PETITIONER: JAI SINGH Vs. RESPONDENT: UNION OF INDIA & ORS. DATE OF JUDGMENT19/11/1976 BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ KRISHNAIYER, V.R. CITATION: 1977 AIR 898 1977 SCR (2) 137 1977 SCC (1) 1 ACT: Practice and procedure--Extra-ordinary jurisdiction--Whether relief to be granted when alternative remedy availed of, and disputed questions of facts involved. HEADNOTE: The appellant had leased some land from the Government of Rajasthan for mining gypsum. A dispute .arose between the parties regarding the rate of royalty payable by the appel- lant. The appellant's revision petition against the les- sor's decision to charge at the higher rate was dismissed by the Central Government and then his writ petition was dis- missed by the High Court on the grounds that the matter involved determination of disputed questions of fact, and that an alternative remedy has been availed of by the appel- lant. Dismissing the appeal the Court,. HELD: The extent of purity of the gypsum won by the appellant is a question of fact. 'Furthermore, after the dismissal of the writ petition the appellant has filed a suit, in which he has agitated the same question which is the subject matter of the writ petition. The appellant cannot pursue two parallel remedies in respect of the same matter at the same time. JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2206 of 1968. From the Judgment and Order dated the 29-3-1968 of the Rajasthan High Court in D.P. Civil W.P. No. 257/68. S.M. Jain, for the appellant B. Dutta, for respondent No. 1 Miss Maya Rao, for respondents Nos. 2-5.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by KHANNA, J. This appeal on certificate is against the order of the Rajasthan High Court dismissing in limine the petition under articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution of India, field by the appellant against the' Union of India, the State of Rajasthan and two others, praying for quashing the demand made from the appellant in respect of royalty. The appellant took on lease 180 acres of land from the Government"of Rajasthan on June 18, 1962 for the purpose of mining gypsum ore for a period of 20 years. Section 9(2) of the Mines and Minerals (Regulation and Development),Act, 1957 relates to. royaltries in respect of mining leases. According to that provision, the holder of a mining lease granted on or after the commencement 138 of the said Act shall pay royalty in respect of any mineral removed or consumed by him or by his agent, manager, employee, contractor or sub-lessee from the leased area at the rate for the time being specified in the Second Sched- ule in respect of that mineral. The Second Schedule provides at item No. 13 the rate on which royalty, etc., in re- spect of gypsum is to be paid. According to that item at the relevant time, royalty would .be at the rate of Rs. 1.25 per tonne of gypsum containing 85 per cent and above CaSO42H20 and at the rate of 75 paise per tonne of gypsum containing less than 85 per cent of CaSO42H20. Royalty was demanded from the appellant in respect of gypsum won by him at the rate of Rs. 1.25 per tonne. The case of the appellant, however, is that the gypsum which was won by him contained less than 85 per cent of CaSO42H20. As against that, the stand taken by the respondents is that the appellant failed to furnish. the analysis reports from a standard laboratory to show that gypsum won by him contained less than 85 per cent CaSO42H20. Revision filed by the appellant against the decision of the Rajasthan Government to charge royalty at the rate of Rs. 1.25 per tonne was dismissed by the Central Government.
The High Court dismissed the writ petition on the ground that it involved determination of disputed questions of fact. It was also observed that the High Court should not in exercise of its extraordinary jurisdiction grant relief to the appellant when he had an alternative remedy. After hearing Mr. Sobhagmal Jain on behalf of the appellant, we see no cogent ground to take a view different from that taken by the High Court. There cannot, in our opinion, be any doubt on the point that the extent of purity of the gypsum won by the appellant is a question of fact. It has also been brought to our notice that after the dismissal of the writ petition by the High Court, the appellant has filed a suit, in which he has agitated the same question which is the subject matter of the writ petition. In our opinion, the appellant cannot pursue two parallel remedies in respect of the same matter at the same time.
Mr. Sobhagmal points out that the suit brought by the appellant has been dismissed in default and that an applica- tion for the restoration of the suit has been filed in the trial court. Learned counsel for the. respondents state that they would not oppose the application for restoration of the suit. We, therefore, dismiss the appeal but with no order as to costs.
M.R. Appeal dismissed.
139
PETITIONER: JAI SINGH Vs. RESPONDENT: UNION OF INDIA & ORS. DATE OF JUDGMENT19/11/1976 BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ KRISHNAIYER, V.R. CITATION: 1977 AIR 898 1977 SCR (2) 137 1977 SCC (1) 1 ACT: Practice and procedure--Extra-ordinary jurisdiction--Whether relief to be granted when alternative remedy availed of, and disputed questions of facts involved. HEADNOTE: The appellant had leased some land from the Government of Rajasthan for mining gypsum. A dispute .arose between the parties regarding the rate of royalty payable by the appel- lant. The appellant's revision petition against the les- sor's decision to charge at the higher rate was dismissed by the Central Government and then his writ petition was dis- missed by the High Court on the grounds that the matter involved determination of disputed questions of fact, and that an alternative remedy has been availed of by the appel- lant. Dismissing the appeal the Court,. HELD: The extent of purity of the gypsum won by the appellant is a question of fact. 'Furthermore, after the dismissal of the writ petition the appellant has filed a suit, in which he has agitated the same question which is the subject matter of the writ petition. The appellant cannot pursue two parallel remedies in respect of the same matter at the same time. JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2206 of 1968. From the Judgment and Order dated the 29-3-1968 of the Rajasthan High Court in D.P. Civil W.P. No. 257/68. S.M. Jain, for the appellant B. Dutta, for respondent No. 1 Miss Maya Rao, for respondents Nos. 2-5.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by KHANNA, J. This appeal on certificate is against the order of the Rajasthan High Court dismissing in limine the petition under articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution of India, field by the appellant against the' Union of India, the State of Rajasthan and two others, praying for quashing the demand made from the appellant in respect of royalty. The appellant took on lease 180 acres of land from the Government"of Rajasthan on June 18, 1962 for the purpose of mining gypsum ore for a period of 20 years. Section 9(2) of the Mines and Minerals (Regulation and Development),Act, 1957 relates to. royaltries in respect of mining leases. According to that provision, the holder of a mining lease granted on or after the commencement 138 of the said Act shall pay royalty in respect of any mineral removed or consumed by him or by his agent, manager, employee, contractor or sub-lessee from the leased area at the rate for the time being specified in the Second Sched- ule in respect of that mineral. The Second Schedule provides at item No. 13 the rate on which royalty, etc., in re- spect of gypsum is to be paid. According to that item at the relevant time, royalty would .be at the rate of Rs. 1.25 per tonne of gypsum containing 85 per cent and above CaSO42H20 and at the rate of 75 paise per tonne of gypsum containing less than 85 per cent of CaSO42H20. Royalty was demanded from the appellant in respect of gypsum won by him at the rate of Rs. 1.25 per tonne. The case of the appellant, however, is that the gypsum which was won by him contained less than 85 per cent of CaSO42H20. As against that, the stand taken by the respondents is that the appellant failed to furnish. the analysis reports from a standard laboratory to show that gypsum won by him contained less than 85 per cent CaSO42H20. Revision filed by the appellant against the decision of the Rajasthan Government to charge royalty at the rate of Rs. 1.25 per tonne was dismissed by the Central Government.
The High Court dismissed the writ petition on the ground that it involved determination of disputed questions of fact. It was also observed that the High Court should not in exercise of its extraordinary jurisdiction grant relief to the appellant when he had an alternative remedy. After hearing Mr. Sobhagmal Jain on behalf of the appellant, we see no cogent ground to take a view different from that taken by the High Court. There cannot, in our opinion, be any doubt on the point that the extent of purity of the gypsum won by the appellant is a question of fact. It has also been brought to our notice that after the dismissal of the writ petition by the High Court, the appellant has filed a suit, in which he has agitated the same question which is the subject matter of the writ petition. In our opinion, the appellant cannot pursue two parallel remedies in respect of the same matter at the same time.
Mr. Sobhagmal points out that the suit brought by the appellant has been dismissed in default and that an applica- tion for the restoration of the suit has been filed in the trial court. Learned counsel for the. respondents state that they would not oppose the application for restoration of the suit. We, therefore, dismiss the appeal but with no order as to costs.
M.R. Appeal dismissed.
139
Short Summary The case involves a dispute over the rate of royalty payable by the appellant, who leased land from the Government of Rajasthan for mining gypsum. The Supreme Court upheld the High Court's decision to dismiss the writ petition because it involved disputed questions of fact and the appellant had availed of an alternative remedy by filing a suit on the same matter. The appellant cannot pursue two parallel remedies simultaneously.
Facts The appellant leased land from the Rajasthan government to mine gypsum. A dispute arose regarding the applicable royalty rate. The government charged Rs. 1.25 per tonne for gypsum containing 85% or more CaSO42H20, while the appellant claimed the gypsum mined contained less than 85% and should be charged at Rs. 0.75 per tonne. The appellant's revision petition was dismissed by the Central Government, and his subsequent writ petition was dismissed by the High Court. After the dismissal of the writ petition, the appellant filed a suit on the same matter.
Issues
Petitioner's Arguments The appellant argued that the gypsum won by him contained less than 85% CaSO42H20, entitling him to a lower royalty rate.
Respondent's Arguments The respondents argued that the appellant failed to provide analysis reports from a standard laboratory to prove that the gypsum contained less than 85% CaSO42H20. They also argued that the appellant had an alternative remedy available.
Court's Reasoning The Court held that the purity of the gypsum was a question of fact that could not be appropriately resolved in a writ petition. Furthermore, the Court noted that the appellant had already filed a suit addressing the same issue, indicating the availability of an alternative remedy. Allowing the appellant to pursue both remedies simultaneously would be inappropriate.
Conclusion The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal, upholding the High Court's decision. The appellant was not granted any relief. The Court noted that respondents would not oppose the application for restoration of the suit.
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