09 January 1974
Supreme Court
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PURXOMOMA RAMANATA QUENIN Vs MAKAN KALYAN TANDEL & ORS.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 844 of 1973


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PETITIONER: PURXOMOMA RAMANATA QUENIN

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: MAKAN KALYAN TANDEL & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT09/01/1974

BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ KRISHNAIYER, V.R. SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH

CITATION:  1974 AIR  651            1974 SCR  (3)  64  1974 SCC  (2) 169  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1979 SC1628  (26)

ACT: Constitution   of   India,  Art.  14--Contracts   with   the Government--Lease  of  distillery  owned  by  the  State  to members  of public by tender--Government reserving right  to select  any tender or reject all tenders  without  assigning any reason--No violation of Art. 14. Words    and   phrases--"Auction"   and    "Invitation    to tender"--Distinction between--Legislative diploma No.  1761, Art. 9 para 2 framed by Portuguese Government.

HEADNOTE: The Union territory of Goa, Daman and Diu invited tenders on behalf  of  the president of India from the public  for  the lease  of the Daman distillery for a period of three  Years. Clause 7 of the terms and conditions of the tender  appended to  the  notice  provided  that  the  highest  tender  shall ordinarily be accepted but the Government reserved the right to select any tender or reject all tenders Without assigning any reason therefor.  The appellant tendered Rs.  3,25,000/- while  respondent No. 1 offered Rs. 3,51,545/- The lease  of the  distillery was granted to appellant for Rs.  3,52,545/- Rs.  1000/- more than the amount mentioned in the tender  of respondent No. 1, On challenge to the legality of the  grant of  lease  by Respondent No. 1 though a writ  petition,  the Judicial  Commissioner of Goa set aside the lease in  favour of appellant No. 1 and directed the Government to deal  with the  tender of respondent No. 1 according to law.  The  main reason which weighed with the learned Judicial  Commissioner was  the submission made on behalf of The State that it  was prepared,  without  accepting the correctness  of  the  con- tentions of Respondent No. 1, to set aside the lease, if the Court so desired.  The Judicial Commissioner also held  that clause  of the notice was ultravires, that giving  lease  to the  appellant by accepting more money than the highest  bid by  a  private deal was contrary to law  and  not  assigning reasons  for the rejection of the tender of respondent  No.1 was illegal. [68D] Allowing the appeal by special leave, HELD:(1) The Judicial Commissioner should not have,  without

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giving  some  cogent  reason, set aside  the  lease  of  the distillery  in  favour of the appellant.   The  main  reason which  weighed  with the learned  Judicial  Commissioner  in setting  aside the lease in favour of the appellant was  the submission made on behalf of the State that it was prepared. without accepting the correctness of the contentions of res- pondent  No.  1,  to set aside the lease  if  the  Court  so desired.  This circumstance was hardly sufficient to warrant the  setting aside of the lease in favour of the  appellant. The  person who was primarily affected by the setting  aside of  the lease was the appellant to whom the lease  had  been granted.    In  the  absence  of  any  concurrence  of   the appellant, the fact that the Government was prepared, if the Court  so  desired,  to set aside the  lease,  could  hardly provide  valid  basis for the setting aside  of  the  lease. [68D] (11)Regarding  the question of the validity of clause 7  and the  grant of lease in favour of the appellant  even  though the  tender of respondent No. 1 was for the highest  amount, the  matter is not resintegra and is more or less  concluded by the pronouncements of this court.  The view taken by this Court  is that a condition like that contained in  clause  7 produced  above  is  not  violative of  Article  14  of  the Constitution and that in matters relating to contracts  with the Government the latter is not bound to accept the  tender of   the  person  who  offers  the  highest   amount.    The circumstance that those cases were decided in the context of certain  statutory  provisions would not  detract  from  the binding effect of the general principles enunciated in those cases. [68F ; 71H] 65 C.K.  Achuthan  v.  The State of Kerala  and  others  [1959] Suppl.   1  S.C.R. 787, Trilochan Mishra etc.  v.  State  of Orissa and Ors. [1971]3 S.C.C. 153,State of Orissa and  Ors. v.   Harinarayan  Jaiswal and others, [1972]  2  S.C.C.  36, Cooverjee B. Bharucha’s case [1954] S.C.R. 873 and Union  of India  and Ors. v. M/s Bhimsen Walaiti Ram, [1970] 2  S.C.R. 594, relied on. Century  Spinning  & Mfg.  Co. and anr.  v.  The  Ulhasnagar Municipal  Council  & Anr. [1970] 3  S.C.R.  854,  Rashbihar Panda  etc. v. State of Orissa. [1969] 3 S.C.R. 374,  Dwarka Prasad Laxmi Narain v. The State of Uttar Pradesh & Two Ors. [1954]  S.C.R. 803, and Guruswamy v. State of Mysore  A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 592, distinguished. No allegations were made in the writ petition by  respondent no.  1 that the act of the authorities in the grant of lease of the distillery to the appellant was mala fide Nor has the above   act   been  shown  to  be  vitiated  by   any   such arbitrariness  as,  should  call for  interference  by  this Court. [73E] (III)It  does  not  appear  that  tenders  were  invited  in connection with the lease of the distillery in pursuance  of the provisions of Art. 9 of the Legislative Diploma No. 1761 framed by the Portuguese Government.  According to para 2 of Art.  9  the lease can be put to auction in  the  stipulated conditions  when  it is found not convenient  to  renew  the previous  one.   The  aforesaid  paragraph,  it  would  thus appear,  relates  to auction-and not to  calling  of  sealed tenders.   An  auction  is a manner of  selling  or  letting property  by  bids,  and usually to the  highest  bidder  by public  competition.   An  invitation to tender  is  a  mere attempt to ascertain whether an offer can be obtained within such  mar-gin as the building owner or employer is;  willing to  adopt, or, in other words, is an offer to negotiate,  an offer to receive offers, an officer to chaffer.  There is  a

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difference  between auction and invitation for tenders.   As there was no auction but only invitation for tenders in  the present case, it cannot be said that the lease was  governed by article 9 of the Legislative Diploma. [72B-E] Halsbury’s  Laws of England, third Edition, Vol. 2, pp.  69, 422, referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos.  844  and 845 (N) of 1973. Appeals  by special leave from the judgment and order  dated the   31st  March,  1973  of  the  Court  of  the   Judicial Commissioner  Goa, Daman and Diu at Panaji in Special  Civil Application Writ Petitions Nos. 8 and 9 of 1973. P.H.  Parekh, P. G. Navelkar and Sunanda Bhandare,  for  the appellant. B.   R. L. Iyengar and P. C. Bhartari, for Respondent No. 1. L.   N. Sinha, Solicitor General of India and M. N.  Shroff, for the Respondent Nos. 2-4. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by KHANNA,  J-This judgment would dispose of civil appeals  No, 844  and 845 of 1973 which have been filed by special  leave against  the judgment of learned Judicial Commissioner  Goa, Daman  and  Diu  whereby  he cancelled  the  leases  of  the distilleries  granted  in  favour  of’  the  appellant   and directed   the  Government  to  deal  with  the  tender   of respondent  No.  1  according to law in  the  light  of  the observations  made  by the Judicial  Commissioner.   As  the question  involved in the two appeals is identical,  we  may set  out  the  facts giving rise to civil  appeal  No.  844, Learned counsel for the parties are agreed that the decision in that civil appeal would also govern the other appeal. 66 There  is  a distillery installation owned by the  State  at Daman.   The  Government  has  been  leasing  out  the  said distillery for specified period to members of the public for manufacture of country liquor.  At the expiry of each lease, the Government used to invite fresh tenders from the  public or the next lease and granted lease of the distillery to the person  whose  tender was accepted.  For a number  of  years before  1973 the appellant’s tender in respect of the  above distillery  was  accepted by the Government  as  the  amount offered by him was the highest. The last lease in favour  of the  appellant expired on January 31, 1973. Before  that  by notice  dated September 25, 1972 the Finance  Secretary  for the Union Territory of Goa, Daman and Diu invited tenders on behalf  of  the President of India from the public  for  the lease  of  the said distillery for a period of  three  years commencing  from  February 1, 1973 for  the  manufacture  of country liquor. The terms and conditions of tender as framed by the Government were appended to the said notice. Clause 7 of those terms and conditions was as under                "The  highest  tender  shall  ordinarily   be               accepted but the Government reserves the right               to select any tender or reject all  tenders               without assigning any reason therefor. Pursuant  to the notice the appellant and respondent  No.  1 submitted closed tenders to the Government in the prescribed form. The tenders   were opened on December 20, 1972 in  the office of the Commissioner of Excise in the presense of  the tenderers. It was found that the tender of respondent No.  1 for an amount of Rs. 3,51,345 was the highest, while that of the appellant for Rs. 3,25,000 was second. There   was   a

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third  tenderer also, but his tender was the lowest  and  we are no longer concerned with him. As respondent No. 1, whose tender  was  for  the highest amount, did  not  receive  any communication regarding  the  acceptance of his  tender,  he wrote a letter on January 16, 1973 to the Finance  Secretary calling  upon him to accept the tender of respondent  No.  1 within  24  hours  and  to  take  necessary  steps  for  the execution of the lease. On January- 18, 1973 the Advocate of respondent  No.  1 sent notice to the Finance  Secretary  to accept  the  tender ,of respondent No. 1. Respondent  No.  1 then  learnt that the distillery in question had been  given on lease to the appellant for Rs. 3,52,345, i.e., Rs.  1,000 more  than the amount mentioned in the tender of  respondent No. 1. Respondent No. 1 thereupon filed petition under articles 226 and  227 praying for the issuance of a writ to quash and set aside  the grant of lease of the distillery in  question  in favour of the appellant and for directing the Government  to grant  the lease of the distillery  in favour of  respondent No. 1. According to respondent No. 1, it was incumbent  upon the  Government  to give reasons for the  rejection  of  his tender.  It was further stated that in case  the  Government relied upon clause 7 of the terms and conditions in  support of its action,   the said clause was void for violation  of article  14 of the Constitution inasmuch as it  enabled  the Government  to reject the highest tender  without  assigning any reason therefor. 67 The petition was resisted by the appellant as well as by the State  Government.   It  was stated in the  reply  filed  on behalf  of  the  State Government  that  the  invitation  of tenders  did  not give rise to any rights other  than  those stipulated  in  the  terms and  conditions  upon  which  the tenders had been invited.  As those rights were purely of  a contractual nature, no relief could be granted by the  court under its writ jurisdiction for alleged breach of  contract. According  further to the affidavit, the acceptance  of  the tender  was solely within the discretion of the  Government, uncontrolled  by any statutory obligation or limitation  and the  rejection of the tender of respondent No. 1 created  no statutory  rights  in  him.   Clause  7  of  the  terms  and conditions  was  stated  to be valid and  not  violative  of article  14.  The tender of respondent No. 1 was  stated  to have  been  rejected after the appellant had  been  informed that  his  tender could be accepted provided he  raised  his offer so as to pay an amount higher than that offered by the person  with the highest tender.  The appellant  accordingly raised  his  and  thereupon his tender  was  accepted.   The grounds for the rejection of the tender of respondent No.  1 were  stated  to  have been recorded in  the  Me.   It  was, according to the affidavit, for the Government to choose the person  to  whom  it would grant the  lease  and  the  party aggrieved could not claim the protection of article 14. The  learned  Judicial  Commissioner in the  course  of  his judgment observed that the act of the Government in giving a lease  of the distillery to the appellant for Rs.  3,52,345, i.e., Rs. 1,000 more than the highest bid, by a private deal was not countenanced by law.  The Judicial Commissioner then referred to the submission which was made during the  course of arguments on behalf of the Government that the Government was  prepared  to annul the lease granted in favour  of  the appellant  if  the court were to so  direct.   The  Judicial Commissioner thereupon directed that the lease in favour  of the  appellant be set aside.  Dealing with the  validity  of clause 7 reproduced above the learned Judicial  Commissioner

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observed that, to the extent it gave power to the Government to  reject the highest tender without assigning any  reason, it was ultra vires and should be struck down. In the opinion of the Judicial Commissioner, it was open to the  Government to  assign  reasons  for  the rejection  of  the  tender  of respondent No. 1. Opportunity was thereafter to be given  to respondent  No. 1 to show that the reasons assigned  by  the Government were bad.  The lease of the distillery granted in favour  of the appellant was accordingly set aside  and  the Government   was  directed  to  deal  with  the  tender   of respondent  No.  1  according to law in  the  light  of  the observations made by the learned Judicial Commissioner. it  may  be stated that after the judgment of  the  Judicial Commissioner,  letter dated April 10, 1973 was addressed  on behalf  of the Government stating that in pursuance  of  the decision  of  the Judicial Commissioner the  Government  had decided that the existing contract with the appellant be set aside  and the lease of the distillery be granted in  favour of respondent No. 1. 68 It has been argued by Mr. Parekh on behalf of the  appellant that the Judicial Commissioner was not justified in  setting aside  the lease in favour of the appellant  without  giving any  reason.   Clause 7 reproduced above  according  to  the learned counsel, is valid and does not contravene article 14 of  the  Constitution.   Respondent No.  1,  it  is  further stated, cannot be allowed to take the benefit of one part of clause  7 without at the same time being bound by the  other part of that clause.  Learned Solicitor General on behalf of the Union of India has contended that clause 7 is valid  and binding  upon the parties.  As against that, Mr. lyengar  on behalf of respondent No. 1 has controverted the  contentions advanced  on behalf of the appellant.  The judgment  of  the Judicial  Commissioner, it is stated, does not  suffer  from any  infirmity.   It  has also been argued  by  the  learned counsel  that  the  grant  of lease  of  the  distillery  in question  is  governed  by the provisions of  article  9  of Legislative  Diploma  No.  1761  framed  by  the   Portugese Government. There  is, in our opinion, force in the contention  advanced on  behalf of the appellant that the  Judicial  Commissioner should not have without giving some cogent reason set  aside the  lease  of the distillery in favour  of  the  appellant. Perusal  of  the judgment shows that the main  reason  which weighed  with the learned Judicial Commissioner  in  setting aside  the  lease  in  favour  of  the  appellant  was   the submission made on behalf of the State that it was  prepared without  accepting  the correctness of  the  contentions  of respondent  No.  1 to set aside the lease if  the  court  so desired.   This  circumstance, in our  opinion,  was  hardly sufficient  to  warrant the setting aside of  the  lease  in favour  of  the  appellant.  The person  who  was  primarily affected by the setting aside of the lease was the appellant to  whom the lease had been granted.  In the absence of  any concurrence  of the appellant, the fact that the  Government was prepared if the court so desired, to set aside the lease could  hardly provide valid basis for the setting  aside  of the lease. So  far as the question is concerned about the  validity  of clause  7 and the grant of lease in favour of the  appellant even  though  the  tender of respondent No. 1  was  for  the highest  amount, we find that the matter is not res  integra and is more or less concluded by the pronouncements of  this Court.   In  C.  K.  Achuthan  v.  The  State  of  Kerala  & Ors.(1)the  facts  were as under.  The  petitioner  and  the

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third   respondent,  Co-operative  Milk   Supplies   Society Cannanore  submitted tenders for the supply of milk  to  the Government  Hospital at Cannanore for the year 1948-49.  The Superintendent who scrutinised the tenders, accepted that of the petitioner and communicated the reasons for the decision to the Director of Public Health.  The contract in favour of the  petitioner was subsequently cancelled in  pursuance  of the policy of the Government that in the matter of supply to Government   medical  institutions  the  Co-operative   Milk Supplies  Union  was to be given contract on  the  basis  of prices  fixed  by the revenue  Department.   The  petitioner challenged the decision of the Government in petition  under article 32 (1)  [1959] Suppl.  1 S.C.R. 787. 69 of  the Constitution on the ground, inter alia,  that  there had  been  discrimination against him, vis-a-vis  the  third respondent and, as such, there was contravention of  article 14,  19(1)(g)  and 31 of the  Constitution.   Rejecting  the contention  the  Constitution Bench of this  Court  speaking through Hidayatullah J. (as he then was) observed:               "The gist of the present matter is the breach,               if  any,  of the contract said  to  have  been               given   to  the  petitioner  which  has   been               cancelled either for good or for bad  reasons.               There  is  no discrimination,  because  it  is               perfectly  open to the Government, even as  it               is  to a private party, to choose a person  to               their  liking, to fulfil contracts which  they               wish  to  be performed.  When  one  person  is               chosen  rather  than  another,  the  aggrieved               party cannot claim the protection of Art.  14,               because  the choice of the person to fulfil  a               particular  contract  must  be  left  to   the               Government.   Similarly, a contract  which  is               held  from  Government stand on  no  different               footing  from a contract held from  a  private               party.   The breach of the contract,  if  any,               may  entitle the person aggrieved to  sue  for               damages or in appropriate cases, even specific               performance but he cannot complain that  there               has  been  a  deprivation  of  the  right   to               practice  any  profession or to carry  on  any               occupation,  trade  or business,  such  as  is                             contemplated  by  Art. 19(1)(g).  Nor  has  it               been shown how Art. 31 of the Constitution may               be  invoked  to  prevent  cancellation  of   a               contract  in exercise of powers  conferred  by               one of the terms of the contract itself." In Trilochan Mishra, etc. v. State of Orissa & Ors.(1)  this court dealt with the validity of section 3(2)(a) and section 8  (1)  of the Orissa Kendu Leaves (Control of  Trade)  Act, 1961  as  amended by the ’Orissa Kendu  Leaves  (Control  of Trade)  Amendment Act, 1969 as well as the validity  of  the rules  framed under that Act.  The petitioner in  that  case also  sought  a declaration that the revised policy  in  the matter   of  the  sale  of  Kendu  leaves   was   arbitrary, discriminatory and mala fide.  One of the grievances of  the petitioner  in that case was that the bid of  person  making the  highest  tenders  were  not  accepted.   Repelling  the contention  advanced on behalf of the petitioner, Mitter  J. who gave the judgment of the Court on behalf of the  Consti- tution Bench observed               "With  regard  to the girevance that  in  some

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             cases  the bids of persons making the  highest               tenders were not accepted, the facts are  that               persons who had made lower bids were asked  to               raise their bids to the highest offered before               the  same  were accepted.  Thus there  was  no               loss  to  Government and  merely  because  the               Government preferred one tender to another  no               complaint  can  be  entertained.    Government               certainly has a right to enter into a contract               with  a person well known to it and  specialty               one who has faithfully performed his contracts               in the past in preference to an undesirable or               unsuitable               (1)   [1971] 3 S.C.R. 153.               70               or  untried person.  Moreover,  Government  is               not bound to accept the highest tender but may               accept a lower one in case it thinks that  the               person  offering  the lower tender  is  on  an               overall  consideration to be preferred to  the               higher tenderer." In State of Orissa & Ors. v. Harinarayan  Jaiswal &  Ors.(1) the respondents were the highest bidders at an auction  held by  the Orissa Government through the  Excise  Commissioner, for the exclusive privilege of selling by retail the country liquor in some shops.  The Government of Orissa had reserved the right either to accept or reject the highest bid and had actually  rejected the bids of the respondents and later  on the  privilege was sold by negotiation to some others.   One of  the contentions taken on behalf of the writ  petitioners in  that case was that the power retained by the  Government "to accept or to reject any bid without assigning any reason therefor" was an arbitrary power and therefore, violative of articles 14 and 19(1)(g).  Hegde J. speaking for this  Court rejected that contention in the following words :               "One of the contentions taken on behalf of the               writ  petitioners was that the power  retained                             by  the Government ’to accept or to re ject  any               bid without assigning any reason therefor’  in               clause (6) of the order made by the Government               on January 6, 1971, in exercise of its  powers               under   section  29(2)  of  the  Act  was   an               arbitrary power and therefore it is  violative               of articles 14 and 19(1)(g).  This  contention               has  been  upheld by the High Court.   It  was               urged  on behalf of the writ petitioners  that               they  have  a fundamental right  to  carry  on               trade  or  business in country  liquor.   That               right can be regulated only by imposing  reas-               onable  restrictions  in the interest  of  the               general public.  It was further urged that the               power retained by the Government to accept  or               to  reject the highest bid  without  assigning               any  reason is an unguided power and hence  it               is violative- of article 14. These contentions               were accepted by the High Court.  To us,  none               of   these  contentions  appear  to  be   well               founded.   As seen earlier section 22  of  the               Act  confers power on the Government to  grant               to any person on such conditions and for  such               period  as  it  may think  fit  the  exclusive               privilege  of  selling in retail  any  country               liquor.  Section 29 empowers the Government to               accept  payment of a sum in consideration  for

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             the  grant  of any exclusive  privilege  under               section  22  either by calling tenders  or  by               auction  or otherwise as it may by general  or               special order direct.  The powers conferred on               the State Government by section 22 and section               29 are absolute powers.  As seen earlier,  the               validity  of  those provisions  has  not  been               challenged before us.  Under section 29(2) the               Government had power to dispose of any of  the               exclusive  privileges mentioned in section  22               either  by auction or otherwise as it  may  by               general  or special order direct.  That  being               the amplitude of the power of the  Government,               we fail to see how the Government can be said               (1)   [1972] 2 S.C.C. 36.               71               to  have conferred on itself  arbitrary  power               under clause (6) of its order made on  January               6, 1971, when it provided that :               "No  sale shall be deemed to be  final  unless               confirmed by the State Government who shall be               at liberty to accept or reject any bid without               assigning any reason therefor." Even  apart from the provisions of sections 22 and 29,  this Court  took  the  view  that  the  power  retained  by   the Government under clause (6)   reproduced   above   was   not unconstitutional.  It was observe in this    context               "Even  apart from the power conferred  on  the               Government under sections 22 and 29 we fail to               see  how the power retained by the  Government                             under clause (6) of its order, dated J anuary 6,               1971,  can be considered as  unconstitutional.               As   held  by  this  Court  in  Cooverjee   B.               Bharucha’s  case(1)  one.  of  the   important               purposes  of  selling the exclusive  right  to               sell  liquor  in wholesale or  retail  is  to.               raise   revenue.   Excise  revenue  forms   an               important part of every State’s revenue.   The               Government is the guardian of the finances  of               the  State.   It is expected  to  protect  the               financial interest of the State.  Hence  quite               naturally,  the legislature has empowered  the               Government to see that there is no leakage  in               its  revenue.   It is for  the  Government  to               decide whether the price offered in an auction               sale   is   adequate.   While   accepting   or               rejecting  a bid, it is merely  performing  an               executive  function.  The correctness  of  its               conclusion is not open to judicial review.  We               fail  to see how the plea of contravention  of               article  19(1)(g) or article 14 can  arise  in               these  cases.  The government’s power to  sell               the exclusive privilege set out in section  22               was not denied.  It was also not disputed that               those  privileges  could  be  sold  by  public               auction.  Public auctions are held to get  the               best  possible price.  Once these aspects  are               recognised,  there appears to be no basis  for               contending that the owner of the privileges in               question  who had offered to sell them  cannot               decline to accept the highest bid if he thinks               that  the price offered is inadequate.   There               is  no  concluded  contract till  the  bid  is               accepted.    Before  there  was  a   concluded

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             contract,  it  was  open  to  the  bidders  to               withdraw  their  bids-see Union of  India  and               Ors.  v.  M/s.   Bhimsen  Walaiti  Ram.(2)  By               merely  giving  bids,  the  bidders  had   not               acquired any vested rights.  The fact that the               Government was the seller does not change  the               legal  position  once its exclusive  right  to               deal  with those privileges is  conceded.   If               the Government is the exclusive owner of those               privileges,  reliance on article  19(1)(g)  or               article 14 becomes irrelevant." ,It would appear from the above that the view taken by  this Court  is that a condition like that contained in  clause  7 reproduced  above  is  not violative of article  14  of  the Constitution and that in matters relating to contracts  with the Government, the latter is not bound (1) (1954) S.C.R. 873. (2) [1970] 2 S.C.R. 594. 72 to  accept the tender of the person who offers  the  highest amount.   Mr.  lyengar has tried to  distinguish  the  above mentioned cases on the ground that they were decided in  the context of certain statutory provisions.  This circumstance, in our opinion, would not detract from the binding effect of the general principle enunciated in those cases. We may now deal with the contention of Mr. lyengar that  the lease of distilleries is governed by para 2 of article 9  of Legislative  Diploma No. 1761.  In this connection  we  find that the judgment of the learned Judicial Commissioner  does not  show  that any such ground was urged before  him.   Mr. Parekh  on  behalf of the appellant submits  that  the  said Legislative  Diploma was no longer in force at the time  the distillery  was, leased in favour of the appellant.  It  is, in our opinion, not necessary to go into this aspect because it  does not appear that tenders were invited in  connection with  the  lease  of  the distillery  in  pursuance  of  the provisions   of  article  9  of  the  Legislative   Diploma. According  to  para 2 of article 9 upon which  reliance  has been placed by Mr. Iyengar, the lease can be put to  auction in the stipulated conditions when it is found not convenient to  renew  the previous one.  The  aforesaid  paragraph,  it would thus appear, relates to auction and not to calling  of sealed tenders.  An auction, as stated in Halsbury’s Laws of England,  Third  Edition, Vol. 2, page 69, is  a  manner  of selling  or  letting property by bids, and  usually  to  the highest  bidder  by public competition.   An  invitation  to tender  is a mere attempt to ascertain whether an offer  can be  obtained  within such margin as the  building  owner  or employer  is  willing to adopt, or, in other  words,  is  an offer to negotiate, an offer to receive offers, an offer  to chaffer (see Halsbury’s Laws of England, Third Edition, page 422).  There is, in our opinion, difference between  auction and  invitation  for tenders.  As there was no  auction  but only  invitation for tenders in the present case, it  cannot be  said  that the lease of the distillery was  governed  by article 9 of the Legislative Diploma. It has been argued by Mr. lyengar that there must have  been some negotiation between the Government and the appellant as a result of which the appellant raised his offer to that  it might exceed that of respondent No. 1. This may have been so but  it  was  apparently  with a view  to  ensure  that  the pecuniary  interest  of the Government did not suffer  as  a result  of the rejection of the tender of respondent No.  1. The  appellant was consequently made to pay Rs,  1,000  more than what had been offered by respondent No. 1.

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Mr.  lyengar has referred to some of the decisions  of  this Court, but none of them, in our opinion, is of any  material assistance  to  respondent  No. 1.  In  Century  Spinning  & Manufacturing  Company  Ltd.  &  Anr.  v.   The   Ulhasnagar Municipal Council & Anr.(1) this Court observed that a pubic body  is  not  exempt from the liability to  carry  out  its obligations arising out of representation made by it when  a citizen  who  relies  upon that  representation  alters  his position  to his prejudice.  No such question arises in  the present  case because it is not shown that respondent No.  1 has  altered his position to his prejudice by  relying  upon any representation made by the authorities. (1)  [1970] 3 S.C.R. 854. 73 In  Rashbihar  Panda etc. v. State of Orissa(1)  this  Court dealt  with  a Government scheme for sale  and  disposal  of Kendu  leaves.  It was found that the right to make  tenders for  the  purchase of Kendu leaves was restricted  to  those persons  who  had obtained contracts in the  previous  year. The  scheme  was  held to be violative of  articles  14  and 19(1)(g) because it gave rise to monopoly in Kendu leaves to certain  traders.   The dictum laid down in the  above  case cannot  be  of  much assistance because there  was  no  such restriction  in the present ,case with regard to the  making of the tenders. Dwarka  Prasad Laxmi Narain v. The State of Uttar Pradesh  & Two  Ors.(2) related to the validity of clause 4(3)  of  the Uttar  Pradesh Coal Control Order, 1953 according  to  which the  licensing  authority was given  absolute  power-in  the matter of grant revocation, cancellation or modification  of the  licences  issued under that Order.   No  such  question arises in the present case. The  last case referred to on behalf of respondent No. 1  is Guruswamy  v.  State  of Mysore.(3) In that  case  a  liquor contract  was  knocked  down in an  auction  by  the  Deputy Commissioner  in favour of A who was the highest bidder.   B who  was  present at the auction but did not  bid,  saw  the Excise Commissioner and offered Rs. 5000/- in excess of  A’s bid.  B’s offer was accepted and A’s bid was cancelled.   It was  held that the cancellation of A’s bid though  irregular was proper as A had obtained no right to the licence by  the mere  fact  that the contract had been knocked down  in  his favour.   The  action of the Deputy Commissioner  in  giving contract  to  B was held to be wrong as it was found  to  be contrary to the rules framed under the Mysore Act.  No  such contravention  of  a statutory rule has been  shown  in  the present  case  because  of the lease of  the  distillery  in question to the appellant. It  may be stated that no allegations were made in the  writ petition by respondent No. 1 that the act of the authorities in  the grant of lease of the distillery in question to  the appellant  was  mala  fide.  There  arises  consequently  no occasion for us to go into that aspect.  Nor   has the above act  been shown to be vitiated by an such  arbitrariness  as should  call  for interferences by the  Court.   Indeed,  as mentioned earlier, the matter is concluded by the  decisions of this Court. As  a result of the above, we accept the appeals, set  aside the  judgment  of  the  learned  Judicial  Commissioner  and dismiss   the  petitions    under  article  226   filed   by respondent No. 1. Looking to all the circumstances, we leave the parties to bear their own costs throughout. S.B.W. Appeals allowed. (1)  [1969] 3 S.C.R. 374.

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(2)  [1954] S.C.R. 803. (3)  A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 592. 74