07 March 1969
Supreme Court
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WESTERN U.P. ELECTRIC POWER & SUPPLYCOMPANY LTD. Vs STATE OF U.P. & ANR.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 2482 of 1968


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PETITIONER: WESTERN U.P. ELECTRIC POWER & SUPPLYCOMPANY LTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF U.P. & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/03/1969

BENCH: SHAH, J.C. BENCH: SHAH, J.C. RAMASWAMI, V.

CITATION:  1970 AIR   21            1969 SCR  (3) 865  1969 SCC  (1) 817  CITATOR INFO :  R          1978 SC 597  (222)  R          1981 SC1829  (33)  R          1983 SC1155  (16)

ACT: Indian  Electricity Act 9 of 1910 as amended by  the  Indian Electricity (Uttar Pradesh Sanshodhan) Adhiniyam 1961, ss. 3 (1)  and 3 (2) (e) (ii) Constitution of India Arts.  14  and 31(1)  and  (2A) Licencee under s. 3(1) of  Electricity  Act supplying  electricity  in  certain  area--State  Government ordering  under s. 3(2)(e)(ii) that energy be supplied to  a factory  in  the said area directly  by  Electricity  Board- Whether  discrimination  results--’Public interest’,  in  s. 3(2)(e)(ii)-Satisfaction      under     section      whether subjective--Order  of  direct supply by Board  whether  com- pulsory   acquisition   of   licencee’s   property   without compensation-Natural justice, whether satisfied.

HEADNOTE: The  appellant  hold a licence under s. 3(1) of  the  Indian Electricity Act, 1910 to supply electricity in certain areas in  the  State  of U.P. The 3rd  respondent  was  a  factory manufacturing  electrical equipment in the appellant’s  area of supply, and was receiving energy from the appellant.  The 3rd respondent made complaints to the State Government  that the  supply  of  electrical  energy  by  the  appellant  was inadequate and fluctuating.  There was no improvement in the supply   even   after  discussions  between   the   parties. Thereafter  at the request of the 3rd respondent, the  State Government  by  order  dated December  26,  1961  under  ’s. 3(2)(e)(ii)  of the Indian Electricity Act, 1910 as  amended by   the  Indian  Electricity  (Uttar  Pradesh   Sanshodhan) Adhiniyam  1961  directed  the State  Electricity  Board  to supply  electrical  energy directly to the  3rd  respondent. The appellant made representations to the Government against the order but these were rejected.  The appellant then filed a  writ petition in the High Court which was dismissed by  a Single Judge.- A Letters Patent Appeal against the  decision was  also  dismissed  although the High  Court  allowed  the appellant  to raise an additional plea based on Art.  14  of the  Constitution  without allowing further evidence  to  be

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given  for that purpose.  In this Court, in  appeal  against the High Court’s (order it was contended : (i) That owing to the different rates at which electricity was supplied by the State Government, there was discrimination, (a) between  the 3rd respondent and other consumers, and (b) between the  3rd respondent  and the appellant; (ii) That the impugned  order of the State Government was not made in the public  interest within the meaning of s. 3(2)(e)(ii) of the Act; (iii)  That the impugned order amounted to compulsory acquisition of the property  of the appellant without compensation-,  and  (iv) That  the  impugned  order was passed in  violation  of  the principles of natural justice. HELD  : (i) Article 14 of the Constitution ensures  equality among  equals  :  its aim is to  protect  persons  similarly placed  against  discriminatory  treatment.   It  does   not operate  against rational classification.  A person  setting up  a  grievance of denial of equal treatment  by  law  must establish that between persons similarly circumstanced, some were  treated  to  their  prejudice  and  the   differential treatment  had  no  relation  to the  object  sought  to  be achieved by the law. [870 D] 866 in  the  present  case, as  to  the  alleged  discrimination between  the 3rd respondent and the other consumers  in  the area  there was no evidence on record showing the  operative rates on the date of the impugned order, and no grievance by any consumer of any prejudicial treatment accorded to,  him. Further  the  3rd  respondent and other  consumers  did  not belong to the same class because in the one case energy  was being  supplied  by the appellant and in the  other  by  the Electricity Board. [870 E-G] Similarly  in respect of the alleged discrimination  between the  3rd respondent and the appellant there was no  evidence that the rates charged by the State Electricity Board to the 3rd  respondent  were lower than the rates  charged  to  the appellant.   The appellant and the 3rd respondent again  did not belong to the same class inasmuch as the appellant was a distributor  of electric energy, whereas the 3rd  respondent was a consumer. [870 H-871 B]    The  plea of violation of Art. 14 of the Constitution  on behalf of the appellant, could not therefore be accepted. The Western U.P. Electric Power and Supply Co. Ltd. v. State of U.P. & Ors., A.I.R. 1968 S.C. 1099, distinguished. (ii)The  question  whether an order under s. 3 (2)  (e).  as amended by U.P. Act 30 of 1961 is in public interest is  not one  on  which the opinion of the Government is  final.   If challenged,  the Government must show that exercise  of  the power  was necessary in the public interest.  The  court  is thereby not intended to sit in appeal over the  satisfaction of  the  Government.  If there be prima  facie  evidence  on which  a reasonable body of persons may hold that it  is  in the  public  interest  to  supply  energy  directly  to  the consumers,  the requirements of the statute  are  fulfilled. Normally  a licencee of electrical energy though he  has  no monopoly, is the person through whom electrical energy would be distributed within the area of supply since the  licencee has  to lay down electric  supply lines for transmission  of energy and to maintain its establishment.  An inroad  may be   made  in  that  right  in  the  conditions  which   ate statutorily   prescribed,  but  the  satisfaction  of    the Government  that  the  supply is  necessary  in  the  public interest is in appropriate cases not excluded from  judicial review. [872 B-D] In  the present case there was ample evidence on  record  to prove that uninterrupted supply of electrical energy to  the

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3rd   respondent was necessary  in the public  interest  and the,  appellant was unable to- ensure it. a  large  industry which  gave  scope and earned foreign exchange,  if  it  was necessary to give direct supply of electrical energy  to the 3rd respondent  the order to the electricity board  to  make a  direct  supply to the 3rd respondent was  in  the  public interest  within the meaning of s. 3(2) (e) (ii) of the  Act [872 G; 873 D-E] (e) D-E] (iii)  Even  assuming that the right  to  supply  electrical energy is property (a question on which the court  expressed no opinion) there was in the present case no infringement of the  guarantee  under Art. 31(2).  By cl. (2A)  of  Art.  31 there  is  no compulsory acquisition  or  requisitioning  of property  unless  ownership or right to  possession  of  the property  stands transferred to the State or  a  corporation owned  or  controlled by the State. By  the  order  granting direct supply of electricalenergy  ownership of  property unless ownership or to right to   possession  of   property was  not transferred to the State or to a corporation  owned or  controlled  by the State and on that limited  ground  it must  be   held that Art. 31(2) had no  application  to  the case. [873 G-874 D] 867 (iv)  In  view of the fact that the complains  made  by  the 3rd  respondent were discussed with the appellant  and  that several  representations were made by the appellant  to  the State  Government  which were by the latter and rejected  it could not be said that the denied natural justice. [874 E-G]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : civil appeal No 2482 of 1968. Appeal by special leave from judgment and order dated  March 18,  1968 of the Allahabad High Court in Second  Appeal  No. 317 of 1965. Mohan Behari Lal, for the appellant. O.   P. Rana, for respondents Nos. 1 and 2. C.   K. Daphtary, B. R. L. Iyengar, Bishambar Lal and H. K. Puri, for respondent No. 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Shah  J.  The Western U.P. Electric Power &  Supply  Company Ltd.-hereinafter called ’the Company’-holds a licence  under s.  3(1) of the Indian Electricity Act 9 of 1910  to  supply electricity  in  certain areas in the State of  U.P.  Messrs Hind  Lamps Private Ltd. set up a factory for  manufacturing electrical  equipment  within  the area  of  supply  of  the Company.  Hind Lamps was receiving energy from the  Company. Hind  Lamps  made  several  representations  to  the   State Government  that  the supply of energy by  the  Company  was inadequate to meet its requirements and was ’interrupted and fluctuating".   Meetings were held between the Company,  the State officials and Hind Lamps for devising means to  ensure uninterrupted and adequate Supply of energy required by Hind Lamps, but there was no improvement in the supply position. Hind  Lamps then applied to the Government of U.P. to  grant direct   supply   of  electrical  energy  from   the   State Electricity  Board.   The State Government  by  order  dated December  26,  1961,  issued  in  exercise  of  the   powers conferred  by s. 3(2)(e)(ii) of the Indian Electricity  Act, 1910  as  amended by the Indian Electricity  (Uttar  Pradesh Sanshodhan) Adhiniyam, 1961, directed the State  Electricity Board  "to supply electrical energy directly to  Hind  Lamps upon  terms  and  conditions similar to those  on  which  it supplied electrical energy to other customers".  In reply to

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a representation to reconsider the decision, the  Government informed the Company that the "decision was necessitated in the  public  interest  and there was  no  justification  for revising  it".  Another representation made by  the  Company was also turned down and direct supply of electrical energy was  commenced,  by the’ State’ Electricity  Board  to  Hind Lamps. L11  Sup.  C.I.-69 968 A  petition  moved  by  the Company in  the  High  Court  of Allahabad for a writ of certiorari quashing the order  dated December 26, 1961 was rejected by R. S. Pathak, J. In appeal under  the  Letters Patent against the order passed  by  the learned Judge, counsel for the Company applied fOr leave  to plead  that the order dated December 26, 1961,  resulted  in discrimination between Hind Lamps and other consumers within the  area  of supply of the Company, and also  between  Hind Lamps  and  the Company and the order was  on  that  account invalid.  The High Court permitted the Company to raise  the contention,  but declined to-give opportunity  to  "enlarge, the  evidence on record at that stage".  Sole  reliance  was therefore  placed by counsel for the Company on  paragraph-2 of  the Government Gazette Notification issued by  the  U.P. Government  on  April, 24/28, 1962, containing  the  revised tariff  for  the, supply of electrical energy  to  licensees obtaining bulk supply from the U.P. State Electricity  Board and to other consumers.  It stated :               "The revised tariff shall, except in the  case               of  the licensees, be applicable to  consumers               in respect of consumption in the month of  May               1962.  In the case of licensees obtaining bulk               supply  of energy from the Board, the  revised               tariff  shall apply to supplies made from  1st               July, 1962 and onwards." The Schedules in the Gazette Notification set out the  rates at  which electrical energy was to be supplied by the  Board to licensees as well as to diverse classes of consumers  who received  supply of energy from the Board.  The  High  Court held  that there was no evidence on the record to prove  the rates  at which energy was being supplied to the Company  on December  25,  1961, and the rates at which the  energy  was being supplied to Hind Lamps.  The High Court observed  that before the order dated December 26, 1961 could be challenged on the ground of discrimination between Hind Lamps and other consumers as also between Hind Lamps and the Company, it was necessary for the Company to establish by evidence the rates of  supply of energy to the Company, the Hind Lamps  and  to the  other consumers obtaining at the time of  the  impugned order,  i.e. December 26, 1961, and in the absence  of  that evidence the plea of discrimination must fail.        The High Court also rejected the contention raised by the  Company that The impugned order was not made in  public interest, that granting direct. supply of electrical  energy to Hind Lamps amounted to compulsory acquisition of property of the Company without payment of compensation, and that  in refusing to give an opportunity to the Company to object the rules of natural justice were violated. 869 The Indian Electricity Act 9 of 1910 makes provision by s. 3 for the grant of a licence to supply energy in any specified area  and also to lay down or place electric  supply.  lines for  transmission  of energy.  Clause (e) of sub-s.  (2)  as amended by U.P. Act 30 of 1961, and sub-s. (3) provide:               "(2)(e)  grant of a licence under  this  Part               for any purpose shall not in any way hinder or

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             restrict-               (i)   the  grant of licence to another  person               within  the  same area of supply  for  a  like               purpose; or               (ii)  the  supply  of  energy  by  the   State               Government  or  the  State  Electricity  Board               within   the  same  area,  where   the   State               Government  deems  such  supply  necessary  in               public interest;"               "(3) Where the supply of energy in any area by               the   State   Electricity  Board   is   deemed               necessary  under subclause (ii) of clause  (e)               of sub-section (2), the Board may, subject  to               any terms and conditions that may be laid down               by the State Government, supply energy in that               area notwithstanding anything to the  contrary               contained  in  this  Act  or  the  Electricity               Supply Act, 1948." The   State  Government  may  grant  a  licence  to   supply electrical  energy to consumers within a specified  area  on terms  and conditions prescribed in the licence and  subject to  statutory  conditions,  but on that  account  the  State Government  is  not  debarred from  granting  a  licence  to another  person or to supply energy directly to  a  consumer within  the  same  area if the State  Government  deemed  it necessary so to do in the public interest. Section 3(2)(e) is challenged on the ground of denial of the guarantee   of   the   equal  protection   clause   of   the Constitution.  Strong reliance was placed by counsel for the appellant upon a recent judgment of this Court : The Western U.P. Electric Power and Supply Co. Ltd. v. The State of U.P. and  Ors.(1)  In  that case the Government of  U.P.  had  by Notification dated September 21, 1966, authorised the  State Electricity Board to supply energy directly to consumers  in the area of supply for which a licence was already  granted. This Court held that a licensee supplying electrical  energy in  an  area  has no monopoly under  its  licence;  but  the Notification  issued  by the U.P. Government  directing  the State  Electricity  Board  to supply energy  directly  to  a consumer  at  a  rate lower than the rate at  which  it  was supplied to the licensee Company amounted to  discrimination between that (2)  A.I..R. 1968 S.C. 1099 870 consumer, and the other consumers and also, between the con- sumer and the licensee and the Notification on that account was invalid.  Counsel for the Company says that the question which  falls  to  be determined in  the  present  appeal  is concluded  by  the judgment in The  Westem  U.P.  Electrical Power  and Supply Company’s case(1), for the Court  in  that case  held that the Notification of the Government  of  U.P. directing  the  State  Electricity Board  to  supply  energy directly  to certain concerns at a rate lower than the  rate at which energy was supplied to the licensee Company amounts to discrimination between those concerns on the one hand and the  other  consumers  on the other, and  also  between  the concerns and the Company. Article  14  of  the Constitution  ensures  equality among equals:  its  aim  is to protect  persons  similarly  placed against  discriminatory  treatment.   It  does  not  however operate  against rational classification.  A person  setting up  a  grievance of denial of equal treatment  by  law  must establish that between persons similarly circumstanced  some were  treated  to  their  prejudice  and  the   differential treatment had no reasonable relation to the object sought to

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be  achieved  by the law.  In the present case there  is  no evidence  about the rate charged for energy supplied by  the State Electricity Board to the Company on December 26, 1961, nor  is  there any evidence on the record  about  the  rates charged  for electrical energy supplied to the consumers  by the Company. The  plea  of discrimination has to be considered  from  two different points of view-(1) the discrimination between Hind Lamps  and the other consumers within the area of supply  in respect  of  which  the Company held the  licence;  and  (2) discrimination  in the rates of supply charged by the  State Electricity  Board to the Company and to Hind Lamps.   There is  no evidence on the record about the operative  rates  on the  date  of the impugned order.  Again Hind  Lamps  was  a consumer  of  electrical  energy  and  so  were  the   other consumers within the area of supply in respect of which  the Company held the licence.  But on that account it does.  not follow  that  they belong to the same class.   In  one  case energy is being supplied by the Company and in the other  by the  State Electricity Board.  Again, there is no  grievance made  by any consumer of energy that he is by the  grant  of preferential  rates  to Hind  Lamps  prejudicially  treated. Other  consumers of energy and Hind Lamps therefore  do  not belong  to the same class, and there is no grievance by  any consumer of any prejudicial treatment accorded to him. There  is  also no evidence that the rates  charged  by  the State  Electricity Board to Hind Lamps were lower  than  the rates charg- (1)  A.I.R. 1968 S.C. 1099. 871 ed to the Company.  The Company and Hind Lamps again do  not belong  to the same class.  The Company is a distributor  of electrical energy, whereas Hind Lamps is a consumer.  If the State  Government  charged  different  rates  from   persons belonging to the same class,. in the absence of any rational basis for that treatment, the plea of discrimination founded on differential rates may probably have some force.  But the Company and Hind Lamps did not belong to the  same  class, and there is no evidence that for energy supplied  different rates were charged.  In The Western U.P. Electric Power  and Supply  Co.  Ltd. v. The State of U.P.(1) the  position  was different.   That case was decided on the footing  that  the consumer and the Western U.P. Electric Power and Supply  Co. Ltd.  belonged  to  the same class, and  the  Board  charged higher  rates  from the distributing Company than  the  rate charged  from the third respondent in that case.  The  Court observed in that case               "........    the    notification    and    the               Government’s  direction to the  Board  therein               results in clear discrimination.  If the Board               were  to  supply energy directly  to  the  3rd               respondent it has to do so at rates lower than               the rates at which electricity is supplied  by               it to the petitioner company.  The  petitioner               company  being  thus charged at  higher  rates               from its other consumers with the result  that               the  3rd  respondent would  get  energy   at               substantially lower rates than other consumers               including  other industrial establishments  in               the  area.  The notification thus  results  in               discrimination  between the 3rd respondent  on               the  one  hand and the other consumer  on  the               other  as also between the 3rd respondent  and               the petitioner company.  " The  first contention was, therefore, rightly  negatived  by

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the High Court. By  the  amendment made by U.P. Act 30  of  1961  electrical energy may be supplied by the State Government or the  State Electricity Board within the same- area in respect of  which a licence is granted only if the State Government deems such supply  "necessary  in  public interest".   The  High  Court observed  that "the State Government was the sole Judge  of the question whether direct- supply of energy to Hind  Lamps was  or was not in the public, interest.  The test is  of  a subjective  nature,  no objective test  being  contemplated. Thus it is not open to this Court to examine whether it  was necessary in the public interest.  The subjective opinion of the  Government is final in the matter, and the same is  not justiciable  or  subject  to judicial  scrutiny  as  to  the sufficiency of the grounds on which the State Government has formed its opinion.  In other words the Legislature has left ’(1) A.I.R. 1968 S.C. 1099. 872 it to the sole discretion of the State Government to  decide whether  a  direct  supply  of  energy  was  in  the  public interest". We  are unable to agree with that view.  By s. 3 (2) (e)  as amended  by the U.P. Act 30 of 1961, the Government  is  au- thorised  to supply energy to consumers within the  area  of the license in certain conditions : exercise of the power is conditioned by the Government deeming it necessary in public interest to make such supply.  If challenged, the Government must show that exercise of the power was necessary in public interest.   The  Court  is thereby not intended  to  sit  in appeal over the satisfaction of the Government.  If there be prima  facie evidence on which a reasonable body of  persons may hold that it-is in the public interest to supply  energy directly  to the consumers, the requirements of the  statute are  fulfilled.  Normally a licensee of  electrical  energy, though  he  has  no monopoly, is  the  person  through  whom electrical  energy would be distributed within the  area  of supply,  since the licensee has to lay down electric  supply lines  for  transmission  of  energy  and  to  maintain  its establishment.   An inroad may be made in that right in  the conditions   which  are  statutorily  prescribed.   In   our judgment, the satisfaction of the Government that the supply is necessary in the public interest is in appropriate  cases not excluded from judicial review. But the decision of the High Court must still be maintained. The order issued by the Government recited:               "The   Governor  is  satisfied  that   it   is               necessary in the public interest for the State               Electricity  Board  to  make  the  supply   of               electricity direct to the industry (Hind Lamps               Private  Ltd.) and is, therefore,  pleased  to               order in exercise of the powers vested in  him               under   section  3(2)(e)(ii)  of  the   Indian               Electricity Act, 1910 (Act No. IV of 1910)  as               amended  by  the  Indian  Electricity   (Uttar               Pradesh Sanshodhan) Adhiniyam, 1961 (U.P.  Act               No.  XXX  of  196  1)  that  the  U.P.   State               Electricity   Board   make   the   supply   of               electricity  direct  to the Hind  Lamps  Ltd.,               Shikohabad." There  is  ample  evidence  on  the  record  to  prove  that uninterrupted supply of electrical energy to Hind Lamps  was necessary in public interest, and the Company was unable  to ensure it.  The only averment made in the petition filed  by the  Company before the High Court was that "the  giving  of the.  supply to Hind Lamps (Private) Ltd. could not be  said

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to be in public interest as required by section  3(2)(e)(ii) of  the  Indian Electricity Act, 1910 as amended  by  Indian Electricity   (U.P.  Amendment)  Act  XXX  of   1961".    No particulars   were  furnished  in  the  petition.   In   the affidavit filed on behalf of the State Electricity Board  it was affirm- 873 ed  that  Hind  Lamps  was engaged  in  the  manufacture  of electric  bulbs,  fluorescent  tubes etc.  and  the  process required  uninterupted supply; that it was one of the  major industries  of  the State and was the only industry  of  its kind in the State; that as a result of the defective  supply by  the  Company,  the  Hind  Lamps  felt  dissatisfied  and informed the Government that if the supply position was  not improved: it would be forced to shift its factory from  the State to some other State; that the industry gave employment to a number of people in the State and saved a large  amount of foreign exchange and on that account the State Government was keen to give it fair and due protection that it  deserv- ed; that the total supply of electricity to the Company  was 1700 K.W. and even if the entire supply under the  agreement was  made  available by the Company to Hind Lamps  it  would fall  short  of  its requirements.  It  was,  therefore,  in public interest that direct supply of energy should be  made available  to Hind Lamps.  An affidavit  containing  similar averments  was also filed on behalf of the State  of  Uttar Pradesh. There  is no evidence on behalf of the Company to  the  con- trary.   For  maintaining  effective  working  of  a   large industry  which  gave  scope for  employment  to  the  local population and earned foreign exchange, if it was  necessary to  give direct supply of electrical energy to  Hind  Lamps, the order to the Electricity Board to make direct supply  of electrical energy to Hind Lamps was unquestionably in public interest within the meaning of s.  3  (2)  (e) (ii)  of  the Act. There is no substance in the contention that by the issue of the order dated December 26, 1961, there was ’compulsory ac- quisition  of the property of the Company without  providing for compensation.  By the grant of a licence under Act 9  of 1910 no monopoly was created in favour of the Company.   The statute  expressly  reserves  the  right  of  the  State  to authorise  supply  of  electrical  energy  through   another licensee in the same area or to a consumer directly  through the  State  Electricity Board.  Assuming that the  right  to supply  electrical energy is property (on that  question  we express  no opinion), we are of the view- that there  is  no infringement  of the guarantee under Art. 31(2)’of the  Con- stitution.   Clause  (2)  of  Art.  31  as  amended  by  the Constitution (Fourth Amendment) Act, 1955, insofar as it  is material, provides               "No  property shall be  compulsorily  acquired               save   for  a  public  purpose  and  save   by               authority   of  a  law  which   provides   for               compensation for the property so acquired  and               either fixes the amount of the compensation or               specifies the principles on which, and               874               the manner in which, the compensation is to be               determined and given................" Clause  (2A) in substance defines compulsory acquisition  or requisitioning  of property within the meaning of  cl.  (2). It provides               Where a law does not provide for the  transfer               of the ownership or right to possession of any

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             property  to  the State or  to  a  corporation               owned or controlled by the State, it shall not               be  deemed  to  provide  for  the   compulsory               acquisition  or  requisitioning  of  property,               notwithstanding that it deprives any person of               his property." By   cl.  (2A)  there  is  no  compulsory   acquisition   or requisitioning  of  property, unless ownership or  right  to possession  of the property stands transferred to the  State or  a corporation owned or controlled by the State.  By  the order granting direct supply of electrical energy  ownership of  property  or  right to possession of  property  was  not transferred  to  the  State or to  a  corporation  owned  or controlled by the State, and on that limited ground it must be  held  that Art. 31(2) has no application.   The  Company may,  it  may be assumed, as a result of  direct  supply  of electrical energy to Hind Lamps, suffer loss; but Art. 31(2) does not guarantee protection against that loss. The Company was afforded sufficient opportunity to make  its representation  before  and  after the  impugned  order  was passed.   Hind Lamps had submitted several,  representations to the Government of U.P. regarding inadequate and irregular supply of electrical energy.  The Company was informed about the  complaints made by Hind Lamps.  Meetings were  held  in which  certain steps to be taken by the Company to make  the supply  regular were agreed upon, but they were not  carried out,  presumably because the Company had not  the  requisite equipment for that purpose.  The Company was asked to supply electrical  energy as released in favour of Hind  Lamps;  it failed to do so.  Representations made by the Company, after the  order  was  passed, requesting  that  the  order  dated December 26, 1961, be withdrawn, were also considered by the Government  and rejected.  Adequate opportunity of making  a representation  was afforded to the Company to  satisfy  the State  Government that it was not in the public interest  to supply electrical energy directly to Hind Lamps. The appeal fails and, is dismissed with costs. G.C.                        Appeal dismissed. 875