Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DIAMOND SUGAR MILLS LTD., ANDANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH ANDANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
13/12/1960
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
KAPUR, J.L.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1961 AIR 652 1961 SCR (3) 242
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1966 SC 416 (3,5,11)
RF 1967 SC1801 (18)
C 1968 SC 599 (13)
D 1969 SC 903 (23)
RF 1972 SC 87 (5)
RF 1972 SC 425 (27)
D 1976 SC 182 (24)
R 1979 SC 537 (5)
F 1979 SC1972 (4,5)
E 1980 SC 286 (18)
RF 1981 SC 991 (11)
RF 1989 SC 516 (22)
ACT:
Sugar Cane-Imposition of cess-Enactment taxing entry of cane
into factory--Constitutionality of-"Local area", Connotation
of-Constitution of India, Sch. VII, List II, Entry 52-U.
P. Sugarcane Cess Act, 1956 (U. P. XXII of 1956), s. 3.
HEADNOTE:
Entry 52 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to the Consti-
tution empowered State Legislatures to make a law relating
to "taxes on the entry of goods into a local area for
consumption, use or sale therein". The U. P. Legislature
passed the U. P. Sugarcane Cess Act, 1956, which authorised
the State Government to impose a cess on the entry of cane
into the premises of a factory for use, consumption or sale
therein. The appellant contended that the premises of a
factory was not a ’local area’ within the meaning of Entry
52 and the Act was beyond the competence of the legislature.
243
Held, (per Imam, Kapur, Das Gupta and Raghubar Dayal, jj.)
that the impugned Act was beyond the competence of the
legislature and was invalid. The premises of a factory was
not a "local area" within the meaning of Entry 52. The
proper meaning to be attached to the words "local area" in
Entry 52 was an area administered by a local body like a
municipality, a district board, a local board, a union
board, a Panchayat or the like.
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In re: the Central Provinces & Beray Act No. XIV of 1938,
[1939] F.C.R. 18, Navinchandra Mafatlal v. The Commissioner
of Income-tax, Bombay City, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 829, State of
Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley & Co., Ltd., [1959] S.C.R. 379
and South Carolina v. United States, (1905) 19 U. S. 437,
referred to.
Emperor v. Munnalal, I.L.R. 1942 All. 302, disapproved.
Per Ayyangar, J.-The Act was invalid only in so far as it
sought to levy a tax on cane entering a factory from within
the same local area in which the factory was situate and was
valid in other cases. It was permissible to read the Act so
as to confine the tax to the limitations subject to which it
could be constitutionally levied and to strike down that
portion which out stepped the limitations.
In re Hindu Women’s Rights to Property Act, 1937, [1941]
F.C.R. 12 and Blackwood v. Queen, (1882) 8 A.C. 82, applied.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 35 of 1959.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated October 29, 1956,
of the Allahabad High Court in Writ Petition No. 327 of
1956.
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India, J. B.
Dadachanji, S. N. Andley, Rameshwar Nath and P. L. Vohra,
for the appellants.
G. C. Mathur and C. P. Lal, for the respondents.
1960, December 13. The Judgment of Imam, Kapur, Das Gupta
and Dayal, JJ. was delivered by Das Gupta, J. Ayyangar, J.
delivered a separate judgment.
DAS GUPTA, J.-This appeal is against an order of the High
Court of Judicature at Allahabad rejecting the appellants’
application under Art. 226 of the Constitution. The first
appellant is the Diamond Sugar Mills Ltd., a public limited
company owning and operating a sugar factory at Pipraich in
the District Gorakhpur, for the manufacture of sugar from
244
sugarcane. The second appellant is the Director of the
company. By this application the appellants challenged the
imposition of cess on the entry of sugarcane into their
factory. On February 24, 1956, when the application was
made the U. P. Sugarcane (Regulation of Supply and Purchase)
Act, 1953 (U. P. XXIV of 1953), was in force. Section 20
of this Act gave to the Governor of U. P. the power to
impose by notification "a cess not exceeding 4 annas per
maund on the entry of sugarcane into an area specified in
such notification for consumption, use or sale therein".
This Act it may be mentioned had taken the place of an
earlier Act, the U. P. Sugar Factories Control Act, 1938, s.
29 of which authorised the Governor of U. P. to impose by a
notification after consultation with the Sugar Control Board
under the Act "a cess not exceeding 10 per cent of the
minimum price, if any, fixed under s. 21 or 4 annas per
maund whichever was higher on the entry of sugarcane into a
local area specified in such notification for consumption,
use or sale therein". Notifications were issued under this
provision for different crushing seasons starting from 1938-
39, the last notification issued thereunder being for the
crushing season of 1952-53. These notifications set out a
number of factories in a schedule and provided that during
1952-53 crushing season cess at a rate of three annas per
maund shall be levied on the entry of all sugarcane into the
local areas comprised in factories mentioned in the schedule
for consumption, use or sale therein. Act No. XXIV of 1953
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repealed the 1938 Act. The first notification under the
provisions of s. 20 of the 1953 Act was in these terms:-
"In exercise of the powers conferred by sub-
section (1) of section 20 of Uttar Pradesh
Sugarcane (Regulation of Supply and Purchase)
Act, 1953; (U. P. Act No. XXIV of 1953) the
Governor is pleased to declare that during the
1954-55 crushing season, a cess at a rate of
three annas per maund shall be levied on the
entry of all sugar cane into the local areas
comprised in the factories mentioned in the
Schedule, for the consumption, use or sale
therein".
245
Similar notifications were also issued on October 23, 1954,
for the crushing season 1954-55 and on November 9, 1955, for
the crushing season 1955-56. The appellants’ factory was
one of the factories mentioned in the schedule of all these
notifications. On the date of the application, i.e.,
February 24, 1956, a sum. of Rs. 2,59,644-9-0 was due from
the first appellant and a further sum of Rs. 2,41,416-3-0 as
liability on account of cess up to the end of January, 1956,
also remained unpaid.
The appellant contended on various grounds that s. 20 of Act
XXIV of 1953 was unconstitutional and invalid and prayed for
the issue of appropriate writs directing the respondents the
State of U. P. and the Collector of Gorakhpur not to levy
and collect cess on account of the arrears of cess for the
crushing season 1954-55 and in respect of the crushing
season 1955-56 and successive crushing seasons and to
withdraw the notifications dated October 23, 1954, and
November 9, 1955 , which have been mentioned above.
During the pendency of this application under Art. 226
before the Allahabad High Court the U. P. Legislature
enacted the U. P. Sugarcane Cess Act, 1956 (U. P. XXII of
1956), repealing the 1953 Act. Section 3 of this Act as
originally enacted was in these words:-
"The State Government may by notification in
the official gazette impose a cess not
exceeding four annas per maund on the entry of
the cane into the premises of a factory for
use, consumption or sale therein:
Provided that the State Government may like.
wise remit in whole or in part such cess in
respect of cane used or to be used in factory
for any limited purpose specified in the
notification.
Explanation:-If the State Government, in the
case of any factory situate outside Uttar
Pradesh, so declare, any place in Uttar
Pradesh set apart for the purchase ’of cane
intended or required for use. consumption or
sale in such factory shall be deemed to be the
premises of the factory.
(2) The cess imposed under sub-section (1)
shall
246
be payable by the owner of the factory and
shall be paid on such date and at such place
as may be prescribed.
(3) Any arrear of cess not paid on the date
prescribed under sub-section (2) shall carry
interest at 6 per cent. per annum from such
date to date of payment."
There is a later amendment by which the words "four annas"
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have been altered to "twenty-five naye paise" and the words
"Gur, Rab or Khandsari Sugar Manufacturing Unit" have been
added after the words "factory" in sub-section (1). These
amendments are however not relevant for the purpose of this
appeal.
Section 9 of this Act repealed s. 20 of the Sugar Cane
(Regulation of Supply and Purchase) Act, 1953. Sub-sections
2 and 3 of s. 9 are important. They are in these words:-
"2. Without prejudice to the general
application of section 24 of the U.P. General
Clauses Act, 1904, every notification imposing
cess issued and every assessment made
(including the amount of cess collected) under
or in pursuance of any such notification,
shall be deemed a notification issued, assess-
ment made and cess collected under this Act as
if sections 2, 3 and 5 to 8 had been in force
at all material dates.
3. Subject as provided in clause (1) of
Article 20 of the Constitution every
notification issued cess imposed and act or
thing done or omitted between the 26th
January, 1950, and the Appointed date in
exercise or the purported exercise of a power
under section 29 of the U. P. Sugar Factories
Control Act, 1938, or of s. 20 of the U. P.
Sugarcane (Regulation of Supply and Purchase)
Act, 1953, which would have been validly and
properly issued, imposed, done or omitted if
the said sections had been as section 3 of
this Act, shall in law be deemed to be and to
have been validly and properly imposed and
done, any judgment, decree or order, of any
court notwithstanding."
The position after the enactment of the U. P.
247
Sugarcane Cess Act, 1956, was that the imposition and
assessment of cess that had already been made under the 1953
Act would operate as if made under the 1956 Act. In view of
this the first appellant, the Diamond Sugar Mills Ltd.,
prayed to the High Court for permission to raise the
question of constitutionality and validity of the 1956 Act.
It also prayed for the issue of a writ in the nature of
mandamus directing the respondents not to levy cess upon the
petitioners-appellants under this new Act, the U. P.
Sugarcane Cess Act, 1956.
This application was allowed and the High Court considered
the question whether s. 3 of the U. P. Sugarcane Cess Act,
1956, ’empowering the State Government to impose a cess not
exceeding four annas per maund on the entry of the cane into
the premises of a factory for the consumption, use or sale
therein was a valid law.
The principal ground urged in support of the appellants’
case was that the law as enacted in s. 3 was invalid and
that it was beyond the legislative competence of the State
Legislature. Several other grounds including one that the
provisions of the section went beyond the permissible limits
of delegated legislation were also raised. All the grounds
were negatived by the High Court which accordingly rejected
the appellants’ petition. The High Court however gave a
certificate under Article 132(1) and also under Art.
133(1)(c) of the Constitution and on the basis of that
certificate the present appeal has been filed.
Of the several grounds urged before the High Court only two
are urged before us in appeal. One is that the law was
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invalid, being beyond the legislative competence of the
State legislature; the other is that in any case the
provision giving the Governor power to levy any cess not
exceeding 4 annas without providing for any guidance as to
the fixation of the particular rate, amounted to excessive
delegation, and was accordingly invalid. The answer to the
question whether the impugned law was within or beyond the
legislative competence of the State legislature depends on
whether the law falls under Entry 52 of the State List-
248
List II of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. It is
quite clear that there is no other entry in either the State
List or the Concurrent List under which the legislation
could have been made. Entry 52 is in these words:-"Tax on
the entry of goods into a local area for consumption, use or
sale therein". Section 3 of the impugned Act which has
already been set out provides for imposition of a cess on
the entry of sugarcane into the premises of a factory for
use, consumption or sale therein. Is the "premises of a
factory" a local area within the meaning of the words used
in Entry 52? If it is the legislation was clearly within
the competence of the State legislature; if it is not, the
law was beyond the State legislature’s competence and must
be struck down as invalid.
In considering the meaning of the words "local area" in
entry 52 we have, on the one hand to bear in mind the
salutary rule that words conferring the right of legislation
should be interpreted liberally and the powers conferred
should be given the widest amplitude; on the other hand we
have to guard ourselves against extending the meaning of the
words beyond their reasonable connotation, in. an anxiety to
preserve the power of the legislature. In Re the Central
Provinces & Berar Act No. XI V of 1938 (1) Sir Maurice
Gwyer, C. J., observed:-
"I conceive that a broad and liberal spirit
should inspire those whose duty it is to
interpret it; but I do not imply by this that
they are free to stretch or pervert the
language of the enactment in the interests of
any legal or constitutional theory, or even
for the purpose of correcting any supposed
errors".
Again, in Navinchandra Mafatlal v. The
Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City (2)
Das, J. (as he then was) delivering the
judgment of this Court observed:-
"........... The cardinal rule of
interpretation however, is that words should
be read in their ordinary, natural and
grammatical meaning subject to this rider that
in construing words in a constitutional
enactment conferring legislative power the
most
(1) [1939] F.C.R. 18, 37.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 829.
249
liberal construction should be put
upon the words so that the same may have
effect in their widest amplitude."
Our task being to ascertain the limits of the powers granted
by the Constitution, we cannot extend these limits by way of
interpretation. But if there is any difficulty in
ascertaining the limits, the difficulty must be resolved so
far as possible in favour of the legislative body. The
presumption in favour of constitutionality which was
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stressed by the learned counsel for the respondents does not
take us beyond this.
On behalf of the appellants it has been urged that the word
"local area" in its ordinary grammatical meaning is never
used in respect of a single house or a single factory or a
single plot of land. It is urged that in ordinary use the
words "local area" always mean an area covering a specified
region of the country as distinguished from the general
area. While it may not be possible to say that the words
"local area" have acquired a definite and precise meaning
and the phrase may have different connotations in different
contexts, it seems correct to say that it is seldom, if
ever, used to denote a single house or a single factory.
The phrase appears in several statutes, some passed by the
Central Legislature and some by the Provincial or State
Legislatures; but in many of these the words have been
defined. These definitions being for the peculiar purpose
of the particular statute cannot be applied to the
interpretation of the words "local area" as used in the
Constitution. Nor can we derive any assistance from the
judicial interpretation of the words "local area" as used in
the Code of Criminal Procedure or other Acts like Bengal
Tenancy Act as these interpretations were made with
reference to the scope of the legislation in which the
phrase occurs. Researches into dictionaries and law
lexicons are also of ’no avail as none of these give the
meaning of the phrase "local area". What they say as
regards the meaning of the word "local" offers no guidance
except that it is clear that the word "local" has different
meanings in different contexts.
32
250
The etymological meaning of the word "local" is "relating
to" or "pertaining to" a place. It may be first observed
that whether or not the whole of the State can be a "local
area", for the purpose of Entry 52, it is clear that to be a
"local area" for this purpose must be an area within the
State. On behalf of the respondents it is argued that
"local area" in Entry 52 should therefore be taken to mean
"any part of the State in any place therein". So, the
argument runs, a single factory being a part of the State in
a place in the State is a "local area". In other words,
"local area" mean "any specified area inside the State".
The obvious fallacy of this argument is that it draws no
distinction between the word "area" standing by itself and
the phrase "local area". If the Entry had been " entry of
goods into any area of the State.............. some area
would be specified for the purpose of the law levying the
cess on entry. If the Constitutions were empowering the
State Legislatures to levy a cess on entry of goods into any
specified area inside the state the proper words to use
would have been "entry of goods into any area...............
" it would be meaningless and indeed incorrect to use the
words they did use "entry of goods into a local area". The
use of the words "local area" instead of the word "area"
cannot but be due to the intention of the Constitution-
makers to make sure that the power to make laws relating to
levy on entry of goods would not extend to cases of entry of
goods into any and every part of the state from outside that
part but only to entry from outside into such portions of
the state as satisfied the description of "local area".
Something definite was sought to be expressed by the use of
the word "local" before the word "area": The question is:
what exactly was sought to be expressed?
In finding an answer to the question it is legitimate to
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turn to the previous history of constitutional legislation
in the country on this subject of giving power to
legislature to levy tax on the entry of goods. In the State
of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley & Co., Ltd.(1)
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 379.
251
this Court referred with approval to the statement of law in
Halsbury’s Laws of England, Vol. II, para. 157, p. 93, that
the existing state of English law in 1867 is relevant for
consideration in determining the meaning of the terms used
in the British North America Act in conferring power and the
extent of that power. This has necessarily to be so as in
the words of Mr. Justice Brewer in South Carolina v. United
States (1) "to determine the extent of the grants of power,
we must, therefore place ourselves in the position of the
men who framed and adopted the Constitution, and inquire
what they must have understood to be the meaning and scope
of those grants."
Turning now to the previous legislative history we find that
in the Government of India Act, 1935, Entry 49 of the
Legislative List (List II of the 7th Schedule) was in the
same words as Entry 52 of the Constitution except that
instead of the words "taxes" as in Entry 52 of List II of
the Constitution, Entry 49 List II of the Government of
India Act, used the word "cess". In Government of India
Act, 1915, the powers of the provincial legislatures were
defined in s. 80A. ’Under clause (a) of the third sub-
section of this section the local legislature of any
province has with the previous sanction of the Governor-
General power to make or take into consideration any law
imposing or authorising the imposition of any new tax unless
the tax was a tax scheduled as exempted from this provision
by rules made under the Act.
The third of the Rules that were made in this matter under
Notification No. 311/8 dated December 18, 1920, provided
that the legislative council of a province may without the
previous sanction of the Governor-General make and take into
consideration any law imposing or authorising a local
authority to impose for the purpose of such local authority
any tax included in Schedule II of the Rules. Schedule II
contained 11 items of which items 7 and 8 were in these
words:-
7. An octroi
8. A terminal tax on goods imported into a local
(1) [1905] 199 U.S. 437.
252
area in which an octroi was levied on or before 6th July,
1917.
Item 8 was slightly modified in the year 1924 by another
notification as a result of which it stood thus: 8. A
terminal tax on goods imported into or exported from a local
area save where such tax is first imposed in a local area in
which an octroi was levied on or before July 6, 1917.
Octroi is an old and well known term describing a tax on the
entry of goods into a town or a city or a similar area for
consumption, sale or use therein. According to the
Encyclopedia Britannica octroi is an indirect or consumption
tax levied by a local political unit, normally the commune
or municipal authority, on certain categories of goods on
their entry into its area. The Encyclopedia Britannica
describes the octroi tax system in France (abolished in
1949) and states that commodities were prescribed by law and
were divided into six classes and for all the separate
commodities within these six groups maximum rates of tariff
were promulgated by presidential decree, specific rates
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being fixed for the three separate sorts of octroi area,
established on the basis of population, namely, communes
having (1) less than 10,000 inhabitants, (2) from 10,000 to
50,000 and (3) more than 50,000. While we are not concerned
here with other features of the octroi tax system, it is
important to note that the tax was with regard to the entry
of goods into the areas of the communes which were local
political units. According to the Shorter Oxford English
Dictionary "commune" in France is a small territorial
division governed by a maire and municipal council and is
used to denote any similar division elsewhere.
The characteristic feature of an octroi tax then was that it
was on the entry of goods into an area administered by a
local body. Bearing in mind this characteristic of octroi
duty we find on an examination of items 7 and 8 of the
Schedule Rules mentioned above that under the Government of
India Act, 1919, the local legislature of a Province could
without the previous sanction of the Governor-General impose
a
253
tax-octroi--for entry of goods into an area administered by
a local body, that is, a local government authority and the
area in respect of which such tax could be imposed was
mentioned in item 8 as local area.
It is in the background of this history that we have to
examine the use of the word "local area" in item 49 of List
II of the Government of India Act, 1935. Here the word
"octroi" has given place to the longer phrase "cesses on the
entry of goods into a local area for consumption, use or
sale therein."
It was with the knowledge of the previous history of the
legislation that the Constitution-makers set about their
task in preparing the lists in the seventh schedule. There
can bring title doubt therefore that in using the words "tax
on the entry of goods into a local area for consumption, use
or sale therein", they wanted to express by the words "local
area" primarily area in respect of which an octroi was
leviable under item 7 of the schedule tax rules, 1920-that
is, the area administered by a local authority such as a
municipality, a district Board, a local Board or a Union
Board, a Panchayat or some body constituted under the law
for the governance of the local affairs of any part of the
State. Whether the entire area of the State, as an area
administered by the State Government, was also intended to
be included in the phrase "local area", we need not consider
in the present case.
The only other part of the Constitution where the word
"local area" appears is in Art. 277. That Article is in
these words:-
"Any taxes, duties, cesses or fees which,
immediately before the commencement of this
Constitution, were being lawfully levied by
the Government of any State or by any
municipality or other local authority or body
for the purposes of the State, municipality,
district, or other local area may,
notwithstanding that these taxes, duties,
cesses or fees are mentioned in the Union
List, continue to be levied and to be applied
to the same purposes until provision to the
contrary is made by Parliament by law."
254
There can be little doubt that "local area" in this Article
has been used to indicate an area in respect of which there
is an authority administering it.
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While the scope of Article 277 is different from the scope
of entry 52 so that no direct assistance can be obtained in
the interpretation of the words "local area" in entry 52
from this meaning of the words in Art. 277 it is
satisfactory to find that the meaning of "local area" in
entry 52 which appears reasonable on a consideration of the
legislative history of the matter is also appropriate to
this phrase in its only other use in the Constitution.
Reliance was sought to be placed by the respondents on a
decision of the Allahabad High Court in Emperor v. Munnalal
(1) where the word "local area" as used in s. 29 of the U.
P. Sugar Factories Control Act, 1938, fell to be considered.
That section, as we have already mentioned, authorised the
Governor of U. P. to impose by a notification, after
consulting the Sugar Control Board under the Act, a cess on
the entry of sugarcane into a local area specified in such
notification for consumption, use or sale therein. The
notifications which were issued under this provision set out
a number of factories for the levy of a cess at the rate of
three annas per maund on entry of all sugarcane into the
local area comprised in the factories mentioned in the
schedule for consumption, use or sale therein. Section 29
was clearly within the words of entry 49 of List 11. The
question that arose before the Court was whether the
specification of certain factories as local areas was valid
law. The learned Judge appears to have proceeded on the
basis that the Governor had notified the area comprised in
74 factories as one "local area" and held that once this was
’done the entire area covered by all these factories should
be considered as one statutory local area. It appears to us
that the learned Judge was not right in thinking that the
area comprised in 74 factories was notified as one local
area. What appears to have been done was that the area of
each factory was being notified as a local area for the
purpose of the Act. Proceeding on
(1) I.L.R. 1942 All. 302.
255
the basis that the area comprised in the 74 factories was
notified as one local area the learned Judge addressed
himself to the question whether this entire area was a local
area within the meaning of the Act. He appears to have
accepted the contention that the word local area was used in
the sense of an administrative unit, but, says he, the
administration need not be political, it may be industrial
and educational or it may take any other form of
governmental activity. "I cannot see," the learned Judge
observed, "why it is not open to the provincial government
or the provincial legislature to make an industrial survey
of the province and to divide up the entire province into
industrial areas or factory areas or mill areas or in any
other kind of areas, and each one of these areas may be
notified and be treated as a local area. And once such
areas come into existence and remain in operation they can
be regarded as local areas within the meaning of entry No.
49 of List II in which a cess may be levied".
Even if this view were correct it would be of no assistance
to the respondents. It is no authority for the proposition
that the area of one single factory is a local area within
the meaning of entry 49. We think however that the view
taken by the learned Judge is not correct.
It is true that when words and phrases previously
interpreted by the courts are used by the Legislature in a
later enactment replacing the previous statute, there is a
presumption that the Legislature intended to convey by their
use the same meaning which the courts had already given to
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them. This presumption can however only be used as an aid
to the interpretation of the later Statute and should not be
considered to be conclusive. As Mr. Justice Frankfurter
observed in Federal Commissioner v. Columbia B. System (1)
when considering this doctrine, the persuasion that lies
behind the doctrine is merely one factor in the total effort
to give fair meaning to language. The presumption will be
strong where the words of the previous statute have received
a settled meaning by a
(1) 311 U.S. 131.
256
series of decisions in the different courts of the country;
and particularly strong when such interpretation has been
made or affirmed by the highest court in the land. We think
it reasonable to say however that the presumption will
naturally be much weaker when the interpretation was given
in one solitary case and was not tested in appeal. After
giving careful consideration’ to the view taken by the
learned Judge of the Allahabad High Court in Emperor v.
Munnalal (supra) about the meaning of the words "local area"
and proper weight to the rule of interpretation mentioned
above, we are of opinion that the Constitution-makers did
not use the words "local area" in the meaning which the
learned Judge attached to it. We are of opinion that the
proper meaning to be attached to the words "local area" in
Entry 52 of the Constitution, (when the area is a part of
the State imposing the law) is an area administered by a
local body like a municipality, a district board, a local
board, a union board, a Panchayat or the like. The premises
of a factory is therefore not a "local area".
It must therefore be held that s. 3 of the U. P. Sugarcane
Cess Act, 1956, empowering the Governor to impose a cess on
the entry of sugarcane into the premises of a factory did
not fall within Entry 52 of the State List. As there is no
other Entry in either State List or Concurrent List in which
the impugned law could fall there is no escape from the
conclusion that this law was beyond the legislative
competence of the State Legislature. The law as enacted in
s. 3 of the U. P. Sugarcane Cess Act, 1956, must therefore
be struck down as invalid.
It may be mentioned that this is not a case where the law is
in two parts and one part can be severed from the other and
saved as valid while striking down the other portion which
is invalid. Indeed, that was not even suggested by the
learned counsel for the respondents. It is unnecessary for
us to consider whether if s. 3 had instead of authorising
levy of cess for entry of sugarcane into the premises of a
factory for use, consumption or sale therein had authorised
the imposition of a cess on entry of cane into a local area
for
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consumption, sale or use in a factory that would have been
within Entry 52. It is sufficient to say that we cannot re-
write the law for the purpose of saving a portion of it.
Nor is it for the Court to offer any suggestion as to how
the law should be drafted in order to keep it within the
limits of legislative competence. As the law enacted by the
Legislature stands there is no escape from the conclusion
that this entire law must be struck down as invalid.
In view of this conclusion on the first ground raised on
behalf of the appellant it is unnecessary to consider the
other ground raised in the appeal that section 3 has gone
beyond the permissible limits of delegated legislation.
As we have held that the impugned legislation was beyond the
legislative competence of the State Legislature the
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appellants are entitled to the relief asked for. We
accordingly allow the appeal, set aside the order passed by
the High Court and order the issue of a writ directing that
the respondents do forbear from levying and collecting cess
from the appellants on account of arrears of cess for the
crushing season 1954-55 and in respect of the crushing
season 1955-56 and successive crushing seasons under the U.
P. Sugarcane Cess Act, 1956.
The appellants will get their costs here and below.
AYYANGAR, J.-I have had the privilege of perusing the
judgment just now pronounced, but with the utmost respect
regret my inability to agree with the order proposed.
The learned Judges of the High Court held that the impugned
enactment was within the scope of Entry 52 of the State
Legislative List in Schedule 7 to the Constitution, by
placing reliance on the following passage in the Judgment of
Das, J. in Emperor v. Munna Lal (1) where the learned Judge
said:
"Indeed I cannot see why it is not open to
Provincial Government or Provincial
Legislature to make an industrial survey of
the Province and to divide up the entire
province into industrial areas
(1) I.L.R. [1942] All. 302, 328.
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258
or factory areas or mill areas or in any other
kind of areas, and each one of these areas may
be notified and be treated as a local area.
And once such areas come into existence and
remain in operation they can be regarded as
local areas within the meaning of Entry No. 45
of List II in which a cess may be levied."
In other words, the view which they favoured was to read
the expression "local area". practically to mean any "area"
entry into which was by the relevant fiscal statute, made
the subject of taxation. In my opinion that is not a
correct interpretation of the entry and agree with my
learned brethren that having regard to the historical
material, which has been exhaustively set out and discussed
in their judgment, the word "local area" can in the entry
designate only a predetermined local unit--a unit demarcated
by statutes pertaining to local self government and placed
under the control and administration of a local authority
such as a municipality, a cantonment, a district or a local
board, an union or a panchayat etc. and not any region,
place or building within the State which might be defined,
described or demarcated by the State’s taxing enactment as
an area entry into which is made taxable.
But there my agreement stops and we diverge. In my opinion,
this construction of the expression "local area" in entry 52
does not automatically result in the invalidity of the
impugned enactment and of the levy under it, but the extent
to which, if any the charging section exceeds the power
conferred by the entry would depend on matters which have
not been the subject of investigation, and it is this point
that I shall elaborate in the rest of this judgment.
It is unnecessary for the purposes of this case and possibly
even irrelevant, to determine the precise scope, content and
incidents of an "octroi" duty except that in the context in
which it appeared in the Scheduled Taxes Rules framed tinder
the Government of India Act, 1919, the expression signified
a tax levied on entry into an area of an unit of local
administration. It is unprofitable to canvass the question
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whether a local authority empowered at that date to levy an
’octroi’ might or might not lawfully confine the levy to
entry for consumption alone, to use alone or for sale alone.
But when that entry was refashioned and enacted as item 49
of the Provincial Legislative List under the Government of
India Act, 1935 (in terms practically identical with Entry
52 in the State Legislative List under the Constitution),
the matter was no longer left in doubt. The new item ran:
"Cesses on the entry of goods into a local area for
consumption, use or sale therein".
In connection with the use of the words "for consumption,
use or sale therein" in the item three matters deserve
notice: (1) Where the entry into the "local area" was not
for one of the purposes set out in it, viz., for
consumption, use or sale therein, but the entry was, for
instance in the course of transit or for warehousing during
transit, the power was not available; in other words, a mere
entry could not per se be made a taxable event. (2) It was
sufficient if the entry was for any one of the three
purposes; the use of the disjunctive ’or’ making this clear.
(3) The passage of goods from one portion of a local area to
another portion in the same local area, would not enable a
tax to be levied, but the entry has to be "into the local
area", i.e., from outside the local area.
It is the second and the third of the above features that
call for a more detailed examination in the context of the
points requiring decision in the present case.
With this background I shall analyse the terms of s. 3(1)
of the Act (United Provinces Act XXII of 1956) to ascertain
where precisely the provision departs from the scope or
content of entry 52. I will read that section which runs:
"3. (1). The State Government may by
notification in the official gazette impose a
cess not exceeding four annas per maund on the
entry of the cane into the premises of a
factory for use, consumption or sale therein:
Provided that the State Government may
likewise remit in whole or in part such cess
in respect
260
of cane used or to be used in factory for any
limited purpose specified in the notification.
Explanation:-If the State Government, in the
case of any factory situate outside Uttar
Pradesh, so declare, any place in Uttar
Pradesh set apart for the purchase of cane
intended or required for use, consumption or
sale in such factory shall be deemed to be the
premises of the factory."
Leaving the Explanation for-the present, there are two
matters which require advertence: (1) The first was the
point emphasised by Mr. Sanyal for the appellant, that entry
into the premises of a factory "for the purpose of
consumption, use or sale therein" is fastened on as the
taxable event treating the factory premises as if that were
itself a "local area". (2) Apart from entry into factory
premises for use, consumption or sale therein, entry of the
cane into other places within the local area, i.e., into
"unit for local administration" is not made the subject of
tax levy.
The second of the above matters cannot invalidate the
legislation, because a power to tax is merely enabling, and
apart from any question of discrimination under Art.
14--which does not arise for consideration before us-the
State is not bound to tax every entry of goods into "a local
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area". Again, the tax could undoubtedly be confined to
entry of goods into a "local area" for consumption or use in
particular modes; in other words, there could be no legal
objection to the tax levy on the ground that it does not
extend to entry of goods into "a local area" for every type
of consumption or use.
In my judgment the real vice of the charging s. 3(1) lies
not in that it Confines the levy to cases where the entry is
for purposes of consumption etc. in a factory but ’in
equating the premises of a factory with "a local area" entry
of goods into which, occasions the tax. Another way of
expressing this same idea would be to say that whereas under
Entry 52 the movement of goods from within the same local.
area in which the factory is situated into the premises of
the factory, could not be the subject of tax liability,
because there
261
would in such cases be no entry of the goods "into a local
area" under s. 3(1) of the Act, not merely is the movement
of goods into the factory from outside the ’local area’ in
which the factory is situate made the subject of tax, but
the words used are capable of imposing the tax even in those
cases where the entry into the factory is from within the
same local area.
What I have in mind may be thus illustrated: If factory A
situated in Panchayat area B gets its supply of cane from
outside the Panchayat area, the levy of the tax on the entry
of the cane into the Panchayat area would clearly be covered
by entry 52. The State is not bound to tax every entry of
the cane into the area but might confine the levy to the
entry of the cane for the purpose of consumption in a
factory. The tax might be levied and collected at the
border of the Panchayat area but there is no legal
obligation to do so, and the place at which the entry of the
goods is checked and the duty realised is a matter of
administrative machinery which does not touch on the
validity of the tax imposition. It would thus not detract
from the validity of the tax if by reason of convenience for
effecting collection, the tax was levied at the stage of
entry into the premises of a factory. So long, therefore,
as the cane which enters a factory for the purpose of
consumption therein comes from outside that local unit of
administration in which the factory is situated, in my
opinion it would be covered by the words of entry 52 and
well within the legislative competence of the State
Government. The language of s. 3, as it stands appears,
however, also to extend to cases where the supply of cane to
a factory is from within the same local unit of
administration; in other words, where there is no entry of
the cane into the local area as explained earlier. If this
were the true position, the enactment cannot be invalidated
as a whole. It would be valid to the extent to which the
tax is levied on cane entering a factory for the purpose of
consumption etc. therein from outside the local area, within
which the factory premises are situated, and only invalid
where it out steps this limitation.
262
The next question is whether this is a case where the valid
and invalid portions are so inextricably interwoven as to
leave the Court no option but to strike down the entire
enactment as invalid as beyond the legislative competence of
the State, or whether the charging provision could be so
read down as to leave the valid portion to operate. In my
opinion, what is involved in the case before us is not any
problem of severance, but only of reading down. Before
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taking up this question for discussion two objections to the
latter course have to be considered. The first is that this
aspect of the matter was not argued before us by learned
Counsel for the State as a ground for sustaining the
validity of the legislation. In my judgment this is not an
objection that should stand in the way of the Court giving
effect to a view of the law if that should appear to be the
correct one. In making this observation one has necessarily
to take into account the fact that legislation in nearly
this form, has been in force in the State for over twenty
years, and though its vires was once questioned in 1942,
that challenge was repelled and the tax levy was held valid
and was being collected during all this period. The sugar-
cane cess has been a prime source of State Revenue for this
length of time and this Court should not pronounce such a
legislation invalid unless it could not be sustained on any
reasonable ground and to any extent.
The second ground of objection which has appealed to my
learned brethren but with which, I regret, I cannot concur
is that it would require a rewriting of the- Act to sustain
it.
Now if the first paragraph of sub-s. (1) of s. 3 bad
read:
"The State Government may by notification in
the official gazette impose a cess not
exceeding four annas per maund on the entry of
the cane into the premises of a factory (from
outside the local area in which the factory
premises were situate) for use, consumption or
sale therein:" (The words in brackets added by
me)
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the levy would be entirely within entry 52 even according to
my learned brethren. The question is whether the
implication of these words would be a rewriting of the
provision or whether it would be merely reading the existing
provision so as to confine it to the powers conferred upon
the State Legislature by the relevant legislative entry. In
view of the strong opinion entertained by my learned
brethren, I have given the matter the utmost consideration,
but I feel that the words which I have suggested are a
permissible mode of construction of a statute by which wide
words of an enactment which would cover an event,
contingency or matter within legislative power as well as
matters not within it, are read as confined to those which
the law making only had authority to enact. In my judgment
the opinion of the Federal Court in In re Hindu Women’s
Rights to Property Act, 1937 (1), affords a useful analogy
to the present case. The enactment there impugned provided
for the devolution or succession to "property" in general
terms which would have included both agricultural as well as
nonagricultural property, whereas the Central Legislature
which enacted the law had no power to deal with succession
to agricultural property. The contention urged before the
Court was that by the use of the expression "property", the
legislature had evinced an intention to deal with property
of every type and that it would be rewriting the enactment
and not carrying out the legislative intent if the
reference to "property" in the statute were read as
"property other than agricultural property". Dealing with
this contention, Sir Maurice Gwyer, delivering the opinion
of the Court said:
"No doubt if the Act does affect agricultural
land in the Governors ’Provinces, it was
beyond the competence of the Legislature to
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enact it: and whether or not it does so must
depend upon the meaning which is to be given
to the word "property" in the Act. If that
word necessarily and inevitably comprises all
forms of property, including agricultural
land, then clearly the Act went beyond the
powers
(1) [1941] F.C.R. 12.
264
of the Legislature; but when a Legislature
with limited and restricted powers makes use
of a word of such wide and general import, the
presumption must surely be that it is using it
with reference ’to that kind of property with
respect to which it is competent to legislate
and to no other. The question is thus one of
construction, and unless the Act is to be
regarded as wholly meaningless and ineffec-
tive, the Court is bound to construe the word
"property" as referring only to those forms of
property with respect to which the Legislature
which enacted the Act was competent to
legislate; that is to say, property other than
agricultural land.............. The Court does
not seek to divide the Act into two parts,
viz., the part which the Legislature was
competent, and the part it was incompetent, to
enact. It holds that, on the true
construction of the Act and especially of the
word "property" as used in it, no part of the
Act was beyond the Legislature’s powers."
The Court accordingly held that the Hindu Women’s Rights to
Property Act, 1937, applied to non-agricultural property and
so was valid. In this connection it might be interesting to
refer to the decision in Blackwood v. Queen (1) which Sir
Maurice Gwyer, C.J., referred to with approval. That case
related to the validity of a duty imposed by the Legislature
of Victoria (Australia) on the personal estates of deceased
person. The learned Chief Justice observed "The Judicial
Committee construed the expression "personal estate"
occurring in the statute to refer only to: "such personal
estate as the colonial grant of probate conferred
jurisdiction on the personal representatives to administer,
whatever the domicile of the testator might be, that is to
say, personal estate situate within the Colony, in respect
of which alone the Supreme Court of Victoria had power to
grant probate: Their Lordships thought that "in imposing a
duty of this nature the Victorian Legislature also was
contemplating the property which was under its own hand, and
did not intend to levy a tax in respect of property
(1) [1882] 8 A.C. 82.
265
beyond its jurisdiction". And they held that "the general
expressions which import the contrary ought to receive the
qualification for which the appellant contends, and that the
statement of personal property to be made by the executor
under s. 7(2) of the Act should be confined to that property
which the probate enables him to administer" (1).
To confine the tax to the limitations subject to which it
could, under the Constitution, be levied is, in my opinion,
not an improper method of construing the statute. The
manner in which the word "property" was read down by the
Federal Court in In re Hindu Women’s Rights to Property Act,
1937 (1) and the word "personal property" construed by the
Privy Council in Blackwood v. Queen (2) make in my opinion
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less change in the text of the impugned provision than the
addition of the words I have set out above, which after all
are words implicit in the power conferred on the State
Legislature. I would, therefore, hold that the charging
section would be invalid and beyond the legislative
competence of the State of Uttar Pradesh only in so far as
it seeks to levy a tax on cane entering a factory from
within the same local area in which the factory is situate
and that in all other cases the tax is properly levied; and
that the impugned section could and ought to be so read
down.
The matter not having been considered from this aspect at
earlier stages, we have necessarily no material before us
for adjudicating upon whether tax levied or demanded from
the appellant is due and if so to what extent. We have
nothing before us to indicate as to how far the cane, the
entry of which into the factory of the appellant is the
subject of the impugned levy, has moved into the factory
from outside the local unit in which the factory is situated
or originated from within the same local area. I consider
that without these matters being investigated it would not
be possible to adjudicate upon the validity of the tax
demanded from the appellants.
There is one matter to which it is necessary to
(1) Per Sir Maurice Gwyer, C. J. [1941] F.C.R. 12, 23,
(2) [1882] 8 A.C. 82.
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266
advert which I have reserved for later consideration, viz.,
the validity of the Explanation to s. 3(1)of the Act. It
would be apparent that the Explanation was necessitated by
the terms of sub-s. (1) of s. 3 which equated "factory
premises" with "local areas", or rather rendering factory
premises the sole local areas entry into which occasioned
the tax. So far as the purchasing centres which are dealt
with in the Explanation are concerned, the cane that moves
into them from outside the "local area" where these centres
are would clearly be covered by Entry 52, since the purpose
of the movement into the centre is on the terms of the
provision for effecting a sale therein. In other words, the
same tests which I have discussed earlier in relation to
entry into factory premises, would apply mutates mutandis to
these purchasing centres and in so far as a tax is levied on
the movement of the cane from outside the local area the
levy would be legal and in order. I would read down the
Explanation in the same manner, as I have read down the main
charging provision so as to confine the levy to entry from
outside ’that "local area"-local area being understood in
the sense already explained.
I would accordingly allow the appeal, and remand it to the
High Court for investigating the material facts which I have
mentioned earlier with a direction to pass judgment in
accordance with the law as above explained.
BY COURT. In accordance with the opinion of the majority
the appeal is allowed, the order passed by the High Court is
set aside and a writ be issued directing that the
respondents do forbear from levying and collecting cess from
the appellants on account of arrears of cess for the
crushing season 1954-55 and successive crushing seasons
under the Uttar Pradesh Sugarcane Cess Act, 1956.
The appellants will get their costs here and below.
Appeal allowed.
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