Source: http://www.rishabhdara.com/sc/view.php?case=5417
Timestamp: 2020-02-22 13:16:48
Document Index: 88921249

Matched Legal Cases: ['Art. 372', 'Art. 32', 'Art. 213', 'Art. 254', 'Art. 372', 'Art. 372', 'Art.\t372', 'Art. 213']

M/S. S. K. G. SUGAR LTD. versus STATE OF BIHAR & ORS
1974 AIR 1533	1975 SCR (1) 312 1974 SCC (4) 827
M/S. S. K. G. SUGAR LTD. V. STATE OF BIHAR & ORS [1974] RD-SC 105 (26 April 1974)
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH RAY, A.N. (CJ) MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
CITATION: 1974 AIR 1533	1975 SCR (1) 312 1974 SCC (4) 827
RF	1977 SC1361	(200) RF	1980 SC1124	(18)
The Bihar Sugar Factories Control Act, (7	of 1937)- Provisions re	: production, supply and distribution of sugar held to be in conflict with provisions of Essential Commodities Act (10 of 1955)-Validity of taxing provisions of Bihar Act, if affected-President's Act 8 of	1969-Effect of.
The Bihar Sugar Factories Control Act, (7 of 1937), was a temporary Act the life of which was extended from time to time and Bihar Act 7 of 1955	reenacted it	permanently.
Bihar Act 17	of 1963 substituted in	the Act, with	re- trospective effect from January 1, 1962, a new s. 29, which empowered the	State Government to impose by	notification cess and tax on sugarcane. The Constitutional validity of the Act was challenged and the High Court held the Act	un- constitutional	and invalid. When the matter	came up on appeal to this Court (A. K. Jain's case ([1969] 2 S.C.C.
340) it was held that if Bihar Act of 1937 provides anything contrary to rule 3(3) of the Sugar Cane (Control) Order, 1955, issued under the Essential Commodities Act 1955 it must be held to have been altered as per Art. 372 of	the Constitution.	In January, 1968, an	Ordinance was	pro- mulgated by the Governor of Bihar,	and s.	35 of	the Ordinance corresponded to s. 29 inserted by the 1963-Act.
Sec. 50 of the Ordinance revealed Bihar Act 7 of 1937,	and s. 50(2) contained a saving and validating provision	with regard	to anything done, tax imposed or liability incurred etc. under the Repealed Act. A notification under s. 35 of the Ordinance imposing a tax was issued by the Government in February, 1968. Successive Ordinances	thereafter promulgated by	the Governor validated the provisions or anything done	thereunder. In August 1969,	during	the President's Rule, the Bihar Sugar Cane (Regulation of Supply and Purchase) Act, (Presidents Act 8 of 1969)	was Passed.
Sec. 66(1) of the Act provided that	notwithstanding	any judgment, decree or order by any court all cesses and taxes imposed or collected under any State law before the	com- mencement of the Act shall be deemd to have been validly imposed	etc.,	as if	the Act had been in force at	all material times.
With respect to certain purchases of sugar cane made by	the petitioner in	January	1968 the respondent	State	sent requisitions to the petitioner for realisation of cane	cess and purchase tax due under the notification under Bihar	Act 7 of 1937. The petitioner challenged the imposition in a petition under Art. 32, on the ground that the imposition was without the authority of law.
HELD :	The validity of the impugned notification and	the cess and tax	imposed thereunder has	to be	judged	with reference to successive Ordinances and the President's	Act.
By virtue of the legal fiction introduced by the validating provision in s. 66(1) of the President's Act, the impugned notification will be	deemed	to have been	issued	not necessarily under the	Ordinance of 1968 but under	the President's Act itself deriving its legal force and validity directly from the latter.
(1) The Bihar Ordinance of 1968 was within the competence of the Governor under Art. 213 of the Constitution. The two conditions required by that Article are satisfied in	the present case. The State legislature was not in session	and the Governor	was satisfied	as to	the necessity	of promulgating the ordinance. The Governor is the sole judge as to the existence of the necessary circumstances and	his satisfaction is not a justiciable matter.
State of Punjab v. Sat Pal Dang, [1969] 1	S.C.R.	633, followed.
(2) (i) The taxing provisions of the Bihar Act of	1937 never lost their validity and continue,] to be in force.
The notification issued under the Bihar Act 313 of 1937 and continued under the latter Acts imposing	the taxes or cesses also remained operative during the period in question till it was replaced by another notification under the Ordinance	of 1968. It is therefore incorrect to	say that there was any period during which the tax	was levied without the authority of law. The taxing provisions of	the Bihar Act were neither rendered inoperative by Art. 254(1), nor repealed or altered by the competent legislature within the contemplation of Art. 372 of the Constitution. The	Act of 1937 dealt	with two distinct and	,separate matters, namely.	(a) the regulation of production,	supply	and distribution of sugar cane,	and (b) imposition	and collection of	cesses and taxes in respect of	sugar cane.
Matter (a) was referable to Entry 33 of the Concurrent	List and matter (b) to Entry 52 of the State List. The Essential Commodities Act (Central Act of 1955) related to matter	(b) only.	In the	light of Art. 372 the Bihar Act would be deemed	to have been repealed with effect from the date on which the Central Act came into force (April 1, 1955)	only in so	far as	it controlled	or authorised control of production supply and	distribution of, and	trade	and commerce in sugar cane.	The taxing provisions of the Bihar Act were not in any way repugnant to the Central Act or	any other law passed by Parliament. [317C-318D; 319F] (ii) The observations of_the High Court while striking	down the Act, though very widely expressed, must be confined to the precise points for determination that arose before	it.
The High Court was not concerned with the validity of	the taxing provisions of the Bihar Act. The question before the High Court was the	conflict between the Essential Commodities Act and the Sugar Control Order, 1955, issued thereunder on the one hand, and the Bihar Act of 1937 on the other,	because	the regulation of price of sugarcane	was expressly dealt with by the Bihar Act.	Thus only that	part of the Bihar Act came out) for consideration which related to Entry 13 of the Concurrent List and that part could be said to be inconsistent with the Central Act, but no question of the validity of the taxing provisions of	the Bihar Act arose before the High Court. [319A-D] (iii)	The matters	relatable to	Entry 33 of	the Concurrent List in the Act were severable from the other provisions of	the Act. There was	no competition	or collision between the taxing provisions of the Bihar Act and those of the Central Act. The two existed side by side	and each remains operative in its own distinct field without interfering with the other. [319D-E] (iv) A	Legislature has the power to make a law	imposing a tax retrospectively or validate defective laws by subsequent legislation or even past unlawful collections, the power of validation being ancillary to and included in the power to legislate on a particular subject. [320C] (vi) The language of	the validating	provisions of	the President's Act are of wide amplitude, and even if it is assumed	that the Essential Commodities Act had cast	any doubt	on or	introduced any	infirmity in	the taxing provisions of the State Act, the same had been	removed or cured by s. 66(1) of the President's Act which not	only nullify the effect if any, of the judgment of the High Court on the	taxing	provisions of the Act	of 1937 but	also validates the imposition, assessment or collection of	all cesses and taxes imposed under any State with retrospective effect	as if the President's Act had been in force at	all material times	including the period in question, that is January, 1968. [320D-E]
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 370 of 1969.
P. K. Chatterjee, N. H. Hingorani and Rathin Das, for	the appellant.
L. N. Sinha, Solicitor General, R. K. Garg, S. C. Agarwal and S. S.
Bhatnagar, for respondent no. 1 The Judgment of the Court was delivered by SARKARIA, J.-In this	petition under	Article	32 of the Constitution, the petitioner,	a Private Ltd. Company, challenges the validity of the 314 Cane Cess and Purchase tax levied on it for the month of January, 1968.	Respondents 1, 2 and 3 are the State of Bihar,	Certificate Officer and the Collector of Champaran, respectively.
The facts are these There was in force in the State of Bihar a pre-Constitution law known as Bihar Sugar Factories Control Act, 1937 (Act 7 of 1937). By notification issued under s. 29 of that	Act, cane cess and purchase tax were being levied in respect of sugar cane intended to be used or used in a sugar factory.
It was a temporary enactment. Originally, it was to remain in force until June 30, 1941.	But its life was extended from time to time by different amending Acts. The	last extension was made by Bihar Act 6 of 1950 upto January	30, 1955, which came into force on January 9, 1950 when it	was published in the Bihar Government Gazette.	Thereafter, Bihar Act 7 of 1955 which came into force on March 30, 1955, amended s. 1(3) of Act 6 of 1950 extending the life of Act 7 of 1937, indefinitely beyond June 30, 1955. In the mean- time,	the Essential	Commodities Act No. 10 of	1955 (hereinafter called the Central Act) was	enacted	by Parliament. After the assent of the President, it came into force on April 1, 1955. Section 16(1) (b) of	the Central Act expressly repealed "any other law in force in any State immediately before the commencement of this Act in so far as such law controls or authorises the control of	the production, supply and distribution	of, and trade	and commerce in, any essential commodity." Bihar Act 17	of 1963 substituted in Act 7 of 1937	with retrospective effect from January 1, 1962, this new Section 29 :
"Cess and tax on cane-The State Government may by notification impose- (a) a cess not exceeding fifty-one naya paise per quintal on the entry of sugarcane into a	local	area, specified in	such notification, for consumption, use or	sale therein;
(b) a tax not exceeding fifty-one naya paise per quintal on the purchase of sugarcane by or on behalf of the occupier of a factory;
Provided that such tax shall not be payable in respect of sugarcane for which a cess imposed under clause (a) is payable." The Government of Bihar, acting under this Section, issued and published	a notification on October 21, 1963, in the Gazette whereby cane cess and purchase tax at certain rates were levied	in the	local	areas	specified in	the notification.
The constitutional validity of Bihar Act 7 of 1937 and	the rules framed thereunder was challenged by a writ petition in the High Court of Patna which by its judgment, dated July 4, 1966, in A. K. Jain and anr. v. Union of India,(1) held	Act 7 of	1937 and the	rules	framed	thereunder to	be unconstitutional and invalid. On appeal against that (1) 1968 Pat.	Law Journal Reports p. 179 315 judgment this	Court in A. K. Jain and others v. Union of India and ors.(1) held that if the Bihar Act	7 of	1937 provides anything contrary to Rule 3(3) of the Sugarcane (Control) Order 1955, issued under the Central Act, it	must be held to have been altered in view of Art.	372 of	the Constitution.	The Patna High Court followed	its earlier decision in A. K. Jain's case, in Sugauli Sugar Works	Pvt.
Ltd. v. Cooperative Development and Cane Marketing Union(2) and in	Belsand Sugar	Co. Ltd. v. Thakur Girja Nandan Singh(3).
After Bihar Act 7 of 1937 was struck down by the High Court, no legislative measures were taken until January 12,	1968 when Ordinance No. 3 was promulgated by the	Governor of Bihar with instructions of the President.
Section 35 of the Ordinance corresponded to s.29 inserted in Act 7 of 1937 by the Amending Act of 1963, excepting	that the maximum rate of the cess/tax leviable was fixed at 67 paise per quintal.
Section	50 of the Ordinance repealed the Bihar Act 7 of 1937. Its sub-section (2) contained a saving and validating provision with	regard	to anything done, tax	imposed or liability incurred etc. under the Repealed Act 7 of 1937.
A notification	under	s. 35 imposing	a tax	under	this Ordinance 3 of 1968, however, was issued by the Government on February 16, 1968.	Ordinance No. 3 lapsed	on February 28, 1968, on which date, another Ordinance (No. 6 of 1968) was promulgated. Sub-sections (1) 'and (2) of s. 35 of this Ordinance were the same as those of the preceding Ordinance excepting that a second proviso to sub-s.(1) was added in these terms :
"Provided further that any tax imposed by	the State Government in respect of the crushing year 1967-68 under the provisions of t he Bihar Sugarcane (Regulation of supply and purchase) Ordinance 1968 (Bihar Ordinance No. 3 of 1968) shall be	deemed	to have been	effectively imposed " from the date of enforcement of	the Ordinance.
By s.	35(3) Ordinance 3 of 1968 was repealed.	But s. 50 saved and validated everything done under Act 7 of 1937	and the repealed Ordinance.
On July 4, 1968, the Governor promulgated Bihar Ordinance 4 of 1969. It provided that except its ss. 1 and 52 which came into force at once, the remaining provisions "shall be deemed	to have come into force from the 25th	June 1969".
Section 49 reproduced the taxing provisions contained in its preceding Ordinance.	Section 66 contained	validating provisions analogous to those found	in the preceding Ordinance :
Notwithstanding any judgment, decree or order of any	court,	all	cesses	and taxes imposed, assessed or collected (1) [1969] 2 S.C.C. 340.
(2) Misc. J. Case No. 1344 of 1964 decided by Patna	High Court on July 29, 1966.
(3) AIR 1969 Pat. 8.
31 6 .lm15 or purporting to have been imposed, assessed or collected under any State Law, before the 25th June, 1968, shall be deemed	to have been validly imposed, assessed or collected in accordance	with law as if this Ordinance had been in force at all	material times when such cess	or tax	was imposed, assessed or collected, and accordingly....
On August 31,	1969 during the President's	Rule, Bihar Sugarcane (Regulation	of Supply and Purchase) Act,	1969 (President's Act 8 of 1969) was passed. Section 66(1) of that Act provided :
"Notwithstanding any judgment, decree or order of any court, all cesses and taxes imposed, assessed	or collected or purporting to	have been imposed, assessed or collected under	any State law, before the commencement of	this Act, shall be deemed to	have been validly imposed, assessed or collected in	a ccordance with law as if this Act had been in force at all material times when such cess or tax	was imposed,	assessed or collected and accordingly...." In January 1968, the petitioner purchased sugarcane	for production of	sugar in its factory	from the sugarcane growers	of the area allotted to its factory on	payment of the price fixed by the State Government. Respondent 1	sent four requisitions for realization of cane cess and purchase tax said to be due under the Bihar Act 7 of	1937.	The demand notices were issued under s.5 of the Bihar and Orissa Public Demands Recovery Act 4 of 1914.	One of such notices was a	demand of Rs. 1,71,543/56P. alleged to	be cess/purchase tax dues for January, 1968.
The petitioner challenges these impositions and consequent requisitions and demands on several grounds out of which the following have been canvassed before us :
(1) Bihar Act 7 of 1937 and Act 7 of	1955 which attempted to make it permanent and	the notification issued thereunder imposing	the cess and	tax in question, were declared unconstitutional and invalid by the Patna High Court in A. K. Jain's case (supra) on July 4, 1966 and that decision was affirmed by this Court in appeal.	There was no law in force authorising the	levy of	the cess/tax	till January 12, 1968 when Bihar Ordinance 6 of 1968 was promulgated;
(2) The	2nd proviso	to s.35 of Bihar Ordinance 6 of 1968 is invalid. Section 35 of Ordinance	3 and 6 of 1968 per	se did	not impose any tax.	It only empowered the State Government to do so by notification, and that too prospectively. The second proviso cannot operate to give retrospective effect to	the notification, dated February	16, 1968.
Reference has been made to Hukam Chand etc. v.
Union of India and ors.(1) (1) [1973] 1 S.C.R. 896.
317 (3) The second proviso to s.35 of Ordinance 6 of 1968 antedated the imposition of tax from January 12, 1968, the date of promulgation of the first Ordinance 3 of 1968. Assuming	this proviso to be valid, there was no notification imposing	the tax, in existence for the period from January 1, 1968 to January 11, 1968.	Any tax or cess levied for this uncovered period was without the authority of law :
(4) The Bihar Ordinance 3 of 1968 was beyond the competence of the Governor under Article 213 of the Constitution because there was no urgency for, the promulgation of the Ordinance and the power was exercised malafide-.
We shall take the last contention first. Barring those cases where the Governor has to obtain previous	instruction from the President, the Governor's power to promulgate Ordinances under Art. 213 is subject	to two	conditions, namely :
(a)that the house or houses, as the case	may be, of the State Legislature must not be in session when the Ordinance is issued; and	(b) the Governor must be satisfied	as to	the existence	of circumstances which render it necessary for him take immediate action.
There is no dispute with regard to the satisfaction of	the first condition. Existence of condition (b) only	is questioned. It is however well-settled that the necessity of immediate action and of promulgating an Ordinance is a matter	purely	for the subjective satisfaction of	the Governor. He is the sole Judge as to the existence of	the circumstances necessitating the making of. an Ordinance.
His satisfaction is not a justiciable matter. It cannot be questioned on ground of error of judgment or otherwise in court-see State of Punjab v. Sat Pal Dang(1) The contention is devoid of merit. Moreover, after the coming into force of the President's Act 8 of 1969, this question had become merely academic.
This takes us to the other contentions.	They	are interlinked. To us,	none of them appears to be well- founded.
The first question is, whether after the commencement of the Central	Act on April 1, 1955, the whole of Act 7 of	1937 became	'void' and inoperative ? The question further resolves itself into the issue : To what extent this	pre- Constitution Act 7 of 1937 was repugnant to the Central Act, and, in consequence stood repealed or altered ? Act 7 of 1937 dealt with two distinct and separate matters viz.,	(a) the regulation of production,	supply	and distribution of sugar-cane,	and (b) imposition	and collection of cesses and taxes in respect of sugarcane.
Matter (a) was referable to Entry 33 of the Concurrent	List (III) and matter (b) to Entry 52 of the State List (11) in the 7th Schedule of the Constitution which corresponds to Entry 49 of the Provincial Legislative List (List II) of the Government of India Act, 1935.	The Central Act 10 of	1955 related to matter (b) only. ]Bihar Act 7 of (1) [1969] 1 S.C.R. 633.
318 1937 and Bihar Act 7 of 1955 which purported to reenact	the former permanently, in so far as it provided for regulation of production, supply and distribution of sugarcane a matter falling under Entry 33 of the Concurrent List- was repugnant to the Central Act 10 of 1955, and, in view of Article	254 of the	Constitution, to the extent of that repugnancy or inconsistency would be void. In the light of Article 372 of the Constitution read with s. 16(1) (b) of the Central	Act, the Bihar Act would be deemed to have been repealed	with effect from April 1, 1955, only in so far as, it controlled or authorised	the control of the production, supply	and distribution of, and trade and commerce in sugar-cane.	The taxing	provisions of	the Bihar Act were not	in any	way repugnant to the Central Act or any other law passed by Parliament. Those taxing provisions, as already noticed, fall under Entry 52, List II and that was why s.16 of	the Central	Act confined the repeal only to those provisions which were covered by Entry 33, list Ill.	The taxing provisions of	the Bihar Act, therefore, never	lost their validity and continued to be in force. The	notification issued	under the Bihar Acts of 1937, (and continued under the Acts of 1955 and 1963), imposing the tax or cess,	also remained operative during the period in question,. till it was replaced by another notification issued on January 12, 1968 under the Ordinance 3 of 1968.	It is therefore, incorrect to say that there was any period, much less in January 1968, during which the tax. was levied without	the authority of law.
Mr. Chatterjee, however, contended that the Patna High Court had in A. K. Jain's case (supra) struck down the Bihar Act 7 of 1937 in its entirety and that decision was	affirmed in appeal by this Court. In this connection he has invited our attention to the observations of the High Court in A. K.
Jain's case and in Belsand Sugar Company's case (supra).
The observations in question in A. K. Jain's case are "Assuming	here that Bihar Act 7 of 1937	'is severable	and can be bifurcated into	two parts, one dealing with the control of sugar industry,	a topic falling under Entry 52 of List I and the other dealing with sugarcane, a topic, as held by me above, falling under Entry 33	of List III, it follows that	the Central Parliament was competent under Article 246 to repeal law in relation to sugarcane and thus the Bihar Act and the Rules in relation to sugarcane stood repealed	and became unenforceable in accordance	with	the provisions of	Article 372	of	the Constitution." The above remarks were reechoed by the	same High Court Belsand Sugar Co's case thus :
"The State Legislature.......... was	not competent	to enact...... and. to	extend	the life of even the severable part of Bihar Act 7 of 1937, without taking recourse to the proce- dure prescribed in clause (2) of Article 254 of the Constitution, but, unfortunately, Bihar Act 7 of 1955 did not receive the assent of the President, and, therefore, being repugnant to certain provisions of the Central Act, it could not have any effect, and it was void on this ground as well." 319 The observations extracted above, though very widely expressed, must be confined to, the	precise	points	for determination that had arisen in those cases. These observations were apparently made in the context of those matters	in the Bihar Act which were either referable to Entry 52, Union List or Entry 33, Concurrent List.	In neither	of those cases, the High Court, was concerned	with the validity of the taxing provisions of the	Bihar	Act, covered by Entry 52 of the State List.	In A. K. Jain's case (supra), the only question that fell for determination	was, whether Sections 3 and 7 of the Central Act IO of 1955,	and Clause 3 (iii) of the Sugar Control Order 1955 issued under that Act, were valid and within the legislative competence of Parliament.	It was contended that	the regulation of price of sugarcane was expressly dealt with by Bihar Act 7 of 1937 and the action taken against the petitioners by	the police and the Magistrate was without jurisdiction being in contravention of Bihar Act and the rules framed	thereunder.
Thus only that part	of the Bihar	Act came up	for consideration which related to Entry 33 of the Concurrent List and which only could be said to be inconsistent	with the Central Act. No question of the validity of the taxing provisions of the Bihar Act arose in that case.
Even the High Court found that the matters relatable to Entry 33, Concurrent List were severable from the other provisions of	the Act. Before us also, it has not	been seriously urged that the taxing provisions of the Bihar	Act were so interwoven and inextricably	connected with	the provisions referable to Entry 33 List III, that the whole Act would stand or fall together. There was no	competition or collision between the taxing provisions of the Bihar	Act and, those of the Central Act.	The two exist side by	side and each remains operative in its own distinct field without interfering with the other.
It will bear repetition that the taxing provisions of	the Bihar Act were advisedly kept out of the purview of s. 16(1) (b) of the Central Act which repealed the State laws only in so far	as they controlled or authorised control of	the production, supply and distribution	of sugarcane.	The taking	provisions of the Bihar Act therefore were neither rendered inoperative by Article 254(1), nor	repealed or altered	by the competent	Legislature within	the contemplation of Article 372 of the Constitution.
It is important to recall that when A. K. Jain's case	came up in	appeal,	this Court, did not endorse the sweeping proposition sought to be spelled out by the petitioners from the wide language used by the High Court in the extracts above.	The only reference to the Bihar Act, made by	this Court, was as follows "..... Sub-rule (3) of Rule (3)	specifically provides	that unless there is an I agreement in writing to the contrary between the parties the purchaser shall pay to the	seller	the price of	the sugarcane purchased within 14 days from the date of the delivery of	the sugarcane. This is a specific mandate.	If the Bihar Act	provides anything to	the contrary	the same must be held to have	been altered	in view of Article 372 of	the Constitution (emphasis added) 320 Since the taxing provisions of the Bihar Act do not contain "anything contrary" to the Central Act, they could not in the light of the observations of this Court, be held to have been altered in view of Article 372. Indeed, as pointed out already, the Court in that case was not at all concerned with the taxing provisions of the Bihar Act.
In view of the above discussion the conclusion	is inescapable that the taxing provisions of the Bihar Act 7 of 1937, as re-enacted permanently by Bihar Act	7 of 1955, continued to be operative and validly in force at	all material times, even after the enactment of the Central Act.
Further, the successive Ordinances promulgated by	the Governor validated by way of abundant caution those taxing provisions or anything done thereunder.
It is well-settled that within its competence, a Legislature has the, power to make a law imposing a tax retrospectively or validate defective laws by subsequent legislation, or even past unlawful collections, the power of validation being ancillary to and included in the power to legislate on a particular subject.
We have extracted earlier in this judgment, such validating provisions in s. 66 of the Bihar Ordinance 4 of 1969 and s.
66(1) of the President's Act 8 of 1969. The	language of these provisions is of the widest amplitude; and, even if it is assumed that the Central Act had cast any doubt on or introduced any	infirmity in the taxing provisions of	the State Act, the same had been removed or cured by s. 66(1) of the President's Act which not only nullifies the effect, if any, of the judgment	of the High Court on	the taxing provisions of the Bihar Act 7 of 1937, but also validates the imposition, assessment or collection of all cesses	and taxes imposed under any state law with retrospective effect as if the President's Act had been in force at all material times including the period in question i.e. of January 1968.
The validity of the impugned notification and the cess	and tax imposed thereunder has to be judged with reference to the successive Ordinances and finally to the	President's Act. By virtue of the legal fiction	introduced by	the validating provision in s. 66(1), the impugned	notification will be deemed to have been issued not necessarily under the Ordinance No.	3 of 1968 but under the President's	Act, itself, deriving its legal force and validity directly	from the latter.
For the foregoing reasons, we negative the contentions of the petitioners and dismiss this petition with costs.