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Indian CasesSupreme Court of India

Municipal Corporation Of Delhi vs Gurnam Kaur on 12 September, 1988

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Supreme Court of India

Municipal Corporation Of Delhi vs Gurnam Kaur on 12 September, 1988

Equivalent citations: 1989 AIR 38, 1988 SCR Supl. (2) 929

Author: A Sen

Bench: Sen, A.P. (J)

           PETITIONER:
MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF DELHI

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
GURNAM KAUR

DATE OF JUDGMENT12/09/1988

BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
RAY, B.C. (J)

CITATION:
 1989 AIR   38		  1988 SCR  Supl. (2) 929
 1989 SCC  (1) 101	  JT 1988 (4)	 11
 1988 SCALE  (2)1155
 CITATOR INFO :
 R	    1989 SC1988	 (33)


ACT:
    Delhi  Municipal Corporation Act, 1957--Sec. 320 Bar  on
illegal	 encroachment on public land--Sec. 322--Exercise  of
power  by  Commissioner to remove encroachment.	 In  a	Writ
Petition  under Article 226 of the Constitution	 High  Court
restrained Corporation from stopping pitching of a stall  on
public land--Held High Court could not give sucha  direction
contrary to provisions of Section 320 and 322.
%
    Precedent--Precedential value of a direction made by the
Supreme	 Court on a writ petition under Article 32 based  on
consent	 of parties with the reservation that it should	 not
be  treated  as	 a precedent--Precedents  sub  silentio	 and
without	 argument  are of no moment--What is binding  on  an
authority is the principle upon which the case was decided--
Obiter dicta are not binding.



HEADNOTE:
    Some persons were plying their business by squatting  on
pavement  in  front of a hospital in Delhi and	had  put  up
stalls or kiosk allegedly on Tehbazari under a licence under
section	 321 of the Delhi Municipal Corporation	 Act,  1957.
The  Delhi  Municipal Corporation tried to  remove  them  by
demolishing  their stalls etc. These persons filed suits  in
the  Court  of	Subordinate  Judge  praying  for   perpetual
injunction restraining the Corporation from interfering with
their business and/or removing or demolishing any  temporary
structures  put	 up  by them for  plying  their	 trade.	 The
Subordinate  Judge  disallowed the  plaintiffs'	 main  claim
seeking a declaration that the Municipal Corporation  had no
right or authority to remove the stalls built up by them. He
however held that by virtue of the Tehbazari licence granted
in  their  favour the plaintiffs had acquired the  right  to
occupy	and carry on business at the suit sites	 till  their
licence	 was not terminated by the Corporation according  to
the procedure laid down in proviso (a)(ii) of Sub-Section of
Section 430 of the Act.
    Two	 of the squatters namely Jamuna Das and his  brother
filed  writ  petitions	in  this Court	seeking	 a  writ  of
mandamus  ordaining the Municipal Corporation to allot	each
of  them  a suitable site on pavement in front of  the	main
gate of the hospital. (Jamna Das & Anr. v.
						   PG NO 929
						   PG NO 930
Delhi Administration & Ors., Writ Petition Nos. 981--982  of
1984.)	 This  Court  directed	that  the   petitioners	  be
rehabilitated  by the Municipal Corporation by	construction
of  stalls  according  to  the	sketch	plan  filed  by	 the
Corporation with a further direction that each of them would
be put in possession of one of the stalls. The Court made it
clear  that this was a consent order and that the  direction
should not be treated as a precedent.
    The	 respondent, who was one of the plaintiffs  who	 had
filed  suits  in the court of Subordinate Judge,  moved	 the
High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution for a	writ
and direction restraining the Corporation from evicting	 her
without	 the  due  process of law.  The	 High  Court  partly
allowed	 the writ petition holding that the judgment of	 the
Learned Subordinate Judge which was a judgment inter  partes
had become final not having been appealed from and therefore
the respondent could not be removed from pitching her  stall
on   the  pavement  outside  the  hospital  where  she	 was
squatting.  Relying on the decision of this Court in  Jamuna
Das' case the High Court gave an option to the	 Corporation
either	to construct the stall similar to the one they	have
constructed  in compliance with the direction made  by	this
Court  in Jamuna Das' case or in the alternative furnish  to
the respondent a plan of the stall with requisite permission
so  that she could build her own stall accordingly.  Feeling
aggrieved by this Judgment of the High Court, the  Municipal
Corporation  filed this appeal by special  leave.   Allowing
the appeal this Court,
    HELD:  The	Learned Judges of the High Court  failed  to
appreciate  that  this	Court  in Jamna	 Das'  case  made  a
direction   with  the  consent	of  parties  and  with	 the
reservation that it should not be treated as a precedent. It
expressed  no opinion on the question whether there was	 any
statutory  obligation cast on the Municipal  Corporation  to
provide	  alternative  site  to	 a  person  making   illegal
encroachment  on a public place like any public street	etc.
contrary to Section 320 of the Act as a condition  precedent
to  the exercise of its powers under s. 322 of the  Act	 for
the  removal  of  such encroachment on	any  public  street,
footpath  or pavement. That apart, the High Court could	 not
have made the  impugned direction contrary to the provisions
contained in ss. 320 and 322 of the Act. [937A-C
    It	is axiomatic that when a direction or order is	made
by  consent  of the parties, the Court does  not  adjudicate
upon  the rights of the parties nor lay down any  principle.
Quotability as 'law' applies to the principle of a case, its
ratio  decidendi.  The	only thing  in	a  Judge's  decision
						   PG NO 931
binding	 as  an	 authority upon a subsequent  Judge  is	 the
principle upon which the case was decided. Statements  which
are  not  part of the ratio decidendi are  distinguished  as
obiter dicta and are not authoritative. The task of  finding
the principle is fraught  with difficulty because without an
investigation  into  the facts, as in the present  case,  it
could  not  be assumed whether a similar direction  must  or
ought to be made as a measure of social justice. That  being
so,  the  direction made by this Court in  Jamna  Das'	case
could  not  be	treated to be a precedent.  The	 High  Court
failed to realise that the direction in Jamna Das' case	 was
made not only with the consent of the parties but there	 was
an  interplay of various factors and the Court was moved  by
compassion to evolve a situation to mitigate hardship  which
was acceptable by all the parties concerned. [937F-H; 938A]
    Pronouncements  of law, which are not part of the  ratio
decidendi   are	 classed  as  obiter  dicta  and   are	 not
authoritative.	With  all respect to the learned  Judge	 who
passed the order in Jamna Das' case and to the learned Judge
who  agreed with him, we cannot concede that this  Court  is
bound  to  follow  it. It was  delivered  without  argument,
without	 reference  to the relevant provisions	of  the	 Act
conferring  express  power on the Municipal  Corporation  to
direct	removal of encroachments from any public place	like
pavements  or  public streets, and without any	citation  of
authority.  Accordingly,  we do not propose  to	 uphold	 the
decision  of the High Court because, it seems to us that  it
is  wrong in principle and cannot be justified by the  terms
of the relevant provisions. [938F-G ]
    A decision should be treated as given per incuriam	when
it  is given in ignorance of the terms of a statute or of  a
rule having the force of a statute. [938G-H]
    Salmond  on Jurisprudence by P.J. Fitzgerald, 12th	Ed.;
Gerard	v.  Worth of Paris Ltd. (K), [1936] 2 All  E.R.	 905
(C.A.)	and  Lancaster Motor Co. (London)  Ltd.	 v.  Bremith
Ltd., [1941] 1 KB 675, referred to.
    Precedents	sub silentio and without argument are of  no
moment.	 This rule'has ever since been followed. One of	 the
chief  reasons	for  the doctrine of precedents	 is  that  a
matter	that has once been fully argued and  decided  should
not be allowed to be reopened. The weight accorded to  dicta
varies	with  the type of dictum.  Mere	 casual	 expressions
carry  no weight at all. Not every passing expression  of  a
Judge,	however	 eminent, can be treated as an	ex  cathedra
statement. having the weight of authority. [939G-H]
						   PG NO 932
    Olga  Tellis  & Ors. v. Bombay Municipal  Corporation  &
Ors.,  [1985] 3 SCC 545 and Bombay Hawkers' Union & Ors.  v.
Bombay	Municipal  Corporation	& Ors., [1985]	3  Scc	528,
referred to.

JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 3189/1989.

From the Judgment and Order dated 11.3.1987 of the Delhi High Court in C.W.P. No. 875 of 1986 R.B. Datar and Ranjit Kumar for the Appellant. V.B. Saharya for the D.D.A.

Jose P. Verghese and O.P. Verma for the Respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by SEN, J. The main question involved in this appeal from a judgment and order of a Division Bench of the Delhi High Court dated March 11, 1987 is whether the High Court was justified, in the facts and circumstances of the case, in issuing a direction to the appellant Municipal Corporation of Delhi to construct a stall or a kiosk on the pavement near the OPD gate of the Irwin Hospital, Delhi within two months from the date of its order or in the alternative, to furnish a plan with requisite sanction to the respondent Gurnam kaur to enable her to construct a stall of her own. The issue involved is as to the precedential value of a direction earlier made by this Court on a petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution based on consent of the parties with the reservation that it should not be treated as a precedent.

It appears that sometime in 1984, the appellant Municipal Corporation of Delhi sought police help to clear the pavement near the OPD gate of the Irwin Hospital, now known as Lok Nayak Jai Prakash Narain Hospital, which is one of the largest hospitals in Northern India, on a complaint made by the Hospital authorities that the pavement-hawkers by setting up their stalls or pitching their wares were causing inconvenience to the ingress or egress of the ambulances besides causing congestion on the pavements and obstructing the free flow of traffic. The Municipal Corporation was satisfied that if the squatters continued to cover pathways meant for pedestrians, a time would come when no room would be left for people to walk on the footpaths. In a police action, the pavements-hawkers were removed from outside the main gate of the Irwin PG NO 933 Hospital in and around the subway of Jawahar Lal Nehru Marg on January 15, 1984.

On February 22, 1984, eight of these pavement squatters instituted separate suits in the Court of the Subordinate Judge, II Class, Delhi against the Municipal Corporation seeking the relief of perpetual injunction restraining the appellant, its officers and servants from interfering with their business of hawking on the pavements out-side the main gate of the hospital and/or from demolishing or removing any temporary structures put up by them for plying their trade. In denial of the claim, the appellant Municipal Corporation pleaded, inter alia, (i) that the construction of the kiosks or stalls by the plaintiffs was without permission and therefore amounted to an encroachment on the pavement. The Municipal Corporation accordingly under s. 322 of the Delhi Municipal Corporation Act, 1957 had the right and authority to remove such encroachment without notice, and (ii) that the plaintiffs had no legally enforceable right under the terms of the tehbazari licence, they having committed violation of the terms and conditions there of besides being in arrears of licence fee. Accordingly, it pleaded that the plaintiffs’ claim in suit was wholly misconceived. The suits were consolidated together for trial as they raised a common issue.

It is common ground that the plaintiffs had each been occupying a site admeasuring 6 ft. x 4 ft. on tehbazari basis since the year 1975. The contention of the plaintiffs was that the Municipal Corporation having itself allotted the plaintiffs licence under s. 321 of the Act on tehbazari basis to use the pavement in front of the main gate of the Irwin Hospital for carrying on their business on specific terms and conditions, such grant of licence or permission gave to them a right under s. 430 of the Delhi Municipal Corporation Act, 1957 which could not be terminated unilaterally without affording them an opportunity of a hearing under proviso (a) to sub-s. (3) of s. 430 of the Act. On February 24, 1984, Shri B.P. Bhalla, learned counsel appearing for the plaintiffs in all the suits made a statement to the effect:

“The plaintiffs shall occupy only 6 ft. x 4 ft. space as allotted to them by the defendants and no further space beyond those limits. They have not constructed any permanent structure on the site and shall not construct any structure thereon, whether permanent or temporary.” Accordingly, the learned Subordinate Judge during the course of his judgmeat observed:

PG NO 934 “In view of the above statement by the counsel for plaintiffs, it is clear that the stall if any erected or posted at the suit sites is without authority. Placing of such a stall at the suit site amounts to encroachment within the meaning of sec. 322 of the DMC Act which stall can be removed at any time by the defendant MCD without notice. In this light the plaintiffs have no right to claim an injunction against demolition or removal of any stall or other structure if posted or placed or affat the same time defendant MCD cannot remove the plaintiffs nor interfere with their business at the suit site in any other manner without terminating their licence to occupy the said sites in accordance with the procedure contained in sec. 430(3) of DMC Act.”

The learned Judge accordingly partly decreed the plaintiff’s claim to the extent indicated hereafter: “Consequently, all these suits are partly decreed to the effect that the defendants are restrained permanently from removing the palintiffs from the suit sites without terminating the Tehbazari permission granted in their favour in accordance with the provisions of s. 430(3) of the DMC Act. The prayer for injunction against demolition or removal of the stalls of the plaintiffs is disallowed.”

It therefore follows that the learned Subordinate Judge accordingly disallowed the plaintiffs main claim seeking a declaration that the Municipal Corporation had no right or authority to remove the stalls built up by them on the pavement in front of the main gate of the Irwin Hospital. He however held that by virtue of the tehbazari licence granted in their favour, the plaintiffs had acquired the right to occupy and carry on business at the suit site each admeasuring 6 ft. x 4 ft. in question and till their licence was not terminated by the Municipal Corporation after PG NO 935 following the procedure laid down in proviso (a) to sub-s. (3) of s. 430 of the Act. It had no power to remove the plaintiffs nor interfere with their business at the suit sites. It could not take recourse to its power of removal of encroachment without notice under s. 322(a) of the Act. It is equally evident that the learned Subordinate Judge partly decreed the plaintiffs’ claim only to that extent that it restrained the Municipal Corporation from taking any steps for removal of such encroachment by the plaintiffs inasmuch as the power under s. 322(a) of the Act cannot be exercised without following the procedure laid down in s. 430(3) of the Act and without terminating the tehbazari licence granted in their favour. The respondent Gurnam Kaur was one of the plaintiffs and she had been in occupation of a site admeasuring 6 ft. x 4 ft. on the basis of tehbazari licence intermittently since the year 1960 and had been paying the licence fee therefor. The decree passed by the learned Subordinate Judge not having been appealed from by the Municipal Corporation of Delhi has since become final. The rights of the parties therefore stand crystallized by the terms of th decree passed by the learned Subordinate Judge. There was a further development. Two of the squatters, namely, one Jamna Das and his brother moved this Court by petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution, being Writ Petition Nos. 981-82/84 Jamna Das & Anr. v. Delhi Administration & Ors., seeking a writ in the nature of mandamus ordaining the Municipal Corporation to allot each of them a suitable site on the pavement in front of the main gate of the Irwin Hospital. Their grievance was that they were similarly situate like 10 other squatters who were all plying their trade on the pavement in front of the main gate of the Irwin Hospital catering to the needs of the visitors to the hospital by selling tea, snacks, pan, bidi etc. and although the Municipal Corporation had rehabilitated the said 10 squatters by allotment of stalls to them, despite repeated applications there was no redressal of the wrong done to them inasmuch as the Municipal Corporation had arbitrarily and without any rational basis, denied them such facility. Further, it was alleged in that case that the father of the petitioners had been occupying the site admeasuring 6 ft. x 4 ft. on tehbazari licence since the year 1947 till his death in 1975 and thereafter the petitioners were permitted to occupy the same on similar terms but the Municipal Corporation illegally caused their removal with police help. It was averred that the Municipal Corporation could not take recourse to its power of eviction under s. 322(a) of the Act without terminating the tehbazari licence in their favour and without following the procedure prescribed by proviso (a) to s. 430(3) of the Act. Several adjournments were taken in an effort to find a solution to PG NO 936 the problem by learned counsel appearing for the Municipal Corporation.

Eventually, Desai, J. speaking for a Bench of two Judges by his order dated March 29, 1985 made a direction for rehabilitation of the petitioners. Virtually, it was a consent order as learned counsel appearing both for the Delhi Development Authority and the Municipal Corporation requested the Court to give a direction keeping in view the sketch plan furnished by the Municipal Corporation, and gave an undertaking that any direction made by the Court for rehabilitation of the petitioners would be carried out. The Court accordingly directed that the petitioners be rehabilitated by the Municipal Corporation by construction of stalls according to the sketch plan with a further direction that each of them would be put in possession of one of the stalls. The direction was however made subject to the condition that such construction of stalls would not cause any further obstruction to the free flow of traffic. The Court also made it clear that the direction should not be treated as a precedent.

Presumably because of the direction made by this Court in Jamna Das’ case. the respondent Gurnam Kaur moved the High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution in April, l986 for the issuance of an appropriate writ or direction restraining the Municipal Corporation from evicting her without the due process of law. A Division Bench of the High Court by the impugned judgment has partly allowed the writ petition holding that the judgment of the learned Subordinate Judge which was a judgment inter partes had become final, not having been appealed from and therefore the respondent could not be removed from pitching her stall on the pavement outside the main OPD gate of the Irwin Hospital where she was squatting. The learned Judges relied upon the decision of this Court in Jamna Das case where a direction was made requiring the Municipal Corporation to construct stall for the petitioners in that case, so that they could be rehabilitated. The learned Judges felt that it was equally desirable that the respondent Gurnam Kaur instead of being allowed to squat on the pavement, should be provided with a stall of the same pattern and design as had been done for the two squatters in Jamna Das case. The High Court gave an option to the Municipal Corporation either to construct a stall similar to the one they had constructed in compliance with the direction made by this Court in Jamna Das’ case or, in the alternative, furnish to the respondent a plan of the stall with requisite permission so that she could build her own stall accordingly.

PG NO 937 We find it rather difficult to sustain the judgment of the High Court. The learned Judges failed to appreciate that this Court in Jamna Das’ case made a direction with the consent of parties and with the reservation that it should not be treated as a precedent. It expressed no opinion on the question whether there was any statutory obligation cast on the Municipal Corporation to provide alternative site to a person making illegal encroachment on a public place like any public street etc. contrary to s. 320 of the Act, as a condition precedent to the exercise of its powers under s. 322 of the Act for the removal of such encroachment on any public street, footpath or pavement. That apart,the High Court could not have made the impugned direction contrary to the provisions contained in ss. 320 and 322 of the Act. S. 320(1) in terms creates a statutory bar against illegal encroachment on any portion of a public street. It provides that “No person shall, except with the permission of the Commissioner granted in this behalf, erect or set up any booth or other structure whether fixed or movable or whether of a permanent or temporary nature, or any fixture in or upon any street etc”. Having regard to this express provision, the High Court failed to see that the respondent Gurnam kaur had no legally enforceable right to the grant of a writ or direction in the nature of mandamus. The High Court could not obviously issue any such direction which would be tantamount to a breach of the law. Furthermore the High Court could not also make the impugned direction in view of the provision contained in s. 322(a) of the Act, which expressly confers power on the Commissioner to cause the removal of any structure which constitutes an encroachment on a public place like a street which is meant for the use of the pedestrains.

It is axiomatic that when a direction or order is made by consent of the parties, the Court does not adjudicate upon the rights of the parties nor lay down any principle. Quotability as ‘law’ applies to the principle of a case, its ratio decidendi. The only thing in a Judge’sdecision binding as an authority upon a subsequent Judge is the principle upon which the case was decided. Statements which are not part of the ratio decidendi are distinguished as obiter dicta and are not authoritative. The task of finding the principle is fraught with difficulty because without an investigation into the facts, as in the present case, it could not be assumed whether a similar direction must or ought to be made as a measure of social justice. That being so, the direction made by this Court in Jamna Das’ case could not be treated to be a precedent. The High Court failed to realise that the direction in Jamna Das’case was made not only with the consent of the parties but there was an interplay of various factors and the Court was moved by compassion to evolve a situation to mitigate hardship which PG NO 938 was acceptable by all the parties concerned. The Court no doubt made incidental observation to the Directive Principles of State Policy enshrined in Art. 38(2) of the Constitution and said:

“Article 38(2) of the Constitution mandates the State to strive to minimise, amongst others, the inequalities in facilities and opportunities amongst individuals. One who tries to survive by one’s own labour has to be encouraged because for want of opportunity destitution may disturb the conscience of the society. Here are persons carrying on some paltry trade in an open space in the scorching heat of Delhi sun freezing cold or torrential rain. They are being denied continuance at that place under the specious plea that they constitute an obstruction to easy access to hospitals. A little more space in the access to the hospital may be welcomed but not at the cost of someone being deprived of his very source of livelihood so as to swell the rank of the fast growing unemployed. As far as possible this should be avoided which we propose to do by this short order.”

This indeed was a very noble sentiment but incapable of being implemented in a fast growing city like the metropolitan City of Delhi where public streets are overcrowded and the pavement squatters create a hazard to the vehicular traffic and cause obstruction to the pedestrians on the pavement.

Pronouncements of law, which are not part of the ratio decidendi are classed as obiter dicta and are not authoritative. With all respect to the learned Judge who passed the order in Jamna Das’ case and to the learned Judge who agreed with him, we cannot concede that this Court is bound to follow it. It was delivered without argument, without reference to the relevant provisions of the Act conferring express power on the Municipal Corporation to direct removal of encroachments from any public place like pavement or public streets, and without any citation of authority. Accordingly, we do not propose to uphold the decision of the High Court because, it seems to us that it is wrong in principle and cannot be justified by the terms of the relevant provisions. A decision should be treated as given per incuriam when it is given in ignorance of the terms of a statute or of a rule having the force of a statute. So far as the order shows, no argument was addressed to the Court on the question or not whether any direction could properly be made compelling the Municipal Corporation to construct a stall at the pitching site of a PG NO 939 pavement squatter. Professor P.J. Fitzgerald, editor of the Salmond on Jurisprudence, 12th edn. explains the concept of sub silentio at p. 153 in these words:

“A decision passes sub silentio, in the technical sense that has come to be attached to that phrase, when the particular point of law involved in the decision is not perceived by the court or present to its mind. The Court may consciously decide in favour of one party because of point A, which it considers and pronounces upon. It may be shown, however, that logically the court should not have decided in favour of the particular party unless it also decided point B in his favour; but point B was not argued or considered by the court. In such circumstances, although point B was logically involved in the facts and although the case had a specific outcome, the decision is not an authority on point B. Point B is said to pass sub silentio.

In Gerard v. Worth of Paris Ltd. (k)., [1936] 2 All E.R. 905 (C.A.), the only point argued was on the question of priority of the claimant’s debt, and, on this argument being heard, the Court granted the order. No consideration was given to the question whether a garnishee order could properly be made on an account standing in the name of the liquidator. When, therefore, this very point was argued in a subsequent case before the Court of Appeal in Lancaster Motor Co. (London) Ltd. v. Bremith, Ltd., [1941] 1 KB 675. the Court held itself not bound by its previous decision. Sir Wilfrid Greene, M.R., said that he could not help thinking that the point now raised had been deliberately passed sub silentio by counsel in order that the point of substance might be decided. We went on to say that the point had to be decided by the earlier court before it could make the order which it did; nevertheless, since it was decided “without argument, without reference to the crucial words of the rule, and without any citation of authority”, it was not binding and would not be followed. Precedents sub silentio and without argument are of no moment. This rule has ever since been followed. One of the chief reasons for the doctrine of precedent is that a matter that has once been fully argued and decided should not be allowed to be reopened. The weight accorded to dicta varies with the type of dictum. Mere casual expressions carry no weight at all. Not every passing expression of a Judge, however eminent, can be treated as an ex cathedra statement, having the weight of authority.

PG NO 940 At the end of the day, we must make a mention that Shri Verghese, learned counsel for the respondent made a valiant effort to bring into play the principles laid down by this Court in Olga Tellis & Ors. v. Bombay Municipal Corporation & Ors., [1985] 3 SCC 545 and Bombay Hawkers’ Union & Ors. v. Bombay Municipal Corporation & Ors., [1985] 3 SCC 528. We are afraid, we cannot permit the question to be raised for two reasons. In the first place, no such point was taken in the writ petition nor any contention advanced before the High Court that the removal of the illegal encroachment by the Municipal Corporation constitutes a threat to life and liberty guaranteed under Art. 21 of the Constitution or that the right to life includes a right to livelihood. Secondly, the rights of the parties now stand crystallized by the aforementioned judgment of the learned Subordinate Judge in the suit brought by the respondent, and the rights have to be worked out in terms of the decree passed by him which has since become final. Besides, the decision in Olga Tellis is of little avail. Chandrachud, CJ. speaking for the Constitution Bench observed that the word ‘life’ in Art. 21 included livelihood, but upheld the validity of ss. 313(1) and 314 of the Bombay Municipal Corporation Act, 1888 which provided that the Commissioner may ‘without notice, cause to be removed’ obstructions as an encroachment on footpaths could not be regarded as unreasonable, unfair or unjust. The learned Chief Justice however said that the section conferred a discretionary power which like all power must be exercised reasonably and in conformity with the provisions of our Constitution. In Bombay Hawkers’ Union, Chandrachud, CJ. speaking for himself and one of us (Sen, J.) held that the impugned provision was in the nature of a reasonable restriction in the interests of the general public, on the exercise of the right of hawkers to carry on their trade or business. The learned Chief Justice added:

“No one has any right to do his or her trade or business so as to cause nuisance, annoyance or inconvenience to the other members of the public. Public streets are meant for the use of the general public and cannot be used to facilitate the carrying on of private trade or business.”

These cases undoubtedly raise a human problem and both the Delhi Development Authority as well as the Municipal Corporation of Delhi should seek to evolve an innovative plan to rehabilitate the unfortunate persons who by force of circumstances are forced to ply their trade by squatting in the open on the pavements. At the same time, these pavement- squatters create a serious problem to the civic administration as it creates congestion on the public streets and obstructs free flow of traffic. As Chandrachud, PG NO 941 CJ. rightly observed in Bombay Hawkers’ Union: “No one has a right to do his or her trade or business so as to cause nuisance, annoyance or inconvenience to the other members of the public”, and further that “All public streets are meant for the use of the general public and cannot be used to facilitate the carrying on of private trade or business”. We feel that the Municipal Corporation authorities in consultation with the Delhi Development Authority should endeavour to find a solution on the lines as suggested in Bombay Hawkers’ Union i.e. by creating Hawking and Non- Hawking Zones and shifting the pavement-squatters to areas other than Non-Howking Zones. The authorities in devising a scheme must endeavour to achieve a twin object viz., to preserve and maintain the beauty and the grandeur of this great historic city of Delhi from an aesthetic point of view, by reducing congestion on the public streets and removing all encroachments which cause obstruction to the free flow of traffic, and rehabilitate those unfortunate persons who by force of circumstances, are made to ply their trade or business on pavements or public streets. In the result, the appeal must succeed and is allowed. The judgment and order passed by the High Court are set aside and the writ petition filed by the respondent in the High Court is dismissed. We direct however that the appellant Municipal Corporation of Delhi shall act in conformity with the judgment of the Subordinate Judge, II Class, Delhi in the aforementioned suits, which, not having been appealed from, has since become final inter partes. No costs.

H.S.K.       Appeal allowed