(1.) THIS is an application by the defendant Municipal Council, Jaora, in a suit by the Madhya Pradesh Electricity Board, for the realization of a large sum owned by the defendant as the price of electric energy taken and consumed by it in its office, roads and streets and the like. The defence seems to be that the Board must at its own costs, in other words, at the cost of the other consumers, light the streets and run the office of the Jaora Municipality a bulk consumer, who should get power free of cost. However, a preliminary point was raised on the allegation that Section 76(1) of the Electricity Supply Act of 1948 (54 of 1948) provides that every question arising between the Board, on the one hand, and any person on the other, shall be determined by arbitration and as such the suit does not lie. The trial Court rejected this, on it interpretation that in that Section the "other person" is one who does the duties of the licensee and that Section 76 has no application to a matter arising between the Board and its consumer, whether a private individual or a Corporation or a local or other authority; so, the Board, like any other supplier of energy or other goods, is competent to sue the consumer for the price. Even at this stage, the defendant -applicant has pressed for a decision on this issue; requesting meanwhile for the stay of further progress in the suit.
(2.) A mere reading of the sections concerned, in particular, 76 itself, and the other Sections like 77, 55 and parts of 57, 58 and 75 as well as Section 28 of the Indian Electricity Act of 1910, leaves no doubt whatsoever that the words "licensee or other person" in the Act of 1948 mean the category of suppliers of energy, whether under a license proper as provided in Part II of the Indian Electricity Act of 1910, or by special permission of the Government in the manner provided in Section 28 of that Act, the latter, whom we may call the quasi licensee, bracketed in several sections along with the licensee. The same question came before the Mysore High Court in the case reported in the Amalgamated Electricity Co. Ltd., vs. N. S. Bathena, AIR 1958 Mys 148 my conclusions are the same, but my approach being slightly different, it is proper to set out the reasoning in extense.
(3.) FOR example, in Section 75, we have the phrase -"any licensee or person supplying electricity for public or private purpose....."; in Section 76 (1) the wording is -"any licensee of other person...". It is the same wording in Section 77. Under Section 75 (3), the Board may demand information and accounts. Under Section 77, where the words "other person" are used without the words ''supplying electricity etc...", still, the provision is that he shall comply with or give effect to directions under certain sections such as 55, 57 (2) (c) and 58 (3). All these sections provide for directions issued from time to time by the Board to the licensee for the purpose of maximum economy and efficiency in the operation of the station; in other words, the "licensee or other person" mentioned in Sections 76 and 77 already explained at slightly greater length in Section 75, is one who is amenable to these directions, that is to say, one who is producing and supplying electricity, whether on a proper licence or the quasi -licence of Government under Section 28 of the Indian Electricity Act of 1910. This view gains support from a reference to the Indian Electricity Act of 1910, which is still in force; subject to special provision made in the later enactment of 1948 governing the supply of electrical energy. The "licensee" is there defined in Section 2 (h) and elaborated in the definition of "licence" in Section 3(1) (d). But in special circumstances, a person (which may be an individual or a company or other juristic person) may engage in the business of supplying electricity, without a licence, but with the sanction of the State Government and in accordance with the conditions imposed by it; such a person would be governed by Section 28 of that Act. Thus, the words "licensee or other person" in Sections 76 and 77 represent the category mentioned in Section 75 (3) of the Electricity Supply Act. As both the licensee the other person -the quasi -licensee, are and two species of the same genus it, may not be incorrect to say, '"the other person" is ejusdem generis of licensee. Generally, this phrase is used only when there are two or more defined things in a provision, and the last is an undefined general mention; but here, for the reason given already, "the other person" is by itself quasi -licensee.