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Allahabad High Court allows PIL seeking removal of country liquor shop situated next to petitioner’s school

The Allahabad High Court has allowed a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) seeking removal of a country liquor shop, situated next to the petitioner’s school.

The Division Bench of Chief Justice Arun Bhansali and Justice Vikas Budhwar passed this order while hearing a PIL filed by a minor through his father.

It is inter alia indicated in the petition that the petitioner is a student of L.K.G, studying in Seth M.R Jaipuria School, Azad Nagar, District Kanpur, which is imparting education from Kindergarten till class 9 and approximately 475 students are studying in the school. That a country liquor shop licensed to respondent no 5 is running adjacent to the school of the petitioner and the distance of the liquor shop from the school is less than 30 meters. The shop remains open throughout the day and is infamous as a meeting place of anti-social elements.

It is submitted that father of the petitioner made a complaint on the IGRS portal of the Government based on which a report was prepared on 20.7.2023 admitting the location of the liquor shop at 20-30 meters away from the school but denied to take any action on the ground that the liquor shop is older than the school of the petitioner. Another report dated 04.10.2023 was prepared indicating that the shop was running for more than 30 years and the school was established in the year 2019 and, therefore, no action can be taken against the respondent.

Submissions have been made that the interpretation of the rules is baseless inasmuch as if any school comes into existence subsequent to the establishment of the liquor shop, the shop may not be closed during the said financial year but after expiry of licence in question, fresh licence/renewal cannot be granted and, therefore, the rejection of the petitioner’s representation on the said ground is factually incorrect.

A prayer has been made to direct the respondents to remove the country liquor shop and not to grant any fresh/renewal of licence for the year 2024-25.

During the course of submissions, counsel for the petitioner confined his prayer to the relief that the licence for the liquor shop at the present location may not be issued/renewed for the year 2025-26.

A response to the writ petition has been given by the State relying on the provisions of Rule 5 (4) (a) of the Uttar Pradesh Number and Location of Excise Shops Rules, 1968.

It is submitted that the proviso to the said rule, which provides for a distance of 50 metres of a liquor shop from any place of public worship or school or hospital or residential colony, clearly provides that if any place of public worship, school, hospital, residential colony comes into existence subsequent to the establishment of shop or sub-shop, the provisions of this rule shall not apply and, therefore, as admittedly the shop in question is running for over 30 years and the school was established in the year 2019, it cannot be said that there is any violation of any of the provisions of the Rules of 1968 rather the shop is being operated in consonance with the provisions of the Rules of 1968 and, therefore, the petition deserves dismissal.

The Court observed that,

The factual position is not in dispute that the liquor shop in question exists for a time longer than the establishment of the school in the year 2019 and is being licensed/licence is renewed year to year and that the distance between the school and the shop in question is 20-30 meters only.

A perusal of the said rule reveals that no shop shall be licensed within a distance of 50 meters from any place of public worship or school or hospital or residential colony, however, the proviso stipulates that the said provision shall not apply if any place of public worship, school, hospital, residential colony comes into existence subsequent to the establishment of shop or sub-shop.

Admittedly, the licence of a shop is issued for the financial year i.e from 1st of April to 31st of March and the present licence is for the year 2024-25 i.e the same would expire on 31st of March, 2025.

A perusal of the provisions of Rule 5 (4) (a) of the Rules of 1968 and Rule 8 (d) of the Rules of 2002 would reveal that every applicant who applies for licence of a retail country liquor shop, is required to furnish an affidavit that he possesses or has an arrangement for taking on rent a suitable premise in that locality for running the shop in accordance with the provisions of Rules of 1968 as amended from time to rime.

The very fact that while applying for the grant of licence and/or the renewal thereof, an affidavit is filed regarding compliance of provisions of Rules of 1968, the same necessarily means compliance of provisions of Section 5 (4) (a) of the Rules of 1968 providing for the minimum distance of the proposed liquor shop from the place of worship or school or hospital or residential colony.

The proviso to Rule 5 (4) (a) of the Rules of 1968 would have application only for the financial year in which licence has already been granted and the place of worship or school or hospital or residential colony comes into existence inasmuch as for seeking licence in the next financial year, the applicant has to comply with the provisions of Rule 5 (4) (a) of the Rules of 1968.

“The mere fact that the shop has been used as a liquor shop in a financial year prior to the school came into existence, is not sufficient for invoking the proviso for the purpose of granting licence year after year inasmuch as the licence is issued to the licensee on his fulfilling the eligibility under Rule 8 of the Rules of 2002 and not to the shop in question. Any other interpretation to the said proviso, as projected by counsel for the respondents, would render the provisions of Rule 5 (4) (a) nugatory.

In view of the above factual and legal position, the plea raised by the respondents seeking to contend that the shop having been licensed once, irrespective of provisions of Rule 5 (4) (a) of the Rules of 1968, with the aid of proviso to Rule 5 (4) (a), can be licensed year after year, cannot be sustained”, the Court further observed while allowing the petition.

“The respondents are restrained from granting/renewing the licence of the shop in question after expiry of the present licence on 31st of March, 2025, i.e for the financial year 2025-26 onwards”, the Court ordered.

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