Citation : 2024 Latest Caselaw 5191 Kant
Judgement Date : 21 February, 2024
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WP No. 22856 of 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF KARNATAKA AT BENGALURU
DATED THIS THE 21ST DAY OF FEBRUARY, 2024
BEFORE
THE HON'BLE MR JUSTICE M.NAGAPRASANNA
WRIT PETITION NO. 22856 OF 2023 (GM-RES)
BETWEEN:
PAREXEL INTERNATIONAL INDIA
SAFETY SERVICES PVT LTD.,
(FORMERLY LIQUENT SOFTWARE INDIA PVT LTD)
BEING A COMPANY INCORPORATED UNDER THE
COMPANIES ACT,
HAVING ITS REGISTERED OFFICE AT
III FLOOR, 5B SARJAPUR, OUTER RING ROAD,
RMZ ECOWORLD (SEZ), MARATHAHALLI,
DEVARABISANAHALLI, VARTHUR HOBLI,
BANGALORE - 560 087.
REPRESENTED BY ITS AUTHORIZED SIGNATORY
MR. PARTHA SIL.
...PETITIONER
(BY SMT. NAYANA TARA B.G., ADVOCATE)
Digitally signed
by NAGAVENI AND:
Location: HIGH
COURT OF
KARNATAKA 1. THE RECOVERY OFFICER,
REGIONAL OFFICE (KARNATAKA)
EMPLOYEES STATE INSURANCE CORPORATION
NO. 10, BINNYFIELDS TANK BUND ROAD,
NEAR BINNY MILLS, NEXT TO ETA MALL,
BINNYPET,
BANGALORE - 560 023.
2. THE ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
REGIONAL OFFICE (KARNATAKA)
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WP No. 22856 of 2023
EMPLOYEES STATE INSURANCE CORPORATION
NO. 10, BINNYFIELDS TANK BUND ROAD,
NEAR BINNY MILLS, NEXT TO ETA MALL,
BINNYPET,
BANGALORE - 560 023.
3. THE DEPUTY DIRECTOR
REGIONAL OFFICE (KARNATAKA)
EMPLOYEES STATE INSURANCE CORPORATION
NO. 10, BINNYFIELDS TANK BUND ROAD,
NEAR BINNY MILLS, NEXT TO ETA MALL,
BINNYPET,
BANGALORE - 560 023.
4. THE ADDL. COMMISSIONER AND REGIONAL
DIRECTOR
REGIONAL OFFICE (KARNATAKA)
EMPLOYEES STATE INSURANCE CORPORATION
NO. 10, BINNYFIELDS TANK BUND ROAD,
NEAR BINNY MILLS, NEXT TO ETA MALL,
BINNYPET,
BANGALORE - 560 023.
...RESPONDENTS
(BY SMT. GEETHA DEVI M.P., ADVOCATE)
THIS WP IS FILED UNDER ARTICLES 226 AND 227 OF
THE CONSTITUTION OF INDIA PRAYING TO DIRECT OF
SIMILAR NATURE QUASHING THE SHOW CAUSE NOTICE
DATED:22.5.2018 BEARING NUMBER KAR.INS.IV.5300037262
0000911/2792,2793 ISSUED BY R-3 PRODUCED AT
ANNEXURE-G AND ETC.
THIS PETITION, COMING ON FOR ORDERS, THIS DAY,
THE COURT MADE THE FOLLOWING:
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WP No. 22856 of 2023
ORDER
The petitioner/Parexel International India Safety Services
Private Limited (hereinafter referred to as 'the Company' for
short) is knocking at the doors of this Court calling in question
a show cause notice dated 22-05-2018; an order dated
19.08.2019 passed under Section 45A by the Employees' State
Insurance Act, 1948 (hereinafter referred to as 'the Act' for
short); a Garnishee order dated 11-08-2022; an application
dated 08-01-2020; a notice dated 23-03-2023 and also a
further notice dated 19-04-2023.
2. Shorn of unnecessary details, facts in brief, are as
follows:-
The petitioner claims to be a private limited company
incorporated under the Indian Companies Act, 1956 having its
registered office as depicted in the cause title. The petitioner is
engaged in the business of providing clinical research and
ancillary services and was earlier known as Liquent Software
India Private Limited.
3. The petitioner had applied and was allotted a code
under the Act; ESIC Code with PAN number attached to it on
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28.11.2014 issued by the Regional Office of the Employees
State Insurance Corporation (hereinafter referred to as 'the
Corporation' for short). The code that was allotted to the
petitioner on 28.11.2014 was to be effective from 01-06-2010.
This would be referred to as the 'First Code' in the course of the
order. The wage ceiling under the Act at the time of First Code
was Rs.15,000/-. The petitioner had 123 employees. It is the
averment in the petition that none of the employees were
covered under the Act and therefore, the First Code was not
operational.
4. The subsisting wage ceiling on and from 2017, was
increased to Rs.21,000/-, as a result of such increase, some
employees of the petitioner then become eligible for the
benefits under the Act. In order to comply with the provisions
of the Act in respect of the employees who become eligible
under the aforesaid increase in wage ceiling, the petitioner was
granted a ESIC Code, a different ESIC Code (hereinafter
referred to as 'the Second Code' for easy reference). The
Second Code was allotted for the address that is now depicted
in the cause title as the petitioner by then had shifted its
registered office from the address which was in the First Code
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to the address which is in the new Code; the Second Code. The
petitioner makes contributions under the Act pursuant to
enhanced wage ceiling only under the Second Code. The
challans so issued for the period from 01-01-2017 to 28-02-
2018 are appended to the petition. Contributions went on under
the Second Code.
5. When things standing thus, a show cause notice is
said to have been issued on 22-05-2018 alleging violations of
the Act, firstly to the old name Liquent Software India Private
Limited and to the old address which was connected to the First
Code, which code was not operational is the averment in the
petition. The allegation in the show cause notice was that the
petitioner had not paid ESI contributions from June 2010 to
February 2018 and had failed to furnish particulars of such
contributions. The amount payable was determined under
Section 45A of the Act as Rs.65,05,533/-. This show cause
notice directed the petitioner to appear before the Director of
the Corporation on 14-06-2018. It is the averment in the
petition that the said notice was never served upon the
petitioner as it was sent to old address under the old
Company's name. Every time an endorsement comes about
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that the "addressee left". Another show cause notice was
issued again to the same address.
6. Thereafter, an order comes about under Section 45A of
the Act on 19-08-2019 determining the contribution due from
the petitioner to be a sum of Rs.32,71,555/- for the period
between 01-07-2014 to 28-02-2018. The amount was directed
to be paid, failing which, recovery proceedings would be
initiated under the Act. The order under Section 45A of the Act
was also returned un-served with an endorsement that the
'addressee left'. Long thereafter on 08.01.2020 alleging that
contributions were not paid, proceedings under Section 45C of
the Act were taken up seeking to recover a sum of
Rs.46,78,763/-. This was again marked to the old address
which was not served.
7. On the ground that the petitioner has not complied
with the orders by making payment, a Garnishee order comes
to be passed by way of a demand notice under Section 45G of
the Act on 11-08-2022 and the petitioner's banker/HSBC Bank
was directed to transfer the amount of Rs.46,80,339/- from the
account of the petitioner. The amount is debited and continues
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to be debited. It is then the petitioner comes to know that
there are huge deductions from its account and then files
necessary applications to secure all orders that were passed for
the last five years. Then a demand notice was issued
demanding interest on the contributions that were skipped as
alleged hereinabove again in the name of the old software
company but to the new address. All subsequent notices
demanding damages and interest were posted to the new
address. The petitioner then makes a representation for
cancellation of the First Code as all the communications have
been made to the address attached to the First Code and also
represented that the Second Code was generated long ago. The
address was attached to the Second Code and ESI contributions
were all deposited under the Second Code. All these facts were
brought before the Corporation in terms of representations.
Those representations having gone unheeded, is what has
driven the petitioner to this Court in the subject petition.
8. Heard Smt. B.G. Nayana Tara, learned counsel
appearing for the petitioner and Smt. Geetha Devi M. Papanna,
learned counsel appearing for the respondents.
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9. The learned counsel for the petitioner would
vehemently contend that Section 45A of the Act mandates that
it should be in compliance with the principles of natural justice.
There is admittedly no notice issued to the petitioner before
debiting the account or determining the amount or before
passing Garnishee order. All the communications are made to
the old address which Code had become defunct. The petitioner
is not a company which wants to escape payment of ESI
contributions. Under the Second Code, when the ESI ceiling
was increased to Rs.21,000/-, the petitioner had made the
contributions. If a notice had been issued to the appropriate
address which the Corporation had with it all the times, these
orders would not have arisen or passed. All that the company
seeks is issuance of a notice and opportunity to submit a reply
to the said notice issued under Section 45A of the Act. The
learned counsel would place reliance upon the judgment
rendered by the co-ordinate Bench of this Court in AFFINE
ANALYTICS PRIVATE LIMITED v. DEPUTY DIRECTOR,
ESIC - W.P.No.28396 of 2023 decided on 22nd January, 2024
to buttress the submission that the company is entitled to a
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notice and without hearing an order of the kind could not be
passed.
10. Per contra, the learned counsel for the
respondents/ESI would vehemently refute the submissions to
contend that the provisions of the Act are very clear as any
default in ESI contributions will automatically lead to initiation
of proceedings and for issuance of notice and a demand made,
no constitutional right of the petitioner is taken away for this
Court to entertain the subject petition on that ground
notwithstanding existence of a statutory alternative remedy of
filing an appeal under Section 45AA of the Act. The learned
counsel would submit that the Corporation is in the process of
preferring an appeal against the order passed in the case of
AFFINE ANALYTICS (P) LTD. (supra) and therefore, it should
not be followed.
11. The learned counsel for the petitioner would join
the issue in contending that the violation of the principles of
natural justice would be an enough ground and circumstance
for this Court to entertain the petition. She would further
contend that identical ground was taken by the very learned
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counsel before the Co-ordinate Bench and the Co-ordinate
Bench had declined to accept the same by following the
judgments of the Apex Court. She would contend that the
petition be allowed and an opportunity be rendered to the
petitioner as sought for.
12. I have given my anxious consideration to the
submissions made by the respective learned counsel and have
perused the material on record.
13. The afore-narrated facts are not in dispute.
Therefore, they would not require any reiteration. It would
suffice if the analysis would commence from noticing Section
45A of the Act. Section 45A of the Act reads as follows:
"45-A. Determination of contributions in certain cases.--(1) Where in respect of a factory or establishment no returns, particulars, registers or records are submitted, furnished or maintained in accordance with the provisions of Section 44 or any Social Security Officer or other official of the Corporation referred to in sub-section (2) of Section 45 is prevented in any manner by the principal or immediate employer or any other person, in exercising his functions or discharging his duties under Section 45, the Corporation may, on the basis of information available to it, by order determine the amount of contributions payable in respect of the employees of that factory or establishment:
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Provided that no such order shall be passed by the Corporation unless the principal or immediate employer or the person in charge of the factory or establishment has been given a reasonable opportunity of being heard:
Provided further that no such order shall be passed by the Corporation in respect of the period beyond five years from the date on which the contribution shall become payable.
(2) An order made by the Corporation under sub-
section (1) shall be sufficient proof of the claim of the Corporation under Section 75 or for recovery of the amount determined by such order as an arrear of land revenue under Section 45-B or the recovery under Section 45-C to Section 45-I."
(Emphasis supplied)
Section 45A of the Act mandates that wherein respect of
a factory or establishment no returns, particulars, registers or
records are maintained. The proceedings under the provisions,
on the basis of information available with the Corporation,
would ensue for determining the amount payable in respect of
employees of that establishment. The proviso makes it clear
that no such order would be passed by the Corporation unless
the principal or immediate employer or the person in charge of
the factory or establishment has been given a reasonable
opportunity of being heard. Section 45AA of the Act which
provides appeal reads as follows:
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"45-AA. Appellate Authority.--If an employer is not satisfied with the order referred to in Section 45-A, he may prefer an appeal to an appellate authority as may be provided by regulation, within sixty days of the date of such order after depositing twenty-five per cent, of the contribution so ordered or the contribution as per his own calculation, whichever is higher, with the Corporation:
Provided that if the employer finally succeeds in the appeal, the Corporation shall refund such deposit to the employer together with such interest as may be specified in the regulation."
The Section permits preferring an appeal within 60 days
from the date of passing of the order under Section 45A with
deposit of 25% of the contribution. The issue now would be
whether the writ petition would be maintainable in the teeth of
existence of statutory alternate remedy under the Act.
14. The narration hereinabove is that proceedings against
the petitioner were all communicated to the old address under
the First Code which was in operation in the year 2014. As
observed hereinabove, the ceiling limit between 2014 and 2017
was at Rs.15,000/- and it is the averment that none of the
employee stood covered at that time. When the ceiling limit got
increased in the year 2017, the petitioner was allotted the
Second Code, a new code. The Second Code was allotted to the
new address of the establishment. Contributions are being
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made by the establishment which by then also changed its
name diligently. This is a matter of record. Notices were issued
by the Corporation alleging that no contributions were made
under the First Code which after 2017 or even before that was
in operation. Before 2017, it could not have had any operation
as the ceiling limit was only Rs.15,000/-. Post 2017 when the
ceiling limit was increased to Rs.21,000/-, employees were
brought under the ambit of the Act and a Second Code was
generated for which contributions are made. These are
undisputed facts. The proceedings for non-payment are
initiated by making communications to the old address. The
learned counsel for the petitioner has demonstrated that the
new address was available with the Corporation as
contributions are paid only under the Second Code. It is also
an admitted fact that all the notices are sent to the old address
and attaching to the First Code. This is also a matter of record.
15. The defence is that the new address was never
communicated to the Corporation. This statement is belied by
the very fact that communications are being made to the new
address by the Corporation and the Company deposited the
amount of contributions under the Act quoting the new
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address. Therefore, it appears to be a case of non-coordination
between the wings of the Corporation. The learned counsel for
the Corporation would submit that they are two different
offices, the First Code and the Second Code being generated by
different offices and the name of the company being different
with change in address, how the Corporation would get to know
all those without communication. This submission in the first
blush would have become acceptable but on a deeper delving
with the documents appended to the petition, it is
unsustainable as the Second Code did have a new address.
There was no warrant to communicate with the old address.
Therefore, direction of determination of amount under Section
45A of the Act is without hearing the petitioner. Without
hearing the petitioner is admitted as no reply is furnished by
the petitioner till 2023. If it is contrary to the proviso to
Section 45A of the Act that order should be passed after
affording a reasonable opportunity to the establishment, the
same has admittedly not been provided by the Corporation to
the petitioner. In such circumstances, whether the petitioner
should be relegated to the filing of an appeal before the
Appellate Authority under Section 45AA of the Act is to be
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considered and if considered on the touchstone of the aforesaid
facts, the answer would be an unequivocal and emphatic "no".
16. Entertainment of a petition under Article 226 of the
Constitution of India or otherwise is a discretion vested with
this Court. A discretionary remedy in certain cases to advance
the cause of justice can always be taken note of and be placed
on a higher pedestal than that of relegating to the Appellate
Authority. Mere existence of an alternative remedy under the
statute would not tie the hands of this Court to exercise
jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution of India. The
Apex Court in plethora of cases has held that rule of alternative
remedy is a rule of discretion. It need not be exercised in few
cases and can be exercised in few depending upon certain
circumstances, those circumstances bear explanation by the
Apex Court in the case of RADHA KRISHNA INDUSTIRES v.
STATE OF H.P.1 as under:
"C.1. Maintainability of the writ petition before the High Court
24. The High Court has dealt with the maintainability of the petition under Article 226 of the Constitution. Relying on the decision of this
(2021) 6 SCC 771
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Court in CCT v. Glaxo Smith Kline Consumer Health Care Ltd. [CCT v. Glaxo Smith Kline Consumer Health Care Ltd., (2020) 19 SCC 681: 2020 SCC OnLine SC 440] , the High Court noted that although it can entertain a petition under Article 226 of the Constitution, it must not do so when the aggrieved person has an effective alternate remedy available in law. However, certain exceptions to this "rule of alternate remedy" include where, the statutory authority has not acted in accordance with the provisions of the law or acted in defiance of the fundamental principles of judicial procedure; or has resorted to invoke provisions, which are repealed; or where an order has been passed in violation of the principles of natural justice. Applying this formulation, the High Court noted that the appellant has an alternate remedy available under the GST Act and thus, the petition was not maintainable.
25. In this background, it becomes necessary for this Court, to dwell on the "rule of alternate remedy" and its judicial exposition. In Whirlpool Corpn. v. Registrar of Trade Marks [Whirlpool Corpn. v. Registrar of Trade Marks, (1998) 8 SCC 1] , a two-Judge Bench of this Court after reviewing the case law on this point, noted : (SCC pp. 9-10, paras 14-15)
"14. The power to issue prerogative writs under Article 226 of the Constitution is plenary in nature and is not limited by any other provision of the Constitution. This power can be exercised by the High Court not only for issuing writs in the nature of habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibition, quo warranto and certiorari for the enforcement of any of the Fundamental Rights contained in Part III of the Constitution but also for "any other purpose".
15. Under Article 226 of the Constitution, the High Court, having regard to the facts of the case, has a discretion to entertain or not to entertain a writ petition. But the High Court has imposed upon itself certain restrictions one of which is that if an effective and efficacious remedy is available, the High Court would not normally exercise its
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jurisdiction. But the alternative remedy has been consistently held by this Court not to operate as a bar in at least three contingencies, namely, where the writ petition has been filed for the enforcement of any of the Fundamental Rights or where there has been a violation of the principle of natural justice or where the order or proceedings are wholly without jurisdiction or the vires of an Act is challenged. There is a plethora of case-law on this point but to cut down this circle of forensic whirlpool, we would rely on some old decisions of the evolutionary era of the constitutional law as they still hold the field."
(emphasis supplied)
26. Following the dictum of this Court in Whirlpool [Whirlpool Corpn. v. Registrar of Trade Marks, (1998) 8 SCC 1], in Harbanslal Sahnia v. Indian Oil Corpn. Ltd. [Harbanslal Sahnia v. Indian Oil Corpn. Ltd., (2003) 2 SCC 107], this Court noted that:
(Harbanslal Sahnia case [Harbanslal Sahnia v. Indian Oil Corpn. Ltd., (2003) 2 SCC 107] , SCC p. 110, para 7)
"7. So far as the view taken by the High Court that the remedy by way of recourse to arbitration clause was available to the appellants and therefore the writ petition filed by the appellants was liable to be dismissed is concerned, suffice it to observe that the rule of exclusion of writ jurisdiction by availability of an alternative remedy is a rule of discretion and not one of compulsion. In an appropriate case, in spite of availability of the alternative remedy, the High Court may still exercise its writ jurisdiction in at least three contingencies: (i) where the writ petition seeks enforcement of any of the fundamental rights; (ii) where there is failure of principles of natural justice; or (iii) where the orders or proceedings are wholly without jurisdiction or the vires of an Act is challenged.
(See Whirlpool Corpn.v. Registrar of Trade Marks [Whirlpool Corpn. v. Registrar of Trade Marks, (1998) 8 SCC 1].) The present case attracts applicability of the first two contingencies. Moreover, as noted, the
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appellants' dealership, which is their bread and butter, came to be terminated for an irrelevant and non-existent cause. In such circumstances, we feel that the appellants should have been allowed relief by the High Court itself instead of driving them to the need of initiating arbitration proceedings."
(emphasis supplied)
27. The principles of law which emerge are that:
27.1. The power under Article 226 of the Constitution to issue writs can be exercised not only for the enforcement of fundamental rights, but for any other purpose as well.
27.2. The High Court has the discretion not to entertain a writ petition. One of the restrictions placed on the power of the High Court is where an effective alternate remedy is available to the aggrieved person.
27.3. Exceptions to the rule of alternate remedy arise where : (a) the writ petition has been filed for the enforcement of a fundamental right protected by Part III of the Constitution; (b) there has been a violation of the principles of natural justice; (c) the order or proceedings are wholly without jurisdiction; or (d) the vires of a legislation is challenged.
27.4. An alternate remedy by itself does not divest the High Court of its powers under Article 226 of the Constitution in an appropriate case though ordinarily, a writ petition should not be entertained when an efficacious alternate remedy is provided by law.
27.5. When a right is created by a statute, which itself prescribes the remedy or procedure for enforcing the right or liability, resort must be had to that particular statutory remedy before invoking the discretionary remedy under Article 226 of the Constitution. This rule of exhaustion of statutory remedies is a rule of policy, convenience and discretion.
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27.6. In cases where there are disputed questions of fact, the High Court may decide to decline jurisdiction in a writ petition. However, if the High Court is objectively of the view that the nature of the controversy requires the exercise of its writ jurisdiction, such a view would not readily be interfered with."
(Emphasis supplied)
The Apex Court follows the earlier judgments in the cases
of Whirlpool Corporation and Harbanslal Sahnia, in a later
judgment the Apex Court in the case of GODREG JARA LEE
LIMITED v. EXCISE AND TAXATIOIN OFFICER-CUM-
ASSESSING AUTHORITY2, has held as follows:
"4. Before answering the questions, we feel the urge to say a few words on the exercise of writ powers conferred by Article 226 of the Constitution having come across certain orders passed by the high courts holding writ petitions as "not maintainable" merely because the alternative remedy provided by the relevant statutes has not been pursued by the parties desirous of invocation of the writ jurisdiction. The power to issue prerogative writs under Article 226 is plenary in nature. Any limitation on the exercise of such power must be traceable in the Constitution itself. Profitable reference in this regard may be made to Article 329 and ordainments of other similarly worded articles in the Constitution. Article 226 does not, in terms, impose any limitation or restraint on the exercise of power to issue writs. While it is true that exercise of writ powers despite availability of a remedy under the very statute which has been
2023 SCC OnLine SC 95
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invoked and has given rise to the action impugned in the writ petition ought not to be made in a routine manner, yet, the mere fact that the petitioner before the high court, in a given case, has not pursued the alternative remedy available to him/it cannot mechanically be construed as a ground for its dismissal. It is axiomatic that the high courts (bearing in mind the facts of each particular case) have a discretion whether to entertain a writ petition or not. One of the self- imposed restrictions on the exercise of power under Article 226 that has evolved through judicial precedents is that the high courts should normally not entertain a writ petition, where an effective and efficacious alternative remedy is available. At the same time, it must be remembered that mere availability of an alternative remedy of appeal or revision, which the party invoking the jurisdiction of the high court under Article 226 has not pursued, would not oust the jurisdiction of the high court and render a writ petition "not maintainable". In a long line of decisions, this Court has made it clear that availability of an alternative remedy does not operate as an absolute bar to the "maintainability"
of a writ petition and that the rule, which requires a party to pursue the alternative remedy provided by a statute, is a rule of policy, convenience and discretion rather than a rule of law. Though elementary, it needs to be restated that "entertainability" and "maintainability" of a writ petition are distinct concepts. The fine but real distinction between the two ought not to be lost sight of. The objection as to "maintainability" goes to the root of the matter and if such objection were found to be of substance, the courts would be rendered incapable of even receiving the lis for adjudication. On the other hand, the question of "entertainability" is entirely within the realm of discretion of the high courts, writ remedy being discretionary. A writ petition despite being maintainable may not be entertained by a high court for very many reasons or relief could even be refused to the petitioner, despite setting up a sound legal point, if grant of the claimed relief would not further public interest. Hence, dismissal of a writ petition by a high court on the ground that the
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petitioner has not availed the alternative remedy without, however, examining whether an exceptional case has been made out for such entertainment would not be proper.
5. A little after the dawn of the Constitution, a Constitution Bench of this Court in its decision reported in 1958 SCR 595 (State of Uttar Pradesh v. Mohd. Nooh) had the occasion to observe as follows:
"10. In the next place it must be borne in mind that there is no rule, with regard to certiorari as there is with mandamus, that it will lie only where there is no other equally effective remedy. It is well established that, provided the requisite grounds exist, certiorari will lie although a right of appeal has been conferred by statute, (Halsbury's Laws of England, 3rd Edn., Vol. 11, p. 130 and the cases cited there). The fact that the aggrieved party has another and adequate remedy may be taken into consideration by the superior court in arriving at a conclusion as to whether it should, in exercise of its discretion, issue a writ of certiorari to quash the proceedings and decisions of inferior courts subordinate to it and ordinarily the superior court will decline to interfere until the aggrieved party has exhausted his other statutory remedies, if any. But this rule requiring the exhaustion of statutory remedies before the writ will be granted is a rule of policy, convenience and discretion rather than a rule of law and instances are numerous where a writ of certiorari has been issued in spite of the fact that the aggrieved party had other adequate legal remedies.
***
6. At the end of the last century, this Court in paragraph 15 of the its decision reported in (1998) 8 SCC 1 (Whirlpool Corporation v. Registrar of Trade Marks, Mumbai) carved out the exceptions on the existence whereof a Writ Court would be justified in entertaining a writ petition despite the party approaching it not having availed the alternative remedy provided by the statute. The same read as under:
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(i) where the writ petition seeks enforcement of any of the fundamental rights;
(ii) where there is violation of principles of natural justice;
(iii) where the order or the proceedings are wholly without jurisdiction; or
(iv) where the vires of an Act is challenged.
7. Not too long ago, this Court in its decision reported in 2021 SCC OnLine SC 884 (Assistant Commissioner of State Tax v. Commercial Steel Limited) has reiterated the same principles in paragraph 11."
(Emphasis supplied)
In the light of the afore-quoted judgments merely
because a statutory alternative remedy is available, this Court
would not relegate the petitioner to such remedy on three
circumstances -
(i) if the order is passed which is without jurisdiction;
(ii) if the order is passed which is contrary to the statute; and
(iii) if the order is passed in violation of the principles of natural justice.
The present case falls within the third exception as
enunciated by the Apex Court. If it is in violation of the
principles of natural justice, this court would not show its door
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of exit to the petitioner who has suffered an order without
hearing. The submission of the learned counsel for the
Corporation is that no constitutional right of the petitioner is
taken away and therefore, the petition should not be
entertained is noted only to be rejected, as it is fundamentally
flawed. The right of any person be it constitutional, statutory or
otherwise is a right that moves with the person. If the said
right is to be taken away or determined to the prejudice of any
person, it cannot be without following the principles of natural
justice in the least. Therefore, the submission that no
constitutional right of the petitioner is taken away, and
therefore, the petition should not be entertained is
unsustainable. Any order having a civil or economic
consequence must pass muster of the principles of natural
justice, failing which, those orders would be rendered
unsustainable. I am in complete agreement with what the
Co-ordinate Bench has rendered in the case of AFFINE
ANALYTICS PRIVATE LIMITED on identical circumstance.
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17. For the aforesaid reasons, the following:
ORDER
i. The writ petition is allowed-in-part.
ii. The impugned action stands obliterated.
iii. The matter is remitted back to the hands of the Competent Authority to reconsider the matter afresh after issuing appropriate notice to the petitioner to the appropriate address and seek its reply and on considering the same, pass appropriate orders in accordance with law.
iv. Till such time, the interim order subsisting in the subject petition, as on today, shall continue.
Sd/-
JUDGE
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