Supreme Court of India (Division Bench (DB)- Two Judge)

Appeal (Civil), 618-620 of 2016, Judgment Date: Jan 29, 2016

                                 REPORTABLE
     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA                       CIVILAPPELLATE
                                JURISDICTION

              CIVIL APPEAL NOS.618-620 OF 2016
               (Arising Out of SLP (C) Nos.9921-9923 of 2014)


SENIOR DIVISIONAL COMMERCIAL MANAGER & ORS.                    ………APPELLANTS

                                     Vs.

S.C.R. CATERERS, DRY FRUITS, FRUIT JUICE
STALLS WELFARE ASSOCIATION & ANR.                             ………RESPONDENTS


                               J U D G M E N T


            V. GOPALA GOWDA, J.

            Applications for intervention are allowed.
Leave granted.



The present appeals arise out of  the  impugned  judgment  and  order  dated
12.09.2013 passed by the High Court  of  Judicature  of  Andhra  Pradesh  at
Hyderabad in W.A. Nos. 1573-1575 of 2013, whereby the Division Bench of  the
High Court upheld the order of the learned  single  Judge,  wherein  it  was
held that the respondents are entitled to get their licenses  renewed  under
the Catering Policy, 2010.



The relevant facts which are required for us to appreciate the  rival  legal
contentions  advanced  on  behalf  of  the  parties  are  stated  in   brief
hereunder:



      Respondents before us are the  South  Central  Railway  Caterers,  Dry
Fruits, Fruit Juice Stalls Welfare Association, (hereinafter referred to  as
“the Welfare Association”). The members  of  the  Welfare  Association  were
granted licenses for running General Minor Units or Special Minor  Units  in
Categories “A”, “B” and “C” Railway Stations. These  licenses  were  granted
in favour of the members of the respondents prior to  the  creation  of  the
Indian  Railways  Catering  and  Tourism  Corporation  Limited  (hereinafter
referred to as “IRCTC”) under the Catering Policy, 2005.  In  terms  of  the
said Policy, the  contracts  under  Categories  “A”,  “B”  and  “C”  Railway
Stations were transferred to the IRCTC while  the  contracts  granted  under
Categories “D” to “F” Railway Stations were continued under the  control  of
the South Central Railways till the IRCTC was equipped to  take  over  these
units. The contracts held by the members of  the  Welfare  Association  were
renewed during the subsistence  of  the  Catering  Policy,  2005.  The  said
policy was replaced by the Catering Policy, 2010. Under the new Policy,  the
contracts of all the existing major and minor  catering  units  were  to  be
awarded and managed by the Zonal Railways.  The  IRCTC  was  left  with  the
running of the Food Plaza, Food Courts and Fast Food  Units  only.  Pursuant
to the Catering Policy, 2010, the South Central Railway granted  renewal  of
licenses in favour of the licensees for a period of three years with  effect
from 21.07.2010, the date on  which  the  Catering  Policy,  2010  was  made
effective in respect of the General Minor Units  (GMUs)  and  Special  Minor
Units  (SMUs)  taken  over  from  the  IRCTC,  subject  to  the   conditions
stipulated in paras 16.1.3 and 16.2.1 of  the  Catering  Policy,  2010.  The
renewed licenses were to expire on 20.07.2013.  On  26.04.2013,  the  Senior
Divisional Commercial Manager, Vijayawada,  issued  a  bid  notice  inviting
sealed bids on the Single Stage Two-Packet System  from  food  and  catering
service providers for provision of catering services at the various GMUs  of
Categories “A” and “B” Railways  Stations  in  the  Vijayawada  Division.  A
similar notification  dated  03.05.2013  was  issued  for  establishment  of
catering stalls/fruits and fruit juice stalls in SMUs in “A1”, “A”  and  “B”
Category  Railway  Stations.  Aggrieved,  the  respondent-Association,   the
members of which had existing licenses, filed a  Writ  Petition  before  the
single  Judge  of  the  High  Court  of  Judicature  of  Andhra  Pradesh  at
Hyderabad.  The  respondent-Association  urged  that  the  said  action   of
inviting fresh bids is discriminatory and also contrary  to  the  provisions
of the Catering Policy, 2010. The main plea  of  the  respondent-Association
was that in terms of the Catering Policy, 2010, the existing licensees  were
entitled for renewal of their licenses for a period of three years,  subject
to their satisfactory performance, payment  of  all  dues  and  arrears  and
withdrawal of court cases,  if  any.  They  prayed  that  the  appellant  be
directed to renew the licenses  of  the  existing  license  holders  of  the
canteens and fruits and fruit juice stalls. Vide judgment  and  order  dated
16.08.2013, the learned  single  Judge  came  to  the  conclusion  that  the
Catering Policy, 2010 did not differentiate among  the  licensees  based  on
the number of years for which they have been carrying on their business.  It
was further held that under the Catering Policy, 2010, the  license  fee  is
liable to be revised based on the potentiality of each Railway  Station  and
the turnover of the licensees during the previous years. Since  the  license
fee is subject to continuous revision and  does  not  remain  stagnant,  the
question of the Railways suffering  any  loss  due  to  renewals  would  not
arise. The learned single  Judge  held  that  the  members  of  the  Welfare
Association are entitled for renewal of the licenses of the members  subject
to their satisfying the conditions stipulated in paras 16.1.3 and 16.2.1  of
the Catering Policy, 2010. On appeal filed by the appellants,  the  judgment
and order of the learned single Judge was upheld by the  Division  Bench  of
the High Court in the  Writ  Appeals  vide  its  judgment  and  order  dated
12.09.2013. Hence, the present appeals are filed by the appellants.



We have heard the learned senior counsel for both the parties. On the  basis
of  the  pleadings  and  evidence  on  record  produced   before   us,   the
circumstances of the  case  and  also  in  the  light  of  the  rival  legal
contentions urged by the learned senior counsel for both  the  parties,  the
main question that arises for our consideration is whether  the  members  of
the respondents before us are entitled to have  their  licenses  renewed  in
terms of the Catering Policy, 2010.



Mr. N.K. Kaul, the learned Additional Solicitor General appearing on  behalf
of the appellants drew our attention to  the  important  provisions  of  the
Catering Policy, 2010. The objective of the Policy reads as under:

“1.1 To provide hygienic, good quality affordable  food  to  the  travelling
public by adopting best trade and hospitality practices.

1.2 The policy  will  have  an  inclusive  approach  where  from  the  least
advantaged passenger to the relatively affluent will  be  provided  catering
services in a socially responsible manner.

1.3 It should meet all the social objectives of  the  Government,  including
provision of reservations as per Government Directives issued from  time  to
time.”




The learned ASG contends that the terms of the  Catering  Policy,  2010  are
absolutely clear. The larger issue here is the right to  livelihood  of  the
licensees who are members of the respondents. The welfare of the  people  is
the prime concern of any responsible government under the provisions of  the
Constitution. The learned ASG places reliance on the case  of  Lala  Ram  v.
Union of  India[1],  wherein  the  concept  of  a  welfare  state  has  been
discussed as under:

“A welfare state denotes a concept of government, in which the  State  plays
a key role in the protection and promotion of the economic and social  well-
being of all of its citizens, which may include  equitable  distribution  of
wealth and equal opportunities and public responsibilities  for  all  those,
who are unable to avail for themselves,  minimal  provisions  for  a  decent
life. It refers to "Greatest good of greatest number and the benefit of  all
and the happiness  of  all".  It  is  important  that  public  weal  be  the
commitment of the State, where the state  is  a  welfare  state.  A  welfare
state is under an obligation to prepare plans and devise beneficial  schemes
for the good of the common  people.  Thus,  the  fundamental  feature  of  a
Welfare state is social insurance. Anti-poverty programmes and a  system  of
personal taxation are examples of certain aspects  of  a  Welfare  state.  A
Welfare state provides State sponsored aid for individuals from  the  cradle
to the grave. However, a welfare state faces basic problems as regards  what
should be the desirable level of provision of such welfare services  by  the
state, for the reason that  equitable  provision  of  resources  to  finance
services over and above the  contributions  of  direct  beneficiaries  would
cause difficulties. A welfare state is one, which seeks  to  ensure  maximum
happiness of maximum  number  of  people  living  within  its  territory.  A
welfare state must attempt to provide  all  facilities  for  decent  living,
particularly to the poor, the weak, the old and the  disabled  i.e.  to  all
those, who admittedly belong to the weaker sections of society. Articles  38
and 39 of the Constitution of India provide that the State  must  strive  to
promote the welfare of the people of  the  state  by  protecting  all  their
economic, social and political rights. These  rights  may  cover,  means  of
livelihood, health and the general well-being of all sections of  people  in
society,  specially  those  of  the  young,  the  old,  the  women  and  the
relatively weaker sections of the society. These  groups  generally  require
special protection measures in almost every set up.  The  happiness  of  the
people is the ultimate aim of a welfare state, and  a  welfare  state  would
not qualify as one, unless it strives to achieve the same.”
                 (emphasis laid by this Court)


The learned ASG further places reliance on the case of Ram &  Shyam  Company
v. State of Haryana[2], relevant paragraph of which is quoted hereunder:

“12.  Let  us  put  into  focus  the  clearly   demarcated   approach   that
distinguishes the  use  and  disposal  of  private  property  and  socialist
property. Owner of private property may deal with it in any manner he  likes
without causing injury to anyone else. But the socialist or if that word  is
jarring to some, the community or further the  public  property  has  to  be
dealt with for public purpose and in public interest. The marked  difference
lies in this that while the owner of private property may have a  number  of
considerations which may permit him to dispose of his property for  a  song.
On the other hand, disposal of public property partakes the character  of  a
trust in that in its disposal there should be nothing hanky panky  and  that
it must be done at the best price so that larger  revenue  coming  into  the
coffers of the State administration would  serve  public  purpose  viz.  the
welfare State may be  able  to  expand  its  beneficent  activities  by  the
availability of larger funds. This is subject to  one  important  limitation
that socialist property may be disposed at a price  lower  than  the  market
price or even for a token price to  achieve  some  defined  constitutionally
recognised public purpose, one such being to achieve the goals  set  out  in
Part IV of the Constitution. But  where  disposal  is  for  augmentation  of
revenue and nothing else, the State is under an  obligation  to  secure  the
best market price  available  in  a  market  economy  An  owner  of  private
property need not auction it nor is he bound to dispose it of at  a  current
market price. Factors such as personal  attachment,  or  affinity,  kinship,
empathy, religious sentiment or limiting  the  choice  to  whom  he  may  be
willing to sell, may permit him to sell the property at a song  and  without
demur. A welfare State as the owner of  the  public  property  has  no  such
freedom while disposing of the public property. A welfare State  exists  for
the largest good of the largest number more so when it  proclaims  to  be  a
socialist State dedicated to eradication of poverty. All  its  attempt  must
be to obtain the best  available  price  while  disposing  of  its  property
because the greater the revenue, the welfare activities will  get  a  fillip
and  shot  in  the  arm.  Financial  constraint  may  weaken  the  tempo  of
activities. Such an approach serves the larger public purpose  of  expanding
welfare activities  primarily  for  which  the  Constitution  envisages  the
setting up of a welfare State.”
                                               (emphasis laid by this Court)

The interest of the passenger has no  correlation  with  social  objectives.
The main objective of the Catering Policy, 2010 is to  provide  food  at  an
affordable  price  to  the  railway  passengers.  The  learned  ASG  further
contends that the State is entitled in law to frame a  new  policy  in  that
respect.  The  learned  ASG  contends  that  the  Policy  contains  detailed
mechanisms and makes it very clear for whom it is  meant.  The  learned  ASG
draws our attention to clause 3.3.1 of the Policy which reads as under:

“3.3.1 All existing major and minor  catering  units  will  be  awarded  and
managed by the zonal railways, except Food Plaza,  Food  Courts,  fast  food
units. All such contracts presently being managed by the  IRCTC,  on  expiry
of the contract period, will be awarded by the zonal  railways.  IRCTC  will
not renew any contract required to be  handed  over  to  zonal  railways  on
expiry of the contract.”


The learned ASG further draws our attention to clause  16.1.3  of  the  2010
Policy which reads as under:

“16.1.3 Allotment of all General Minor Units at A,B &  C  category  stations
shall be awarded for a period of five years with  a  provision  for  renewal
after every 3 years on satisfactory performance and payment of all dues  and
arrears and withdrawal of court cases, if  any.  Allotment  of  all  General
Minor Unis at D,E & F category stations will be for  a  period  of  5  years
with a provision for renewal after every 5 years for a further period  of  5
years on satisfactory performance and payment of all dues  and  arrears  and
withdrawal of court cases, if any.”

The learned ASG contends that by virtue of clause  16.1.3,  the  members  of
the respondents cannot claim renewal of their license as a matter of  right.
The learned ASG further placed reliance on clause 26.1.1 of the 2010  Policy
which reads as under:
“26.1.1 All existing operational catering  licenses  awarded  by  IRCTC  and
transferred to Zonal Railways will be  governed  by  the  existing  Catering
Policy 2005 upto the validity of their contractual period.”

Further, Clause 26.1.4 of the policy reads as under:
“26.1.4 This policy will also apply in case of award of fresh  licenses  and
licenses awarded in the event of termination, non-renewal, vacation etc.  of
the existing licenses.”

The learned ASG further contends that a welfare State has to  generate  more
money to take care of the larger public interest. He further  contends  that
the claim of the members of the respondents that they have  a  vested  right
to get the renewal of their license in  the  railway  stations  referred  to
supra and that the government cannot expand its  competitors  is  completely
unsupported in law.



The learned ASG further  contends  that  the  entire  policy  is  not  under
challenge. It is only the clause which confers the right of renewal  of  the
license which has been challenged. The scope of the judicial review in  such
cases is limited. For the Court to examine the validity  of  the  same,  the
policy either needs to be arbitrary, or must suffer from some glaring  error
and must be perverse, or  be  contrary  to  constitutional  provisions.  The
learned ASG, in support of his contentions, places reliance on the  case  of
Jivan Das v. Life Insurance Corporation of India & Anr.[3] to  contend  that
the right to livelihood of  licensees  cannot  be  extended  to  use  public
property to the best advantage as a commercial venture. It was held in  that
case as under:

“An owner is entitled to deal with his property in his  own  way  profitable
in its use and occupation. A public authority is  equally  entitled  to  use
the public property to the best advantage as a  commercial  venture.  As  an
integral incidence of ejectment of a tenant/licensee is inevitable.  So  the
doctrine of livelihood cannot discriminately be  extended  to  the  area  of
commercial operation.”

On the other hand, Mr. Prashanta K.  Goswami,  the  learned  senior  counsel
appearing on behalf of some of the respondents, draws our attention  to  the
Catering Policy, 2010. He contends that revenue  collection  for  the  State
cannot be a yardstick or consideration for deciding renewals of licenses  of
licensees. The learned senior counsel further submits that the  licenses  of
these small shop/ kiosk owners have  been  renewed  in  some  zones  of  the
Railways, while in others not renewed, which action  of  the  appellants  is
violative of Article 14 of the Constitution of India.



Mr. Raju Ramachandran, the learned senior counsel  appearing  on  behalf  of
one of the respondent licensees contends that renewal  of  the  licenses  of
the members is the norm under the Catering Policy, 2010 and that  the  right
to renewal must be read into the contracts of the  existing  licensees.  The
learned senior counsel further contends that the social  objectives  of  the
Central Government, which is running the railways  across  the  country  and
which is the major transport industry  catering  to  the  need  of  a  large
number of commuters, must necessarily include the protection  of  the  right
to livelihood of the members of the respondents, apart from  the  protection
of Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution of India.



Mr. Ramachandran further contends that two views are  legitimately  possible
to construe the renewal clause. One is that renewals of  the  licenses  that
can be done only through the tender route and the  other  is  to  renew  the
existing or  pre-existing  licenses.  He  contends  that  the  same  can  be
resolved  by  applying   the   principle   of   ‘contra   proferentem’,   or
interpretation against the draftsman. In this connection, reliance has  been
placed by the learned senior counsel upon the  decision  of  this  Court  in
Bank of India & Ors. v. K. Mohandas & Ors.[4], wherein it has been  held  as
under:

“31. It is also a well-recognized principle of construction  of  a  contract
that it must be read as a whole in order to ascertain the  true  meaning  of
its several clauses and the words of each clause should  be  interpreted  so
as  to  bring  them  into  harmony  with  the  other  provisions   if   that
interpretation does no violence to the meaning of which they  are  naturally
susceptible. [(The North Eastern Railway Company v.  L.  Hastings)  1900  AC
260].

32. The fundamental position is that it is the banks  who  were  responsible
for formulation of the terms in the contractual Scheme that  the  optees  of
voluntary retirement under that Scheme will be  eligible  to  pension  under
Pension Regulations, 1995, and, therefore, they bear the  risk  of  lack  of
clarity, if any. It is a well-known principle of  construction  of  contract
that if the terms applied  by  one  party  are  unclear,  an  interpretation
against that party is preferred [Verba Chartarum Fortius Accipiuntur  Contra
Proferentum].”

The learned senior counsel further contends that the  social  objectives  of
the Policy are clearly meant to side step the profit  making  objective.  He
places reliance on a Constitution Bench decision of this Court in  the  case
of Olga Tellis v. Bombay Municipal Corporation[5], wherein it was held  that
the right to life includes the right to livelihood. In that case, the  Court
held as under:

“32. As we have stated while summing up  the  petitioners'  case,  the  main
plank of their argument is that the right to life  which  is  guaranteed  by
Article 21 includes  the  right  to  livelihood  and  since,  they  will  be
deprived of their livelihood  if  they  are  evicted  from  their  slum  and
pavement dwellings, their eviction is tantamount  to  deprivation  of  their
life and is hence  unconstitutional.  For  purposes  of  argument,  we  will
assume the factual correctness of the premise that if  the  petitioners  are
evicted from their dwellings, they will be  deprived  of  their  livelihood.
Upon that assumption, the question which we have to consider is whether  the
right to life includes the right to livelihood. We see only  one  answer  to
that question, namely, that  it  does.  The  sweep  of  the  right  to  life
conferred by Article 21 is wide and far reaching. It does  not  mean  merely
that life cannot be extinguished or taken  away  as,  for  example,  by  the
imposition  and  execution  of  the  death  sentence,  except  according  to
procedure established by law. That is but one aspect of the right  to  life.
An equally important  facet  of  that  right  is  the  right  to  livelihood
because, no person can live without the means of living, that is, the  means
of livelihood. If the right to livelihood is not treated as a  part  of  the
constitutional right to life, the easiest way  of  depriving  a  person  his
right to life would be to deprive him of his  means  of  livelihood  to  the
point of abrogation. Such deprivation would not only denude the life of  its
effective content and meaningfulness but it would make  life  impossible  to
live. And yet, such deprivation would not have to be In accordance with  the
procedure established by law, if the right to livelihood is not regarded  as
a part of the right to life. That, which alone makes it  possible  to  live,
leave aside what makes life livable,  must  be  deemed  to  be  an  integral
component of the right to life. Deprive a person of his right to  livelihood
and you shall have deprived him of  his  life.  Indeed,  that  explains  the
massive migration of the  rural  population  to  big  cities.  They  migrate
because they have no means of livelihood in the villages. The  motive  force
which people their desertion of their hearths  and  homes  in  the  villages
that  struggle  for  survival,  that  is,  the   struggle   for   life.   So
unimpeachable is the evidence of the nexus between life  and  the  means  of
livelihood. They have to eat to live : Only a handful can afford the  luxury
of living to eat. That they can do, namely,  eat,  only  if  they  have  the
means of livelihood. That is the context in which it was said by Douglas  J.
in Baksey that the right to work is the most precious  liberty  because,  it
sustains and enables a man to live and the  right  to  life  is  a  precious
freedom. "Life", as observed by Field, J. in  Munn  v.  Illinois  (1877)  94
U.S.  113,  means  something  more  than  mere  animal  existence  and   the
inhibition against the deprivation of life extends to all those  limits  and
faculties by which  life  is  enjoyed.  This  observation  was  quoted  with
approval by this Court in Kharak Singh v. The State of U.P.

33. Article 39(a) of the Constitution, which is  a  Directive  Principle  of
State Policy, provides that the  State  shall,  in  particular,  direct  its
policy towards securing that the citizens, men and women equally,  have  the
right to an adequate means of  livelihood.  Article  41,  which  is  another
Directive Principle, provides, inter alia, that the State shall, within  the
limits of its economic capacity and development,  make  effective  provision
for securing the right to work in cases of unemployment  and  of  undeserved
want.  Article  37  provides  that  the  Directive  Principles,  though  not
enforceable by any court, are nevertheless fundamental in the governance  of
the country. The Principles contained in  Articles  39(a)  and  41  must  be
regarded as equally fundamental in the understanding and  interpretation  of
the meaning and content of fundamental rights. If  there  is  an  obligation
upon the State to secure to the citizens an  adequate  means  of  livelihood
and the right to work, it would be sheer pedantry to exclude  the  right  to
livelihood from the content of the right to life.  The  State  may  not,  by
affirmative action, be compellable to provide adequate means  of  livelihood
or work to the citizens. But, any person, who is deprived of  his  right  to
livelihood except according to just and fair procedure established  by  law,
can challenge the deprivation as offending the right to  life  conferred  by
Article 21.”
  (emphasis laid by this Court)

The learned senior counsel further places reliance on a recent  decision  of
this Court in Charu Khurana v. Union of India[6], wherein the  above  stated
principle enunciated in Olga Tellis (supra) has been reiterated.



Before we advert to the contentions in  detail,  we  quote  Justice  Krishna
Iyer from the case of LIC v. D.J. Bahadur[7], wherein the learned Judge  has
explained what should be the  guiding  force  for  judges  when  faced  with
matters pertaining to social justice, as under:

“Law is no cold-blooded craft bound by  traditional  techniques  and  formal
forceps handed down to us from the Indo-Anglian era but a warm-blooded  art,
with a bleak from the past and a tryst with the present, deriving  its  soul
force from the Constitution enacted by the People of  India.  Law,  as  Vice
President G.S. Pathak used to emphasize in several lectures, is  a  tool  to
engineer a peaceful 'civil revolution' one of the components of which  is  a
fair deal to the weaker human sector like the working  class.  The  striking
social justice values of the Constitution impact on  the  interpretation  of
Indian laws and to forget this essential postulate while relying on  foreign
erudition is  to  weaken  the  vital  flame  of  the  Democratic,  Socialist
Republic of India.”


The case of the appellants, in nutshell, is that the railways had the  right
to enact the Catering Policy, 2010. In terms of the said Policy,  only  such
licensees who were granted license under the 2010 Policy  were  entitled  to
get their contracts renewed and the same benefit could not  be  extended  to
those  licensees  who  were  granted  license  prior  to  the  2010  Policy.
According to the Catering Policy 2010, no provision is made for the  renewal
of the existing catering units on the expiry of the term  of  the  licenses.
The renewal of the licenses of the licensee under  para  16  of  the  Policy
would apply only to licensees allotted under the Catering Policy  2010.  The
appellants have further submitted that the renewals of the licenses  by  the
Zonal  Railways  upto  2013  was  only  meant  to  operate  as  a  temporary
arrangement till the bidding and allocation process was finally completed.



We are unable to agree  with  the  contention  advanced  on  behalf  of  the
Appellants. The Railway  Board  issued  Commercial  Circular  No.  37  dated
09.08.2010, which contained the following instructions:

“1. Transfer of License Units:
d. Zonal railways should renew all agreements which have expired or are  due
for expiry in the next 6  months  by  giving  an  extension,  subject  to  a
maximum extension of six months from the date of issue of  Catering  Policy,
2010.”


This circular clarifies that the renewal of the license is  required  to  be
granted to all the existing licensees of the Minor Units as per  clauses  16
and 17 of the  Catering  Policy,  2010.  It  also  becomes  clear  that  the
existing licensees need not be included  in  the  tender  process.  Circular
dated 23.08.2011 issued by the Chief Commercial  Manager  of  South  Central
Railway  directed  all  the  Divisional  Commercial   Managers   and   other
subordinate officers of the  South  Central  Railway  to  confirm  that  the
tenure of all GMUs and SMUs at “A1”, “A” and “B” category stations shall  be
renewed after every 3 years on their satisfactory  performance  and  payment
of all dues and arrears as  per  the  2010  Policy.  In  view  of  the  said
circular,  catering  licenses  of  all  the  members   of   the   respondent
Association were renewed till July 2013. On this aspect  of  the  case,  the
learned single Judge of the High Court has held as under:
“While the 2010 Policy proper has not  envisaged  renewal  of  the  existing
licenses for a period not exceeding  six  months,  the  Immediate  Operative
Instructions issued in commercial circular no. 37/2010 dated 09.08.2010  has
directed the Zonal Railways to renew the licenses for a  maximum  period  of
six months from the date of issue of the 2010 Policy. If the 2010 Policy  is
understood as providing renewals only in  respect  of  the  licenses  issued
under the said Policy, there was no reason why the respondent No. 3 has  not
called for tenders on the expiry of six  months  period  from  the  date  of
coming into force of the 2010 Policy. Instead of calling  for  tenders,  the
respondent No.3 has renewed all the GMU and SMU licenses  for  a  period  of
three years in terms of paras 16.1.3 and 16.2.1 of  the  2010  Policy.  This
was done even before Para 16.3  was  amended.  Having  understood  the  2010
Policy in its true spirit even before the amendment  of  Para  16.3,  it  is
incomprehensible  that  respondent  no.3  projects  the  said  policy  in  a
different light by seeking to give it an interpretation which runs  contrary
to its plain language.  Nowhere  in  the  2010  Policy,  the  licensees  are
classified into two categories, namely,  those  who  were  granted  licenses
prior to the commencement of the 2010 Policy  and  those  who  were  granted
licenses after the said Policy. On the contrary, all the GMUs and SMUs  were
treated under one  category.  Irrespective  of  whether  the  licenses  were
granted by the Railways prior to 2005 or by the IRCTC from 2005 and  by  the
Indian Railways after 2010, renewal of licenses is envisaged for  all  these
categories  of  licensees  subject  to  their  fulfillment  of   the   three
requirements as referred to hereinbefore.”
                                               (emphasis laid by this Court)

The findings of the learned single Judge have been upheld  by  the  Division
Bench and we do find any reason to interfere with the same.  Article  14  of
the Constitution of India mandates that state action must not  be  arbitrary
and  discriminatory.  It  must  also  not  be  guided  by   any   extraneous
considerations which are antithetical to equality. A three  Judge  Bench  of
this Court in the case of R.D. Shetty v. International Airport  Authority[8]
held as under:
“21 ……It must, therefore follow as a necessary corollary from the  principle
of equality enshrined in Article 14 that though the  State  is  entitled  to
refuse to enter into relationship with any  one,  yet  if  it  does  so,  it
cannot arbitrarily choose  any  person  it  likes  for  entering  into  such
relationship and discriminate between persons similarly  circumstanced,  but
it must act in conformity with some standard or principle  which  meets  the
test of reasonableness and non-discrimination and any  departure  from  such
standard or principle would  be  invalid  unless  it  can  be  supported  or
justified on some rational and non-discriminatory ground.”
               (emphasis laid by this Court)



India is a welfare State. Article 38 of the Constitution of India, which  is
a Directive Principle of State Policy, reads as under:

“38. State to secure a social order for the  promotion  of  welfare  of  the
people.—(1) The State shall strive to promote the welfare of the  people  by
securing and protecting as effectively as it may a  social  order  in  which
justice, social, economic and political, shall inform all  the  institutions
of the national life.

 (2) The State shall, in particular, strive to minimise the inequalities  in
income, and endeavour to eliminate inequalities in  status,  facilities  and
opportunities, not only amongst  individuals  but  also  amongst  groups  of
people residing in different areas or engaged in different vocations.”


It is the duty of every welfare state  to  generate  employment.  Presently,
millions of youth of the country are unemployed. The right to livelihood  is
a part of right to life, as has  been  held  in  the  case  of  Olga  Tellis
(supra). A vast majority of the unemployed population of the  country  then,
is susceptible to being exploited by the rich and  the  capitalists.  It  is
the duty of the state, acting through its instrumentalities to  ensure  that
no person in a vulnerable position is exploited. In  the  case  of  People’s
Union for Democratic  Rights  &  Ors.  v.  Union  of  India[9],  Bhagwati,J.
lamenting on the exploitation of the weak and the powerless held as under:

“………The Rule of Law does not mean that the protection of  the  law  must  be
available only to a fortunate few or that the law should be  allowed  to  be
prostituted by the vested interests for protecting and upholding the  status
quo under the guise of enforcement of their civil and political rights.  The
poor too have civil and political rights and the Rule of Law  is  meant  for
them also, though today it exists only on paper and not in reality.  If  the
sugar barons and the alcohol kings have the Fundamental Right  to  carry  on
their business and to  fatten  their  purses  by  exploiting  the  consuming
public, have the 'chamars' belonging to the  lowest  strata  of  society  no
Fundamental Right to earn an honest living through  their  sweat  and  toil?
………civil and political rights, priceless and  invaluable  as  they  are  for
freedom and democracy, simply do not  exist  for  the  vast  masses  of  our
people. Large numbers of men, women and children who constitute the bulk  of
our population are today living  a  sub-human  existence  in  conditions  of
abject poverty: utter grinding poverty has  broken  their  back  and  sapped
their moral fibre. They have no faith in the existing  social  and  economic
system. What  civil  and  political  rights  are  these  poor  and  deprived
sections of humanity going to enforce?”


This Court, being entrusted with the task of being  the  countermajoritarian
institution, is duty bound to ensure that  the  rights  of  the  downtrodden
minorities and the members of the weaker sections of  the  society  are  not
trampled upon.



One more important aspect to be taken note of  by  this  Court  is  the  non
governance of railway property in the  past  67  years  since  independence.
Though, it is a recognized  principle  of  law  that  the  property  of  the
railways is public property, yet in reality, it is the private  players  and
industries that are allowed to carry on their business for transport of  raw
materials from one place to another. After the  enactment  of  the  Railways
Act, 1989, the Rail Land Development Authority has  been  established  under
Chapter IIA of the Act to manage the railway property by framing  policy  or
rules for allotment of the  same  in  favour  of  the  licensees,  including
fixing license fee or occupation charges in respect of the  vast  extent  of
vacant property from which  huge  revenue  can  be  collected,  which  is  a
laudable object to cater to the need of the public at large. The  periodical
revision of license fee in respect of such big operators has not  been  done
by the railways. Also, the Policy of not  renewing  the  licenses  of  those
persons who are members of the respondents are completely dependent on self-
earning from these small units and  making  them  participate  in  a  public
competition is absolutely unfair, unreasonable and  arbitrary.  The  chances
of such persons being deprived of their  right  to  livelihood  is  also  an
important factor which has to be taken into consideration by this  Court  to
interpret the policy framed by the appellants. The callous attitude  as  far
as the inaction on the part of the State in tackling the problem  of  rising
unemployment is appalling. The situation is made worse by the  handing  over
of public  functions  to  private  entrepreneurs,  which  then  exploit  the
policies of the government against the poor and downtrodden  people  of  the
country. If the appellants under the guise of the policy  are  permitted  to
deny renewal of licenses in favour of the  licensees,  it  would  amount  to
deprivation of  their  right  to  freedom  of  occupation  guaranteed  under
Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution as well as  the  right  to  livelihood,
which action of the appellants  would  be  diametrically  opposed  to  their
constitutional duty towards social justice as well as uplifting  the  weaker
sections of the society and the unemployed youth of the country.



In the case of Consumer Education & Research Center v.  Union  of  India[10]
a three Judge Bench of this Court observed as under:

“Social justice, equality and dignity of person are cornerstones  of  social
democracy. The concept 'social justice'  which  the  Constitution  of  India
engrafted, consists of diverse principles essential for the  orderly  growth
and development of  personality  of  every  citizen.……Social  justice  is  a
dynamic device to  mitigate  the  sufferings  of  the  poor,  weak,  Dalits,
Tribals and deprived sections of the society and  to  elevate  them  to  the
level of equality to live a life with dignity of person. Social  justice  is
not a simple or single idea of  a  society  but  is  an  essential  part  of
complex social change to relieve the poor etc.  from  handicaps,  penury  to
ward off distress, and to make their life livable, for greater good  of  the
society at large. In other words, the aim of social  justice  is  to  attain
substantial degree of social, economic and political equality, which is  the
legitimate expectation. Social security, just and humane conditions of  work
and leisure to workman are part of his  meaningful  right  to  life  and  to
achieve self- expression of his personality  and  to  enjoy  the  life  with
dignity, the State should provide facilities  and  opportunities  to  enable
them to reach at least minimum standard of  health,  economic  security  and
civilised living  while  sharing  according  to  the  capacity,  social  and
cultural heritage.”

Further, in the case of Sadhuram Bansal v. Pulin Sarkar[11] this Court  held
as under:
“There is no ritualistic formula or any magical  charm  in  the  concept  of
social justice. All that it means is that as between two parties if  a  deal
is made with one party without serious detriment  to  the  other,  then  the
Court would lean in favour of the weaker  section  of  the  society,  Social
justice is  the  recognition  of  greater  good  to  larger  number  without
deprivation of accrued legal rights of anybody. If such a thing can be  done
then indeed social justice must prevail over any technical rule.  It  is  in
response to the felt necessities of  time  and  situation  in  order  to  do
greater good to a larger number even  though  it  might  detract  from  some
technical rule in favour of a party.”


Keeping in view the  evolving  concept  of  social  justice,  we  allow  the
members of respondents  who  are  the  licensees  to  continue  their  petty
business, especially in  the  absence  of  employment  potentiality  in  the
country  on  account  of  non-governance  and  non-  implementation  of  the
constitutional philosophy of an  egalitarian  society,  which  provides  the
opportunity to all individuals to lead a life of dignity. The right to  life
with dignity has been interpreted to be a part of  right  to  life  by  this
Court in  the  case  of  Francis  Coralie  Mullin  v.  Administrator,  Union
Territory of Delhi & Ors.[12] , as under:

“We think that the right to life includes  the  right  to  live  with  human
dignity and all that goes along with it, namely,  the  bare  necessaries  of
life such as adequate nutrition, clothing and  shelter  and  facilities  for
reading, writing and expressing one-self in  diverse  forms,  freely  moving
about and mixing and commingling with fellow human beings.  Of  course,  the
magnitude and content of the components of this right would depend upon  the
extent of the economic development of the country, but it must, in any  view
of the matter, include the right to the basic necessities of life  and  also
the right to carry on such functions and activities as constitute  the  bare
minimum expression of the human-self.”


Therefore, we have to hold that the provisions of the Catering Policy,  2010
are applicable to the concerned respondents. The action of the  railways  in
not granting renewals of the licenses to the members of the  respondents  is
arbitrary, unreasonable, unfair and discriminatory, and the same  cannot  be
allowed to sustain in law.



For the reasons stated supra, this Court cannot interfere with the  impugned
judgment and order of the High Court. The Civil Appeals are  dismissed.  The
order dated 11.04.2014 granting stay of  the  impugned  order  shall  stands
vacated. We, however, make  it  clear  that  only  those  licensees  may  be
eligible for renewal of their licenses who can  declare  on  affidavit  that
they do not have the license of more than one shop or kiosk  in  their  name
or benami  license  at  the  railway  stations  with  periodical  reasonable
increase of license fee. All pending applications are disposed of.



                                                       …………………………………………………J.

                                                           [V. GOPALA GOWDA]


                                                       …………………………………………………J.

                                                               [AMITAVA ROY]

            New Delhi,
            January 29, 2016

ITEM NO.1A-For Judgment       COURT NO.10               SECTION XIIA

               S U P R E M E  C O U R T  O F  I N D I A
                       RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS

Civil Appeal  No(s).  618-620/2016 @ SLP(C) Nos.9921-9923/2014

SENIOR DIVISIONAL COMMERCIAL MANAGER & ORS       Appellant(s)

                                VERSUS

S.C.R CATERERS,DRY FRUITS,F.J.S.W ASSOCI AND ANR.  Respondent(s)


Date : 29/01/2016 These appeals were called on for pronouncement of
JUDGMENT today.


For Appellant(s)
                     Mr. Shreekant N. Terdal,Adv.

For Respondent(s)
                     Ms. Ranjeeta Rohtagi,Adv.
                                 REPORTABLE
     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA                       CIVILAPPELLATE
                                JURISDICTION

              CIVIL APPEAL NOS.618-620 OF 2016
               (Arising Out of SLP (C) Nos.9921-9923 of 2014)


SENIOR DIVISIONAL COMMERCIAL MANAGER & ORS.                    ………APPELLANTS

                                     Vs.

S.C.R. CATERERS, DRY FRUITS, FRUIT JUICE
STALLS WELFARE ASSOCIATION & ANR.                             ………RESPONDENTS


                               J U D G M E N T


            V. GOPALA GOWDA, J.

            Applications for intervention are allowed.
Leave granted.



The present appeals arise out of  the  impugned  judgment  and  order  dated
12.09.2013 passed by the High Court  of  Judicature  of  Andhra  Pradesh  at
Hyderabad in W.A. Nos. 1573-1575 of 2013, whereby the Division Bench of  the
High Court upheld the order of the learned  single  Judge,  wherein  it  was
held that the respondents are entitled to get their licenses  renewed  under
the Catering Policy, 2010.



The relevant facts which are required for us to appreciate the  rival  legal
contentions  advanced  on  behalf  of  the  parties  are  stated  in   brief
hereunder:



      Respondents before us are the  South  Central  Railway  Caterers,  Dry
Fruits, Fruit Juice Stalls Welfare Association, (hereinafter referred to  as
“the Welfare Association”). The members  of  the  Welfare  Association  were
granted licenses for running General Minor Units or Special Minor  Units  in
Categories “A”, “B” and “C” Railway Stations. These  licenses  were  granted
in favour of the members of the respondents prior to  the  creation  of  the
Indian  Railways  Catering  and  Tourism  Corporation  Limited  (hereinafter
referred to as “IRCTC”) under the Catering Policy, 2005.  In  terms  of  the
said Policy, the  contracts  under  Categories  “A”,  “B”  and  “C”  Railway
Stations were transferred to the IRCTC while  the  contracts  granted  under
Categories “D” to “F” Railway Stations were continued under the  control  of
the South Central Railways till the IRCTC was equipped to  take  over  these
units. The contracts held by the members of  the  Welfare  Association  were
renewed during the subsistence  of  the  Catering  Policy,  2005.  The  said
policy was replaced by the Catering Policy, 2010. Under the new Policy,  the
contracts of all the existing major and minor  catering  units  were  to  be
awarded and managed by the Zonal Railways.  The  IRCTC  was  left  with  the
running of the Food Plaza, Food Courts and Fast Food  Units  only.  Pursuant
to the Catering Policy, 2010, the South Central Railway granted  renewal  of
licenses in favour of the licensees for a period of three years with  effect
from 21.07.2010, the date on  which  the  Catering  Policy,  2010  was  made
effective in respect of the General Minor Units  (GMUs)  and  Special  Minor
Units  (SMUs)  taken  over  from  the  IRCTC,  subject  to  the   conditions
stipulated in paras 16.1.3 and 16.2.1 of  the  Catering  Policy,  2010.  The
renewed licenses were to expire on 20.07.2013.  On  26.04.2013,  the  Senior
Divisional Commercial Manager, Vijayawada,  issued  a  bid  notice  inviting
sealed bids on the Single Stage Two-Packet System  from  food  and  catering
service providers for provision of catering services at the various GMUs  of
Categories “A” and “B” Railways  Stations  in  the  Vijayawada  Division.  A
similar notification  dated  03.05.2013  was  issued  for  establishment  of
catering stalls/fruits and fruit juice stalls in SMUs in “A1”, “A”  and  “B”
Category  Railway  Stations.  Aggrieved,  the  respondent-Association,   the
members of which had existing licenses, filed a  Writ  Petition  before  the
single  Judge  of  the  High  Court  of  Judicature  of  Andhra  Pradesh  at
Hyderabad.  The  respondent-Association  urged  that  the  said  action   of
inviting fresh bids is discriminatory and also contrary  to  the  provisions
of the Catering Policy, 2010. The main plea  of  the  respondent-Association
was that in terms of the Catering Policy, 2010, the existing licensees  were
entitled for renewal of their licenses for a period of three years,  subject
to their satisfactory performance, payment  of  all  dues  and  arrears  and
withdrawal of court cases,  if  any.  They  prayed  that  the  appellant  be
directed to renew the licenses  of  the  existing  license  holders  of  the
canteens and fruits and fruit juice stalls. Vide judgment  and  order  dated
16.08.2013, the learned  single  Judge  came  to  the  conclusion  that  the
Catering Policy, 2010 did not differentiate among  the  licensees  based  on
the number of years for which they have been carrying on their business.  It
was further held that under the Catering Policy, 2010, the  license  fee  is
liable to be revised based on the potentiality of each Railway  Station  and
the turnover of the licensees during the previous years. Since  the  license
fee is subject to continuous revision and  does  not  remain  stagnant,  the
question of the Railways suffering  any  loss  due  to  renewals  would  not
arise. The learned single  Judge  held  that  the  members  of  the  Welfare
Association are entitled for renewal of the licenses of the members  subject
to their satisfying the conditions stipulated in paras 16.1.3 and 16.2.1  of
the Catering Policy, 2010. On appeal filed by the appellants,  the  judgment
and order of the learned single Judge was upheld by the  Division  Bench  of
the High Court in the  Writ  Appeals  vide  its  judgment  and  order  dated
12.09.2013. Hence, the present appeals are filed by the appellants.



We have heard the learned senior counsel for both the parties. On the  basis
of  the  pleadings  and  evidence  on  record  produced   before   us,   the
circumstances of the  case  and  also  in  the  light  of  the  rival  legal
contentions urged by the learned senior counsel for both  the  parties,  the
main question that arises for our consideration is whether  the  members  of
the respondents before us are entitled to have  their  licenses  renewed  in
terms of the Catering Policy, 2010.



Mr. N.K. Kaul, the learned Additional Solicitor General appearing on  behalf
of the appellants drew our attention to  the  important  provisions  of  the
Catering Policy, 2010. The objective of the Policy reads as under:

“1.1 To provide hygienic, good quality affordable  food  to  the  travelling
public by adopting best trade and hospitality practices.

1.2 The policy  will  have  an  inclusive  approach  where  from  the  least
advantaged passenger to the relatively affluent will  be  provided  catering
services in a socially responsible manner.

1.3 It should meet all the social objectives of  the  Government,  including
provision of reservations as per Government Directives issued from  time  to
time.”




The learned ASG contends that the terms of the  Catering  Policy,  2010  are
absolutely clear. The larger issue here is the right to  livelihood  of  the
licensees who are members of the respondents. The welfare of the  people  is
the prime concern of any responsible government under the provisions of  the
Constitution. The learned ASG places reliance on the case  of  Lala  Ram  v.
Union of  India[1],  wherein  the  concept  of  a  welfare  state  has  been
discussed as under:

“A welfare state denotes a concept of government, in which the  State  plays
a key role in the protection and promotion of the economic and social  well-
being of all of its citizens, which may include  equitable  distribution  of
wealth and equal opportunities and public responsibilities  for  all  those,
who are unable to avail for themselves,  minimal  provisions  for  a  decent
life. It refers to "Greatest good of greatest number and the benefit of  all
and the happiness  of  all".  It  is  important  that  public  weal  be  the
commitment of the State, where the state  is  a  welfare  state.  A  welfare
state is under an obligation to prepare plans and devise beneficial  schemes
for the good of the common  people.  Thus,  the  fundamental  feature  of  a
Welfare state is social insurance. Anti-poverty programmes and a  system  of
personal taxation are examples of certain aspects  of  a  Welfare  state.  A
Welfare state provides State sponsored aid for individuals from  the  cradle
to the grave. However, a welfare state faces basic problems as regards  what
should be the desirable level of provision of such welfare services  by  the
state, for the reason that  equitable  provision  of  resources  to  finance
services over and above the  contributions  of  direct  beneficiaries  would
cause difficulties. A welfare state is one, which seeks  to  ensure  maximum
happiness of maximum  number  of  people  living  within  its  territory.  A
welfare state must attempt to provide  all  facilities  for  decent  living,
particularly to the poor, the weak, the old and the  disabled  i.e.  to  all
those, who admittedly belong to the weaker sections of society. Articles  38
and 39 of the Constitution of India provide that the State  must  strive  to
promote the welfare of the people of  the  state  by  protecting  all  their
economic, social and political rights. These  rights  may  cover,  means  of
livelihood, health and the general well-being of all sections of  people  in
society,  specially  those  of  the  young,  the  old,  the  women  and  the
relatively weaker sections of the society. These  groups  generally  require
special protection measures in almost every set up.  The  happiness  of  the
people is the ultimate aim of a welfare state, and  a  welfare  state  would
not qualify as one, unless it strives to achieve the same.”
                 (emphasis laid by this Court)


The learned ASG further places reliance on the case of Ram &  Shyam  Company
v. State of Haryana[2], relevant paragraph of which is quoted hereunder:

“12.  Let  us  put  into  focus  the  clearly   demarcated   approach   that
distinguishes the  use  and  disposal  of  private  property  and  socialist
property. Owner of private property may deal with it in any manner he  likes
without causing injury to anyone else. But the socialist or if that word  is
jarring to some, the community or further the  public  property  has  to  be
dealt with for public purpose and in public interest. The marked  difference
lies in this that while the owner of private property may have a  number  of
considerations which may permit him to dispose of his property for  a  song.
On the other hand, disposal of public property partakes the character  of  a
trust in that in its disposal there should be nothing hanky panky  and  that
it must be done at the best price so that larger  revenue  coming  into  the
coffers of the State administration would  serve  public  purpose  viz.  the
welfare State may be  able  to  expand  its  beneficent  activities  by  the
availability of larger funds. This is subject to  one  important  limitation
that socialist property may be disposed at a price  lower  than  the  market
price or even for a token price to  achieve  some  defined  constitutionally
recognised public purpose, one such being to achieve the goals  set  out  in
Part IV of the Constitution. But  where  disposal  is  for  augmentation  of
revenue and nothing else, the State is under an  obligation  to  secure  the
best market price  available  in  a  market  economy  An  owner  of  private
property need not auction it nor is he bound to dispose it of at  a  current
market price. Factors such as personal  attachment,  or  affinity,  kinship,
empathy, religious sentiment or limiting  the  choice  to  whom  he  may  be
willing to sell, may permit him to sell the property at a song  and  without
demur. A welfare State as the owner of  the  public  property  has  no  such
freedom while disposing of the public property. A welfare State  exists  for
the largest good of the largest number more so when it  proclaims  to  be  a
socialist State dedicated to eradication of poverty. All  its  attempt  must
be to obtain the best  available  price  while  disposing  of  its  property
because the greater the revenue, the welfare activities will  get  a  fillip
and  shot  in  the  arm.  Financial  constraint  may  weaken  the  tempo  of
activities. Such an approach serves the larger public purpose  of  expanding
welfare activities  primarily  for  which  the  Constitution  envisages  the
setting up of a welfare State.”
                                               (emphasis laid by this Court)

The interest of the passenger has no  correlation  with  social  objectives.
The main objective of the Catering Policy, 2010 is to  provide  food  at  an
affordable  price  to  the  railway  passengers.  The  learned  ASG  further
contends that the State is entitled in law to frame a  new  policy  in  that
respect.  The  learned  ASG  contends  that  the  Policy  contains  detailed
mechanisms and makes it very clear for whom it is  meant.  The  learned  ASG
draws our attention to clause 3.3.1 of the Policy which reads as under:

“3.3.1 All existing major and minor  catering  units  will  be  awarded  and
managed by the zonal railways, except Food Plaza,  Food  Courts,  fast  food
units. All such contracts presently being managed by the  IRCTC,  on  expiry
of the contract period, will be awarded by the zonal  railways.  IRCTC  will
not renew any contract required to be  handed  over  to  zonal  railways  on
expiry of the contract.”


The learned ASG further draws our attention to clause  16.1.3  of  the  2010
Policy which reads as under:

“16.1.3 Allotment of all General Minor Units at A,B &  C  category  stations
shall be awarded for a period of five years with  a  provision  for  renewal
after every 3 years on satisfactory performance and payment of all dues  and
arrears and withdrawal of court cases, if  any.  Allotment  of  all  General
Minor Unis at D,E & F category stations will be for  a  period  of  5  years
with a provision for renewal after every 5 years for a further period  of  5
years on satisfactory performance and payment of all dues  and  arrears  and
withdrawal of court cases, if any.”

The learned ASG contends that by virtue of clause  16.1.3,  the  members  of
the respondents cannot claim renewal of their license as a matter of  right.
The learned ASG further placed reliance on clause 26.1.1 of the 2010  Policy
which reads as under:
“26.1.1 All existing operational catering  licenses  awarded  by  IRCTC  and
transferred to Zonal Railways will be  governed  by  the  existing  Catering
Policy 2005 upto the validity of their contractual period.”

Further, Clause 26.1.4 of the policy reads as under:
“26.1.4 This policy will also apply in case of award of fresh  licenses  and
licenses awarded in the event of termination, non-renewal, vacation etc.  of
the existing licenses.”

The learned ASG further contends that a welfare State has to  generate  more
money to take care of the larger public interest. He further  contends  that
the claim of the members of the respondents that they have  a  vested  right
to get the renewal of their license in  the  railway  stations  referred  to
supra and that the government cannot expand its  competitors  is  completely
unsupported in law.



The learned ASG further  contends  that  the  entire  policy  is  not  under
challenge. It is only the clause which confers the right of renewal  of  the
license which has been challenged. The scope of the judicial review in  such
cases is limited. For the Court to examine the validity  of  the  same,  the
policy either needs to be arbitrary, or must suffer from some glaring  error
and must be perverse, or  be  contrary  to  constitutional  provisions.  The
learned ASG, in support of his contentions, places reliance on the  case  of
Jivan Das v. Life Insurance Corporation of India & Anr.[3] to  contend  that
the right to livelihood of  licensees  cannot  be  extended  to  use  public
property to the best advantage as a commercial venture. It was held in  that
case as under:

“An owner is entitled to deal with his property in his  own  way  profitable
in its use and occupation. A public authority is  equally  entitled  to  use
the public property to the best advantage as a  commercial  venture.  As  an
integral incidence of ejectment of a tenant/licensee is inevitable.  So  the
doctrine of livelihood cannot discriminately be  extended  to  the  area  of
commercial operation.”

On the other hand, Mr. Prashanta K.  Goswami,  the  learned  senior  counsel
appearing on behalf of some of the respondents, draws our attention  to  the
Catering Policy, 2010. He contends that revenue  collection  for  the  State
cannot be a yardstick or consideration for deciding renewals of licenses  of
licensees. The learned senior counsel further submits that the  licenses  of
these small shop/ kiosk owners have  been  renewed  in  some  zones  of  the
Railways, while in others not renewed, which action  of  the  appellants  is
violative of Article 14 of the Constitution of India.



Mr. Raju Ramachandran, the learned senior counsel  appearing  on  behalf  of
one of the respondent licensees contends that renewal  of  the  licenses  of
the members is the norm under the Catering Policy, 2010 and that  the  right
to renewal must be read into the contracts of the  existing  licensees.  The
learned senior counsel further contends that the social  objectives  of  the
Central Government, which is running the railways  across  the  country  and
which is the major transport industry  catering  to  the  need  of  a  large
number of commuters, must necessarily include the protection  of  the  right
to livelihood of the members of the respondents, apart from  the  protection
of Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution of India.



Mr. Ramachandran further contends that two views are  legitimately  possible
to construe the renewal clause. One is that renewals of  the  licenses  that
can be done only through the tender route and the  other  is  to  renew  the
existing or  pre-existing  licenses.  He  contends  that  the  same  can  be
resolved  by  applying   the   principle   of   ‘contra   proferentem’,   or
interpretation against the draftsman. In this connection, reliance has  been
placed by the learned senior counsel upon the  decision  of  this  Court  in
Bank of India & Ors. v. K. Mohandas & Ors.[4], wherein it has been  held  as
under:

“31. It is also a well-recognized principle of construction  of  a  contract
that it must be read as a whole in order to ascertain the  true  meaning  of
its several clauses and the words of each clause should  be  interpreted  so
as  to  bring  them  into  harmony  with  the  other  provisions   if   that
interpretation does no violence to the meaning of which they  are  naturally
susceptible. [(The North Eastern Railway Company v.  L.  Hastings)  1900  AC
260].

32. The fundamental position is that it is the banks  who  were  responsible
for formulation of the terms in the contractual Scheme that  the  optees  of
voluntary retirement under that Scheme will be  eligible  to  pension  under
Pension Regulations, 1995, and, therefore, they bear the  risk  of  lack  of
clarity, if any. It is a well-known principle of  construction  of  contract
that if the terms applied  by  one  party  are  unclear,  an  interpretation
against that party is preferred [Verba Chartarum Fortius Accipiuntur  Contra
Proferentum].”

The learned senior counsel further contends that the  social  objectives  of
the Policy are clearly meant to side step the profit  making  objective.  He
places reliance on a Constitution Bench decision of this Court in  the  case
of Olga Tellis v. Bombay Municipal Corporation[5], wherein it was held  that
the right to life includes the right to livelihood. In that case, the  Court
held as under:

“32. As we have stated while summing up  the  petitioners'  case,  the  main
plank of their argument is that the right to life  which  is  guaranteed  by
Article 21 includes  the  right  to  livelihood  and  since,  they  will  be
deprived of their livelihood  if  they  are  evicted  from  their  slum  and
pavement dwellings, their eviction is tantamount  to  deprivation  of  their
life and is hence  unconstitutional.  For  purposes  of  argument,  we  will
assume the factual correctness of the premise that if  the  petitioners  are
evicted from their dwellings, they will be  deprived  of  their  livelihood.
Upon that assumption, the question which we have to consider is whether  the
right to life includes the right to livelihood. We see only  one  answer  to
that question, namely, that  it  does.  The  sweep  of  the  right  to  life
conferred by Article 21 is wide and far reaching. It does  not  mean  merely
that life cannot be extinguished or taken  away  as,  for  example,  by  the
imposition  and  execution  of  the  death  sentence,  except  according  to
procedure established by law. That is but one aspect of the right  to  life.
An equally important  facet  of  that  right  is  the  right  to  livelihood
because, no person can live without the means of living, that is, the  means
of livelihood. If the right to livelihood is not treated as a  part  of  the
constitutional right to life, the easiest way  of  depriving  a  person  his
right to life would be to deprive him of his  means  of  livelihood  to  the
point of abrogation. Such deprivation would not only denude the life of  its
effective content and meaningfulness but it would make  life  impossible  to
live. And yet, such deprivation would not have to be In accordance with  the
procedure established by law, if the right to livelihood is not regarded  as
a part of the right to life. That, which alone makes it  possible  to  live,
leave aside what makes life livable,  must  be  deemed  to  be  an  integral
component of the right to life. Deprive a person of his right to  livelihood
and you shall have deprived him of  his  life.  Indeed,  that  explains  the
massive migration of the  rural  population  to  big  cities.  They  migrate
because they have no means of livelihood in the villages. The  motive  force
which people their desertion of their hearths  and  homes  in  the  villages
that  struggle  for  survival,  that  is,  the   struggle   for   life.   So
unimpeachable is the evidence of the nexus between life  and  the  means  of
livelihood. They have to eat to live : Only a handful can afford the  luxury
of living to eat. That they can do, namely,  eat,  only  if  they  have  the
means of livelihood. That is the context in which it was said by Douglas  J.
in Baksey that the right to work is the most precious  liberty  because,  it
sustains and enables a man to live and the  right  to  life  is  a  precious
freedom. "Life", as observed by Field, J. in  Munn  v.  Illinois  (1877)  94
U.S.  113,  means  something  more  than  mere  animal  existence  and   the
inhibition against the deprivation of life extends to all those  limits  and
faculties by which  life  is  enjoyed.  This  observation  was  quoted  with
approval by this Court in Kharak Singh v. The State of U.P.

33. Article 39(a) of the Constitution, which is  a  Directive  Principle  of
State Policy, provides that the  State  shall,  in  particular,  direct  its
policy towards securing that the citizens, men and women equally,  have  the
right to an adequate means of  livelihood.  Article  41,  which  is  another
Directive Principle, provides, inter alia, that the State shall, within  the
limits of its economic capacity and development,  make  effective  provision
for securing the right to work in cases of unemployment  and  of  undeserved
want.  Article  37  provides  that  the  Directive  Principles,  though  not
enforceable by any court, are nevertheless fundamental in the governance  of
the country. The Principles contained in  Articles  39(a)  and  41  must  be
regarded as equally fundamental in the understanding and  interpretation  of
the meaning and content of fundamental rights. If  there  is  an  obligation
upon the State to secure to the citizens an  adequate  means  of  livelihood
and the right to work, it would be sheer pedantry to exclude  the  right  to
livelihood from the content of the right to life.  The  State  may  not,  by
affirmative action, be compellable to provide adequate means  of  livelihood
or work to the citizens. But, any person, who is deprived of  his  right  to
livelihood except according to just and fair procedure established  by  law,
can challenge the deprivation as offending the right to  life  conferred  by
Article 21.”
  (emphasis laid by this Court)

The learned senior counsel further places reliance on a recent  decision  of
this Court in Charu Khurana v. Union of India[6], wherein the  above  stated
principle enunciated in Olga Tellis (supra) has been reiterated.



Before we advert to the contentions in  detail,  we  quote  Justice  Krishna
Iyer from the case of LIC v. D.J. Bahadur[7], wherein the learned Judge  has
explained what should be the  guiding  force  for  judges  when  faced  with
matters pertaining to social justice, as under:

“Law is no cold-blooded craft bound by  traditional  techniques  and  formal
forceps handed down to us from the Indo-Anglian era but a warm-blooded  art,
with a bleak from the past and a tryst with the present, deriving  its  soul
force from the Constitution enacted by the People of  India.  Law,  as  Vice
President G.S. Pathak used to emphasize in several lectures, is  a  tool  to
engineer a peaceful 'civil revolution' one of the components of which  is  a
fair deal to the weaker human sector like the working  class.  The  striking
social justice values of the Constitution impact on  the  interpretation  of
Indian laws and to forget this essential postulate while relying on  foreign
erudition is  to  weaken  the  vital  flame  of  the  Democratic,  Socialist
Republic of India.”


The case of the appellants, in nutshell, is that the railways had the  right
to enact the Catering Policy, 2010. In terms of the said Policy,  only  such
licensees who were granted license under the 2010 Policy  were  entitled  to
get their contracts renewed and the same benefit could not  be  extended  to
those  licensees  who  were  granted  license  prior  to  the  2010  Policy.
According to the Catering Policy 2010, no provision is made for the  renewal
of the existing catering units on the expiry of the term  of  the  licenses.
The renewal of the licenses of the licensee under  para  16  of  the  Policy
would apply only to licensees allotted under the Catering Policy  2010.  The
appellants have further submitted that the renewals of the licenses  by  the
Zonal  Railways  upto  2013  was  only  meant  to  operate  as  a  temporary
arrangement till the bidding and allocation process was finally completed.



We are unable to agree  with  the  contention  advanced  on  behalf  of  the
Appellants. The Railway  Board  issued  Commercial  Circular  No.  37  dated
09.08.2010, which contained the following instructions:

“1. Transfer of License Units:
d. Zonal railways should renew all agreements which have expired or are  due
for expiry in the next 6  months  by  giving  an  extension,  subject  to  a
maximum extension of six months from the date of issue of  Catering  Policy,
2010.”


This circular clarifies that the renewal of the license is  required  to  be
granted to all the existing licensees of the Minor Units as per  clauses  16
and 17 of the  Catering  Policy,  2010.  It  also  becomes  clear  that  the
existing licensees need not be included  in  the  tender  process.  Circular
dated 23.08.2011 issued by the Chief Commercial  Manager  of  South  Central
Railway  directed  all  the  Divisional  Commercial   Managers   and   other
subordinate officers of the  South  Central  Railway  to  confirm  that  the
tenure of all GMUs and SMUs at “A1”, “A” and “B” category stations shall  be
renewed after every 3 years on their satisfactory  performance  and  payment
of all dues and arrears as  per  the  2010  Policy.  In  view  of  the  said
circular,  catering  licenses  of  all  the  members   of   the   respondent
Association were renewed till July 2013. On this aspect  of  the  case,  the
learned single Judge of the High Court has held as under:
“While the 2010 Policy proper has not  envisaged  renewal  of  the  existing
licenses for a period not exceeding  six  months,  the  Immediate  Operative
Instructions issued in commercial circular no. 37/2010 dated 09.08.2010  has
directed the Zonal Railways to renew the licenses for a  maximum  period  of
six months from the date of issue of the 2010 Policy. If the 2010 Policy  is
understood as providing renewals only in  respect  of  the  licenses  issued
under the said Policy, there was no reason why the respondent No. 3 has  not
called for tenders on the expiry of six  months  period  from  the  date  of
coming into force of the 2010 Policy. Instead of calling  for  tenders,  the
respondent No.3 has renewed all the GMU and SMU licenses  for  a  period  of
three years in terms of paras 16.1.3 and 16.2.1 of  the  2010  Policy.  This
was done even before Para 16.3  was  amended.  Having  understood  the  2010
Policy in its true spirit even before the amendment  of  Para  16.3,  it  is
incomprehensible  that  respondent  no.3  projects  the  said  policy  in  a
different light by seeking to give it an interpretation which runs  contrary
to its plain language.  Nowhere  in  the  2010  Policy,  the  licensees  are
classified into two categories, namely,  those  who  were  granted  licenses
prior to the commencement of the 2010 Policy  and  those  who  were  granted
licenses after the said Policy. On the contrary, all the GMUs and SMUs  were
treated under one  category.  Irrespective  of  whether  the  licenses  were
granted by the Railways prior to 2005 or by the IRCTC from 2005 and  by  the
Indian Railways after 2010, renewal of licenses is envisaged for  all  these
categories  of  licensees  subject  to  their  fulfillment  of   the   three
requirements as referred to hereinbefore.”
                                               (emphasis laid by this Court)

The findings of the learned single Judge have been upheld  by  the  Division
Bench and we do find any reason to interfere with the same.  Article  14  of
the Constitution of India mandates that state action must not  be  arbitrary
and  discriminatory.  It  must  also  not  be  guided  by   any   extraneous
considerations which are antithetical to equality. A three  Judge  Bench  of
this Court in the case of R.D. Shetty v. International Airport  Authority[8]
held as under:
“21 ……It must, therefore follow as a necessary corollary from the  principle
of equality enshrined in Article 14 that though the  State  is  entitled  to
refuse to enter into relationship with any  one,  yet  if  it  does  so,  it
cannot arbitrarily choose  any  person  it  likes  for  entering  into  such
relationship and discriminate between persons similarly  circumstanced,  but
it must act in conformity with some standard or principle  which  meets  the
test of reasonableness and non-discrimination and any  departure  from  such
standard or principle would  be  invalid  unless  it  can  be  supported  or
justified on some rational and non-discriminatory ground.”
               (emphasis laid by this Court)



India is a welfare State. Article 38 of the Constitution of India, which  is
a Directive Principle of State Policy, reads as under:

“38. State to secure a social order for the  promotion  of  welfare  of  the
people.—(1) The State shall strive to promote the welfare of the  people  by
securing and protecting as effectively as it may a  social  order  in  which
justice, social, economic and political, shall inform all  the  institutions
of the national life.

 (2) The State shall, in particular, strive to minimise the inequalities  in
income, and endeavour to eliminate inequalities in  status,  facilities  and
opportunities, not only amongst  individuals  but  also  amongst  groups  of
people residing in different areas or engaged in different vocations.”


It is the duty of every welfare state  to  generate  employment.  Presently,
millions of youth of the country are unemployed. The right to livelihood  is
a part of right to life, as has  been  held  in  the  case  of  Olga  Tellis
(supra). A vast majority of the unemployed population of the  country  then,
is susceptible to being exploited by the rich and  the  capitalists.  It  is
the duty of the state, acting through its instrumentalities to  ensure  that
no person in a vulnerable position is exploited. In  the  case  of  People’s
Union for Democratic  Rights  &  Ors.  v.  Union  of  India[9],  Bhagwati,J.
lamenting on the exploitation of the weak and the powerless held as under:

“………The Rule of Law does not mean that the protection of  the  law  must  be
available only to a fortunate few or that the law should be  allowed  to  be
prostituted by the vested interests for protecting and upholding the  status
quo under the guise of enforcement of their civil and political rights.  The
poor too have civil and political rights and the Rule of Law  is  meant  for
them also, though today it exists only on paper and not in reality.  If  the
sugar barons and the alcohol kings have the Fundamental Right  to  carry  on
their business and to  fatten  their  purses  by  exploiting  the  consuming
public, have the 'chamars' belonging to the  lowest  strata  of  society  no
Fundamental Right to earn an honest living through  their  sweat  and  toil?
………civil and political rights, priceless and  invaluable  as  they  are  for
freedom and democracy, simply do not  exist  for  the  vast  masses  of  our
people. Large numbers of men, women and children who constitute the bulk  of
our population are today living  a  sub-human  existence  in  conditions  of
abject poverty: utter grinding poverty has  broken  their  back  and  sapped
their moral fibre. They have no faith in the existing  social  and  economic
system. What  civil  and  political  rights  are  these  poor  and  deprived
sections of humanity going to enforce?”


This Court, being entrusted with the task of being  the  countermajoritarian
institution, is duty bound to ensure that  the  rights  of  the  downtrodden
minorities and the members of the weaker sections of  the  society  are  not
trampled upon.



One more important aspect to be taken note of  by  this  Court  is  the  non
governance of railway property in the  past  67  years  since  independence.
Though, it is a recognized  principle  of  law  that  the  property  of  the
railways is public property, yet in reality, it is the private  players  and
industries that are allowed to carry on their business for transport of  raw
materials from one place to another. After the  enactment  of  the  Railways
Act, 1989, the Rail Land Development Authority has  been  established  under
Chapter IIA of the Act to manage the railway property by framing  policy  or
rules for allotment of the  same  in  favour  of  the  licensees,  including
fixing license fee or occupation charges in respect of the  vast  extent  of
vacant property from which  huge  revenue  can  be  collected,  which  is  a
laudable object to cater to the need of the public at large. The  periodical
revision of license fee in respect of such big operators has not  been  done
by the railways. Also, the Policy of not  renewing  the  licenses  of  those
persons who are members of the respondents are completely dependent on self-
earning from these small units and  making  them  participate  in  a  public
competition is absolutely unfair, unreasonable and  arbitrary.  The  chances
of such persons being deprived of their  right  to  livelihood  is  also  an
important factor which has to be taken into consideration by this  Court  to
interpret the policy framed by the appellants. The callous attitude  as  far
as the inaction on the part of the State in tackling the problem  of  rising
unemployment is appalling. The situation is made worse by the  handing  over
of public  functions  to  private  entrepreneurs,  which  then  exploit  the
policies of the government against the poor and downtrodden  people  of  the
country. If the appellants under the guise of the policy  are  permitted  to
deny renewal of licenses in favour of the  licensees,  it  would  amount  to
deprivation of  their  right  to  freedom  of  occupation  guaranteed  under
Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution as well as  the  right  to  livelihood,
which action of the appellants  would  be  diametrically  opposed  to  their
constitutional duty towards social justice as well as uplifting  the  weaker
sections of the society and the unemployed youth of the country.



In the case of Consumer Education & Research Center v.  Union  of  India[10]
a three Judge Bench of this Court observed as under:

“Social justice, equality and dignity of person are cornerstones  of  social
democracy. The concept 'social justice'  which  the  Constitution  of  India
engrafted, consists of diverse principles essential for the  orderly  growth
and development of  personality  of  every  citizen.……Social  justice  is  a
dynamic device to  mitigate  the  sufferings  of  the  poor,  weak,  Dalits,
Tribals and deprived sections of the society and  to  elevate  them  to  the
level of equality to live a life with dignity of person. Social  justice  is
not a simple or single idea of  a  society  but  is  an  essential  part  of
complex social change to relieve the poor etc.  from  handicaps,  penury  to
ward off distress, and to make their life livable, for greater good  of  the
society at large. In other words, the aim of social  justice  is  to  attain
substantial degree of social, economic and political equality, which is  the
legitimate expectation. Social security, just and humane conditions of  work
and leisure to workman are part of his  meaningful  right  to  life  and  to
achieve self- expression of his personality  and  to  enjoy  the  life  with
dignity, the State should provide facilities  and  opportunities  to  enable
them to reach at least minimum standard of  health,  economic  security  and
civilised living  while  sharing  according  to  the  capacity,  social  and
cultural heritage.”

Further, in the case of Sadhuram Bansal v. Pulin Sarkar[11] this Court  held
as under:
“There is no ritualistic formula or any magical  charm  in  the  concept  of
social justice. All that it means is that as between two parties if  a  deal
is made with one party without serious detriment  to  the  other,  then  the
Court would lean in favour of the weaker  section  of  the  society,  Social
justice is  the  recognition  of  greater  good  to  larger  number  without
deprivation of accrued legal rights of anybody. If such a thing can be  done
then indeed social justice must prevail over any technical rule.  It  is  in
response to the felt necessities of  time  and  situation  in  order  to  do
greater good to a larger number even  though  it  might  detract  from  some
technical rule in favour of a party.”


Keeping in view the  evolving  concept  of  social  justice,  we  allow  the
members of respondents  who  are  the  licensees  to  continue  their  petty
business, especially in  the  absence  of  employment  potentiality  in  the
country  on  account  of  non-governance  and  non-  implementation  of  the
constitutional philosophy of an  egalitarian  society,  which  provides  the
opportunity to all individuals to lead a life of dignity. The right to  life
with dignity has been interpreted to be a part of  right  to  life  by  this
Court in  the  case  of  Francis  Coralie  Mullin  v.  Administrator,  Union
Territory of Delhi & Ors.[12] , as under:

“We think that the right to life includes  the  right  to  live  with  human
dignity and all that goes along with it, namely,  the  bare  necessaries  of
life such as adequate nutrition, clothing and  shelter  and  facilities  for
reading, writing and expressing one-self in  diverse  forms,  freely  moving
about and mixing and commingling with fellow human beings.  Of  course,  the
magnitude and content of the components of this right would depend upon  the
extent of the economic development of the country, but it must, in any  view
of the matter, include the right to the basic necessities of life  and  also
the right to carry on such functions and activities as constitute  the  bare
minimum expression of the human-self.”


Therefore, we have to hold that the provisions of the Catering Policy,  2010
are applicable to the concerned respondents. The action of the  railways  in
not granting renewals of the licenses to the members of the  respondents  is
arbitrary, unreasonable, unfair and discriminatory, and the same  cannot  be
allowed to sustain in law.



For the reasons stated supra, this Court cannot interfere with the  impugned
judgment and order of the High Court. The Civil Appeals are  dismissed.  The
order dated 11.04.2014 granting stay of  the  impugned  order  shall  stands
vacated. We, however, make  it  clear  that  only  those  licensees  may  be
eligible for renewal of their licenses who can  declare  on  affidavit  that
they do not have the license of more than one shop or kiosk  in  their  name
or benami  license  at  the  railway  stations  with  periodical  reasonable
increase of license fee. All pending applications are disposed of.



                                                       …………………………………………………J.

                                                           [V. GOPALA GOWDA]


                                                       …………………………………………………J.

                                                               [AMITAVA ROY]

            New Delhi,
            January 29, 2016

ITEM NO.1A-For Judgment       COURT NO.10               SECTION XIIA

               S U P R E M E  C O U R T  O F  I N D I A
                       RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS

Civil Appeal  No(s).  618-620/2016 @ SLP(C) Nos.9921-9923/2014

SENIOR DIVISIONAL COMMERCIAL MANAGER & ORS       Appellant(s)

                                VERSUS

S.C.R CATERERS,DRY FRUITS,F.J.S.W ASSOCI AND ANR.  Respondent(s)


Date : 29/01/2016 These appeals were called on for pronouncement of
JUDGMENT today.


For Appellant(s)
                     Mr. Shreekant N. Terdal,Adv.

For Respondent(s)
                     Ms. Ranjeeta Rohtagi,Adv.

                     Ms. Diksha Rai,Adv.

                     Mr. Venkateswara Rao Anumolu,Adv.
                        Mr. Goli Rama Krishna, Adv.
                        Mr. Prabhakar Parnam, Adv.
                        Mr. Shashwat Goel, Adv.

                     Dr. Rajeev Sharma,Adv.

      Hon'ble Mr. Justice V.Gopala Gowda  pronounced  the  judgment  of  the
Bench comprising His Lordship and Hon'ble Mr. Justice Amitava Roy.
      Applications for intervention are allowed.
      Leave granted.
      The appeals are dismissed in terms of the signed Reportable Judgment.
      All pending applications are disposed of.

 

|(VINOD KUMAR)                          | |(MALA KUMARI SHARMA)                  |
|COURT MASTER                           | |COURT MASTER                          |

      (Signed Reportable Judgment is placed on the file)

-----------------------
[1]
      [2] (2015) 5 SCC 813
[3]   [4] (1985) 3 SCC 267
[5]   [6] 1994 Supp (3) SCC 694
[7]   [8] (2009) 5 SCC 313
[9]   [10] (1985) 3 SCC 545
[11]  [12] (2015) 1 SCC 192
[13]  [14] (1981) 1 SCC 315
[15]  [16] (1979) 3 SCC 489
[17]
      [18] (1982) 3 SCC 235
[19]  [20] (1995) 3 SCC 42
[21]  [22] (1984) 3 SCC 410
[23]  [24] (1981) 1 SCC 608

 

 

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