Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 33
PETITIONER:
BHARAT KALA BHANDAR LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MUNICIPAL COMMITTEE, DHAMANGAON
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/03/1965
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
SUBBARAO, K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
BACHAWAT, R.S.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 249 1965 SCR (3) 499
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1966 SC1089 (17,18,37)
RF 1967 SC 887 (22)
RF 1968 SC 271 (11)
RF 1969 SC 78 (19,20)
F 1970 SC1002 (2)
R 1971 SC 97 (12)
RF 1975 SC2238 (21)
RF 1976 SC1207 (102)
E 1977 SC 955 (12,13,14,15,20)
RF 1986 SC1556 (27)
ACT:
Central Provinces and Berar Municipalities Act (2 of 1922),
ss. 48 and 84(3)-Scope of-Suit for refund of excess tax
paid-If barred.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was paying a tax at the rate of one anna
per--unit weight of cotton, under s. 66(1)(b) of the Central
Provinces Municipalities Act. 1922, from 1936. In all 1941
the rate of tax was increased to 4 as. In 1952, the
appellant filed a suit for recovery of the excess,tax paid
within 3 years of the date of suit. It was contended that
after the coming into force of s. 142A of the Government of
India Act, 1935, on 1st April 1939, till 25th January 1950,
a tax in excess of Rs. 50 per annum could not be imposed by
the respondent, and, after the coming into force of the
Constitution the upper limit of the tax was raised to Rs.
250 per annum under Art. 276 of the Constitution; and that
as the appellant was already paying more than this amount
per year even at the rate of one anna, the enhanced rate of
4 annas was illegal. The trial court decreed the suit for
recovery from the Municipal Committee of excess tax paid by
the appellant within 3 years of the date of suit but on
appeal, the High Court held that the suit was bad for non-
compliance with the requirements of s. 48 of the Act,
according to which a suit for anything done or purported to
be done under the Act shill be instituted only after the
expiration of 2 months after serving a written notice and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 33
within six months from the date of the accrual of the
alleged cause of action.
In its appeal to this Court, the appellant contended that it
was a case of recovery of an illegal tax and therefore, a,
claim for its refund fell outside the provisions of s. 48.
The respondent contended that (i) since the ban was not upon
the rate of tax but upon the excess collection thereof, the
collection of a tax above the constitutional limit was not
without jurisdiction but only illegal or irregular and
therefore, the suit would be in respect of a matter
"Purported to be done under the Act" and the provision of s.
48 would apply, and (ii) on the basis of Raleigh Investment
Company Ltd. v. Governor. General in Council, (74 I.A. 50)
the suit was barred by s. 84(3) of the Act, which enacts
that no objection shall be taken to any assessment in any
other manner than is provided in the Act.
HELD (Per K. Subba Rao, J. R. Mudholkar and V. Ramaswami
JJ.): (i) Since the respondent had no authority to levy a
tax beyond what s. 142A of the Government of India Act,
1935, or what Art. 276 permitted, the assessment proceedings
were void in so far as they purported to levy a tax in
excess of the permissible limit and authorise. Its
collection, and the assessment order would be no answer to
the suit for the recovery of the excess amount, and
therefore, the suit was maintainable. [522G-H]
The Constitution is the fundamental law of the land and it
is unnecessary to provide in any law that anything done in
disregard of the Constitution is prohibited, Such a
prohibition has to be read into
500
every enactment, and where such prohibition exists or can be
implied, anything done or purported to be done by an
authority must be regarded as wholly without jurisdiction,
and is not entitled to a protection of the law under colour
of which that act was done. [512A-B; 516B-C]
Poona City Municipal Corporation v. Dattatraya Nagesh
Deodhar.[1964] 8 S.C.R. 178, followed.
(ii)A tax can be recovered only if it is "payable" and it
would be payable only after it is assessed. It is therefore
futile to contend that the ban placed by s. 142A of the
Government of India Act and Art. 276 of the Constitution,
extends only to recoveries and not to an earlier stage.
[513G]
It is true that the respondent had jurisdiction to recover
an amount up to the constitutional limit. But it cannot be
contended that merely because of this, the recovery by the
respondent of an amount in excess of the constitutional
limit was only irregular or at the worst illegal. Where
power exists to assess and recover a tax up to a particular
limit and the assessment or recovery of anything above that
amount is prohibited, the assessment or recovery of an
amount in excess is wholly without jurisdiction. To such a
case, the statute under which action was purported to be
taken can afford no protection. Indeed, to the extent that
it affords protection it would be bad. But it is the duty
of the court to so construe it as to avoid rendering the
provision unconstitutional, that is, to construe s. 48 as
affording protection only if what was done was something
which could legally have been done by the respondent but was
wrongly done by it, and reject a construction which will
invalidate the provision. [515B; 516B-H]
(iii)The appellant’s suit could not be barred even if
s. 84(3) of the Act is interpreted in the same way as the
Privy Council interpreted s. 67 of the Income-tax Act, in
the Raleigh Investment Co.’s case. Unlike the Income-tax
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 33
Act the Act does not provide a machinery for making a claim
for refund or repayment on the ground of the un-
constitutionality of the levy, and the jurisdiction of the
civil court in cases of refund is not taken away. Even in
the class of cases to which the provisions of ss. 83 and 85
of the Act, which are the only provisions providing a
machinery under the Act for challenging an assessment,
apply, they cannot be said to provide a sufficiently
effective remedy to an assessee. A reference to the High
Court is only at the discretion of the appellate or
revisional authority and the person aggrieved has no right
to move the High Court. Besides, in the Raleigh Investment
Co.’s case, the expression "assessment made under this Act
was given too wide a construction, because, it is difficult
to appreciate how taking into account an ultra vires provi-
sion, which in law must be regarded as not being a part of
the Act at all, will make the assessment as one under the
Act. [517G; 518B, F, H; 519A-B; 520D-F; 521H]
The exclusion of the jurisdiction of the civil court is not
to be readily inferred but such exclusion must either be
-explicitly expressed or clearly implied. One of the
corollaries flowing from the principle that the Constitution
is the fundamental law is that the normal remedy of a suit
will be available for obtaining redress against the
violation of a constitutional provision. Moreover the
provisions of Art. 265 of the Constitution preclude the levy
or collection of a tax except by authority of law, which
means only a valid law. There was no corresponding
provision in the various Acts for the governance of India
which preceded the Constitution and the decision in the
Raleigh Investment Co.’s case was given in that context.
Further under Art.
501
226, the Constitution has provided a remedy to a citizen to
obtain redress in respect of a tax levied or collected under
an invalid law, and this remedy will not be affected by any
provision like s. 67 of the Income-tax Act, or s. 84(3) of
the Act. [520G-H; 521C-E]
Thus, when the question merely is whether the assessment had
been made according to law, the respondent having
jurisdiction over the subject matter and the assessee, the
provisions of s. 84(3) may be a bar to a suit. But, where
the question raised is as to the jurisdiction of the
respondent to proceed against the assessee, and levy on or
collect from him an amount in excess of that permitted by
the Constitution, the matter would be entirely out of the
bar of that provision. [522E-G]
Per Raghubar Dayal and Bachawat, JJ. (dissenting): The
appellant’s suit for the recovery of the tax realized in
excess of Rs. 250 a year was rightly dismissed, as the
correctness of the assessment of the tax could not be
challenged by a suit in a civil court in view of s. 84(3)
and as the provisions of s. 48, requiring the giving of
notice to the respondent and the institution of the suit
within a certain period, had not been complied with. [534H;
535A-B]
The suit was in essence a suit for, first, modifying the
amount assessed and then to decree the payment of the amount
held to have been paid in excess of the tax as modified by
the court. But the act of assessing the tax or the
consequential act of collecting the amount cannot be broken
up into two acts, one, upto the legal limit and the other in
excess of it. The act of assessment or of collection
therefore was an act done by the respondent under the
provisions of the Act, though it acted wrongly in assessing
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 33
the tax at an excessive figure, and consequently in
collecting an amount in excess of that which could have been
legally collected. The suit was therefore fully covered by
s. 48 and had to be dismissed. [526E-H]
In view of s. 84(3), exclusive jurisdiction to determine the
correctness of the amount assessed is given to the
authorities mentioned in s. 83. The result is that no other
authority can enter into the question of the correctness of
the assessment on grounds of law or fact, and therefore the
appellant’s suit was barred from the cognizance of the civil
court. [527G]
Raleigh Investment Co. Ltd. v. Governor-General in Council,
L.R. 74 I.A. 50 and Firm of Illuri Subbayya Chetty & Sons v.
State of Andhra Pradesh, [1964] 1 S.C.R. 752, followed.
Poona City MuniciPal Corporation v. Dattatraya Nagesh
Deodhar, [1964] 8 S.C.R. 178, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 600 and 679
of 1964.
Appeals from the judgment and decree dated February 20, 1962
of the Bombay High Court (Nagpur Bench) at Nagpur in Appeals
Nos. 196 and 195 of 1956 from original decree.
S.G. Patwardhan, S. Murthy and B. P. Maheshwari, for the
appellant (in C.A. No. 600/64).
S.N. Kherdekar and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for the appellant (in,
C.A. No. 679/64).
A.V. Viswanatha Sastri and M. S. Gupta, for the
respondent (in C.A. No. 600/64).
A.V. Viswanatha Sastri and M. S. Gupta for U. P. Singh, for
the respondent (in C.A. No. 679/64).
502
The Judgment of Subba Rao, Mudholkar and Ramaswami, JJ. was
delivered by Mudholkar J. The dissenting Opinion of Raghubar
Dayal and Bachawat, JJ. was delivered by Dayal, J.
Mudholkar, J. This judgment will also govern Civil Appeal
No. 679 of 1964 since common questions of law arise in both
the ’appeals. For illustrating the points which arise for
consideration in ,these appeals we will set out briefly the
facts pertaining to C.A. 600 of 1964.
The appellant (hereinafter referred to as the Company) is a
private limited company having its registered office at
Calcutta and a branch office at Dhamangaon which was
formerly in the Province ,of Central Provinces & Berar but
is now in the State of Maharashtra. The company owns a
ginning factory at Dhamangaon. The Notified Area Committee
of that place imposed, under s. 66(1)(b) of the Central
Provinces Municipalities Act, 1922 (hereinafter referred to
as the Act) as applied to Berar, a tax at the rate of one
anna per bojha of ginned cotton and one anna per bale of
pressed cotton as from Dec. 22, 1936 on which date a
notification sanctioning the imposition under s. 241(1) of
the Act was published in the official Gazette by order of
the Government of the Province. The Notification in
question runs as follows: -
"No. 7911-3242-M-VII:-In exercise of the
powers conferred by clause (a) of sub-sec. (1)
of sec. 241 of the Central Provinces
Municipalities Act, 1922 (C.P. Act 11 of 1922)
as applied to Berar, the Local Government is
pleased to confirm the following rule made by
the Notified Area Committee, Dhamangaon, in
the Amravati district, under clause (b) of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 33
sub-s. (1) of sec. 6(1) of the said Act, for
imposing a tax on persons carrying on the
trade of ginning and pressing cotton by means
of steam or mechanical process within its
limits:-
Rule
The committee shall levy from all persons
carrying on within its limits the trade of
ginning or pressing cotton into bales by means
of steam or mechanical process a tax at the
following rates from the date of the
publication of this notifiCation in the
Central Provinces Gazette:-
(a) For each bojha of 392 lbs. ginned-1
anna.
(b) For each bale of 392 lbs. pressed-1
anna.
By order of the Government,
(Ministry of Local Self-Government),
Sd/- R. N. Bannerjee,
Secretary to Government,
Central Provinces.
503
The Notified Area Committee of Dhamangaon decided to raise
the rate from 1 anna per bojha and 1 anna per bale to four
annas per bojha and four annas per bale. Soon after this
decision it caused the following notification to be
published in the official Gazette on April 10, 1941. The
Notification runs thus:-
"The following amendment to the rule for
imposition of the tax’ by the o Municipal
Committee, Dhamangaon, in the Amraoti
district, under cl. (b) of sub-sec. (1) of
sec. 66 of the Central Provinces
Municipalities Act, 1922 (11 of 1922) as ap-
plied to Berar, on persons carrying on the
trade of ginning and pressing cotton by means
of steam or mechanical process within its
limits, published in the Central Provinces and
Berar Gazette Notification No. 7911-3242-
M/Vlll, dated the 22nd Dec. 1936, is published
for the information of the public, the same
having been previously published as required
by subsection (3) of sec. 68 of that Act, and
in exercise of the powers conferred by sub-
sec. (7) of sec. 68 of that Act, the municipal
committee directs that the said amendments
shall come into operation on the 1st August,
1941:
Amendment
For the figure and the word ’anna’ occurring
in clauses (a) and (b) of the rule, the figure
and word ’4 annas’ shall be substituted.
Sd/- B. S. Mundhada,
President, Municipal Committee
No. 2418-M-XIII"
Certain rules were framed by the Government for the assess-
ment and collection of tax which were also published on Dec.
22, 1936. These rules were, however, amended by the Local
Government and the amended rules were published in the
Gazette on July 30, 1941. It is these latter rules which
are now in force. Consequent upon the amendment of the
rules the appellants in the two appeals and the proprietors
of the ginning factory in Dhamangaon have been paying these
taxes at the new rate of 4 annas per bojha and 4 annas per
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 33
bale.
It may be mentioned that in Dec. 1951 the Municipal Com-
mittee. Dhamangaon, which by then had replaced the Notified
Area Committee proposed to raise the tax from four annas to
one rupee per bojha and per bale but eventually dropped the
proposal. Apparently being alarmed at the abortive attempt
of the Municipal committee to raise the tax further, the
appellant and other factory owners in Dhamangaon instituted
suits for recovery from the Municipal Committee of excess
tax paid by them within 3 years of the dates of the
respective suits. The Company claimed refund of Rs. 12,511-
6-6 on the ground that it was recovered from it illegally
504
by the Municipal Committee and paid by it under a mistake.
The amount has been computed by them thus: Rs. 6,905-14-6
recovered from them in respect of ginned cotton between
29-3-49 and some date in the year 1952 plus Rs. 8,048-8-0 in
respect of pressed cotton recovered from them during the
same period less Rs. 3,738-9-6 which was legally due from
them thus totaling to Rs. 11,215-13-0. To this they added
Rs. 1,295-9-6 as interest by way of damages on the aforesaid
said amount at the rate of 9 per cent. p.a. In the plaint it
was contended by the Company that after the coming into
force of s. 142A of the Government of India Act, 1935 (which
came into effect from 1-4-1939) till January 25, 1950 a tax
on trade, profession or calling in excess of Rs. 501- per
annum could not be imposed either by a Provincial Government
or by a Local Body. Nor again, could an existing tax on
trade, profession or calling be raised further so as to
exceed Rs. 501- per annum. The Company further pointed out
that after the coming into force of the Constitution the
upper limit of the tax was raised to Rs. 250/per annum and
that as the Company was already paying more than this amount
per year even at the rate of one anna per bojha and one anna
per bale recovery from them at the enhanced rate of 4 annas
was illegal with effect from April 1, 1939. The Municipal
Committee contended in its written statement that the provi-
sion of s. 142A of the Government of India Act and Art. 276
of the Constitution which limit the tax on professions,
trades or callings or employments to Rs. 50 and Rs. 250 per
annum respectively do not apply to a case such as the
present where there is no imposition of a new tax but only
an enhancement of the rate of an existing tax. It further
contended that the tax in question at the rate of 4 annas
per bojha and 4 annas per bale was in existence when Art.
276 came into force and is saved by that Article. According
to the Committee, the Company is not entitled to claim back
the amount paid by it under s. 72 of the Indian Contract Act
or the general law. This contention, however, was negatived
by the trial court and does not appear to have been
reiterated before the High Court. Nor again was it pressed
before us by Mr. Viswanatha Sastri who appears for the
Municipal Committee. The principal contention which was
pressed before the trial court and raised before the High
Court was that the Company’s suit was bad for non-compliance
with the requirements of s. 48 of the Act and that is the
point which we have to consider in this appeal.
Sec. 48 of the Act reads thus:
"(1) No suit shall be instituted against any Committee or
any member, officer or servant thereof or any person acting
under the direction of any such committee, member, officer
or servant for anything done or purporting to be done under
this Act, until the expiration of two months next after
notice in writing stating the cause of action, the name and
place of abode of the intending plaintiff and the relief
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 33
which he claims,
505
has been, in the case of a committee, delivered or left at
its office, and, in the case of any such member, officer or
servant or person as aforesaid, delivered to him or left at
his office or usual place of abode, and the plaint shall
contain a statement that such notice has been so delivered
or left.
(2)Every such suit shall be dismissed unless it is
instituted within six months from the date of the accrual of
the alleged cause of action."
Mr. Patwardhan for the appellant contends that this was a
case of recovery of an Illegal tax and, therefore a claim
for its refund fell outside the provisions of s. 48 of the
Act. In support of his contention he relied upon a number
of decisions and we will proceed to examine them.
The first of these cases is Municipal Committee, Karania v.
New, East India Press Co. Ltd., Bombay(1). That was also a
case where enhancement of a tax was made by the Municipal
Committee of Karanja after March 31, 1939 in excess of Rs.
50 per year payable by one person. There, a Division Bench
of the High Court held, that the enhancement was in
contravention of s. 142A of the Government of India Act,
1935 and was illegal, that a’ suit for refund of the tax is
maintainable by the person who has paid the tax and that
such a suit is not barred by the provisions of ss. 48, 83 or
84 of the Act. The relevant ’observations of Bose A.C.J.
(as he then was) who delivered the judgment are as follows:
"It was then argued that the Civil Courts have
no jurisdiction because of sections 83 and 84
of the Central Provinces Municipalities Act as
applied to Berar. It was said that Act
provides for remedies in cases of wrongful
recovery of taxes. Therefore, the
jurisdiction of the civil courts is barred.
A large number of cases have dealt with this
question but we need consider only two of the
latest decisions. In District Council,
Bhandara v. Kishorilal (Civil Revision No. 220
of 1946 decided on the 25th June, 1948) one of
us (Bose, J.) held that provisions
corresponding to sections 83 and 84 come into
play only when the Municipal Committee acts
within the scope of its authority, that is to
say, when it is acting or purporting to act
under the Municipalities Act. It is pointed
out there in respect of this very section of
the Government of India Act, sec. 142-A, that
when a Municipality is prohibited by law from
imposing a tax in excess of a certain amount
then it cannot be said to be acting either
under the Act or purporting to act under the
Act if it exceeds that amount, and in such a
case the jurisdiction of the Civil Courts is
not barred. Here again we may refer to the
fact that in the Privy Council case Radha
Kishan Jaikishan (Firm) v. Municipal
Committee, Khandwa(2), this objection does not
appear to have
(1) I.L.R. [1948] Nag. 971. (2) [1939] 30
Nag. T.R. 121 (P.C.)
506
been taken. It is hardly likely that it would
have-been omitted had there been any force in
the contention.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 33
In the present case, as in District Council,
Bhandara v. Kishorilal the Municipality is
seeking to recover sums which the:- law has
prohibited it from taking, in the shape of
taxes. Accordingly, as it is acting wholly
without jurisdiction, the claims lie and are
not barred by reason of sections 83 and 84.
Then it was stated that the claims are barred
by sec. 48 of the Municipalities Act. There
again the same considerations apply. Sec. 48
comes into play only when the act is done or
is purported to be done under the
Municipalities Act.
As we have said, that is not the case here
because its action is something which is
prohibited by law, and so wholly beyond
its jurisdiction, and therefore section 48
does not apply. The distinction between a
case where section 48 applies and a case where
it does not is clearly shown in The Amraoti
Town Municipal Committee v. Shaikh Bhikan(1)".
Kishorilal’s case to which reference is made in the above
quotation is a decision of a Division Bench upon a reference
made by Bose J. and which, though rendered earlier, has been
reported in I.L R. 1949 Nag. 87. In that case a tax imposed
by the District Council, Bhandara under a similar provision
of the Local Self Government Act, 1920 at the rate of three
pies per khandi on persons carrying on trade of husking,
milling or grinding of grains was raised by it to one anna
as from April 1, 1942 with the sanction of the Provincial
Government. It was contended on behalf of the respondent
that the recovery was illegal. Since the matter involved
the interpretation of s. 142A of the Government of India Act
1935 Bose J, acting under one of the rules of the High Court
referred it to a Division Bench. This is what the Division
Bench held:
" We are clear that the tax in question is a
tax which can be so termed. This was in fact
conceded in the Court below and the contention
raised before us that the persons who gave
grain to Kishorilal for grinding and not he
were the traders concerned was plainly devoid
of force. He had a mill and with it carried
on the trade of milling grain. The tax in
question was recovered from him because of
this and it was one of the taxes hit by
section 142-A of the Government of India Act,
1935, and the Professions Tax Limitation Act,
1941 (XX of 1941)."
When the matter went back before Bose J., it was contended
on behalf of the District Council that the suit was barred
altogether by the provisions of s. 71 and that the
provisions of s. 73 make the issue of a notice by the Distt.
Council a precondition for the institution of a suit of the
kind before him. Reliance was placed on a
(1)I.L.R. [1939] Nag. 216, 219, 220.
507
certain rule framed under s. 79(1) (xxix) of the Central
Provinces local Self-Government Act, 1920 After quoting s.
71 and the rule relied on the learned Judge observed:
"It will be observed that both section 79 and
the rule Fire confined to orders and decisions
given under the Act. It is impossible to say
that an order which contravenes the law or is
made in the face of an express statutory
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 33
prohibition can be said to be under the Act.
The words "purporting to be given" or "made
under the Act" are not present in this section
and so the difficulty which arises regarding
the other point is not present here. I hold
that the suit is not incompetent on this
score."
Pointing out that the other question urged
before him was more difficult the learned
Judge said that his conclusion was that what
was done in the case was not "under the Act"
and, therefore, what remained for
consideration was whether it was "purported to
be done" Under the Act. He came to the
conclusion that what was done was not
"purported to be done under the Act" and
expressed himself thus:
"Now this expression has recently been
interpreted by their Lordships of the Privy
Council in H.H.B. Gill v. The King(2) also in
Hori Ram Singh v. The Crown(2) of which their
Lordships approved. The question is a
difficult one and as Varadachariar J. observed
in the Federal Court decision at p. 187, it is
neither possible nor desirable to lay down any
hard and fast rule. The question is
substantially one of fact and "must be
determined with reference to the act
complained of and the attendant
circumstances." I think, however, that the
following test which their Lordships of the
Privy Council laid down concludes the matter
so far as this Act is concerned. Their Lord-
ships say: "A public servant can only be said
to act or to purport to act in the discharge
of his official duty, if his act is such as to
lie within the scope of his official duty."
Now I can understand it being said that an act
which is within the scope of an official duty
cannot be taken out of that category simply
because it is carelessly or negligently
performed, but I cannot see how an act which
is expressly prohibited by law can be said to
lie there. If a magistrate directed to
supervise a sentence of whipping duly imposed
by a competent Court has the wrong man whipped
by mistake or imposes more lashes than war-
ranted, I can understand him being protected.
He is there acting within the scope of his
duty. But if, instead of having the man
whipped. he has him branded with a hot iron he
would not, in my opinion, be able to claim the
protection. In the same way I cannot see bow
a Municipal Committee can
(1)A.I.R. [1948] P.C. 128.
(2)[1939] F.C.R. 159.
508
be said to be acting ’under the Act’ when it
does that which is expressly prohibited by the
Legislature. Say it purported to tax salt.
Its action would not be covered by sec. 73
because the Constitution Act makes that an
exclusively Central subject. Say also a
municipality attempted to tax marriages or
births, that would be completely beyond its
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 33
province and it could not be heard to say that
because it has been given certain limited
powers of taxation, therefore it ’purports to
act’ under the Act whatever the nature of the
tax it attempts to impose. In the same way,
if the Legislature limits the authority of the
Committee to a maximum of Rs. 50 1 do not
think it can be said to purport to act within
the scope of the Act if it travels beyond its
limited provisions."
A reference may be made to the decision in The Amraoti Town
Municipal Committee v. Shaikh Bhikan(1) which apparently
takes a contrary view. There Niyogi J., sitting singly has
held that a suit against a municipal committee for the
recovery of a tax illegally collected is governed by s. 48
of the Central Provinces Municipalities Act, and, is,
therefore, barred by limitation if not filed within six
months of the. date of the collection of the tax. That case
is, however, distinguishable in that there was no
prohibition to the levy of the tax and all that had happened
was that proper procedure had not been followed in imposing
the tax. This was thus a case of something purporting to be
done under the Act but not done strictly in accordance with
the provisions. That such a case would squarely fall within
the ambit of s. 48 cannot be questioned. But the point is
whether what was done by a local body under the colour of an
Act can be regarded as something purported to be done under
the Act even though neither the local body nor even the
State Legislature has the power to-do what was in fact done.
The next case referred to was Gajadhar Hiratal v. Municipal
Committee, Washim(2). That was also a case in which a tax
on bojhas and bales of ginned cotton was raised from Re.
0-2-3 per bale to Re. 0-4-0 per bale and the learned Judges
held, following the decision in the New East India Press
Co.’s case(1) that the enhancement was ultra vires of Art.
276 of the Constitution. The other question did not arise
for consideration in this case. This decision is,
therefore, of little assistance to us, because it is not
contended before us that the enhancement of the tax is
valid.
There is, however, another decision in the same volume at p.
483 (The Municipality of Chopda v. Motilal Manekchand) which
is relevant for consideration in this appeal. In that case
a Division Bench, while pointing out that the particular tax
which was levied by the Municipality was in substance a tax
on trade within the meaning of Art. 276 of the Constitution
and being in
(1) I.L.R. [1939] Nag. 216. (3) T.L.R.. [1948)
971. (2) I.L.R. [1958] Bom. 625.
509
excess of Rs. 250 p.a. was beyond the competence of the
Municipality, held that a suit for its refund beyond the
time prescribed by rules was barred by limitation.
According to the learned Judges the levy of the tax though
beyond the authority of a Municipality was " an act done in
pursuance or execution or intended execution of the Bombay
District Municipal Act" and was merely a wrongful act as
distinguished from an ultra vires or illegal act. In coming
to this conclusion they followed a previous decision of the
High Court in Jalgaon Borough Municipality v. The Khandesh
Spinning and Weaving Mills Co. Ltd.(1). Incidentally we may
mention that an appeal was brought before this Court from
that part of the decision in The Municipality of Chonda,
East Khandesh v. Motilal Manekchand Press Factory, Chonda(2)
which held that the levy was unconstitutional. Ayyangar J.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 33
who spoke for the Court has stated towards the end of the
Judgment as follows:-
"In the circumstances the correctness of the
decision of the High Court in holding the
impugned levy to be a tax on " callings or
employments’ and therefore subject to a
pecuniary limit of Rs. 250 per year does not
really arise for consideration. The
respondent-, had in their plaint, no doubt,
challenged the entirety of the levy and sought
relief on that basis, but they had however
pleaded in the alternative that the tax might
be held to be one on ’a trade etc.’ and
therefore within Art. 276(2) and claimed
relief on this footing in the alternative.
The learned Civil Judge had accepted this
alternative contention and had granted them a
decree on that basis and the respondents had
not challenged the correctness of that
decision by preferring an appeal and the
learned Judges of the High Court had accepted
this view of the nature of the levy. We
however consider it proper to add that there
is considerable force in the opinion expressed
by the High Court that the tax in question, at
the date when the same was challenged, being a
levy imposed on persons carrying on the
business of pressing cotton, was a tax on
’professions, trades, callings, or
employments’ and that the learned Judges of
the High Court came to a correct conclusion
that the respondents were entitled to the
declaration which was granted as regards the
maximum amount of the tax that could be levied
from the respondents,"
In Jalgaon Borough Municipality’s case(3) on which the High
Court relied in Motilal Manekchand’s case, what had happened
was this: The Municipality acting under s. 73(iv) of the
Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act, 1925 levied octroi duty on
fuel oil or furnace oil under certain rules and by-laws
framed by it with the sanction of the Government which
provided for the levy ’of an octroi duty on various articles
including ’oils used for machinery’.
(1) 55 Bom. L.R. 65.
(2) C.A. No. 168 of 1961 decided on March 11, 1962,
(3) 55 Rom. L.R. 65.
(N) 4SCI--5
510
it was found that the Municipality was not entitled to levy
any octroi duty on fuel oil or furnace oil which was not
comprised within the items enumerated in the octroi rules
and by-laws. The respondent who had paid the tax instituted
a suit for its recovery. One ’of the questions which arose
for consideration was whether the provisions of s. 206 of
the Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act, 1925 corresponding to
those of s. 48 of the Central Provinces and Berar
Municipalities Act, 1922 applied to the case. The learned
Judges of the High Court held that what the municipality
(lid was not an act done in pursuance of the Act, but it was
an act which it purported to do in pursuance of the Act and
that therefore its action was well within the terms of s.
206. In the course of the judgment Bhagwati J., observed
that the acts which fell within the category of those "done
or purporting to have been done in pursuance of this Act"
could only be those which were done under a vestige or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 33
semblance of authority or of a shadow of right. If an act
was outrageous and extraordinary or could not be supported
at all, not having been done with a vestige or semblance ’of
authority, or a shadow of right invested in the party doing
that act, it would not be an act which is done or purported
to have been done in pursuance of the Act. The distinction
is really between ultra vires and illegal acts, on the one
hand, and wrongful acts, on the other-wrongful in the sense
that they purport to have been done in pursuance of the Act;
they are intended to have been done in pursuance of the Act
if they are done with a vestige or semblance of authority,
or a sort of a right invested in the party doing those acts.
The learned Judge then referred to certain decisions and
said that under s. 73(iv) of the Act power was given to the
Municipality to impose octroi duty on articles and goods
imported within its jurisdiction. What had happened there
was that the defendants, on the interpretation which they
gave to the words "oils used for machinery", did something
which ultimately, on an adjudication in that behalf, the
court found to be wrong. By acting in that way what the
Municipality purported to do could not be said to be illegal
or outrageous and extraordinary or done without having any
vestige or semblance of authority or without even a shadow
of a right.
Apart from the fact that much of what was said in this case
is opposed to a recent decision of this Court to which we
will presently make a reference certain observations made by
Bhagwati J., in fact lend support to the argument advanced
before us by Mr. Patwardhan. The observations we have in
mind are to the effect that where ,a municipality, not
having the power to levy a particular tax at all, either
wholly or in regard to some classes of goods, had purported
to levy the same it would certainly be an act which was
"outrageous and extraordinary, or done without having any
vestige or semblance of authority or without even a shadow
of a right". Here, the over stopping of its authority by
the Municipality consists not in the matter of the selection
of a class of goods but of that of the rate at
511
which it has levied and collected a tax. It has levied and
collected a tax beyond constitutional limits. Therefore, to
the extent it has done so the tax could properly be said to
have been levied without a vestige or semblance of authority
or even of a shadow of right.
We may now refer to the recent decision of this Court in The
Poona City Municipal Corporation v. Dattatraya Naresh Deo-
dhar(1). That was a case in which the Municipal Corporation
had imposed a tax on the refund of octroi duty collected by
it on goods imported within the Municipal limits of the
city. Its practice was to deduct the tax from the amount
which it was required to refund and pay the person entitled
to the refund only the balance. A suit was instituted by
the respondents for refund of the amount illegally deducted
by the Corporation from the octroi refund made by the
Corporation to the respondents. It was contended on behalf
of the Corporation that the deduction made by it was valid
and that the suit was barred by limitation. This Court
upheld the contention of the respondents that the
Corporation had no power to impose the tax and that in fact
there was a prohibition against the imposition of such a tax
by the Corporation. On the plea of limitation, which was
founded upon the provisions of s. 487 of the Bombay Act
which are almost the same as those of s. 48 of the Act with
which we are concerned, this Court observed:
"The benefit of this section would be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 33
available to the Corporation only if it was
held that this deduction of ten per cent was
’an act done or purported to be done in
pursuance or execution or intended execution
of this Act.’ We have already held that this
levy was not in pursuance or execution of the
Act. It is equally clear that in view of the
provisions of s. 127 (4) (to which we have
already referred) the levy could not be said
to be ’purported to be done in pursuance or
execution or intended execution of the Act.’
For, what is plainly prohibited by the Act
cannot be claimed to be purported to be done
in pursuance or intended execution of the
Act."
Sub-sec. (4) of s. 127 of the Act to which
this Court has referred is in the following
terms:
"Nothing in the section shall authorise the
imposition of any tax which the State
Legislature has no power to impose in the
State under the Constitution."
It is pertinent to bear in mind that the conclusion of this
Court on the question whether the act was "done or purported
to be done" under the Act was not based solely on this
provision and reliance wag placed upon it as affording
additional support to the conclusion already arrived at. It
seems to us that this provision was enacted by way of
abundant caution. For, the Constitution is the
(1)[1964] 8 S.C.R. 178.
512
fundamental law of the land and it is wholly unnecessary to
provide in any law made by the Legislature that anything
done in disregard of the Constitution is prohibited. Such a
prohibition has to be read in every enactment. This
decision does appear to conclude the matter.
During the pendency of the suit before the trial court the
appellant had preferred a writ petition before the High
Court at Nagpur in which it contended that the notification
of April 10, 1941 enhancing the tax from one anna per bojha
and one anna per bale to four annas per bojha and four annas
per bale was illegal and ultra vires and should therefore be
quashed. This petition was granted by the High Court on
April 12, 1955. There was, therefore, a direct decision
before the trial court and the appellate court which though
it could not be treated as res judicata was binding on those
courts and was treated as such by them and it is perhaps
because of this that it was not sought to be urged on behalf
of the Municipal Committee when the second appeal was argued
before the High Court that the notification is valid and,
therefore, the Municipal Committee could recover the tax at
the enhanced rate. Though Mr. Viswanatha Sastri did say
that the decision of the High Court is not res judicata he
did not directly challenge its correctness. What he argued
was as follows:
The levy of a tax on professions, trades,
callings etc. was within the power of the
Provincial Legislature and is now within the
power of the State Legislature. It could in
the past and can even now levy such a tax at
the rate of 4 annas per no ha and 4 annas per
bale, that both under s. 142-A of the
Government of India Act and Art. 276 of the
Constitution the Municipal Committee could
collect such a tax to the constitutional limit
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 33
(which was formerly Rs. 50 p.a. and is after
the coming into force of the Constitution Rs.
250 p.a.). The mischief, according to him, is
not in the levy but in the realisation of an
excess over the limit. To put it differently,
the ban is not upon the rate of tax but upon
excess collection thereof. Therefore, the
collection of a tax above the constitutional
limit was not without jurisdiction but only
illegal or irregular. A suit by an assessee
to recover the amount paid by him in excess of
the constitutional limit would therefore be in
respect of a matter "purported to be done"
under the Act and the provisions of s. 48 of
the Act would apply to it. Further according
to him every suit against a Committee for
anything done or purported to be done under
the Act must comply with the conditions laid
down in the section. He points out that the
assessment of the tax was made by an authority
competent to make an assessment, that in
making it the authority proceeded in
accordance with the provisions of the Act and
assessed the tax as authorised by Rules which
had been sanctioned by the former Government
of Central Provinces and Berar. So, even it
is assumed that any of
513
the Rules were ultra vires and therefore the
assessment and recovery of the tax was
illegal, what the authority had done was
something purported to be done under the Act.
Some of these arguments were advanced in cases
discussed earlier
and rejected.
In support of his contention he placed reliance on the
decisions in Richard Spooner and Bomanjee Nowrojee v.
Juddow(1) and Dhondu Dagdu Patil v. The Secretary of State
for India(2). These cases were not pressed in aid in the
decisions so far considered and we would deal with them now.
Before we deal with these cases it is necessary to point out
the rationale upon which s. 142-A of the Government of India
Act, 1935 was enacted and on which Art. 276 of the
Constitution now rests. It is that the legislative spheres
of the Provinces and the Centre came to be clearly
demarcated in regard to items falling within Lists 1 and 11
of Schedule VII of the Government of India Act and now to
those falling within the same lists of Schedule VII of the
Constitution. Taxes on professions, trades, callings and
employments are taxes on income and are thus outside the
provincial/and now State-list and belong exclusively to
Parliament and before that to the Central Legislature. Yet
under a large number of laws enacted before the Government
’of India Act, 1935 came into force, power was conferred on
local governments and local authorities to impose taxes on
such activities. This was obviously in conflict with s. 100
of the Government of India Act. When this was realised s.
142-A was enacted by the British Parliament which saved the
power conferred by pre-existing laws but limited the amount
payable to Rs. 50 after 31st March, 1939. A saving was
made, however, of pre-existing laws subject to certain
conditions with which we are not concerned. The provisions
of this section have been substantially reproduced in Art.
276 of the Constitution with the modification that the upper
limit of such tax payable per annum would be Rs. 250 instead
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 33
of Rs. 50. A tax can be recovered only if it is ’payable’
and it would be, payable only after it is assessed. it is,
therefore, futile to contend that the ban placed by the
aforesaid provisions extends only to recoveries and not to
an earlier stage.
Now coming to the cases, the first was one in which the
question considered by the Privy Council was whether the
Supreme Court at Bombay was competent to entertain a suit
for recovery of damages brought by one Harkissondas
Hurgovindass against the Collector of Bombay and others in
respect of trespass and nuisance committed by certain
officers of the Collectorate while purporting to execute a
distress warrant issued against one Narrondass for non-
payment of arrears of land revenue. Under the Letters
Patent dated Dec. 8, 1823 the jurisdiction of the Supreme
Court was barred "in any matter concerning the revenue under
the management of the
(1) 4 MI.A. 353, 379.
(2) I.L.R. 37 Bom. 101, 106.
514
said Governor and Council of Bombay respectively...... or
concerning any act done according to the usage and practice
of the country, or the regulations of the Governor and
Council of Bombay aforesaid." Similar provisions were
contained in s. 8 of Statute 21 Geo. 111, c. 70. The
Supreme Court over-ruled the defendant’s contention on the
ground that what was due from the plaintiff was not revenue
but a perpetual ground rent which was incapable of being
enhanced and could not be regarded as revenue at all. After
holding so Lord Campbell who delivered the opinion of the
Judicial Committee observed:
"The point, therefore, is, whether the
exception of jurisdiction only arises where
the Defendants have acted strictly, according
to the usage and practice of the contrary, and
the Regulations of the Governor and Council.
But upon this supposition the proviso is
wholly nugatory; for if the Supreme Court is
to inquire whether the Defendants in this
matter concerning the public revenue were
right in the demand made, and to decide in
their favour only if they acted in entire con-
formity to the Regulations of the Governor and
Council of Bombay, they would equally be
entitled to succeed, if the Statutes and the
Charters contained no exception or proviso for
their protection. Our books actually swarm
with decisions putting a contrary construction
upon such enactments, and there can be no rule
more firmly established, than that if parties
bona fide and not absurdly believe that they
are acting in pursuance of Statutes, and
according to law, they are entitled to the
special protection which the Legislature
intended for them, although they have done an
illegal act. In this case it may well be that
the warrant against the goods of Tookaydass
did not authorise the taking of the goods of
Hurgovindass, or even that Hurgovindass might
not be liable for the arrears of ’quit rent’
which accrued before he became owner of the
house. Still the Collector was evidently of
opinion, that a distress might be made for the
whole of the arrears due, and that it was
sufficient to introduce into the warrant the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 33
name of Tookaydass, in whose name the house
continued to be registered. The other
Defendant never could have doubted the
sufficiency of the warrant. If Indian revenue
officers have fallen into a mistake, or
without bad faith have been guilty of an
excess in executing the duties of their
office, the object of the Legislature has
been, that they should not be liable to be
sued in a civil action before the Supreme
Courts."
Later in his opinion Lord Campbell said:
"If it concerned the revenue, or was a matter
concerning an act bona fide believed to be
done according to the Regulations of the
Governor and Council of Bombay, his (i.e., of
the Judge of the Supreme Court) jurisdiction
was gone, although prima
515
facie it appeared to be a trespass over which
his jurisdiction might be properly exercised."
This case would have assisted Mr. Sastri only if what was
done was something which could legally have been done by the
Municipality but was wrongly done by it as, for instance,
the collection of a lawful tax from a person other than the
one from whom it was due. But this decision is no authority
for the proposition that if the Collector recovered or tried
to recover from a person a sum of money as arrears of land
revenue even though it did not fall within the definition of
revenue or tried to collect a sum of money which he was
expressly -prohibited by law from collecting, he would still
be said to have purported to act under the revenue law which
empowered him to collect land revenue. If an act of
trespass was committed in execution of a distress warrant
for recovery of such monies. a suit for damages would not.
have been barred.
in the next case what the High Court was dealing with was
the claim of the plaintiff against the Government for
damages occasioned by the wrongful cancellation of his
licence to sell liquor. The suit had been dismissed by the
trial judge as barred by the provisions of s. 67 of the
Bombay Abkari Act, 1878, firstly because the Collector had
acted bona fide in pursuance of the Act and secondly because
it was not instituted within four months from the date of
the act complained of. The High Court upheld the dismissal
of the suit and in the course of its judgment observed:
"It is quite true that the Collector’s action
is not strictly in conformity with the section
which authorises the revocation only on the
actual conviction of the licensee. But the
circumstances under which the Collector acted
are so near the circumstances legally
entitling him to act as he did that we feel
bound to say the act was done in pursuance of
the Statute. The law upon this point may be
found stated in many cases, of which we may
notice Hermann v. Saneschal(1). In
strictness, anything not authorized by a
Statute cannot be said to be in pursuance of
it, while if it is authorized by the Statute
clearly it would need no other protection.
But if effect were given to such a
construction it would altogether do away with
the protection intended to be given;
accordingly the general principle is that if
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 33
any public or private body charged with the
execution of a Statute honestly intends to put
the law in motion and really and not
unreasonably believes in the existence of
facts. which, if existent, would justify his
acting and acts accordingly. his conduct will
be in pursuance of the Statute and will be
protected."
The learned Judges then referred to Spooner’s case(2) also.
Mr. Sastri laid particular emphasis on the concluding
portion
(1) (1862) 32 L.J.C.P. 43.
(2) 4 M.I.A. 353, 379.
516
of the observations quoted above. This again, it may be
said, is not a decision which is quite in point. There was
no want of jurisdiction in the Collector to do what he did
but there was only the absence of facts which, had they
existed would have given him power to do what he did. Cases
of this type must be distinguished from those like the
present in which we must imply a constitutional or statutory
prohibition against the act done. Where such prohibition
exists or can be implied, anything done or purported to be
done by an authority must be regarded as wholly without
jurisdiction and is not entitled to a protection of the law
under colour of which that act was done.
It is true, as urged by Mr. Sastri, that it was within the
competence of the respondent committee to raise the rate of
tax from one anna to four annas per bojha and bale even
after the coming into force of s. 142-A of the Government of
India Act, 1935. The levy of tax at that rate cannot,
therefore, be regarded to be beyond the jurisdiction of the
respondent so long as the constitutional limit was not
exceeded. What is, however, contended on behalf of the
appellant is that the action of the Committee in compelling
it to pay the tax in excess of the amount which was
constitutionally recoverable from it in respect of any one
year was ultra vires, that thereby the provisions of section
142-A have been transgressed and, therefore, this was a case
of utilization by the Committee of the provisions of the Act
and the rules made thereunder for doing something which was
prohibited by the Government of India Act, 1935 and is now,
by the Constitution. It is true that the Committee had
jurisdiction to recover an amount up to the constitutional
limit. But it cannot fairly be contended on its behalf that
merely because of this, that the recovery by it of an amount
in excess of the constitutional limit was only irregular or
at the worst illegal. Where power exists to assess and
recover a tax up to a particular limit and the assessment or
recovery of anything above that amount is prohibited the
assessment or recovery of an amount in excess is wholly
without jurisdiction and nothing else. To such a case the
Statute under which action was purported to be taken can
afford no protection. Indeed, to the extent that it affords
protection, it would be bad. But where, as here, the
validity of a provision of a statute can be upheld upon a
possible construction of that provision it would be the duty
of the court to so construe it as to avoid rendering the
provision unconstitutional and reject a construction which
will invalidate the provision.
The final contention urged by Mr. Sastri is based upon the
decision of the Privy Council in Raleigh Investment Company
Ltd. v. Governor-General in Council(1). His argument is
that the Municipalities Act contains adequate provisions
dealing with refund of taxes and that the provisions of s.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 33
85(2) bar a suit for recovery of a
(1)74 I.A. 50.
517
tax wrongfully recovered by the Municipal Committee. It may
be mentioned that the contention was not raised in the suit
or in the grounds of appeal before the High Court and has
not therefore been considered by it. It has been raised for
the first time in the statement of case. But the scope of
an appeal cannot, even at the instance of the respondent who
is entitled to support a decree in his favour even upon a
ground found against him by the High Court. be permitted to
be enlarged beyond that of the appeal before the High Court
or the courts below. But as it is a question of consider-
able importance and might be raised in other similar suits
which are said to be pending, we propose to deal with it.
Before dealing with Raleigh Investment Co.’s case(1) we may
refer to the provisions of the Act which Mr. Sastri placed
before us. Sec. 83(1) provides for an appeal against the
assessment or levy of or refusal to refund any tax under the
Act before the Deputy Commissioner and sub-s. (1-A) for a
revision before the State Government. Sub-sec. (2) provides
that if the authority hearing the appeal or revision
entertains a reasonable doubt on any question as to the
liability to or the principles of assessment of a tax it
shall draw up a statement of the facts of the case and the
point on which the doubt is entertained and refer the
statement with his own opinion on the point for the decision
of the High Court. There is, however, no express provision
like that of s. 31(1) or s. 33(4) of the Indian Income-tax
Act entitling the assessee to a hearing either in the appeal
or revision petition. Section 85 empowers the State Govern-
ment to make rules for regulating the refund of taxes, and
such rules may impose limitations on such refunds. Sub-
section (2) thereof provides that no refund of any tax shall
be claimable by any person otherwise than in accordance with
the provisions ’of this Act and the rules made thereunder.
This sub-section can be availed only if the Act or the rules
provide for making a claim for refund. The rules relating
to refunds, if there are any, were, however, not placed
before us. Nor was our attention drawn to any provision of
the Act or to any rule which makes it obligatory upon a
person to apply to the Municipal Committee for a refund of a
tax. Even assuming that the Act contemplates obtaining a
refund only upon compliance with rules made thereunder, does
it contemplate cases where refund or repayment on the ground
of the unconstitutionality of the levy? It will be noticed
that sub-s. (1) of this section empowers the State
Government to impose by rules limitations on the refunds-
presumably including limitation on the amount of refunds-and
sub-s. (2) bars a claim for refund otherwise than in
accordance with the rules made under sub-s. (1). These
provisions cannot possibly apply to case where the right to
obtain a refund or repayment is based upon the ground that
the action of the Committee was in violation of a
constitutional provision. To hold otherwise would lead to
the startling result
(1)74 I.A. 50.
518
that what was incompetent to the State Legislature to do or
authorise a committee to do directly can be permitted to be
done indirectly by empowering the State Government to make
rules for refund where under the amount ’of refunds could be
so limited as to permit retention by the committee of the
tax recovered by it in excess of the constitutional limit.
In our view, therefore, s. 85 of the Act cannot, in any
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 33
event, be said to provide a machinery for obtaining refunds
in cases of this kind. Since s. 85 is inapplicable, a
fortiori s. 83 cannot apply either. We must therefore
proceed on the footing that the Act does not provide a
machinery for making a claim for refund or repayment in such
cases.
It would be pertinent to advert also to the provisions of s.
84, sub-s. (3) of which deals with "Bar of other
proceedings". Sub-s. (1) provides for the period of
limitation for an appeal under s. 83(1). Sub-sec. (2)
empowers the appellate authority to require the assessee to
deposit the tax before the hearing or the decision of the
appeal. Sub-sec. (3) is in the following terms:
"No objection shall be taken to any valuation,
assessment, or levy, nor shall the liability
of any person to be assessed or taxed be
questioned, in any other manner or by any
other authority than is provided in this Act."
It will be seen that there is no express mention of a civil
court in this sub-section as there was in s. 67 of the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. In fact s. 48 of the
Municipalities Act contemplates the institution of a suit
subject to fulfillment of certain conditions and thus
indicates that it was not the intention of the legislature
to make the machinery provided by the Act exclusive. But
even if a bar to the Jurisdiction of a civil court be
assumed or implied, there is an absence of a reference to
"refund" in sub-s. (3) of s. 83, In other words, no finality
seems to have been given to a decision rendered by an
authority under s. 83 refusing to refund a tax improperly or
’File -ally assessed or recovered. In the light of these
circumstances we have to consider the applicability of the
decision in Raleigh Investment Co.’s case(1). In that case
the Privy Council considered the effect of certain
provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 which
prescribed remedies to an assessee who sought to challenge
the assessment made against him and also the provisions of
s. 67. The relevant portion of s. 67 was that "no suit
shall be brought in any civil court to set aside or modify
any assessment made under this Act............ After
examining all these provisions the Privy Council said that
an effective and appropriate machinery was provided by the
Act itself for the review of any assessment on grounds of
law, including the question whether a provision of the Act
was ultra vires and it was in that setting that s. 67 had to
be construed. Then it went on to say that the phrase
"assessment made under this Act" in s. 67 meant an
assessment finding its origin in an activity of the
assessing officer acting as such and that the circumstance
that
(1)74 I.A. 50.
519
he had taken into account an ultra vires provision of the
Act was in that view immaterial in determining whether the
assessment was " made under this Act." But, with respect, we
find it difficult to appreciate how taking into account an
ultra vires provision which in law must be regarded as not
being a part of the Act at all, will make the assessment as
one ’under the Act’. No doubt the power to make an
assessment is conferred by the Act and, therefore, making an
assessment would be within the jurisdiction of the assessing
authority. But the jurisdiction can be exercised only
according, as well as with reference, to the valid
provisions of the Act. When, however, the authority travels
beyond the valid provisions it must be regarded as acting in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 33
excess of its jurisdiction. To give too wide a construction
to the expression "under the Act" may lead to the serious
consequence of attributing to the legislature, which owes
its existence itself to the Constitution, the intention of
affording protection to unconstitutional activities by
limiting challenge to them only by resort to the special
machinery provided by it in place of the normal remedies
available under the Code of Civil Procedure, that is, to a
machinery which cannot be as efficacious as the one provided
by the general law. Such a construction might necessitate
the consideration of the very constitutionality of the
provision which contains this expression. This aspect of
the matter does not appear to have been considered in
Raleigh Investment Co.’s case(1).
This decision has been briefly referred to by this Court in
Firm and Iliuri Subbayya Chetty & Sons v. The State of
Andhra Pradesh(2) and what this Court has observed is this:
"In determining the effect of s. 67, the Privy
Council considered the scheme of the Act by
particular reference to the machinery provided
by the Act which enables an assessee
affectively to raise in courts the question
whether a particular provision of the Income-
tax Act bearing on the assessment made is or
is not ultra vires. The presence of such
machinery observed the judgment, though by no
means conclusive, marches with a construction
of the section which denies an alternative
jurisdiction to enquire into the same subject-
matter. It is true that the judgment shows
that the Privy Council took the view that even
the constitutional validity of the taxing pro-
vision can be challenged by adopting the
procedure prescribed by the Income-tax Act;
and this assumption presumably proceeded on
the basis that if an assessee wants to
challenge the vires of the taxing provision on
which an assessment is purported to be made
against him, it would be open to him to raise
that point before the taxing authority and
take it for a decision before the Court under
s. 66(1) of the Act. It is not necessary for
us to consider whether this assumption is well
founded or not. But the presence of the
alternative machinery by way of
(1) 74 I.A. 50.
(2) (1964) 1 S.C.R. 752 at 764,
520
appeals which a particular statute provides to
a party aggrieved by the assessment order on
the merits, is a relevant consideration and
that consideration is satisfied by the Act
with which we are concerned in the present
appeal."
We have already adverted to the provisions of ss. 83 and 85
of the Act which are the only provisions brought to our
notice as providing a machinery under the Act for
challenging an assessment and we have pointed out that they
do not cover a case like the present. Again the provision
for an appeal before a Deputy Commissioner who is an
authority who performs numerous functions under different
laws, functions which are executive, as well as administra-
tive and judicial, cannot be regarded as on par with one
which provides for an appeal before an Appellate Assistant
Commissioner under the Income-tax Act, an authority whose
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 33
duties are confined to matters arising under that Act.
Further, the latter Act contains a safeguard in the shape of
an appeal to the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal which deals
exclusively with matters arising under that Act and is an
independent tribunal. In the circumstances it must be held
that even in the class of cases to which the provisions of
ss. 83 and 85 of the Municipalities Act apply they cannot be
said to provide a sufficiently effective remedy to an
assessee to challenge the assessment made against him or to
a person who is aggrieved by the action of the Committee
levying or refusing to refund a tax. It is true that Sub-
sec. (2) of s. 83 provides for a reference to the High Court
but even that provision cannot be said to be a sufficiently
efficacious remedy for challenging the assessment made on an
assessee. For whether to make a reference or not is at the
discretion of the appellate or revisional authority and the
Act does not confer upon the person aggrieved a right to
move the High Court, as does the Income-tax Act, to require
a reference to be made in an appropriate case. We may again
point out that there is a complete absence of a provision
corresponding to s. 67 of the Indian Income Tax Act barring
the institution of a suit in so far as refusal of refund of
a tax is concerned.
In Secretary of State v. Mask & Co.(1) the Privy Council has
observed that it is settled law that the exclusion of the
jurisdiction of the civil courts is not to be readily
inferred, but that such exclusion must either be explicitly
expressed or clearly implied. As earlier pointed out, this
decision has been approved by this Court in the case of Firm
and Illuri Subbayya Chetty & Sons(2). Further, one of the
corollaries flowing from the principle that the Constitution
is the fundamental law of the land is that the normal remedy
of a suit will be available for obtaining redress against
the violation of a constitutional provision. The Court
must, therefore, lean in favour of construing a law in such
a way as not to take away this right and render illusory the
protection afforded by the Constitution. So, whatever be
the position with respect to s. 67 of the Indian
(1) [1940] 67 T.A. 222,226.
(2) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 752 at 764.
521
Income-tax Act, so far as s. 83(3) of the Act is concerned,
we find it reasonably possible to construe it as not
depriving a person of his right to obtain redress from a
civil court in respect of an amount recovered from him as a
tax in violation of Art. 276 of the Constitution.
We have already pointed out that no machinery is provided by
the Act for obtaining a refund of tax assessed and recovered
in excess of the Constitutional limit and that the machinery
actually provided by the Act is not adequate for enabling an
assessee to challenge effectively the constitutionality or
legality of assessment or levy of a tax by a municipality or
to recover from it what was realised under an invalid law.
It is, therefore, not possible to infer that the
jurisdiction of the civil court is barred. The decision in
the Raleigh Investment Co.’s case(1) does not, therefore,
help the respondent. Moreover, we must bear in mind the
provisions of Art. 265 of the Constitution which preclude
the levy or collection of a tax except by authority of law,
which means only a valid law. There was no corresponding
provision in the various Acts for the governance of India
which preceded the Constitution. Under Art. 226 the
Constitution has provided a remedy to a citizen to obtain
redress in respect of a tax levied or collected under an
invalid law. This remedy will not be affected by any
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 33
provision like s. 67 of the Indian Income-tax Act or like s.
84(3) of the Municipalities Act.
We must not lose sight of the fact that what the appellant
has claimed in the suit is the repayment by the Municipal
Committee of an amount recovered by it in excess of that
which under the Constitution it was competent to recover
from the appellant. The appellant has not sought to modify
or set aside any order made by an authority acting or
purporting to act under the Act. No doubt, the relief of
repayment is claimed on the ground that the enhancement of
the rate is unconstitutional. No doubt also that the appel-
lant had sought a further relief of injunction. As regards
the first, the position is that the High Court of Nagpur has
held, in the petition under Art. 226 preferred by the
appellant, the enhancement to be unlawful. This decision
was rendered by the Court during the pendency of the suit
and was binding on the civil court in which the suit was
pending and has been in fact followed by it. As regards the
relief of injunction, that relief became unnecessary because
of the order made by the High Court in the Writ petition.
It is apparently for this reason that the civil court did
not award that relief to the appellant. In view of the High
Court’s decision it was not at all necessary for the trial
court to consider in the suit before it the question of the
validity of the assessment by or collection of the tax but
only to ascertain the amount which was payable to the appel-
lant and whether the suit was barred under s. 48 or s. 85(2)
as contended by the respondent. In these circumstances, we
are of opinion that the appellant’s suit cannot be said to
be barred even if we interpret s. 84(3) of the
Municipalities Act in the same way as the Privy Council
interpreted s. 67 of the Indian Income-tax Act.
(2)74 1.A. 50.
522
We may further observe that where there is an express
prohibition in a statute against a local authority from
imposing a tax, as for instance the recovery in the Statute
construed by this Court in the Poona City Municipal
Corporation case(1) or where prohibition can be implied-
whether it be with regard to an item of taxation or with
regard to the rate of tax or the quantum of tax payable by
an individual assessee-the action of a local authority or of
any of its instrumentalities in transgressing that
prohibition must be regarded as being in excess of its
jurisdiction. Here there is a prohibition in s. 142-A of
the Government of India Act and now in Art. 276 of the
Constitution, which preclude a State Legislature from making
a law enabling a local authority to impose a tax on "profes-
sions, trades, callings and employments" in excess of Rs.
250 per annum. These provisions have to be read in the Act
or to be deemed by implication to be there as the
Constitution is the paramount law to which all other laws
are subject as was the Government of India Act, 1935 before
January 26, 1950. If therefore, after the date specified in
s. 142-A of the Government of India Act or after the
commencement of the Constitution a local authority or any of
its instrumentalities imposed or imposes a tax which is in
excess of the permissible amount, it would be exceeding its
jurisdiction and a provision like s. 84(3) of the Act will
not bar the jurisdiction of a civil court to entertain a
suit instituted by a person from whom it is collected for
the repayment of the money recovered from him in excess of
the permissible amount. There is a real distinction between
those cases where a suit was held to be incompetent and the
kind of cases which we have before us. Thus where the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 33
question merely is, whether the assessment had been made
according to law, the Assessing Officer of the Municipality
having jurisdiction on the subject matter and over the
assessee the provisions of s. 84(3) may be a bar to a suit.
Where, however, the question raised is as to the
jurisdiction of the Assessing Officer to proceed against the
assessee and levy on or collect from him an amount in excess
of that permitted by the Constitution, the matter would be
entirely out of the bar of that provision. Here since the
Assessing Officer had no authority to levy a tax beyond what
s. 142-A of the Government of India Act, 1935 permitted or
what Art. 276 permits his proceedings are void in so far as
they purport to levy a tax in excess of the permissible
amount and authorise its collection and the assessment order
is no answer to the suit for the recovery of the excess
amount. To this extent, even the order of assessment cannot
obtain the protection of s. 84(3) of the Act and, therefore,
the appearances’ suit is maintainable.
For all these reasons we hold that the High Court was in
error in dismissing the appellant’s suit. We hold the same
in the connected appeal and accordingly allow both the
appeals with costs throughout.
(1)[1964] 8 S.C.R. 178.
523
Raghubar Dayal J. We have given careful thought to the ques-
tions of law arising in this appeal, but regret we have not
been able to agree with the view expressed by brother
Mudholkar J. in the majority judgment.
We need not recapitulate the facts which have been fully set
out in the judgment of Mudholkar J. The questions of law
which arise for determination are: (i) whether the
respondent’s collecting the amount in excess of the amount
which it could have collected on account of the tax on
trade, in view of the provisions of Art. 276 of the
Constitution, was ’an act done or purported to be done under
the Act’ within the meaning of s. 48(1) of the Central
Provinces & Berar Municipalities Act, 1922 (Act 11 of 1922),
hereinafter called the Act-, and (ii) whether the suit is
barred by s. 84(3) of that Act.
The question in short boils down to this: whether the
expression ’anything done or purporting to be done’ under
the Act will cover only those acts which would be in strict
conformity with the provisions of the Act or will also cover
such acts which the Municipal Committee is competent to do
under the Act, but in doing which the Committee has, in some
manner, acted beyond the provisions of the Act or beyond any
other legal provision.
Section 48 of the Act refers to suits against the Committee
or any of the other specified persons acting under the
directions of the Committee, for anything done or purported
to be done under the Act. If a suit is for anything done or
purported to be done under the Act, the necessary conditions
laid down in the section are to be satisfied before the
institution of the suit. One condition is that the suit is
to be instituted after the expiration of two months after
the service of a notice, in writing, to the persons
mentioned in sub-s. (1). Another is that suit be instituted
within six months from the date of accrual of the alleged
cause of action. If a suit is not instituted after giving
notice or within this period, it has to be dismissed.
The question then is: what is the present suit for? And it
is only on the determination of the nature of the act to
which the present suit relates that it can be said whether
the suit is covered by s. 48 for not i.e., whether the act
can be said to be done or purported to be done under the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 33
Act.
The plaintiff claims a decree for the amount alleged to have
been illegally collected from him as tax and for a permanent
injunction. The illegality of the collection is said to be
on account of there being an upper limit for a person , s
liability to tax on trade and calling, in view of s. 142A of
the Govern of India Act, 1935 (shortly referred to as the
1935 Act) and Art. 276 of the Constitution. The limit under
the Constitution is Rs. 250. It was Rs. 50 under the 1935
Act. What was collected from the appellant was the tax
assessed on him. According to the appellant, the amount
assessed exceeded the legal limit and therefore what had
been collected in excess of that limit was collected
illegally.
524
We may now consider the procedure laid down for the
collection of tax under the Act before we determine the
nature of the alleged excessive collection of tax from the
appellant. Section 66 empowers the Committee to impose the
taxes enumerated in sub-s. (1), clause (b) of subs. (1)
mentions a tax on persons exercising any profession or art,
or carrying on any trade or calling, within the limits of
the municipality. Sub-section (2) empowers the State
Government, by rules made under the Act, to regulate the
imposition of taxes mentioned in the section and to impose
maximum amounts of rates for any tax. The rate of tax fixed
by Government Notification dated December 22, 1936 was
enhanced by another Notification dated April 10, 1941. The
former rate of one annual was enhanced to four annas. These
notifications did not lay down any upper limit for the
amount of tax payable by one person to the Municipality.
The legality of the imposition is not questioned. The
legality of the enhancement was questioned by the appellant
through Miscellaneous Petition No. 389 of 1954 decided by
the High Court on April 12. 1955. The appellant prayed, by
that petition, for the issue of a writ prohibiting the
Committee from collecting taxes tinder the notification of
1941. The High Court did not hold the notification to be
bad in law. What it held was that the tax was invalid to
the extent it offended against s. 142A of the 1935 Act and
that it was also invalid to the extent it offended against
art. 276 of the Constitution. The writ issued by the High
Court was a writ of mandamus prohibiting the Municipality
from resorting to the 1941 Notification for the purpose of
collecting tax in excess of Rs. 250 per annum. The
Municipality therefore was empowered to impose tax in
accordance with the notification of 1941 and, in view of s.
142A of the 1935 Act and art. 276 of the Constitution, the
total tax claimable on account of this tax from the
appellant could not exceed Rs. 50 or Rs. 250 respectively
during the period when s. 142A was in force and later
when art. 276 came into force.
The next step, after the imposition of a valid tax,
according to the Act, relates to the assessment of tax on
the person’s liability to pay it. Section 71 empowers the
State Government to make rules under the Act regulating
assessment of tax and for preventing the evasion of
assessment and s. 76 empowers the State Government to make
rules regulating the collection of taxes. The rules for
assessment and collection of taxes framed in 1936 were
notified on December 22, 1936.
Rule 1 required a person carrying on the trade of ginning
or pressing cotton into bales by means of steam or
mechanical process to furnish to the Committee, annually, a
return in the prescribed form which required the furnishing
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 33
of the number of bojhas ginned and the number of bales
pressed, with the total weight in maunds during the
financial year in each case. This information was necessary
as the rate of tax related to a bojha of 392 lbs. ginned
cotton and a bale of 392 lbs. pressed cotton.
525
Rule 4 provided that the tax would be assessed by a sub-
committee on the basis of the information received under
certain rules including r. 1. Rule 5 required the
communication of the amount of assessment to the assessee.
Rule 6 provided that objections to the assessment would be
received and considered by the sub-committee if presented
within a month from the date of communication of the amount
of assessment to the assessee and that the decision of the
sub-committee would be final subject to the confirmation by
the general committee. Rule 7 provided that the tax would
be payable in one instalment on August 1, each year. Fresh
rules were notified in 1941 and these were practically
identical with the 1936 rules.
It is not alleged that the tax assessed on the appellant
during the periods in suit had not been assessed by
following the procedure laid down in the rules.
It follows from the statutory rules that once the tax is
assessed according to The rules, the assessee becomes liable
statutorily, to pay the assessed tax.
Section 77 provides how any arrears of tax claimable by the
Committee under the Act can be recovered. They can be
recovered on an application to a Magistrate, by distress and
sale of movable property of the defaulter within the limits
of his jurisdiction. Sections 77A and 80 provide other
procedure for arrears of certain taxes to be realised.
Section 83 provides for an appeal, against the assessment or
levy of or refusal to refund any tax under the Act, to the
Deputy Commissioner or some other officer empowered by the
State Government in that behalf. Sub-s. (1A) allows a
person aggrieved by the decision of the appellate authority
to apply to the State Government for revision of the
decision on the grounds that the decision is contrary to law
or is repugnant to any principle of assessment of tax or
that the appellate authority has exercised jurisdiction not
vested in it by law or has failed to exercise a jurisdiction
vested in it by law. Sub-s. (2) provides for a reference to
the High Court by the appellate authority or the revisional
authority on its own motion or on the application of any
person interested, for the opinion of the High Court on any
question as to the liability or the principle of assessment
of tax if such a question arises on the hearing of the
appeal or revision.
sub-s. (3) of S. 84 Provides
"No objection shall be taken to any valuation,
assessment, or levy, nor shall the liability
of any person to be assessed or taxed be
questioned, in any other manner or by any
other authority than is provided in this Act,"
p(N)4SCI-7
526
Section 85 reads:
"(1) The State Government may make rules under
this Act regulating the refund of taxes, and
such rules may impose limitations on such
refunds.
(2)No refund of any tax shall be claimable
by any person otherwise than in accordance
with the provisions of this Act and the rules
made thereunder."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 33
It follows from the above provisions that an assessee has to
pay the tax assessed and that if aggrieved with the
assessment of tax he has to appeal against the assessment
order. He can raise questions of law and fact in the
appeal.
The appellant, in the present case, could have appealed
against the assessment on the ground that the amount
assessed exceeded the limits laid down for the tax under s.
142A of the 1935 Act if that applied at the time of
assessment or under art. 276 of the Constitution if the
latter applied at the relevant time. His claim for the
refund of any amount, if paid, would arise only after the
amount assessed and paid is modified by the appellate or
revisional authority. If that amount is not so modified, no
question for the refund or repayment of any amount paid as
tax under the Act arises. The statute provided for the
assessment of tax and for its collection in case the
assessee did not himself pay the assessed amount according
to the rules. The present suit for the repayment of the
amount alleged to have been realised illegally is in essence
a, suit for firstly modifying the amount assessed and then
to decree the payment of the amount held to have been paid
in excess of the tax as modified by the Court. It follows
therefore, to our mind, that the suit relates to the act of
the Committee in assessing the appellant wrongly by ignoring
the constitutional provision that the amount payable by a
single person to the municipality for such tax was not to
exceed a certain limit and that it is not merely with
respect to the act of collecting the excess amount. In
fact, the assessment of the entire tax was one act and so
was the collection of the amount assessed. The act of
assessing the tax or the consequential act of collecting the
amount cannot be broken up into two acts (i) of assessing
the tax upto the legal limit and (ii) of assessing the tax
with respect to the amount in excess of the legal limit.
Neither can the act of collection be broken up into two
acts (i) of collecting the amount which can be legally
assessed; and (ii) of collecting the amount in excess of the
legally realisable amount of tax. The act of assessment or
of collection therefore was an act done by the Committee
Linder the provisions of the Act, though it may be, as
appears to be the case, that it acted wrongly in assessing
the tax at an excessive figure and consequently in
collecting an amount in excess which could have been legally
collected. The suit is therefore fully covered by the
provisions of sub-s, (1) of s. 48 of the Act.
527
Sub-s. (2) of s. 48, as already stated, provides that every
such suit, i.e. a suit falling within Sub-s. (1) of that
section, shall be dismissed unless it is instituted within
six months from the date of the accrual of the alleged cause
of action. The suit was instituted in the instant case on
December 6, 1952, more than 8 months after the date of
recovery of most of the amounts alleged to have been
illegally recovered from the appellant and, clearly, the
suit for the recovery of such amounts bad to be dismissed.
The taxes for the years 1951-52 were recovered in small
amounts on January 17, 1952, March 13, 1952, March 31, 1952
and August 27, 1952. The suit for the amount recovered on
January 17 was also instituted after the period of
limitations
No notice with respect to the alleged illegal collection of
taxes in March and August 1952 had been given to the
Municipal Committee as notice was given on January 10, 1952,
prior to these collections and could not have possibly
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 27 of 33
referred to them. The suit for these amounts also has to be
dismissed as the condition precedent for the institution of
the suit under sub-s. (1) of s. 48 has not been satisfied.
There is another reason which justifies the dismissal of the
appellant’s suit, though the view of the High Court on that
point is in favour of the appellant. In view of s. 84(3)
the assessment of the tax or the liability of the person
assessed or taxed cannot be objected to in any manner or
before any authority other than what is provided in the Act.
Section 83 provides the procedure by which the assessment of
tax can be questioned both on law and facts. The
correctness of the assessment cannot be questioned by any
other manner and questioning by instituting the suit in a
Civil Court would be one such other manner. We have already
indicated that in essence the present suit is a suit for the
modification of the taxes assessed and for consequential
order decreeing the repayment of the amount held to have
been collected in excess of the amount so modified. In view
of sub-s. (3) of s. 84. exclusive jurisdiction to determine
the correctness of the amount assessed is given to the
authorities mentioned in s. 83. The result is that no other
authority can enter into the question of the correctness of
the assessment on grounds of law or fact. The present suit
is barred from the cognizance of the Civil Court.
The views we have expressed find support from what has been
decided by the Privy Council and this Court. We would first
refer to those cases before dealing, with the cases relied
on for the appellant in support of the contention that the
Committee had no jurisdiction to assess the tax beyond the
limit allowed by s. 142A or art. 276 and that therefore the
act of the Committee was an act which could not be said to
have been done or purported to have been done under the Act
and that it was not necessary for the appellant to take
recourse to the procedure laid down in ss, 48 and 83 -of the
Act.
528
In Raleigh Investment Co. Ltd. v. Governor-General in
Council(1) the Privy Council had to construe s. 67 of the
Income-tax Act which provided: ’no suit shall be brought in
any civil court to set aside or modify any assessment made
under this Act........ The, suit giving rise to the appeal
before the Privy Council was for a declaration that certain
provision of the Act was ultra vires the; legislative powers
of the Federal Legislature, that therefore the appellant
before the Privy Council was not liable to be assessed or,
charged to tax in respect of certain dividends and the
assessment was illegal and wrongful, for an injunction
restraining the department from making assessment in future
years in respect of such dividends and for the repayment of
the amount said to have been illegally realised on account
of the illegal assessment. The Privy Council said at p. 62:
"In form the relief claimed does not profess
to modify or set aside the assessment. In
substance it does, for repayment of part of
the sum due by virtue of the notice of demand
could not be ordered so long as the assessment
stood."
The same can be said with respect to the claim
for repayment of the alleged illegal
collection of the excess amount from the
appellant.
The Privy Council further said:
"An assessment made under the machinery
provided by the Act, if based on a provision
subsequently held to be ultra vires, is not a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 28 of 33
nullity like an order of a court lacking
jurisdiction. Reliance on such a provision is
not an excess of jurisdiction but a mistake of
law made in the course of its exercise."
In view of what the Privy Council has said, the Committee’s
overlooking the constitutional provisions in the exercise of
its jurisdiction to assess the tax will not make its
assessment of the tax an assessment without jurisdiction but
would only show that the Committee mad-. a mistake of law in
the course of the exercise of its jurisdiction.
The Privy Council took into consideration the machinery pro-
vided in the Income-tax Act for the assessee raising
objections to the assessment made against him and held that
effective and proper machinery was provided by the Act
itself for the review on grounds of law. This was however
not the reason for their construing s. 67 in the way they
did. In fact, they considered the construction of
67 clear and said:
"Under the Act the income-tax officer is
charged with the duty of assessing the total
income of the assessee. The obvious meaning,
and in their Lordships’ opinion, the correct
meaning, of the phrase ’assessment made under
this Act’ is an assessment
(1) LR. 74 I.A. 50.
529
finding its origin in an activity of the
assessing officer acting as such. the
circumstance that the assessing officer has
taken into account an ultra vires provision of
the Act is in this view immaterial in
determining whether the assessment is ’made
under this Act’. The phrase describes the
provenance of the assessment: it does not
relate to its accuracy in point of law. The
use of the machinery provided by the Act, not
the result of that use, is the test."
These observations fully apply to the expression ’the
assessment of any tax under the Act’ in sub-s. (1) of s. 83.
It follows that when the Committee made the assessment of
the tax on the appellant the assessment was founded on the
activity of the Committee acting as the assessing authority
and the fact that it overlooked the constitutional
requirement is immaterial in determining whether the assess-
ment is made under the Act. The expression ’made under the
Act’ has no relation to the accuracy of the assessment in
point of law. The expression ’assessment of any tax under
the Act’ in s. 83 is equivalent in its content to the
expression ’assessment made under the Act’.
Lastly, the final observations of the Privy Council in this
case indicate that when an exclusive machinery for the
determination of the tax is provided by the Act and the tax
is assessed by that machinery, there arises a duty to pay
the amount of tax demanded on the basis of that assessment
and that the jurisdiction to question the assessment
otherwise than by the use of the machinery expressly
provided by the Act would be inconsistent with the statutory
obligation to pay arising by virtue of the assessment. The
very fact that the appellant let the assessment become final
without taking recourse to the procedure of appeal and
revision laid down in s. 83 of the Act and thus became
liable under the statute to pay the amount assessed, makes
his questioning the correctness of the amount through the
Court inconsistent with that obligation. It appears that
the Privy Council considered a special provision barring the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 29 of 33
taking of objection to assessment of tax by any authority to
be unnecessary. It said at p. 65 :
"The only doubt, indeed, in their Lordships’ mind, is
whether an express provision was necessary in order to
exclude jurisdiction in a civil court to set aside or modify
an assessment."
This would meet the contention for the appellant that sub-
s., (3) of s. 84 does not specifically refer to the Civil
Court and therefore does not specifically bar jurisdiction
of the Civil Court from taking cognizance of a suit relating
to the assessment of tax.
It may also be mentioned that s. 84(3) of the Act, by its
terms, refers to an objection to assessment and not to
’assessment under the Act or assessment made under the Act’.
This makes the provisions of s. 84(3) much wider in scope
than those of s. 67 of the Indian Income-tax Act were.
630
The other case we would refer to is Firm & Illuri Subbayya
Chetty & Sons v. The State of Andhra Pradesh(1). The
appellant before this Court, in that case, sued the State of
Andhra Pradesh for a decree for a certain amount on the
ground that amount had been illegally recovered from it
under the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939. Section 18A
of that Act provides that no suit or other proceeding shall,
except as expressly provided in the Act, be instituted in
any Court to set aside or modify any assessment made under
the Act. This provision is practically identical in terms
with that of s. 67 of the Income-tax Act which had been
considered by the Privy Council in Raleigh’s Case(2). The
contention raised before the Court was that if an order of
assessment had been made illegally by the proper authority
purporting to exercise its powers under the Act, such an
assessment could not be said to be an assessment made under
the Act. It was also contended that the use of the words
’any assessment made under this Act’ did not cover cases of
assessment which purported to have been made under the Act.
This Court said at p. 759:
"The expression ’any assessment made under
this Act’ is, in our opinion, wide enough to
cover all assessments made by the appropriate
authorities under this Act whether the said
assessments are correct or not. It is the
activity of the assessing officer acting
as such officer which is intended to be
protected and as soon as it is shown that
exercising his jurisdiction and authority
under this Act, an assessing officer has made
an order of assessment that clearly falls
within the scope of s, 18A."
The view expressed by this Court is practically the same as
had been expressed in Raleigh’s Case (2). In fact, the only
difference between the two cases appears to be that in the
Privy Council case the illegality of the assessment was said
to lie in basing the assessment on a provision which was
said to be ultra vires the legislature while the illegality
of the assessment made in the case before this Court lay in
the alleged mistake of the assessing officer in construing
certain transactions to be transactions of purchases though
they were really transactions of sale, the tax being
leviathan on purchases and not on sales. This Court
referred to Raleigh’s Case(1) at p. 764 and did not express
an opinion, on the view of the Privy Council that even the
constitutional validity of the taxing provision could be
challenged by adopting the procedure prescribed by the
Income-tax Act, a question which does not arise for
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 30 of 33
consideration in the present case.
We are therefore of opinion that the construction put on the
expression ’assessment made under the Act’ in these two
cases justifies the conclusion that the assessment of tax
made on the appellant in this case is covered by sub-s. (1)
of s. 83 of the Act and
(1) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 752.
(2) 74 I.A. 50
531
amounts to ’an act done, under the Act’ for the purposes of
sub-s. (1) of s. 48 of the Act. It is therefore unnecessary
to determine the scope of the expression ’an act purported
to be done under the Act’ in sub-s. (1) of s. 48.
We may now briefly deal with the cases relied on for the ap-
pellant.
Before, however, doing so, we may first deal with the case
of Poona City Municipal Corporation v. Dattatraya Naresh
Deodhar(1) decided by this Court. In this case the Poona
Municipality had imposed a tax on the amount of octroi duty
which had been levied on the goods imported within the
Municipal limits but had been subsequently exported out of
such limits within the specified periods. The Poona
Municipality used to deduct 10 per cent of the amount to be
refunded. This deduction was held to amount to a tax on the
octroi refund. Such a deduction was imposed as a tax under
s. 59(b)(xi) of Act III of 1901. The tax continued after
the 1901 Act was repealed by the Bombay Municipal Boroughs
Act, 1925. The Boroughs Act was, in its turn, repealed by
the Bombay Provincial Municipal Corporation Act, 1949. That
Act was applied to Poona on February 15, 1950 and thereafter
the powers of taxation of the Municipality were governed by
s. 127 of that Act which authorised the Corporation to
impose the various taxes mentioned in that section. A tax
on octroi refund was not one of such taxes. It could not
come under cl. (f) which described: ’any other tax which the
State Legislature has power under the Constitution to impose
in the States’. The State Legislature had no power under
the Constitution to impose a tax on octroi refund. It was
therefore held by this Court that the amount of tax on
octroi refund could not be imposed by the Poona City
Municipal Corporation. It was, after holding so, that
reference was made to sub-s. (4) of s. 127 which provided
that nothing in that section would authorize the imposition
of any tax which the State Legislature had no power to
impose in the State under the Constitution, and it was said:
"Apart from his absence of power to impose
such a tax, which is clear from the earlier
parts of s. 127, we have the categorical
prohibition in sub-section 4 against the
imposition of any such tax by the
Corporation."
This reference was to emphasize that the impugned tax could
not possibly be imposed under the Act. Sub-section (4)
appears to have been enacted as a matter of caution. There
could be no necessity for sub-section (4) as s. 127 itself
had provided for the taxes which could be imposed. Any tax
which was not specified in the section could not possible be
imposed by the Corporation. The legislature might have
considered the possibility of any of the specified taxes not
remaining in future within the legislative list of the State
and
(1)[1964] 8 S.C.R. 178.
532
therefore provided that in such a contingency a tax though
specified in the section will not be imposed. The provision
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 31 of 33
of sub-s. (4) did not in any way affect the decision of this
Court in holding that the Poona Municipal Corporation could
not impose a tax on octroi refund.
The other contention for the Poona Municipal Corporation was
that the suit was instituted beyond the period of limitation
prescribed under s. 487 of the 1949 Act. The suit would
have been time-barred if the act of the Corporation imposing
the tax on octroi refund could be held to be ’an act done or
purported to be done in pursuance or in execution or
intended execution’ of the 1949 Act. This Court held that
the tax was not levied in pursuance or in, execution of the
Act and therefore the benefit of s. 487 could not be
available to the Corporation.
The expression used in s. 487 is different from the one used
in s. 48 of the Act. Apart from this consideration, the
act of imposing the tax could not be said to have originated
from any provision of the 1949 Act and therefore could not
possibly be held to be an act done under the 1949 Act. We
do not think this case can be taken to support the
appellant’s contention that the assessment of the tax on it
and the consequential collection of the amount in excess of
the limit laid down by art. 276 of the Constitution was not
an act done under the Act.
The appellant has mainly relied on the cases decided by the
Nagpur High Court and a brief reference may now be made to
them. We may refer to the case reported as The Amraoti Town
Municipal Committee v. Shaikh Bhikan(1) first. The
plaintiffs had sued to recover the tax which had been
collected from them in excess of the lawful rate. The suit
was instituted after the plaintiffs had obtained a
declaration that the enhancement of the tax over that rate
was illegal. The Municipal Committee had power to impose
and enhance the tax. It however had enhanced the tax
without following the entire procedure laid down for such
enhancement and had omitted to consider the objections filed
against the proposed enhancement. The question before the
’High Court was whether the collection of the tax at the
enhanced rate was an act which fell within the ambit of the
expression ’anything done or purported to be done under the
Act’ which Act, it may be mentioned, was the C.P. & Berar
Municipalities Act, 1929, the very Act with which we are
concerned in the present appeal. Niyogi J. expressed at p.
219 his agreement with the principle that if the Municipal
Committee exercised a power which it did not possess, it
should not be regarded as acting in pursuance of the statute
governing its affairs and its acts should not be regarded as
being done under the statute, and further stated that
principle however did not help the Municipal Committee, the
appellant before him.
(3) I.L.R. 1939 Nag. 216.
533
Niyogi J. then said, after noticing the failure of the
Municipal Committee to consider the objections to the
proposed taxes:
"Now there can be no question that the
municipal committee, in imposing and
collecting tax at four annas per animal, was
acting exactly in accordance with section 68.
It must be observed that there is a difference
between a case when a corporate body exercises
a power which is wholly absent and a case
where it has power but it exercises it
illegally or with material irregularity. In
the former case the municipal committee’s act
from beginning to end is illegal; whereas in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 32 of 33
the latter case the act is quite legal in the
beginning but becomes illegal in the end.".
Again he said:
"In enhancing the tax and collecting it the
municipal committee was certainly exercising
although irregularly, the power conferred on
it by section 68 and to that extent it appears
to me that the contention that they were
not acting under the statute is untenable."
The views expressed by Niyogi J., we may say with respect,
find full support from Raleigh s Case(1) and Subbayya
Chetty’s Case(2). Amraoti Municipal Committee’s Case(3) was
in a way on all fours with the present case. In that case
the Municipal Committee overlooked the provision of law
about considering the objections to the proposed enhancement
in tax. In the present case the Committee overlooked the
constitutional requirement that the maximum limit of the tax
payable by a single individual is Rs. 250.
The next case is District Council, Bhandara v.
Kishorilal(4). In this case the question before Bose J. was
whether a suit for the recovery of an amount recovered in
excess of what could be legally taxed came within the
mischief of s. 71 and s. 73(1) of the Central Provinces
Local Self-Government Act, 1920 (C.P. IV of 1920). Bose
J. said at p. 92:
"It will be observed that both section 79 and
the rule are confined to orders and decisions
given under the Act. It is impossible to say
that an order which contravenes the law or is
made in the face of an express statutory
prohibition can be said to be under the Act.
The words ’purporting to be given’ or ’made
under the Act’ are not present in this section
and so the difficulty which arises retarding
the other point is not present here."
We do not see why an ordinary decision given under the Act
be not considered to be an order made under the Act.
Neither of the expressions refer to the order or decision
being correct or not.
(1)74 I.A. 50.
(2)[1964] 1 S.C.R. 752.
(3) I.L.R. 1939 Nag. 216.
(4)I.L.R. [1949] Nag. 87.
534
Section 73 of the Central Provinces Local Self-Government
Act prescribed that no suit shall be instituted
etc.......... for anything done or purporting to be done
under that Act, unless the prescribed notice be first given.
Bose J. presumably in view of what he had said earlier in
connection with orders and decisions given under the Act,
said:
"I am clear that what was done here was not done ’under the
Act’, so the only question is whether it ’purported to be
done’ under the Act."
In these observationshe seems to have equated the
expression ,given under the Act’with ’done under the
Act’. His view, as we have already pointed out with
reference to something done under the Act, does not find
support from Raleigh’s Case(1) and Subbayya Chetty’s
Case(2). BoseJ. then considered the content of the
expression ’purported to bedone’. We need not discuss
what he says on this point as we haveheld that the
assessment made on the appellant was an assessment made
under the Act and that the act of, illegal collection with
respect to the amount in excess was an act done under the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 33 of 33
Act.
The appellant mainly relied on the Nagpur case reported as
Municipal Committee, Karanja v. New East India Press Co.
Ltd., Bombay. It was held in that case that a suit for
refund of a tax, illegally imposed by the Municipal
Committee was not barred by reason of ss. 48, 83 and 84 of
the Central Provinces Municipalities Act as the Municipal
Committee did not act or purport to act under the Act in
imposing the illegal tax. Bose, Acting C.J., delivering the
judgment, relied on his earlier decision in District
Council, Bliandara Case(1) and held that the claim for the
recovery of the tax illegally reallised in excess of the
permissible limit were not barred by reason of ss. 83 and
84. He then referred to s. 48 and, after stating that the
act of the Municipality when prohibited by law was wholly
beyond its jurisdiction and therefore s. 48 did not apply,
said:
"The distinction between a case where section 48 applies and
a case where it does not is clearly shown in The Amraoti
Town Municipal Committee v. Shaikh Bhikan(4)."
We have referred to this case and expressed full agreement
with the views expressed by Niyogi J. there. It appears to
us that the full significance of that judgment has been
overlooked in Municipal Committee, Karanja Case(3).
We bold that the appellant’s suit for the recovery of the
tax realised in excess of Rs. 250 a year has been rightly
dismissed as
(1) 74 I.A. 50. (2) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 752.
(3) I.L.R. [1948] Nag. 971. (4) I.L.R. [1949] Nag. 87.
535
the correctness of the assessment of the tax could not be
challenged by a suit in a Civil Court in view of s. 84(3)
and as the provisions of s. 48 requiring the giving of
notice to the Municipality and the institution of the suit
within a certain period had not been complied with. We
would therefore dismiss the appeal with costs.
ORDER
In view of the majority judgment, the appeal is allowed with
costs throughout.
536