Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF ASSAM & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LABANYA PROBHA DEBI
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/04/1967
BENCH:
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ)
BENCH:
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ)
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
SHELAT, J.M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1575 1967 SCR (3) 611
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1975 SC 17 (15)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 301, Entry 57 of List II
and Entry 35 of List III-Taxation of motor vehicles and
"Principles of taxation" of motor vehicles, difference-Art.
301, scope of.
HEADNOTE:
Under the Assam Motor Vehicles Taxation Act, 1936, no motor
vehicle could be used in the Assam Province unless the owner
thereof had- paid in respect of it a tax at the appropriate
rate specified in the Schedule to the Act. The Schedule was
amended from time to time by the substitution of new
Schedules and as a result of such amendments in 1963 and
1966, the tax on stage carriage motor vehicles was gradually
raised.
In a writ petition, filed by the respondent, challenging the
validity of the Amending Acts of 1963 and 1966, the High
Court held that the Amending, Acts were made in respect of
the matter contained in Entry 35 of the Concurrent List,
namely principles of taxation of motor vehicles, and, as the
provisions of the Amending Acts were inconsistent with those
of the existing law, namely, the 1936 Act, the Amending Acts
were ,void, because, the assent of the President as required
by Art. 254 was not received.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD : (i) Taxes on vehicles connote the liability to pay
taxes at &he rates at which the taxes are to be levied,
while, the expression "principles of taxation" denotes rules
of guidance in the matter of taxation. The Amending Acts do
not come into conflict with the existing law in respect of
any principles of taxation within the meaning of Entry 35 of
the Concurrent List, but only deal with a subject matter-,
namely, taxes on vehicles within the meaning of Entry 57 of
the State List, which is exclusively within the legislative
competence of the State Legislature; and as such. there is
no scope for invoking Art. 254. [615A-C]
(ii) It is only a comparatively small proportion of the
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general expenditure incurred on new roads and the
maintenance of the ,)Id roads that was realised through the
impugned taxation. Therefore, the Amending Acts are only
regulatory measures imposing compensatory taxes for faci-
litating trade, commerce and intercourse. The Acts are,
hence, not hit by Art. 301 of the Constitution. [616C]
The Automobile Transport (Raiasthan) Ltd. v. The State of
Rajasthan, [1963] 1 S.C.R. 491, followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 38 of 1967.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated December 1, 1966,
of the Assam and Nagaland High Court in Civil Rule No. 145
of 1964.
S. V. Gupte, Solicitor-General and Naunit Lal, for the
appellants.
612
Ram Labhaya Obhrai, I. M. Obhrai, S.K. Mehta and K. L.
Mehta, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subbarao C.J. This appeal by certificate is directed against
the order of the High Court of Assam declaring that the
Assam Motor Vehicles Taxation (Amendment) Acts of 1963 and
1966 were repugnant to the Assam Motor Vehicles Taxation
Act, 1936 (Assam Act 9 of 1936), hereinafter called the
Principal Act, and, therefore, void as they were made in
contravention of the provisions of Art. 254(2) of the
Constitution.
The facts are in a small compass and they are as follows The
Principal Act came into force on March 1, 1937. The assent
of the Governor-General in Council was given under section
35 of the Government of India Act, 1935. This Act imposes
tax on motor vehicles in the Province of Assam. In 1955 the
Principal Act was amended by Assam Act IV of 1956 and it had
received the assent of the President. Subsequently the
Principal Act was amended by Act 15 of 1963, but the Bill
was introduced in the Assam State Assembly with the previous
sanction of the President and it came into force on April 1,
1963. Subsequent to the filing of the petition, out of
which the present appeal has arisen, the Principal Act was
again amended in the year 1966 and it came into force on
April 1, 1966. The tax on the stage carriage motor vehicles
was gradually raised under each amendment and under the last
of the amendments a sum of Rs. 56/- was imposed per seat.
Under the last amendment Act the petitioner respondent had
to pay a sum of Rs. 1680/- as tax for the stage carriage she
was plying.
The respondent filed a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution in the High Court for declaring the amending
Acts void and for other reliefs.
The petition was heard by a Division Bench of the High Court
and the learned Judges delivered two separate but concurrent
judgments. They held that the Amending Acts of 1963 and
1966 were void and gave the petitioner-respondent the
reliefs :asked for. Hence the present appeal.
The main question in the appeal is whether the said Amending
Acts increasing the rate of tax are void for constitution
incompetence. The High Court in effect held that the
provisions of the said Amending Acts were inconsistent with
those of the existing law, namely, the Principal Act and,
therefore, as they had not received the assent of the
President, were void under Art. 254 of the Constitution.
This conclusion was arrived at on the ground that the
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Amending Acts were made in respect of the matter contained
in entry 35 of the Concurrent List.
613
To appreciate the contentions it will be convenient to read
at the outset the relevant Articles of the Constitution.
Entry 57 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitu-
tion :
Taxes on vehicles, whether mechanically
propelled or not, suitable for use on roads,
including tramcars subject to the provisions
of entry 35 of List 111.
Entry 35 of List III
Mechanically propelled vehicles including the
principles on which taxes on such vehicles are
to be levied.
Art. 254 (1) If any provision of law made by
the Legislature of a State is
repugnant......... to any provision of an
existing law with respect to one of the
matters enumerated in the Concurrent List,
then, subject to the provisions of clause
(2)........ the existing law, shall prevail
and the law made by the Legislature of the
State shall, to the extent of the repugnancy,
be void.
(2) Where a law made by the Legislature of a
State with respect to one of the matters
enumerated in the Concurrent List contains any
provision repugnant to the provisions of an
earlier law made by Parliament or an existing
law with respect to that matter, then the law
so made by the Legislature of such State
shall, if it has been reserved for the
consideration of the President and has
received his assent, prevail in that State.
Art. 366(10) Existing law means any law, ordi-
nance or bye-law, rule or regulation passed or
made before the commencement of the
Constitution by any Legislature, authority or
person having power to make such a law,
ordinance or bye-law, rule or regulation.
The application of the said provisions to the subject-matter
of the present appeal leads to the following result. The
Principal Act was an existing law. If the Amending Acts
were made under entry 35 of the Concurrent List and if they
were in conflict with any of the provisions of the existing
law, to the extent of the inconsistency the said amendments
would he void. But, on the other hand, if the Amending Acts
were passed under entry 57 of List 11 of the Seventh
Schedule, they would fall outside the scope of Art. 254 of
the Constitution, as Art. 254 would apply only to a conflict
between the provisions of an "existing law" and those or the
post-constitution law in respect of matters enumerated in
any of the entries of the Concurrent List.
The learned Solicitor General raised before us two points,
namely, (i) Art. 254 of the Constitution posits the
existence of
614
two. parallel laws--One an "existing law" and the other a
post Constitutional law-in respect of any one of the entries
in the Concurrent List and the provisions thereof are in
conflict with each other; but it has no application to a
case where the State Legislature, within the scope of its
legislative competency, amends an existing law so as to
extinguish a part of it. (2) The amending Acts were only
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made under entry 57 of List 11 and, therefore, there is no
scope for invoking the provisions of Art. 254 of the
Constitution.
Learned counsel for the respondent, on the other hand, con-
tended that there was no distinction between an amending Act
and a new Act in the matter of. application of Art. 254 of
the Constitution, as in either case the provisions of the
said Acts would be inconsistent with the existing law. He
further argued that the Amending Acts introduced new
principles of taxation and, therefore, fell squarely within
the scope of entry 35 of the Concurrent List.
As we are holding in favour of the appellant on the second
point, it is not necessary to express our view on the first.
The short question, therefore, is whether any of the
provisions of the Amending Acts is repugnant to any of the
provisions of the existing law with respect to any of the
matters enumerated in the Concurrent List. Under the
existing law, i.e., Act 9 of 1936, no motor vehicle could be
used in the Assam Province unless the owner thereof had paid
in respect of it a tax at the appropriate rate specified in
the Schedule to the Act and, save as therein specified, such
tax should thereafter be payable annually notwithstanding
that the motor vehicle might from time to time cease to be
used (see s. 4). As aforesaid, the Schedule annexed to the
Principal. Act was amended from time to time by different
amending Acts and the rate was increased. Under the 1963
amending Act, apart from other provisions which do not
relate to any principles of taxation, a new Schedule has
been substituted. Neither the amending Act nor the Schedule
laid down any principles of taxation in respect of motor
vehicles. So too, the amending Act ,of 1966 substituted the
Schedule of the Act by another Schedule. A persual of the
aforesaid Schedule only disclose that different rates were
fixed; that is to say, the amended Schedule does not lay
down any principles on which taxes on motor vehicles are to
be levied within the meaning of entry 35 of the Concurrent
List; it is solely concerned with taxes on vehicles within
the meaning entry 57 of List 11. The two entries deal With
two different matters though allied ones-one deals with
taxes on vehicles and the other with the principles on which
such taxes are to be levied. When two entries in the
Constitution, whether in the same List or different Lists,
deal with two subjects, if possible, an attempt
615
shall be made to harmonize them rather than to bring them
into conflict. Taxes on vehicles in their ordinary meaning
connote the liability to pay taxes at the rates at which the
taxes are to be levied. On the other hand, the expression
"principles of taxation" denotes rules of guidance in the
matter of taxation. We, therefore, hold that the Amending
Acts do not come into conflict with the existing law in
respect of any principles of taxation, ’but only deal with a
subject-matter which is exclusively within the legislative
competence, of the State Legislature. In this view, there
is no scope for the application of Art. 254 of the
Constitution.
Even so, learned counsel for the respondent contended that
the amending Acts offend the provisions of Art. 301 of the
Constitution. Article 301 reads
"Subject to the other provisions of this Part,
trade, commerce and intercourse throughout the
territory of India shall be free,."
The scope of this Article has been authoritatively defined
by this Court in The Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd.
v. The State of Rajasthan(1). There the majority held that
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regulatory Measures or measures imposing compensatory taxes
for the use of trading facilities did not hamper trade,
commerce or interCourse but rather facilitate them, and,
therefore, were not hit by the freedom declared by Art. 301.
There, by virtue of section 4 of the Rajasthan Motor
Vehicles Taxation Act, 1951, read with the Schedules, no one
could use or keep a motor vehicle in Rajasthan without
paying an appropriate tax for it and, if he did so, be was
made liable to the penalties imposed under s. 11 of that
Act. This Court by majority held that such taxes were com-
pensatory and regulatory taxes which did not hinder the
freedom of trade. In the present case the respondent in
her petition questioned the validity of the provisions, of
the amending Acts on the following grounds :-(i) The Act
abolished the permit fee previously payable on such motor
vehicles. She alleges that as a result of the
rationalisation of tax and the introduction of a single
point levy, the tax fixed irrespective of road condition.
distance travelled, region catered for imposes crushing
burden oil the petitioner and the other stage carriage
permit-bolders plying their vehicles in the short distance
route and gives discriminatory weightage in favour of the
State Carriage, Inter-State public carriers and other
vehicles plying in longer distance routes. It will be seen
that the averments are general and vague. On the other
hand, the State has filed a detailed affidavit. The
following figures show the expenditure incurred on new roads
and maintenance of old roads and the income from motor
vehicles for
(1) [1963] 1 S.C.R.491.
616
some years. In 1962-63 the expenditure was Rs. 671.60 lakhs
and the income was Rs. 75.58 lakhs. In 1965-66 the expend-
ture was Rs. 1499.77 lakhs and the income was Rs. 137.96
lakhs. From the said figures it is clear that the State is
charging from the users of motor vehicles some thing in the
neighbourhood of II% and IO % respectively for the said two
years of the cost it has to, incur in maintaining and making
roads. From Annexure D to the said affidavit it appears
that in some cases tax under the 1963 Act had been increased
by 50% under the 1966 Act and in some cases the tax under
1963 Act has been increased by 40% under 1966 Act. It is
obvious that comparatively small proportion of the general
expenditure is realised through the impugned taxation. In
the circumstances, we must hold that the said Acts were only
regulatory measures imposing _compensatory taxes for
facilitating trade, commerce and intercourse. The Acts are,
therefore, not hit by Art. 301 of the Constitution.
in the result the order of the High Court is set aside and
the appeal is allowed. The petition filed by the respondent
in the High Court is dismissed with costs here and in the
court below.
V.P.S. Appeal
allowed
617