( ') and the decision of this Court in The State of Madhya Pradesh vs Shri Moula Bux & Ors.(2) in which with reference to Part States, some observations have been made that the authority conferred under Article 239, as it then stood, to administer Part States has (1) ; (2) ; 385 not effect of converting those States into the Central Government, and that under Article 239 the President occupies in regard to Part States, a position analogous to that of a Governor in Part A States and of a Rajpramukh in Part in States. ' It was also observed that 'though the Part States are centrally administered under the provisions of Article 239, they do not cease to be States and become merged with the Central Government. ' It was then urged that by the amendment to Articles 239 and 240 by the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956 and introduction of Article 239 A and 239 by the Constitution (Fourteenth Amendment) Act, 1962, only the nomenclature of the Part States has undergone a change, now being described as Union Territory, but the position the Union Territory is the same as it was as Part States and therefore, the view taken in the aforementioned decisions that the administration of Part States could appropriately be described as State Government would mutatis mutandis apply to the administration of Union Territories.