21 August 1959
Supreme Court
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GULLAPALLI NAGESWARA RAO ETC. Vs THE STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH & OTHERS

Case number: Appeal (civil) 198 of 1959


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PETITIONER: GULLAPALLI NAGESWARA RAO ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH & OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 21/08/1959

BENCH: SUBBARAO, K. BENCH: SUBBARAO, K. SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P. GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.

CITATION:  1959 AIR 1376            1960 SCR  (1) 580

ACT:        Road      Transport-Scheme     of      nationalisation-Chief        Minister, if can hear  objections-Doctrine of     bias-Motor        Vehicles Act (IV of 1939  as amended by Act 100 of 1956, ch.        IVA, s. 68D.

HEADNOTE: The appellants were carrying on motor transport business  in Krishna District in Andhra Pradesh.  The General Manager  of the  State  Transport  Undertaking published  a  scheme  for nationalisation  of  motor transport and objections  to  the said  scheme  were invited.  The appellants,  among  others, filed  their  objections.  The Secretary in  charge  of  the Transport Department gave personal hearing to the  objectors and  heard  the representation made on behalf of  the  State Transport  Undertaking.   The  Chief Minister,  who  was  in charge of transport, passed the order approving the  scheme. The  appellants  moved  this  Court under  Art.  32  of  the Constitution for quashing the said scheme and this Court  in Gullapalli  Nageswara Rao v. Andhra Pradesh  Road  Transport Corporation, previously decided, held that the Secretary- in charge  of the Transport Department was incompetent to  hear the objections on the around that no party could be a  judge in his own cause and quashed the order approving the scheme. Thereafter  notices  were issued by the  Government  to  the objectors.    The   Chief   Minister   himself   heard   the representatives  of  the objectors and  the  Road  Transport Corporation  and  passed the order approving the  scheme  as originally  published.  The appellants moved the High  Court under  Art. 226 of the Constitution for writs of  certiorari quashing  the order passed by the Government confirming  the scheme and subsequent orders Made by the Regional  Transport Authority canceling their stage carriage permits.  The  High Court  rejected the petitions and the  appellants  appealed. It was contended, inter alia, on their behalf that the  same infirmity  which attached to the Secretary in charge of  the Transport  Department on the previous occasion, attached  to the  Chief  Minister, who was in charge  of  transport,  and rendered him incompetent to hear the objections. Held,  that the two well-settled principles of the  doctrine of  bias that applied equally to judicial as well as  quasi-

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judicial  tribunals, were,-(i) that no man shall be a  judge in  his own cause and that (2) justice should not merely  be done  but  must also appear to be done.  Any kind  of  bias, therefore,  in  a judicial authority, whether  financial  or other, for or against any party, or any position that  might impute bias, must disqualify him as a judge. 581 But  when a State Legislature or the Parliament,  in  trans- gression of the aforesaid principles, by statute empowers an authority to be a judge in its own cause or decide a dispute in  which it has an official bias, such statute, unlike  one passed by the  English Parliament, has to stand scrutiny  in the light of the    fundamental  rights  enshrined  in   the Constitution. The King v. Bath Compensation Authority, [1925] 1 K.B. 685 and  The  King  v. Leicester justices, [1927]  i  K.B.  557, discussed.     In the instant case, however, the relevant provisions  of the Act   do not sanction any transgression of the aforesaid principles of natural justice or authorise the Government to constitute itself a judge in its own cause.  Nor could it be said  that the State Government, in the present case,  acted in violation of the aforesaid principles. Since the appellants never questioned the competence of  the Chief Minister to decide the objections on the last occasion and  obtained the judgment of this Court on that  basis,  it was  not  open to them at this stage to  reopen  the  closed controversy or take a contrary position. The  position of the Chief Minister was quite distinct  from that  of  the  Secretary  of  the  Department.   While   the Secretary  of the Department was its head and so a  part  of it,  the Minister in charge was only  primarily  responsible for  the  disposal  of  the  business  pertaining  to   that Department.  It was not, therefore, correct to say that  the Chief Minister was a part of the Department constituted as a Statutory Undertaking under the Act.

JUDGMENT:        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 198 to  200        of 1959.        Appeals  from  the judgment and order dated  the  5th  March        1959,  of the Andhra Pradesh High Court, in  Writ  Petitions        Nos. 1511 and 1512 of 1958 and 23 of 1959.        N.   C.  Chatterjee, G. Suryanarayana, K. Mangach and T.  V.        R. Tatachari, for the appellants.        D.   Narasaraju,  Advocate-General for the State  of  Andhra        Pradesh,  D.  Venkatappiah  Sastry and T. M.  Sen,  for  the        respondents.        1959.   August 21.  The Judgment of the Court was  delivered        by        SUBBA  RAO  J.-These appeals on  certificates  are  directed        against the judgment of the High Court of Judicature, Andhra        Pradesh, at Hyderabad, dismissing the petitions filed by the        appellants under Art, 226 74        582        of the Constitution for issuing writs of certiorari to quash        the orders of the Government of Andhra Pradesh confirming  a        scheme  of nationalization of transport and  the  subsequent        orders  of the Regional Transport Authority  cancelling  the        appellants’ stage carriage permits.        These  appeals  are the off-shoot of the  judgment  of  this        Court  in Gullapalli Nageswara Rao v. Andhra  Pradesh  State        Road  Transport  Corporation (1) delivered  on  November  5,

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      1958.   The  facts were fully stated therein.  It  would  be        only necessary to recapitulate briefly the facts relevant to        the  present enquiry: The appellants were carrying on  motor        transport business for several years in Krishna District  in        the  State of Andhra Pradesh.  Shri Guru Pershad, styled  as        the  General Manager of the State Transport  Undertaking  of        the  Andhra Pradesh Road Transport, published a  scheme  for        nationalization  of motor transport in the said  State  from        the date to be notified by the State Government.  Objections        to  the  said  proposed scheme were  invited  by  the  State        Government,  and the appellants, among others,  filed  their        objections.   On December 26, 1957, the Secretary in  charge        of  the Transport Department gave a personal hearing to  the        objectors  and heard the representations made on  behalf  of        the  State  Transport  Undertaking.   The  entire   material        gathered by him was placed before the Chief Minister of  the        State  in charge of transport who made the  order  approving        the scheme.  The approved scheme was published in the Andhra        Pradesh  Gazette dated January 9, 1958, and it was  directed        to  come  into  force with effect  from  January  10,  1958.        Thereafter  the Andhra Pradesh Road  Transport  Corporation,        which was formed under the provisions of the Road  Transport        Corporation  Act,  1950,  took  over  the  Undertaking   and        proceeded to implement the scheme under a phased  programme.        The  appellants  moved  this  Court under  Art.  32  of  the        Constitution  for  quashing  the  said  scheme  on   various        grounds.  This Court rejected most of the objections  raised        by the appellants except in regard to two pertaining to  the        hearing given by the Secretary in charge        (1)  [1959] S.C.R. (SUPPl) 319.                     583        of  the Transport Department which resulted in the  quashing        of  the  order of the Government approving  the  scheme  and        directing  it to forbear from taking over any of the  routes        on which the appellants were engaged in transport  business.        After the said order, notices were issued by the  Government        to all the objectors informing them that a personal  hearing        would  be given by the Chief Minister on December  9,  1958,        and they were further informed that they were at liberty  to        file further objections before November 30, 1958.  The Chief        Minister heard the representatives of the objectors and  the        Corporation  and  passed  orders dated  December  19,  1958,        rejecting  the objections filed and approving the scheme  as        originally  published.  The order approving the  scheme  was        duly published by the Government in the official Gazette oil        ]December  22, 1958.  On December 23, 1958, the  Corporation        applied  to  the Road Transport Authority for the  issue  of        permits  for plying stage carriages and for eliminating  the        permits granted to the private bus operators.  On --December        24,  1958,  the said Authority passed orders  rendering  the        permits  of  the appellants ineffective  from  December  24,        1958,  and  also  issuing  permits  to  the  Corporation  in        -respect  of  the routes previously operated by  the  appel-        lants.  The said orders were communicated to the  appellants        on  December 24, 1958, and they were also directed  to  stop        plying  their  buses  from  December  25,  1958,  on   their        respective  routes.  The appellants, who were aggrieved,  by        the  orders  of the Government as well by the order  of  the        Regional  Transport  Authority filed petitions in  the  High        Court  under Art. 226 of the Constitution for  quashing  the        same.        The  petitions  were heard by a Division Bench of  the  said        High   Court   consisting  of  Chandra  Reddy,   C.J.,   and        Srinivasachari, J., who negatived the contentions raised  by        the  appellants  and dismissed the petitions.   Hence  these

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      appeals.        The  arguments  of Mr. Chatterjee, learned Counsel  for  the        appellants  maybe  summarized thus: (1) This Court  held  in        Gullapalli  Nageswara  Rao  v.  Andhra  Pradesh  State  Road        Transport Corporation that the        (1)  [1959] S.C.R. (SUPPL.) 319.        584        Secretary   in  charge  of  the  Transport  Department   was        disqualified   from   deciding  the  dispute   between   the        Department and the private bus operators on the basis of the        principle  that a party cannot be a judge in his own  cause,        and  that,  as  the  Chief Minister was  in  charge  of  the        portfolio  of transport, the same infirmity attached to  him        also, and, therefore, for the same reason he should also  be        disqualified  from  hearing  the objections  to  the  scheme        published by the Undertaking; and (2) the Chief Minister  by        his acts, such as initiating the scheme, and speeches showed        a  clear bias in favour of the Undertaking and  against  the        private  bus  operators and therefore on the  basis  of  the        principles of natural justice accepted by this Court, he was        precluded  from  deciding  the  dispute  between  the   said        parties.        The   learned   Advocate-General  sought  to  make   out   a        distinction between " official bias " of an authority  which        is inherent in a statutory duty imposed on it and " personal        bias  " of the said authority in favour of, or against,  one        of  the  parties and contended that the mere fact  that  the        Chief Minister of the Government had supported the policy of        nationalization,  or  even  the  fact  that  the  Government        initiated  the  said  scheme, did Dot  disqualify  him  from        deciding  the dispute unless it was established that he  was        guilty  of personal bias, and that there was no legal  proof        establishing the said fact.        At this stage, it would be convenient to notice briefly  the        decisions   cited  at  the  Bar  disclosing   the   relevant        principles governing the doctrine of bias ". The  principles        governing   the  doctrine  of  bias  "  vis-a-vis   judicial        tribunals  are well-settled and they are : (i) no man  shall        be a judge in his own cause; (ii) justice should not only be        done  but manifestly and undoubtedly seem to be  done.   The        two  maxims yield the result that if a member of a  judicial        body is " subject to a bias (whether financial or other)  in        favour of, or against, any party to a dispute, or is in such        a  position that a bias must be assumed to exist,  he  ought        not to take part in the decision or sit on the tribunal "  ;        and that " any direct pecuniary interest, however small,  in        the        585        subject-matter  of inquiry will disqualify a judge, and  any        interest,  though not pecuniary, will have the same  effect,        if  it  be sufficiently substantial to create  a  reasonable        suspicion  of  bias  ".  The  said  principles  are  equally        applicable  to  authorities, though they are not  courts  of        justice or judicial tribunals, who have to act judicially in        deciding  the  rights of others, i.e., authorities  who  are        empowered  to discharge quasi-judicial functions.  The  said        principles  are  accepted  by the learned  Counsel  on  both        sides; but the question raised in this case is whether, when        a statute confers a power on an authority and imposes a duty        on it to be a judge of its own cause or to decide a  dispute        in  which it has an official bias, the doctrine of  bias  is        qualified to the extent of the statutory authorization.   In        The  King v. Bath Compensation Authority (1)  the  licensing        justices  of a county borough referred the  application  for        the  renewal of the licence of a hotel to  the  compensation

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      authority of the borough and also resolved that a  solicitor        should  be  instructed  to appear  before  the  compensation        authority  and  oppose the renewal of the licence  on  their        behalf.   The  solicitor so instructed appeared  before  the        authority  and supported the opposition, and in  the  result        the  compensation authority refused the renewal  subject  to        payment  of  compensation.   It  may  be  mentioned  that  a        majority  of  the  justices  who  sat  on  the  compensation        tribunal and voted against the renewal of the licence had as        members  of  the  licensing committee been  parties  to  the        resolution   referring  the  question  of  renewal  to   the        compensation authority.  The Court of Appeal by a  majority,        Atkin,  L. J., dissenting, held that in view of  the  provi-        sions of the Licensing Act, 1910, the facts in that case did        not  disclose  such  bias or likelihood  of  bias  as  would        disqualify them from sitting on the tribunal.  This decision        was  reversed by the House of Lords on appeal  (reported  in        1926  A.C. 586).  The House of Lords held that the  decision        of  the  tribunal, whereon three justices who  referred  the        matter  to the said authority sat, must be set aside on  the        ground  that no one can both be a party and a judge  in  the        same cause,        (1)  [1925] 1 K.B. 685.        586        Viscount  Cave,  L.C.,  meets the argument  based  upon  the        statutory duty thus at p. 592:        "  No doubt the statute contemplates the possibility of  the        licensing   justices  appearing  before   the   compensation        authority  and  taking  part  in the  argument;  for  it  is        provided by s. 19, sub-s. 2, that the compensation authority        shall give any person appearing to them to be interested  in        the  question of the renewal of a licence, "  including  the        licensing justices," an opportunity of being heard.  But the        statute  nowhere says that justices who elect to  appear  as        opponents  of  the renewal and take active  steps  (such  as        instructing a solicitor) to take their opposition affective,        may  nevertheless act as judges in the dispute,; and in  the        absence of a clear provision to that effect I think that the        ordinary  rule, that no one can be both party and  judge  in        the same cause, holds good."        This  decision,  therefore,  is an authority  for  the  pro-        position that, unless the legislature clearly and  expressly        ordained to the contrary, the principles of natural  justice        cannot be violated.  In The King v. Leicester Justices  (1),        a case also arising under the Licensing (Consolidation) Act,        1910, the king’s Bench Division held that the mere fact that        the  licensing  justice has originated an objection  to  the        renewal  of a licence does not disqualify him by  reason  of        interest  from sitting and adjudicating as a member of  that        authority  upon  the matter of that  licence.   Salter,  J.,        brought out the distinction between the Bath Justices’  Case        (2)  and the case before him in the following terms,  at  p.        565:        " The distinction is that, in that case, Parliament had  not        sanctioned what was done; in this case it has."        Dealing with the argument that there was some, risk of  bias        if  the  statutory duty was discharged,  the  learned  Judge        rejected it with the observation that " some risk of bias is        inseparable  from the machinery which Parliament has set  up        ".  At first sight this judgment appears to be  inconsistent        with the decision        (1) [1927] 1 K.B. 557.        (2) [1925] 1 K.B. 685.        587        of  the  House  of Lords in Bath Justices’  Case(1),  but  a

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      scrutiny  of  the latter case shows that in  that  case  the        licensing  justices  had  themselves  actively  opposed  the        renewal of the licence before the compensation authority and        instructed a solicitor to do so on their behalf This is  not        a  duty  cast on them by the statute whereas  the  licensing        justices  in  dealing with an application for renewal  of  a        licence  and, when the question of renewal was referred  for        decision  to  the  compensation  authority,  in  sitting  as        members of that authority are merely carrying out the duties        in   accordance  with  the  procedure  prescribed   by   the        legislature.   These  decisions  show  that  in  England   a        statutory invasion of the common law objection on the ground        of  bias  is  tolerated by decisions, but  the  invasion  is        confined strictly to the limits of the statutory  exception.        It  is not out of place here to notice that in  England  the        Parliament is supreme and therefore a statutory law, however        repugnant  to the principles of natural justice,  is  valid;        whereas  in  India  the law made by Parliament  or  a  State        Legislature  should  stand the test  of  fundamental  rights        declared in Part III of the Constitution.        In  the instant case the relevant provisions of the  Act  do        not  sanction any dereliction of the principles  of  natural        justice.   Under the Act a statutory authority,  called  the        Transport  Undertaking, is created and  specified  statutory        functions  are  conferred  on  it.   The  said   Undertaking        prepares  a scheme providing for road transport  service  in        relation  to  an  area to be run or  operated  by  the  said        Undertaking.  Any person affected by the Scheme is  required        to file objections before the State Government and the State        Government,    after    receiving   the    objections    and        representations,  gives a personal hearing to the  objectors        as  well as to the Undertaking and approves or modifies  the        scheme  as  the  case may be.  The provisions  of  the  Act,        therefore,  do not authorise the Government to initiate  the        scheme  and thereafter constitute itself a judge in its  own        cause.  The entire scheme of the Act visualises, in case  of        conflict  between  the  Undertaking  and  the  operators  of        private buses, that the State Government        (1)  [1925] 1 K.B. 685.        588        should  sit in judgment and resolve the conflict.  The  Act,        therefore, does not authorise the State Government to act in        derogation of the principles of natural justice.        The  next question is whether the State Government,  in  the        present  case,  acted in violation of the  said  principles.        The  argument that as this Court held in the previous  stage        of  this litigation that the hearing given by the  secretary        in   charge  of  the  Transport  Department   offended   the        principles of natural justice, we should hold, as a  logical        corollary to the same, that the same infirmity would  attach        to the Chief Minister.  This argument has to be rejected  on        two  grounds:  firstly,  for the reason  that  on  the  last        occasion  the appellants did not question the right  of  the        Chief  Minister to decide on the objections to the  scheme,-        and  indeed  they assumed his undoubted right to  do  so-but        canvassed  the validity of his order on the basis  that  the        secretary,  who was part of the Transport  Department,  gave        the  hearing  and not the Chief Minister and,  therefore,  a        party to the dispute was made a judge of his own cause.  If,        as  it  is now contended, on the same  reasoning  the  Chief        Minister  also  would  be  disqualified  from  deciding  the        dispute,  that point should have been raised at that  stage:        instead,  a distinction was made between the Secretary of  a        Department  and the Chief Minister, and the validity of  the        order  of the Chief Minister was questioned on the basis  of

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      this  distinction.   This  Court  accepted  that   argument.        Having obtained the judgment of this Court on that basis, it        could  not  be  open to the appellants, at  this  stage,  to        reopen the closed controversy and take a contrary  position.        That  apart, there are no merits in this contention.   There        is  a clear distinction between the position of a  Secretary        of  the  Department  and the Chief Minister  of  the  State.        Under  the Constitution, the Governor is directed to act  on        the  advice of the Ministers headed by the  Chief  Minister.        In exercise of the powers conferred by cls. 2 and 3 of  Art.        166  of the Constitution the Governor of Madras  made  rules        styled  as  "  The  Madras  Government  Business  Rules  and        Secretariat Instructions", and r. 9 thereof        589        prescribes that without prejudice to the provisions of r. 7,        the  Minister in charge of a department shall  be  primarily        responsible  for the disposal of the business pertaining  to        that department.  The Governor of Andhra,in exercise of  the        powers  under  the Constitution, directed that  until  other        provisions  are  made  in this regard the  business  of  the        Government of Andhra shall be transacted in accordance  with        the  said Rules.  It is, therefore, manifest that under  the        Constitution  and the Rules framed thereunder a Minister  in        charge  of  a department is primarily  responsible  for  the        disposal of the business pertaining to that department,  but        the ultimate responsibility for the advice is on the  entire        ministry.  But the position of the Secretary of a department        is  different.   Under the said Rules, the  Secretary  of  a        department  is its head i.e., he is part of the  department.        There is an essential distinction between the functions of a        Secretary  and  a  Minister; the former is  a  part  of  the        department and the latter is only primarily responsible  for        the disposal of the business pertaining to that  department.        On this distinction the previous judgment of this Court  was        based, for in that case, after pointing out the position  of        the  Secretary in that Department, it was held that  "though        the formal orders were made by the Chief Minister, in effect        and  substance,  the  enquiry  was  conducted  and  personal        hearing  was  given  by one of the parties  to  the  dispute        itself  ". We cannot, therefore, accept the argument of  the        learned  Counsel  that  the Chief Minister is  part  of  the        department constituted as a statutory Undertaking under  the        Act.        The next question is whether the Chief Minister by his  acts        and  speeches  disqualified  himself to act  for  the  State        Government in deciding the dispute.  In the affidavit  filed        by  Nageswara Rao, one of the appellants herein, in  respect        of the writ petitions filed in the High Court, he states  in        ground (8) of paragraph (14) thus:        "  He (the Chief Minister) is the Minister in charge of  the        Transport Department at whose instance the Scheme was  first        published under Section 68C of the Act.  He is not only  the        initiator  of  the  Scheme  but  also  the  person  who   is        interested in its approval and        75        590        implementation.    He  has  thus  a  direct   and   specific        connection  with  the dispute being a party thereto  and  he        would be acting as a Judge in his own cause when he gives  a        personal hearing and considers the objections."        Mr.  Chatterjee  contends that this allegation  embodied  in        ground (8) has not been contradicted by the respondents.  It        is   not  correct  to  say  that  these   allegations   went        unchallenged,  for in paragraph 6 of the  counter  affidavit        filed  on  behalf  of  the  State,  we  find  the  following

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      statements:        "  The  contentions  of the petitioner in para.  14  of  his        affidavit are without substance.  The scheme as approved  by        the Government is neither illegal nor without jurisdiction."        In sub-paragraph (3) of paragraph 6, it is alleged:        " The allegations that the hearing and determination of  the        questions  in  issue  are  not in  accordance  with  law  or        principles  of  judicial procedure, but only  a  farce  gone        through  to satisfy the direction of the Supreme  Court,  is        not correct."        Sub-paragraph (7) of paragraph 6 reads:        "  The Minister in charge i.e., the Chief Minister can  hear        and decide.  The State Government itself cannot be  regarded        as  interested  in the cause and therefore  disqualified  to        decide."        Sub-paragraph (8) of the said paragraph says:        "  The contention that the Chief Minister is not  competent,        to give the hearing and consider the objections inasmuch  as        he is biassed and has also prejudged the issue, is not well-        founded.  On facts on 9-12-1958, there was no Road Transport        Department at all but a Road Transport Corporation, which is        a completely autonomous body, with which the Chief  Minister        has  no  concern.   Hence on the date of  the  enquiry,  the        Corporation  being  a  completely  autonomous  body  is   an        entirely independent body altogether and hence there can  be        no  question  of  bias to the  Chief  Minister  hearing  the        objectors.  The bearing given by the Chief Minister is  just        like a hearing of the court of law after remand        591        by  a Superior Court.......................  The  allegation        that  the Chief Minister had closed his mind and was  biased        is absolutely baseless.  He kept an open mind and considered        all the objections fully."        The counter-affidavit further gives in detail how the scheme        was initiated by Guru Pershad and how the various steps were        taken  in compliance with the provisions of the Act.  It  is        therefore  clear  that  the Government did  not  accept  the        allegations  made  by the appellants  in  their  affidavits.        Whatever  may be the policy of the Government in the  matter        of  nationalisation of the bus transport, it cannot be  said        that  the Chief Minister initiated the scheme  in  question.        The  learned Counsel then relied upon certain extracts  from        the reports published in the newspapers purporting to be the        speeches of the Chief Minister.  Exhibit IV is said to be  a        summary of the speech of the Chief Minister. made on October        14, 1957, and the relevant portion thereof reads :        " I do not have any prejudice against the Krishna  District.        The  bus  transport in Telangana was nationalised  25  years        ago.   The  Bus Transport nationalisation  was  extended  to        Krishna  District  since it is contiguous  to  Telangana  in        regard  to transport services.  It will be extended  to  the        other districts gradually.  It requires 12 crores of  rupees        to  introduce  nationalisation in all the districts  at  the        same time.  The Government is aware that Nationalisation  of        Bus Transport is not profitable.  But we should fall in line        with  other States and move with the times.  There  are  360        buses in Krishna District.  I cannot give an assurance  that        all these would be taken over.  It is regrettable that these        should be subjected to severe criticism when they are  being        done in public interest."        This  speech  only reflects the policy  of  the  Government.        Exhibit  V is said to be an extract from the report  of  the        Indian Express dated October 18, 1957.  The material part of        it runs thus:        "  Nationalisation of road transport services in the  Andhra

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      area was a settled fact and there was absolutely no question        of going back on it ............        592        This  speech also only states the policy of  the  Government        and has no reference to Krishna District or to the transport        services  in that district.  Exhibit VI is an  extract  from        the  report in the Hindu dated October 25, 1957, wherein  it        is  alleged  that  the Chief Minister’  made  the  following        statement:        " Mr. N. Sanjiva Reddy, Chief Minister, said here today that        the   nationalised  road  transport  in  Krishna  would   be        administered by a Corporation.        The  Chief Minister, who was addressing a  press  conference        said: " There is no question of postponement of the decision        to      nationalise      bus     transport      in      that        district.........................  The Chief  Minister  said        firmly that there was no public support to the contention of        the   private  bus  operators  that  there  should   be   no        nationalisation."        This speech has a direct reference to the nationalisation of        bus  transport  in  Krishna District and  indicates  a  firm        determination  on  the  part of the Chief  Minister  not  to        postpone it any further.  Exhibit IX is an extract from  the        report in the Indian Express dated December 13, 1957 and  it        reads:        "  The  Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister  Sanjeeva  Reddy  told        pressmen  here  to-day that the State  Government  would  go        ahead  with  the implementation of its  decision  to  extend        nationalisation  of bus transport to Krishna  district  from        April I next."        This  also indicates the Chief Minister’s  determination  to        implement the scheme of nationalisation of bus transport  in        Krishna  District  from a particular date.  Exhibit X  is  a        report  in the Mail under date April 1, 1958, purporting  to        be  a speech made by the Chief Minister in inaugurating  the        first  phase  of  the extension  of  the  nationalised  road        transport  services to Guntur and Krishna Districts  by  the        State Road Transport Corporation.  Relevant extracts of  the        speech read thus:        "  He (the Chief Minister) considered the implementation  of        the  scheme  simple  first,  but he  regretted  to  find  it        difficult  since bus operators filed writ petitions  in  the        High Court, raised a I huge noise’ and fought        593        till  the  very  end against the  scheme  and  finally  even        approached  the Congress President Mr. U. N. Dhebar to  save        them....................................................        Mr.   Sanjeeva  Reddi  affirmed  that  the  Government   was        determined to implement the scheme of nationalisation of bus        transport  services against all opposition and persons  like        him  trained  by the late T. Prakasam were never  afraid  of        opposition."        If it had been established that the Chief Minister made  the        speeches  extracted  in Exhibits VI, lX and X,  there  would        have been considerable force in the argument of the  learned        Counsel for the appellants; but no attempt was made to prove        that the Chief Minister did in fact make those speeches.  It        is  true  that the extracts from the newspapers  were  filed        before the Chief Minister and they were received subject  to        proof  ; but no person who heard the Chief  Minister  making        those  speeches  filed an affidavit before him.   The  Chief        Minister   did  not  admit  that  he  made  the   statements        attributed  to  him.   The  Chief  Minister  in  his   order        approving the scheme says:        "  As regards the paper cuttings, I may mention that in  the

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      course  of a long and varied, political career I  have  made        hundreds of statements on many an occasion and many of  them        may be purely personal opinions.  Moreover, it is not always        that the press people consult the persons on the accuracy of        the  statements made before they are published.   The  press        cuttings  filed before me are not communiques issued by  the        Government,  with the approval of the Government.  They  are        published  records of several statements said to  have  been        made  by  me on various occasions.  It is  common  knowledge        press  cuttings  here and there, torn out of  context,  will        give  a  completely twisted picture and version of  a  man’s        real  intentions.   It is not possible for me to  state  any        thing  definite about the veracity of these statements  said        to have been made by me at different points of time.  It  is        quite possible that I might have made many such, on many  an        occasion,  and it is also quite possible, that  some  points        spoken  here  and there may have been  published  with  Head        lines in the papers.        594        It is not possible nor desirable to treat paper cuttings  of        statements  said to have been made on several  occasions  as        legal evidence in a judicial enquiry."        Notwithstanding  the  fact that the Chief Minister  did  not        accept  the correctness of the statements attributed to  him        in the newspapers, no attempt was made by the appellants  to        file any affidavit in the High Court sworn to by persons who        had  attended the meetings addressed by the  Chief  Minister        and   heard  him  making  the  said  statements.    In   the        circumstances,  it  must  be  held  that  it  has  not  been        established  by the appellants that the Chief Minister  made        the  speeches indicating his closed mind on the  subject  of        nationalisation  of bus transport in Krishna  District.   If        these  newspaper  cuttings are excluded from  evidence,  the        factual basis for the appellants’ argument disappears.   We,        therefore, hold that the Chief Minister was not disqualified        to  hear  the objections against the  scheme  of  nationali-        sation.        A subsidiary argument is raised on the basis of r. 11 of the        Andhra  Pradesh Motor Vehicles Rules.  It is contended  that        the  Road Transport Authority made an order  rendering  that        the  permits  of the appellants ineffective  without  giving        them  due notice as required by that rule and therefore  the        said order was invalid.  Rule 11 of the said Rules reads:        "  In  giving effect to the approved  scheme,  the  Regional        Transport  Authority or Authorities concerned shall,  before        eliminating the existing services or cancelling any existing        permit or modifying the conditions of the existing permit so        as to -        (i)  render the permit ineffective beyond a specified  date;        (ii)  reduce  the number of vehicles authorised to  be  used        under a permit; or        (iii)     curtail the area or route covered by the permit in        so  far as such permit relates to the notified  route:         give due notice to the persons likely to be affected in the        manner prescribed in these rules."        595        This rule will have to be read along with s. 68-F, sub-s. 2,        which reads:        " For the purpose of giving effect to the approved scheme in        respect  of a notified area or notified route, the  Regional        Transport Authority may, by order,-        (a)  refuse to entertain any application for the renewal  of        any other permit:        (b)  cancel any existing permit;        (c)  modify the terms of any existing permit so as to-

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      (i)  render the permit ineffective beyond a specified date:        (ii) reduce  the  number of vehicles authorised to  be  used        under the permit;        (iii)     curtail the area or route covered by the permit in        so  far  as  such permit relates to  the  notified  area  or        notified route."        A  combined reading of s. 68F (2) and r. 11 makes  it  clear        that the order contemplated under the said subsection can be        made by the Regional ’Transport Authority only after  giving        due notice to the persons likely to be affected by the  said        order.   On  December  24,  1958,  the  Regional   Transport        Authority made the following order:        "   The  permits  of  the  following  buses   are   rendered        ineffective  beyond 24-12-1958, under section 68F  (2)(c)(1)        of Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 (as amended by Act 100 of  1956)        for  the purpose of giving effect to the approved scheme  of        Nationalisation   in  respect  of  the  following   notified        routes."        The  routes  on which the appellants  were  operating  their        buses  were  also included in the routes  mentioned  in  the        order.   On  December  24,  1958,  the  Regional   Transport        Authority issued an order to the operators directing them to        stop  plying  their buses on their  respective  routes  from        December  25,  1958,  and  that  order  was  served  on  the        appellants on the same day i.e., December 24, 1958.   Though        the  learned Advocate-General suggested that the  provisions        of r. 11 have been satisfied in the present case, we find it        impossible  to  accede  to his contention.   There  are  two        defects in the procedure. followed by the Regional        596        Transport  Authority  : (i) while the rule  enjoins  on  the        Authority  to  issue notice to the persons  affected  before        making the relevant order, the Authority made the order  and        communicated  the’  same to the persons affected;  and  (ii)        while the rule requires due notice i.e., reasonable notice.,        to  be given to the persons affected to enable them to  make        representations against the order proposed to be passed, the        Regional  Transport  Authority  gave them  only  a  day  for        complying with that order, which in the circumstances  could        not be considered to be due notice within the meaning of the        rule.   We have, therefore, no hesitation to hold  that  the        Regional  Transport Authority did not strictly  comply  with        the provisions of the rule.  But, in view of the supervening        circumstances, the High Court, while noticing this defect in        the procedure followed by the Regional Transport  Authority,        refused  to exercise its jurisdiction under Art. 226 of  the        Constitution.   Pursuant  to  the  order  of  the   Regional        Transport.  Authority the appellants withdrew their vehicles        from  the  concerned  routes and the vehicles  of  the  Road        Transport Corporation have been plying on those routes.  The        judgment   of  this  Court  conclusively  decided  all   the        questions  raised in favour of the respondents, and  if  the        order of the Regional Transport Authority was set aside  and        the appellants were given another opportunity to make  their        representations to that Authority, it would be, as the  High        Court says, only an empty formality.  As their vehicles have        already  been withdrawn from the routes and replaced by  the        vehicles  of the Corporation, the effect of any  such  order        would  not  only be of any help to the appellant  but  would        introduce unnecessary complication and avoidable  confusion.        In  the  circumstances,  it  appears  to  us  that  as   the        appellants have failed all along the line, to interfere on a        technical  point of no practical utility is "to strain at  a        gnat  after swallowing a camel ". We cannot, therefore,  say        that the High Court did not rightly exercise its  discretion

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      in this matter.  The appeals fail and, in the circumstances,        are dismissed without costs.                                            Appeals dismissed.        597