Administrative Law
Subject : Law & Justice - Supreme Court Judgments
New Delhi — In a definitive ruling clarifying the hierarchy between statutory schemes and inter-state agreements, the Supreme Court of India has held that private bus operators cannot be granted stage-carriage permits on inter-state routes if any part of that route overlaps with a notified intra-state route reserved for a State Transport Undertaking (STU) under Chapter VI of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988.
The judgment, delivered by a bench of Justice Dipankar Datta and Justice Augustine George Masih in U.P. State Road Transport Corporation vs. Kashmiri Lal Batra & Ors. , settles a long-standing conflict between the contractual obligations of Inter-State Reciprocal Transport (IS-RT) Agreements and the statutory monopoly created by nationalization schemes. The Court unequivocally affirmed the supremacy of Chapter VI of the Act, setting aside a judgment from the Gwalior Bench of the Madhya Pradesh High Court that had favored private operators.
The legal battle originated from a 2006 IS-RT Agreement between Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh. The agreement categorized routes into two schedules: Schedule A for private operators and Schedule B reserved for the Madhya Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation (MPSRTC). However, when MPSRTC eventually ceased its operations, private operators from Madhya Pradesh argued that the Schedule B routes should be opened to them, as per the agreement's terms.
The Madhya Pradesh transport authority, acting on this interpretation, issued permits to private operators for these routes. The critical roadblock emerged when its Uttar Pradesh counterpart, the U.P. State Road Transport Corporation (UPSRTC), refused to countersign the permits. UPSRTC's contention was that portions of these inter-state routes overlapped with its own "notified routes" within Uttar Pradesh, where it held exclusive operational rights under a nationalization scheme approved under Chapter VI of the Motor Vehicles Act.
Aggrieved private operators successfully challenged this refusal before the Madhya Pradesh High Court, which directed the UP authorities to grant the permits. This prompted the UPSRTC and the State of Uttar Pradesh to appeal to the Supreme Court, framing a substantial question of law with nationwide implications for transport regulation.
The central issue before the Supreme Court was whether a permit granted under an IS-RT Agreement, an instrument framed under Chapter V of the Act, could compel a state to allow private buses on a route segment that is statutorily protected under an approved nationalization scheme formulated under Chapter VI.
Answering this in the negative, the judgment authored by Justice Datta dismantled the private operators' core argument by clarifying the legal nature of an IS-RT agreement. The Court held:
“An IS-RT Agreement is an agreement between two States and, therefore, not a law.”
This fundamental distinction was crucial. The Court reasoned that an agreement, being a mere "instrument," cannot supersede a statutorily "approved scheme," which carries the force of law. The judgment emphasized that the provisions of Chapter VI, fortified by the non-obstante clause in Section 98, have an overriding effect on Chapter V (which governs IS-RT agreements) and any other law.
The bench conducted a thorough review of jurisprudence on the matter, heavily relying on the authoritative Constitution Bench decision in Adarsh Travels Bus Service v. State of Uttar Pradesh (1985) . This precedent established that if a scheme under Chapter VI provides for the total or partial exclusion of private operators from a notified route, no private permit can be validly granted for any portion of that route, regardless of how small the overlap.
Applying this settled principle, the Supreme Court concluded that the Madhya Pradesh High Court had erred. Justice Datta's judgment stated:
"No permission can be granted at this stage to any private operator having a permit issued by the STA, MP to ply his vehicle on an inter-State route connecting two cities in the neighbouring States, which overlaps any notified intra-State route in the State of UP."
The Court effectively ruled that the physical fact of overlapping is sufficient to trigger the statutory prohibition, and the obligations under the IS-RT agreement must yield to the legislative mandate of the nationalization scheme.
While the legal question was decided firmly in favor of the UPSRTC, the Court did not stop there. It expressed significant concern over the administrative lapses that led to the dispute, criticizing the "apparent lack of application of mind" by both states. The bench observed that the failure to account for existing notified routes when drafting the IS-RT agreement had frustrated its very purpose and rendered public interest a "casualty."
The Court highlighted the paradox: an agreement designed to facilitate public transport between states was rendered inoperable due to poor coordination.
“If the two reciprocating States fail to notice that the services to be introduced would face road-blocks because certain inter-State routes overlap a few intra-State routes, public interest is rendered a casualty and thereby, the whole object and purpose of the IS-RT Agreement would be frustrated and lost in the process,” the judgment noted.
Recognizing the need for a pragmatic resolution that serves the traveling public, the Supreme Court issued specific directions for the states to resolve the impasse. It ordered the Principal Secretaries of the Transport Departments of Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh to convene a meeting within three months to discuss modalities for implementing the IS-RT agreement effectively.
The Court suggested a potential solution: exploring a "partial exclusion" from the notified scheme, as contemplated under Section 102 of the Motor Vehicles Act. This would allow private inter-state buses to traverse the overlapping sections without picking up or setting down passengers, thereby preserving the UPSRTC's monopoly on local routes while still facilitating through-travel for inter-state commuters.
This directive shifts the onus from litigation to collaborative governance, urging the states to find a mutually agreeable policy solution. The bench left the final decision to the discretion of the states, underscoring that these are matters of policy best resolved through administrative consensus. The appeals filed by UPSRTC were allowed, and the High Court's order was set aside.
#MotorVehiclesAct #TransportLaw #SupremeCourt
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