01 December 1998
Supreme Court
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M/S. UPADHYAY & CO. Vs STATE OF U.P. & OTHERS.


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PETITIONER: M/S. UPADHYAY & CO.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF U.P. & OTHERS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       01/12/1998

BENCH: S.SAGHIR AHMAD & K.T. THOMAS.,

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT: ORDER ----- Shashtri  Bridge  at  Allahabad  runs  across  river Ganga.   Motor vehicles playing on National Highway No.2 and passing through the said bridge have to  pay  toll  charges. The bridge is named after Lal Bhadur Shashtri, former Primer Minister of India who is well remembered for his honesty and simplicity.   River  Ganga is adored in India with reverence in the belief that her holy water cleanses the believers  of their sins.  Ironically, that bridge built across that river was  used  by  the  petitioner  as  a  means to amass wealth dishonestly.  Unfortunately, such  unwholesome  conduct  was facilitated  on  account  of  certain  orders  passed by the Allahabad High Court,  Petitioner,  who  flourished  in  the aforesaid wealth having been insulated with the court orders against  any outside interference for a long time, could not continue preening in such opulence as he was caught  in  the meanwhile.   He  is now being asked to return the ill-gotten wealth.   Strategy  of  subterfuge  played   by   him   even thereafter  did  not  work  for  long  and  he is now facing stringent measures for recovery of the booty. Initially petitioner was allowed  to  collect  the  toll  at specified  rates  for  a period of one year which expired on 23-3-1991.   For  a  succeeding  period   of   three   years petitioner  competed with other bidders in a public auction. When his bid was not accepted by the  authorities  he  filed Writ  Petition  No.  32974 of 1991 before the Allahabad High Court and got an interim order by which he was permitted  to continue  to collect toll charges from vehicles passing over the bridge. By a notification issued by  the  Government  of India  on  19.2.1992 the rates of toll were raised. The idea then dawned on the  petitioner  to  take  advantage  of  the enhanced  rates. He than filed another Writ Petition (WP No. 22439/92) praying for permitting him to collect toll at  the revised  rates.  A  single  judge  (Mr.  Justice A.P. Singh) before whom the said writ petition  came  up  for  admission passed an extraordinary order which reads thus:-         "Admit.         Issue Notice.         Learned standing counsel prays for  and  is  granted

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       one  month’s  time  to file counter affidavit, three         weeks thereafter are allowed to  the  petitioner  to         file rejoinder affidavit.   List thereafter.  In the         meantime the  petitioner  will  be  allowed  by  the         respondents   to  charge  toll  fees  on  the  rates         notified  by  the  Government   notification   dated         19.2.1992 Annexure  4  to  the  writ  petition.  The         respondent are, however, restrained  from  enhancing         the  bid  money  of the theka till further orders of         this Court." But the said order remained alive only for a period of  less than  2  years  because  this Court interfered with it by an order dated 16.3.1994 while disposing of  two  SLPs.    This Court then observed thus:         "It  need  be  recorded  that  in  the   matter   of         realisation  of public revenue, courts have been and         should remain reluctant to stay recovery  unless  an         exceptional  case  is  made out. No such exceptional         case is made out  here.  The  impugned  orders  are,         therefore, set aside leaving it open to the State of         take  such  effective  steps  as  are  necessary  to         recover public revenues as due. The High Court shall         now proceed with the main matter and dispose  it  of         in accordance with law." Undaunted  by  the  above order passed by this Court the petitioner filed a new writ petition in the  High  Court of Allahabad  and  a  Division Bench (Dubey and A.P.  Singh, JJ) passed an order in it on 23.3.1997 which too is  unusual and it needs extraction here.  The order reads:         "Learned  Standing  Counsel prays for and is granted         one month’s time to file counter Affidavit Rejoinder         Affidavit may be filed within another  three  weeks.         List  for  orders  thereafter  on  16th  May,  1994.         Status quo with respect to collection of  fees  over         Shashtri  Bridge situated at River Ganga on National         Highway No.2 at Allahabad.      The State of U.P. challenged the aforesaid order before this Court in S.L.P. (C) No. 9835/94. However, while the SLP was pending another Division Bench of the High Court vacated the aforesaid strange order dated 23.3.1994. When  the  said development was brought to the notice of this Court, SLP (C) 9835/94  was  disposed  of  by  an  order in which following observations were made by a  two-Judge  Bench  (B.P.  Jeevan Reddy and S.C. Sen, JJ) of this court:         "The  Hon’ble  Chief Justice of Allahabad High Court         is requested to list  the  said  writ  petition  and         other  connected  writ petitions, if any, before his         own court at an early date or assign the same to  an         appropriate  Bench for early disposal. The Court may         also decide the liability of the respondent for  the         period beyond the original auction-lease period.         It  is made clear that the Government is free either         to auction the right to collect the toll  fees  over         the  said  bridge  or  to make any other alternative         arrangement, as they may deem  fit.  It  is  equally         open  to  the  Government to take such steps as they         think appropriate to recover monies due to  it  from         the respondent.         We  are  constrained  to  pass  these  unusual   and         exceptional order because we felt acutely distressed         by  several  similar orders passed by the High Court         in matters relating to collection of  toll  fees  on         bridges in the State of Uttar Pradesh. Petitioner who was aware of the said  order  of  the High  Court  adopted  his  next strategy by reporting to the

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High Court that  he  was  not  pressing  writ  Petition  No. 32974/91.  A  Division  Bench  of  the High Court (Katju and Chauhan, JJ) then felt the need to  be  circumspect  at  the seemingly  innocuous submission made by the petitioner. When a  scrutiny  was  made,  learned  judges  came  across   the directions  contained  in  the  order  passed  by this Court extracted above. Hence the Division Bench of the High  Court passed the following order on 3.5.1996:         "It appears that rates of toll had been  revised  to         almost  double compared to the previous rate, but by         the interim order of this court  dated  24.6.92  the         Government  was  restrained  from  enhancing the bid         money.   IN  these  circumstances,  we  are  of  the         opinion   that  petitioner  has  to  refund  to  the         Government the extra illegal  amount  which  he  has         pocketed.   In  our  opinion,  the bid money for the         period for which the petitioner collected toll after         23.11.91 over Shastri Bridge should be  recalculated         by  the  Commissioner, Allahabad Division, Allahabad         within one  month  from  today.    The  bid  of  the         petitioner  for  the  period after 23.11.91 shall be         enhanced propertionate to  the  enhancement  of  the         rates by  the  revision  in the rates.  The enhanced         amount of bid money shall be payable  with  interest         at  15%  by  the  petitioner  to the Government with         effect from the date of enhancement of the  rate  of         toll."      Pursuant to the above directions, the  commissioner  of Allahabad  Division  passed  proceedings  on  1.6.1996.  The relevant portion of which is this:         "Therefore I hereby order that M/s. Upadhyay &  Co.,         Village   Saroya,  Post  Karantadih,  Ballia,  shall         deposit the  amount  of  rupees  2,07,63,556/-  (TWO         CRORES SEVEN LAKHS SIXTY THREE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED         FIFTY SIX) in the Government Treasury within fifteen         days  of passing of this order, in compliance of the         above  said  order  of  Hon’ble   High   Court   and         information be conveyed." Petitioner thereafter filed a new  petition  in  the High   Court  of  Allahabad  (Writ  Petition  No.  19593/96) challenging  the  validity  of  the  order  passed  by   the Commissioner  of Allahabad Division. Learned Judges directed the petitioner to pay 50% of the  amount  mentioned  in  the Commissioner’s  order  forthwith and to furnish security for the balance amount. The said writ petition is still pending. In   the  meanwhile,  petitioner  challenged  the  order  of Allahabad High Court dated 3.5.1996  by  filing  SLP(c)  No. 12673 of  1996  in this court.  But for reasons better known to  the  petitioner  he  withdrew  the  SLP   on   9.7.1996. Thereafter,  he  filed  an application before High Court for clarification of the order dated 3.5.1996, but the  Division Bench did not find anything to be clarified about that order and hence dismissed the petition on 10.10.1997.        The present special leave petitions are filed against the two orders of the High Court, one dated 3.5.1996 and the other dated 10.9.1997.        We  made  a recapitulation of the events as above for the purpose of showing that the petitioner has absolutely no case in the present  SLPs.  He  cannot,  at  any  rate,  now challenge  the  order  of the High Court dated 3.5.1996 over again having withdrawn the SLP which he filed  in  challenge of  the  same  order.  it  is  not a permissible practice to challenge the same order over again  after  withdrawing  the Special  Leave  Petition without obtaining permission of the court for withdrawing it with liberty to  move  for  special

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leave again subsequently.         The  above principle has been incorporated as a rule in the realm of suits. Order 23 Rule 1 of the Code of  Civil Procedure  deals  with  withdrawal of suit or abandonment of part of the claim. Sub-rule (3) says that the court  may  in certain contingencies grant permission to withdraw from suit with  liberty  to  institute  a fresh suit in respect of the subject matter of such suit. Sub-rule (4) reads thus:   (4)   Where the plaintiff- (a)   abandons any  suit  or  part  of  claim  under       sub-rule (1), or         (b)   withdraw from  a  suit  or  part  of  a  claim         without the permission referred to in sub-rule (3).         he  shall  be liable for such costs as the court may         award and shall be precluded  from  instituting  any         fresh suit in respect of such subject matter or such         part of the claim. The aforesaid ban for filing a fresh suit is based on public policy.   This Court has made the said rule of public policy applicable  to  jurisdiction  under  Article  226   of   the Constitution (Sarguja Iransport Service vs.  State Transport Appellate Tribunal,  Gwalior,  1987 1 SCC 5).  The reasoning for adopting it in writ jurisdiction is that very  often  it happens,  when  the petitioner or his counsel finds that the court is not likely to pass  an  order  admitting  the  writ petition  after it is heard for some time, that a request is made by the petitioner or  his  counsel  to  permit  him  to withdraw  it without seeking permission to institute a fresh writ petition.  A court which  is  unwilling  to  admit  the petition  would not ordinarily grant liberty to file a fresh petition while it may just agree to permit withdrawal of the petition.  When once a writ petition filed in a  High  Court is  withdrawn  by  the  party concerned he is precluded from filing an appeal  against  the  order  passed  in  the  writ petition   because  he  cannot  be  considered  as  a  party aggrieved by the order passed by the High Court.  If so,  he cannot  file a fresh petition for the same cause once again. The following observations of E.S.  Venkataramiah, J.    (as the learned chief Justice then was) are to be quoted here:         "We  are  of  the view that the principle underlying         Rule 1 of Order 233 of the code should  be  extended         in  the  interests  of  administration of justice to         cases of withdrawal of writ petition  also,  not  on         the  ground  of  res  judicata  but on the ground of         public policy as explained above.    It  would  also         discourage    the   litigant   from   indulging   in         bench-hunting tactics.  In any  event  there  is  no         justifiable  reason  in  such  a  case  to  permit a         petitioner to invoke the extraordinary  jurisdiction         of the   High   Court   under   Art.    226  of  the         Constitution once again.  While the withdrawal of  a         writ petition filed in High Court without permission         to  file  a  fresh  writ  petition may not bar other         remedies like a suit or a petition under  Art.32  of         the  constitution  since  such  withdrawal  does not         amount to res judicata, the remedy under Art.226  of         the  Constitution  should  be  deemed  to  have been         abandoned by the petitioner in respect of the  cause         of  action  relied  on  in the writ petition when he         withdraws it without such permission.       Of course their Lordships added that the above rule is not applicable to writ petitions involving personal  liberty "since such a case stands on a different footing altogether. We have no doubt that the above rule of public  policy,  for the  very  same  reasoning,  should  apply  to special leave

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petitions filed under  Art.136  of  the  Constitution  also. Even  otherwise,  the  order passed by the Division Bench of the High Court on 3.5.1998 does not warrant interference  on merits  as  the  learned judges of the High Court have taken into account all the relevant facts and came to the  correct conclusion.        We also agree with the Division  Bench  of  the  High Court  that  the  order  dated 3.5.1996 does not require any clarification. In fact the attempt of the petitioner was  to get the order reviewed. Since there was no error apparent on the face of the record the petitioner termed his petition as one  for clarification. The Division Bench of the High Court has dismissed it rightly.        Accordingly we dismiss these Special Leave Petitions.