Title: Judicial interventions in regulatory matters: Indian experience
1Judicial interventions in regulatory matters
Indian experience
- S Sundar
- Distinguished Fellow
- Tata Energy Research Institute
- August 2002
- Dhaka
2Rationale for regulation
- To provide a level playing field
- To regulate service providers including SOEs
- To bring in expertise
- To reduce transaction costs
- To protect consumer interest
3Regulator vis-a-vis government
- Exercise powers and discharge functions earlier
with government - Process to be transparent and consultative
- Expertise in decision making
- Quick in response to stakeholders needs
- Accountable
4Regulator vis-a-vis government (Contd..)
- Regulators deemed to be Civil Courts
- Enjoy certain powers under CrPC
- Can levy penalties
- Proceedings deemed to be judicial under IPC
5Regulator vis-a-vis judiciary
- Judiciary generally deals with bipolar interests
- regulators balance interests of multiple
stakeholders - Judicial process generally adversarial -
regulatory process seeks to build consensus, to
avoid litigation and influence behavioural
changes - Regulators can use alternative instruments
6Regulator vis-a-vis judiciary (contd..)
- Judiciary applies law to facts - regulators
implement legislation and public policy - Judiciary reactive - regulators have to be
proactive to address sector growth
7Judicial intervention in regulatory decisions
- Government decisions on tariff etc. were
administrative or policy decisions - Could be reviewed by government itself - not
appealable - subject only to writ jurisdiction - Appeals against regulatory decisions provided for
in law
8Judicial intervention in regulatory decisions
(contd..)
- Regulatory accountability calls for review and
appeals - Issue is what should superior Courts look for
- abuse of powers or jurisdiction
- error of law or violation of natural justice
- unreasonableness OR
- merits or substance of the decision
9Review jurisdiction
- Courts consistent in the view that review should
only address questions of legality and
reasonableness of tribunal decisions - Court not concerned whether a policy is wise or
foolish but only whether it is within the powers
of the authority (G B Mahahan vs. Jalgaon
Municipal Council)
10Review jurisdiction (contd.)
- Principles laid down by SC as basis for review in
Tata Cellular vs. Union of India - Judicial restraint in administrative action
- Review should be of the manner in which decision
was made - Court does not have expertise to correct
administrative decision - Decisions often made qualitatively by experts
- Decision must be reasonable not malafide
- Quashing decisions may impose heavy
administrative costs
11Review jurisdiction (contd.)
- Regulatory decisions are also administrative
decisions - AP High Court in Bharat Kumar and others vs.
Government of AP refused to go beyond the
legality of APERCs order - Upholding the order the SC observed that tariff
function essentially a policy matter. Courts not
to intervene, unless decision is malafide or
arbitrary
12Appellate jurisdiction
- Courts have drawn a distinction between review
and appeals - In appeals a Court can substitute its own
decision for that of the tribunal
13Appellate jurisdiction (contd.)
- Section 27 of the ERC Act and Section 18 of TRAI
Act provide for appeals - Grounds for appeal not specified in legislation
except OER Act, 1995 - Section 39 of OER Act restricts appeals to
questions of law
14Appellate jurisdiction (contd.)
- In CES Ltd. vs. WBERC, the WB High Court held
Our scope of enquiry is not merely limited to
law. It extends to facts, it extends to
principles and it extends to policies too
15Issue for discussion
- Even in appeals should Superior Courts go into
merits and substance of regulatory decisions? - Few appeals preferred against regulatory
decisions - Jurisprudence limited
16Case for limited intervention as in review
- Deference to expertise
- Calendar pressure - no time limit as for TDSAT
- Commissions proceedings transparent with all
stakeholders participating - With wide mandate regulators need play in the
joints
17Conclusion
- Courts should restrict themselves to issues of
law and jurisdiction - and remand back where
there are errors of substance
18Amend legislation?
- In the alternative amend regulatory legislation
to restrict appeals to points of law as in OER
Act - Appellate Courts can exercise only such powers as
are confided to it
19- Regulatory risk should be mitigated and not
replaced by judicial risk