Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
VIDEO ELECTRONICS PVT. LTD. AND ANR. ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB & ANR. ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/12/1989
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (CJ)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (CJ)
RANGNATHAN, S.
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 820 1989 SCR Supl. (2) 731
1990 SCC (3) 87 JT 1989 Supl. 457
1989 SCALE (2)1483
ACT:
U.P. Sales Tax Act, 1948--Sections 4A, 5A and 48 and
Notification dated January 29, 1985 and December 26,
1985--Constitutional validity of Manufacturers of goods in
state--No liability to pay tax-Dealers selling goods import-
ed from outside state---liable to pay tax-whether discrimi-
natory, legal and permissible.
Constitution of India 1950--Articles 14, 19, 38, 39, 301
and 304-Sales Tax Law--Manufacturers of goods in the state
exempted from Sales Tax--Non-manufacturer of same goods
importing goods and selling--Liable to sales tax--Whether
valid, legal and constitutional.
HEADNOTE:
A common question of law having arisen for determination
in these petitions filed under Article 32 of the Constitu-
tion, they are disposed of by a Common Judgment, though the
petitioners--dealers are different and carry on their busi-
ness in different states and have challenged the respective
provisions of law by which their cases are governed.
The petitioners in WP 803/88 carry on the business of
selling cinematographic Idms and other equipments like
projector, sound recording and reproducing equipments, X-Ray
films etc. in the State of U.P. and in Delhi. The petition-
ers receive these goods from their manufacturers outside the
State of U.P. In U.P. there is a single point levy of Sales
Tax.
The State of Uttar Pradesh issued two notifications
under section 4A of the Uttar Pradesh Sales Tax Act and
under Section 8(5) of the Central Sales Tax Act exempting
new units of manufacturers as defined in the Act in respect
of the various goods for different periods ranging from 3 to
7 years, from payment of Sales Tax. The petitioners by these
petitions challenge the constitutional validity of these
Notifications. They have also challenged the constitutional
validity of section 4A of the Uttar Pradesh Sales Tax Act
and sections 8(5) of the Central Sales Tax Act, and the
proceedings taken by the Respondent under section 5A of
732
the said Act. The case of the petitioners is that they are
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discriminated on account of these notifications as the
manufacturers covered by these Notifications are entitled to
sell the articles manufactured by them without liability to
pay sales-tax while the manufacturers in other states and
non-manufacturers of the same article selling the same goods
in the State are liable to pay sales tax under the local
Sales Tax Act as well as under the Central Sales Tax Act.
Their contention, therefore, is that they became subject to
gross discrimination and their business was crippled. In
these premises the petitioners challenge the provisions as
ultra vires the constitution being violative of the provi-
sions of Articles 301 to 305 of part III of the Constitution
as also Articles 14 and 19 of the Constitution.
The Respondents counter the assertion of the petition-
ers. According to them the contention put forward by the
petitioners ignores the basic features of the Constitution
and also the fact that the concept of economic unity may not
necessarily be the same as it was at the time of the Consti-
tution making; the state which was technically and economi-
cally weak in 1950 cannot be allowed to remain in the same
state of affairs. The state has to give subsidy and grant
exemptions/concessions for the economic development of the
state to new industries. It was urged that if all the states
are economically strong or developed then only can economic
unity as a whole be assured or strengthened.
Dismissing the petitions, this Court,
HELD: Sales Tax Laws in all the States provide for exemp-
tion.
Power to grant exemption is inherent in all taxing
Legislations. Economic unity is a desired goal. Development
on parity is one of the commitments of the Constitution.
Directive Principles enshrined in Articles 38 and 39 must be
harmonised with economic unity as well as economic develop-
ment of developed and under-developed area. [756H; 757A-B]
Taxes may sometime amount to restrictions but it is only
such taxes as directly and immediately restrict trade that
would fail within the mischief of Art. 301. [740E]
See Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd. v. The State of Assam & Ors.,
[1961] 1 SCR 809 and Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd.
v. The State of Rajasthan & Ors., [1963] 1 SCR 491.
The taxes which do not directly and immediately restrict or
733
interfere with trade, commerce and intercourse throughout
the territory of India would therefore be excluded from the
ambit of Art. 30 1 of the Constitution. It has to be borne
in mind that sales tax has only an indirect effect on trade
and commerce. [747F]
In the instant case, the general rate applicable to
locally made goods is the same as that on imported goods.
Even supposing without admitting that Sales Tax is covered
by Art. 301 as a tax directly and immediately, hampering the
free flow of trade, it does not follow that it fails within
the exemption of Art. 304 and it would be hit by Art. 30 1.
Still the general rate of tax which is to be compared under
Art. 304(a) is at par, and the same qua the locally made
goods and the imported goods. [751G-H]
Concept of economic barrier must be adopted in a dynamic
sense with changing conditions. What constitutes an economic
barrier at one point of time often ceased to be so at anoth-
er point of time. It will be wrong to denude the people of
the state of the right to grant exemptions which flow from
the plenary powers of legislative heads in List III of the
7th Schedule of the Constitution. [752A-B]
Basically the concept of equality embodied in Articles
304(a) and 16 are the same. Article 14 enjoins upon the
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state to treat every person equal before the law while
Article 304(a) enjoins upon the state not to discriminate
with respect to imposition of tax on imported goods and the
locally made goods. [753C]
It is not that with changing times the meaning changes
but changing times illustrate and illuminate the meaning of
the expressions used. The connotation of the expressions
used takes its shape and colour in evolving dynamic situa-
tions. [757B-C]
James v. Commonwealth of Australia, [1936] AC 578 at
613; Firm A.T.B. Mehtab Majid & Co. v. State of Madras &
Anr., [1963] 2 Suppl. SCR 435; A. Hajee Abdul Shakoor & Co.
v. State of Madras, [1964] 8 SCR 217 at 225; State of Madras
v. N.K. Nataraja Mudaliar, [1968] 3 SCR 829 at 847; Andhra
Sugars Ltd. & Anr. etc v. State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors.,
[1968] 1 SCR 705; Bengal Immunity Co. Ltd. v. State of
Bihar, [1955] 2 SCR 603 at 754; State of Madhya Pradesh v.
Bhailal Bhai & Ors., [1964] 6 SCR 261 at 268-9; Rattan Lal &
Co. & Anr. v. The Assessing Authority & Anr., [1969] 2 SCR
544 at 557; India Cement & Ors. v. State of Andhra Pradesh &
Ors., [1988] 1 SCC 743; Weston Electroniks & Anr. v. State
of Gujarat & Ors., [1988] 2 SCC
734
568 at 571; C.A.F. Seeling Inc. v. Charles H. Baldwin, 79
L.Ed. 2d 1033 at 1038; Smt. Ujjam Bai v. State of U.P.,
[1963] 1 SCR 778 at 851; Coffee Board, Bangalore v. Joint
Commercial Tax Officer, Madras & Anr., [1970] 3 SCR 147 at
156; V. Guruviah Naidu & Sons v. State of Tamil Nadu & Anr.,
[1977] 1 SCR 1065 at 1070; Kathi Raning Rawat v. The State
of Saurashtra, [1952] SCR 435; Kalyani Stores v. The State
of Orissa & Ors., [1966] 1 SCR 865; Bharat General & Tex-
tiles Industries Ltd. v. State of Maharashtra, 72 STC 354;
H. Anraj v. Government of Tamil Nadu, [1986] 1 SCC 414; West
Bengal Hosiery Assn. & Ors. v. State of Bihar & Anr., [1988]
4 SCC 134; State of U. P. & Ors. v. Babu Ram Upadhya, [1961]
2 SCR 679 at 702; State of Tamil Nadu, v. Hind Stone etc.,
[1981] 2 SCR 742 at 757; State of Mysore v. H. Sanjeeviah,
[1967] 2 SCR 361; Kailash Nath & Anr. v. State of U.P. &
Ors., AIR 1957 SC 790 at 791; State of U.P. & Ors. v. Renu-
sagar Power Co. & Ors., [1988] 4 SCC 59 at 100; M/s Narinder
Chand Hem Raj & Ors. v. Lt. Governor, Administrator, U.T.,
Himachal Pradesh & Ors., [1971] 2 SCC 747 at 751 and Associ-
ated Tanners Vizianagram A.P.v.C.T.O., Vizianagram, Andhra
Pradesh & Ors., [1986] 1 SCR 969, reffered to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 665 of 1988
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
Sanjay Parikh, M.L. Sachdev, C.S. Vaidyanathan, S.R.
Bhat, S.R. Setia, S.C. Dhanda, H.K. Puri, Harish N. Salve,
Rajiv Dutta, Anil Kumar and Sultan Singh for the Petition-
ers.
Raja Ram Agarwal, S.C. Manchanda, G.L. Sanghi, A.S.
Nambiar, Ashok K. Srivastava, R.S. Rana, P.G. Gokhale, B.R.
Agarwala, R.B. Hathikhanawala, C.M. Nayar, P.K. Manohar,
P.N. Misra, Ms. Halida Khatoon and Santhanam for the Re-
spondents.
G.L. Sanghi, Ms. Vrinda Grover, Miss Seita Vaidialingam,
Kailash Vasudev and A.C. Gulathi for the Intervenor.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, CJ. In these several writ peti-
tions, we are concerned with the question of harmonising the
power of different States in the Union of India to legislate
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and/or give
735
appropriate directions within the parameters of the subjects
in list II of the 7th Schedule of the Constitution with the
principle of economic unity envisaged in Part XIII of the
Constitution of India. We are also concerned with the provi-
sions of exemption, encouragement/incentives given by dif-
ferent States to boost up or help economic growth and devel-
opment in those States, and in so doing the attempt of the
States to give preferential treatment to the goods manufac-
tured or produced in those States. The question essentially
is the same in all the matters but the question has to be
appreciated in the context of the provisions and the fact
situation of the different States involved in these writ
petitions. It would, therefore, be appropriate to first deal
with writ petition No. 803/88 (Niksin Marketing Associate &
Ors. v. Union of India & Anr.) which is under article 32 of
the Constitution by four petitioners.
Petitioner No. 1 in W’.P. No. 803/88 is a partnership
firm carrying on business in New Delhi. Petitioner No. 2 is
its partner and petitioner No. 3 is another partnership
business carrying on business at Kanpur in U.P. consisting
of petitioner No. 4 and other partners. The petition chal-
lenges the constitutional validity of notification No. ST-
II7558/X-9(208)-1981 U.P. Act XV-48 order 85 dated 26th
December, 1985 issued by Uttar Pradesh Govt. u/s 4A of the
Uttar Pradesh Sales Tax Act, 1948. A prior notification No.
ST-II/604-X-9(208)-198 1 U.P. Act XV-48-Order 85 dt. 29th
January, 1985 was superseded by the aforesaid notification
dt. 26th December, 1985. It also challenges the constitu-
tional validity of notification No. ST-II/8202/X-9(208)-1981
issued by Uttar Pradesh Govt. u/s 8(5) of the Central Sales
Tax Act, 1956 which superseded a previous notification. It
also challenges the constitutional validity of s. 4A of the
Uttar Pradesh Sales Tax Act, 1948 as substituted by U.P. Act
22 of 1984 and also s. 8(5) of the Central Sales Tax Act,
1956 and consequentially all actions and proceedings taken
by the respondent u/s 5A of the said Act. The respondents to
this application are the State of Uttar Pradesh, the Union
of India, and the Commissioner of Sales Tax, Uttar Pradesh.
It is stated that the petitioners carry on the business
of selling cinematographic films and other equipments like
projectors, sound recording and reproducing equipment,
industrial X-ray films, graphic art films, Photo films etc.
in the State of Uttar Pradesh and in Delhi. The petitioners
sell the goods upon receiving these from the manufacturers
from outside the State of U.P. They are dealers on behalf of
those manufacturers. The petitioners are dealers of Hindu-
stan Photo Films Mfg. Co. Ltd., a Government of India under-
taking. In
736
U.P. there is a single point levy of sales taX. The State of
U.P. had issued two notifications u/s 4A of the U.P. Sales
Tax Act and u/s 8(5) of the Central Sales Tax Act exempting
new units of manufacturers as defined in the Act in respect
of the various goods for different periods ranging from 3 to
7 years as the case may be, from payment of any sales tax.
These notifications are annexed and terms thereof are set
out in annexures A- 1 & B- 1 to the writ petition.
The notification dated 26th December, 1985 stated, inter
alia:
"The Governor is pleased to direct that in
respect of any goods manufactured in an indus-
trial unit, which is a new unit as defined in
the aforesaid Act of 1948 established in the
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areas mentioned in column 2 of the Table given
below, the date of starting production whereof
falls on or after the first day of October,
1982 but not later than 31st March, 1990, no
tax under the aforesaid Act of 1956 shall be
payable by the manufacturer thereof on the
turnover of sales on such goods for the period
specified in column 3 against each, which
shall be reckoned from the date of first sale
if such sale takes place not later than 6
months from the date of starting production
subject to certain conditions mentioned."
It is not necessary to set out the conditions. In the
annexure several districts have been mentioned. In column 2
categories have been made for exemption and have been divid-
ed in 2 categories, one in case of units with capital in-
vestment not exceeding 3 lakhs of rupees and another in
cases of the units with capital investment exceeding 3 lakhs
of rupees. For one the period of exemption is 5 years while
for the latter it is 7 years. Period of exemption various
from 3 to 7 years in different districts. More or less
similar were the terms of notification dated 29th January
1985.
The case of the petitioners is that they did not ini-
tially feel the adverse effects or discrimination on account
of these notifications. Petitioners point out that the
manufacturers covered by the said notification are entitled
to sell the articles manufactured by them without liability
to pay sales tax while the manufacturers in other States and
non-manufacturers of the same article selling the same goods
in the State are liable to pay sales tax under the local
Sales Tax Act as well as under the Central Sales Tax Act.
The petitioners found that they had become liable to pay
sales tax on their sales at 12% + 10% surcharge
737
(13.2%) under the U.P. Sales Tax Act on photographic and
graphic arts material and @ 8% + 10% surcharge (8.8%) on
medical x-ray films and chemicals and a minimum of 10% on
their inter-State turnover whereas the manufacturers in the
State of U.P. and their dealers had no tax liability by
virtue of the exemption granted under the impugned notifica-
tions. Thus the petitioners contend that the goods sold by
them became costlier by 8.8% to 13.2% depending on the item
sold compared to the goods of manufacturers in the State of
U.P. They had given a chart illustrating the position. They,
hence, contended that they became subject to gross discrimi-
nation and their business was crippled and wanted to sustain
the said contention by referring to a chart showing gross
sale prices of the products in diverse States. In the prem-
ises the petitioners challenge these provisions as ultra
vires of the Constitution of India, the rights guaranteed
under part XIII as also under articles 14 & 19(l)(g) of the
Constitution.
The question is, are these notifications valid, proper
and sustainable in the light of part XIII of the Constitu-
tion of India judged in the background of the said articles.
Appearing in support of the petition, Mr. Sanjay Parikh in
writ petitions Nos. 790,665 and 1939-40/88, Mr. C.S. Vaidy-
nathan and Mr. S.C. Dhanda in writ petition No. 761/88, Mr.
Harish N. Salve for the petitioners in writ petition No.
803/88. Miss Seita Vaidialingam, Mr. G.L. Sanghi, Kailash
Vasudev for the intervenors. Mr. Raja Ram Agarwal, Mr. G.L.
Sanghi and Mr. Nambiar for the State of U.P. and respondents
have made their elaborate submissions. These petitions have
been heard together.
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Apart from the submission that the provisions impugned
violate articles 19(l)(g) and 14 of the Constitution, and
are in violation of the principles of natural justice, the
main challenge to these provisions by Mr. Salve was that
they violated the provisions of articles 301 to 305 of Part
XIII of the Constitution of India. The contention of the
petitioners was that, subject to other provisions of Part
XIII, trade, commerce and intercourse throughout the terri-
tory of India was enjoined to be free. Article 302 of the
Constitution empowers the Parliament by law to impose such
restrictions on the freedom of trade, commerce or inter-
course between one State and another or within any part of
the territory of India as may be required in the public
interest. Article 303 indicates the restrictions on the
legislative powers of the Union and the States with regard
to trade and commerce, and stipulates that, notwithstanding
anything contained in article 302, neither Parliament nor
the legislature of the States shall have power to make any
law giving or authorising the giving of any preference to
one State
738
over another or making or authorising the making of any
discrimination between one State and another by virtue of
any entry relating to trade and commerce in any list of the
7th Schedule. Sub-clause (2) of article 303 enjoins that
nothing in clause (1) shall prevent Parliament from making
any law giving, or authorising the giving of, any preference
or making, or authorising the making of, any discrimination
if it is declared by such law that it is necessary to do so
for the purpose of dealing with a situation arising from
scarcity of goods in any part of the territory of India.
Article 304 deals with restrictions on trade, commerce and
intercourse among States, which is as follows:
"304. Restrictions on trade, commerce and
intercourse among States.--
Notwithstanding anything in Article 301 or
Article 303, the Legislature of a State may by
law--
(a) impose on goods imported from other States
or the Union territories any tax to which
similar goods manufactured or produced in that
State are subject, so, however, as not to
discriminate between goods so imported and
goods so manufactured or produced; and
(b) impose such reasonable restrictions on the
freedom of trade, commerce or intercourse with
or within that State as may be required in the
public interest;
Provided that no Bill or amendment for the
purposes of clause (b) shall be introduced or
moved in the Legislature of a State without
the previous sanction of the President."
Article 305 saves certain existing laws and laws provid-
ing for State monopolies.
Our attention was drawn to the decision of this Court in
Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd. v. The State of Assam & Ors., [1961] 1
SCR 809. There this Court was concerned with the Assam
Taxation (on goods carried by Roads and Inland Waterways)
Act, 1954 which was passed under entry 56 of list II of the
7th Schedule to the Constitution. The appellants therein
contended that the Act had violated the freedom of trade
guaranteed by article 301 of the Constitution and as it was
not passed after obtaining the previous sanction of the
President as
739
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required by art. 304(b), it was ultra vires. The respondent
therein had urged that taxing laws governed only by Part XII
and not Part XIII (which contained articles 301 & 304) and
in the alternative that the provisions of Part XIII applied
only to such legislative entries in the 7th Schedule as
dealt specifically with trade, commerce and intercourse.
Gajendragadkar, Wanchoo and Das Gupta, JJ. held that the Act
violated art. 301 and since it did not comply with the
provisions of art. 304(b) it was ultra vires and void. On
the contrary, Chief Justice Sinha held that the Assam Act
did not contravene art. 301 and was not ultra vires. Accord-
ing to the learned Chief Justice, neither the one extreme
position that art. 301 included freedom from all taxation
nor the other that taxation was wholly outside the purview
of art. 301 was correct; and that the freedom conferred by
art. 301 did not mean freedom from taxation simpliciter but
only from the erection of trade barriers, tariff walls and
imposts which had a deleterious effect on the free flow of
trade, commerce and intercourse. Justice Shah on the other
hand expressed the view that the Assam Act infringed the
guarantee of freedom of trade and commerce under art. 301
and as the Bill was not moved with the previous sanction of
the President as required by art. 304(b) nor was it validat-
ed by the assent of the President under art. 255(c), it was
ultra vires and void.
In construing the provisions with which we are concerned
herein, in our opinion, it is instructive to remind our-
selves, as was said in James v. Commonwealth of Australia,
[19361 AC 578 at 613, that the relevant provision of the
Constitution has to be read not in vacuo but as occurring in
a single complex instrument in which one part may throw
light on another, and therefore, Gajendragadkar, J. as the
learned Chief Justice then was, at p. 860 of the said re-
port, rightly in our opinion. posed the problem as follows:
"In construing Art. 301 we must, therefore,
have regard to the general scheme of our
Constitution as well as the particular provi-
sions in regard to taxing laws. The construc-
tion of Art. 301 should not be determined on a
purely academic or doctrinaire considerations;
in construing the said Article we must adopt a
realistic approach and bear in mind the essen-
tial features of the separation of powers on
which our Constitution rests. It is a federal
constitution which we are interpreting, and so
the impact of Art. 30 1 must be judged accord-
ingly. Besides, it is not irrelevant to remem-
ber in this connection that the Article 23 are
construing imposes a constitutional limitation
on the power of
740
the Parliament and State Legislatures to levy
taxes, and generally, but for such limitation,
the power of taxation would be presumed to ,be
for public good and would not be subject to
judicial review or scrutiny. Thus considered
we think it would be reasonable and proper to
hold that restrictions freedom from which is
guaranteed by Art. 301, would be such restric-
tions as directly and immediately restrict or
impede the free flow or movement of trade.
Taxes may and do amount to restrictions; but
it is only such taxes as directly and immedi-
ately restrict trade that would fall within
the purview of Art. 30 1. The argument that
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all taxes should be governed by Art. 301
whether or not their impact on trade is imme-
diate or mediate, direct or remote, adopts, in
our opinion, an extreme approach which cannot
be upheld. If the said argument is accepted it
would mean, for instance, that even a legisla-
tive enactment prescribing the minimum wages
to industrial employees may fall under Part
XIII because in an economic sense an addition-
al wage bill may indirectly affect trade or
commerce. We are, therefore, satisfied that in
determining the limits of the width and ampli-
tude of the freedom guaranteed by Art. 301 a
rational and workable test to apply would be:
Does the impugned restriction operate directly
or immediately on trade or its movement?"
It is in that light we must examine the impugned provi-
sion. It is necessary to bear in mind that taxes may and
sometimes do amount to restrictions but it is only such
taxes as directly and immediately restrict trade that would
fall within the mischief of art. 301. Mr. Salve, however,
rightly reminded us that regulatory measures or measures
imposing compensatory taxes for using trading facilities do
not come within the purview of restrictions contemplated
under art. 301. Here, it is necessary to refer to the deci-
sion of this Court in the Automobile Transport (Rajasthan)
Ltd. v. The State of Rajasthan & Ors., [1963] 1 SCR 491
which was a decision of a bench of this Court consisting of
7 learned Judges, and was concerned with the Rajasthan Motor
Vehicles Taxation Act, 1951. Sub-section (1) of s. 4 of that
Act provided that no motor vehicle shall be used in any
public place or kept for use in Rajasthan unless the owner
thereof had paid in respect of it, a tax at the appropriate
rate specified in the schedules to that Act within the time
allowed. The appellants therein were carrying on the busi-
ness of plying stage carriages in the State of Ajmer. They
held permits and plied their buses on diverse routes. There
was one route which lay
741
mainly in Ajmer State but it crossed narrow strips of the
territory of the State of Rajasthan. Another route, Ajmer to
Kishangarh, was substantially in the Ajmer State, but a
third of it was in Rajasthan. Formerly, there was an agree-
ment between the Ajmer State and the former State of Kishan-
garh, by which neither State charged any tax or fees on
vehicles registered in Ajmer or Kishangarh. Later, Kishan-
garh became a part of Rajasthan. On the passing of the
Rajasthan Motor Vehicles Taxation Act, 1951, and the promul-
gation of the rules made thereunder, the Motor Vehicles
Taxation Officer, Jaipur, demanded of the appellants payment
of the tax due on their motor vehicles for the period from
April 1, 1951 to March 31, 1954. The appellants challenged
the legality of the demand on the grounds that s. 4 of the
Act read with the Schedules constituted a direct and immedi-
ate restriction on the movement of trade and commerce with
and within Rajasthan inasmuch as motor vehicles which car-
ried passenger and goods within or through Rajasthan had to
pay tax which imposed a pecuniary burden on commercial
activity and was therefore hit by art. 301 of the Constitu-
tion and was not saved by Art. 304(b) inasmuch as the provi-
so to Art. 304(b) was not complied with, nor was the Act
assented to by the President within the meaning of art. 255
of the Constitution. It was held by Das, Kapur, Sarkar and
Subba Rao, JJ. as the learned Judges then were, that the
Rajasthan Motor Vehicles Taxation Act, 1951 did not violate
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the provisions of art. 301 of the Constitution of India and
that the taxes imposed under the Act were compensatory or
regulatory taxes which did not hinder the freedom or trade,
commerce and intercourse assured by that article. Das, Kapur
and Sarkar, JJ. held that the concept of freedom of trade,
commerce and intercourse postulated by art. 301 must be
understood in the context of an ordinary society and as part
of a Constitution which envisaged a distribution of powers
between the States and the Union, and if so understood, the
concept must recognise the need and legitimacy of some
degree of regulatory control, whether by the Union or the
States. Mr. Justice Subba Rao, as the learned Chief Justice
then was, observed that the freedom declared under art. 30 1
referred to the right of free movement of trade without any
obstructions by way of barriers, inter-State or intra-State,
or other impediments operating as such barriers; and the
said freedom was not impeded, but on the other hand, promot-
ed, by regulations creating conditions for the free movement
of trade, such as, police regulations, provisions for
services, maintenance of roads, provision for aerodromes,
wharfs etc., with or without compensation. Parliament may be
law impose restrictions, it was stated, on such freedom in
the public interest, and the States also, in exercise of
their legislative power, may impose similar restrictions,
742
subject to the proviso mentioned therein. Laws of taxation
were not outside the freedom enshrined either in Art. 19 or
301. Mr. Justice Hidayatullah, as the learned Chief Justice
then was, and Rajagopala Ayyangar and Mudholkar, JJ. held
that s. 4(1) of the Rajasthan Motor Vehicles Taxation act,
195 1 offended art. 301 of the Constitution, and as resort
to the procedure prescribed by art. 304(b) was not taken it
was ultra vires the Constitution. The pith and substance of
the Act was the levy of tax on motor vehicles in Rajasthan
or their use in that State irrespective of where the vehi-
cles came from and not legislation in respect of inter-State
trade or commerce. A tax which is made the condition prece-
dent of the right to enter upon and carry on business is a
restriction on the right to carry on trade and commerce
within art. 30 1 of the Constitution. The tax levied under
the Act was not truly a fair recompense for wear and tear of
roads but a restriction which art. 30 1 forbade. The act was
not, in its true character, regulatory. In judging the
situation it would be instructive to bear in mind the obser-
vations of Mr. Justice Das at p. 5 12 of the report, where
he observed that in evolving an integrated policy on this
subject our Constitution makers seem to have kept in mind
three main considerations which may be broadly stated thus:
first, in the larger interests of India there must be free
flow of trade, commerce and intercourse, both inter-State
and intra-State; second, the regional interests must not be
ignored altogether; and third, there must be a power of
intervention by the Union in any case of crisis to deal with
particular problems that may arise in any part of India. At
p. 523 of the report, it was reiterated that for the tax to
become a prohibited tax it has to be a direct tax the effect
of which is to hinder the movement part of trade. Dealing
with wide interpretation Justice Das observed at p. 523-5 of
the said report as follows:
"The widest view proceeds on the footing that
Art. 301 imposes a general restriction on
legislative power and grants a freedom of
trade, commerce and intercourse in all its
series of operations, from all barriers, from
all restrictions, from all regulation, and the
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only qualification that is to be found in the
article is the opening clause, namely,
subject to the other provisions of Part XIII.
This in actual practice will mean that if the
State Legislature wishes to control or regu-
late trade, commerce and intercourse in such a
way as to facilitate its free movement, it
must yet proceed to make a law under Art.
304(b) and no such bill can be introduced or
moved in the Legislature of a State without
the previous sanction of the President. The
practi-
743
cal effect would be to stop or delay effective
legislation which may be urgently necessary.
Take, for example, a case where in the inter-
ests of public health, it is necessary to
introduce urgently legislation stopping trade
in goods which are deleterious to health, like
the trade in diseased potatoes in Australia.
If the State Legislature wishes to introduce
such a bill, it must have the sanction of the
President. Even such legislation as imposes
traffic regulations would require the sanction
of the President. Such an interpretation
would, in our opinion, seriously affect the
legislative power of the State Legislatures
which power has been held to be plenary with
regard to subjects in list II."
Mr. Justice Subba Rao, as the learned Chief Justice then
was, at page 550 of the report, observed that if a law
directly and immediately imposes a tax for general revenue
purposes on the movement of trade, it would be violating the
freedom. The learned Judge reiterated that the Court will
have to ascertain whether the impugned law in a given case
affects directly the said movement or indirectly and remote-
ly affects it.
Mr. Salve, however, sought to contend that as regards
the local sales tax, there were broadly two well accepted
propositions, namely, sales tax was a tax levied for the
purpose of general revenue. Secondly, it was neither a
compensatory tax nor a measure regulating any trade. Reli-
ance was placed on the observations of Mr. Justice Raghubar
Dayal, J. in Firm A.T.B. Mehtab Majid & Co. v. State of
Madras & Anr., [1963] 2 Suppl. SCR 435 but the context in
which the said observations were made has to be examined.
That case dealt with a petition under art. 32 of the Consti-
tution. The petitioners therein were dealers in hides and
skins in the State of Madras. The impugned sales tax assess-
ment related to turnover sales tanned hides and skins which
had been obtained from outside the State of Madras. The main
contention was that the tanned hides and skins imported from
outside and sold inside the State were, under r. 16 of the
Madras General Sales Tax Rules, subject to a higher rate of
tax than the tax imposed on hides and skins tanned and sold
within the State and this discriminatory taxation offended
art. 304 of the Constitution. The contentions of the re-
spondents therein were that sales tax did not come within
the purview of art. 304(a) as it was not a tax on the im-
port. of goods at the point of entry, that the impugned rule
was not a law made by the State legislature, that the im-
pugned rule by itself did not impose the tax but fixed the
single point at which the tax was imposed by ss. 3 & 5 of
the Act was to
744
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be levied; and that the impugned rule was not made with an
eye on the place of origin of the goods. It was held that
taxing laws can be restrictions on trade, commerce and
intercourse, if they hamper the flow of trade and if they
are not what can be termed to be compensatory taxes or
regulating measures.
Reliance was also placed by Mr. Salve on the observa-
tions of Justice Raghubar Dayal in A. Hajee Abdul Shakoor &
Co. v. State of Madras, [1964] 8 SCR 2 17 at 225. See also
the observations in State of Madras v. N.K. Nataraja Mudali-
ar, [1968] 3 SCR 829 at 847 and Andhra Sugars Ltd. & Anr.
etc. v. State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors., [1968] 1 SCR 705
where at p. 7 18 of the report it was reiterated that a sale
tax which discriminates against goods imported from other
States may impede the free flow of trade and is then invalid
unless protected by art. 304(a). It is, however, necessary
to bear in mind that in N.K.N. Mudaliar’s, case (supra) at
p. 850 Mr. Justice Bachawat after referring to several cases
observed as follows:
"But, there can be no doubt that a tax on such
sales would not normally offend Article 301.
That Article makes no distinction between
movement from one part of the State to another
part of the same State and movement from one
State to another. Now, if a tax on intra-State
sale does not offend Article 301, logically, I
do not see how a tax on inter-State sale can
do so. Neither tax operates directly or imme-
diately on the free flow of trade or the free
movement of the transport of goods from the
part of the country to the other. The tax is
on the sale. The movement is incidental to and
a consequence of the sale."
There was a reference in the said judgment to the obser-
vations of Jagannathadas, J. in The Bengal Immunity Co. Ltd.
v. State of Bihar, [1955] 2 SCR 603 at 754 wherein it was
stated:
"Now it is not disputed that a tax on a purely
internal sale which occurs as a result of the
transportation of goods from a manufacturing
centre within the State to a purchasing market
within the same State is clearly permissible
and not hit by anything in the Constitution.
If a sale in that kind of trade can bear the
tax and is not a burden on the freedom of
trade, it is difficult to see why a single
point tax on the same kind of sale where a
State boundary intervenes bet-
745
ween the manufacturing centre and the consum-
ing centres need be treated as a burden,
especially where that tax is ultimately to
come out of the residents of the very State by
which such sale is taxable. Freedom of trade
and commerce applies as much within a State as
outside it. It appears to me again, with great
respect, that there is no warrant for treating
such a tax as in any way contrary either to
the letter or the spirit of the freedom of
trade, commerce and’ intercourse provided
under Article 301."
It was contended that the Central Sales Tax Act ex-
hypothesi violates art. 301 of the Constitution since it is
a tax on inter-State movement of goods. Shah, J. in Mudali-
ar’s case (supra) at p. 84 1 of the report observed that tax
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under the Central Sales Tax Act on interState sales, it must
be noticed, is in its essence a tax which encumbers movement
of trade or commerce, if it--(a) occasions the movement of
goods from one State to another; (b) is effected by a trans-
fer of documents of title to the goods during their movement
from one State to another. It was contended by Mr. Salve
that by exempting the local manufacturers from both local
and central sales tax, the State Govt. has clearly made the
imposition of both local and central sales tax discriminato-
ry and prejudicial to outside goods. The goods of the local
manufacturer, when sold by him, do not bear any tax whereas
the goods imported from outside the State have to bear the
burden of sales tax. It was also contended that similarly,
the goods of a ’local manufacturer, when exported from the
State of U.P. do not have to bear tax, while goods brought
into the State of U.P. and further ex- , ported in competi-
tion with the local goods have to bear the tax, so there is
clear discrimination against goods produced by manufacturers
situated outside the State. The discrimination within the
meaning of art. 301 read with art. 304 arises where there is
a difference in the rates of sales tax levied, it was sought
to be emphasised by Mr. Sanjay Parikh for some of the peti-
tioners. This proposition has been reiterated by this Court
in a large number of cases, according to counsel, and we
were referred to the observations in State of Madhya Pradesh
v. Bhailal Bhai & Ors., [1964] 6 SCR 261 at 268-9 and Mudal-
iar’s case (supra) where at p. 847 Shah, J. reiterated that
imposition of differential rates of tax by the same State on
goods manufactured or produced in the State and similar
goods imported in the State is prohibited under art. 304(a).
It was also reiterated by this Court in Rattan Lal & Co. &
Anr. v. The Assessing Authority & Anr., [1969] 2 SCR 544 at
557 dealing with the Punjab General Sales Tax Act that when
a taxing State was not imposing rates of tax on imported
goods different from the rates of
746
tax on goods manufactured or produced, art. 304 had no
application. So long as the rate was the same, art. 304 was
satisfied. Reference was made to India Cement & Ors. v.
State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors., [1988] 1 SCC 743, whereas at
p. 759 this Court observed that variation of the rate of
inter-state sales tax did affect free trade and commerce and
created a local preference which was contrary to the scheme-
of Part XIII of the Constitution. To similar effect are the
observations to which Mr. Sanjay Parikh has referred us in
Weston Electronics & Anr. v. State of Gujarat & Ors.,
[1988] 2 SCC 568 at 571. Mr. Salve strongly relied on the
observations of Justice Cardozo in C.A.F. Seeling Inc. v.
Charles H. Baldwin, 79 L. Ed. 2d 1033 at 1038 where the
learned Judge observed while he was dealing with Art. (1) s.
8, clause (3) of the American Constitution which is known as
the ’Commerce Clause’--"This part of the Constitution was
framed under the dominion of a political philosophy less
parochial in range. It was framed upon the theory that the
peoples of the several States must sink or swim together and
that in the long run prosperity and salvation are in union
and not division". This passage has been cited with approval
in this Court in Atiabari’s case (supra) by Gajendragadkar,
J. as aforesaid.
We were referred to the observations of Firm A.T.B.
Mehtab Majid & Co.s case [1963] 2 Suppl. SCR 435 at 445. It
was contended that the acceptance of the petitioner’s case
would not conflict with the plenary power of the State to
grant exemptions under the Act because statutory powers have
to yield to constitutional inhibitions and, therefore,
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article 304(a) & (b) being envisaged to safeguard the eco-
nomic unity of the country, these must have precedence. It
was also contended that the petitions under art. 301 read
with 304(a) are clearly maintainable.
Reliance was placed in Smt. Ujjam Bai v. Stale of U.P.,
[1963] 1 SCR 778 at 85 1 and Coffee Board, Bangalore v.
Joint Commercial Tax Officer, Madras & Anr., [1970] 3 SCR
147 at 156. In light of these, it was contended by the
petitioners that the petition under art. 32 is clearly
maintainable.
The question as we see is, how to harmonise the con-
struction of the several provisions of the Constitution. It
is true that if a particular provision being taxing provi-
sion or otherwise impedes directly or immediately the free
flow of trade within the Union of India then it will be
violative of art. 301 of the Constitution. It has further to
be borne in mind that art. 301 enjoins that trade, commerce
and
747
intercourse throughout the territory of India shall be free.
The first question, therefore, which one has to examine in
this case is, whether the sales tax provisions (exemption
etc.) in these cases directly and immediately restrict the
free flow of trade and commerce within the meaning of art.
30 1 of the Constitution. We have examined the scheme of
art. 30 1 of the Constitution read with art. 304 and the
observations of this Court in Atiabari’s case (supra),
as,also the observations made by this Court in Automobile
Transport, Rajasthan’s case (supra). In our opinion, Part
XIII of the Constitution cannot be read in isolation. It is
part and parcel of a single constitutional instrument envis-
aging a federal scheme and containing general scheme confer-
ring legislative powers in respect of the matters relating
to list II of the 7th Schedule on the State. It also confers
plenary powers on States to raise revenue for its purposes
and does not require that every legislation of the State
must obtain assent of the President. Constitution of India
is an organic document. It must be so construed that it
lives and adapts itself to the exigencies of the situation,
in a growing and evolving society, economically, politically
and socially. The meaning of the expressions used there
must, therefore, be so interpreted that it attempts to solve
the present problem of distribution of power and rights of
the different States in the Union of India, and anticipate
the future contingencies that might arise in a developing
organism. Constitution must be able to comprehend the
present at the relevant time and anticipate the future which
is natural and necessary corollary for a growing and living
organism. That must be part of the constitutional adjudica-
tion. Hence, the economic development of States to bring
these into equality with all other States and thereby devel-
op the economic unity of India is one of the major commit-
ments or goals of the constitutional aspirations of this
land. For working of an orderly society economic equality of
all the States is as much vital as economic unity.
The taxes which do not directly or immediately restrict
or interfere with trade, commerce and intercourse throughout
the territory of India, would therefore be excluded from the
ambit of art. 301 of the Constitution. It has to be borne in
mind that sales tax has only an indirect effect on trade and
commerce.
Reference may be made to the Constitution bench judgment
of this Court in Andhra Sugar Ltd. & Anr. v. State of A. P.
& Ors., [1968] 1 SCR 705 where this Court observed that
normally a tax on sale of goods does not directly impede the
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free movement of transport. See also the observations in
Mudaliar’s case (supra) where at p. 851 it was observed that
a tax on sale would not normally offend art. 301. That
748
article made nO distinction between movement from one part
of State to another part of the same State and movement from
one State to another. In this connection, reference may also
be made to the observations in Bengal Immunity’s case
(supra). Both the preceding cases clearly establish that if
a taxing provision in respect of intra-State sale does not
offend art. 30 1, logically it would not affect the freedom
of trade in respect of free flow and movement of goods from
one part of the country to the other under art. 301 as well.
It has to be examined whether difference in rates per se
discriminates so as to come within articles 301 and 304(a)
of the Constitution. It is manifest that free flow of trade
between two States does not necessarily or generally depend
upon the rate of tax alone. Many factors including the cost
of goods play an important role in the movement of goods
from one State to another. Hence the mere fact that there is
a difference in the rate of tax on goods locally manufac-
tured and those imported would not amount to hampering of
trade between the two States within the meaning of art. 301
of the Constitution. As in manifest, art. 304 is an excep-
tion to art. 30 1 of the Constitution..The need or taking
resort to exception will arise only if the tax impugned is
hit by articles 301 and 303 of the Constitution. If it is
not then art. 304 of the Constitution will not come into
picture at all. See the observations in Nataraja Mudaliar’s
case (supra) at pp. 843-6 of the report. It has to be borne
in mind that there may be differentiations based on consid-
eration of natural or business factors which are more or
less in force in different localities. A State might be
allowed to impose a higher rate of tax on a commodity either
when it is not consumed at all within the State or if it is
felt that the burden falling on consumers within the State,
will be more than that and large benefit is derived by the
revenue. The imposition of rates of sales tax is influenced
by various political, economic and social factors. Preva-
lence of differential rate of tax on sales of the same
commodity cannot be regarded in isolation as determinative
of the object to discriminate between one State and another.
Under the Constitution originally flamed revenue from sales
tax was reserved for the States.
In V. Guruviah Naidu & Sons. v. State of Tamil Nadu &
Anr., [1977] 1 SCR 1065 at 1070 this Court observed as
follows:
"Article 304(a) does not prevent levy of tax
on goods; what it prohibits is such levy of
tax on goods as would result in discrimination
between goods imported from other States and
similar goods manufactured or produced within
the
749
State. The object is to prevent discrimination
against imported goods by imposing tax on such
goods at a rate higher than that borne by
local goods since the difference between the
two rates would constitute a tariff wall or
fiscal barrier and thus impede the free flow
of inter-State trade and commerce. The ques-
tion as to when the ’levy of tax would consti-
tute discrimination would depend upon a varie-
ty of factors including the rate of tax and
the item of goods in respect of the sale of
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which it is levied. The scheme of items 7(a)
and 7(b) of the Second Schedule to the State
Act is that in case of raw hides and skins
which are purchased locally in the State, the
levy of tax would be at the rate of 3 per cent
at the point of last purchase in the State.
When those locally purchased raw hides and
skins are tanned and are sold locally as
dressed hides and skins, no levy would be made
on such sales as those hides and skins have
already been subjected to local tax at the
rate of 3 per cent when they were purchased in
raw form. As against that, in the case of
hides and skins which have been imported from
other States in raw form and are thereafter
tanned and then sold inside the State as
dressed hides and skins, the levy of tax is at
the rate of 1-1/2 per cent at the point of
first sale in the State of the dressed hides
and skins. This levy cannot be considered to
be discriminatory as it takes into account the
higher price of dressed hides and skins com-
pared to the price of raw hides and skins. It
also further takes note of the fact that no
tax under the State Act has been paid in
respect of those hides and skins. The Legisla-
ture, it seems, calculated the price of hides
and skins in dressed condition to be double
the price of such hides and skins in raw
state. To obviate and prevent any discrimina-
tion of differential treatment in the matter
of levy of tax, the Legislature therefore
prescribed a rate of tax for sale of dressed
hides and skins which was half of that levied
under item 7(a) in respect of raw hides and
skins."
The object is to prevent discrimination against the
imported goods by imposing tax on such goods at a rate
higher than that borne by local goods. The question as to
when the levy of tax would constitute discrimination would
depend upon a variety of factors including the rate of tax
and the item of goods in respect of the sale on which it is
levied. Every differentiation is not discrimination. The
word ’discrimination’ is not used in art. 14 but is used in
articles 16, 303 & 304(a).
750
When used in art. 304(a), it involves an element of inten-
tional and purposeful differentiation thereby creating
economic barrier and involves an element of an unfavorable
bias. Discrimination implies an unfair classification.
Reference may be made to the observations of this Court in
Kathi Raning Rawat v. The State Of Saurashtra, [1952] SCR
435 where Chief Justice Shastri at p. 442 of the report
reiterated that all legislative differentiation is not
necessarily discriminatory. At p. 448 of the report, Justice
Fazal Ali noticed the distinction between ’discrimination
without reason’ and ’discrimination with reason’. The whole
doctrine of classification is based on this and on the
well-known fact that the circumstances covering one set of
provisions or objects may not necessarily be the same as
these covering another set of provisions and objects so that
the question of unequal treatment does not arise as between
the provisions covered by different sets of circumstances.
Where the general rate applicable to the goods locally
made and on those imported from other States is the same
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nothing more normally and generally is to be shown by the
State to dispel the argument of discrimination under art.
304(a), even though the resultant tax amount on imported
goods may be different. Here, reference may be made to Ratan
Lal’s case (supra). In the instant writ petition, in the
State of U.P. those producers or manufacturers who do not
come within the ambit of notifications, have to pay tax on
their goods at the general rate described and there is no
differentiation or discrimination qua the imported goods.
The question naturally arises whether the power to grant
exemption to specified class of manufacturers for a limited
period on certain conditions as provided by s. 4A of the
U.P. Sales Tax Act is violative of art. 304(a). It was
contended by the petitioners that Part XIII of the Constitu-
tion was envisaged for preserving the unity of India as an
economic unit and, hence, it guarantees free flow of trade
and commerce throughout India including between State and
State and as such art. 304(a), even though an exception to
art. 301, yet applies where an exemption is granted by one
State to a special class of manufacturers for a limited
period on certain conditions. It was so submitted that
either a State should grant exemption to all goods irrespec-
tive of the fact that the goods are locally manufactured or
imported from other States, else it would be violative of
art. 304 and 304(a).
It was submitted by the respondents that this is not the
correct position. This argument ignores the basic feature of
the Constitution and also the fact that the concept of
economic unity may not necessa-
751
rily be the same as it was at the time of Constitution
making. The result of the same would be acceptance of the
view that a State which was technically and economically
weak in 1950 due to various factors, must always remain the
same and cannot be helped to develop economically by grant-
ing concessions/exemptions or allowing subsidies etc. for
-establishing new industries so as to be economically de-
veloped. It was also submitted that if all the parts of
India i.e. to say all the States are economically strong or
developed then only can economic unity as a whole be assured
and strengthened. Hence, the concept of economic unity is
ever changing with very wide horizons and cannot and should
not be imprisoned in a strait-jacket of the concept and
notion as advocated by the petitioner. Economic unity of
India is one of the constitutional aspirations of India and
safeguarding the attainment and maintenance of that unity
are objectives of the Indian Constitution. It would be
wrong, however, to assume that India as a whole is already
an economic unit. Economic unity can only be achieved if all
parts of whole of Union of India develop equally, economi-
cally. Indeed, in the affidavits of opposition various
grounds have been indicated on behalf of the respondents
suggesting the need for incentives and exemptions, and these
were suggested to be absolutely necessary for economic
viability and survival for these industries in these States.
These were based on cogent and intelligible reasons of
economic encouragement and growth. There was a rationale in
these which is discernible. The power to grant exemption is
always inherent in all taxing Statutes. If the
suggestions/submissions as advanced by the petitioners are
accepted, it was averted, and in our opinion rightly, that
it will destroy completely or make nugatory the plenary
powers of the States. If the exemption is based on natural
and business factors and does not involve any intentional
bias, the impugned notifications to grant exemption for
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limited period on certain specific conditions cannot be held
to be bad. Judged by that yardstick, the present notifica-
tions cannot be held to be violative of the constitutional
provisions. An examination of art. 304(a) would reveal that
what is being prohibited by this article which is really an
exception to art. 30 1 will not apply if art. 301 does not
apply.
In the instant case the general rate applicable to
locally made goods is the same as that on imported goods.
Even supposing without admitting that sales tax is covered
by art. 301 as a tax directly and immediately hampering the
free flow of trade, it does not follow that it falls within
the exemption of art. 304 and it would be hit by art. 301.
Still the general rate of tax which is to be compared under
art. 304(a) is at par and the same qua the locally made
goods and the imported goods.
752
Concept of economic barrier must be adopted in a dynamic
sense with changing conditions. What constitutes an economic
barrier at one point of time often cease to be so at another
point of time. It will be wrong to denude the people of the
State of the right to grant exemptions which flow from the
plenary powers of legislative heads in list II of the 7th
Schedule of the Constitution. In a federal polity, all the
States having powers to grant exemption to specified class
for limited period, such granting of exemption cannot be
held to be contrary to the concept of economic unity. The
contents of economic unity by the people of India would
necessarily include the power to grant exemption or to
reduce the rate of tax in special cases for achieving the
industrial development or to provide tax incentives to
attain economic equality in growth and development. When all
the States have such provisions to exempt or reduce rates
the question of economic war between the States inter se or
economic disintegration of the country as such does not
arise. It is not open to any party to say that this should
be done and this should not be done by either one way or the
other. It cannot be disputed that it is open to the States
to realise tax and thereafter remit the same or pay back to
the local manufacturers in the shape of subsidies and that
would neither discriminate nor be hit by art. 304(a) of the
Constitution. In this case and as in all constitutional
adjudications the substance of the matter has to be looked
into to find out whether there is any discrimination in
violation of the constitutional mandate.
In Kalyani Stores v. The State of Orissa & Ors., [1966]
1 SCR 865, Shah, J. (as the learned Chief Justice then was),
speaking for himself and on behalf of Chief Justice Gajen-
dragadkar, Wanchoo, J. and Sikri, J. observed that the
restriction on the freedom of trade, commerce and inter-
course throughout the territory of India declared by Article
301 of the Constitution cannot be justified unless it falls
within Art. 304. Exercise of power under art. 304(a) can be
effective only if the tax or duty on goods imported from
other States and the tax or duty imposed on similar goods
manufactured or produced in that State is such that there is
no discrimination. Hidayatullah, J. as the learned Chief
Justice then was, observed, at p. 883 of the report, that
art. 304(a) imposes no ban but lifts the ban imposed by
articles 30 1 & 303 subject to one condition. That article
is enabling and prospective.
Counsel for the respondents drew out attention to arti-
cles 38 & 39 of the Constitution. The striving for the
attainment of the objects enshrined in these Articles is
enjoined. For achieving these objects the States have neces-
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sarily to develop themselves economically so as to
753
secure economic unity and to minimise the inequalities and
imbalances between State and State and region and region. If
the power to grant exemption has been conferred for achiev-
ing these objects on all, it is not possible to assail these
as violative of art. 304 as the latter article has to be
interpreted in conjunction with others and not in isolation.
Reference may be made to the observations of this Court in
Bharat General & Textiles Industries Ltd. v. State of Maha-
rashtra, 72 STC 354 where it was held that s. 41 of the
Bombay Sales Tax Act, did not contravene articles 14 & 19 of
the Constitution of India and the State Govt. could validly
classify new units producing edible oil as distinct and
separate from other units and validly withdraw the exemption
in relation to such units only. It is true that the afore-
said observations were made in the context different from
art. 304(a) but basically the concept of equality embodied
in articles 304(a) & 16 are the same. Art. 14 enjoins upon
the State to treat every person equal before the law while
art. 304(a) enjoins upon the State not to discriminate with
respect to imposition of tax on imported goods and the
locally made goods. The petitioners made reference to sever-
al decisions of this Court, namely, H. Anraj v. Government
of Tamil Nadu, [1986] 1 SCC 414; Indian Cement & Ors. v.
State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors., (supra); Weston Electronics
v. State of Gujarat, (supra) and West Bengal Hosiery Assn. &
Ors. v. State of Bihar & Anr., [1988] 4 SCC 134 wherein it
has been reiterated that difference in rate of sales tax is
hit by articles 301 & 304 but the said conclusions were
arrived at in the context of a controversy not in the
present form and the question of exemption as such did not
arise in these cases, as explained later. These cases were
not at all concerned with granting of exemption to a special
class for a limited period on specific conditions of main-
taining the general rate of tax on the goods manufactured by
all those producers in the State who do not fall within the
exempted category at par with the rate applicable to import-
ed goods as we have read these cases. Hence, it was not
necessary in those decisions to consider the problem in its
present aspect. If, however, the said power is exercised in
a colourable manner intentionally or purposely to create
unfavorable bias by prescribing a general lower rate on
locally manufactured goods either in the shape of general
exemption to locally manufactured goods or in the shape of
lower rate of tax, such an exercise of power can always be
struck down by the courts. That is not the situation in the
instant cases. The aforesaid decisions, therefore, are not
authorities for the general proposition that while, main-
taining the general rate at par, special rates for certain
industries for a limited period could not be prescribed by
the States.
754
There was another subsidiary question in these matters
as to whether the legislation in the shape of notification
is law within the meaning of art. 304 of the Constitution.
The phrase used in the opening part of art. 304 should
necessarily mean any law enacted either by legislature
itself or by its delegate. Here it may be instructive to
refer to clause 10 of art. 366 of the Constitution which
defines existing law and even though the word ’Notification’
is not to be found, yet in Kalyani Stores v. The State of
Orissa & Ors., (supra) it has been held that it was an
existing law. In The State of U.P. & Ors. v. Babu Ram Upad-
hya, [196] 12 SCR 679 at 702 this Court relied on a passage
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from Maxwell "On the Interpretation of Statutes" and held
that a rule framed in the absence of any specific provision
in the Act shall be deemed to be a part of the Act itself.
In the State of Tamil Nadu v. Hind Stone etc., [1981] 2 SCR
742 at 757 this Court relied upon the aforesaid dictum in
the case of Babu Ram Upadhya, (supra) and distinguished the
decision in State of Mysore v. H. Sanjeeviah, [1967] 2 SCR
361 cited on behalf of the petitioner. This Court in Kailash
Nath & Anr. v. State of U. P. & Ors., AIR 1957 SC 790 at 791
has held that the notification having been made in accord-
ance with the power conferred by the Statute has statutory
force and validity and, therefore, exemption is as if con-
tained in the Act itself. The U.P. Sales Tax Act by s. 24(4)
confers rule making powers on the State Government. Section
25 confers powers on the State Government to issue notifica-
tions with retrospective effect. Hence, it cannot be disput-
ed that the exemption notification is the exercise of the
legislative power. This Court in State of U.P. & Ors. v.
Renusagar Power Co. & Ors., [1988] 4 SCC 59 at 100 has held
that the power to grant exemption is quasi legislative. In
M/s Narinder Chand Hem Raj & Ors. v. Lt. Governor, Adminis-
trator, U.T., Himachal Pradesh & Ors., [1971] 2 SCC 747 at
751 it was held that the exercise of the power is legisla-
tive whether it is by the legislature or by the delegate.
In respect of the decisions aforesaid relied on behalf
of the petitioner, on examination of the observations in
India Cement’s case (supra) to the contrary to which stated
hereinbefore on this aspect must be confined to the facts of
that case alone as the said decision had no occasion to
consider it in the full light. In the aforesaid view of the
matter the challenge in these petitions to the aforesaid
exemptions cannot, in our opinion, be upheld. The writ
petitions dealing with the U.P. matters on the same conten-
tions, therefore, fail.
Writ petition No. 665/88 being M/s Video Electronics
Pvt. Ltd. & Anr. v. State of Punjab & Anr., deals with the
notification issued by
755
the Punjab Government whereby two different rates of taxes
are provided. By that notification the State Government has
differentiated between the manufacturers of electronics
goods outside the State and within the State. Under section
5 of the Punjab General Sales Tax Act (hereinafter referred
to as ’the Act’), the State of Punjab had been imposing
sales tax @ 10% + 2% surcharge on electronics goods sold
within the State irrespective of their manufacture. The
State Govt. in pursuance of the powers conferred on it u/s 5
of the Act issued the notification date 11.12.1986 stating
that the rate of sales tax payable by an electronic manufac-
turing unit existing in Punjab in cases of electronic goods
specified in Annexure-A of the petition within the State
will be 1%. Thus the rate of sales tax was brought down from
10% (+ 2% surcharge) to 1% while for similar goods manufac-
tured outside the State and sold within the respondent-
State, the rate of sales tax remained 10% (+ 2% surcharge).
It was contended that there was differentiation. In support
of this contention the petitioners reiterate more or less
the same submissions, as indicated before. It is true that
there was difference in rate yet there was reason for this
differentiation. The State Government in its counter affida-
vit has stated that a lower rate of tax i.e. to say 1% in
the case of new units and 2% in the case of existing units
has been levied to boost this industry and to stop the
existing industry shifting to neighboring States. The pre-
vailing peculiar circumstances of Punjab were one of the
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factors indicated for the same. The lower rate, it was
reiterated, was imposed in view of the peculiar circum-
stances and also to attract new entrepreneurs from other
States and from within the State. It was contended that the
said notification was issued in public interest in view of
the peculiar position; and that while the States of Gujarat
and Maharashtra are fully developed States, on the other
hand, Punjab is comparatively a backward State in industry.
Unless some incentives are given, the industries which have
already shifted to other States, will have further deterring
effects. Hence, in view of the situation the concessional
rate was introduced and was not discriminatory.
As mentioned hereinbefore, reliance was placed mainly on
H. Anraj v. Govt. of Tamil Nadu, (supra) to which one of us
was a party. That was a decision dealing with lottery tick-
ets, and dealt with the question whether lottery tickets
amounted to movable property so as to be within the purview
of the Sale of Goods Act. But in relation to the question
relevant to the present purpose it was reiterated that the
real question is, whether direct and immediate result of the
impugned notification was to impose an unfavourable and
discriminatory tax burden on the imported goods (in those
cases lottery tickets of other
756
States) when they are sold within the State of Tamil Nadu as
against indigenous goods (Tamil Nadu Government lottery
tickets) when these are sold within the State, from the
point of view of the purchaser and this question had to be
considered from the normal business of commercial point of
view. It has to be reiterated that more or less all States
used to issue and sell lottery tickets, hence, the lottery
tickets from other States were specifically discriminated
against in the sense that there was differentiation without
any valid or justifiable reason. That would certainly work
as deterrent. Trade, commerce and intercourse throughout the
territory of India, come within art. 301 of the Constitu-
tion. It prevents imposing on goods imported from other
States a tax to which similar goods in the State are not
subject so as to discriminate between the goods so imported
and goods produced locally. In that light the decision in
Anraj’s case has to be understood.
The cases of India Cement & Ors. v. State of Andhra
Pradesh & Ors., (supra); Weston Electronics v. State of
Gujarat & Ors., (supra) and West Bengal Hosiery Assn. & Ors.
v. State of Bihar & Anr., (supra) were cases where there was
a naked blanket preference in favour of locally manufactured
goods as against goods coming from outside the State. These
cases, as we read these, dealt with a conferment of exemp-
tion without any reason or concession in favour of indige-
nous manufactured goods which was not available in respect
of the goods imported into that State. In case, however, of
U.P. as well as State of Punjab the provisions which we have
examined, proceeded on a different basis. In these cases, it
cannot be suggested, in our opinion, that there is discrimi-
nation against goods manufactured outside the State. In case
of Punjab an Overwhelmingly large number of local manufac-
turers of similar goods are subject to sales tax and, there-
fore, the general statement that the manufacturers within
the State are favoured against the manufacturers outside the
State, is incorrect. Under the notifications in case of
Punjab, only newly set up units are eligible to claim the
benefits thereunder for a limited period of 5 years and that
also only if they strictly comply with the terms and condi-
tions set out in the notification.
It has to be reiterated that sales tax laws in all the
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States provide for exemption. It is well-settled that the
different entries in lists I, II and III of the 7th Schedule
deal with the fields of legislation, and these should be
construed widely, liberally and harmoniously. And these
entries have been construed to include ancillary or inciden-
tal power. Power to grant exemption is inherent in all
taxing legislations. Economic unity is a desired goal,
economic equilibrium and prosperity
757
is also the goal. Development on parity is one of the com-
mitments of the Constitution. Directive principles enshrined
in articles 38 & 39 must be harmonised with economic unity
as well as economic development of developed and under-
developed areas. In that light on art. 14 of the Constitu-
tion, it is necessary that the prohibition in art. 301 and
the scope of art. 304(a) & (b) should be understood and
construed. Constitution is a living organism and the latent
meaning of the expressions used can be given effect to only
if a particular situation arises. It is not that with chang-
ing times the meaning changes but changing times illustrate
and illuminate the meaning of the expressions used. The
connotation of the expressions used takes its shape and
colour in evolving dynamic situations. A backward State or a
disturbed State cannot with parity engage in competition
with advanced or developed States. Even within a State,
there are often backward areas which can be developed only
if some special recentives are granted. If the incentives in
the form of subsidies or grant are given to any part of
units of a State so that it may come out of its limping or
infancy to compete as equals with others, that, in our
opinion, does not and cannot contravene the spirit and the
letter of Part XIII of the Constitution. However, this is
permissible only if there is a valid reason, that is to say,
if there are justifiable and rational reasons for differen-
tiation. If there is none, it will amount to hostile dis-
crimination. Judge in this light, despite the submissions of
Mr. Sanjay Parikh and Mr. Vaidyanathan, we are unable to
accept the contentions that the petitioners sought to urge
in this application.
The next petition is W.P. No. 1124/88--Computer Graphics
(P) Ltd. & Anr. v. Union of India & Ors., which challenges
the concession given in favour of manufacturers in U.P. and
Goa. The same contentions were reiterated for the reasons
discussed hereinbefore. We are unable to accept this peti-
tion. It may be relevant to refer to Associated Tanners
Vizianagram, A. P. v. C.T. 0., Vizianagram, Andhra Pradesh &
Ors., [1986] 1 SCR 969 where it was stated that when a
taxing statute was not imposing rates of tax on imported
goods different from rates of tax on goods manufactured
locally, art. 304 had no application. In case an exemption
was granted applying the same rate the resulting tax might
be somewhat higher but that did not contravene the equality
clause contemplated by art. 304.
In the instant writ petition in view of the terms of the
notification impugned and the facts and the circumstances
stated in the affidavit of the State Government as well as
the interveners, Goa and Pondicherry, being comparatively
under-developed in electronic industry, in
758
our opinion, it cannot be said that there was violation of
either Part XIII of the Constitution or Article 14 of the
Constitution. This application must also, therefore, fail.
Writ petition No. 70/89--Spartek Ceramics India Ltd. v.
Union of India & Ors., under art. 32 also challenges the
notification under the Central Sales Tax Act and the U.P.
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Act as mentioned hereinbefore. In the state of facts as
appearing, this petition also fails. We have considered the
submissions and the statements made by the interveners in
these matters. Writ Petition No. 761/89--Weston Electronics
Ltd. & Anr. v. State of Punjab & Anr., dealing with the
notifications issued by the State of Karnataka and writ
petition No. 1140/88--M/s Survo Udyog Pvt. Ltd. & Anr. v.
State of Bihar & Anr., deal with the same controversy and
with similar notification. In view of the averments made
which we have examined in detail on behalf of the concerned
State Governments in the light of the principles we have
reiterated before, we are of the opinion that the notifica-
tions impugned cannot be challenged and the petition cannot
succeed.
We have also considered writ petition No. 10 16/88--M/s
Disco Electronics Ltd. & Anr. v. State of U.P. & Others, and
in light of the facts and the circumstances and the aver-
ments made in the background of the principles reiterated,
we are unable to sustain the challenge to the impugned
notifications. In these matters we had the advantage of
having the views of the interveners and we have considered
the submissions made on their behalf.
In the aforesaid light the intervention applications are
allowed, submissions considered and the aforesaid writ
petitions are dismissed but in the facts and the circum-
stances of the case, there will be no order as to costs.
Y. Lal Petitions
dismissed.
759