(SUPREME COURT OF INDIA)
Karnataka Rare Earth and Another
Vs
The Senior Geologist, Department of Mines and Geology and Another
HON'BLE JUSTICE R. C. LAHOTI, HON'BLE JUSTICE ASHOK BHAN AND
23/01/2004
Civil Appeal Nos. 3618-3619 OF 1999
JUDGMENT
R.C. LAHOTI, J.
The grant of 203 leases for quarrying granites in government land under Rule 3
of the Karnataka Minor Mineral Concession Rules 1969, contrary to the
prohibition contained in Rule 3A was challenged in the Karnataka High Court in
public interest litigation. The writ petitions were allowed by the learned
single Judge and all the grants were quashed. Writ appeals were dismissed by a
Division Bench of the High Court. The unsuccessful lessees came up to this
Court and by judgment dated January 18, 1996 [Alankar Granites Industries &
Ors Vs. P.G.R. Scindia, MLA & Ors. 4]
this Court directed the appeals to be dismissed by holding that the grants of
leases were made against the prohibition contained in Rule 3 A and were rightly
held by the High Court to be invalid.
2. The appellants before us were holding two quarry leases and were amongst the
appellants in this Court in the appeals by special leave referred to
hereinabove. On 19.11.1993, by an interim order, the Court directed that the
renewals or existing grants in favour of the appellants would continue till the
next date of hearing. On 21.11.1993, the Court modified the previous order by
extending its operation 'to continue till further orders of the Court'. The
appellants brought to the notice of the Court that in spite of the previous
interim order the appellants were not issued transport permits with the result
that the renewal or grant of leases was of no avail to them as they were not
able to remove the minerals quarried by them. In the opinion of the Court such
action of the respondents resulted in frustrating the interim orders. It was
clarified that the appellants in whose favour interim orders were granted,
should be granted transport permits also by the appropriate authority on
payment of royalty and complying with the rules. On 18.1.1996, the appeals came
to be dismissed as already stated.
3. According to the appellants they had operated the quarries and transported
several granite blocks on the strength of the order passed by this Court. They
had paid the prescribed royalty and exported the granite blocks. The quarrying
had taken place during the pendency of the appeals and the export had taken
place on 24.1.1996 as the dismissal of the appeals on 18.1.1996 at Delhi did
not come to the notice of the appellants or the authorities of the State at
Karnataka until after the granite blocks had already been exported. On
14/15.2.1996, the State of Karnataka issued an order calling upon the
appellants to pay the price of the granite blocks calculated at the minimum
rate per unit volume of minor mineral. The appellants filed writ petitions in
the High Court laying challenge to the impugned action of the respondents
proposing to recover the price of the granite blocks which were already
exported. The writ petitions were dismissed. Feeling aggrieved the appellants
have filed these appeals by special leave.
4. The substance of the plea, forcefully urged by the learned counsel for the
appellants and highlighted from very many angles, is that the act of the
appellants in quarrying the granite stones and exporting the same was
accompanied by payment of royalty and issuance of transport permits by the
authorities of the State and though done under the interim orders of this Court
was nevertheless a lawful and bona fide act. The mining leases in favour of the
appellants ought to be held to be valid, in spite having been invalidated by
the High Court, in view of the interim orders passed by this Court. The
appellants cannot be held liable for payment of price of the granite blocks.
The demand of price of the granite blocks is a demand in the nature of penalty
and hence cannot be sustained. Reliance is placed by the learned counsel on the
decision of this Court in Hindustan Steel Vs. State of Orissa, and
Consolidated Coffee vs. Agriculrural Income Tax Office. 6.
5. Having heard Shri K.V. Vishwanathan, the learned counsel for the appellants
and Shri Sanjay R. Hegde, the learned counsel for the State of Karnataka, we
are satisfied that no faults can be found with the view taken by the High Court
and the appeals are devoid of any merit and hence liable to be dismissed.
6. Section 21 of the Mines and Minerals (Development & Regulation) Act 1957
(hereinafter 'MMDR Act', for short) reads as under:-
"21. Penalties.- (1) Whoever contravenes the provisions of sub-section (1)
or sub-section (1A) of section 4 shall be punished with imprisonment for a term
which may extend to two years, or with fine which may extend to twenty-five
thousand rupees, or with both.
(2) Any rule made under any provision of this Act may provide that any
contravention thereof shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which
may extend to one year, or with fine which may extend to one year, or with fine
which may extend to five thousand rupees, or with both, and in the case of a
continuing contravention, with an additional fine which may extend to five
hundred rupees for every day during which such contravention continues after
conviction for the first such contravention. *
(3) Where any person trespasses into any land in contravention of the
provisions of sub-section (1) of section 4, such trespasser may be served with
an order of eviction by the State Government or any authority authorised in
this behalf by that Government and the State Government of such authorised
authority may, if necessary, obtain the help of the police to evict the
trespasser from the land.
(4) Whenever any person raises, transports, or causes to be raised or
transported, without any lawful authority, any mineral from any land, and, for
that purpose, uses any tool, equipment, vehicle or any other thing, such
mineral tool, equipment, vehicle or any other thing shall be liable to be
seized by an officer or authority specially empowered in this behalf.
(4A) Any mineral tool, equipment, vehicle or any other thing seized under
sub-section (4), shall be liable to be confiscated by an order of the court
competent to take cognizance of the offence under sub-section (1) and shall be
disposed of in accordance with the directions of such court.
(5) Whenever any person raises, without any lawful authority, any mineral from
any land, the State Government may recover from such person the mineral so
raised, or, where such mineral has already been disposed of, the price thereof,
and may also recover from such person, rent, royalty or tax, as the case may
be, for the period during which the land was occupied by such person without
any lawful authority.
(6) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974), an offence under sub-section (1)
shall be cognizable."
*
7. The submission of Shri Vishwanathan is that the impugned demand by the State
of Karnataka has been raised by reference to sub-Section (5) of Section 21
above-quoted which is nothing but a levy of penalty. The applicability of the
provision is not attracted unless the extraction and export of the minor
mineral by the appellants can be said to be 'without any lawful authority',
which it is not, in the facts and circumstances of the case, as already
noticed, submitted Shri Vishwanathan.
8. In our opinion, the demand by the State of Karnataka of the price of the
mineral cannot be said to be levy of penalty or a penal action. The marginal
note of the Section - 'Penalties', creates a wrong impression. A reading of
Section 21 shows that it deals with a variety of situations. Sub-sections (1),
(2) (4), (4A) and 6 are in the realm of criminal law. Sub-section (3) empowers
the State Government or any authority authorized in this behalf to summarily
evict a trespasser. Sub-Section(5) empowers the State Government to recover
rent, royalty or tax from the person who has raised the mineral from any land
without any lawful authority and also empowers the State Government to recover
the price thereof where such mineral has already been disposed of inasmuch as
the same would not be available for seizure and confiscation. The provision as
to recovery of price is in the nature of recovering the compensation and no
penalty so also the power of the State Government to recover rent, royalty or
tax in respect of any mineral raised without any lawful authority can also not
be called a penal action. The underlying principle of sub-Section (5) is that a
person acting without any lawful authority must not find himself placed in a
position more advantageous than a person raising minerals with lawful
authority. #
9. The correct principles of law applicable to the facts of the present case
emanating from equity, and statutorily embodied in sub-Section (5) of Section
21 abovesaid, are to be found dealt with extensively in a recent decision of
this Court in South Eastern Coalfields Ltd. Vs. State of M.P. & Ors. (2003)
8 SCC 648. #
10. It is true that by the interim orders passed by this Court the appellants
were allowed during the pendency of the earlier appeals to operate under the
mining leases, whether freshly granted or renewed and to effectuate the
interim, orders the authorities were also directed to issue transport permits.
Admittedly, the transport permits were obtained by the appellants after the
dismissal of their appeals. The appellants claim that both the parties were
ignorant of the dismissal of the appeals when the transport permits were issued
and the granite blocks were exported. It is difficult to accept the plea of
the appellants that the dismissal of the appeals was not in their knowledge
inasmuch as the judgments must have been pronounced in an open Court and their
counsel at Delhi must have gathered the knowledge thereof. In any case the
appellants cannot be heard taking shelter behind there own convenient
ignorance. In our opinion, whether they had the knowledge of the judgment or
not and whether the transport permits were obtained by the appellants before
the dismissal of the appeals during which the interim orders were in operation
or after the dismissal of the appeals when the interim orders had ceased to
operate would not make any difference. For the purposes of the law it is enough
that the appellants have enjoyed the benefit under the interim orders of the
Court which have stood vacated with the dismissal of their appeals. It is also
noteworthy that this Court had not, in the earlier appeals, directed the
judgment of the High Court to remain stayed in its entirety and this is an
additional fact or which tells adversely on the appellants # .
11. In South Eastern Coalfields Ltd. (supra), this Court dealt with the effect
on the rights of the parties who have acted bona fide, protected by interim
orders of the Court and incurred rights and obligations while the interim
orders stood vacated or reversed at the end. The Court referred to the doctrine
of actus curiae neminem gravahit and held that the doctrine was not confined in
its application only to such acts of the Court which were erroneous; the
doctrine is applicable to all such acts as to which it can be held that the
Court would not have so acted had it been correctly apprised of the facts and
the law. It is the principle of restitution which is attracted. When on account
of an act of the party, persuading the Court to pass an order, which at the end
is held as not sustainable, has resulted in one party gaining advantage which
it would not have otherwise earned, or the other party has suffered an
impoverishment which it would not have suffered but for the order of the Court
and the act of such party, then the successful party finally held entitled to a
relief, assessable in terms of money at the end of the litigation, is entitled
to be compensated in the same manner in which the parties would have been if
the interim order of the Court would not have been passed. The successful party
can demand (a) the delivery of benefit earned by the opposite party under the
interim order of the Court, or (b) to make restitution for what it has lost.
12. In the facts of this case, in spite of the judgment of the High Court,
if the appellants would not have persuaded this Court to pass the interim
orders, they would not have been entitled to operate the mining leases and to
raise and remove and dispose of the minerals extracted. But for the interim
orders passed by this Court, there is no difference between the appellants and
any person raising, without any lawful authority, any mineral from any land,
attracting applicability of sub-Section (5) of Section 21. As the appellants
have lost from the Court they cannot be allowed to retain the benefit earned by
them under the interim Orders of the Court. The High Court has rightly held the
appellants liable to be placed in the same position in which they would have
been if this Court would not have protected them by issuing interim orders. All
that the State Government is demanding from the appellants is the price of the
minor minerals. Rent, royalty or tax has already been recovered by the State
Government and, therefore, there is no demand under that Head. No penal
proceedings, much less any criminal proceedings, have been initiated against
the appellants. It is absolutely incorrect to contend that the appellants are
being asked to pay any penalty or are being subjected to any penal action. It
is not the case of the appellants that they are being asked to pay a price more
than what they have realised from the exports or that the price appointed by
the respondent State is in any manner arbitrary of unreasonable. #
13. Is sub-section (5) of Section 21 a penal enactment? Can the demand of
mineral or its price thereunder be called a penal action or levy of penalty?
14. A penal statute or penal law is a law that defines an offence and
prescribes its corresponding fine, penalty or punishment, (Blacks Law
Dictionary, Seventh Edition, P. 1421). Penalty is a liability composed as a
punishment on the party committing the bench. The very use of the term 'penal'
is suggestive of punishment and may also include any extraordinary liability to
which the law subjects a wrong-doer in favour of the person wronged, not
limited to the damages suffered, (See, The Law Lexicon, P. Ramanatha Aiyer,
Second Edition, p. 1431).
15. In support of the submission that the demand for the price of mineral
raised and exported is in the nature of penalty, the learned counsel for the
appellants has relied on the marginal note of Section 21. According to Justice
G.P. Singh on Principles of Statutory Interpretation (Eighth Edition, 2001, at p.
147) though the opinion is not uniform but the weight of authority is in favour
of the view that the marginal not appended to a Section cannot be used for
construing the section. There is no justification for restricting the Section
by the marginal note nor does the marginal note control the meaning of the body
of the Section if the language employed therein is clear and spells out its own
meaning. In Director of Public Prosecutions Vs. Schildkamp, 1969 Indlaw HL 33, Lord Reid opined that a side not is poor
guide to the scope of a section for it can do no more than indicate the main
subject with which the section deals and Lord Upjohn opined that a side note
being a brief précis of the section forms a most unsure guide to the
construction of the enacting section and very rarely it might through some
light on the intentions of Parliament just as a punctuation mark.
16. We are clearly of the opinion that the marginal note 'penalties' cannot
be pressed into service for giving such colour to the meaning of sub-Section
(5) as it cannot have in law. The recovery of price of the mineral is intended
to compensate the State for the loss of the mineral owned by it and caused by a
person who has been held to be not entitled in law to raise the same. There is
no element of penalty involved and the recovery of price is not a penal action.
It is just compensatory. #
17. The Court while dismissing the appeals filed by the appellants in the year
1996, which dismissal vacated the interim orders, could have also relieved the
appellants of the consequences logically and necessarily flowing from the
dismissal of the appeals by taking into consideration the equity of relieving
against hardship or could also have done so in exercise of its jurisdiction
conferred by Article 142 of the Constitution. So was done in Samatha Vs. State
of A.P. & Ors. 4, 277 para 131. This
Court having directed the State Government to ensure further mining operations
by industrialist concerned in the scheduled area, restrained the lessees of
mining leases not to break fresh mines, but in the meanwhile allowed them to
remove the minerals already extracted and stocked in the reserved forest area
within four months time from the date of judgment.
18. Neither the appellants prayed for such relief nor the Court has passed any
such order. What this Court had not done, could not obviously have been done by
the High Court in exercise of its writ jurisdiction in view of the earlier
judgment of this Court having achieved a finality.
19. The two decisions relied on by the learned counsel for the appellants are
not applicable to the facts of the present cases Hindustan Steel (supra) is a
case under the Orissa Sales Tax Act, 1947. The
appellant company was engaged in construction activity. During the course of
such activity the company supplied building materials to the contractor for
construction and adjusted the value of the goods supplied at the rates
specified in the tender. The Court held such transaction of supply of building
materials to be a sale and, therefore, the company a 'dealer' covered by the
Act. However, the persons incharge of the affairs of the company has not
registered the company as dealer in the honest and genuine belief that the
company was not a dealer. The Court held that the liability to pay penalty did
not arise merely upon proof of default in registering as a dealer. An order
imposing penalty for failure to carry out the statutory obligation is the
result of a quasi-criminal proceeding and penalty will not ordinarily be
imposed unless the party obliged has either acted deliberately in defiance of
law or was guilty of conduct contumacious or dishonest or acted in conscious
disregard of its obligation. Penalty will not also be imposed merely because it
is lawful to do so. In spite of a minimum penalty prescribed the authority
competent to impose the penalty may refuse to impose penalty if the breach
complained of was a technical or venial breach or flew from a bona fide though
mistaken belief. In Consolidated Coffee (supra), the court was dealing with
Section 42(1) of Karnataka Agricultural Income Tax Act, 1957. A default by
assessee in making payment of tax attracted a penalty equivalent to one and a
one-half percent of the tax remaining unpaid for the first three months and two
and one-half percent of such tax for each month subsequent thereto. There was
also a provision for payment of interest on delayed payment of tax. This Court
held that interest is compensatory while penalty is penal, i.e. punishing in
character. Where delay in payment of tax was attributable to the order of stay
passed by the Court, it was held that the order of stay placed the demand for
the tax in abeyance and, therefore, during the period of stay the assessee
cannot be said to be a default and hence no penalty can be imposed on the
assessee on the stay being vacated. However, still the Court held that a late
payment surcharge/interest is necessarily compensatory in character and a
penalty is a punishment.
20. At the end, the learned counsel for the appellants submitted that the
appellants may be allowed the liberty of making a representation to the State
Government for some relief at least in the calculation of the amount of price.
Needless to say that the appellants are always at liberty to do and we express
no opinion thereon.
21. The appeals are dismissed though without any order as to the costs. #