The Trade Monopolies and Restrictive Trade Practices Act,
1969
( Act No.
54 of 1969)
Contents
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Sections |
Particulars |
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Preamble |
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1 |
Short title, extent and commencement. |
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2 |
Definitions. |
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2A |
Power of Central Government to decided certain
matters. |
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3 |
Act not to apply in certain cases. |
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4 |
Application of other laws not barred. |
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5 |
Establishment and Constitution of the
commission. |
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6 |
Terms of Office, Conditions of Service, etc., of
members. |
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7 |
Removal of members from office in certain
circumstances. |
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8 |
Appointment of Director General, Etc., and Staff of
the commission. |
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9 |
Salaries, Etc., to be defrayed out of the
consolidated fund to India. |
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10 |
Inquiry Into Monopolistic or Restrictive trade
practices by commission. |
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11 |
Investigation by Director General before issue of
process in certain. |
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12 |
Power of the Commission. |
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12A |
Power of the commission to grant temporary
injunctions. |
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12B |
Power of the commission to award compensation. |
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12C |
Enforcement of the order made by the commission
under section 12A or 1. |
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13 |
Orders of commission may be subject to conditions,
etc. |
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13A |
Power of the commission to cause investigation to
find out whether or not orders made by it have been complied
with. |
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13B |
Power to punish for contempt |
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14 |
Orders where party concerned does not carry on
business in India. |
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15 |
Restriction of Application of order in certain
cases. |
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16 |
Sittings of the Commission. |
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17 |
Hearing to be in public except in special
circumstances. |
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18 |
Procedure of the commission. |
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19 |
Orders of the commission to be noted in the
register. |
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20 |
Undertakings to which this part applies - Omitted
by the MRTP (Amendment). |
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21 |
Expansion of undertakings - Omitted by the MRTP
(Amendment) Act, 1991. |
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22 |
Establishment of new undertakings - Omitted by the
MRTP (Amendment). |
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22A |
Power to exempt - Omitted by the MRTP (Amendment)
Act, 1991. |
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23 |
Merger, Amalgamation and take over - Omitted by the
MRTP (Amendment). |
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24 |
Merger, Amalgamation and take over in contravention
to Section 23. |
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25 |
Directors undertakings not to be appointed
Directors of other under. |
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26 |
Registration of undertakings to which part a
applies - Omitted. |
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27 |
Division of undertakings. |
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27A |
Power of the Central Government to Direct Severance
of Inter-Connection. |
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27B |
Manner in which order made under Section 27 or
Section 27A. |
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28 |
Matters to be considered by the Central Government
before according. |
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29 |
Opportunity of being heard - Omitted by the MRTP
(Amendment) Act, 1991. |
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30 |
Time within which action should be taken - Omitted
by the MRTP (Amendment). |
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30A |
Application of Chapter - Omitted by the MRTP
(Amendment) Act, 1991. |
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30B |
Restrictions on the Acquisition of Certain shares.
- Omitted by the MRTP (Amendment) Act, 1991. |
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30C |
Restriction on transfer of shares - Omitted by the
MRTP (Amendment) Act, 1991. |
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30D |
Restriction on the transfer of shares of foreign
companies - Omitted by the MRTP (Amendment) Act, 1991. |
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30E |
Power of the Central Government to Direct companies
not to give effect. |
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30F |
Time within which refusal to be communicated -
Omitted by the MRTP (Amendment) Act, 1991. |
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30G |
Nothing in sections 30B to 30E to apply to
Government Companies Etc. |
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31 |
Investigation by Commission of monopolistic trade
practices. |
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32 |
Monopolistic trade practice to be deemed to be
prejudicial to the published. |
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33 |
Registrable Agreements relating to restrictive
trade practices. |
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34 |
Registrar of restrictive trade agreements -
Repealed by the MRTP (Amendment) Act, 1991. |
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35 |
Registration of Agreements. |
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36 |
Keeping the Register. |
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36A |
Definition of unfair trade practice. |
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36B |
Inquiry into unfair trade practice by
commission. |
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36C |
Investigation by Director General before an issue
of process in certain. |
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36D |
Powers which may be exercised by the commission
inquiring into an unfair. |
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36E |
Power relating to restrictive trade practices by
commission. |
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37 |
Investigation into Restrictive trade practices by
commission. |
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38 |
Presumption as to the public interest. |
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39 |
Special Conditions for Avoidance of conditions for
maintaining. |
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40 |
Prohibition of other measures of maintaining resale
prices. |
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41 |
Power of commission to exempt particular classes of
goods from section. |
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42 |
Power of [Director General] to obtain
information. |
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43 |
Power to call for information. |
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44 |
Power to appoint inspectors. |
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45 |
Penalty for contravention of Section 21 - Omitted
by the MRTP (Amendment) Act, 1991. |
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46 |
Penalty for Contravention of Section 27. |
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47 |
Penalty for Contravention of Section 25 - Omitted
by the MRTP (Amendment) Act, 1991. |
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48 |
Penalty for failure to register agreements. |
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48A |
Penalty for contravention of order made under
Section 27B or for possession. |
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48B |
Penalty for contravention of Section 27B. |
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48C |
Penalty for contravention of order made by
commission relating. |
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49 |
Penalty for offences in relation to furnishing of
information. |
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50 |
Penalty or offences in relation to orders under the
Act. |
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51 |
Penalty for offences in relation to resale price
maintenance. |
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52 |
Penalty for wrongful disclosure of
information. |
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52A |
Penalty for contravention of any condition or
restriction, etc. |
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52B |
Penalty for making false statement in application,
return, etc. |
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53 |
Offences by companies. |
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54 |
Power of Central Government to impose Conditions,
Limitation. |
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55 |
Appeals. |
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56 |
Jurisdiction of Courts to try offences. |
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57 |
Cognizance of offences. |
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58 |
Magistrates
Power to impose enhanced penalties - Repealed by the
MRTP. |
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59 |
Protection regarding statements made to the
commission. |
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60 |
Restriction on Disclosure of Information. |
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61 |
Power of the Central Government to require the
commission to submit. |
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62 |
Reports of the commission to be placed before
parliament. |
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63 |
Members, Etc., to be public servants. |
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64 |
Protection of Action Taken in Good faith. |
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65 |
Inspection of and extracts from, the register. |
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66 |
Power to make regulations. |
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67 |
Power to make rules. |
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Schedules |
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Schedule I |
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Schedule II |
PREAMBLE
[ACT NO. 54 OF 1969]
An Act to provide that the operation of the economic
system does not result in the concentration of economic power to the
common detriment, for the control of monopolies, for the prohibition
of monopolistic and restrictive trade practices and for matters
connected therewith or incidental thereto.
Comment: After major
amendments in the year 199, the legal process under this Act is now
mostly used for consumer protection for dealing with restrictive and
unfair trade practices.
Be it
enacted by Parliament in the Twentieth Year of the Republic of India
as follows :-
Section
1
SHORT TITLE, EXTENT AND
COMMENCEMENT.
(1) This Act may be called the Monopolies and
Restrictive Trade Practices Act, 1969.
(2) It extends to the
whole of India except the State of Jammu and Kashmir.
(3) It
shall come into force on such date as the Central Government may, by
notification, appoint 1a .
Section
2
DEFINITIONS.
In this Act,
unless the context otherwise requires, -
(a) "agreement"
includes any arrangement or understanding, whether or not it is
intended that such agreement shall be enforceable (apart from any
provision of this Act) by legal proceedings;
(b) "Commission"
means the Monopolies and Restrictive Trade Practices Commission
established under section 5;
(c) "Director General" means the
Director General of Investigation and Registration appointed under
section 8, and includes any Additional, Joint, Deputy or Assistant
Director General of Investigation and Registration appointed under
that section;
(d) [ 3 "dominant undertaking" means
-
(iii) an undertaking which, by itself or along with
inter-connected undertakings produces, supplies, distributes or
otherwise controls not less than one-fourth of the total goods that
are produced, supplied or distributed in India or any substantial
part thereof; or
(iv) an undertaking which provides or
otherwise controls not less than one-fourth of any services that are
rendered in India or any substantial part
thereof.
Explanation II : Where any goods are the subject of
different forms of production, supply, distribution or control,
every reference in this Act to such goods shall be construed as
reference to any of those forms of production, supply, distribution
or control, whether taken separately or together or in such groups
as may be prescribed.
Explanation III : The question as to
whether any undertaking, either by itself or along with
inter-connected undertakings, produces, supplies, distributes or
controls
one-fourth of any goods or provides or controls
one-fourth of any services may be determined according to any of the
following criteria, namely, value, cost, price, quantity or capacity
of the goods or services.
Explanation IV : In determining,
with reference to the features specified in sub-clause (iii)
sub_clause(iv), as the case may be, the question as to whether an
undertaking is or is not a dominant undertaking, regard shall be had
to -
(i) the average annual production of the goods, or the
average annual value of the services provided, by the undertaking
during the relevant period; and
(ii) the figures published by
such authority as the Central Government may, by notification,
specify, with regard to the total production of such goods made, or
the total value of such services provided, in India or any
substantial part thereof during the relevant
period.
Explanation V : In determining the question as to
whether an undertaking is or is not a dominant undertaking in
relation to any goods supplied, distributed or controlled in India,
regard shall be had to the average annual quantity of such goods
supplied, distributed or controlled in India by the undertaking
during the relevant period.
Explanation VI : For the purposes
of this clause, "relevant period" means the period of three calendar
years immediately preceding that calendar year which immediately
precedes the calendar year in which the question arises as to
whether an undertaking is or is not a dominant
undertaking.
Explanation VII : Where goods produced in India
by an undertaking have been exported to a country outside India,
then the goods so exported shall not be taken into account in
computing for the purposes of this clause -
(i) the total
goods that are produced in India by that undertaking; or
(ii)
the total goods that are produced, supplied or distributed in India
or any substantial part thereof;
(da) "financial institution"
means, -
(i) a public financial institution specified in or
under section 4A of the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956);
(ii)
a State Financial, Industrial or Investment
Corporation;
(iii) the State Bank of India or a subsidiary
bank as defined in the State Bank of India (Subsidiary Banks) Act,
1959 (38 of 1959);
(iv) a nationalised bank, that is to say,
a corresponding new bank as defined in clause (d) of section 2 of
-
(i) the Banking Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of
Undertakings) Act, 1970 (5 of 1970); or
(ii) the Banking
Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Act, 1980 (40
of 1980);
(v) the General Insurance Corporation of India
established in pursuance of the provisions of section 9 of the
General Insurance Business (Nationalisation) Act, 1972 (57 of
1972);
(vi) the Industrial Reconstruction Corporation of
India; or
(vii) any other institution which the Central
Government may, by notification, specify in this behalf;
(e)
"goods" means goods as defined in the Sale of Goods Act, 1930 (3 of
1930), and includes, -
(i) products manufactured, processed
or mined in India;
(ii) shares and stocks including issue of
shares before allotment;
(iii) in relation to goods supplied,
distributed or controlled in India, goods imported into
India;
(ee) Omitted by the MRTP (Amdt.) Act, 1991, w.e.f.
27-9-1991;
(ef) "group" means a group of -
(i) two or
more individuals, association of individuals, firms, trusts,
trustees or bodies corporate (excluding financial institutions), or
any combination thereof, which
exercises, or is established to be
in a position to exercise, control, directly or indirectly, over any
body corporate, firm or trust; or
(ii) associated
persons.
Explanation : For the purposes of this clause
-
(I) a group of persons who are able, directly or
indirectly, to control the policy of a body corporate, firm or
trust, without having a controlling interest in that
body
corporate, firm or trust, shall also be deemed to be in a
position to exercise control over it;
(II) "associated
persons" -
(a) in relation to a director of a body corporate,
means -
(i) a relative of such director, and includes a firm
in which such director or his relative is a partner;
(ii) any
trust of which any such director or his relative is a
trustee;
(iii) any company of which such director, whether
independently or together with his relatives, constitutes one-fourth
of its board of directors;
(iv) any other body corporate, at
any general meeting of which not less than one-fourth of the total
number of directors of such other body corporate are appointed or
controlled by the director of the first mentioned body corporate or
his relative, whether acting singly or jointly;
(b) in
relation to the partner of a firm, means a relative of such partner
and includes any other partner of such firm; and
(c) in
relation to the trustee of a trust, means any other trustee of such
trust;
(III) where any person is an associated person in
relation to another, the latter shall also be deemed to be an
associated person in relation to the former;
(f) "India"
means, for the purposes of this Act, the territories to which this
Act extends;
(ff) & (fff)
(g) "inter-connected
undertakings" means two or more undertakings which are
inter-connected with each other in any of the following manner,
namely :-
(i) if one owns or controls the other.
(ii)
where the undertakings are owned by firms, if such firms have one or
more common partners.
(iii) where the undertakings are owned
by bodies corporate, -
(a) if one body corporate manages the
other body corporate, or
(b) if one body corporate is a
subsidiary of the other body corporate, or
(c) if the bodies
corporate are under the same management, or
(d) if one body
corporate exercises control over the other body corporate in any
other manner;
(iv) where one undertaking is owned by a body
corporate and the other is owned by a firm, if one or more partners
of the firm, -
(a) hold, directly or indirectly, not less
than fifty per cent of the shares, whether preference or equity, of
the body corporate, or
(b) exercise control, directly or
indirectly, whether as director or otherwise, over the body
corporate,
(v) if one is owned by a body corporate and the
other is owned by a firm having bodies corporate as its partners, if
such bodies corporate are under the same management,
(vi) if
the undertakings are owned or controlled by the same person or by
the same group,
(vii) if one is connected with the other
either directly or through any number of undertakings which are
inter-connected undertakings within the meaning of one or more of
the foregoing sub-clauses.
Explanation 1 : For the purposes
of this Act, two bodies corporate, shall be deemed to be under the
same management, -
(i) if one such body corporate exercises
control over the other or both are under the control of the same
group or any of the constituents of the same group; or
(ii)
if the managing director or manager of one such body corporate is
the managing director or manager of the other; or
(iii) if
one such body corporate holds not less than one-fourth of the equity
shares in the other or controls the composition of not less than
one-fourth of the total membership of the board of directors of the
other; or
(iv) if one or more directors of one such body
corporate constitute, or at any time within a period of six months
immediately preceding the day when the question arises as to whether
such bodies corporate are under the same management, constituted
(whether independently or together with relatives of such directors
or the employees of the first mentioned body corporate) one-fourth
of the director of the other; or
(v) if the same individual
or individuals belonging to a group, while holding (whether by
themselves or together with their relatives) not less than
one-fourth of the equity shares in one such body corporate also hold
(whetherby themselves or together with their relatives) not less
than one-fourth of the equity shares in the other; or
(vi) if
the same body corporate or bodies corporate belonging to a group,
holding, whether independently or along with its or their subsidiary
or subsidiaries, not less than one-fourth of the equity shares in
one body corporate, also hold not less than one-fourth of the equity
shares in the other; or
(vii) if not less than one-fourth of
the total voting power in relation to each of the two bodies
corporate is exercised or controlled by the same individual (whether
independently or together with his relatives) or the same body
corporate (whether independently or together with its subsidiaries);
or
(viii) if not less than one-fourth of the total voting
power in relation to each of the two bodies corporate is exercised
or controlled by the same individuals belonging to a group or by the
same bodies corporate belonging to a group, or jointly by such
individual or individuals and one or more of such bodies corporate;
or
(ix) if the directors of the one such body corporate are
accustomed to act in accordance with the directions or instructions
of one or more of the directors of the other, or if the directors of
both the bodies corporate are accustomed to act in accordance with
the directions or instructions of an individual, whether belonging
to a group or not.
Explanation II : If a group exercises
control over a body corporate, that body corporate and every other
body corporate, which is a constituent of or controlled by, the
group shall be deemed to be under the same
management.
Explanation III : If two or more bodies corporate
under the same management hold, in the aggregate, not less than
one-fourth equity share capital in any other body corporate, such
other body corporate shall be deemed to be under the same management
as the first mentioned bodies corporate.
Explanation IV : In
determining whether or not two or more bodies corporate are under
the same management, the shares held by financial institutions in
such bodies corporate shall not be taken into
account.
Illustration
Undertaking B is inter-connected
with undertaking A and
Undertaking C is inter-connected with
undertaking B.
Undertaking C is inter-connected with undertaking
A; if
Undertaking D is inter-connected with undertaking
C,
Undertaking D will be inter-connected with undertaking B
and
Consequently with undertaking A; and so on.
(h)
"member" means a member of the Commission :
(i) "monopolistic
trade practice" means a trade practice which has, or is likely to
have, effect of, -
(i) maintaining the prices of goods or
charges for the services at an unreasonable level by limiting,
reducing or otherwise controlling the production, supply or
distribution of goods or the supply of any services or in any other
manner.
(ii) unreasonably preventing or lessening competition
in the production, supply or distribution of any goods or in the
supply of any services,
(iii) limiting technical development
or capital investment to the common detriment or allowing the
quality of any goods produced, supplied or distributed, or any
services rendered, in India to deteriorate;
(iv) increasing
unreasonably, -
(a) the cost of production of any goods;
or
(b) charges for the provision, or maintenance, of any
services;
(v) increasing unreasonably, -
(a) the
prices at which goods are, or may be, sold or re-sold, or the
charges at which the services are, or may be, provided;
or
(b) the profits which are, or may be, derived by the
production, supply or distribution (including the sale or purchase)
of any goods or by the provision of any services;
(vi)
preventing or lessening competition in the production, supply or
distribution of any goods or in the provision or maintenance of any
services by the adoption of unfair methods or unfair or deceptive
practices;
(j) "notification" means a notification published
in the Official Gazette;
(ja) "owner", in relation to an
undertaking, means an individual, Hindu undivided family, body
corporate or other association of individuals, whether incorporated
or not, or trust (whether public or private or whether religious or
charitable) who or which owns or controls, the whole or
substantially the whole of such undertaking, and includes any
associated person who is a constituent of a group and who has the
ultimate control over the affairs of such undertaking;
(k)
"prescribed" means prescribed by rules made under this
Act;
(l) "price", in relation to the sale of any goods or to
the performance of any services, includes every valuable
consideration, whether direct or indirect, and includes any
consideration which in effect relates to the sale of any goods or to
the performance of any services although ostensibly relating to any
other matter or thing;
(ll) "produce" includes manufacture
and all its grammatical variations and cognate expressions shall be
construed accordingly;
(m) "register" means the register kept
by the Director General under section 36;
(n) "registered
consumers' association" means a voluntary association of persons
registered under the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956), or any other
law for the time being in force which is formed for the purpose of
protecting the interests of consumers generally and is recognised by
the Central Government as such association on an application made in
this behalf in such form and such manner as may be
prescribed;
(o) "restrictive trade practice" means a trade
practice which has, or may have, the effect of preventing,
distorting or restricting competition in any manner and in
particular, -
(i) which tends to obstruct the flow of capital
or resources into the stream of production, or
(ii) which
tends to bring about manipulation of prices, or conditions of
delivery or to affect the flow of supplies in the market relating to
goods or services in such manner as to impose on the consumers
unjustified costs or restrictions;
(p) "retailer", in
relation to the sale of any goods, includes every person, other than
a wholesaler, who sells the goods to any other person; and in
respect of the sale of goods by a wholesaler, to any person for any
purpose other than re-sale, includes that wholesaler;
(r)
"service" means service which is made available to potential users
and includes the provision of facilities in connection with banking,
financing,
insurance, chit fund, real estate, transport,
processing, supply of electrical or other energy, boarding or
lodging or both, entertainment, amusement or the purveying of news
or other information, but does not include the rendering of any
service free of charge or under a contract of personal
service.
Explanation : For the removal of doubts, it is
hereby declared that any dealings in real estate shall be included
and shall be deemed always to have been included within the
definition of "service";
(s) "trade" means any trade,
business, industry, profession or occupation relating to the
production, supply, distribution or control of goods and includes
the provision
of any services;
(t) "trade association"
means a body of persons (whether incorporated or not) which is
formed for the purpose of furthering the trade interests of its
members or of persons represented by its members;
(u) "trade
practice" means any practice relating to the carrying on of any
trade, and includes -
(i) anything done by any person which
controls or affects the price charged by, or the method of trading
of, any trader or any class of traders,
(ii) a single or
isolated action of any person in relation to any trade;
(v)
"undertaking" means an enterprise which is, or has been, or is
proposed to be, engaged in the production, storage, supply,
distribution, acquisition or control of articles or goods, or the
provision of services, of any kind, either directly or through one
or more of its units or divisions, whether such unit or division is
located at the same place where the undertaking is located or at a
different place or at different places.
Explanation I : In
this clause, -
(a) "article" includes a new article and
"service" includes a new service;
(b) "unit" of "division",
in relation to an undertaking includes, -
(i) a plant or
factory established for the production, storage, supply,
distribution, acquisition or control of any article or
goods;
(ii) any branch or office established for the
provision of any service.
Explanation II : For the purposes
of this clause, a body corporate, which is, or has been, engaged
only in the business of acquiring holding, underwriting or dealing
with shares, debentures or other securities of any other body
corporate shall be deemed to be an undertaking
Explanation
III : For the removal of doubts, it is hereby declared that an
investment company shall be deemed, for the purposes of this Act, to
be an undertaking; 47]
(x) "wholesaler", in relation to the
sale of any goods, means a person who sells the goods, either in
bulk or in large quantities, to any person for the purposes of
re-sale, whether in bulk or in the same or smaller
quantities;
(y) words and expressions used but not defined in
this Act and defined in the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956), have
the meanings respectively assigned to them in that Act.
Section
2A
POWER OF CENTRAL GOVERNMENT TO
DECIDED CERTAIN MATTERS.
If any question arises as to
whether, -
(a) two or more individuals, trustees,
associations of individuals, firms or bodies corporate or any
combination thereof, constitute, or fall within, a group,
or
(b) two or more undertakings are inter-connected
undertakings within the meaning of this Act, or
(c) two or
more bodies corporate are under the same management, the Central
Government or where the Board of Company Law Administration,
constituted under section 10E of the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of
1956), is, by notification, authorised so to do by the Central
Government, that Board shall decide such question, after giving to
the persons concerned a reasonable opportunity of being heard.
Section
3
ACT NOT TO APPLY IN CERTAIN
CASES.
Unless the Central Government, by notification
otherwise directs, this Act shall not apply to -
(a) any
undertaking owned or controlled by a Government company,
(b)
any undertaking owned or controlled by the Government,
(c)
any undertaking owned or controlled by a corporation (not being a
company) established by or under any Central, Provincial or State
Act,
(d) any trade union or other association of workmen or
employees formed for their own reasonable protection as such workmen
or employees,
(e) any undertaking engaged in an industry, the
management of which has been taken over by any person or body of
persons in pursuance of any authorisation made by the Central
Government under any law for the time being in force,
(f) any
undertaking owned by a co-operative society formed and registered
under any Central, Provincial or State Act relating to co-operative
societies,
(g) any financial institution.
Explanation
: In determining, for the purposes of clause (c), whether or not any
undertaking is owned or controlled by a corporation, the shares held
by financial institutions shall not be taken into account.
Section
4
APPLICATION OF OTHER LAWS NOT
BARRED.
(1) Save as otherwise provided in sub-section (2) or
elsewhere in this Act, the provisions of this Act shall be in
addition to, and not in derogation of, any other law for the time
being in force.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
section 3 or elsewhere in this Act, so much of the provisions of
this Act, as relate to matters in respect of which
specific
provisions exist in the -
(i) Reserve Bank of
India Act, 1934 (2 of 1934), or the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 (10
of 1949), or
(ii) State Bank of India Act, 1955 (23 of 1955),
or the State Bank of India (Subsidiary Banks) Act, 1959 (38 of
1959), or
(iii) Insurance Act, 1938 (4 of 1938),
shall
not apply to a banking company, the State Bank of India or a
subsidiary bank, as defined in the State Bank of India (Subsidiary
Banks) Act, 1959 (38 of 1959), or an insurer, as the case may be.
Section
5
ESTABLISHMENT AND CONSTITUTION OF
THE COMMISSION.
(1) For the purposes of this Act, the Central
Government shall establish, by notification, a Commission to be
known as the Monopolies and Restrictive Trade Practices Commission
which shall consist of a Chairman and not less than two and not more
than eight other members, to be appointed by the Central
Government.
(2) The Chairman of the Commission shall be a
person who is, or has been or is qualified to be, a Judge of the
Supreme Court or of a High Court and the members thereof shall be
persons of ability, integrity and standing who have adequate
knowledge or experience of, or have shown capacity in dealing with,
problems, relating to economics, law, commerce, accountancy,
industry, public affairs or administration.
(3) Before
appointing any person as a member of the Commission, the Central
Government shall satisfy itself that the person does not, and will
not, have, any such financial or other interest as is likely to
affect prejudicially his functions as such member
Section
6
TERMS OF OFFICE, CONDITIONS OF
SERVICE, ETC., OF MEMBERS.
(1) Every member shall hold office
for such period, not exceeding five years, as may be specified by
the Central Government in the notification made under sub-section
(1) of section 5, but shall be eligible for reappointment
:
Provided that no member shall hold office as such for a
total period exceeding ten years, or after he has attained the age
of sixty-five years, whichever is earlier.
(2)
Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), a member may
-
(a) by writing under his hand and addressed to the Central
Government resign his office at any time;
(b) be removed from
his office in accordance with the provisions of section
7.
(3) A casual vacancy caused by the resignation or removal
of the Chairman or any other member of the Commission under
sub-section (2) or otherwise shall be filled by fresh
appointment.
(3A) Where any such casual vacancy occurs in the
office of the Chairman of the Commission, the seniormost member of
the Commission, holding office for the time being, shall discharge
the functions of the Chairman until a person appointed to fill such
vacancy assumes the office of the Chairman of the
Commission.
(3B) When the Chairman of the Commission is
unable to discharge the functions owing to absence, illness or any
other cause, the seniormost member of the Commission, if authorised
so to do by the Chairman in writing, shall discharge the functions
of the Chairman until the day on which the Chairman resumes the
charge of his functions.
(4) No act or proceeding of the
Commission shall be invalid by reason only of the existence of any
vacancy among its members or any defect in the constitution
thereof.
(5) The chairman of the Commission and other members
shall receive such remuneration and other allowances and shall be
governed by such conditions of service as may be prescribed
:
Provided that the remuneration of the Chairman or any other
member shall not be varied to his disadvantage after his
appointment.
(6) In the case of a difference of opinion among
the members of the Commission, the opinion of the majority shall
prevail and the opinion or orders of the Commission shall be
expressed in terms of the views of the majority.
(7) The
Chairman of the Commission and every other member shall, before
entering upon his office, make and subscribe to an oath of office
and of secrecy in such form, in such manner and before such
authority as may be prescribed.
(8) The Chairman or any
member ceasing to hold office as such shall not hold any appointment
in, or be connected with the management or administration of, any
industry or undertaking to which this Act applies for a period of
five years from the date on which he ceases to hold such
office.
Section
7
REMOVAL OF MEMBERS FROM OFFICE IN
CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES.
(1) The Central Government may remove
from office any member, who -
(a) has been adjudged an
insolvent, or
(b) has been convicted of an offence which, in
the opinion of the Central Government, involves moral turpitude,
or
(c) has become physically or mentally incapable of acting
as such member, or
(d) has acquired such financial or other
interest as is likely to affect prejudicially his functions as a
member, or
(e) has so abused his position as to render his
continuance in office prejudicial to the public interest.
(2)
Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), no member
shall be removed from his office on the ground specified in clause
(d) or clause (e) of that sub-section unless the Supreme Court, on a
reference being made to it in this behalf by the Central Government,
has on an inquiry held by it in accordance with such procedure as it
may specify in this behalf, reported that the member ought, on such
grounds, to be removed.
Section
8
APPOINTMENT OF DIRECTOR GENERAL,
ETC., AND STAFF OF THE COMMISSION.
(1) The Central Government
may, by notification, appoint a Director General of Investigation
and Registration, and as many Additional, Joint, Deputy or Assistant
Directors General of Investigation and Registration, as it may think
fit, for making investigation for the purposes of this Act and for
maintaining a Register of agreements subject to registration under
this Act and for performing such other functions as are, or may be,
provided by, or under, this Act.
(2) The Director General
may, by written order, authorise one of the Additional, Joint,
Deputy or Assistant Directors General to function as the Registrar
of agreements subject to registration under this Act.
(3)
Every person authorised to function as the Registrar of agreements
and every Additional, Joint, Deputy or Assistant Director General
shall exercise his powers, and discharge his functions, subject to
the general control, supervision and direction of the Director
General.
(4) The Central Government may provide the staff of
the Commission and may, in addition, make provisions for the
conditions of service of the Director General, Additional, Joint,
Deputy or Assistant Director General and of the members of the staff
of the Commission.
(5) The conditions of service of the
Director General or any Additional, Joint, Deputy or Assistant
Director General or of any member of the staff of the Commission
shall not be varied to his disadvantage after his appointment.
Section
9
SALARIES, ETC., TO BE DEFRAYED OUT
OF THE CONSOLIDATED FUND OF INDIA.
The salaries and
allowances payable to the members and the administrative expenses,
including salaries, allowances and pensions, payable to or in
respect of officers and other employees of the Commission, shall be
defrayed out of the Consolidated Fund of India.
Section
10
INQUIRY INTO MONOPOLISTIC OR
RESTRICTIVE TRADE PRACTICES BY COMMISSION
The Commission may
inquiry into -
(a) any restrictive trade practice
-
(i) upon receiving a complaint of facts which constitute
such practice from any trade association or from any consumer or a
registered consumers' association, whether such consumer is a member
of that consumers' association or not, or
(ii) upon a
reference made to it by the Central Government or a State
Government, or
(iii) upon an application made to it by the
Director General, or
(iv) upon its own knowledge or
information;
(b) any monopolistic trade practice, upon a
reference made to it by the Central Government or upon an
application made to it by the Director General or upon its own
knowledge or information.
Section
11
INVESTIGATION BY DIRECTOR GENERAL
BEFORE ISSUE OF PROCESS IN CERTAIN CASES.
(1) The Commission
may, before issuing any process requiring the attendance of the
person against whom an inquiry (other than an inquiry upon an
application by the Director General) may be made under section 10,
by an order, require the Director General to make, or cause to be
made, a preliminary investigation in such manner as it may direct
and submit a report to the Commission to enable it to satisfy itself
as to whether or not the matter requires to be inquired
into.
(2) The Director General may, upon his own knowledge or
information or on a complaint made to him, make, or cause to be
made, a preliminary investigation in such manner as he may think fit
to enable him to satisfy himself as to whether or not an application
should be made by him to the Commission under section 10.
(3)
For the purpose of conducting the preliminary investigation under
sub-section (1), or sub-section (2), as the case may be, the
Director General or any other person making the investigation shall
have the same powers as may be exercised by an Inspector under
sub-section (2) of section 44.
(4) Any order or requisition
made by a person making an investigation under sub-section (1), or
sub-section (2), shall be enforced in the same manner as if it were
an order or requisition made by an Inspector appointed under section
240 or section 240A of the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956), and any
contravention of such order or requisition shall be punishable in
the same manner as if it were an order or requisition made by an
Inspector appointed under the said section 240 or section 240A.
62.
Section
12
POWERS OF THE
COMMISSION.
(1) The Commission shall, for the purposes of any
inquiry under this Act, have the same powers as are vested in a
civil court under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908),
while trying a suit, in respect of the following matters, namely
:-
(a) the summoning and enforcing the attendance of any
witness and examining him on oath;
(b) the discovery and
production of any document or other material object producible as
evidence;
(c) the reception of evidence on
affidavits;
(d) the requisitioning of any public record from
any court or office;
(e) the issuing of any commission for
the examination of witnesses;
(f) the appearance of parties
and consequence of non-appearance.
(2) Any proceeding before
the Commission shall be deemed to be a judicial proceeding within
the meaning of sections 193 and 228 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860
(45 of 1890), and the Commission shall be deemed to be a civil court
for the purposes of section 195 and Chapter XXVI of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974).
(3) The Commission
shall have power to require any person -
(a) to produce
before, and allow to be examined and kept by, an officer of the
Commission specified in this behalf, such books, accounts or other
documents in the custody or under the control of the person so
required as may be specified or described in the requisition, being
documents relating to any trade practice, the examination of which
may be required for the purposes of this Act; and
(b) to
furnish to an officer so specified such information as respects the
trade practice as may be required for the purposes of this Act or
such other information as may be in his possession in relation to
the trade carried on by any other person.
(4) For the purpose
of enforcing the attendance of witnesses the local limits of the
Commission's jurisdiction shall be the limits of the territory of
India.
(5) Where, during any inquiry under this Act, the
Commission has any grounds to believe that any books or papers of,
or relating to any undertaking in relation to which such inquiry is
being made or which the owner of such undertaking may be required to
produce in such inquiry, are being, or may be, destroyed, mutilated,
altered, falsified or secreted, it may, by a written order,
authorise any officer of the Commission to exercise the same powers
of entry, search and seizure in relation to the undertaking, or the
books or papers, aforesaid as may be exercised by the Director
General while holding a preliminary investigation under section 11.
67.
Section
12A
POWER OF THE COMMISSION TO GRANT
TEMPORARY INJUNCTIONS.
(1) Where, during an inquiry before
the Commission, it is proved, whether by the complainant,Director
General,any trader or class of traders or any other person, by
affidavit or otherwise, that any undertaking or any person is
carrying on, or is about to carry on, any monopolistic or any
restrictive, or unfair, trade practice and such monopolistic or
restrictive, or unfair, trade practice is likely to affect
prejudicially the public interest or the interest of any trader,
class of traders or traders generally or of any consumer generally,
the Commission may, for the purposes of staying or preventing the
undertaking or, as the case may be, such person from causing such
prejudicial effect, by order, grant a temporary injunction
restraining such undertaking or person from carrying on any
monopolistic or restrictive, or unfair, trade practice until the
conclusion of such inquiry or until further orders.
(2) The
Provisions of rules 2A to 5 (both inclusive) of Order XXXIX of the
First Schedule to the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908),
shall, as far as may be, apply to a temporary injunction issued by
the Commission under this section, as they apply to a temporary
injunction issued by a civil court, and any reference in any such
rule to a suit shall be construed as a reference to an inquiry
before the Commission.
Explanation 1 : For the purposes of
this section, an inquiry shall be deemed to have commenced upon the
receipt by the Commission of any complaint, reference, or, as the
case may be, application or upon its own knowledge or information
reduced to writing by the Commission.
Explanation II : For
the removal of doubts, it is hereby declared that the power of the
Commission with respect to temporary injunction includes power to
grant a temporary injunction without giving notice to the opposite
party. 70.
Section
12B
POWER OF THE COMMISSION TO AWARD
COMPENSATION.
(1) Where, as a result of the monopolistic or
restrictive, or unfair, trade practice, carried on by any
undertaking or any person, any loss or damage is caused to the
Central Government, or any State Government or any trader or class
of traders or any consumer, such Government or, as the case may be,
trader or class of traders or consumer may, without prejudice to the
right of such Government, trader or class of traders or consumer to
institute a suit for the recovery of any compensation for the loss
or damage so caused, make an application to the Commission for an
order for the recovery from that undertaking or owner thereof or, as
the case may be, from such person, of such amount as the Commission
may determine as compensation for the loss or damage so
caused.
(2) Where any loss or damage referred to in
sub-section (1) is caused to numerous persons having the same
interest, one or more of such persons may, with the permission of
the Commission, make an application, under that sub-section, for and
on behalf of, or for the benefit of, the persons so interested, and
thereupon the provisions of rule 8 of Order I of the First Schedule
to the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), shall apply
subject to the modification that every reference therein to a suit
or decree shall be construed as a reference to the application
before the Commission and the order of the Commission
thereon.
(3) The Commission may, after an inquiry made into
the allegations made in the application filed under sub-section (1),
make an order directing the owner of the undertaking or other person
to make payment, to the applicant, of the amount determined by it as
realisable from the undertaking or the owner thereof, or, as the
case may be, from the other person, as compensation for the loss or
damage caused to the applicant by reason of any monopolistic or
restrictive, or unfair, trade practice carried on by such
undertaking or other person.
(4) Where a decree for the
recovery of any amount as compensation for any loss or damage
referred to in sub-section (1) has been passed by any court in
favour of
any person or persons referred to in sub-section (1),
or, as the case may be, sub-section (2), the amount, if any, paid or
recovered in pursuance of the order made by the Commission under
sub-section (3) shall be set off against the amount payable under
such decree and the decree shall, notwithstanding anything contained
in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), or any other law
for the time being in force, be executable for the balance, if any,
left after such set off. 71.
Section
12C
ENFORCEMENT OF THE ORDER MADE BY
THE COMMISSION UNDER SECTION 12A OR 12B.
Every order made by
the Commission under section 12A granting a temporary injunction or
under section 12B directing the owner of an undertaking or other
person to make payment of any amount, may be enforced by the
Commission in the same manner as if it were a decree or order made
by a court in an suit pending therein and it shall be lawful for the
Commission to send, in the event of its inability to execute it,
such order to the court within the local limits of whose
jurisdiction, -
(a) in the case of an order against a
company, the registered office of the company is situated,
or
(b) in the case of an order against any other person, the
place where the person concerned voluntarily resides or carries on
business of personally works for gain, is
situated, and thereupon
the court to which the order is so sent shall execute the order as
if it were a decree or order sent to it for execution. 72.
Section
13
ORDERS OF COMMISSION MAY BE
SUBJECT TO CONDITIONS, ETC.
(1) In making any order under
this Act, the Commission may make such provisions not inconsistent
with this Act, as it may think necessary or desirable for the proper
execution of the order and any person who commits a breach of or
fails to comply with any obligation imposed on him by any such
provision shall be deemed to be guilty of an offence under this
Act.
(2) Any order made by the Commission may be amended or
revoked at any time in the manner in which it was made.
(3)
An order made by the Commission may be general in its application or
may be limited to any particular class of traders or a particular
class of trade practice or a
particular trade practice or a
particular locality.
Section
13A
POWER OF THE COMMISSION TO CAUSE
INVESTIGATION TO FIND OUT WHETHER OR NOT ORDERS MADE BY IT HAVE BEEN
COMPLIED WITH.
(1) The Commission may, if it has any
reasonable cause to believe that any person has omitted or failed to
comply with any order made by it under this Act or any obligation
imposed on him by or under any order made by the Commission under
this Act, authorise the Director General or any officer of the
Commission to make an investigation into the matter and the Director
General, or the officer so authorised, may, for the purpose of
making such investigation, exercise all or any of the powers
conferred on the Director General by section 11.
(2) On the
conclusion of the investigation, the Director General, or, as the
case may be, the officer so authorised, shall submit to the
Commission a report of the investigation to enable the Commission to
take such action in the matter as it may think fit. 72.
Section
13B
POWER TO PUNISH FOR
CONTEMPT.
The Commission shall have, and exercise the same
jurisdiction, powers and authority in respect of contempt of itself
as a High Court has and may exercise and, for this purpose, the
provisions of the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 (70 of 1971) shall
have effect subject to the modifications that -
(a) the
reference therein to a High Court shall be construed as including a
reference to the Commission;
(b) the references to the
Advocate-General in section 15 of the said Act shall be construed as
a reference to such Law Officer as the Central Government may, by
notification 74 in the Official Gazette, specify in this behalf.
73.
Section
14
ORDERS WHERE PARTY CONCERNED DOES
NOT CARRY ON BUSINESS IN INDIA.
Where any practice
substantially falls within monopolistic, restrictive, or unfair,
trade practice, relating to the production, storage, supply,
distribution or control of goods of any description or the provision
of any services and any party to such practice does not carry on
business in India, an order may be made under this Act with respect
to that part of the practice which is carried on in India.
Section
15
RESTRICTION OF APPLICATION OF
ORDERS IN CERTAIN CASES.
No order made under this Act with
respect to any monopolistic or restrictive trade practice shall
operate so as to restrict -
(a) the right of any person to
restrain any infringement of a patent granted in India,
or
(b) any person as to the condition which he attached to a
licence to do anything, the doing of which but for the licence would
be an infringement of a patent granted in
India, or
(c)
the right of any person to export goods from India, to the extent to
which the monopolistic or restrictive trade practice relates
exclusively to the production, supply, distribution or control of
goods for such export.
Section
16
SITTINGS OF THE
COMMISSION.
(1) The Central office of the Commission shall be
in Delhi but the Commission may sit at such places in India and at
such times as may be most convenient for the exercise of its powers
or functions under this Act.
(2) The powers or functions of
the Commission may be exercised or discharged by Benches formed by
the Chairman of the Commission from among the members.
Section
17
HEARING TO BE IN PUBLIC EXCEPT IN
SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES.
(1) Subject to the provisions of
sub-section (2), the hearing of proceedings before the Commission
shall be in public.
(2) Where the Commission is satisfied
that it is desirable to do so by reason of the confidential nature
of any offence or matter or for any other reason, the Commission may
-
(a) hear the proceedings or any part thereof in
private;
(b) give directions as to the persons who may be
present thereat;
(c) Prohibit or restrict the publication of
evidence given before the Commission (whether in public or in
private) or of matters contained in documents filed before
the
Commission.
Section
18
PROCEDURE OF THE
COMMISSION.
(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the
Commission shall have power to regulate -
(a) the procedure
and conduct of its business;
(b) the procedure of Benches of
the Commission;
(c) the delegation to one or more members of
such powers or functions as the Commission may specify and subject
to any general or special direction given, or condition imposed, by
the Commission, a member, to whom any powers or functions are so
delegated, shall exercise such powers or discharge those functions
in the same manner and with the same effect as if they had been
conferred on such member directly by this Act and not by way of
delegation and any order or other act or thing made or done by such
member in pursuance of the power or function so delegated shall be
deemed to be an order or other act or thing made or done, by the
Commission.
(2) In particular, and without prejudice to the
generality of the foregoing provisions, the powers of the Commission
shall include the power to determine the extent to which persons
interested or claiming to be interested in the subject-matter of any
proceeding before it are allowed to be present or to be heard,
either by themselves or by their representatives or to cross-examine
witnesses or otherwise to take part in the proceeding.
Section
19
ORDERS OF THE COMMISSION TO BE
NOTED IN THE REGISTER.
The Commission shall cause an
authenticated copy of every order made by it in respect of a
restrictive trade practice or an unfair trade practice, as the case
may be, to be forwarded to the Director General who shall have it
recorded in such manner as may be prescribed.
Section
20
UNDERTAKINGS TO WHICH THIS PART
APPLIES. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F.
27-9-1991.
Section
21
EXPANSION OF UNDERTAKINGS. -
OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F. 27-9-1991.
Section
22
ESTABLISHMENT OF NEW UNDERTAKINGS.
- OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F. 27-9-1991.
Section
22A
POWER TO EXEMPT. - OMITTED BY THE
MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F. 27-9-1991.
Section
23
MERGER, AMALGAMATION AND TAKE
OVER. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F.
27-9-1991.
Section
24
MERGER, AMALGAMTION AND TAKE OVER
IN CONTRAVENTION OF SECTION 23. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT)
ACT, 1991, W.E.F. 27-9-1991.
Section
25
DIRECTORS OF UNDERTAKINGS NOT TO
BE APPOINTED DIRECTORS OF OTHER UNDERTAKINGS. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP
(AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F. 27-9-1991.
Section
26
REGISTRATION OF UNDERTAKINGS TO
WHICH PART A APPLIES. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991,
W.E.F.
27-9-1991.
Section
27
DIVISION OF
UNDERTAKINGS.
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in this
Act or in any other law for the time being in force, the Commission
may, -
(i) upon receiving a complaint of facts from any trade
association or from any consumer or a registered consumers'
association, whether such consumer is a member of that consumers'
association or not, or
(ii) upon a reference made to it by
the Central Government or a State Government, or
(iii) upon
its own knowledge or information.
If it is of opinion that
the working of an undertaking is prejudicial to the public interest,
or has led, or is leading, or is likely to lead, to the adoption of
any monopolistic or restrictive trade practices, inquire as to
whether it is expedient in the public interest to make an order,
-
(a) for the division of any trade of the undertaking by the
sale of any part of the undertaking or assets thereof, or
(b)
for the division of any undertaking or inter-connected undertakings
into such number of undertakings as the circumstances of the case
may justify,
and the Commission may, after such hearing as it
thinks fit, report to the Central Government its opinion thereon and
shall, where it is of opinion that a division ought to be made,
specify the manner of the division and compensation, if any, payable
for such division.
Explanation : For the purposes of this
section all activities carried on by way of trade by an undertakings
or two or more inter-connected undertaking may be treated as a
single trade.
(2) If the Commission so recommends, the
Central Government may, notwithstanding anything contained in any
other law for the time being in force, by an order in writing,
direct the division of any trade of the undertaking or of the
undertaking or inter-connected undertakings.
(3)
Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the time
being in force, the order referred to in sub-section (2) may provide
for all such matters as may be necessary to give effect to the
division of any trade of the undertaking, or of the undertaking or
inter-connected undertakings, including, -
(a) the transfer
or vesting of property, rights, liabilities or
obligations;
(b) the adjustment of contracts either by the
discharge or reduction of any liability or obligation or
otherwise;
(c) the creation, allotment, surrender or
cancellation of any shares, stock or securities;
(d) the
payment of compensation;
(e) the formation or winding up of
an undertaking or the amendment of the memorandum and articles of
association or any other instruments regulating the business of any
undertaking;
(f) the extent to which and the circumstances in
which provisions of the order affecting an undertaking may be
altered by the undertaking and the registration thereof;
(g)
the continuation, with such changes as may be necessary, of parties
to any legal proceeding
(4) Where the Central Government
makes, or intends to make, an order for any purpose mentioned in
sub-section (3), it may, with a view to achieving that purpose,
prohibit or restrict the doing of anything that might impede the
operation or making of the order and may impose on any person such
obligations as to the carrying on of any activities or the
safeguarding of any assets, as it may think fit, or it may, by
order, provide for the carrying on of any activities or safeguarding
of any assets either by the appointment of a person to conduct, or
supervise the conduct of, any such activities or in any other
manner.
(5) Notwithstanding anything contained in any other
law for the time being in force or in any contract or in any
memorandum or articles of association, an officer of a
company
who ceases to hold office as such in consequence of the division of
an undertaking or inter-connected undertakings shall not be entitled
to claim any compensation for such cesser.
Section
27A
POWER OF THE CENTRAL GOVERNMENT
TO DIRECT SEVERANCE OF INTER-CONNECTION BETWEEN
UNDERTAKINGS.
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in this
Act or in any other law for the time bing in force, the Commission
may, -
(i) upon receiving a complaint of facts from any trade
association or from any consumer or a registered consumers'
association, whether such consumer is a member of that consumers'
association or not, or
(ii) upon a reference made to it by
the Central Government or a State Government, or
(iii) upon
its own knowledge or information.
If it is of opinion that
the continuance of inter-connection of an undertaking (hereafter in
this section referred to as the principal undertaking) with any
other undertaking is detrimental to -
(a) the interests of
the principal undertaking; or
(b) the future development of
the principal undertaking; or
(c) the steady growth of the
industry to which the principal undertaking pertains; or
(d)
the public interest.
Inquire 83 as to whether it is expedient
in the public interest to make an order for the severance of such
inter-connection on one or more of the grounds aforesaid,
and the
Commission may, after such hearings as it think fit, report to the
Central Government its opinion thereon and shall, where it is of
opinion that the severance of the inter-connection of the principal
undertaking with any other undertaking ought to be made, include in
its report a scheme with respect to such severance, providing
therein for the matters specified in sub-section (2).
(2)
Where, in any such report, the Commission recommends the severance
of any such inter-connection, the scheme with respect thereto shall
provide for the following matters, namely :-
(a) the manner
in which, and the period within which, the severance of such
inter-connection is to be effected;
(b) the appropriation or
transfer of any share or other interest held by the owner in, or in
relation to, the principal undertaking, in the other undertaking or
the termination of any office or employment in such undertaking,
which may be required for effecting the severance of such
inter-connection;
(c) compensation, if any, payable for the
severance of such interconnection; and
(d) such incidental,
consequential and supplemental matters, as may be necessary to
secure the severance of such inter-connection.
(3) If the
Commission so recommends, the Central Government may,
notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the time
being in force, by an order in writing, direct the severance of
inter-connection between the undertakings, as far as may be, in
accordance with the scheme included in the report of the
Commission.
(4) Where the Central Government makes, or
intends to make, an order for any purpose mentioned in sub-section
(3), it may, with a view to achieving that purpose, prohibit or
restrict the doing of anything that might impede the operation or
making of the order and may impose on any person such obligations as
to the carrying on of any activities or the safeguarding of any
assets, as it may think fit, or it may, by order, provide for the
carrying on of any activities or safeguarding of any assets either
by the appointment of a person to conduct, or supervise the conduct
of, any such activities or in any other manner.
(5)
Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the time
being in force or in any contract or in any memorandum or articles
of association, an officer of a
company who ceases to hold office
as such in consequence of the severance of inter-connection between
undertakings shall not be entitled to claim any compensation for
such cesser.
Explanation : For the purposes of this section,
"inter-connection" means inter-connection of an undertaking with any
other undertaking in any manner specified in clause (g) of section
2. 82.
Section
27B
MANNER IN WHICH ORDER MADE UNDER
SECTION 27 OR SECTION 27A SHALL BE CARRIED OUT.
(1) Where in
any report made by it, whether under section 27 or section 27A, the
Commission recommends that the division of any trade of any
undertaking or division of any undertaking or undertakings or of
interconnected undertakings, or, as the case may be, the severance
of interconnection between two or more undertakings, is to be
effected by -
(a) the disinvestment by any person holding any
share in the body corporate owning such undertaking or undertakings;
or
(b) the sale of the whole or any part of such undertaking
or undertakings, or, of any part of the assets thereof,
The
Central Government may, in its order under the said section 27 or
section 27A, specify that such disinvestment of shares or the sale
of the whole or part of the
undertaking or undertakings or of
such assets, as the case may be, shall be effected within such
period and in such one or more of the following methods as may be
specified in such order, namely :-
(i) by directing the
person holding such shares to make a public offer for the sale of
such number of shares held by him in the body corporate owning the
undertaking or undertakings, as may be specified in the order;
or
(ii) by directing the body corporate owning the
undertaking to make further issue of equity capital to the members
of the public except to the person who is directed to disinvest the
shares held by him in such body corporate; or
(iii) by
directing that the sale of the undertaking or any part thereof, or,
as the case may be, of such assets, be made by public auction;
or
(iv) by such other prescribed method as the Central
Government may specify :
Provided that the Central Government
may extend on its own motion or on the application of the person
concerned and for sufficient cause, the period specified as
aforesaid in any order made by it under section 27 or section 27A by
another order.
(2) Every order of the Central Government
referred to in sub-section (1), shall have effect notwithstanding
anything contained elsewhere in this Act or in any other law for the
time being in force or in the memorandum or articles of association
of the body corporate owning the undertaking.
(3) Where any
person who has been directed to do so by an order referred to in
sub-section (1), omits or fails to disinvest any share or block of
shares specified in the said order, the body corporate in which such
shares are held shall not permit such person or his nominee or proxy
to exercise any voting or other rights attaching to such share or
block of shares. 84.
Section
28
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED BY THE
CNETRAL GOVERNMENT BEFORE ACCORDING APPROVAL. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP
(AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F. 27-9-1991.
Section
29
OPPORTUNITY OF BEING HEARD. -
OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F. 27-9-1991.
Section
30
TIME WITHIN WHICH ACTION SHOULD BE
TAKEN. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F.
27-9-1991.
Section
30A
APPLICATION OF CHAPTER. - OMITTED
BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F. 27-9-1991.
Section
30B
RESTRICTIONS ON THE ACQUISITION
OF CERTAIN SHARES. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991,
W.E.F. 27-9-1991.
Section
30C
RESTRICTION ON TRANSFER OF
SHARES. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F.
27-9-1991.
Section
30D
RESTRICTION ON THE TRANSFER OF
SHARES OF FOREIGN COMPANIES. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT,
1991, W.E.F. 27-9-1991.
Section
30E
POWER OF THE CENTRAL GOVERNMENT
TO DIRECT COMPANIES NOT TO GIVE EFFECT TO THE TRANSFER. - OMITTED BY
THE MRTP
(AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F. 27-9-1991.
Section
30F
TIME WITHIN WHICH REFUSAL TO BE
COMMUNICATED. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F.
27-9-1991.
Section
30G
NOTHING IN SECTIONS 30B TO 30E TO
APPLY TO GOVERNMENT COMPANIES ETC. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT)
ACT, 1991,
W.E.F. 27-9-1991.
Section
31
INVESTIGATION BY COMMISSION OF
MONOPOLISTIC TRADE PRACTICES.
(1) Where it appears to the
Central Government that the owners of one or more undertakings are
indulging in any practice which is, or, may be, a monopolistic trade
practice, or that, monopolistic trade practices prevail in respect
of any goods or services, that Government may refer the matter to
the Commission for an inquiry and the Commission shall, after such
hearing as it thinks fit, report to the Central Government its
findings thereon :
Provided that where the Commission
receives any application from the Director General or any
information, or comes to know, that the owner of any undertaking is,
or, the owners of two or more undertakings are, indulging in any
trade practice, which is, or may be, a monopolistic trade practice,
or that monopolistic trade practices prevail in respect of any goods
or services, it may on such application or on its own motion, and
notwithstanding that no reference has been made to it by the Central
Government under this sub-section, make an inquiry into the
matter.
(2) If as a result of such inquiry, the Commission
makes a finding to the effect that, having regard to the economic
conditions prevailing in the country and to all other
matters
which appear in particular circumstances to be relevant, the trade
practice operates or is likely to operate against the public
interest, it shall make a
report to the Central Government as to
its findings thereon and on receipt of such report, the Central
Government may, notwithstanding anything contained in any other law
for the time being in force, pass such orders as it may think fit to
remedy or prevent any mischiefs which result or may result from such
trade practice.
(2A) If any such report contains a finding of
the Commission to the effect that the owner of any undertaking is,
or, the owners of two or more undertakings are,
indulging in any
monopolistic trade practice, or that monopolistic trade practice
prevails in respect of any goods or services, and the Central
Government is satisfied that it is necessary to take steps to remedy
or prevent any mischiefs which result or may result from such
monopolistic trade practice, and that such monopolistic trade
practice does not fall within any of the exceptions specified in
section 32, it may, notwithstanding anything contained elsewhere in
this Act or in any other law for the time being in force, make such
orders as it may think fit, -
(a) prohibiting the owner of
the concerned undertaking or the owners of the concerned
undertakings, as the case may be, from continuing to indulge in such
monopolistic trade practice; or
(b) prohibiting the owners of
any class of undertaking or undertakings generally, from continuing
to indulge in any monopolistic trade practices in relation to such
goods or services, and may also make such other orders as it may
think fit to remedy or prevent any mischief which results, or may
result, from the continuation of monopolistic trade practices in
relation to the goods and services aforesaid.
(3) Without
prejudice to the generality of the powers conferred by sub-section
(2A), any order made by the Central Government under this section
may also include an order -
(a) regulating the production,
storage, supply, distribution or control of any goods by the
undertaking or the control of supply of any service by it and fixing
the terms of sale (including prices) or supply thereof;
(b)
prohibiting the undertaking from resorting to any act or practice or
from pursuing any commercial policy which prevents or lessens, or is
likely to prevent or lessen, competition in the production, storage,
supply or distribution of any goods or provision of any
services;
(c) fixing standards for the goods used or produced
by the undertaking;
(d) declaring unlawful, except to such
extent and in such circumstances as may be provided by or under the
order, the making or carrying out of any such agreement as may be
specified or described in the order;
(e) requiring any party
to any such agreement as may be so specified or described to
determine the agreement within such time as may be so specified,
either wholly or to such extend as may be so specified;
(f)
regulating the profits which may be derived from the production,
storage, supply, distribution or control of goods or from the
provision of any service;
(g) regulating the quality of any
goods or the provision of any service so that the standards thereof
may not deteriorate.
(4) Whenever any order is made by the
Central Government under sub-section (2A) prohibiting the owner of
any undertaking or class of undertakings or undertakings generally
from continuing to indulge in any monopolistic trade practice,
-
(a) the owner of any undertaking or the owners of
undertakings of any class, as the case may be, shall, within thirty
days form the date of receipt of such order (or
within such
further time as the Central Government may, on sufficient cause
being shown, allow) communicate to the Central Government his or
their compliance with the order; and
(b) the Director General
shall within ninety days from the date of such order (or from the
expiry of the further time allowed by the Central Government) inform
the Central Government, whether the order made by it has been
complied with, and where the Director General has any reason to
believe that any such order has been, or in being, contravened by
the owner of any undertaking, he shall inform the Central Government
about the particulars of the owner of such undertaking to, enable
that Government to take such action, under this Act, as it may think
fit.
Section
32
MONOPOLISTIC TRADE PRACTICE TO BE
DEEMED TO BE PREJUDICIAL TO THE PUBLIC INTEREST EXCEPT IN CERTAIN
CASES.
For the purposes of this Act, every monopolistic trade
practice shall be deemed to be prejudicial to the public interest,
except where -
(a) such trade practice is expressly
authorised by any enactment for the time being in force,
or
(b) the Central Government, being satisfied that any such
trade practice is necessary -
(i) to meet the requirements of
the defence of India or any part thereof, or for the security of the
State; or
(ii) to ensure the maintenance of supply of goods
and services essential to the community; or
(iii) to give
effect to the terms of any agreement to which the Central Government
is a party,
by a written order, permits the owner of any
undertaking to carry on any such trade practice.
Section
33
REGISTRABLE AGREEMENTS RELATING TO
RESTRICTIVE TRADE PRACTICES.
(1) Every agreement falling
within one or more of the following categories shall be deemed, for
the purpose of this Act, to be an agreement relating to restrictive
trade practices and shall be subject to registration in accordance
with the provisions of this Chapter, namely :-
(a) any
agreement which restricts, or is likely to restrict, by any method
the persons or classes of persons to whom goods are sold or from
whom goods are bought;
(b) any agreement requiring a
purchaser of goods, as a condition of such purchase, to purchaser
some other goods;
(c) any agreement restricting in any manner
the purchaser in the course of his trade from acquiring or otherwise
dealing in any goods other than those of the seller or any other
person;
(d) any agreement to purchase or sell goods or to
tender for the sale or purchase of goods only at prices or on terms
or conditions agreed upon between the sellers or
purchasers;
(e) any agreement to grant or allow concessions
or benefits, including allowances, discounts, rebates or credit in
connection with, or by reason of, dealings;
(f) any agreement
to sell goods on condition that the prices to be charged on re-sale
by the purchaser shall be the prices stipulated by the seller unless
it is clearly
stated that prices lower than those prices may be
charged;
(g) any agreement to limit, restrict or withhold the
output or supply of any goods or allocate any area or market for the
disposal of the goods;
(h) any agreement not to employ or
restrict the employment of any method, machinery or process in the
manufacture of goods;
(i) any agreement for the exclusion
from any trade association of any person carrying on or intending to
carry on, in good faith the trade in relation to which the
trade
association is formed;
(j) any agreement to sell
goods at such prices as would have the effect of eliminating
competition or a competitor;
(ja) any agreement restricting
in any manner, the class or number of wholesalers, producers or
suppliers from whom any goods may be bought;
(jb) any
agreement as to the bids which any of the parties thereto may offer
at an auction for the sale of goods or any agreement whereby any
party thereto agrees to abstain from bidding at any auction for the
sale of goods;
(k) any agreement not hereinbefore referred to
in this section which the Central Government may, by notification
specify for the time being as being one
relating to a restrictive
trade practice within the meaning of this sub-section pursuant to
any recommendation made by the Commission in this behalf;
(l)
any agreement to enforce the carrying out of any such agreement as
is referred to in this sub-section.
(2) The provisions of
this section shall apply, so far as may be, in relation to
agreements making provision for services as they apply in relation
to agreements connected with the production, storage, supply,
distribution or control of goods.
(3) No agreement falling
within this section shall be subject to registration in accordance
with the provisions of this Chapter if it is expressly authorised by
or under any law for the time being in force or has the approval of
the Central Government or if the Government is a party to such
agreement.
Section
34
REGISTRAR OF RESTRICTIVE TRADE
AGREEMENTS. - REPEALED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1984, section 28
W.E.F. 1-8-1984.
Section
35
REGISTRATION OF
AGREEMENTS.
(1) The Central Government shall, by
notification, specify a day hereinafter referred to as the appointed
day on and from which every agreement falling within section 33
shall become registrable under this Act :
Provided that
different days may be appointed for different categories of
agreements.
(2) Within sixty days from the appointed day, in
the case of an agreement existing on that day, and in the case of an
agreement made after the appointed day, within sixty days from the
making thereof, there shall be furnished to the Director General in
respect of every agreement falling within section 33, the following
particulars, namely :-
(a) the names of the persons who are
parties to the agreement; and
(b) the whole of the terms of
the agreement.
(3) If at any time after the agreement has
been registered under this section, the agreement is varied (whether
in respect of the parties or in respect of the terms thereof) or
determined otherwise than by efflux of time, particulars of the
variation or determination shall be furnished to the Director
General within one month after the date of the variation or
determination.
(4) The particulars to be furnished under this
section in respect of an agreement shall be furnished -
(a)
in so far as the agreement or any variation or determination of the
agreement is made by an instrument in writing, by the production of
the original or a true copy of that agreement; and
(b) in so
far as the agreement or any variation or determination of the
agreement is not so made, by the production of a memorandum in
writing signed by the person
by whom the particulars are
furnished.
(5) The particulars to be furnished under this
section shall be furnished by or on behalf of any person who is a
party to the agreement or, as the case may be, was a party thereto
immediately before its determination, and where the particulars are
duly furnished by or on behalf of any such person, the provisions of
this section shall be deemed to be complied with on the part of all
such persons.
Explanation I : Where any agreement subject to
registration under this section relates to the production, storage,
supply, distribution or control of goods or the performance of any
services in India and any party to the agreement carries on business
in India, the agreement shall be deemed to be an agreement within
the meaning of this section, notwithstanding that any other party to
the agreement does not carry on business in
India.
Explanation II : Where an agreement is made by a trade
association the agreement for the purposes of this section shall be
deemed to be made by all persons who are members of the association
or represented thereon as if each such person were a party to the
agreement.
Explanation III : Where specific recommendations,
whether express or implied, are made by or on behalf of a trade
association to its members, or to any class of its members, as to
the action to be taken or not to be taken by them in relation to any
matter affecting the trade conditions of those members, this section
shall apply in relation to the agreement for the constitution of the
association notwithstanding any provision to the contrary therein as
if it contained a term by which each such member and any person
represented on the association by any such member agreed with the
association to comply with those recommendations and any subsequent
recommendations affecting those recommendations.
Section
36
KEEPING THE REGISTER.
(1)
For the purpose of this Act, the Director General shall keep a
register in the prescribed form and shall enter therein the
prescribed particulars as regards agreements subject to
registration.
(2) The Director General shall provide for the
maintenance of a special section of the register for the entry or
filing in that section of such particulars as the Commission may
direct, being -
(a) particulars containing information, the
publication of which would, in the opinion of the Commission, be
contrary to the public interest;
(b) particulars containing
information as to any matter being information the publication of
which, in the opinion of the Commission, would substantially damage
the legitimate business interest of any person.
(3) Any party
to an agreement required to be registered under section 35 may apply
to the Director General -
(i) for the agreement or any part
of the agreement to be excluded form the provisions of this Chapter
relating to the registration on the ground that the agreement or
part thereof has no substantial economic significance;
or
(ii) for inclusion of any provision of the agreement in
the special section.
and the Director General shall dispose
of the matter in conformity with any general or special directions
issued by the Commission in this behalf.
Section
36A
DEFINITION OF UNFAIR TRADE
PRACTICE.
In this Part, unless the context otherwise requires
"unfair trade practice" means a trade practice which, for the
purpose of promoting the sale, use or supply of any goods or for the
provisions of any services, adopts any unfair method or unfair or
deceptive practice including any of the following practices, namely
:-
(1) the practice of making any statement, whether orally
or in writing or by visible representation which, -
(i)
falsely represents that the goods are of a particular standard,
quality, quantity, grade, composition, style or model;
(ii)
falsely represents that the services are of a particular standard,
quality or grade;
(iii) falsely represents any re-built,
second-hand, renovated, reconditioned or old goods as new
goods;
(iv) represents that the goods or services have
sponsorships, approval, performance, characteristics, accessories,
uses or benefits which such goods or services
do not
have;
(v) represents that the seller or the supplier has a
sponsorship or approval or affiliation which such seller or supplier
does not have;
(vi) makes a false or misleading
representation concerning the need for, or the usefulness of, any
goods or services;
(vii) gives to the public any warranty or
guarantee of the performance, efficacy or length of life of a
product or of any goods that is not based on an adequate or proper
test thereof :
Provided that where a defence is raised to the
effect that such warranty or guarantee is based on adequate or
proper test, the burden of proof of such defence shall lie on the
person raising such defence;
(viii) makes to the public a
representation in a form that purports to be -
(i) a warranty
or guarantee of a product or of any goods or services;
or
(ii) a promise to replace, maintain or repair an article
or any part thereof or to repeat or continue a service until it has
achieved a specified result.
if such purported warranty or
guarantee or promise is materially misleading or if there is no
reasonable prospect that such warranty, guarantee or promise will be
carried out;
(ix) materially misleading the public concerning
the price at which a product or like products or goods or services,
have been, or are, ordinarily sold or provided, and, for this
purpose, a representation as to price shall be deemed to refer to
the price at which the product or goods or services has or have been
sold by sellers or provided by suppliers generally in the relevant
market unless it is clearly specified to be the price at which the
product has been sold or services have been provided by the person
by whom or on whose behalf the representation is made;
(x)
gives false or misleading facts disparaging the goods, services or
trade of another person.
Explanation : For the purposes of
clause (1), a statement that is -
(a) expressed on an article
offered or displayed for sale, or on its wrapper or container;
or
(b) expressed on anything attached to, inserted in, or
accompanying, an article offered or displayed for sale, or on
anything on which the article is mounted for display or sale;
or
(c) contained in or on anything that is sold, sent,
delivered, transmitted or in any other manner whatsoever made
available to a member of the public,
shall be deemed to be a
statement made to the public by, and only by, the person who had
caused the statement to be so expressed, made or
contained;
(2) permits the publication of any advertisement
whether in any newspaper or otherwise, for the sale or supply at a
bargain price, of goods or services that are not intended to be
offered for sale or supply at the bargain price, or for a period
that is, and in quantities that are, reasonable, having regard to
the nature of the market in which the business is carried on, the
nature and size of business, and the nature of the
advertisement.
Explanation : For the purpose of clause (2),
"bargain price" means -
(a) a price that is stated in any
advertisement to be a bargain price, by reference to an ordinary
price or otherwise, or
(b) a price that a person who reads,
hears, or sees the advertisement, would reasonably understand to be
a bargain price having regard to the prices at which the product
advertised or like products are ordinarily sold;
(3) permits
-
(a) the offering of gifts, prizes or other items with the
intention of not providing them as offered or creating the
impression that something is being given or offered free of charge
when it is fully or partly covered by the amount charged in the
transaction as a whole.
(b) the conduct of any contest,
lottery, game of chance or skill, for the purpose of promoting,
directly or indirectly, the sale, use or supply of any product or
any business interest;
(4) permits the sale or supply of
goods intended to be used, or are of a kind likely to be used by
consumers, knowing or having reason to believe that the goods do not
comply with the standards prescribed by competent authority relating
to performance, composition, contents, design, constructions,
finishing or packaging as are necessary to prevent or reduce the
risk of injury to the person using the goods;
(5) permits the
hoarding or destruction of goods, or refuses to sell the goods or to
make them available for sale, or to provide any service, if such
hoarding or destruction or refusal raises or tends to raise or is
intended to raise, the cost of those or other similar goods or
services.
Section
36C
INVESTIGATION BY DIRECTOR GENERAL
BEFORE AN ISSUE OF PROCESS IN CERTAIN CASES.
The Commission
may, before issuing any process requiring the attendance of the
person against whom an inquiry (other than an inquiry upon an
application by the Director General) may be made under section 36B,
by an order, require the Director General to make, or cause to be
made, a preliminary investigation in such manner as it may direct
and submit a report to the Commission, for the purpose of satisfying
itself that the matter requires to be inquired into.
Section
36D
POWERS WHICH MAY BE EXERCISED BY
THE COMMISSION INQUIRING INTO AN UNFAIR TRADE PRACTICE.
(1)
The Commission may inquire into any unfair trade practice which may
come before it for inquiry and, if after such inquiry, it is of
opinion that the practice is
prejudicial to the public interest,
or to the interest of any consumer or consumers generally, it may,
by order direct that -
(a) the practice shall be discontinued
or shall not be repeated;
(b) any agreement relating to such
unfair trade practice shall be void or shall stand modified in
respect thereof in such manner as may be specified in the
order;
(c) any information, statement or advertisement
relating to such unfair trade practice shall be disclosed, issued or
published, as the case may be, in such manner as may be specified in
the order.
(2) The Commission may, instead of making any
order under this section, permit any party to carry on any trade
practice, if it so applies and takes such steps within the time
specified by the Commission as may be necessary to ensure that the
trade practice is no longer prejudicial to the public interest or to
the interest of any consumer or consumers generally, and, in any
such case, if the Commission is satisfied that necessary steps have
been taken within the time so specified, it may decide not to make
any order under this section in respect of that trade
practice.
(3) No order shall-be made under sub-section (1) in
respect of any trade practice which is expressly authorised by any
law for the time being in force.
Section
36E
POWER RELATING TO RESTRICTIVE
TRADE PRACTICES MAY BE EXERCISED OR PERFORMED IN RELATION TO UNFAIR
TRADE PRACTICES.
Without prejudice to the provisions of
section 12A, section 12B and section 36D, the Commission, Director
General or any other person authorised in this behalf by the
Commission or Director General, may exercise, or perform, in
relation to any unfair trade practice, the same power of duty which
it or he is empowered, or required, by or under this Act to
exercise, or perform, in relation to a restrictive trade
practice
Section
37
INVESTIGATION INTO RESTRICTIVE
TRADE PRACTICES BY COMMISSION.
(1) The Commission may inquire
into any restrictive trade practice, whether the agreement, if any,
relating thereto has been registered under section 35 or not, which
may come before it for inquiry and, if, after such inquiry it is of
opinion that the practice is prejudicial to the public interest, the
Commission may, by order, direct that-
(a) the practice shall
be discontinued or shall not be repeated;
(b) the agreement
relating thereto shall be void in respect of such restrictive trade
practice or shall stand modified in respect thereof in such manner
as may be specified in the order.
(2) The Commission may,
instead of making any order under this section, permit the party to
any restrictive trade practice, if he so applies, to take such steps
within the time specified in this behalf by the Commission as may be
necessary to ensure that the trade practice is no longer prejudicial
to the public interest, and, in any such case, if the Commission is
satisfied that the necessary steps have been taken within the time
specified, it may decide not to make any order under this section in
respect of that trade practice.
(3) No order shall be made
under sub-section (1) in respect of -
(a) any agreement
between buyers relating to goods which are bought by the buyers for
consumption and not for ultimate resale whether in the same or
different form, type or specie or as constituent of some other
goods;
(b) a trade practice which is expressly authorised by
any law for the time being in force.
(4) Notwithstanding
anything contained in this Act, if the Commission, during the course
of an inquiry under sub-section (1), finds that the owner of any
undertaking is indulging in monopolistic trade practices, it may,
after passing such orders under sub-section (1) or sub-section (2)
with respect to the restrictive trade practices as it may consider
necessary, submit the case along with its findings thereon to the
Central Government for such action as that Government may take under
section 31.
Section
38
PRESUMPTION AS TO THE PUBLIC
INTEREST.
(1) For the purposes of any proceedings before the
Commission under section 37, a restrictive trade practice shall be
deemed to be prejudicial to the public interest
unless the
Commission is satisfied of any one or more of the following
circumstances, that is to say -
(a) that the restriction is
reasonably necessary, having regard to the character of the goods to
which it applies, to protect the public against injury (whether to
persons or to premises) in connection with the consumption,
installation or use of those goods;
(b) that the removal of
the restriction would deny to the public as purchasers, consumers or
users of any goods, other specific and substantial benefits or
advantages enjoyed or likely to be enjoyed by them as such, whether
by virtue of the restriction itself or of any arrangements or
operations resulting therefrom;
(c) that the restriction is
reasonably necessary to counteract measures taken by any one person
not party to the agreement with a view to preventing or
restricting
competition in or in relation to the trade or
business in which the persons party thereto are engaged,
(d)
that the restriction is reasonably necessary to enable the persons
party to the agreement to negotiate fair terms for the supply of
goods to, or the acquisition of goods from, any one person party
thereto who controls a preponderant part of the trade or business of
acquiring or supplying such goods, or for the supply of goods to any
person not party to the agreement and not carrying on such a trade
or business who, either alone or in combination with any other such
persons, controls a preponderant part of the market for such
goods;
(e) that, having regard to the conditions actually
obtaining or reasonably foreseen at the time of the application, the
removal of the restriction would be likely to have a serious and
persistent adverse effect on the general level of unemployment in an
area, or in areas taken together, in which a substantial proportion
of the trade, or industry to which the agreement relates is
situated;
(f) that, having regard to the conditions actually
obtaining or reasonably foreseen at the time of the application, the
removal of the restriction would be likely to cause a reduction in
the volume or earnings of the export business which is substantial
either in relation to the whole export business of India or in
relation to the whole business (including export business) of the
said trade or industry;
(g) that the restriction is
reasonably required for purposes in connection with the maintenance
of any other restriction accepted by the parties, whether under the
same agreement or under any other agreement between them, being a
restriction which is found by the Commission not to be contrary to
the public interest upon grounds other than those specified in this
paragraph, or has been so found in previous proceedings before the
Commission;
(h) that the restriction does not directly or
indirectly restrict or discourage competition to any material degree
in any relevant trade or industry and is not likely to do
so;
(i) that such restriction has been expressly authorised
and approved by the Central Government;
(j) that such
restriction is necessary to meet the requirements of the defence of
India or any part thereof, or for the security of the State;
or
(k) that the restriction in necessary to ensure the
maintenance of supply of goods and services essential to the
community.
and is further satisfied (in any such case) that
the restriction is not unreasonable having regard to the balance
between those circumstances and any detriment to the public or to
persons not parties to the agreement (being purchasers, consumers or
users of goods produced or sold by such parties, or persons engaged
or seeking to become engaged in the trade or business of selling
such goods or of producing or selling similar goods) resulting or
likely to result from the operation of the restriction.
(2)
In this section, "purchasers", "consumers" and "users" include
person purchasing, consuming or using for the purpose or in the
course of trade or business or for public purposes; and references
in this section to any one person include references to any two or
more persons being inter-connected undertakings or individuals
carrying on business in partnership with each other.
Section
39
SPECIAL CONDITIONS FOR AVOIDANCE
OF CONDITIONS FOR MAINTAINING RESALE PRICES.
(1) Without
prejudice to the provisions of this Act with respect to registration
and to any of the powers of the Commission or of the Central
Government under this Act, any term or condition of a contract for
the sale of goods by a person to a wholesaler or retailer or any
agreement between a person and a wholesaler or retailer relating to
such sale shall be void insofar as it purports to establish or
provide for the establishment of minimum prices to be charged on the
resale of goods in India.
(2) After the commencement of this
Act, no supplier of goods whether directly or through any person or
association of persons acting on his behalf shall notify to dealers
or otherwise publish on or in relation to any goods, a price stated
or calculated to be understood as the minimum price which may be
charged on the resale of the goods in India.
(3) This section
shall apply to patented articles (including articles made by a
patented process and articles made under any trade mark) as it
applies to other goods and notice of any term or condition which is
void by virtue of this section or which would be so void if included
in a contract of sale or agreement relating to the sale of such
article shall be of no effect for the purpose of limiting the right
of a dealer to dispose of that article without infringement of the
patent or trade mark, as the case may be :
Provided that
nothing in this section shall affect the validity as between the
parties and their successors, of any term or condition of a licence
granted by the proprietor of a patent or trade mark or by a licensee
of patent or trade mark or of any assignment of a patent or trade
mark, so far as it regulates the prices at which articles produced
or processed by the licensee or the assignee may be sold by
him.
Explanation : In this section and in section 40, the
term "supplier", in relation to supply of any goods, means a person
who supplies goods to any person for the ultimate purpose of resale
and includes a wholesaler, and the term "dealer" includes a supplier
and a retailer.
Section
40
PROHIBITION OF OTHER MEASURES FOR
MAINTAINING RESALE PRICES.
(1) Without prejudice to the
provisions of this Act with respect to registration and to any of
the powers of the Commission or of the Central Government under this
Act, no supplier shall withhold supplies of any goods from any
wholesaler or retailer seeking to obtain them for resale in India on
the ground that the wholesaler or retailer -
(a) has sold in
India at a price below resale price, goods obtained either directly
or indirectly, from that supplier, or has supplied such goods,
either directly or indirectly, to a third party who had done so;
or
(b) is likely if the goods are supplied to him to sell
them in India at a price below that price or supply them, either
directly or indirectly, to a third party who would be likely to do
so.
(2) Nothing contained in sub-section (1) shall render it
unlawful for a supplier to withhold supplies of goods from any
wholesaler or retailer or to cause or procure another supplier to do
so if he has reasonable cause to believe that the wholesaler or the
retailer, as the case may be, has been using as loss leaders any
goods of the same or a similar description whether obtained from
that supplier or not.
(3) A supplier of goods shall be deemed
to be withholding supplies of goods from a dealer if he -
(a)
refuses or fails to suply those goods to the order of the
dealer;
(b) refuses of supply those goods to the dealer
except at prices, or on terms or conditions as to credit, discount
or other matters which are less favourable than those at or on which
he normally supplies those goods to other dealers carrying on
business in similar circumstances; or
(c) treats a dealer, in
spite of a contract with such dealer for the supply of goods, in a
manner less favourable than that in which he normally treats other
dealers in respect of time or methods of delivery or other matters
arising in the performance of the contract.
(4) A supplier
shall not be deemed to be withholding supplies of goods on any of
the ground mentioned in sub-section (1), if, in addition to that
ground, he has any
other ground which alone would entitle him to
withhold such supplies.
Explanation I : "Resale price", in
relation to sale of goods of any description, means any price
notified to the dealer or otherwise published by or on behalf of
the
supplier of the goods in question (whether lawfully or not)
as the price or minimum price which is to be charged on, or is
recommended as appropriate for, a sale of that description or any
price prescribed or purporting to be prescribed for that purpose by
any contract or agreement between the wholesaler or retailer and
such supplier.
Explanation II : A wholesaler or retailer is
said to use goods as loss leaders when he re-sells them otherwise
than in a genuine seasonal or clearance sale not for the purpose of
making a profit on the resale but for the purpose of attracting to
the establishment at which the goods are sold, customers likely to
purchase other goods or otherwise for the purpose of advertising his
business.
Section
41
POWER OF COMMISSION TO EXEMPT
PARTICULAR CLASSES OF GOODS FROM SECTIONS 39 AND 40.
(1) The
Commission may, on a reference made to it by the Director General or
any other person interested, by order, direct that goods of any
class specified in the order shall be exempt from the operation of
sections 39 and 40 if the Commission is satisfied that in default of
a system of maintained minimum resale prices applicable to those
goods -
(a) the quality of goods available for sale or the
varieties of goods so available would be substantially reduced to
the detriment of the public as consumers or users of those goods,
or
(b) the prices at which the goods are sold by retail
would, in general and in the long run, be increased to the detriment
of the public as such consumers or users, or
(c) any
necessary services actually provided in connection with or after the
sale of the goods by retail would cease to be so provided or would
be substantially reduced to the detriment of the public as such
consumers or users.
(2) On a reference under this section in
respect of goods of any class which have been the subject of
proceedings before the Commission under section 31, the Commission
may treat as conclusive any evidence of fact made in those
proceedings.
Section
42
POWER OF DIRECTOR GENERAL TO
OBTAIN INFORMATION.
(1) If the Director General has
reasonable cause to believe that any person is a party to an
agreement subject to registration under section 35, he may give
notice to that person requiring him within such time, not less than
thirty days, as may be specified in the notice, to notify to the
Director General whether he is a party to any such agreement and, if
so, to furnish to the Director General such particulars of the
agreement as may be specified in the requisition.
(2) The
Director General may give notice to any person by whom particulars
are furnished under section 35 in respect of an agreement or to any
other person being a party to the agreement requiring him to furnish
to the Director General such further documents or information in his
possession or control as the Director Genral may consider expedient
for the purpose of, or in connection with, the registration of the
agreement.
(3) Where a notice under this section is given to
a trade association, the notice may be given to the secretary,
manager or other similar officer of the association and for the
purposes of this section any such association shall be treated as a
party to an agreement to which members of the association, or
persons represented on the association by those members, are parties
as such.
(4) If the particulars called for under sub-section
(1), or sub-section (2) are not furnished, the Commission may, on
the application of the Director General-
(a) order the person
or, as the case may be, the association to furnish those particulars
to the Director General within such time as may be specified in the
order, or
(b) authorise the Director General to treat the
particulars contained in any document or information in his
possession as the particulars relating to the agreement,
or
(c) in case the Commission is satisfied that the failure
to furnish the particulars is wilful, make an order restraining
wholly or partly the parties to the agreement from acting on such
agreement and from making any other agreement to the like effect.
Section
43
POWER TO CALL FOR
INFORMATION.
Notwithstanding anything contained in any other
law for the time being in force, the Central Government may, by a
general or special order, call upon the owner of any undertaking to
furnish to that Government periodically or as and when required any
information concerning the activities carried on by the undertaking,
the connection between it and any other undertaking, including such
other information relating to its organisation, business, cost of
production, conduct, trade practice or management, as may be
prescribed to enable that Government to carry out the purposes of
this Act.
Section
44
POWER TO APPOINT
INSPECTORS.
(1) The Central Government may, if it is of
opinion that there are circumstances suggesting that an undertaking
is indulging in any monopolistic or restrictive, or
unfair, trade
practice or is, in any way, trying to acquire any control over any
dominant or inter-connected undertaking, appoint one or more
Inspectors for making an investigation into the affairs of the
undertaking.
(2) The provisions of section 240 and section
240A of the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956), so far as may be, shall
apply to an investigation made by an Inspector appointed under this
section as they apply to an investigation made by the Inspector
appointed under that Act.
Section
45
PENALTY FOR CONTRAVENTION OF
SECTION 21. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F.
27-9-1991.
Section
46
PENALTY FOR CONTRAVENTION OF
SECTION 27.
If any person contravenes the provisions of
section 27, he shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term
which may extend to five years, or with fine which may extend to Rs.
one lakh, or with both and where the offence is a continuing one,
with a further fine which may extend to one thousand rupees for
every day, after the first, during which such contravention
continues.
Section
47
PENALTY FOR CONTRAVENTION OF
SECTION 25. - OMITTED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F.
27-9-1991.
Section
48
PENALTY FOR FAILURE TO REGISTER
AGREEMENTS.
(1) If any person fails, without any reasonable
excuse, to register an agreement which is subject to registration
under this Act, he shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term
which may extend to three years, or with fine which may extend to
five thousand rupees or with both, and where the offence is a
continuing one, with a further fine which may extend to five hundred
rupees for every day, after the first, during which such failure
continues.
(2) Omitted by the MRTP (Amendment) Act, 1991,
section 20, w.e.f. 27-9-1991.
Section
48A
PENALTY FOR CONTRAVENTION OF
ORDER MADE UNDER SECTION 27B OR FOR POSSESSION OF PROPERTY SOLD TO
ANY PERSON
UNDER SECTION 27B.
Any person or body corporate
who or which, -
(a) being required by any order of the
Central Government referred to in sub-section (1) of section 27B to
effect disinvestment of any shares or sale of the whole or any part
of any undertaking or undertakings by any method referred to in that
sub-section, omits or fails to do so; or
(b) having in his
possession, custody or control any property or assets or any part
thereof which have been sold to any person in pursuance of an order
of the Central
Government referred to in sub-section (1) of
section 27B (hereinafter in this section referred to as the
"purchaser"), wrongfully withholds such property, assets or part
thereof from the purchaser; or
(c) wrongfully obtains
possession of any property, assets or any part thereof or retains
any property, assets or any part thereof, which have been sole in
pursuance of an order of the Central Government referred to in
sub-section (1) of section 27B; or
(d) withholds or fails to
furnish to the purchaser, any document in his possession, custody or
control relating to the property, or any part or assets thereof,
which have been sold in pursuance of an order of the Central
Government referred to in sub-section (1) of section 27B;
or
(e) fails to deliver to the purchaser the property, or any
part or assets thereof which have been sold in pursuance of an order
of the Central Government referred to in
sub-section (1) of
section 27B, or any books or account, registers and other documents
in his possession, custody or control relating to such property, or
nay part or assets thereof; or
(f) wrongfully removes or
destroys any property or assets which have been sold in pursuance of
an order of the Central Government referred to in sub-section (1) of
section 27B; or
(g) prefers any claim, in relation to the
property, or any part or assets thereof which have been sold in
pursuance of an order of the Central Government referred to
in
sub-section (1) of section 27B, which he knows, or has reason
to believe, to be false or grossly inaccurate,
shall be
punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to two
years and also with fine which may extend to ten thousand rupees.
127.
Section
48B
PENALTY FOR CONTRAVENTION OF
SECTION 27B.
(1) Every person who exercises any voting right,
in respect of any share in contravention of any order of the Central
Government referred to in sub-section (1) of section 27B shall be
punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to five
years, and shall also be liable to fine.
(2) If any company
gives effect to any voting or other right exercised in relation to
any share held in contravention of an order or the Central
Government referred to in sub-section (1) of section 27B, the
company shall be Punishable with fine which may extend to five
thousand rupees and every officer of the company who is in default
shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to
three years, or with fine which may extend to five thousand rupees,
or with both. 130.
Section
48C
PENALTY FOR CONTRAVENTION OF
ORDER MADE BY COMMISSION RELATING TO UNFAIR TRADE
PRACTICES.
If any person contravenes any order made by the
Commission under section 36D, he shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which shall not be less than six months but
which may extend to three years and with fine which may extend to
ten lakh rupees:
Provided that the Court may, for reasons to
be recorded in writing, impose a sentence of imprisonment for a term
lesser than the minimum term specified in this section. 131.
Section
49
PENALTY FOR OFFENCES IN RELATION
TO FURNISHING OF INFORMATION.
(1) If any person fails,
without any reasonable excuse, to produce any books or papers, or to
furnish any information, required by the Director General under
section 11, or to furnish any information required under section 43
or to comply with any notice duly given to him under section 42, he
shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to
three months, or with fine which may extend to two thousand rupees,
or with both, and where the offence is a continuing one, with a
further fine which may extend to one hundred rupees for every day,
after the first, during which such failure continues.
(2) If
any person, who furnishes or is required to furnish any particulars,
documents or any information -
(a) makes any statement or
furnishes any document which he knows or has reason to believe to be
false in any material particular; or
(b) omits to state any
material fact knowing it to be material; or
(c) wilfully
alters, suppresses or destroys any document which is required to be
furnished as aforesaid,
He shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to six months, or with fine
which may extend to five thousand rupees, or with both.
Section
50
PENALTY FOR OFFENCES IN RELATION
TO ORDERS UNDER THE ACT.
(1) A person, who is deemed under
section 13 to be guilty of an offence under this Act, shall be
punishable with imprisonment for term which may extend to three
years, or with fine which may extend to fifty thousand rupees, or
with both, and where the offence is a continuing one, with a further
fine which may extend to five thousand rupees for every day, after
the first, during which such contravention continues.
(2) If
any person contravenes, without any reasonable excuse, any order
made by the Central Government under section 31 or any order made by
the Commission under section 37, he shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which shall not be less than, -
(a)
in the case of the first offence, six months but not more than three
years, and
(b) in the case of any second or subsequent
offence in relation to the goods or services in respect of which the
first offence was committed, two years but not more than seven
years,
and, in either case, where the contravention is a
continuing one, also with fine which may extend to five thousand
rupees for every day, after the first, during which such
contravention continues :
Provided that the Court may, for
reasons to be recorded in writing, impose a sentence of imprisonment
for a term lesser than the minimum term specified in this
sub-section.
(3) If any person carries on any trade practice
which is prohibited by this Act, he shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to six months, or with fine
which may extend to five thousand rupees, or with both, and where
the offence is a continuing one, with a further fine which may
extend to five hundred rupees for every day, after the first, during
which such contravention continues.
Section
51
PENALTY FOR OFFENCES IN RELATION
TO RESALE PRICE MAINTENANCE.
If any person contravenes the
provisions of section 39 or section 40, he shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to three months, or with
fine which may extend to five thousand rupees, or with both.
Section
52
PENALTY FOR WRONGFUL DISCLOSURE OF
INFORMATION.
If any person discloses an information in
contravention of section 60, he shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to six months, or with fine
which may extend to five hundred rupees, or with both.
Section
52A
PENALTY FOR CONTRAVENTION OF ANY
CONDITION OR RESTRICTION, ETC.
If any person contravenes,
without any reasonable excuse, any condition or restriction subject
to which any approval, sanction, direction or exemption in relation
to any matter has been accorded, given, made or granted under this
Act, he shall be punishable with fine which may extend to one
thousand rupees and where the contravention is a continuing one,
with a further fine which may extend to one hundred rupees for every
day, after the first, during which such contravention continues.
Section
52B
PENALTY FOR MAKING FALSE
STATEMENT IN APPLICATION, RETURN, ETC.
If in any application,
return, report, certificate, balance sheet, prospectus, statement or
other document made, submitted, furnished or produced for the
purpose of any provision of this Act, any person makes a statement,
-
(a) which is false in any material particular, knowing it
to be false, or
(b) which omits to state any material fact,
knowing it to be material,
He shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to two years and shall also
be liable to fine.
Section
53
OFFENCES BY COMPANIES.
(1)
Where an offence under this Act has been committed by a company,
every person who, at the time the offence was committed, was in
charge of, and was responsible to, the company for the conduct of
the business of the company, as well as the company, shall be deemed
to be guilty of the offence and shall be liable to be proceeded
against and punished accordingly :
Provided that nothing
contained in this sub-section shall render any such person liable to
any punishment if he proves that the offence was committed without
his knowledge or that he had exercised all due diligence to prevent
the commission of such offence.
(2) Notwithstanding anything
contained in sub-section (1), where an offence under this Act has
been committed by a company and it is proved that the offence has
been committed with the consent or connivance of, or is attributable
to any neglect on the part of, any director, manager, secretary or
other officer of the company, such director, manager, secretary or
other officer shall also be deemed to be guilty of that offence and
shall be liable to be proceeded against and punished
accordingly.
Explanation : For the purposes of this section
-
(a) "company" means a body corporate and includes a firm or
other association of individuals; and
(b) "director", in
relation to a firm, means a partner in the firm.
Section
54
POWER OF CENTRAL GOVERNMENT TO
IMPOSE CONDITIONS, LIMITATIONS AND RESTRICTIONS ON APPROVALS, ETC.,
GIVEN UNDER THE ACT.
(1) The Central Government may, while
-
(a) according any approval, sanction, permission,
confirmation or recognition, or
(b) giving any direction or
issuing any order, or
(c) granting any
exemption.
Under this Act in relation to any matter, impose
such conditions, limitations or restrictions as it may think
fit.
(2) Omitted by the MRTP (Amendment) Act, 1991, section
24, w.e.f. 27-9-1991.
(3) If any condition, limitation or
restriction imposed by the Central Government under sub-section (1)
is contravened, the Central Government may rescind or withdraw the
approval, sanction, permission, confirmation, recognition,
direction, order or exemption made or granted by it.
Section
55
APPEALS.
Any person
aggrieved by any decision on any question referred to in clause (a),
clause (b) or clause (c) of section 2A, or any order made by the
Central Government under Chapter III or Chapter IV, or, as the case
may be, or the Commission under section 12A or section 13 or section
36D or section 37, may, within sixty days from the date of the
order, prefer an appeal to the Supreme Court on one or more of the
grounds specified in section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908 (5 of 1908
Section
56
JURISDICTION OF COURTS TO TRY
OFFENCES.
No Court inferior to that of a Court of Session
shall try any offence under this Act.
Section
57
COGNIZANCE OF OFFENCES.
No
Court shall take cognizance of any offence punishable under this Act
except on a report in writing of the facts constituting such offence
made by a person who is a public servant as defined in section 21 of
the Indian Penal Code 1860 (45 of 1860).
Section
58
MAGISTRATES' POWER TO IMPOSE
ENHANCED PENALTIES. - REPEALED BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1984,
section 46 W.E.F. 1-8-1984.
Section
59
PROTECTION REGARDING STATEMENTS
MADE TO THE COMMISSION.
No statement made by a person in the
course of giving evidence before the Commission shall subject him
to, or be used against him in, any civil or criminal proceeding
except a prosecution for giving false evidence by such statements
:
Provided that the Statement -
(a) is made in respect
to a question which he is required by the Commission to answer;
and
(b) is relevant to the subject-matter of the inquiry.
Section
60
RESTRICTION ON DISCLOSURE OF
INFORMATION.
(1) No information relating to any undertaking
being an information which has been obtained by or on behalf of the
Commission for the purposes of this Act, shall, without the previous
permission in writing of the owner for the time being of the
undertaking, be disclosed otherwise than in compliance with or for
the purposes of this Act.
(2) Nothing contained in
sub-section (1) shall apply to a disclosure of an information made
for the purpose of any legal proceeding pursuant to this Act or of
any criminal proceeding which may be taken, whether pursuant to this
Act or otherwise, or for the purposes of any report relating to any
such proceeding.
(3) The provisions of sub-section (2)
relating to the disclosure of information shall not extend to the
disclosure of the source of such information, except where the
disclosure of such source is required by any Court, Tribunal or
other authority.
Section
61
POWER OF THE CENTRAL GOVERNMENT TO
REQUIRE THE COMMISSION TO SUBMIT A REPORT.
The Central
Government may at any time require the Commission to submit to it a
report on the general effect on the public interest of such trade
practices as, in the
opinion of that Government, either
constitute or contribute to monopolistic or restrictive or unfair
trade practices or concentration of economic power to the common
detriment.
Section
62
REPORTS OF THE COMMISSION TO BE
PLACED BEFORE PARLIAMENT.
The Central Government shall cause
to be laid before both Houses of Parliament an annual report, and
every report which may be submitted to it by the Commission from
time to time, pertaining to the execution of the provisions of this
Act.
Section
63
MEMBERS, ETC., TO BE PUBLIC
SERVANTS.
Every member of the Commission, Director General,
and every member of the staff of the Commission, and of the Director
General, shall be deemed, while acting or purporting to act in
pursuance of any of the provisions of this Act, to be public
servants within the meaning of section 21 of the India Penal Code
1860 (45 of 1860).
Section
64
PROTECTION OF ACTION TAKEN IN GOOD
FAITH.
(1) No suit, prosecution or other legal proceedings
shall lie against the Commission or any member, officer or servants
of the Commission, the Director General or any member of the staff
of the Director General in respect of anything which is in good
faith done or intended to be done under this Act.
(2) No suit
shall be maintainable in any civil court against the Central
Government or any officer or employee of that Government for any
damage caused by anything done under, or in pursuance of any
provisions of this Act.
Section
65
INSPECTION OF AND EXTRACTS FROM,
THE REGISTER.
(1) The register, other than the special
section, shall be open to public inspection during such hours and
subject to the payment of such fees, not exceeding rupees
twenty-five, as may be prescribed.
(2) Any person may upon
the payment of such fee, not exceeding rupee one, for every one
hundred words, as may be prescribed, require the Director General to
supply to him a copy of, or extract from, any particulars entered or
filed in the register, other than the special section, certified by
the Director General to be a true copy or extract.
(3) A copy
of, or extract from, any document entered or filed in the register
certified under the hand of the Director General or any officer
authorised to act in this behalf shall, in all legal proceedings. be
admissible in evidence as of equal validity with the original.
Section
66
POWER TO MAKE
REGULATIONS.
(1) The Commission may by notification make
regulations for the efficient performance of its functions under
this Act.
(2) In particular, and without prejudice to the
generality of the foregoing provisions, such regulations may provide
for all or any of the following matters, namely :-
(a) the
conditions of service, as approved by the Central Government, of
persons appointed by the Commission;
(b) the issue of the
processes to Government and to other persons and the manner in which
they may be served;
(c) the manner in which the special
section of the registered shall be maintained and the particulars to
be entered or filed therein;
(d) Omitted by the MRTP
(Amendment) Act, 1984, w.e.f. 1-8-1984;
(e) the payment of
costs of any proceedings before the Commission by the parties
concerned and the general procedure and conduct of the business of
the Commission;
(f) any other matter for which regulations
are required to be, or may be, made under this Act.
(3) The
Central Government shall cause every regulation made under this
section to be laid, as soon as may be after it is made, before each
House of Parliament, while it is in session, for a total period of
thirty days which may be comprised in one session or in two or more
successive sessions, and if, before the expiry of the session
immediately following the session or the successive sessions
aforesaid, both Houses agree in making any modification in the
regulation, or both Houses agree that the regulation should not be
made, the regulations shall thereafter have effect only in such
modified form or be of no effect, as the case may be; so, however,
that any such modification or annulment shall be without prejudice
to the validity of anything previously done under that
regulation.
Section
67
POWER TO MAKE RULES.
(1)
The Central Government may, by notification, make rules to carry out
the purposes of this Act.
(2) In particular, and without
prejudice to the generality of the foregoing power, such rules may
provide for all or any of the following matters, namely
:-
(a) the form and manner in which notices may be given or
applications may be made to it under this Act and the fees payable
therefor;
(ab) the form and the manner in which an
application for recognition shall be made under clause (n) of
section 2;
(ac) Omitted by the MRTP (Amendment) Act 1991,
w.e.f. 27-9-1991.
(b) the particulars to be furnished under
this Act and the form and manner in which and the intervals within
which they may be furnished;
(ba) Omitted by the MRTP
(Amendment) Act, 1991, w.e.f. 27-9-1991.
(c) the conditions
of service of members of the Commission and the Director
General;
(ca) the duties and functions of the Director
General;
(d) the places and the manner in which the register
shall be maintained and the particulars to be entered
therein;
(da) the manner in which every authenticated copy of
any order made by the Commission in respect of any restrictive, or
unfair, trade practice shall be recorded;
(e) the fees
payable for inspection of the register and for obtaining certified
copies of particulars from the register;
(f) the travelling
and other expenses payable to persons summoned by the Commission to
appear before it;
(g) Omitted by the MRTP (Amendment) Act,
1991, w.e.f. 27-9-1991.
(h) any other matter which is
required to be, or may be, prescribed.
(2A) Any rule made
under clause (c) of sub-section (2) in relation to the conditions of
service of the members of the Commission may be made retrospectively
from a date not earlier than the 1st day of January, 1986, so,
however, that such rule shall not prejudicially affect the interests
of any such member.
(3) Every rule made by the Central
Government under this Act shall be laid, as soon as may be after it
is made, before each House of Parliament while it is in session for
a total period of thirty days which may be comprised in one session
or in two or more successive sessions, and if, before the expiry of
the session immediately following the session or the successive
sessions aforesaid, both Houses agree in making any modification in
the rule or both Houses agree that the rule should not be made, the
rule shall thereafter have effect only in such modified form or be
of no effect, as the case may be; so, however, that any such
modification or annulment shall be without prejudice to the validity
of anything previously done under that rule.
Schedules
Sch. Part
I
#
162 THE
SCHEDULE
[See section 30C]
#
[ 162 I OMITTED BY
THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F.
27-9-1991. 162 ]
Sch. Part
II
#
162 THE
SCHEDULE
[See section 30C]
#
[ 162 II OMITTED
BY THE MRTP (AMENDMENT) ACT, 1991, W.E.F.
27-9-1991. 162 ]