Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
FOOD CORPORATION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MUNICIPAL COMMITTEE, JALALABAD AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/07/1999
BENCH:
D.P.Wadhwa, M.B.Shah
JUDGMENT:
D.P. Wadhwa, J.
Food Corporation of India (’Corporation’ for short) is
aggrieved by the judgment dated December 13, 1994 of the
Division Bench of the Punjab and Haryana High Court
dismissing its writ petition challenging the order of
assessment of its properties under the Punjab Municipal Act
by the second respondent, the Municipal Committee,
Jalalabad, District Ferozpur in the State of Punjab.
It is contended before us that the Corporation is
exempt from taxation under Article 285 of the Constitution
and that valuation and assessment of the properties has been
completed without taking into account the provisions of
Section 3 of the Punjab Municipal Act under which house tax
is to be arrived at on the basis of the "annual value" on
which the properties can be let.
High Court has held that assessment of the property
tax was based on agreed fair rent as stated by the Municipal
Committee. There is no challenge to this averment by the
Corporation. It is, therefore, difficult for us to hold
that the agreed rent is not the fair rent and that there has
been any violation of the provisions regarding fixation of
annual value. This contention of the Corporation must fail.
The appellant Corporation is constituted by the Food
Corporation Act, 1964 (for short the ’Act’). Under Section
3 of this Act, the Corporation shall be body corporate with
that name, having perpetual succession and a common seal
with power, subject to the provisions of the Act, to
acquire, hold and dispose of property and to contract and
may, by that name, sue and be sued. If we refer to Section
42 of the Act, the Corporation is a company within the
meaning of the Income-tax Act, 1961 and liable to tax on its
income, profits and gains. However, under Section 43,
provision of law relating to winding up of companies or
corporations do not apply to the Corporation and it cannot
be placed in liquidation save by order of the Central
Government. It is, thus, apparent that the Corporation is a
distinct entity from the Union of India.
It is submitted before us that the Corporation is
nevertheless a statutory corporation incorporated by an Act
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of parliament and runs entirely on the subsidies provided by
the Central Government and in fact it has taken over the
role earlier performed by the Directorate of Food in the
Government of India and further that the Corporation has no
profit motives. Lastly, it is submitted that the
Corporation is obliged to follow directions/instructions
issued by the Central Government from time to time and its
management is also provided by the Central Government. It
was, thus, submitted that for all intent and purposes, the
Corporation is nothing but an extended arm of the Central
Government and it is thus exempt from taxation under Article
285 of the Constitution.
Article 285 of the Constitution is set out as under :
"285. Exemption of property of the Union from State
taxation.-(1) The property of the Union shall, save in so
far as Parliament may by law otherwise provides, be exempt
from all taxes imposed by a State or by any authority within
a State.
(2) Nothing in clause (1) shall, until Parliament by
law otherwise provided, prevent any authority within a State
from levying any tax on any property of the Union to which
such property was immediately before the commencement of
this Constitution liable or treated as liable, so long as
that tax continues to be levied in that State."
The question that arises before us is: If the
property of the Corporation is property of the Union of
India and, thus, exempt from taxation imposed by the State
or any authority within a State. Authority in the present
case would include local authority. A Constitution Bench of
this court in Electronics Corporation of India Ltd. & Ors.
vs. Secretary, Revenue Department, Government of Andhra
Pradesh [(1999) 4 SCC 458 = 1999 (3) SCALE 123] has held
that a Government company is distinct from the Central
Government and cannot claim exemption from taxation under
Article 285 of the Constitution. The case of the
Corporation cannot be any different. The Act under which it
is constituted specifically makes the Corporation a body
corporate having the attributes of a company.
In State of Punjab & Ors. vs. Raja Ram & Ors. [AIR
1981 SC 1694 = (1981) 2 SCC 66] the question raised was if
acquisition of land under the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 for
the Food Corporation of India was valid as it was said that
Corporation is not a company to which the provisions of that
Act would apply.
Before its amendment in 1984, Section 3(e) of the Land
Acquisition Act defined the expression ’company’ as under:
"the expression "company" means a company registered
under the Indian Companies Act, 1882 or under the (English)
Companies Act, 1862 to 1890 or incorporated by an Act of
parliament of the United Kingdom or by an Indian Law, or by
Royal Charter or Letters patent and included a society
registered under the Societies Registration Act 1860, and a
registered society within the meaning of the Co-operative
Societies Act, 1912 or any other law relating to co-
operative societies for the time being in force in any
State."
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The expression ’corporation’ had not been defined
earlier which now finds place in clause (cc) of Section 3 of
the Land Acquisition Act. Clause (e) which defined the
expression ’company’ has also thus been amended. However,
we are concerned with the old definition of ’company’. In
this case land was acquired for the Corporation and the
question was if the Corporation was a company within the
meaning of Section 3(e) (old) of the Land Acquisition Act.
This Court after referring to Section 3 of the Act observed
that sub-section (2) thereof clothes the Corporation with
the attributes of a company and it cannot, therefore, be
contended that the Corporation is not a company within the
meaning of the definition of that term appearing in clause
(e) of Section 3 of the Land Acquisition Act. This Court
also did not accept the argument that Corporation is a
Government Department. It said :
"A Government department has to be an organisation
which is not only completely controlled and financed by the
Government but has also no identity of its own. The money
earned by such a department goes to the exchequer of the
Government and losses incurred by the department are losses
of the Government. The Corporation, on the other hand, is
an autonomous body capable of acquiring, holding and
disposing of property and having the power to contract. It
may also sue or be sued by its own name and the Government
does not figure in any litigation to which it is a party.
It is true that its original share capital is provided by
the Central Government (S.5 of the F.C. Act) and that 11
out of 12 members of its Board of Directors are appointed by
that Government (S.7 of the F.C. Act) but then these
factors may at the most lead to the conclusion (about which
we express no final opinion) that the Corporation is an
agency or instrumentality of the Central Government."
The Court further said that even if the Corporation is
an agency or instrumentality of the Central Government, that
did not lead to the inference that the Corporation is a
Government department. The reason is that Act has given the
Corporation an individuality apart from that of the
Government.
Thus we hold that the Corporation is not exempt from
taxation under Article 285 of the Constitution.
The appeal fails and dismissed with costs.