Ramana Dayaram of India Shetty vs. International Airport Authority [AIR 1979 SC 1628]: Supreme Court of India
Where the Government is dealing with distribution of largesse it cannot act arbitrarily and its act must not be arbitrary, irrational or irrelevant
11. To-day the
Government, is a welfare State, is the regulator and dispenser of special
services and provider of a large number of benefits, including jobs contracts,
licences, quotas, mineral rights etc. The Government pours forth wealth, money,
benefits, services, contracts, quotas and licences. The valuables dispensed by
Government take many forms, but they all share one characteristic. They are
steadily taking the place of traditional forms of wealth. These valuables which
derive from relationship to Government are of many kinds. They comprise social
security benefits, cash grants for political sufferers and the whole scheme of
State and local welfare. Then again, thousands of people are employed in the
State and the Central Governments and local authorities. Licences are required
before one can engage in many kinds of business or work. The power of giving
licences means power to withhold them and this gives control to the Government
or to the agents of Government on the lives of many people. Many individuals
and many more businesses enjoy largess in the form of Government contracts.
These contracts often resemble subsidies. It is virtually impossible to lose
money on them and many enterprises are set up primarily to do business with
Government. Government owns and controls hundreds of acres of public land
valuable for mining and other purposes. These resources are available for
utilization by private corporations and individuals by way of lease or licence.
All these mean growth in the Government largess and with the
increasing magnitude and range of governmental functions as we move closer
to a welfare State, more and more of our wealth consists of these new forms.
Some of these forms of wealth may be in the nature of legal rights but the
large majority of them are in the nature of privileges but on that account, can
it be said that they do not enjoy any legal protection? Can they be regarded as
gratuity furnished by the State so that the State may withhold, grant or revoke
it at its pleasure? Is the position of the Government in this respect the same
as that of a private giver? We do not think so. The law has not been slow to
recognise the importance of this new kind of wealth and the need to protect
individual interest in it and with that end in view, it has developed new forms
of protection. Some interests in Government largesse, formerly regarded as
privileges, have been recognised as rights while others have been given legal
protection not only by forging procedural safeguards but also by
confinding/structuring and checking Government discretion in the matter of
grant of such largess. The discretion of the Government has been held to be not
unlimited in that the Government cannot give or withhold largess in its
arbitrary discretion or at its sweet will. It is insisted, as pointed out by
Prof. Reich in an especially stimulating article on “The New
Property” in 73 Yale Law Journal 733, “that Government action be
based on standards that are not arbitrary or unauthorised.” “The
Government cannot be permitted to say that it will give jobs or enter into
contracts or issue quotas or licences only in favour of those having grey hair
or belonging to a particular political party or professing a particular
religions faith. The Government is still the Government when it acts in the
matter of granting largess and it cannot act arbitrarily. It does not stand in
the same position as a private individual.
12. We agree with
the observations of Mathew, J., in V. Punnan Thomas v. State of Kerala [AIR
1969 Ker 81] that: “The Government is not and should not be as free as an
individual in selecting the recipients for its largess. Whatever its activity,
the Government is still the Government and will be subject to restraints,
inherent in its position in a democratic society. A democratic Government
cannot lay down arbitrary and capricious standards for the choice of persons
with whom alone it will deal”. The same point was made by this court
in Erusian Equipment and Chemicals Ltd. v. State of West Bengal [[1975] 2
S.C.R. 674] where the question was whether black-listing of a person without giving
him an opportunity to be heard was bad ? Ray, C. J., speaking on behalf of himself
and his colleagues on the Bench pointed out that black-listing on a person not
only affects his reputation which is in Poundian terms an interest both of
personality and substance, but also denies him equality in the matter of
entering into contract with the Government and it cannot, therefore, be
supported without fair hearing. It was argued for the Government that no person
has a right to enter into contractual relationship with the Government and the
Government, like any other private individual, has the absolute right to enter
into contract with anyone it pleases. But the Court, speaking through the
learned Chief Justice, responded that the Government is not like a private
individual who can pick and choose the person with whom it will deal, but the
Government is still a Government when it enters into contract or when it is
administering largess and it cannot, without adequate reason, exclude any
person from dealing with it or take away largess arbitrarily. The learned Chief
Justice said that when the Government is trading with the public, “the
democratic form of Government demands equality and absence of arbitrariness and
discrimination in such transactions. The activities of the Government have a
public element and, therefore, there should be fairness and equality. The State
need not enter into any contract with anyone, but if it does so, it must do so
fairly without discrimination and without unfair procedure.” This
proposition would hold good in all cases of dealing by the Government with the
public, where the interest sought to be protected is a privilege. It must,
therefore, be taken to be the law that where the Government is dealing with the
public, whether by way of giving jobs or entering into contracts or issuing
quotas or licenses or granting other forms of largesse, the Government cannot
act arbitrarily at its sweet will and, like a private individual, deal with any
person it pleases, but its action must be in conformity with standard or norms
which is not arbitrary, irrational or irrelevant. The power or discretion of
the Government in the matter of grant of largesse including award of jobs,
contracts, quotas, licenses, etc. must be confined and structured by rational,
relevant and nondiscriminatory standard or norm and if the Government departs
from such standard or norm in any particular case or cases, the action of the
Government would be liable to be struck down, unless it can be shown by the
Government that the departure was not arbitrary, but was based on some valid
principle which in itself was not irrational, unreasonable or discriminatory.