networks to be opened  in   1,385          new  rural  exchanges  and ‘to  provide  8.4  lakhs          telephone connections.  The Department had  already          installed 295 rural exchanges and provided 2  lakhs          telephones between April, 1998 and December,  1998.          For  1999-2000, it was planned to allocate  Rs.2000          crores for rural network and to provide 12.5  lakhs          telephone  connections.  It was also  stated  that,          presently, there were 18,500 indigenously developed          C-DOT  exchanges which were working in  rural  area          having total capacity of 40 lakh lines,  landlines,          digital MARR etc.

              So  far  as  remote/inaccessible  areas  were          concerned,  it was stated in the affidavit  of  the          respondent that a choice of technology was made  by          including  wireless  in local loop (WLL)  based  on          area  of  application as stated  in  the  affidavit          dated   5.11.1998.   The  Department  had   already          floated  a  tender  for 20,000  lines  for  Digital          Wireless  Local loop Systems for rural areas -  for          the  entire country, including UP.  A copy  of  the          Bid  document was filed.  It was alleged  that  the          appellant,  among  other  manufacturers,  had  also          actively  participated in the finalisation  of  the          Technical Specifications of the new tenders.  These          specifications  were  slightly different  from  the          earlier  ADB  tender  and  were  based  on   latest          ‘Generic Requirement’ (GR) prepared by the  Telecom          Engineering  Centre (TEC) of the Department,  after          extensive consultation with the manufacturers.  The          bid  document  for this tender was on  sale  w.e.f.          8.1.1999 and 7 companies had already purchased  the          same  and  the tenders were scheduled to be  opened          on  4.2.1999.   It was stated for  the  respondents          across   the  Bar  that  the  appellant  had   also          responded  to the new advertisement.   Again  C-DOT          TDMA PMP Technology, field-trial orders were placed          on  M/s  ITI  for 25 Systems  having  capacity  for          providing   4,000  Village   Panchayat   Telephones          (VPTs).   These  telephones  were  expected  to  be          installed  by February, 1999 in 17 Telecom  Circles          spread  throughout  the Country and  these  systems          were  more cost-effective than WLL system and  were          based on indigenous technology developed by M/s  C-          DOT.   Against satellite based  technology,  notice          inviting tenders had been issued on 30.12.1998  for          1,000 terminals and the tender was scheduled to  be          opened on 9.4.1999.

              Two  tabular  statements were  filed  by  the          Union of India during the process of hearing of the          cases.  One  showed, District-wise, the  number  of          villages identified for the earlier ADB tender  and          the  villages  provided with VPT out  of  the  said          villages.  It was shown that out of 32,350 villages          in UP Telecom Circle in UP Districts, 8524 villages

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        out  of  the villages identified  for  ADB  tender,          (i.e.  in  Eastern UP) were already  provided  with          telephones.  A separate tabular statement was filed          showing  the progress of telephone installation  in          the   rural   sector  right  from  1992.    As   on          31.12.1998,  the  position  is  stated  to  be   as          follows:

             "Assam & Nagaland - 72.3%; AP -78.5%;  AS               -  48.2%; Bihar -24.2%; Gujarat -  76.8%;               Haryana - 99.4%; Himachal Pradesh -40.4%;               J&K-41.75%; Karnataka-81%; Kerala - 100%;               Madhya  Pradesh  - 55.1%;  Maharashtra  -               69.5%; NE - 26.7%; Orissa - 41.7%; Punjab               - 94.1%; Rajasthan - 56.3%; Tamil Nadu  -               98.4%; UP(Eastern) - 43.9%; UP(Western) -               34.4%; Delhi - 100%; Calcutta - 90%.   In               all,  6,07,491 villages, the  average  is               51.8%".

        It   will  be  noticed  that  the   percentage   of          telephones  in Bihar, Himachal Pradesh, J&K,  North          East  and  Orissa is less than  the  percentage  in          Eastern UP.

              These  are  the subsequent events  that  have          taken place during the pendency of these matters in          this  Court. It will be noticed that  these  events          have  substantially changed the very basis  of  the          original  writ petition filed in the High Court  of          Punjab & Haryana. The ADB loan on which the  tender          was  based  now stands withdrawn; the  tenders  for          installing  38,000 telephones in Eastern  UP  stand          withdrawn  and invitations for new  Tenders  spread          over several rural areas in various States have now          been made. In fact, the new tenders have also  been          submitted.   It is stated for the respondents  that          the  appellant is also participating in  these  new          tenders.  We have, therefore, to decide this appeal          in the light of the above subsequent developments.

              Learned Senior counsel Sri D.D.Thakur and Sri          R.F.Nariman  for the appellant and  Senior  counsel          Sri  Rajeev  Dhawan  for  the  petitioner  in   the          Transfer  Petition have submitted that in spite  of          these   developments,  the  question  whether   the          various  officers  conspired and  played  fraud  in          seeing  to  it that the ADB loan  lapsed  or  stood          withdrawn, has still to be gone into.  They contend          that when the writ petition was filed on  6.1.1998,          the  position was that with a view to allow  multi-          national   companies  to  dump   outmoded    analog          technology into India, the officers were wanting to          float fresh tenders in which such analog technology          could  be  made the basis of  the  tenders,  either          wholly  or  partly,  that  the  said  attempt   was          successfully  thwarted by the appellant filing  the          writ  petition  in  the High Court  of  Punjab  and          Haryana   and  that  with  a  view  to  spite   the          appellant,  the  officers  had  all  conspired  and          played  fraud in having the ADB loan withdrawn  and          the  ADB tender cancelled.  This, according to  the          appellant, amounted to a fraud on the appellant and

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        also  on  the people of Eastern UP and  has  to  be          investigated.   The  excuse  put  forward  by   the          officers  of DOT that ADB loan would  be  expensive          was   absurd  inasmuch  as  there  was  a  5   year          moratorium  on interest and the interest  rate  was          something  like  4%  and  there  were  other   very          favourable terms.  It was argued that there was  no          point  in having such a beneficial  loan  withdrawn          and spending funds of the Government of India.  The          learned  Senior  counsel  for  appellant  and   for          petitioner in the Transfer Petition contended  that          the  scheme  meant for a very  backward  area  like          Eastern UP could not be allowed to be frustrated in          this manner.

              Alternatively,   it  was  contended  by   the          learned  senior counsel for the appellant that  the          appellant   had  a  legitimate  expectation  of   a          substantive  nature, that, even if  the  Government          wanted  to put its own funds, the  original  tender          notification would be processed for the benefit  of          Eastern  UP.   The respondents  cannot  change  the          policy  to  benefit the rural areas  in  the  whole          country    and   abandon   the   original    tender          notification for Eastern UP.

              Dr.Rajeev  Dhawan for the petitioner  in  the          Transfer Petition contended that fraud in  private-          law  field was different from fraud in the  public-          law  field.  This Court should,  therefore,  decide          whether   these  officials  got  the   High   Level          Committee  appointed only with a view to  harm  the          appellant  and  whether the  Committee  was  stage-          managed  by a few officers who had  other  motives.          Learned counsel Sri Dhawan also contended that this          was  a  case  of  legitimate  expectation  for  the          appellant in the civil appeal as also to the 36,000          villages in Eastern UP.  The learned Senior counsel          for the State of Punjab Sri P.C.Jain also supported          the  case of the appellant on the ground  that  the          appellant was its public sector undertaking.

              On   the   other  hand,  it   was   contended          vehemently   for   the  Union  of  India   by   Sri          C.S.Vaidyanathan, the learned Additional  Solicitor          General  of  India, that there  was  absolutely  no          truth in the contention of the appellant that there          was  a conspiracy or fraud to shelve the ADB  loan,          or  to  bring  in outmoded  technology  into  India          through certain favoured multinationals.  According          to  him, there were two main defects in the  tender          submitted by the appellant, one was a technical one          and   the  other  was  the  absence  of  proof   of          ‘proveness’.   Even though, final  opportunity  was          given, the appellant having agreed to produce fresh          certificate from China, (apart from the certificate          initially filed) to prove ‘proveness’ of the system          in  that country - the appellant failed to  do  so.          The  High Level Committee’s proceedings,  in  fact,          showed  that  it wanted to accept  the  appellant’s          tender and it gave an opportunity to the  appellant          to  make good the defects but the attitude  of  the          appellant  was not helpful and it was the  inaction          of  the appellant that was the cause for the  delay          that led to a situation where the time limit set by

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        the ADB came very close and was expiring.  As there          was  no chance of the appellant curing the  defects          within  the few days that were left, the  ADB  loan          had  to  be withdrawn.  Photocopies of  the  entire          departmental  proceedings  were placed  before  the          Court to show that everything was done bonafide and          the  allegations  of the appellant  were  wild  and          unsubstantiated.   It was argued that there was  no          forgery or ante-dating of any minutes. Two files in          the    respective    departments    were     moving          simultaneously and there was absolutely no truth in          the  allegations of ante-dating the  minutes.   Now          that  the  ADB  loan stood withdrawn  and  the  ADB          tender  had also fallen through, the writ  petition          had become totally infructuous.  The Government  of          India decided to go on with its own funds and now a          new  policy  decision was taken  to  benefit  rural          areas  in  the  whole country and  not  merely  the          36,000  villages in Eastern UP.  This  was  because          there were other rural areas in other States  which          were  more  backward  then Eastern  UP.   In  those          places, the  percentage of telephones was far  less          than  in Eastern UP.  In fact, fresh  tenders  have          been called for to benefit the backward rural areas          in  the  whole country and the new tenders  are  no          longer  confined  exclusively  to  Eastern  UP.   A          Tabular statement relating to the national  figures          regarding telephones is placed before the Court  to          show that there are even more backward rural  areas          in  some States where the percentage  of  telephone          was less than in Eastern UP.   The Government  has,          now plans to cover all backward rural areas in  the          country in  the next few years and monies have also          been allocated.  All these details have been  given          in  the additional affidavits and statements  filed          in  the  Court.  There is no  question  of  dumping          outdated technology into India. The new tenders and          the  future  schemes   are  based  on  the   latest          ‘digital’  technology  and  not  on  the   outmoded          ‘analogy’ technology.  The new government  policies          are  wider  and cannot be challenged in  this  writ          petition which had become infructuous.  There is no          proof of fraud either in private law or public  law          established.    There   can   be   no    legitimate          expectation in regard to the ADB loan contract  and          in any event the new policy is based on  overriding          considerations  of  public interest and  cannot  be          questioned.     The  appeals  are  liable   to   be          dismissed.  It is also argued that there is no need          to  transfer  the  writ petition filed  by  Mr.  OP          Srivastava  from the Allahabad High Court  to  this          Court.   That  has  also,  it  is  stated,   become          infructuous.

              On these submissions, the following questions          arise for consideration:

        (1)   Whether, after the ADB loan for the  contract          for   providing  telephones  for  Eastern  UP   was          withdrawn,  it is necessary to give any finding  on          the  question  of  alleged fraud or  to  grant  any          directions  regarding the bids offered for the  ADB          contract?

        (2)   Whether, if initially the Government  decided

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        to  fund the proposed contract for Eastern UP  from          its  own  resources,  it was  permissible  for  the          Government  to  change  its  policy  into  one  for          providing telephones for rural areas in the  entire          country and whether the ‘legitimate expectation’ of          the appellant in regard to the earlier notification          required,   this   Court   to   direct   that   the          notification for Eastern UP should be continued?

        Point 1

              The disputes between the parties, before  the          ADB loan was withdrawn, were (i) whether there  was          a conspiracy or fraud or other manouvre on the part          of  the  DOT-officials to shelve the  ADB  loan  to          spite the appellant and bring in outmoded  ‘analog’          technology through favoured multinationals and (ii)          whether   the  appellant  (a)  complied  with   the          technical specifications and (b) produced  adequate          proof  of the ‘proveness’ of the system offered  by          the   appellant   i.e.   as   to   its   successful          implementation in China.

              A  review  of the facts  and  the  subsequent          events  would show that the issues which were  live          when the writ petition of the appellant was pending          in   the  High  Court  have  now  lost  all   their          relevance.  The entire tender was based on the  ADB          loan.   If  the  ADB  loan  itself  has  now  stood          withdrawn,  there is now no possibility of the  ADB          loan  project  for  Eastern  UP  being  started  or          completed.   It   will well nigh be  impossible  to          issue any directions to the Union of India to  seek          a  renewal  of  the lapsed loan nor  to  issue  any          directions  to continue the project for Eastern  UP          on the basis of ADB loan.

              Even  so,  learned  Senior  counsel  for  the          appellant  and  the  petitioner  in  the   Transfer          petition have argued the case  on merits as if  the          ADB  loan  were still alive.  We  have  been  taken          through  several volumes of correspondence  between          the various departments, and the minutes of various          officers  and of the High Level Committee to  prove          arbitrariness   in   the  non-acceptance   of   the          appellant’s   bid  on two counts.   We  have  heard          these  submissions very patiently but the point  is          whether  this Court is to give findings  on  issues          which   have  become  non-issues  now   after   the          withdrawal  of  the ADB loan.  We  have  given  our          anxious  consideration to the  various  contentions          raised   on  behalf  of  the  appellant   and   the          petitioner  in the Transfer Petition and we are  of          the  view  that  a detailed decision  on  the  said          questions is not called for.   A question of  fraud          was  also  raised.   But  once  the  ADB  loan   is          withdrawn the question has also become a non-issue.          The  position  is that in respect of the  ADB  loan          project, no fresh tenders based on ‘analog’  system          have been invited nor has any multinational company          been awarded any contract based on outmoded  analog          system.   The said question of fraud is  no  longer          relevant.    On all these issues we should  not  be          understood   as  having  expressed   any   opinion.          Further,  there cannot be a cause of action on  the

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        basis  of  an  "attempt at  fraud"  which  did  not          materialise.   It  is true as stated in   De  Smith          Administrative  Law (para 13.010)(5th Ed.) that  it          is   fundamental  to  the  legitimacy   of   public          decision-making that official decisions should  not          be   infected  with  motives  such  as  fraud   (or          dishonesty) malice or personal self interest.  Duty          to  act in good faith is inherent in  the  process.          Learned  senior counsel for the petitioner  in  the          Transfer  Petition, Sri Rajeev Dhavan  referred  to          Shrisht Dhawan vs. Shaw Brothers [1992 (1)SCC  534]          where  the distinction between fraud in public  law          and  private  law has been adverted  to.   But  all          these legal principles are not relevant if,  the so          called   or  alleged  attempt  at  fraud  did   not          fructify.    We   accordingly  do  not   think   it          worthwhile  to  go  into the  question  of  ‘fraud’          either.  We may once again clarify that  we  should          not be understood as having decided anything on the          merits  of  these questions.  Point  1  is  decided          accordingly.

        Point  2       It was argued that even if  the  ADB          loan  was withdrawn, when the State decided  to  go          ahead with its own funds, it should have gone ahead          with the same notification calling for tenders  for          Eastern  UP  sans  ADB loan.   The  change  in  the          policy  to  benefits other backward  areas  in  the          courts was unwarranted.  Reliance was placed on the          principles  of promissory estoppel  and  legitimate          expectation.   It was contended that  the   project          for  Eastern UP should still go ahead and   it  was          not  open  to  the Union of India  to  deprive  the          appellant company of its reasonable and  legitimate          expectation  regarding  the acceptance of  the  bid          offered  for  the Eastern UP project;  It  was  not          open  to  the State to deprive the  expectation  of          villagers  in 36000 villages in Eastern UP  and  to          change over to a new policy of providing telephones          to  rural  areas in all the States.   Such  is  the          contention  of the appellant. We do not propose  to          deal  with question of promissory estoppel  because          the parties were still at the stage of the tenders,          at the relevant time.  We shall, therefore, confine          ourselves  to  the  point  relating  to  legitimate          expectation of the appellant and the effect of  the          change of policy.

              The principle of ‘legitimate expectation’  is          still at a stage of evolution  as pointed out in De          Smith  Administrative Law (5th Ed.)  (para  8.038).          The principle is at the root of the rule of law and          requires regularity, predictability and  certainity          in   governments’   dealings   with   the   public.          Adverting  to the basis of  legitimate  expectation          its procedural and substantive aspects, Lord  Steyn          in  Piersova vs. Secretary of State [1997  (3)  All          E.R.  577  (at  606) (HL)]  goes  back  to  Dicey’s          description of the rule of law in his "Introduction          to the study of the Law of the Constitution"  (1oth          Ed.,  1959 p.203) (*) as containing  principles  of          enduring  value  in  the work of  a  great  Jurist.          Dicey  said  that the  constitutional  rights  have          roots in the common law.  He said: .lm15

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        "The  ‘rule of law’, lastly, may be used as  a          formula for expressing the fact that with  us,          the  law of constitution, the rules  which  in          foreign  countries  naturally form part  of  a          constitutional  code, are not the  source  but          the consequence of the rights of  individuals,          as  defined and enforced by the Courts;  that,          in  short, the principles of private law  have          with  us been by the action of the Courts  and          Parliament  so  extended as to  determine  the          position  of the Crown and its servants,  thus          the constitution is the result of the ordinary          law of the land".

..........L.....T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J

         This,  says  Lord Steyn, is the pivot  of  Dicey’s           discussion  of  rights to personal freedom and  to           freedom  of association and of public meeting  and           that                    it                      is           ________________________________________________________           * See also ‘The Rule of Law as the Rule of Reason:           Consent and Constitutionalism in (1999) 115 L.Q.R.           221  at 234 that ‘Fairness is both procedural  and           substantive’:   Due Process and Fair Procedure  by           D.J.  Galligam (1996);  and at p.242 quoting Dicey           (1959)  at p.203-204 clear that Dicey regards  the           rule   of  law  as   having  both  procedural  and           substantive  effects.   "The rule of law  enforces           minimum  standards  of fairness, both  substantive           and  procedural".   On the facts in  Pierson,  the           majority  held  that the Secretary of State  could           not  have  maintained a higher tariff of  sentence           than  recommended by the judiciary when admittedly           no  aggravating circumstances existed.  The  State           could   not   also  increase   the   tariff   with           retrospective effect.

         The  basic  principles in this branch relating  to           ‘legitimate  expectation’ were enunciated by  Lord           Diplock  in  Council of Civil Service  Unions  vs.           Minister  of  the Civil Service 1985 AC 374  (408-           409).   It  was observed in that case that  for  a           legitimate  expectation to arise, the decisions of           the  administrative  authority   must  affect  the           person  by  depriving  him  of  some  benefit   or           advantage which either (i) he had in the past been           permitted by the decision-maker to enjoy and which           he  can  legitimately  expect to be  permitted  to           continue  to do until there has been  communicated           to him some rational grounds for withdrawing it on           which he has been given an opportunity to comment;           or  (ii)  he  has   received  assurance  from  the           decision-maker  that  they will not  be  withdrawn           without  giving  him  first   an  opportunity   of           advancing  reasons for contending that they should           not  be  withdrawn.   The procedural  part  of  it           relates  to  a  representation that a  hearing  or           other  appropriate  procedure   will  be  afforded           before the decision is made.  The substantive part           of  the  principle is that if a representation  is           made  that a benefit of a substantive nature  will           be  granted or if the person is already in receipt           of  the benefit that it will be continued and  not

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         be  substantially  varied, then the same could  be           enforced.  In the above case, Lord Fraser accepted           that   the  civil  servants   had   a   legitimate           expectation  that  they would be consulted  before           their trade union membership was withdrawn because           prior  consultation  in the past was the  standard           practice  whenever  conditions  of  service   were           significantly altered.  Lord Diplock went a little           further,  when he said that they had a  legitimate           expectation  that they would continue to enjoy the           benefits  of  the  trade  union  membership.   The           interest   in  regard  to   which   a   legitimate           expectation  could  be had must be one  which  was           protectable.   An expectation could be based on an           express   promise   or    representation   or   by           established  past action or settled conduct.   The           representation  must be clear and unambigious.  It           could  be  a representation to the  individual  or           generally to a class of persons.

         The    principle   of    substantive    legitimate           expectation,  that is, expectation of a favourable           decision of one kind or another, has been accepted           as  part of the English Law in several cases.  (De           Smith,  Administrative Law, 5th Ed) (para 13.030);           (See  also Wade, Administrative Laws, 7th Ed.) (pp           418-419).   According  to  Wade, the  doctrine  of           substantive   legitimate  expectation   has   been           "rejected"  by  the  High Court  of  Australia  in           Attorney  General  for N.S.W vs.  Quinn (1990)  93           ALR  1 (But see Teon’s case referred to later) and           that  the principle was also rejected in Canada in           Reference  Re Canada Assistance Plan (1991) 83 DLR           (4th)  297  =  1991  (2)SCR 525  but  favoured  in           Ireland  :   Cannon vs.  Minister for  the  Marine           1991  (1) I.R.  82 The European Court goes further           and permits the Court to apply proportionality and           go  into  the balancing of legitimate  expectation           and the Public interest.

         Even  so, it has been held under English law  that           the  decision maker’s freedom to change the policy           in  public  interest,  cannot be fettered  by  the           application   of  the   principle  of  substantive           legitimate  expectation.  Observations in  earlier           cases  project  a more inflexible rule than is  in           vogue  presently.  In Re Findlay (1985 AC 318) the           House  of Lords rejected the plea that the altered           policy  relating to parole for certain  categories           of  prisoners required prior consultation with the           prisoner.  Lord Scarman observed:

         "But what was their legitimate expectation.  Given           the  substance  and  purpose  of  the  legislative           provisions  governing  parole,  the  most  that  a           convicted prisoner can legitimately expect is that           his  case be examined individually in the light of           whatever policy the Secretary of State sees fit to           adopt provided always that the adopted policy is a           lawful  exercise of the discretion conferred  upon           him  by the statute.  Any other view would  entail           the  conclusion  that  the  unfettered  discretion           conferred by statute upon the minister can in some           cases  be  restricted so as to hamper, or even  to

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         prevent changes of policy."

         To  a  like  effect are the observations  of  Lord           Diplock  in  Hughes vs.  Department of Health  and           Social Security 1985 AC 778 (788):

         "Administrative  policies may change with changing           circumstances,  including changes in the political           complexion  of  governments.  The liberty to  make           such  changes is something that is inherent in our           constitutional form of government."

         (See  in  this connection Mr.Dotan’s article  "why           Administrators  should be bound by their policies"           (Vol.17)  1997  Oxford Journal of  Legal  Studies,           p.23).   But  today  the  rigidity  of  the  above           decisions appears to have been somewhat relaxed to           the  extent  of  application  of  Wednesbury  rule           whenever  there is a change in policy and we shall           be referring to these aspects presently.

         Before  we  do so, we shall refer to some  of  the           important  decisions of this Court to find out the           extent  to  which  the  principle  of  substantive           legitimate expectation is accepted in our country.           In  Navjyoti  Co- op.  Group Housing  Society  vs.           Union of India [1992 (4) SCC 477, the principle of           procedural fairness was applied.  In that case the           seniority as per the existing list of co-operative           housing  societies  for  allotment   of  land  was           altered  by  a subsequent decision.  The  previous           policy  was  that  the seniority  amongst  housing           societies in regard to allotment of land was to be           based  on the date of registration of the  society           with  the Registrar.  But on 20.1.1990, the policy           was  changed by reckoning seniority as based  upon           the  date  of  approval of the final list  by  the           Registrar.  This altered the existing seniority of           the  societies for allotment of land.  This  Court           held  that  the  Societies   were  entitled  to  a           ‘legitimate  expectation’ that the past consistent           practice  in  the  matter of  allotment,  will  be           followed even if there was no right in private law           for  such  allotment.   The   authority  was   not           entitled  to defeat the legitimate expectation  of           the  societies as per the previous seniority  list           without some overriding reason of public policy to           justify   change  in  the   criterion.   No   such           overriding  public interest was shown.   According           to  the principle of ‘legitimate expectation’,  if           the  authority  proposed  to   defeat  a  person’s           legitimate  expectation,  it should afford him  an           opportunity   to  make  a  representation  in  the           matter.   Reference was made to Halsbury’s Laws of           England (p.51, Vol.1(1) (4th Ed.  re-issue) and to           the  case in Council of Civil Service Unions  1985           AC 374, already referred to.  It was held that the           doctrine imposed, in essence, a duty to act fairly           by taking into consideration all relevant factors,           relating  to such legitimate expectation.   Within           the  contours  of  fair  dealing,  the  reasonable           opportunity  to make representation against change           of  policy,  came in.  The next case in which  the           principle   of   ‘legitimate    expectation’   was           considered  is  the  case in Food  Corporation  of

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         India  vs.   M/s Kamdhenu Cattle  Feed  Industries           [1993  (1) SCC 71].  There the Food Corporation of           India  invited  tenders  for  sale  of  stocks  of           damaged  food grains and the respondent’s bid  was           the  highest.   All  tenderers  were  invited  for           negotiation  but the respondent did not raise  his           bid  during  negotiation  while others  did.   The           respondent  filed a writ petition claiming that it           had  a legitimate expectation of acceptance of its           bid,  which  was  the  highest.   The  High  Court           allowed   the   writ   petition.   Reversing   the           judgment,  this Court referred to Council of Civil           Service  Union Case 1985 AC 374 and to Preston  In           re  1985  AC  835.  It was held  that  though  the           respondent’s  bid was the highest, still it had no           right  to have it accepted.  No doubt, its  tender           could  not  be  arbitrarily rejected  but  if  the           corporation   reasonably  felt   that  the  amount           offered  by  the respondent was inadequate as  per           the factors operating in the commercial field, the           non-  acceptance of bid could not be faulted.  The           procedure  of  negotiation   itself  involved  the           giving due weight to the legitimate expectation of           the highest bidder and this was sufficient.

              This    Court   considered    the    question          elaborately  in  in Union of  India  vs.  Hindustan          Development Corporation [1993 (3) SCC 499].   There          tenders were called for supply of cast-steel bogies          to  the  railways.   The  three  big  manufacturers          quoted  less  than the smaller  manufacturers.  The          Railways then adopted a dual pricing policy  giving          counter  offers  at  a lower  rate  to  the  bigger          manufacturers  who allegedly formed a cartel and  a          higher  offer to others so as to enable  a  healthy          competition.  This was challenged by the three  big          manufacturers  complaining  that  they  were   also          entitled  to  a higher rate and a large  number  of          bogies.   This  Court held that the change  into  a          dual pricing policy was not vitiated and was  based          on  ‘rational  and reasonable’  grounds.   In  that          context, this Court referred to Halsbury’s Laws  of          England   (4th  Ed.)(Vol.1(I)  151).   This   Court          referred to Schmidt vs. Secretary of State for Home          Affairs  [1969  (2)  Ch  149]  which  required   an          opportunity  to be given to an alien if  the  leave          given to him to stay in UK was being revoked before          expiry of the time and to Attorney General of  Hong          Kong  vs.  Ng  Yuen Shiu [1983 (2)  AC  629]  which          required the Government of Hong Kong to honour  its          undertaking  to treat each deportation case on  its          merits;  this  Court also referred  to  Council  of          Civil  Service  Unions vs. Minister for  the  Civil          Service 1985 AC 835 which related to alteration  of          conditions  relating to membership of trade  unions          and  the  need  to consult the unions  in  case  of          change  of policy as was the practice in the  past,          and to Food Corporation of India case 1993 (1)  SCC          71 and Nayjyoti Co-op. Group Housing Society’s case          1992  (4) SCC 477.  This Court then  observed  that          legitimate  expectation was not the same  thing  as          anticipation.   It was also different from  a  mere          wish  or  desire or hope.  Nor was it  a  claim  or          demand  based  on a right.  A  mere  disappointment          would  not  give rise to legal  consequences.  This

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        Court held(p.540) as follows:

             "The legitimacy of an expectation can  be               inferred  only  if it is founded  on  the               sanction   of   law  or  custom   or   an               established procedure followed in regular               and  natural sequence.  Such  expectation               should  be  justifiably  legitimate   and               protectable."

         After   quoting  Wade,   Administrative  Law  (6th           Ed.)(p.424,  522),  this  Court  referred  to  the           judgment  of the Australian High Court in Attorney           General  for New South Wales vs.  Quin [(1990)  64           Aust.   LJR  327] in which the  principle  itself,           according  to  Wade, did not find acceptance.   In           that  case a Stipendiary Magistrate incharge of  a           Court of Petty Sessions under the old court system           was  refused  appointment to the system  of  local           courts which replaced the previous system of Petty           Sessions Courts.  In 1987 the Attorney General who           was  hitherto  recommending former magistrates  on           the ground of ‘fitness’ for appointment to the new           local  courts,  deviated  from   that  policy  and           decided  to  go  by  assessment of  merit  of  the           competing  applicants.   The Court of  Appeal  had           directed  that  the  case  of Mr.   Quin  must  be           considered  separately and not in competition with           other  applicants,  but  it was  reversed  by  the           majority of the High Court of Australia(Mason, CJ,           Brennan  &  Dawson,JJ)  (Deane   and  Toohey,   JJ           dissenting).   Mason, CJ held that the Court could           not  fetter  the executive discretion to  adopt  a           different  policy  which was better calculated  to           serve  the  administration of justice and make  it           more  effective.  The grant of substantive  relief           in  such  a  case would  effectively  prevent  the           executive  from  giving effect to the  new  policy           which  it  wished  to pursue in  relation  to  the           appointment  of magistrates.  Brennan,J.  observed           very  clearly  that  the   notion  of   legitimate           expectation  (falling short of a legal right)  was           too  nebulous to form a basis for invalidating the           exercise  of power.  He said that such a principle           would  "set the courts adrift on a featureless sea           of   pragmatism."   Dawson,J.    held   that   the           contention ofthe respondent exceeded the bounds of           procedural  fairness and intruded upon the freedom           of  the  executive.(*)  This  Court  in  Hindustan           Development  Corporation’s  case 1993 (3) SCC  499           then  proceeded  to refer to R vs.   Secretary  of           State  for  the Home Department ex  parte  Ruddock           (1987)  2 All E.R.  518 and Findlay vs.  Secretary           of  State for the Home Department (1984 3 All E.R.           801  and  to  Breen vs.   Amalgamated  Engineering           Union,  (1971)  1  All  E.R.   1148.   This  Court           accepted  (see  p.546)  that   the  principle   of           legitimate   expectation   gave    the   applicant           sufficient  locus  standi to seek judicial  review           and  that  the doctrine was confined mostly  to  a           right  to  fair  hearing before a  decision  which           resulted in negativing a promise or withdrawing an           undertaking,  was  taken.  It did not involve  any           crystallised   right.   The   protection  of  such

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         legitimate   expectation  did   not  require   the           fulfilment  of the expectation where an overriding           public  interest required otherwise.  However, the           burden  lay on the decision maker to show such  an           overriding              public                .ls1           ________________________________________________________           *  In a later decision from Australic in  Minister           for  Immigration  and  Ethnic  Affairs  vs.   Teoh           [(1995)  69 ALJR 423] the High Court held that the           U.N.Covenant on the rights of the Child, which was           not   incorporated   into   Australian  Law,   may           nevertheless give rise to a legitimate expectation           that  the  decision  maker would comply  with  it,           atleast to the extent of giving an affected person           a  hearing.   This  decision has been  treated  as           controversial  and  critised (See Taggart)  (1996)           112  L.Q.R.  50.  The decision no doubt held  that           such  an  expectation  did  not,  however,  compel           action  consistent  with  the  Treaty  provisions.           McHugh,J.    dissented.      [See   Unincorporated           Treaties  in Australian Law] (1996 PL 190 and Lord           Lester’s  article  in 1996 PL 187).  interest.   A           case  of substantive legitimate expectation  would           arise  when  a body by representation or  by  past           practice  aroused  expectation which it  would  be           within  its  powers  to fulfil.  The  Court  could           interfere  only  if  the  decision  taken  by  the           authority was arbitrary, unreasonable or not taken           in  public interest.  If it is established that  a           legitimate  expectation has been improperly denied           on  the  application of the above principles,  the           question  of  giving  opportunity   can  arise  if           failure  of  justice  is shown.   The  Court  must           follow  (p.548)  an objective method by which  the           decision  making authority is given the full range           of  choice  which the legislature is  presumed  to           have  intended.   (In  this  connection  we  shall           advert  to a similar view of Laws, J.  and also to           the  contrary view of Sedley, J).  If the decision           is  reached  fairly and objectively, it cannot  be           interfered  with  on  the   ground  of  procedural           fairness.   An example was given that if a renewal           was  given  to an existing licence holder,  a  new           applicant  cannot  claim an opportunity  based  on           natural  justice.   On  facts, it  was  held  that           legitimate  expectation was denied on the basis of           reasonable considerations.  The next case in which           the  question  was considered is Madras City  Wine           Merchants’  Association  vs.  State of Tamil  Nadu           [1994  (5)  SCC  509].   In that  case  the  rules           relating  to  renewal  of   liquor  licences  were           statutorily  altered by repealing existing  rules.           It  was held that the repeal being the result of a           change  in the policy by legislation the principle           of  non-arbitrariness was not invocable.  In  that           context,  this Court referred to a large number of           authorities  on the question.  This Court in  M.P.           Oil  Extraction vs.  State of M.P.  [1997 (7)  SCC           592] considered the question again.  In that case,           it  was  held  that the State’s policy  to  extend           renewal  of  an agreement to  selected  industries           which  came  to  be located in Madhya  Pradesh  on           invitation  of  State,  - as against  other  local           industries  -  was  not  arbitrary  and  the  said           selected  industries had a legitimate  expectation

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         of  renewal  under renewal claims which should  be           given  effect to according to past practice unless           there  was any special reason not to adhere to the           practice.   It was clearly held that the principle           of substantive legitimate expectation was accepted           by this Court earlier.  Reference was made to Food           Corporation’s  case  1993  (1) SCC  71;   Navjyoti           Co-op.   Group Housing Society’s case 1992 (4) SCC           477  and  to Hindustan  Development  Corporation’s           case  1993  (3)  SCC 499.  Lastly we come  to  the           three   judge  judgment  in   National   Buildings           Construction  Corporation  vs.    S.Raghunathan  &           Others  [1998  (7)  SCC 66].  This was  a  service           matter.   The  respondents were appointed in  CPWD           and  they  went on deputation to the NBCC in  Iraq           and they opted to draw, while on deputation, their           grade  pay  in  CPWD  plus  deputation  allowance.           Besides  that,  the  NBCC   granted  them  Foreign           Allowance  at  125% of the basic  pay.   Meanwhile           their  Basic  Pay  in   CPWD  was  revised  w.e.f.           1.1.1986  on  the  recommendation of the  4th  Pay           Commission.   They  contended that  the  abovesaid           increase  of 125% should be given by NBCC on their           revised  scales.  This was not accepted by NBCC by           orders  dated  15.10.1990.  The contention of  the           respondents  based  on legitimate expectation  was           rejected  in view of the peculiar conditions under           which  NBCC was working in Iraq.  It was  observed           that  the doctrine of ‘legitimate expectation’ had           both  substantive  and procedural  aspects.   This           Court  laid down a clear principle that claims  on           legitimate   expectation  required   reliance   on           representation and resultant detriment in the same           way  as  claims based on  promissory  estoppel(*).           The                                           .ls1           ---------------------------------------------------           -----*  This also appears to be the view of  Simon           Brown,   LJ   in  a  tax   case  in   Regina   vs.           Commissioners  of Inland Revenue ex parte Unilever           Plc  (1996)  68 Tax Cases 205 at 231 referring  to           Regina  vs.  Inland Revenue Commissioners ex parte           MFK  Underwriting  Agents Ltd.  & Others 1990  (1)           WLR  1545;   Regina vs.  Jockey Club ex parte  RAM           Racecourses  Ltd.  1993 (2) All ER 225 and  Regina           vs.   Independent  Television Commission ex  parte           TSW  Broadcasting  Ltd.  1994 (2) LRC 414.   Wade,           Administrative  Law, (7th Ed.  P.419) also appears           to  think  that detrimental reliance  on  previous           policy is necessary.

         See, however, DeSmith (5th Ed.) Administrative Law           (para  8.060)  where  he says  that  in  important           cases,  a legitimate expectation has been  founded           in  the  absence of detrimental reliance and  that           there  are  good  reasons  for doing  so.   R  vs.           Secretary  of State for Home Department exp.  Asif           Mahmood  Khan 1984 (1) WLR 1337;  Attorney General           of Hong Kong vs.  Ng Yuen Shiu 1983 (2) AC 629;  R           vs.  Secretary of State for the Home Department ex           parte  Ruddock 1987 (1) WLR 1982.  .ls2  principle           was  developed in the context of  ‘reasonableness’           and  in  the context of ‘natural  justice’.   This           Court  referred to R vs.  IRC exp Preston 1985  AC           835,  Food  Corporation’s  case 1993 (1)  SCC  71,           Hindustan  Development Corporation’s case 1993 (3)

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         SCC  499,  the Australian Case in Quin  (1990)  64           Aust.   LJR 327 and M.P.Oil Extraction’s case 1997           (7)  SCC 592, the Council of Civil Service Union’s           case  1985 AC 374 and Navjyoti’s case 1992 (4) SCC           477.   The  above survey of cases shows  that  the           doctrine   of   legitimate   expectation  in   the           substantive sense has been accepted as part of our           law  and  that the decision maker can normally  be           compelled  to give effect to his representation in           regard  to  the  expectation   based  on  previous           practice  or  past conduct unless some  overriding           public interest comes in the way.  The judgment in           Raghunathan’s  case  requires that  reliance  must           have  been  placed on the said representation  and           the   representee  must   have  thereby   suffered           detriment.   The  more  important aspect,  in  our           opinion, is whether the decision maker can sustain           the  change  in  policy by  resort  to  Wednesbury           principles of rationality or whether the Court can           go  into  the question whether decision maker  has           properly  balanced  the legitimate expectation  as           against the need for a change?  In the latter case           the  Court would obviously be able to go into  the           proportionality of the change in the policy.  This           aspect  has come up for consideration recently  in           the  English  Courts.  The debate was  started  by           Laws,J.    in  R  vs.    Secretary  of  State  for           Transport, ex parte Richmond upon Thames London BC           1994  (1) WLR 74 where the learned Judge laid down           that  the  Wednesbury  reasonableness  test  alone           applied  for  finding out if the change  from  one           policy  to another was justified.  That was a case           in  which, in relation to airports a new system of           night  flying restrictions were imposed.  The  new           policy  related  to  the fixation of  the  maximum           number  of take-off and landing movements variable           according to the type of aircraft involved and the           noise  the  aircraft  generated during  the  night           time.   The  Wednesbury test was held  applicable.           Laws,J.  stated:

         "The  Court is not the Judge of the merits of  the           decision maker’s policy ....  the public authority           in  question  is  the Judge of the  issue  whether           ‘overriding  public  interest’  justifies  such  a           change  in  policy ...  But that is no  more  than           saying   that  a  change  in  policy,   like   any           discretionary decision by a public authority, must           not transgress Wednesbury principles."

         But this view of Laws,J.  was dissented by Sedley,           J.   in R vs.  Ministry of Agriculture Fisheries &           Food,  ex  parte Hamble Coffshore  Fisheries  Ltd.           1995  (2)  All  E.R.    714.   The  learned  Judge           observed  that if the outcome is challenged by way           of  judicial review, he ‘did not consider that the           courts’  criterion was restricted to consider  the           rationality of the policy maker’s conclusions.  He           held  that  while policy was for the policy  maker           alone,  the  fairness  of   his  or  her  decision           remained the courts’ concern.  He said that to say           so did not amount to placing the Judge in the seat           of the minister.

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         The  judgment  of  Sedley,  J.   has  since   been           overruled  in  R vs.  Secretary of State  for  the           Home  Department and another, ex parte  Hargreaves           and others 1997 (1) WLR 906(A).  In that case, the           facts  were that the eligibility for ‘home  leave’           of  prisoners was initially one third of the  term           of  sentence  as  per in earlier decision  of  the           government of 1994 (accepting Lord Woolf’s Report,           1990) and Hargreaves would attain that eligibility           by  12-4-95  to put in his application.   But  the           Home  Secretary  felt  that the scheme  was  being           abused  and therefore he modified the  eligibility           to  one  half of the period of sentence by  notice           dated   20.4.95.   This    postponed   Hargreaves’           eligibility  to 12.4.96.  Though the applicant had           "become  eligible" by 20.4.95, the Courts rejected           his   plea  of   legitimate  expectation   because           eligibility  merely  enabled consideration of  the           application  for home leave.  The case was similar           to  Findlay 1985 AC 318 which related to change in           parole  policy  and which was held valid.  It  was           held  that the change in home leave policy did not           violate  the  earlier  policy.  In  the  Court  of           Appeal,  Hirst,  LJ said described  the  principle           laid  down by Sedley,J.  as based on ‘heresy’  and           stated:

         "On  matters  of  substance   (as  contrasted   to           procedure)  Wednesbury provides the correct  test.           It follows that ...  his (Sedley,J.’s) ratio in so           far  as  he propounds a balancing exercise  to  be           undertaken  by the Court should, in my opinion, be           overruled."

         The  result is that change in policy can defeat  a           substantive  legitimate  expectation if it can  be           justified  on Wednesbury reasonableness.  We  have           noticed  that in Hindustan Development Corporation           case [1993 (3) SCC 449] also it was laid down that           the decision maker has the choice in the balancing           of  the  pros and cons relevant to the  change  in           policy.   It is, therefore, clear that the  choice           of  the  policy is for the decision-maker and  not           for   the   Court,   The  legitimate   substantive           expectation  merely permits the Court to find  out           if  the  change in policy which is the  cause  for           defeating the legitimate expectation is irrational           or  perverse  or  one which no  reasonable  person           could have made.

         The  Court of Appeal considered the question again           in  a  tax case in R vs.  Commissioner  of  Inland           Revenue, ex parte Unilever Plc (1990) (Vol.68) Tax           Cases  205  =  1996 STC 681.   A  particular  loss           relief was being granted at a second stage on more           than  30  occasions  during 20  years  though  the           relief  was  not  claimed  within  the  stipulated           period  of  two  years.  In respect of  1988,  the           relief  claimed beyond time was for the first time           refused.   It  was  contended  that  there  was  a           substantive   legitimate  expectation   that   the           revenue  would  continue  to follow  the  previous           practice  in regard to claims for loss relief.  It           was  held  that  the Court was still  confined  to

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         Wednesbury  principles but that on facts it a case           of  ‘exceptional’  circumstances and it  would  be           unfairness  amounting to abuse of power to  refuse           to  follow  past practice.  Lord Woolf  MR  agreed           that  no  doubt the Revenue was the best Judge  of           what  was  fair.  But on facts, the learned  Judge           treated  the case as exceptional.  Simon Brown, LJ           also  agreed  with  this  view.   He  in  addition           emphasised  the detrimental test as did this Court           in   Raghunathan’s  case   (p.231).   Noting  that           substantive  legitimate expectation was rooted  in           the  theory  of ‘legal certainty’, he observed  as           follows (p.  233):

         "Of  course legal certainty is a highly  desirable           objective    in     public    administration    as           elsewhere.......the  central Wednesbury  principle           is  that an administrative decision is unlawful if           "...so  outrageous in its defiance of logic of  or           accepted  moral standards that no sensible  person           who  had  applied his mind to the question  to  be           decided   could   have  arrived   at   it".    The           flexibility  necessarily inherent in that  guiding           principle should not be sacrificed on the altar of           legal certainty."

L.........I.....T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J           On  facts, the case was treated as one  containing exceptional   circumstances  which,  even   going   by   the Wednesbury  principle, required relief to be granted.   Thus both  in ex p.Hargreaves (in which the challenge failed) and ex  p.   Unilever  (in which the challenge  succeeded),  the protection  for substaitive legitimate expectation was based on Wednesbury unreasonableness.  In sum, this means that the judgment  whether public interest overrides the  substaitive legitimate  expectation  of  individuals  will  be  for  the decision-maker who has made the change in the policy and the Courts  will  intervene  in that decision only if  they  are satisfied  that the decision is irrational or perverse  [See 1997  Public Law, 375 "Wednesbury Protection of  Substantive legitimate   expectation  by   Christopher  Forsyth].    The observations   of  this  Court   in  Hindustan   Development Corporation’s  case  1993  (3)  SCC   499;   in  M.P.    Oil Extraction’s  case  1997 (7) SCC 592 and in  S.Raghunathan’s case  1998 (7) SCC 66) are more or less to a similar effect, though  no  specific  reference was made to  the  Wednesbury rule.

         After  Hargreaves,  Wednesbury  principle  is  now consistently  followed  in England.  We shall refer  to  two recent cases.  Lapse of time resulted in a changed policy in R  vs.  Cardiff County Council, Exp.  Scars Group Properties Ltd.   [1998 Public Law 518].  The position there was that a company  was  granted  planning permission in 1993  and  the relevant  highway  authority  had indicated that it  had  no objection  to entering into a highway improvement  agreement under  Section 278 of the Highways Act, 1990.  The  proposed highway scheme was approved in 1995.  But in 1996, there was a  reorganisation  of  local Government in  Wales,  and  the successor  authority withheld its authority for the approved scheme  until  an updated traffic impact analysis  had  been submitted  and  was considered.  It was held by  Carnworth,J that  where a formal decision had been made in relation to a subject matter affecting private rights, that decision would be  considered binding unless and until there had been  some

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change  which  undermined  the foundation  of  the  original decision;  the question whether there could be such a change was    for   the    authority,    subject   to    Wednesbury unreasonableness  test.  In that case, the highway authority had  not rejected the agreement outright but had requested a new  traffic  analysis,  which was  prima  facie  reasonable because of lapse of time.  In yet another case in McPhee vs. North  Lanarkshine Council [1998 SLT 1317] (See 1999  Public Law  152- 153), the petitioner was a traveller who consented to  vacate a site after receiving a letter from the Director of  Housing telling her that she would be offered a pitch at the  site after the refurbishment work had been carried out. The  Council subsequently refused to grant her a pitch.  She sought  a ‘declarator’ that she was ‘entitled to be  offered accommodation  by way of a petition on the site and that  on the  same  terms and conditions as any other family  seeking accommodation  from  the respondents".  It was held by  Lady Congreve,J.   that an authority providing an assurance as to a  substantive right may depart from it but will fall to  be scrutinised  by  reference  to  Wednesbury   reasonableness. Since  it  could  not be said that no  reasonable  authority could  do  anything  other than grant her  application,  the remedy of declarator was inappropriate.

         In  view  of the above legal position, can  it  be said  on  the  facts  of  this  case  that  the  substantive legitimate   expectations  of  the   appellant   have   been contravened?

         It  will be noticed that at one stage when the ADB loan lapsed, the Government took a decision to go ahead with the project on its own funds.  But later it thought that the scheme  regarding  telephones in rural areas must cover  not only  the villages in Eastern UP but also in other  backward rural  areas  in other States.  The statistics given in  the counter-affidavits  of  the Union of India to which we  have already  referred,  show that there are other States in  the country  where the percentage of telephones is far less than what it is in eastern UP.  The said facts are the reason for the change in the policy of the government and for giving up the  notification  calling for bids for Eastern UP.  Such  a change  in  policy  cannot, in our opinion, be  said  to  be irrational  or perverse according to Wednesbury  principles. In  the circumstances, on the basis of the clear  principles laid  down  in  exp.   Hargreaves and  exp.   Unilever,  the Wednesbury  principle of irrationality or perversity is  not attracted  and  the revised policy cannot be said to  be  in such   gross  violation  of   any   substantive   legitimate expectation  of the appellant which warrants interference in judicial  review  proceedings.  Point 2 is held against  the appellant.

         The appeal and Transfer Petition are dismissed but in the circumstances, without costs.