20 April 1967
Supreme Court
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PYARE LAL ETC. Vs NEW DELHI MUNICIPAL COMMITTEE & ANR.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 486 of 1967


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PETITIONER: PYARE LAL ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: NEW DELHI MUNICIPAL COMMITTEE & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/04/1967

BENCH: MITTER, G.K. BENCH: MITTER, G.K. WANCHOO, K.N. (CJ) BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA

CITATION:  1968 AIR  133            1967 SCR  (3) 747  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1975 SC2178  (9)             1989 SC1988  (2,9,17)

ACT: Punjab Municipal Act 1911 (3 of 1911), ss. 173, 188-Power to regulate  sale of edibles on public  streets-Street  vendors whether have fundamental right to carry on their  trade-Food Adulteration  Act,  1954  and  Rules  made  thereunder-Their effect on powers tander s. 173 of Municipal Act.

HEADNOTE: The  petitioners  were  vendors of potato  chops  and  other edibles  which they sold on public streets.  The  New  Delhi Municipal  Committee issued them licences for some time  and later  on tried to give them alternative sites for  carrying on  their  trade.   Finally however on 30th  April  1965  it passed  a resolution banning the sale of cooked  edibles  on public  streets.  The vendors filed a petition for  writ  in the  High  Court  which failed.   With  special  leave  they appealed to this Court. It  was urged on behalf of the appellants that : (i) in  the absence  of  bye-laws  framed under s.  188  of  the  Punjab Municipal Act the Municipal Committee had no power under  s. 173  of  the  Act to prohibit their trade;  (ii)  After  the passing of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 the powers under s. 173 could not be used to regulate the  sale of  food  from  the purity aspect; (iii) the  power  of  the Municipality under s. 173 was only to regulate the trade but it could not be used to contravene the fundamental right  of the petitioners to carry on their business. HELD  : (i) The powers of the Municipality under s.  173  to allow encroachments on public streets and to permit sale  of food or stalls to be set up was meant for special  occasions like  festivals, etc.  Section 188 was not designed for  the purpose  of. framing bye-laws to regulate the conditions  on which  persons  like the petitioners, could  be  allowed  to carry  on trade on public streets and thus create  permanent unhygienic   conditions.   This  should  never   have   been permitted by the Municipality.[753 M] (ii) The  object of the Food Adulteration Act was that  food which  the public would buy was prepared packed  and  stored

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under  sanitary conditions so as not to be injurious to  the health   of  the  people  consuming  it.   The  rules   made thereunder  would  override  rules or  bye-laws  made  by  a municipality only if they covered the same field.  Under  s. 173(1) of the Punjab Municipal Act, however, it was open  to the Municipal Committee to take steps to prevent sale of any cooked  food  however  pure if the sale  thereof  on  public streets  would  offer  obstruction to  passersby  or  create insanitary conditions. [755 D-F] (iii)     Out  of  sympathy  for  the  street  hawkers   and squatters the N.D.M.C. had permitted the continuance of  the trade  for a long time.  But no objection could be taken  to their exercise of power under s. 173 of the Punjab Municipal Act to eradicate the evil.  The power was confined merely to preventing obstruction to traffic.  Every person has a right to pass and repass along a public street.  But he cannot  be heard  to say that he ha,;; a fundamental right to carry  on street  trading and particularly in a manner which is  bound to  create  insanitary  and  unhygiene  conditions  in   the neighbourhood. [758 A-B] 7 48 Roberts  v.  Hopwood, [1925] A.C. 578, Pyx  Granite  Co.  v. Ministry ,of Housing, [1958] 1 All E.R. 625, C. S. S.  Motor Service   v.  Madras  State  A.I.R.  19053  Mad.   279   and Westminister Corporation v. London and North Western Railway [1905] A.C. 426, referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 4865492 of 1967. Appeals  by  special leave from the orders  dated  August.4, 1966  of  the Punjab High Court, Circuit Bench at  Delhi  in Letters  Patent Appeals Nos ’ 84-D, 70-D, 72-D, 73-D,  71-D, 55-D and 79-D of 1966 respectively. Madan Bhatia and D. Goburdhun, for the appellants (in all the  appeals). Bishan Narain and Sardar Bahadur, for respondent No. 1 (in C.   As.  Nos. 486-488 of 1967) and the respondent (in  C.A. No. 489 of 1967). Sardar Bahadur, for respondent No. 1 (in C. As.  Nos. 490492 of 1967). R.   N. Sachthey, for respondent No. 2 (in C. As.  Nos. 486- 488 and 490 to 492 of 1967). The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Mitter, J. These are seven appeals, by special leave, from a a  judgment and order of the Punjab High Court in a  Letters Patent  Appeal from a judgment and order of a  single  Judge dated April 7, 1966. The facts in all these appeals bear a close resemblance  and these cases were dealt with by a common judgment of the High Court.  The facts in Appeal No. 486 of 1967 i.e. Pyare Lal’s case,  as  laid  in his petition, may be stated  by  way  of specimen.  By his petition dated October 12, 1965 Pyare  Lal moved  the  Punjab  High Court for the issue of  a  writ  or direction restraining the New Delhi Municipal Committee from interfering with his right to carry on his trade at the site referred to in paragraph 1 of his petition, or, at any rate, without  allotting  an alternative site to him.   He  was  a seller  of  potato chops and squatted at a site  beside  the service  lane at the back of a shop off Janpath, New  Delhi. There  were other squatters who occupied sites in  the  same service lane.  Although in the petition it was claimed  that the  site  was  not part of a public street,  this  was  not

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pressed  before  the High Court and we will proceed  on  the basis that as a matter of fact, be was squatting on a public street.   He claimed to have. been carrying on his trade  at the  same site from before 1950.  He became a member  of  an association  of  squatters  within the  area  of  New  Delhi Municipal  Committee  known as the New  Delhi  Rehri  Owners Association formed for the purpose of pressing 749 the  demands of its members for grant of licences and  other facilities  by the said Municipal Committee.   Reference  is made  in the petition to assurances said to have been  given by  the  President  and  Vice-President  of  the   Municipal Committee to the association in 1956 for giving the  members of  the association certain protection on conditions. it  is said that the Vice-President of the Municipal Committee gave an assurance that if the squatters formed themselves into  a co-operative  society for preparation of edibles  and  built trolleys  of specified designs and agreed to carry on  their trade at places allotted, licences would be issued to  them. In response to this, a co-operative society was. formed  and the  Health Officer of the Municipal Committee informed  the association  of  the sites which had been  approved  by  the Municipal  Committee for the purpose.  Before  the  licences could  be  issued,  the  office  bearers  of  the  Municipal Committee  were changed and the new incumbents sought to  go back upon the assurances given by their predecessors.  After a  long spell of contest and uncertainty the then  President of the Municipal Committee made a press announcement in  May 1963 that all squatters and stall-holders within the area of the New Delhi Municipal Committee who had been squatting  or holding stalls since 1957 would be granted licences for  the same.  This was followed by a. survey of all squatters and a list  of  them including the petitioner  was  prepared.   On December 20, 1963, the New Delhi Municipal Committee  passed a  resolution for the grant of licences to these  squatters. The relevant portion of the same is as follows :-               "1.  Temporary  tehbazari  permits  would   be               issued to verified squatters/hawkers.               2.    The hawkers/squatters would be  required               to  sit at the site as might  be  specifically               allotted  by  the committee  and  during  such               hours as might be prescribed.               3.    The tehbazari fee would be charged  from               such  squatters  at  the rates  given  in  the               scheme  prepared  by  the  SVP  (senior  Vice-               President) dated 22-7-1962.               4.    The squatters should be required to  pay               three months’ tehbazari fee in advance  before               the issue of the temporary tehbazari permit.               5.               6.    The  conditions of the tehbazari  permit               as  mentioned above were approved  subject  to               the condition               (a)   Condition No. 7 be deleted.               (b)   The word licencee’ shall be  substituted               by "hawkers/squatters". 750               (c)   The last condition would be as suggested               by the L.A. in his note dated 20-12-1963.               7. The     selection  and allotment  of  sites               would be done by a sub-committee consisting of               P.M.C., S.V.P. and J.V.P." The petitioner was granted a licence to run his potato chops trade  at  a  monthly fee of Rs. 25 and he  was  allotted  a specific site mentioned earlier.  Sometime in July 1964  the

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respondent  Committee  sought to impose a condition  to  the effect that all hawkers/squatters should remove their stalls every day after sunset and re-establish them after  sunrise. Various stall-holders challenged the aforesaid condition  as unreasonable  by  way  of writ petitions  and  civil  suits. Thereupon, the Committee stopped accepting licence fee  from these  squatters/hawkers.  Ultimately most of them  withdrew their  cases pending in court on assurance being given  that they would not be disturbed in their trade.  Thereafter, the New    Delhi   Municipal   Committee   called    upon    the squatters/hawkers to submit declarations that they had  paid the  tehbazari  fee up to 30-6-1965 and that they  had  been allotted alternative accommodation by the respondent in lieu of  the sites previously occupied.  In return the  Committee assured  them that it would accept tehbazari fee  from  them and allow the occupation by them of the former sites held by them  until allotment of alternative accommodation.   It  is stated that the petitioner submitted the desired declaration and  the New Delhi Municipal Committee accepted the  sum  of Rs.  225 as licence fee up to 30-6-1965.  In the  matter  of allotment  of  alternative  sites  however,  the  respondent practised  discrimination and did not allot any site to  the petitioner  although  it granted such  facility  to  others. Further,  the  employees of the N.D.M.C. from time  to  time threatened  the petitioner with removal of all his  articles etc.  with  which  he carried on his  trade  from  the  site occupied by him.  The petitioner submitted that the N.D.M.C. was  preventing him from carrying on his trade as a  seller of  potato  chops  unreasonably and in gross  abuse  of  its power.  It was submitted further that it was not open to the respondent  to  act  arbitrarily  and  interfere  with   the petitioner’s  trade  until  the  resolution,  granting   the licence  was  annulled by a subsequent resolution.   It  was also  submitted that the N.D.M.C. had no power under s.  173 of  the  Punjab Municipal Act to  withdraw  permission.  for encroachment  on  a public street  unless  reasonable  prior notice  was given.  The :grounds formulated in the  petition were inter alia as follows               1.    The  N.D.M.C. has no power to take  away               the  fundamental  right of the  petitioner  to               carry  on his trade.  It could  only  regulate               the common law right of the petitioner to sell               his wares on a public street under s. 173                                    751               of the Punjab Municipal Act only so far as  it               was necessary in the interest of the safety or               convenience of the public.               2.    That  no resolution having  been  passed               annulling   the  grant  of  licence   to   the               petitioner,  the  action of the  N.D.M.C.  was               illegal and without jurisdiction.               3.    The action of the N.D.M.C. in preventing               the  petitioner  from carrying  on  his  trade               without  allotting  an  alternative  site  was               discriminatory and unconstitutional. In  the counter affidavit by the Secretary to the New  Delhi Municipal   Committee  (hereinafter  referred  to   as   the N.D.M.C.)   it  was  stated  that  the  petitioner  had   no fundamental right of the kind mentioned in the petition  and his  right, if any, to early on his business was subject  to such reasonable restrictions as the N.D.M.C. might think tit to impose under the provisions of the Punjab Municipal  Act. The restrictions actually imposed upon the squatters/hawkers were  reasonable and within the ambit of the powers  of  the N.D.M.C.  The  petitioner  had  been  granted  a   temporary

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tehbazari permit under the temporary tehbazari permit scheme and according to condition No. 2 of the permit the  N.D.M.C. reserved  to  itself the right to cancel  the  same  without assigning any reason whatsoever.  The permit did not  confer any  right  in property to the petitioner and his  right  to carry  on  business  had been banned  to  his  knowledge  by resolution  No.  36  dated 30th April, 1965  passed  by  the N.D.M.C.  The  petitioner was carrying on ;the  business  in violation of the resolution of the committee.  On the merits of the case, it was stated that the N.D.M.C. had  considered a scheme prepared by the senior Vice President regarding re- organisation  of procedure about the issue of  licences  to, hawkers,  squatters, etc. and by a resolution of  29th  June 1962 it was resolved that in future a sub-committee would go into  the matter of determining the persons or  category  of persons  who  would  be  given  licences.   After  prolonged discussions and consideration, the resolution was passed  on 20th  December 1963.  By this the terms and conditions of  a permit to be granted to hawkers/squatters were decided  upon a  pro-forma of a temporary permit was also settled  and  on the  reverse thereof the conditions regarding the  grant  of permit   were  incorporated.   Due  to  violation   of   the provisions of the Punjab Municipal Act by the squatters  and because  of  certain practical difficulties,  the  committee resolved on 13th March 1964 that temporary permits would  be issued  to verified hawkers for the day-time only  and  that the  sites occupied must be left clear during the night.   A sub-committee consisting of several municipal officers  went round  to various places in New Delhi to inspect  the  sites already selected 7 52 for  allotment  to hawkers/squatters.  They were  unable  to select  any  further  new sites and made  a  report  to  the President of the Committee.  As many as 264 squatters out of 725  were allotted the sites approved.  The progress of  the allotment  of approved sites was not appreciable as many  of the  squatters did not find the new sites to  their  choice. The Committee by its resolution dated 17th July 1964 decided that temporary tehbazari permit fees should be deposited  by the verified squatters who had not been allotted sites  till then  on  condition  that  "site to  be  fixed"  was  to  be mentioned  in the permits of such squatters.  483  squatters deposited  requisite  charges upto the  period  ending  30th September  1964.  It was noticed however that the  squatters were  not  complying with the conditions  of  the  temporary tehbazari   permit  scheme.   In  order  to  enforce   these conditions, day and light raids were conducted and tarpaulin sheds  of  various squatters were removed as also  goods  of those  who  stayed on the sites at  night.   Ultimately,  by reason of non-compliance of the conditions of the  temporary permit  scheme by hawkers, the scheme itself  was  suspended with  effect from 1-9-1964.  The sale of cooked articles  of food  gave  rise  to  such  insanitary  conditions  that   a resolution  was  passed by the committee on the  30th  April 1965 banning the sale of cooked food including, tea, kulcha, choley, dahi bara, etc. It   was  submitted  in  the  counter  affidavit  that   the petitioner  as a holder of a temporary tehbazari permit  had no  right or interest in the land belonging to the  N.D.M.C. and that his right was subject to permission by the N.D.M.C. to  carry  on  his trade.  The petitioner  had  submitted  a declaration  to the effect that he had ceased to  squat  in the  N.D.M.C  area.   He  never  made  an  application   for allotment  of  a platform at  Ramakrishnapuram  (a  facility granted to many) but applied for change of trade from potato

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chops dealer to that of a general merchant.  He was informed on 2nd December 1964 about the cancellation of the temporary tehbazari  permit  granted  under  S.  173  of  the   Punjab Municipal  Act.  He had never been granted any licence.   He along  with the other squatters were carrying on a  business which tended to create slums on some of the important  roads in  New  Delhi and as such the  temporary  tehbazari  permit scheme had to be suspended and permission for sale of cooked food was withdrawn. The  contentions of the petitioner were turned down  by  the learned single Judge and his appeal in common with that of a number  of  appeals of other squatters and  hawkers  to  the Division Bench met with the same fate.  The first contention pressed before us in this appeal was that it was not open to the  Municipal Committee to stop the petitioner  and  others from carrying on their trade by a resolution under S. 173 of the  Punjab  Municipal  Act.  The relevant  portion  of  the section runs as follows 753               "(1)  The  Committee may grant  permission  in               writing, on such conditions as it may deem fit               for  the  safety  or  convenience  of  persons               passing  by,  or dwelling or  working  in  the               neighbourhood,  and may charge fees  for  such               permission, and may at its discretion withdraw               the permission, to any person to-               (a)   place  in  front  of  any  building  any               movable encroachment upon the ground level  of               any  public  street or over or on  any  sewer,               drain   or   watercourse   or   any    movable               overhanging  structure  projecting  into  such               public street at a point above the said ground               level.               (b)               (c)   deposit   or  cause  to   be   deposited               building  materials, goods for sale, or  other               articles on any public street, or               (d)               (e)   erect  or set up any fence, post,  stall               or scaffolding in any public street.               It  was argued that s. 173 only  made  general               provisions but it was open to the N.D.M.C.  to               frame bye-laws under s. 188 and in the absence               of such bye-laws a resolution under s.  173(1)               could  not  be  passed so  as  to  affect  the               petitioner’s  rights.  S. 188 provides that  a               committee may, and shall if so required by the               State Government frame. bye-laws.  The  nature               of  the bye-laws is specified in cls.  (a)  to               (v) of s. 188 and cl. (u) reads :               "  regulate  the conditions on which  and  the               periods  for  which permission  may  be  given               under sub-section (1) of section 172 and  sub-               section  (1) of section 173, and  provide  for               the  levy  of  fees and rents  for  such  per-               mission;" It  was urged that so long as bye-laws are not framed  under the  above clause, the conditions on which and  the  periods for  which permission could be given under s. 173 (1)  could not be altered.  In our opinion the bye-laws under s. 188(u) had to be made for an altogether different purpose.  Ss. 172 and 173 are generally aimed at preventing any  encroachments -over  public streets which cause obstruction thereon.   The expression  "goods  for  sale" in cl. (c) of  s.  173(1)  or "stall"  in  cl. (e) of s. 173(1) have to be  read  in  that

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connection.   The  placing  of goods for  sale  or  erecting stalls  in public street may be allowed by the  municipality on  stated occasions as in the case of some  festivals  etc. Again  it  may be necessary to seek the  permission  of  the municipality to make 754 .holes or excavation on any street or remove materials  from beneath  any  street or to take up or alter the  payment  or deposit  building  materials  thereon  for  the  purpose  of erecting  a  new  building or making  an  alteration  to  an existing  one and the power to regulate the  conditions  for grant  of permission and the fees to be paid  in  connection therewith by bye-laws under s. 188 has that object in  view. S. 188 was not designed for the purpose of framing  bye-laws to  regulate  the  conditions  on  which  persons  like  the petitioner  could  be allowed to carry on  trade  on  public streets  and  thus create  permanent  unhygienic  conditions thereon.   This  should  never have been  permitted  by  the municipality  and the fact that it has by resolution  tinder S. 173 purported to stop that practice cannot go against it. It  was then urged that s. 173 in so far as it purported  to give  the municipality power to prevent the sale  of  cooked food  was  repealed by the provisions of the  Prevention  of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 and the Rules framed thereunder. Our  attention  was  drawn  to ss. 23,  24  and  25  of  the Prevention  of Food Adulteration Act.  S. 23(1) of this  Act gives the Central Government power to make rules subject  to certain  conditions.   Under  sub cl.  (a)  such  rules  may specify  articles of food or classes of food for the  import of  which  a  licence is required  prescribe  the  form  and ,conditions  of  such licence., the authority  empowered  to issue  the same and the fees payable thereunder.  Under  cl. (c) such rules may lay down special provisions for  imposing rigorous control over the production, distribution and  sale of  any  article  or class of articles  of  food  which  the Central  Government  may, by notification in  :the  Official Gazette,  specify in this behalf including  registration  of the premises where they are manufactured, maintenance of the premises  in  a sanitary condition and maintenance  ,of  the healthy   state   of  human  beings  associated   with   the production. distribution and sale of such article or  class of  articles.  Under cl. (g) such rules may also define  the conditions of sale or conditions for licence of sale of  any article of food in the interest of public health.  S.  24(1) empowers   the   State  Government.   subject   to   certain conditions,  to make rules for the purpose of giving  effect to the provisions of this Act in matters not falling  within the purview of S. 23.  S. 25 (1) provides that               "If,  immediately before the  commencement  of               this  Act, there is in force in any  State  to               which  this Act extends any law  corresponding               to this Act, that corresponding law shall upon               such commencement stand repealed." Rules have been framed under this Act known as Prevention of Food  Adulteration  Rules,  1955.  R.  50(1)  of  the  rules provides  that  no person shall  manufacture,  sell,  stock, distribute or exhibit 755 for  sale  any  of the articles of  food  specified  therein except  under a licence.  Such articles include  "sweetmeats and savourly".  Our attention was also drawn to sub-rr. (5), (10)  and  (11)  ’of  r. 50Under  sub-r  (5)  the  licensing authority must inspect the premises and satisfy itself  that it  is free from sanitary defects before granting a  licence for  the  manufacture, storage or exhibition of any  of  the

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articles  of food in respect of which a licence is  required Under sub-r. (10) no person can manufacture, store or expose for  sale or permit the sale of any article of food  in  any premises  not effectively separated from any privy,  urinal, sullage, drain or place of storage of foul and waste  matter to  the satisfaction of the licensing authority,  and  under sub-r.  (  1  1  ) all vessel s used to  r  the  storage  or manufacture  of  the articles intended for  sale  must  have proper covers to avoid contamination.  It was argued on  the strength of the above that these rules covered the field  of sale  of  cooked  food  at  stalls  on  public  streets  and therefore  the  provisions  of  s.  173(1)  of  the   Punjab Municipal  Act  which  might otherwise  have  empowered  the municipality  to  proceed thereunder stood repealed  on  the promulgation  of these rules.  This argument is  fallacious. The object of s. 23(1) and the different sub-rules. under r. 50 was entirely different from that behind s. 173(1) of  the Punjab  Municipal Act.  The object of the Food  Adulteration Act,  as its preamble shows, was to make provision  for  the prevention of adulteration of food and adulteration in  this connection had a special significance under s. 2 of the Act. The  object  of this Act was to ensure that food  which  the public could buy was inter alia prepared, packed and  stored under  sanitary conditions so as not to be injurious to  the health  of  the  people  consuming  it.   The  rules  framed thereunder  would only over-ride rules or bye laws, if  any, made  by  any municipality if they covered the  same  field. Under s. 173(1) of the Punjab Municipal Act it is open to  a municipal  committee  to take steps to prevent sale  of  any cooked  food  however  pure if the sale  thereof  on  public streets  would  offer  obstruction to  passersby  or  create insanitary condition.,, because waste matter was bound to be thrown  on the street an washing up of articles used in  the trade  introduce unhygienic conditions in the  neighbourhood and  create nuisance.  We cannot accept the contention  that s.  173(1) had only the object of ensuring the free  passage of  persons and traffic along the public street and so  long as  there was no such obstruction powers under s. 173  could not be utilised for any oblique purpose like preventing per- son,, from carrying on a lawful trade. It was further argued that s. 56(1) (g) of the Punjab  Muni- cipal  Act showed that "all public streets, not  being  land owned  by  Government and the pavements,  stones  and  other materials thereof and also trees growing on, and  erections, materials, implements and things provided for such  streets" vested in and were under the 756 -control of the committee.  According to the learned counsel this  ,only  empowered the committee to  regulate  trade  on public streets and not altogether prevent the same. Our attention was drawn to Halsbury’s Laws of England,  Vol. -33  (Third  Edition),  article  998  at  page  586   headed "regulation  of  street trading".  The learned  author  thus summarised the law in England:-               "Subject to certain exceptions it is  unlawful               for any person to engage in street trading  in               or  from a stationary position in  any  street               within a metropolitan borough, or to engage in               street   trading  in  any  designated   street               whether  or  not  in  or  from  a   stationary               position, unless he is authorised to do so  by               a street trading licence.....               Nothing   in  the  foregoing  provisions   (1)               restricts the right of any person to carry  on               the   business  of  a  pedlar  or  hawker   in

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             accordance  with  a  pedlar’s  certificate  or               hawker’s  licence  which  he  holds;  or   (2)               applies  to the sale or exposure or offer  for               sale  of  newspapers  or  periodicals  by  any               person who does not use in connection with the               sale,  etc., any receptacle which  occupies  a               stationary position in a street, other than  a               receptacle   which  is  exclusively  used   in               connection with the sale etc. . . . " It would appear that street trading is regulated by  certain statute,,  in England and we have nothing of the kind  here. On  the basis of the above passage, it cannot be  said  that persons  in  India  have a lawful  right  to  pursue  street trading and such trading may be regulated but not altogether prevented.  On the authority of Roberts v. Hopwood(1) it was argued  by  learned  counsel  that s. 173  at  best  gave  a discretion  to the Committee to regulate street trading  and therefore the same has to be exercised reasonably and  could not altogether be prevented.  Reference was also made to Pyx Granite Co. v. Ministry of Housing(2) where it was held that the  planning authority under the Town and Country  Planning Act,  1947, was not at liberty to use their powers  for  art ulterior  object, however desirable that object may seem  to them  to  be in the public interest.  In our view,  hone  of these decisions have any bearing on the question before us. There  was no ulterior object behind the resolution  of  the N.D.M.C.  in this case.  Clearly the presence of the  stall- holders  on  public  streets and sale  of  cooked  food  was against public hygiene and S. 173(1) could be availed of  to stop the same.  Learned counsel also cited the case of C. S. S.  Motor Service v. Madras State(1).  There it  was  argued that the (1) [1925] A.C. 578.      (2) [1958] 1 All E. R. 625. (3)  A.I.R. 1953 Madras 279. 7 5 7 petitioners had a right to carry on motor transport business and that this was a right guaranteed under Art. 1 9 (1)  (g) of  the  Constitution.  It was held that the  regulation  of motor traffic must be determined with the object of  serving the  interests  of the public.  Further it was held  that  a system of licensing which had for its object the  regulation of  trade  was not repugnant to Art. 19(1) (g).  We  do  not think  that  the  observations  in  that  case  are  of  any assistance to the appellants before us. As a branch of the above argument it was also contended that the resolution under s. 173 on which the municipal committee relied in this case gave uncontrolled power to the committee to do what they pleased. It  was  argued  that  under the  guise  of  regulation  the committee  sought to take away the right of  the  petitioner and  others  to carry on their trade at  their  sweet  will. Reliance was placed in this connection on a judgment of the House  of Lords in Westminster Corporation v.   London  and North  Western  Railway(1).  There it was  observed  that  a public  body invested with statutory powers must  take  care not  to  exceed or abuse them and that it must act  in  good faith  and reasonably.  We do no," think that  these  obser- vations help the appellants because it has not been shown to its that there was any bad faith which prompted the N.D.M.C. to  pass  the  resolution complained of, nor  did  they  act unreasonably. It was argued however that the counter affidavit of the res- pondent  as regards the allocation of alternative sites  was not correct and comment had been made thereon by the learned single Judge of the High Court.  However that may be, it  is

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apparent  from  the  judgment that not  all  the,  squatters applied  for alternative accommodation and not all  of  them approved  of the sites which were allotted to them.  It  was beyond  the jurisdiction of the N.D.M.C. to provide  persons like  the appellants with sites at  Ramakrishnapuram.   That was under the jurisdiction of the Director of Estates and it appears that this authority had been approached for  helping persons  like  the  appellants.  Further, no  question  of discrimination can arise because all the hawkers/  squatters did  not apply for such sites or could not be provided  with such sites.  The resolution of 30th April 1965 clearly show- ed that the N.D.M.C. was out to stop the sale of cooked food including  tea, kulche choley etc., inasmuch as the sale  of cooked  food  presented an exceptionally  difficult  problem because facilities like running water, sewer connection etc. necessary  for the minimum standard of sanitation could  not be made available. It  appears  to us that this series of  litigation  was  the result  of the N.D.M.C. allowing trade of a kind  on  public streets which it (1)  [1905] A. C. 426. 758 should  have  never allowed.  Out of sympathy for  them  the N.D.M.C.  had permitted the continuance of the trade  for  a Ion,-,  time.   But  no  exception can  be  taken  to  their exercise  of power under s. 173 of the Punjab Municipal  Act to  eradicate the evil.  After all every person has a  right to  pass  and re-pass along a public street.  He  cannot  be heard  to  say that he has a fundamental right to  carry  on street  trading and particularly in a manner which is  bound to  create  insanitary  and  unhygienic  conditions  in  the neighbourhood. The appeals therefore fail, and are dismissed.  G.C. Appeals dismissed. 759