{"id":20688,"date":"2011-06-01T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2011-05-31T18:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.legalindia.com\/judgments\/resources-of-aviation-redressal-vs-uoi-and-ors-on-1-june-2011"},"modified":"2018-01-15T02:12:13","modified_gmt":"2018-01-14T20:42:13","slug":"resources-of-aviation-redressal-vs-uoi-and-ors-on-1-june-2011","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.legalindia.com\/judgments\/resources-of-aviation-redressal-vs-uoi-and-ors-on-1-june-2011","title":{"rendered":"Resources Of Aviation Redressal &#8230; vs Uoi And Ors on 1 June, 2011"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"docsource_main\">Delhi High Court<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_title\">Resources Of Aviation Redressal &#8230; vs Uoi And Ors on 1 June, 2011<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_author\">Author: Dipak Misra,Chief Justice<\/div>\n<pre>*         IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI\n\n%                                       Date of Decision: 1st June, 2011\n\n+              WRIT PETITION (CIVIL) NO. 3889\/2011\n\nRESOURCES OF AVIATION REDRESSAL ASSOCIATION..Petitioner\n                 Through  Mr. Sandeep Sethi, Sr. Advocate\n                          with Mr. Vinay Hegde, Mr. Rakesh\n                          Sinha and Mr. Pawan Kumar\n                          Bansal, Advocates.\n\n                    versus\n\nUOI AND ORS                                                ..... Respondent<\/pre>\n<pre>                             Through    Ms. Anjana Gosain, Advocate for\n                                        R-1.\n                                        Mr. Naresh Kaushik, Advocate for\n                                        R-2.\n                                        Dr. A.M. Singhvi, Sr. Advocate\n                                        with Mr. Jayant Bhushan, Sr.\n                                        Advocate, Mr. Atul Sharma and\n                                        Ms. Milanka Chaudhary,\n                                        Advocates for R-3.\n                                        Mr. Digvijay Rai, Advocate for\n                                        AAI.\n\n\n             WRIT PETITION (CIVIL) NO. 3893\/2011\n\nCONSUMER ONLINE FOUNDATION                 ..... Petitioner\n                 Through Mr. Altaf Ahmad, Sr. Advocate\n                         with Mr. Arunabh Chaudhary, Mr.\n                         Anurag Sharma and Mr. Prashant\n                         Kumar, Advocates.\n\n                    versus\n\nUOI AND ORS                                               ..... Respondent\n<\/pre>\n<p>                             Through Ms. Anjana Gosain, Advocate for R-1.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                      Page 1 of 18<\/span><\/p>\n<p>                                        Mr. Naresh Kaushik, Advocate for<br \/>\n                                       R-2.\n<\/p>\n<p>                                       Dr. A.M. Singhvi, Sr. Advocate<br \/>\n                                       with Mr. Jayant Bhushan, Sr.<br \/>\n                                       Advocate, Mr. Atul Sharma and<br \/>\n                                       Ms. Milanka Chaudhary,<br \/>\n                                       Advocates for R-3.\n<\/p>\n<p>                                       Mr. Digvijay Rai, Advocate for<br \/>\n                                       AAI.\n<\/p>\n<p>CORAM:\n<\/p>\n<p>HON&#8217;BLE THE CHIEF JUSTICE<br \/>\nHON&#8217;BLE MR. JUSTICE SANJIV KHANNA<\/p>\n<p>1. Whether Reporters of local papers may be<br \/>\nallowed to see the judgment?                        Yes.\n<\/p>\n<p>2. To be referred to the Reporter or not ?          Yes.\n<\/p>\n<p>3. Whether the judgment should be reported<br \/>\nin the Digest ?                                     Yes.\n<\/p>\n<p>DIPAK MISRA, CJ.\n<\/p>\n<p>      In these two writ petitions the controversy that emerges for<\/p>\n<p>consideration being similar, they were heard together and disposed of by a<\/p>\n<p>singular order.\n<\/p>\n<p>2.     We may not with profit that W.P.(C) No.3889\/2011 has been<\/p>\n<p>preferred by Resources of Aviation Redressal Association and W.P.(C)<\/p>\n<p>No.3893\/2011 is at the instance of Consumer Online Foundation. It is apt<\/p>\n<p>to note, both the associations have preferred the writ petitions as pro bono<\/p>\n<p>publico basically praying for issue of a writ of certiorari for quashment of<\/p>\n<p>the public notice dated 23rd April, 2010 issued by the Airports Economic<\/p>\n<p>Regulatory Authority of India (for short, \u2017the authority&#8217;) under the<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                      Page 2 of 18<\/span><br \/>\n Airports Economic Regulatory Authority of India Act, 2008 (for brevity,<\/p>\n<p>\u2017the 2008 Act&#8217;) on the foundation that such a determination could not<\/p>\n<p>have been made by the said authority without following the procedure<\/p>\n<p>postulated under Section 13 of the Act and that apart the concept of ad-<\/p>\n<p>hoc determination is not contemplated under the purview of the provisions<\/p>\n<p>of the Act.\n<\/p>\n<p>3.    At this juncture, it is apposite to note that all the respondents have<\/p>\n<p>entered appearance and canvassed their oral submissions as the<\/p>\n<p>controversy basically relates to issue of law. Before we proceed to deal<\/p>\n<p>with the contentions raised, it is seemly to refer to the previous history of<\/p>\n<p>this litigation. Certain public interest writ petition was filed before this<\/p>\n<p>Court forming subject matter of W.P.(C) No. 8918\/2009 and other<\/p>\n<p>connected matters challenging the levy imposed by the Central<\/p>\n<p>Government under the Airports Authority of India Act, 1994 (for short,<\/p>\n<p>\u2017the Act&#8217;). The validity of the said notices were challenged on the ground<\/p>\n<p>that such imposition would tantamount to tax and without authority of law<\/p>\n<p>the tax could not be imposed. The Division Bench of this Court expressed<\/p>\n<p>the view that it is not in the nature of tax and, in fact, it is a<\/p>\n<p>tariff-arrangement and, therefore, notices and the consequent imposition<\/p>\n<p>were not ultra vires.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                       Page 3 of 18<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<p> 4.     Being dissatisfied with the order passed by this Court, SLP (Civil)<\/p>\n<p>No.23541\/2009 was preferred, which after grant of leave formed the<\/p>\n<p>subject matter of Civil Appeal No.3612\/2011. The Apex Court after<\/p>\n<p>noting the submissions of the learned counsel for the parties came to hold<\/p>\n<p>as follows:-\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>           &#8220;14. The High Court was not correct in<br \/>\n           coming        to    the conclusion in the impugned<br \/>\n           judgment that the development fees to be levied<br \/>\n           and collected under Section 22A of the 1994<br \/>\n           Act is in the nature of tariff or charges collected by<br \/>\n           the Airports Authority for the facilities provided<br \/>\n           to the passengers and the airlines. It will be<br \/>\n           clear from a bare reading of Sections 22 and<br \/>\n           22A that there is a distinction between the<br \/>\n           charges, fees and rent collected under Section 22<br \/>\n           and the development fees levied and collected<br \/>\n           under Section 22A of the 1994 Act. The<br \/>\n           charges, fees and rent collected by the Airports<br \/>\n           Authority under Section 22 are for the services and<br \/>\n           facilities provided by the Airports Authority to the<br \/>\n           airlines, passengers, visitors and traders doing<br \/>\n           business at the airport. Therefore, when the<br \/>\n           Airports Authority makes a lease of the<br \/>\n           premises of an airport (including buildings and<br \/>\n           structures thereon and appertaining thereto) in<br \/>\n           favour of a lessee to carry out some of its functions<br \/>\n           under Section 12, the lessee, who has been assigned<br \/>\n           such functions, will have the powers of the<br \/>\n           Airports Authority under Section 22 of the<br \/>\n           Act to collect charges, fees or rent from the third<br \/>\n           parties for the different facilities and services<br \/>\n           provided to them in terms of the lease agreement.<br \/>\n           The legal basis of such charges, fees or rent<br \/>\n           enumerated in Section 22 of the 2008 Act<br \/>\n           is the contract between the Airports Authority<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                     Page 4 of 18<\/span><br \/>\n            or the lessee to whom the airport has been<br \/>\n           leased out and the third party, such as the airlines,<br \/>\n           passengers, visitors and traders doing business at<br \/>\n           the airport.       But there can be no such<br \/>\n           contractual relationship between the passengers<br \/>\n           embarking at an airport and the Airports<br \/>\n           Authority with regard to the up-gradation,<br \/>\n           expansion or development of the airport which is to<br \/>\n           be funded or financed by development fees as<br \/>\n           provided in clause (a) of Section 22A. Those<br \/>\n           passengers who embark at the airport after the<br \/>\n           airport is upgraded, expanded or developed<br \/>\n           will only avail the facilities and services of<br \/>\n           the upgraded, expanded and developed airport.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>           Similarly, there can         be     no     contractual<br \/>\n           relationship between the Airports Authority and<br \/>\n           passengers embarking at an airport for<br \/>\n           establishment of a new airport in lieu of the existing<br \/>\n           airport or establishment of a private airport in<br \/>\n           lieu of the existing airport as mentioned in<br \/>\n           Clauses (b) and (c) of Section 22A of the 1994<br \/>\n           Act. In the absence of such contractual<br \/>\n           relationship, the liability of the embarking<br \/>\n           passengers to pay development fees has to be<br \/>\n           based on a statutory provision and for this reason<br \/>\n           Section 22A has been enacted empowering            the<br \/>\n           Airports Authority to levy and collect from the<br \/>\n           embarking passengers the development fees for<br \/>\n           the purposes mentioned in clauses (a), (b) and (c) of<br \/>\n           Section 22A of the Act. In other words, the<br \/>\n           object of Parliament in inserting Section 22A<br \/>\n           in the 2004 Act by the Amendment Act of<br \/>\n           2003 is to authorize by law the levy and collection of<br \/>\n           development       fees    from     every   embarking<br \/>\n           passenger de hors the facilities that the<br \/>\n           embarking      passengers      get   at  the existing<br \/>\n           airports. The nature of the levy under Section 22A<br \/>\n           of the 2004 Act, in our considered opinion, is not<br \/>\n           charges or any other consideration for services<br \/>\n           for     the     facilities provided by the Airports<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                     Page 5 of 18<\/span><br \/>\n            Authority.    This Court has held in <a href=\"\/doc\/1444738\/\">Vijayalashmi<br \/>\n           Rice Mills &amp; Ors. v. Commercial Tax<br \/>\n           Officers, Palakot &amp; Ors.<\/a> (supra) that a cess is a tax<br \/>\n           which generates revenue which is utilized for a<br \/>\n           specific purpose.     The levy under Section 22A<br \/>\n           though described as fees is really in the nature of a<br \/>\n           cess or a tax for generating revenue for the<br \/>\n           specific purposes mentioned in clauses (a), (b)<br \/>\n           and (c) of Section 22A.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>5.    Thus, it is manifest the Apex Court has expressed the view that<\/p>\n<p>once the development fee is received under Section 22A of the 1994 Act,<\/p>\n<p>which has the character of cess or tax, it cannot be levied by the executive<\/p>\n<p>fiat and accordingly came to hold as follows:-\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>              19.     Section 22A of the 1994 Act before its<br \/>\n           amendment by the 2008 Act specifically provided<br \/>\n           that the development fees may be levied and<br \/>\n           collected at the rate as may be prescribed by the<br \/>\n           rules. Hence, the rate of development fees could not<br \/>\n           be determined by the Central Government in the two<br \/>\n           letters   dated     09.02.2009    and     27.02.2009<br \/>\n           communicated to DIAL and MIAL respectively.<br \/>\n           Under section 22A of the 1994 Act, the Central<br \/>\n           Government has only the power to grant its<br \/>\n           previous approval to the levy and collection<br \/>\n           of the development fees but has no power to fix the<br \/>\n           rate at which the development fees is to be levied<br \/>\n           and collected from the embarking          passengers.<br \/>\n           Hence, the levy and collection of development<br \/>\n           fees by DIAL and MIAL at the rates fixed by the<br \/>\n           Central Government in the two letters dated<br \/>\n           09.02.2009 and 27.02.2009 are ultra vires the<br \/>\n           1994 Act and the two letters being ultra vires<br \/>\n           the 1994 Act are not saved by Section 6 of the<br \/>\n           General Clauses Act, 1897.\u2016<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                      Page 6 of 18<\/span>\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p> 6.    At this juncture, it is imperative to sit in a time machine and note<\/p>\n<p>that the notice dated 23rd April, 2010 that has been impugned before us<\/p>\n<p>was also brought to the notice of the Apex Court and in that context their<\/p>\n<p>Lordships in paragraph 20 have stated as follows:-<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>           \u201520. After the amendment of Section 22A<br \/>\n           by the 2008 Act with effect from 01.01.2009, the<br \/>\n           rate of development fees to be levied and collected<br \/>\n           at the major airports such as Delhi and Mumbai is<br \/>\n           to be determined by the Regulatory Authority<br \/>\n           under clause (b) of sub-section (1) of Section 13 of<br \/>\n           the 2008 Act and not by the Central<br \/>\n           Government.The Regulatory Authority constituted<br \/>\n           under the 2008 Act has already issued a public<br \/>\n           notice dated 23.04.2010 permitting DIAL to continue<br \/>\n           to levy the development fees at the rate of Rs.200\/-<br \/>\n           per departing domestic passenger and at the rate of<br \/>\n           Rs.1,300\/- per departing international passenger<br \/>\n           with effect from 01.03.2009 on an ad hoc<br \/>\n           basis pending final determination under Section<br \/>\n           13 of the 2008 Act. This public notice dated<br \/>\n           23.04.2010 has been issued by the Regulatory<br \/>\n           Authority under the 2008 Act long after the<br \/>\n           impugned decision of the High Court upholding the<br \/>\n           levy and it has not been challenged by the<br \/>\n           appellants. Hence, the question of examining the<br \/>\n           validity of the said public notice dated 23.04.2010<br \/>\n           issued by the Regulatory Authority pertaining<br \/>\n           to levy and collection of development fees by<br \/>\n           DIAL does not arise. But no such public<br \/>\n           notice has been issued by the Regulatory<br \/>\n           Authority under the 2008 Act pertaining to<br \/>\n           levy and collection of development fees by<br \/>\n           MIAL. Hence, MIAL could not continue to<br \/>\n           levy and collect development fees at the<br \/>\n           major airport at Mumbai and cannot do so in<br \/>\n           future until the Regulatory Authority passes an<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                    Page 7 of 18<\/span><br \/>\n            appropriate order under Section 22A of the 1994 Act<br \/>\n           as amended by the 2008 Act.\u2016<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>7.     It is urged by Mr. Altaf Ahmed and Mr. Sandeep Sethi, learned<\/p>\n<p>senior counsel for the petitioner that the impugned notice is a public<\/p>\n<p>notice and by no stretch of imagination it can be construed as an order by<\/p>\n<p>the authority. Per contra, Dr. Singhvi appearing for DIAL has referred to<\/p>\n<p>paragraph 20 of the order passed by the Apex Court, which we have<\/p>\n<p>reproduced hereinabove, to highlight that it is an order. On a perusal of<\/p>\n<p>the order, penned by their Lordships there can be no scintilla of doubt that<\/p>\n<p>it has been treated as an imposition of tax in an ad-hoc manner. In this<\/p>\n<p>context, it is profitable to reproduce paragraph 6 of the conclusions, which<\/p>\n<p>is as follows:-\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>              \u2015(vi) Nothing stated herein shall come in the way<br \/>\n           of any aggrieved person challenging the public notice<br \/>\n           dated 23.4.2010 issued by the Airports Economic<br \/>\n           Regulatory Authority in accordance with law.\u2016<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>8.    Thus, leave and liberty was granted to challenge the notice in<\/p>\n<p>accordance with law and no opinion was expressed on such imposition.<\/p>\n<p>9.    Questioning the legal propriety of the aforesaid notice, learned<\/p>\n<p>senior counsel appearing for the petitioners in both the writ petitions have<\/p>\n<p>contended as follows:-\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                      Page 8 of 18<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<p> (i)     The passing of an ad-hoc order is not within the purview of the Act,<\/p>\n<p>if the stipulations in Section 13 of the 2008 Act are studiedly scrutinized<\/p>\n<p>inasmuch as where certain guidelines have been incorporated for<\/p>\n<p>determination of the functions of the authority and the primary function is<\/p>\n<p>based on the development fee.\n<\/p>\n<p>(ii)    Assuming for the sake of argument, the regulatory authority has the<\/p>\n<p>jurisdiction\/power to impose such a cess or tax on ad-hoc basis, there has<\/p>\n<p>been no application of mind and, in fact, what has been placed reliance<\/p>\n<p>upon in the said notice, are two letters dated 9th February, 2009 and 1st<\/p>\n<p>March, 2009, which have been quashed by the Apex Court.<\/p>\n<p>(iii)   Once the infrastructure collapses, the super structure, on which the<\/p>\n<p>edifice is built, is bound to collapse and hence, the order passed by the<\/p>\n<p>regulatory authority has to pave the path of extinction.<\/p>\n<p>(iv)    Neither cess or tax cannot be imposed in an ad-hoc manner without<\/p>\n<p>prior determination as it is a levy on a citizen and has to be absolutely<\/p>\n<p>guided by the parameters of imposition of cess or tax.<\/p>\n<p>(v)     The public notice, which has the characteristic of an order in a way,<\/p>\n<p>has already expired, if the paragraph 2.3 of the said notice is appropriately<\/p>\n<p>understood.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                       Page 9 of 18<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<p> 10.   Learned senior counsel appearing for the respondent raised the<\/p>\n<p>following contentions:-\n<\/p>\n<p>(a)    The petitioner can prefer an appeal before the appellate authority<\/p>\n<p>constituted under Section 17 of the 2008 Act in view of the broad<\/p>\n<p>language used under Section 18 of the 2008 Act.\n<\/p>\n<p>(b)   Solely because liberty was granted by the Apex Court to challenge<\/p>\n<p>the order it cannot be construed that the leave was granted to file a writ<\/p>\n<p>petition seeking relief in the nature of certiorari or mandamus as their<\/p>\n<p>Lordships have not expressed such an opinion. It is obligatory on the part<\/p>\n<p>of the petitioners to take recourse to the statutory remedy not visit this<\/p>\n<p>Court invoking the extraordinary and inherent jurisdiction of this Court.<\/p>\n<p>(c)   The regulatory authority when has been conferred the power for<\/p>\n<p>determination of cess or tax finally, it always can be as an interim<\/p>\n<p>measure on the principle that what can be finally done, can also be done at<\/p>\n<p>an interim stage on the basis of the material available today.<\/p>\n<p>(d)   As the Apex Court has already interpreted that by the letter there<\/p>\n<p>has been a permission to DIAL to collect the levy, the same should not be<\/p>\n<p>axed by issue of a writ of certiorari as there is no manifest infirmity.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                        Page 10 of 18<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<p> (e).   The submission that there has been no application of mind and the<\/p>\n<p>notice issued by the regulatory authority is laconic, is totally sans<\/p>\n<p>substance as the letter clearly reveals that there is application of mind.<\/p>\n<p>11.    First we shall address to the issue, whether an appeal would lie to<\/p>\n<p>the Appellate Tribunal. Section 17 of the Act, which occurs in chapter IV<\/p>\n<p>deals with Appellate Tribunal and provides that Central Government by<\/p>\n<p>notification in the Official Gazette can establish an appellate tribunal to be<\/p>\n<p>known as the Airports Economic Regulatory Authority Appellate<\/p>\n<p>Tribunal. The Tribunal has been conferred the jurisdiction to adjudicate<\/p>\n<p>any dispute under sub-section (a) and (b) of section 18 and dispose of an<\/p>\n<p>appeal pertaining to any direction, decision or order of the Authority<\/p>\n<p>under the Act.\n<\/p>\n<p>12.    We will be failing in our duty, if we do not take note of a<\/p>\n<p>submission of Dr. Singhvi that the petitioners are stake holder under<\/p>\n<p>Section 20 of the 2008 Act and, therefore, they can raise dispute under<\/p>\n<p>Section 17 of the Act. Whether they can raise a dispute at this stage or not<\/p>\n<p>need not be adverted to by us. What is required to be determined is<\/p>\n<p>whether under Section 18(2), the petitioners can prefer an appeal. Section<\/p>\n<p>18(2) reads as follows:-\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>           \u201518(2) The Central Government or a State<br \/>\n           Government or a local authority or any person<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                        Page 11 of 18<\/span><br \/>\n            aggrieved by any direction, decision or order made<br \/>\n           by the Authority may prefer an appeal to the<br \/>\n           Appellate Tribunal.\u2016 (emphasis supplied.)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>13.   The said provision has to be read in juxtaposition with sub-section<\/p>\n<p>(a) of sub-section 17(i) and (ii). They read as under:-<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>      \u201517(a) adjudicate any dispute&#8211;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>      (i) between two or more service providers;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>      (ii) between a service provider and a group of consumer:<br \/>\n      Provided that the Appellate Tribunal may, if considers appropriate,<br \/>\n      obtain the opinion of the Authority on any matter relating to such<br \/>\n      dispute:\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>      Provided further that nothing in this clause shall apply in respect of<br \/>\n      matters-\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>      (i) relating to the monopolistic trade practice, restrictive trade<br \/>\n      practice and unfair tradepractice which are subject to the<br \/>\n      jurisdiction of the Monopolies and Restrictive Trade Practices<br \/>\n      Commission established under sub-section (1) of section 5 of the<br \/>\n      Monopolies and Restrictive Trade Practices Act, 1969;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>      (ii) relating to the complaint of an individual consumer<br \/>\n      maintainable before a Consumer Disputes Redressal Forum or a<br \/>\n      Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission or the National<br \/>\n      Consumer Redressal Commission established under section 9 of the<br \/>\n      Consumer Protection Act,1986;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>      (iii) which are within the purview of the Competition Act, 2002;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>      (iv) relating to an order of eviction which is appealable under<br \/>\n      section 28K of the Airports Authority of India Act, 1994.\u2016<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>14.   The language employed under Section 18(2) is quite broadly<\/p>\n<p>worded. It includes \u2015any person\u2016 \u2015any direction\u2016 \u2015decision or order\u2016. The<\/p>\n<p>legislature, as we are disposed to think has deliberately made the<\/p>\n<p>provision of appeal quite wide. It worth noting, sometimes the legislature<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                      Page 12 of 18<\/span><br \/>\n uses the terms \u2015every order\u2016. The said terms though may not relate to any<\/p>\n<p>procedural order, but if an order affects a party, he has a right to prefer an<\/p>\n<p>appeal. In this context, we may usefully refer to the decision in The<\/p>\n<p>Central Bank of India Ltd., Vs. Gokal Chand AIR 1967 SC 799. In the<\/p>\n<p>said case, a three Judges Bench of the Apex Court was considering the<\/p>\n<p>words \u2015every order\u2016 used in Section 38(1) of Delhi Rent Control Act,<\/p>\n<p>1958. In that context their Lordships have held thus:-<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>                     3. The object of Section 38(1) is to give a<br \/>\n           right of appeal to a party aggrieved by some order<br \/>\n           which affects his right or liability. In the context of<br \/>\n           Section 38(1), the words \u2015every order of the<br \/>\n           Controller made under this Act\u2016, though very wide,<br \/>\n           do not include interlocutory orders, which are merely<br \/>\n           procedural and do not affect the rights or liabilities of<br \/>\n           the parties. In a pending proceeding, the Controller<br \/>\n           may pass many interlocutory orders under Sections<br \/>\n           36 and 37, such as orders regarding the summoning<br \/>\n           of witnesses, discovery, production and inspection of<br \/>\n           documents, issue of a commission for examination of<br \/>\n           witnesses, inspection of premises, fixing a date of<br \/>\n           hearing and the admissibility of a document or the<br \/>\n           relevancy of a question. All these interlocutory orders<br \/>\n           are steps taken towards the final adjudication and for<br \/>\n           assisting the parties in the prosecution of their case in<br \/>\n           the pending proceeding; they regulate the procedure<br \/>\n           only and do not affect any right or liability of the<br \/>\n           parties. The legislature could not have intended that<br \/>\n           the parties would be harassed with endless expenses<br \/>\n           and delay by appeals from such procedural orders. It<br \/>\n           is open to any party to set forth the error, defect or<br \/>\n           irregularity, if any, in such an order as a ground of<br \/>\n           objection in his appeal from the final order in the<br \/>\n           main proceeding. Subject to the aforesaid limitation,<br \/>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                        Page 13 of 18<\/span><br \/>\n            an appeal lies to the Rent Control Tribunal from<br \/>\n           every order passed by the Controller under the Act.<br \/>\n           Even an interlocutory order passed under Section<br \/>\n           37(2) is an order passed under the Act and is subject<br \/>\n           to appeal under Section 38(1) provided it affects<br \/>\n           some right or liability of any party. Thus, an order of<br \/>\n           the Rent Controller refusing to set aside an ex parte<br \/>\n           order is subject to appeal to the Rent Control<br \/>\n           Tribunal.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>              4. Similar considerations have induced the courts<br \/>\n           to give a limited construction on the apparently wide<br \/>\n           words of other statutes conferring rights of appeal.<br \/>\n           Section 202 of the Indian Companies Act, 1913<br \/>\n           confers a right of appeal \u2015from any order or decision<br \/>\n           made or given in the matter of the winding up of a<br \/>\n           company by the court.\u2016 <a href=\"\/doc\/1420506\/\">In Shankarlal Aggarwal v.<br \/>\n           Shankarlal Poddar<\/a> this court decided that these<br \/>\n           words, though wide, would exclude merely<br \/>\n           procedural orders or those which did not affect the<br \/>\n           rights or liabilities of parties.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p> 15. In this context we may profitably refer to the decision in the case of<\/p>\n<p>Raj Kumar Shivhare Vs. Assistant Director, Directorate of Enforcement<\/p>\n<p>and Anr (2010) 4 SCC772 while interpreting Section 35 of the FEMA,<\/p>\n<p>the Apex Court has opined thus:-\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>           \u201518. The argument that under Section 35 only appeals<br \/>\n           from final order can be filed has been advanced on a<br \/>\n           misconception of the clear provision of the Section<br \/>\n           itself. The Section clearly says that from \u2015any<br \/>\n           decision or order\u2016 of the Appellate Tribunal, appeal<br \/>\n           can be filed to the High Court on a question of law.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>           19. The word \u2015any\u2016 in this context would mean \u2015all\u2016.<br \/>\n           We are of this opinion in view of the fact that this<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                      Page 14 of 18<\/span><br \/>\n             Section confers a right of appeal on any person<br \/>\n            aggrieved. A right of appeal, it is well settled, is a<br \/>\n            creature of statute. It is never an inherent right, like<br \/>\n            that of filing a suit. A right of filing a suit, unless it is<br \/>\n            barred by statute, as it is barred here under Section 34<br \/>\n            of FEMA, is an inherent right (See Section 9 of the<br \/>\n            Civil Procedure Code) but a right of appeal is always<br \/>\n            conferred by statute. While conferring such right<br \/>\n            Statute may impose restrictions, like limitation or<br \/>\n            pre-deposit of penalty or it may limit the area of<br \/>\n            appeal to questions of law or sometime to substantial<br \/>\n            questions of law. Whenever such limitations are<br \/>\n            imposed, they are to be strictly followed. But in a<br \/>\n            case where there is no limitation on the nature of<br \/>\n            order or decision to be appealed against, as in this<br \/>\n            case, the right of appeal cannot be further curtailed<br \/>\n            by this Court on the basis of an interpretative<br \/>\n            exercise.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>             20.     Under Section 35 of FEMA, the legislature<br \/>\n            has conferred a right of appeal to a person aggrieved<br \/>\n            from \u2015any\u2016 \u2015order\u2016 or \u2015decision\u2016 of the Appellate<br \/>\n            Tribunal. Of course such appeal will have to be on a<br \/>\n            question of law. In this context the word \u2015any&#8217; would<br \/>\n            mean \u2015all\u2016.\u2016<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>16.   We have no ounce of doubt that an order or direction issued by the<\/p>\n<p>authority even if it is in the ad-hoc nature, can be challenged before the<\/p>\n<p>tribunal.\n<\/p>\n<p>17.   As an appeal would lie, as advised at present, we are not inclined to<\/p>\n<p>deal with the submissions which have been canvassed by the learned<\/p>\n<p>counsel for the parties and grant liberty to the petitioners to file an appeal<\/p>\n<p>before the appellate tribunal.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                             Page 15 of 18<\/span>\n<\/p>\n<p> 18.   At this stage, learned counsel for the petitioners submitted that if<\/p>\n<p>the Court has thought of relegating the petitioners to prefer an appeal for<\/p>\n<p>the purpose of efficacious adjudication regard being had to the lis in<\/p>\n<p>question, there should be an interim direction for not giving effect to the<\/p>\n<p>order dated 23rd April, 2010. Dr. Singhvi, learned senior counsel<\/p>\n<p>submitted that the balance of convenience and irreparable injury are in<\/p>\n<p>favour of the third respondent inasmuch as the amount that is collected<\/p>\n<p>from the passengers does not go to its coffer, but goes to the Airports<\/p>\n<p>Authority of India, which is spent for development and, hence, it will be<\/p>\n<p>advisable and desirable in law not to pass any kind of interdiction while<\/p>\n<p>asking the petitioners to agitate their grievance before the appellant<\/p>\n<p>forum. It is also contended by him that it is obligatory on the part of DIAL<\/p>\n<p>to collect the same as the Supreme Court has also not interdicted in such<\/p>\n<p>collection. Learned senior counsel has also invited our attention to<\/p>\n<p>paragraph 23(v), which pertains to the future collection to highlight that<\/p>\n<p>there is no justification to pass an interim order.<\/p>\n<p>19.   Resisting the aforesaid submissions with regard to injunction<\/p>\n<p>during the interregnum period, Mr. Ahmed and Mr. Sethi, learned senior<\/p>\n<p>counsel appearing for the petitioners submitted that there has been illegal<\/p>\n<p>collection on the basis of the two letters dated 9 th February, 2009 and 27th<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                       Page 16 of 18<\/span><br \/>\n February, 2009, as the same have quashed by the Apex Court and there<\/p>\n<p>could not have been refunds to the passengers. The directions have been<\/p>\n<p>given to deposit the same before the Airports Authority. It is urged by<\/p>\n<p>them that the passengers have suffered for almost a span of two years with<\/p>\n<p>the levy and, therefore, balance of convenience as well as irreparable<\/p>\n<p>injury would tilt in their favour. Further, the learned senior counsel would<\/p>\n<p>canvass that the ad-hoc determination is bereft of reasons, which is the<\/p>\n<p>heart and soul of any kind of determination and, therefore, the same<\/p>\n<p>should not be given effect to as this will lead to price rise which will be<\/p>\n<p>borne by the consumers.\n<\/p>\n<p>20.   Having heard learned counsel for the parties, we dispose of the writ<\/p>\n<p>petitions by recording the following conclusions and directions:-<\/p>\n<p>(a)   The public notice dated 23rd April, 2010 is an ad-hoc<\/p>\n<p>order\/direction on cess or tax in view of what has been stated in paragraph<\/p>\n<p>20 of the Apex Court&#8217;s decision in Civil Appeal No.3612\/2011<\/p>\n<p>(b)   The aforesaid order is appealable under Section 18(2) to the<\/p>\n<p>Airports Economic Regulatory Authority Appellate Tribunal.<\/p>\n<p>(c)   The petitioners may prefer an appeal within a period of two weeks<\/p>\n<p>from today before the Tribunal which shall hear the appeal on merits and<\/p>\n<p>not throw the same overboard on the ground of limitation. Along with<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                      Page 17 of 18<\/span><br \/>\n memorandum of appeal, if an application for stay is filed, the same shall<\/p>\n<p>be decided by the Tribunal within a span of two weeks from the date of its<\/p>\n<p>presentation. Till the application for stay is dealt with by the Tribunal, the<\/p>\n<p>public notice 23rd April, 2010 shall not be given effect to.<\/p>\n<p>(d)   The present order shall not be construed as this Court has<\/p>\n<p>interdicted in the proceedings of the regulatory authority for final<\/p>\n<p>determination of the cess or tax as per law.\n<\/p>\n<p>(e)   The Tribunal shall decide the appeal within a span of 45 days.<\/p>\n<p>21.   Before we part with the case, we may hasten to clarify that we have<\/p>\n<p>not expressed opinion on any of the contentions canvassed by the learned<\/p>\n<p>counsel for the parties and the Tribunal shall independently deal with the<\/p>\n<p>matter.\n<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>                                                       (DIPAK MISRA)<br \/>\n                                                       CHIEF JUSTICE<\/p>\n<p>                                                      (SANJIV KHANNA)<br \/>\n                                                          JUDGE<br \/>\nJUNE 1, 2011<br \/>\nNA<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">WP(C) Nos.3889 &amp; 3893\/2011                                        Page 18 of 18<\/span>\n <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Delhi High Court Resources Of Aviation Redressal &#8230; vs Uoi And Ors on 1 June, 2011 Author: Dipak Misra,Chief Justice * IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI % Date of Decision: 1st June, 2011 + WRIT PETITION (CIVIL) NO. 3889\/2011 RESOURCES OF AVIATION REDRESSAL ASSOCIATION..Petitioner Through Mr. Sandeep Sethi, Sr. Advocate with [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[14,8],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-20688","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-delhi-high-court","category-high-court"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.3 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Resources Of Aviation Redressal ... vs Uoi And Ors on 1 June, 2011 - Free Judgements of Supreme Court &amp; 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