Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DELHI CLOTH & GENERAL MILLS CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHIEF COMMISSIONER, DELHI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/09/1969
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 344 1970 SCR (2) 348
1970 SCC (2) 172
CITATOR INFO :
R 1971 SC1182 (10)
R 1971 SC1325 (11)
R 1975 SC 846 (16,18,23)
R 1980 SC1008 (17)
ACT:
The Factories Act, 1948 (63 of 1948) Delhi Factories Rules
1950 made under s. 112 of Act--Validity of R. 7 read with
R. 5 and Schedule thereto---Fee for annual renewal of
licence to run factory--Whether fee or tax--Maintenance of
Inspectors whether provides quid pro quo for fee
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company had a number of industrial
establishments in Delhi. These establishments were
factories within the meaning of s. 2Ira) of the Factories
Act, 1948. The factories could be run only after
registration and under a licence granted under the Act and
the Rules on payment of a prescribed fee. The licensee was
renewable every year under R. 7 on payment of the same. fee
as for grant of the licence. The company filed a writ
petition under Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution
challenging the validity of the Rules under which the fee
for renewal of the licence for each of its factories in
Delhi was being levied and collected i.e.R. 7 read with R. 5
and its Schedule. The petition being dismissed by the High
Court, an appeal was filed in this Court with certificate.
The contention on behalf of the appellant was that there was
no quid pro quo for the fee paid for renewal of the licence
and that the maintenance of a team of Inspectors under the
Act did not amount to such quid pro quo. Reliance. was
placed on the Liberty Cinema case.
HELD: In each case when the question arises whether the levy
is the nature of a fee, the entire scheme of the statutory
provisions, the duties and obligations imposed on the
inspecting staff ’and the nature of tire work done by them
wilt have to be examined for the purpose of determining
the rendering of the services which would make the levy
of a fee. In the Liberty Cinema case it was found that
no service of any kind was being and could be rendered and
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for that reason the levy was held to. be a tax and not a
fee. The present case however fell within the other class
of cases in which contributions for the purpose of
maintaining an authority and the staff for supervising and
controlling public institutions were held to be fee and not
tax. [354 B--C]
A large number of provisions of the Act, particularly in
the chapters dealing with safety, involve a good deal of
technical knowledge and in the course of discharge of their
duties and obligations the Inspectors are expected to give
proper advice and guidance so that there may be due
compliance with the provisions of the Act. On certain
occasions the factory owners are bound to receive a good
deal of benefit by being saved from the consequences of the
working of dangerous machines or employment of such
processes as involve danger to human life by being warned at
the proper time as to the defective nature of the machinery
or of the taking of precautions which are enjoined under the
Act. Similarly if a building or a machinery or plant is in
such a condition that it is dangerous to human life or
safety the Inspector by serving a timely notice on the
manager saves the factory owner from all the consequences of
proper repairs not being done in time to the building. or
machinery.
349
The High Court found that 60% of the amount of licence fees
which were being realized was actually spent on services
rendered to the. factory owners. The finding being one of
fact must be considered final. [355 H--356,
D] ..
It could therefore hardly be contended that the levy of
the licence fee was wholly unrelated to the expenditure
incurred out of the total realization. The appeal must
accordingly fail. [356 D--El
Corporation of Calcutta & Anr. v. Liberty Cinema, [1965]
2 S.C.R. 477,distinguished.
H.H. Sudhundra Thirtha Swamiar v. Commissioner for Hindu
Religious & Charitable Endowments, Mysore, [1963] Supp. 2
S.C.R. 302, Mahant Sri Jagannath Ramanuj Das & Anr. v. State
of Orissa & Anr [1954] S.C.R. 1046 and Ratilal Panachand
Gandhi v. State of Bombay & Ors, [1954] S.C.R. 1055,
applied.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1424 of 1966.
Appeal from the order dated February 11, 1965 of the
Punjab High Court, Circuit Bench at Delhi in Civil Writ No.
3-D of 1963.
H.R. Gokhale, D.R. Thadani and A.N. Goyal, for the.
appellant.
Jagdish Swarup, Solicitor-General, L.M. Singhvi and R.N.
Sachthey, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Grover, J. This is an appeal from a judgment of the
Punjab High Court (Circuit Bench, Delhi) involving the
question of the validity of Rule 7 read with Rule 5 and its
Schedule of the Delhi Factories Rules 1950 made under s. 112
of the Factories Act 1948, hereinafter called the Act.
The impugned Rules relate to the grant of a licence for a
factory and renewal thereof, the fees. being prescribed by
the Schedule to. Rule 5.
The Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd. operates
within the Delhi area a number of industrial establishments
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which are factories within the meaning of s. 2(m) of the
Act. The company has to pay a total sum of Rs. 12,775.00 as
annual licence. fee for all its factories in Delhi, the fees
being calculated according to the Horse Power and the
maximum in number of workers to be employed on any day
during the year as given in the Schedule. The maximum fee
that is payable is Rs. 2,000/- for a factory. The factories
can be run only after registration and under a licence
granted under the Act and the Rules on payment of the
prescribed fee. The licence is renewed every year under R.
7 on payment of the same fee which is paid at the time of
the granting of the licence. Every licence granted or
renewed remains in force up to December 31, of the year for
which it is granted or
350
renewed. In January 1963 the company filed a petition under
Arts. 226 and 227 o,f the Constitution in the High Court
challenging the validity of the Rules under which the
licence fee for renewal of the licence for each of its
factories in Delhi was being levied and collected i.e.R. 7
read with R. 5 and its, Schedule. This petition was
dismissed by a division bench on February 11, 1965. The
company then filed the present appeal by certificate.
The principal point which has been canvassed on behalf
of the appellant company is that the payment made’ for
renewal of the licence was and is only to endorse the
licence as valid ,for the next year and the amount charged
for the renewal thereof cannot and does not entail services
which can reasonably be regarded to be commensurate with the
amount so charged. In other words the element of quid-pro-
quo which distinguishes a fee from a tax is absent and
lacking. The Act, it is pointed out; contains specific
provisions for rendering of benefit and service to the
workmen by the owners of the factories. The Inspectors who
are .appointed under the Act to ensure that its provisions
are complied with by the factory owners constitute a
policing agency and it is not possible to say that the power
and duties of the Inspectors when exercised and carried out
amount to services rendered for the benefit of the
factory owners or the workmen.
Falshaw C.J., who delivered the judgment of the
division bench was of the view that the work carried out by
the Inspectors under the Act of seeing that all its
beneficient provisions for the health and welfare of the
workers employed in the factories were fully implemented
must definitely be regarded as services rendered in return
for the fee levied for the annual renewal of the licence for
the factory. It was further observed on an examination of
’the affidavit which had been placed before the court that
at least 60.% of the amount realised as licence fee was
being utilised on running the department.
Mr. H.R. Gokhale for the appellant company has contended
that the High Court failed to apply the principles which are
settled by certain decisions of this Court for determining
whether a fee for a licence or a renewal thereof in
circumstances similar to the present case is in
substance and effect a tax. He has relied largely on
Corporation of Calcutta & Another v. Liberty Cinema(1).
In that case the licence fee had been raised from Rs. 400/-
to Rs. 6,000/- per year. It was observed in the majority
judgment that the provision under which the licence had to
be taken out for a cinema did not refer to the rendering of
any service by the Corporation of Calcutta. It was also.
not obligatory on the Corporation to make any bye-law
under which
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(1) [1955] 2S.C.R.477.
351
services were to be rendered. If the bye-laws were not
made there would be no service to render. It was further
pointed out that inspection by the authorities concerned
could not be regarded as a service to the licence as it was
meant only to make sure that the licensee carried out the
conditions on which the licence had been granted to him.
Some of the earlier decisions were considered as also the
pronouncement in H.H. Sudhundra Thirtha Swamiar v.
Commissioner for Hindu Religious & Charitable Endowments,
Mysore(1) and with regard to the latter case it was said
that a service resulting in the control of the Math adipathi
conferred special benefit on the institution which alone
paid the levy.
As far back as 1954 it was laid down in Mahant Sri
Jagannath Ramanui Das & Anr. v. The State of Orissa &
Another(2)that the contributions levied for the. expenses
of the Commissioner and his staff who were to. exercise
effective control over the trustees of the Maths and the
temples was to. be regarded as a fee and not a tax. Two
reasons were given for this: (1) The payment was demanded
only for the purpose of meeting the expenses of the
Commissioner and his staff which is the machinery.. set up
for due administration of the affairs of the religious
institution. (2) The collections made were no.t merged in
the general public revenue. Similarly in Ratilal Panachand
Gandhi v. The State of Bombay & Others(3) the contribution
imposed under the Bombay Public Trusts Act was held to: be
fee and not tax. it was stated that in the first place
these contributions were to be credited to the Public Trusts
Administration Fund which was a special fund land were not
to be merged in the general revenue. Secondly, it was not
necessary that services should be rendered only at the
request of particular people and it was enough that payments
were demanded for rendering services which the State
considered beneficial in the public interest and which the
people had to accept whether they were willing or not. The
following observations in H.H. Sudhundra Thirtha Swamiar
case(1) may be referred to with advantage:
"A levy in the nature of a fee does not
cease to be of that character merely because
there is an element of compulsion or
coerciveness present in it, nor is it a
postulate of a fee that it must have direct
relation to the actual services rendered by
the authority to individual who obtains the
benefit of service. If with a view to provide
a specific service, levy is imposed by law and
expenses for maintaining the service are met
out of the amounts collected there being a
reasonable relation between the levy and the
expenses incurred for render-
(1) [1963] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 302. (2) [1954]
S.C.R. 1046. (3) [1954] S.C.R. 1055.
352
ing the service, the levy would be in the
nature of a fee and not in the nature of a
tax."
According to Mr. H.R. Gokhale the present case is of the
type which would fall squarely within the decision in
Liberty Cinema case(1). It is difficult to agree. In each
case where the question arises whether the levy is in the
nature of a fee the entire scheme of the statutory
provisions, the duties and obligations imposed on the
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inspecting staff and the nature of work done by them will
have to be examined for the purpose of determining the
rendering of the services which would make the levy a ,fee.
It is quite apparent that in the Liberty Cinema case it was
found that no service of any kind was being or could be
rendered and for that reason the levy was held to be a tax
and not a fee. In our judgment the present case falls
within the other class of cases to which reference has been
made in which contributions for the purpose of maintaining
an authority and the staff for supervising and controlling
public institutions like Maths etc. were held to be fee and
not tax.
We may now look at the provisions of the Act. Chapter
II provides for the inspecting staff. Section 9 gives the
powers of the Inspectors. They can enter any factory and
inter alia make examination of the premises, plant and
machinery. Under s. 10 qualified medical practitioners can
be appointed to. be certifying surgeons for the purpose of
the Act. The certifying surgeon has to. carry out such
duties as may be prescribed in connection with the
examination and ,certification of young persons under the
Act. the examination of persons. engaged in factories in
dangerous occupation or process as also the exercising of
medical supervision. Chapter III deals with health.
Section Il contains detailed provisions about cleanliness.
Sections 12 to 14 relate to disposal of waste and effluents,
ventilation and temperature, and dust and fume. Sections 17
to 20 concern lighting, drinking water, latrines and
urinals, and spittoons. Chapter IV contains the provisions
relating to safety. Section 21 deals with fencing of
machinery. Section 22 with work on or near machinery in
motion and section 23 with employment of young persons on
dangerous machines. The other sections which may be noticed
in this Chapter are s. 27 containing the prohibition of
employment of women and children near cotton-openers; s. 35
in the matter of protection of eyes, s. 36 dealing with
precautions against dangerous fumes, s. 37 relating to
explosive or inflammable dust, gas etc., and s. 38
relating to precautions in case of fire. Under s. 39
if it appears to the Inspector that any building or part of
a building or any part of the ways, machinery or plant in a
factory is in such a condition that it may be dangerous to
human life and safety he may serve on the manager of the
factory an order in writing
[1965] 2 S.C.R. 477.
353
requiring him to. furnish the particulars for determining
whether the building, machinery, plant etc., can be used
with safety or to carry out such tests as may be specified
and convey the result thereof to the Inspector. Under s. 40
if it appears to the Inspector that any building or part of
a building is in such a condition that it is dangerous to
human life or safety he can serve an order on the manager of
the factory specifying the measures which should be adopted
and requiring him to carry out the same before a specified
date. Shnilarly if it ’appears to him that the use of any
building or machinery or plant involves imminent danger to
human life or safety he can serve an order prohibiting its
use until it has been properly repaired or altered. Chapter
V deals with welfare and provisions are made therein ,for
such amenities as washing facilities for storing and drying
clothing, for sitting, first aid appliances, canteens and
creches and every factory is required under s. 49 wherein
500 or more workers are ordinarily employed to have such
number of welfare officers as may be prescribed. The Rules
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also contain various provisions where the Inspector has to
be consulted and his approval obtained for doing certain
things. For instance R. 65(3) says that the manager of a
factory shall submit for the approval of the Chief Inspector
plans of the building to be constructed or adapted for use
as a canteen. It is unnecessary to refer to several other
provisions contained in the Act and the Rules which show
that the Chief Inspector and his staff play a very
important role in the working of the factory.
In the return which was filed in the High Court to the writ
petition it was stated in paragraph 8 that the fees were
being charged for the running of the whole establishment
including the Factory Inspectorate which in its turn
"provides free inspection and expert technical advice etc.,
to factory owners in matters connected with safety, health
welfare and the allied matters in respect of compliance with
the provisions of the Factories Act". It has further been
stated that in our country matters relating to health,
safety, welfare and employment have to be looked after and
the desired results have been sought to be achieved by the
legislature by providing statutory inspection service.
According to Mr. Gokhale the Inspectors only carry out
the duties laid on them under the Act and all that they have
to do is to ensure that the statutory provisions and the
rules are carried out properly and launch prosecutions
against factory owners under the provisions of Chapter X of_
the Act in case of any breach or default on the part of the
factory owners. We do not consider that the functions and
duties of the Inspectorate are confined only to the limited
task which has been suggested on behalf of the appellant
company. A large number of provisions to which reference
has been made, particularly in the Chapter dealing with
354
safety, involve a good deal of technical knowledge and in
the course of discharge of their duties and obligations the
Inspectors are expected to give proper advice and guidance
so that there may be due compliance with the provisions of
the Act. It can well be said that on certain occasions
factory owners are bound to receive a good deal of benefit
by being saved from the consequences of the working of
dangerous machines or employment of such processes as
involve danger to human life by being warned at the proper
time as to the defective nature of the machinery or of the
taking of precautions which are enjoined under the Act.
Similarly if a building or a machinery or a plant is in
such a condition that it is dangerous to human life or
safety the Inspector by serving a timely notice on the
manager saves the factory owner from all the consequences
of proper repairs not being done in time to the building
or the machinery. Indeed it seems to us that the nature of
the work of the Inspector is such that he is to render as
much. if not more, service than a Commissioner would, in the
matter of supervision, regulation and control over the way
in which the management of the trustees of religious and
charitable endowment was conducted. The High Court further
found, which finding being of fact, must be considered as
final that 60’% of the amount of licence fees which were
being realized was actually spent on services rendered to
the factory owners. It can, therefore, hardly be contended
that the levy of the licence fee was wholly unrelated to the
expenditure incurred out of the total realisation. Before
the High Court the appellant company never made out any case
that the collections on .account of the licence fee were
merged in the general public revenue and were not
appropriated in the manner laid down for the appropriation
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of expenses for the department concerned.
There can be no manner of doubt that the amount which
the appellant company has to pay as licence fee is not in
the nature of a tax but is a fee which could be properly
levied.
The appeal fails and it is dismissed with costs.
G.C. Appeal dismissed.
355