02 February 1967
Supreme Court
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THE STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ANR. Vs B. K. TAKKAMORE & ORS.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 2340 of 1966


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PETITIONER: THE STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ANR.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: B.   K. TAKKAMORE & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/02/1967

BENCH: BACHAWAT, R.S. BENCH: BACHAWAT, R.S. WANCHOO, K.N. RAMASWAMI, V.

CITATION:  1967 AIR 1353            1967 SCR  (2) 583  CITATOR INFO :  E          1969 SC 707  (49)  R          1976 SC 232  (10,18)  R          1987 SC 570  (14)  F          1989 SC1185  (23)

ACT: City of Nagpur Corporation Act, 1948 (C.P. & Berar Act 2  of 1950),    s.    408-Municipality--Supersession-Grounds    of interference  in writ application-Order if sustainable  when one of the two charges found not proved.

HEADNOTE: By  s. 408 of the City of Nagpur Corporation Act,  1948  the State  Government  may, after giving an opportunity  to  the Corporation  to  show cause, pass an order  superseding  the Corporation, if it is of opinion that the Corporation is not competent  or persistently makes default in the  performance of the duties imposed on it by or under the Act.  After  the requisite show cause notice the State Government passed  the impugned Order superseding the Nagpur Municipal Corporation. The  High  Court,  in a writ  petition,  quashed  the  Order holding that the State Government exercised its power’ under s.  408 on grounds which were not reasonably related to  its Legitimate  exercise  and that the finding  upon  which  the Order was passed was rationally impossible on the  materials before the State Government.  On appeal to this Court: HELD:The  Order of supersession was valid and could  not  be set aside. (i)Of  the two grounds on which the opinion of  the  State Government   was  based  the  first  ground  could  not   be sustained,   firstly   because  the   Corporation   had   no opportunity to show cause against the charge, and  secondly, because  no  reasonable person on the materials  before  the State  Government could possibly form the opinion  that  the charge  was proved.  Regarding the second ground there  were materials  before the State Government upon which  it  could find  that the Corporation was not competent to perform  the duties imposed upon it. [588H; 592D] In a writ application the court will not review the facts as an appellate body.  But the Order of supersession is  liable to be set aside, as in excess of the, statutory power  under

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s. 408, if no reasonable person on a proper consideration of the  materials  before the State Government  will  form  the opinion that the Corporation is not competent to perform  or persistently  defaults  in  the performance  of  the  duties imposed on it.  ’Me Order is also liable to be set aside  if it was passed in bid faith or due opportunity to show  cause was not given. [585H] (ii)The Order cannot be set aside for the reason that one of the grounds is found to be non-existent or irrelevant.   The Order,  read  with the show cause notice shows that  in  the opinion of the State Government the second ground by  itself was serious enough to warrant action under s.408. [595 A-B]  An administrative or quasi-judicial Order based on  several grounds,  all taken together, cannot be sustained if  it  be found   that  some  of  the  grounds  are  non-existent   or irrelevant  and there is nothing to show that the  authority would  have  passed  the Order on the  basis  of  the  other relevant and 584 existing  grounds.  But, an Order based on  several  grounds some of which are found to be non-existent or irrelevant can be  sustained if the Court is satisfied that  the  authority would  have passed the Order on the basis of other  relevant and existing grounds and the exclusion of the irrelevant  or non-existent  grounds could not have affected  the  ultimate ’opinion or decision. [594 E-G] Dwarka  Das  Bhatia v. State of Jammu  and  Kashmir,  [19651 S.C.R,  948.  Dhirajilal  Girdharilal  v.  Commissioner   of Income-tax,  A.I.R.  1956  S.C.  271,  State  of  Orissa  v. Bidyabhushan  Mahapatra,  [1963]  Supp.   I  S.CR.  648  and Naursinha  v.  State of Madhya Pradesh, A.I.R.  [1958]  M.P. 397. referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2340 of 1966. Appeal from the judgment and order dated October 7, 1966  of the Bombay High Court, Nagpur Bench in Special Civil  Appli- cation No. 940 of 1965. M.   C.  Setalvad,  N.  S.  Bindra and  R.  H.  Dhebar,  for appellant No. 1. A.   S. Bobde, and S. G. Kukdey, for respondent No. 1. M.   M. Kinkhede, G. L. Sanghi and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for respondents  Nos. 3-16, 19-31, 33, 34, 36-45, 47-53, 55  and 57. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Bachawat, J. This appeal arises out of a writ petition filed by  respondent No. 1 before the Nagpur Bench of  the  Bombay High Court, challenging the show-cause notice dated July 21, 1965 and the order dated September 29, 1965, superseding the municipal corporation of the city of Nagpur.  In July, 1962, the term of office of the present Councillors commenced.  On July 21, 1965, the Government of Maharashtra issued a notice to  respondent  No.  1, the Mayor of  the  Nagpur  Municipal Corporation,  asking him to show cause why  the  corporation should not be superseded.  On August 1, 1965, respondent No. I  filed his reply to the show-cause notice.   On  September 29,  1965,  the State Government passed the  impugned  order superseding  the  corporation under ss. 408 and 409  of  the City  of Nagpur Corporation Act 1948 (C.  P. & Berar Act  11 of  1950).  On September 30, 1965, respondent No. I filed  a writ  petition  challenging the show-cause  notice  and  the order  of  supersession.  The High Court  allowed  the  writ petition  and quashed the order of supersession.   The  High

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Court  held  that the State Government exercised  its  power under S. 408 on grounds which were not reasonably related to its legitimate exercise and the finding upon which the order was passed was rationally impossible on the materials before the State Government.  The State of Maharashtra now  appeals to  this Court on a certificate granted by the  High  Court. By an order of this Court, the Administrator of the City  of Nagpur   appointed  under  the  order  of  supersession   of September 29, 1965, has been joined as the second appellant. 585 Section 408 of the City of Nagpur Corporation Act 1948 is in ’these terms:-                "408. (1) If at any time upon representations               made  or  otherwise it appears  to  the  State               the Corporation is not competent to perform or               persistently makes default in the  performance               of  the duties imposed on it by or under  this               Act  or  any other law for the time  being  in               force,  or  exceeds or abuses its  powers  the               State  Government may’, after having given  an               opportunity to the Corp oration to show  cause               why  such an order should not be made,  or  if               it"  appears to the State Government that  the               case  is one of emergency, forthwith issue  an               order directing that all the Councillors shall               retire  from office as and from such  date  as               may  be appointed and declare the  Corporation               to   be  superseded.   Such  order  shall   be               published  in the Gazette and the reasons  for               making it shall be stated therein.               (2)   Notwithstanding  anything  contained  in               sections  17  and 20,  all  Councillors  shall               vacate  their office from the  date  mentioned               in- any order under sub-section (1).". The consequence of supersession of the corporation under  s. 408 is that all its members vacate their office,  all powers and  duties of the; corporation; the Standing Committee  and the  chief  executive  officer  may  be  exercised  by   the administrator of the city appointed by the State government, and  all  property vested in the corporation  vests  in  the administrator (s. 408). The conditions for the exercise of he power under s. 408 are clearly stated in the section.  It must appear to the  State government   that  the  corporation  is  not  competent   or persistently makes default in the performance of the  duties imposed  on it by or under the Act or any other law for  the time  being  in  force, or exceeds  or  abuses  its  powers. Except  in  cases of emerge icy, the State  government  must give to the corporation an opportunity to show cause why the order  under  the  section  should not be  made.   If  on  a consideration   of   the  explanation   submitted   by   the corporation, the State government considers that there is no ground  for  making the order, the Government may  drop  the proceeding.  Otherwise, it may issue an order declaring  the corporation  to  ’be superseded and directing that  all  the Councillors  shall  retire from office.  The order  must  be published in the Gazette and the reasons: For-making it must be stated therein.  There is no appeal to the court from the order under s. 408. in a writ application the court will not review  the  facts as an appellate body.  But the  order  is liable  to be set aside if no reasonable person on a  proper consideration  of the materials before the State  government could  form  the  opinion  that  the  corporation  "is   not competent  to perform, or persistently makes default in  the performance of the duties imposed on it by or under this Act

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or any other law for the 586 time  being  in  force, or exceeds or  abuses  its  powers". Likewise,  the  order is liable to be set aside  if  it  was passed  in bad faith or if in a case which was not  one,  of emergency,  due opportunity to show cause was not  given  to the corporation.  In all such cases, the order is in  excess of the statutory power under s. 408 and is invalid. On  the  question  whether  the order under  s.  408  is  an administrative  or  quasi-judicial act,  our  attention  was drawn  to the decisions in Municipal Committed,  Karali  and Another,  v.  The  State  of  Madhya  Pradesh(1)  and   Shri Radheshyam Khare and Anr. v. The State of Madhya Pradesh and Others.(2) These cases turned on the construction of ss. 53A and 57 of the C. P. & Berar Municipalities Act 1922 (Act  11 of  1922).   The  point whether the order under  s.  408  is quasi-judicial  or administrative act is not very  material, for it is common ground,that the present case was not one of emergency  and  the  State  government  was  bound  to  give opportunity  to the corporation to show cause why the  order should not be made. The order dated September 29, 1965 was in these terms:-                "Whereas it is reported to the Government  of               Maharashtra that the Municipal Corporation  of               the City of Nagpur (hereinafter referred to as               ’the Municipal Corporation’) constituted under               the City of Nagpur Municipal Corporation  Act,               1948 (C.P. & Berar Act 11       of       1950)               (hereinafter. referred to as ’the said Act’)               (a)   has,   since  the  present   Councillors               entered   upon  their  office,   planned   its               -expenditure   on  the  basis   of   uncertain               receipts as shown below, that is to say-  Year     Receipts in budget as           Actual of previous         passed by Corporation             year          Rs. in lacs                      Rs. in lacs. 1963-64        351                        173 1964-65        221                        190 1965-66        258             (200 to 215 lacs anticipated. and  without exercising the proper controls provided  by  or under  the  said Act has allowed its financial  position  to deteriorate rapidly and-seriously to such an extent that the free  cash balance of Rs. 5.81 lacs approximately  in  March 1962  was  reduced to Rs. 53,000 approximately on  the  12th July, 1965: and that the Corporation had no funds even to (1) A.I.R. 1958 M.P. 323. (2) [1959] S.C.R. 1440. 587               disburse  the  salaries of  its  officers  and               ’servants as is noticed from the Resolution of               the  Municipal Corporation No. 98,  dated  the               4th September, 1965; and               (b)   has   neglected   to  under   take   the               improvement  of water supply and to provide  a               sufficient supply of suitable water for public               and private purposes;               And  whereas, an opportunity was given to  the               Municipal Corporation to show cause why in the               aforesaid    circumstances   an    order    of               supersession under sub-section (1) of  section               408 of the said Act should not be made-,               And  whereas, after considering the  reply  of               the  Municipal Corporation and  subsequent  it               submissions  made  by  it  the  Government  of               Maharashtra   is  of  the  opinion  that   the

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             Municipal  Corporation  is  not  competent  to               perform  the duties imposed on it by or  under               the said Act;               Now’  therefore,  in exercise  of  the  powers               conferred  by sub-section (1) of  section  408               and subsection (1) of section 409 of the  said               Act,  and of all other powers enabling  it  in               this behalf, the Government of Maharashtra for               the reasons specified aforesaid, hereby-               (1)   directs that all the Councillors of  the               Municipal Corporation shall retire from office               as and from the 1st day of October, 1965;                (2) declares the Municipal Corporation to  be               superseded from that date; and               (3)   appoints  Shri D. H. Deshmukh to be  the               Administrator of the City of Nagpur From  the  order it appears that there were two  grounds  on which  the  State  government formed the  opinion  that  the corporation was not competent to perform the duties  imposed on  it  by or under the Nagpur  Municipal  Corporation  Act, 1948. Annexure 2 to the show-cause notice dated July 21, 1965  Set out  the  following  facts relatable  to  the  first  ground mentioned in paragraph 1(a) of the order:-               "II. (1) In March 1962, the free cash  balance               with the Corporation was Rs., 5. 81 lacs.   On               12-7-65,  the  opening  cash  balance  of  the               Corporation  ",as Rs. 53,821.   The  Statement               ’A’ appended hereto will reveal the financial.               position of the Corporation.  On the basis  of               average  daily receipts the  Corporation  will               have  an opening balance of Rs. 7 -74 lacs  on               1-8-65   as  against  that   their   immediate               liabilities  are  of the order of  Rs.  30  84               lacs.  ’It is               588                 thus clear that the  Corporation  is heading               for a grave. financial crisis and it will  not               be  in  a  position  even  to  pay  fully  the               salaries  and  wages of  their  permanent  and               temporary employees.  Under Chapter IV of  the               City   of   Nagpur   corporation   Act,    the               Corporation  is  required to pay  salaries  to               their officers and servants as provided for in               Sections  47, 49 and 50 of the said Act.   The               liability  arising  out  of  the  payment   of               salaries; and wages is the third charge on the               municipal fund the. previous two charges being               repayment   of  all  loans  payable   by   the               Corporation  under Chapter IX of that Act  and               the second being the payment for discharge  of               all liabilities imposed on the Corporation  in               respect   of   debts’  and   obligations   and               contracts of’ the Municipality, of Nagpur,  to               whom  the Corporation- is a successor.  It  is               assumed  that  such liabilities do  -not  any’               longer  exist.  Thus the payment  of  salaries               etc.,  is the ,second charge on the  municipal               fund, and it is very obvious from the  figures               in  Statement ‘A’ that the Corporation is  not               in a position to discharge that liability." The  opinion of the State, government so far as it is  based on  the  first ground cannot be supported.   The  show-cause notice  did  not  mention the charge  that  the  Councillors planned  the expenditure on the basis of uncertain  receipts

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or  that they did not exercise .proper controls provided  by or  under  the  Act.   No  opportunity  was  given  to   the corporation  to explain the charge.  Without giving such  an opportunity,  the  State government could not  lawfully  and that  the charge was proved.  The cash balances of the  cor- poration  vary from day to day.  No reasonable person  could possibly  come to the conclusion hat the financial  position of  the corporation had deteriorated from the fact that  the cash balances were Rs. 5,81,000 in March 1962 and Rs. 53,000 on July 12, 1965. The, statement that the corporation had no funds to disburse the salaries of its officers and  servants had no factual basis.  As a matter of fact, the  corporation paid  the  salaries.  The dearness allowance  was  not  paid because  the  bills were not  scrutinized.’  The  resolution dated September 4, 1965  referred to in the order was passed long  after  the  show-cause   notice  was  issued  and  the corporation  was  not given an, opportunity to  explain  it. The  resolution  did not say that the co’  oration  had  no’ funds  even  to disburse’ the salaries of its  officers  and servants.  The, corporation resolved to raise a loan of  Rs. 15  lacs from the State; Government, but, the; loan was  not raised.   The High Court also pointed out that many  of  the statements  in the. statement "A" referred to in  the  show- cause  notice were factually incorrect.  The opinion of  the State  government,  based  on the  first  ground  cannot  be sustained,   firstly   because  the  corporation   had   no, opportunity to show cause against the charge, and  secondly, because no reasonable Person on the materials 589 before the State government could possibly form the  opinion that the charge was proved:- The  second.  ground referred to in paragraph 1 (b)  of  the order  dated  September 29, 1965 is more  serious.   Section 57(1)(k)  of  the  City  of  Nagpur  Corporation  Act,  1948 provides that the corporation shall make adequate  provision by  any means or measures which it may lawfully use or  take for...........  "(k) the management and maintenance  of  all municipal  water-works and the construction and  maintenance of  new works and Means for providing sufficient  supply  of suitable water for public and private purposes." The  charge was   that  the  corporation  neglected  to  undertake   the improvement  of  water, supply and to provide  a  sufficient supply  of suitable water for public and  private  purposes. The  relevant facts were set out in annexure 1-1(1)  to  (4) and  annexure  11 to the show-cause notice.  It  is’  common ground  that  the  water supply of the city  of  Nagpur  was inadequate.  The population of the city was fast  increasing and  it  was  the duty of the  corporation  to  augment  the supply.   The  improvement of the head works at  the  Kanhan Stage  III and also the re-modelling and redesigning of  the -distribution   system   was   necessary   for    augmenting and,improving   the  water  supply.   The  work  at   Kanhan Stage.111  commenced  in  1964 and.  for  that  purpose  the Government  sanctioned an ad hoc loan of Rs. 21  lacs.   The cost of the remaining work at Kanhan Stage III and the  work of  re-modelling and redesigning of distribution system  was estimated to be Rs. 70 lacs.  The corporation could not meet the cost without. raising a loan.  II had the power to raise a  loan for this purpose with the previous sanction  of  the State  government  under  s.  90  of  the  City  of   Nagpur Corporation Act 1948.  The corporation was not in a position to  raise 1 he loan in the open market unless the  repayment of the loan was guaranteed by the Government.  It approached the.  Government to give the guarantee.  The Government  was willing  to  give  the  guarantee  if  two  conditions  were

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fulfilled  (1) the co oration would meter the  water  supply immediately, and (2) in the annual budget, the budget of the water  works  department for the supply of  water  would  be shown  separately.  The Government was not willing to,  give the   guarantee  unless  conditions  were   fulfilled.    In May/June,.965,  these conditions were communicated  by,  the minister  in  charge to the municipal commissioner  and  the chairman  of the standing committee.  On June 5,  1965,  the standing committee resolved:               "(i)  The  Corporation may raise in  the  open               market loan of Rs. 70 lacs for the purpose  of               completing the Kanhan Stage III head works and               provision   of   Alteration  plant   and   for               re-modelling   -and  redesigning   the   water               distribution system in Nagpur Corporation are.               590               (ii)  The principle of universal  meterisation               should be accepted and all water connection in               future should only be in the meter system’               (iii) The  principle of providing  a  separate               subsidiary  budget for water supply should  be               accepted." At a meeting held on June 30, 1965, the corporation  appears to  have disapproved of the standing committee’s  resolution regarding  the  principle  of  universal  meterisation   and setting  up  a separate subsidiary budget for  water  supply though no specific resolution to that effect was passed.   A meeting  of the corporation on July 5, 1965 was convened  to discuss the matter of raising a loan of Rs. 70 lacs.  In the notice  calling  the  meeting,  the  following  office  note appeared at the foot of the relevant agenda:-               "In  this  connection  the  State   Government               demanded the following two assurances from the               Corporation,               (1)   Nagpur  Corporation  should  meter   the               water               supply     immediately.                (2)  In    the   annual   budget    of    the               Corporation,budget   of   the   water    works               department  should  be  shown  separately  for               supply of water.  In the said budget provision               for payment of loans, sinking. fund and future               increase,   in  expenditure  should  be   made               separately. After making these provisions  the               Corporation  can  expend the money  for  other               works."                On  July 5, 1965, the meeting was  adjourned.               On July 1,2, 1965, the corporation passed the,               following resolution:-               "The  Corporation  gives its approval  to  the               raising of a loan of Rs. 70 lakhs, in the next               three years.  Such a loan comprising of Rs. 24               lakhs  for  Kanhan 3 Stage scheme and  Rs.  45               lakhs  for  improvement  in  the  Distribution               System necessitated in view of the  additional               29  million  gallons  of water  that  will  be               available  after  completion of the  Kanhan  3               Stage Scheme.               The  office  should take necessary  action  to               obtain  the guarantee of the State  Government               for  raising this loan in the open  market  in               accordance with the above Resolution." The  resolution  is not printed in the paper  book,  but  an agreed  copy  of the resolution was filed  before  us.  :The State  government  was of the view that  by  the  resolution

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dated  July 12, 1965, the corporation refused to accept  the two conditions mentioned in the office note and thereby made it  impossible  for  the corporation to  meet  the  cost  of construction of the head works and the. remodelling and 591 redesigning  of  the distribution system and  to  provide  a sufficient  supply  of  water for  the  public  and  private purposes.  The corporation could not raise the loan  without the  Government  guarantee  and the  government  could,  not reasonably  guarantee the loan unless the two conditions  of universal meterisation and the separate budget for the water supply  were accepted.  The two conditions were  reasonable. The adoption of universal meterisation would have  curtailed the wastage of water and secured adequate revenues necessary for  the  repayment  of the loan and the setting  up  of  an adequate sinking and development fund for the water  supply. A separate budget for the supply of water would have ensured that  the receipts from the/ supply of water were a  located to  the expenditure on the water supply scheme.  The  answer of  the  corporation  was  twofold.   The  corporation  said firstly  that  the resolution dated July  12,  1965  neither accepted nor rejected the two conditions and the question of accepting  the conditions was left for  future  negotiations with the government after the government would be approached for the sanction of the loan under s. 420(2)(r) of the  City of  Nagpur  Corporation Act 1948, read with City  of  Nagpur Corporation Loans Rules 1951.  The corporation said secondly that   the  cost  of  immediate  meterisation  of  the   old connections  would be Rs. 52 lacs and it was impossible  for the  corporation  to raise this sum, nor could  it  lawfully divert  any portion of the loan of Rs. 70 lacs  for  meeting this cost. The  High Court accepted the contention that at the  meeting held on July 12, 1965, the corporation had resolved that-the matter  with  regard  to  the  conditions  imposed  by   the government  for giving the loan should be left  for  further negotiations  with the government.  But it is to be  noticed that the resolution dated July 12, 1965 did riot state  that there should be any further negotiations with the government on  the  matter, nor did it disclose the  financial  problem with regard to meterisation or the basis upon which  further negotiations  should  take  place.  On  June  30,  1965,  he corporation  had  talked  out  the  recommendation  of   the standing committee with regard to the universal meterisation and   separate  budget.   In  this  background,  the   State government.  could reasonably hold that the passing  of  the resolution  excluding  the office note amounted  to  virtual rejection of the conditions mentioned in the note.  The High Court was in error in accepting the first contention. The High Court was also in error in holding that the Govern- ment  passed  the  order  of  September  29,  1965   without considering  that universal meterisation posed a  formidable problem  which could not be overcome without a loan  of  Rs. 52,  lacs  in  addition to the loan of  Rs.  70  lacs.   The resolution  of  July  12,  1965  did  not  state  that   the corporation  wanted an additional loan of Rs. .52  lacs  for meeting  the  cost of universal meterisation.  Even  in  the answer to the showcause notice, the corporation did not  say that it wanted to raise 592 an  additional loan of Rs. 52 lacs.  The answer stated  that the   raising   of  this  sum  for  the   present   was   an impossibility.   There  is nothing to show that  the  State, government  would  not  have guaranteed  repayment  of  this additional  loan  or that it was not possible to  raise  the

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loan  backed,  by  a  government  guarantee.   In  the  writ petition respondent No.1 gave a summary of the reply to  the show-cause  notice.  But there was no specific  averment  in the  petition  supported by affidavit that Rs. 52  lacs  was necessary for the meterisation and that the raising of  this sum  was  an impossibility.  That is why the point  was  not dealt  with  in  the return to  the  writ,  petition.   Even assuming that the meterisation would cost Rs. 52 lacs, there is  nothing  to  show that the  government  would  not  have guaranteed  the  loan for this sum or that  the  corporation could  not  have  raised  the  loan  with  this,  guarantee. Moreover,  if the Government was right in assuming that  the corporation  had  refused  to  entertain  the  proposal   of meterisation,   the  question  of  raising  funds  for   the meterisation  would not arise and would be irrelevant.   The government passed the order after taking into  consideration the reply to the show-cause notice.  There were materials be "ore the State Government upon which it could find that  the corporation  had  neglected to undertake an  improvement  of water supply and to provide a sufficient supply of water for private  and public purpose.  On the basis of this  finding, the  State  government  could  form  the  opinion  that  the corporation was not competent to perform the duties  imposed on it by or under the Act. Mr. Bobde contended that the opinion of the State government was based on two grounds arid as one of them is found to  be non-existent or irrelevant, the order is invalid and  should be  set aside.  The cases relied on by him may,  be  briefly noticed.  In a number of cases, the Court has quashed orders of  preventive  detention based on several  grounds  one  of which  is  found  to  be  irrelevant  or  illusory.    After reviewing the earlier cases Jagannadhadas J, in Dwarka  Dass Bhatia v. The State of Jammu and Kashmir (1) said:               "The principle underlying all these  decisions               is   ’this.   Where  power  is  vested  in   a               statutory authority to deprive the liberty  of               a subject on its subjective satisfaction  with               reference   to  specified  matters,  if   that               satisfaction is stated to be based on a number               of  grounds or for a variety ’of  reasons  all               taken  together, and if some out of  them  are               found  to be non-existent or  irrelevant,  the               very  exercise of that power is bad.  This  is               so because the matter being one for subjective               satisfaction, it must be properly based on all               the reasons on which it purports to be  based.               If  ’some  out of them are found  to  be  non-               existent or irrelevant, the Court cannot  pre-               dicate what the subjective satisfaction of the               said   authority  would  have  been   on   the               exclusion of those grounds or               (1)   [1956] S.C.R. 948,955.                                    593               reasons.   To uphold the validity of  such  an               order  in spite of the invalidity of -some  of               the reasons or grounds would be to  substitute               the  objective standards of the Court for  the               subjective  satisfaction  of  the.   statutory               authority.   In  applying  these   principles,               however, the Court must be. satisfied that the               vague  or irrelevant grounds are such  as,  if               excluded,  might reasonably have affected  the               subjective  satisfaction  of  the  appropriate               authority.   It  is not  merely  because  some               ground  or  reason  of  a  comparatively   un-

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             essential  nature  is defective that  such  an               order based on subjective satisfaction can  be               held to be invalid.  The Court, while  anxious               to  safeguard  the  personal  liberty  of  the               individual  will  not lightly  interfere  with               such orders." In  Maursinha  v.  State of Madhya  Pradesh(1),  the  Madhya Pradesh   High  Court,  following  the  principle   of   the preventive   detention   cases,  held  that  an   order   of supersession of the municipality under s. 208 of the  Madhya Bharat  Municipal ties Act 1954, based on  several  grounds, most of which were found to be irrelevant, was invalid.   In Dhirajlal  Girdharilal  v.  Commissioner  of   Income-tax(2) Mahajan,  C.  J.,  said with reference to the  order  of  an income-tax tribunal               "The learned Attorney-General frankly conceded               that it could not be denied that to a  certain               extent  the  Tribunal had drawn upon  its  own               imagination  and had made use of a  number  of               surmises  and  conjectures  in  reaching   its               result.     He,   however,   contended    that               eliminating  the irrelevant material  employed               by the Tribunal in arriving at its conclusion,               there  was  sufficient material on  which  the               finding  of fact could be supported.  -In  our               opinion, this contention is not well  founded.               It  is well established that when a  court  of               facts  acts on material, partly  relevant  and               partly irrelevant, it is impossible to say  to               what  extent  the  ’mind  of’  the  court  was               affected by the irrelevant material used by it               in arriving at its finding.  Such a finding is               vitiated  because of the use  of  inadmissible               material and thereby an issue of law arises." In   State  of  Orissa  v.  Bidyabhushan   Mahapatra(3)   an administrative tribunal in a disciplinary proceeding against a public servant found the second charge and four out of the five heads under the first charge proved and recommended his dismissal.   The  Governor  after giving  him  a  reasonable opportunity  to show cause against the  proposed  punishment dismissed  him.  The High Court held that, the  findings  on two  of  the  heads  under the first  charge  could  not  be sustained as in arriving at those findings the tribunal  had violated rules of natural justice.  It held that the  second charge and only (1) A.I.R. 1958 M.P. 397   (2) A.I.R. 1956 S.C., 271  273. (3)  [1963] Supp.  I S.C.R. 618,665-6. 594 two heads of the first charge were established and  directed the  Governor  to reconsider whether on the basis  of  these charges  the punishment of dismissal should  be  maintained. On appeal, this Court set aside the order of the High Court. In the course of the judgment, Shah, J, observed:                "If the High Court is satisfied that if  some               but  not all of the findings of  the  Tribunal               were ’unassailable’, the order of the Governor               on  whose powers by the rules no  restrictions               in determining the appropriate punishment  are               placed,  was final, and the High Court had  no               jurisdiction to direct the Governor to  review               the  penalty, for as we have already  observed               the  order Of dismissal passed by a  competent               authority   on  a  public  servant,   if   the                             conditions of the constitutional prote ction ha*

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             been   complied  with,  is  not   justiciable.               Therefore if the order may be supported on any               finding  as  to substantial  misdemeanour  for               which the punishment can lawfully be  imposed,               it  is not for the Court to  consider  whether               that ground alone would have weighed with  the               authority  in dismissing the  public  servant.               The Court  has no jurisdiction if the findings               of the enquiry officer or the  Tribunal  prima               facie  make  out a case  of  misdemeanour,  to               direct the authority to reconsider that  order               because in respect of same of the findings but               not  all  it  appears  that  there  had   been               violation of the rules of natural justice." The principle underlying these decisions appears to be this. An  administrative or quasi-judicial order based on  several grounds,  all taken together, cannot be sustained if  it  be found   that  some  of  the  grounds  are  non-existent   or irrelevant, and there is nothing to show that the  authority would  have  passed  the order on the  basis  of  the  other relevant and existing grounds.  On the other hand, an  order based on several grounds some of which are found to be  non- existent  or  irrelevant, can be sustained if the  court  is satisfied that the authority would have passed the order  on the  basis of the other relevant and existing  grounds,  and the  exclusion  of the irrelevant  or  non-existent  grounds could not have affected the ultimate opinion or decision. Now,   the  opinion  of  the  State  government   that   the corporation was not competent to perform the duties  imposed on  it by or under the Act, was based on two grounds one  of Which  is  relevant  and the  other  irrelevant.   Both  the grounds  as also other grounds were set out in paragraphs  1 and  2 read with annexures 1 and 2 of the  showcause  notice dated  July  21,  1965.  Para 3  of  the  show-cause  notice stated,  "And whereas the grounds aforesaid jointly as  well as  severally appear serious enough to warrant action  under section 408(1) of the said Act".  The (order dated September 29, 1965, 595 read  with the notice dated July 21, 1965 shows that in  the opinion of the State government the second ground alone  was serious  enough  to warrant action under s. 408(1)  and  was sufficient  to  establish  that  the  corporation  was   not competent  to  perform its duties under the Act.   The  fact that  the first ground mentioned in the order is  now  found not  to exist and is irrelevant, does not affect the  order. We  are reasonably certain that the State  government  would have  passed  the order on the basis of  the  second  ground alone.   The  order is, therefore, valid and cannot  be  set aside. In the result, the appeal is allowed, the order of the  High Court  is set aside and the writ petition is dismissed.   In all the circumstances, there will be no order as to costs in this Court and, in the court below. Y.P. Appeal allowed. supCI/67-9 596