Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 9
PETITIONER:
BHARAT GENERAL & TEXTILE INDUSTRIESLTD. & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/09/1988
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
BENCH:
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1988 SCR Supl. (3) 72 JT 1988 (4) 204
1988 SCALE (2)944
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950: Articles 14. 19(1) (g) and
300A-Sections 41 and 41A of Bombay Sales Tax Act--Validity
of--Whether there is conferment of arbitrary power on State
Government to exempt units from sales tax.
%
Bombay Sales Tax Act: Sections 41 and 41A and Package
Scheme of incentives i979-Whether confers arbitrary power of
exemption on State Government to exempt units from payment
of Purchase Tax, Sales Tax and Central Sales Tax.
HEADNOTE:
By virtue of the notifications issued by the Government
of Maharashtra in exercise of its powers under section 41 of
the Bombay Sales Tax Act, the new industries set up in
backward areas for the production of edible as well as non-
edible oils came to enjoy the benefit of exemption from
paying purchase tax/sales tax. Subsequently, the Government
of Maharashtra amended the Act and introduced section 41A by
virtue of which the tax exemption facility originally
granted under the Package Scheme of Incentives, 1979 to
edible oil units stood withdrawn earlier than stipulated in
the exemption notifications. The withdrawal of the tax
exemption however did not apply to units engaged in
producing non-edible oils.
The petitioner in one petition has challenged the
constitutional validity of section 41, while the petitioners
in the other two writ petitions challenged the validity of
section 41A.
The petitioner in the first petition, who was engaged in
the production of washed cottonseed oil, in an old unit,
contends that (i) the power of exemption can be granted on
any specified class of sales or purchases from payment of
tax, and the Government was not entitled to grant exemption
only in favour of new units set up in backward areas, (ii)
section 41 confers arbitrary powers of exemption on the
State Government so as to exempt new units from the payment
of purchase tax, sales tax and central sales tax, thus
placing old units in a very disadvantageous position, and
PG NO 72
PG NO 73
(iii) washed cottonseed oil is also edible oil although it
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 9
requires some processing for making it fit for human
consumption, and therefore the new washed cottonseed oil
units should also be classified as units producing edible
oils and subjected to purchase tax and sales tax.
The petitioners in the other two petitions contend that
the Government was precluded by Promisory Estoppel from
going back on the lncentive Scheme before the expiry of the
full term of tax exemption benefit period.
Dismissing the writ petitions, it was,
HELD: (l) Section 41 has been provided in order to
enable the State (government to grant exemption from payment
of purchase tax/ sales tax on any specified class of sales
or purchases in public interest. It is not as if the power
has been given to the government to act in an arbitrary
manner or for conferring largess on any section of
manufacturers or traders. Section 41 has withstood the test
of time and has enabled the government to promote public
interest, by granting tax exemption benefit, whenever
needed. [81A-D]
(2) The words "exempt any specified class of sales or
purchases’ could well be construed as applying to the grant
of exemption of the new units because the sales and
purchases effected by new entrants would constitute a
specified class by themselves in contra distinction with the
class of sales and purchases effected by the older and
seasoned units. [82C-D]
(3) Even though edible and non-edible oils may fall
under the general heading of ’oils they undoubtedly
constitute two separate groups which are capable of distinct
classification on intelligible basis. [83A-B]
(4) The Package Incentives Scheme was only evolved to
provide incentive to entrepreneurs to start new units in
backward areas. It could never have been the intention or
the object of the Government that the entrepreneurs should
unjustly enrich themselves at the cost of the public
exchequer or to be given competing ability with the older
units to such an extent as to virtually drive the latter out
of the business.
(5) Since the very foundation of the Scheme for giving
tax exemption benefits is public interest, the government
PG NO 74
was not only entitled but it was under an obligation to
withdraw the tax exemption benefit when the continuance of
the Scheme was going against public interest.
(6) As long as the washed cottonseed oil that is
produced is sold without further processing, it will not
constitute edible oil. [82Fl
(7) The government had neither acted arbitrarily nor
practised any discrimination against edible oil units
started newly or had interfered with the rights of the
owners of the new units in running their business and trade
in any manner when it enacted Section 41A.
(8) Section 41A is fully in accordance with law and not
violative of Articles 14, 19(i)(g) and 300A of the
Constitution. [83E]
Tapti Oil Industries v. The State of Maharashtra. AIR
1984 Bom. 161
Olympic Oil Industries Ltd. W.P. No. 3275 of 1985 in
Bombay High Court and S.L.P. (Civil) No. 10144 and 10550 of
1986 in the Supreme Court, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 1521 Of 1987
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 9
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India)
Anil Dev Singh, G.L. Sanghi, Serva Mitter, Miss Vrinda
Grover and T.V.S.N. Chari for the Petitioners.
V.S. Desai, A.S. Bhasme and A.M. Khanwilkar for the
Respondents .
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
NATARAJAN, J. Writ Petition No. 1521 of 1987 has been
filed under Article 32 of the Constitution of India to
challenge the constitutional validity of Section 41 of the
Bombay Sales Tax Act (hereinafter referred to as the Act) on
the ground it confers arbitrary powers of exemption on the
State Government so as to exempt all types of new units from
the payment of purchase tax, sales tax and central sales tax
under the Package Scheme of Incentives, 1979.
PG NO 75
On notice being issued in the writ petitions, the
respondent State of Maharashtra has filed affidavit in reply
and the petitioner has filed a rejoinder.
In order to exempt in public interest any specified
class of sales or purchases from payment of the whole or any
part of the tax payable under the ’Act, the State Government
gave to itself powers of exemption under Section 41 of the
Act. In exercise of its powers under Section 41 the
Government had been issuing notifications so as to grant
exemption in appropriate Gases from payment of sales tax or
purchase tax or both, as the case may be. One of such
notifications issued by the Government under Entry 136 was
for granting full tax exemption for the purchases of the
inputs and the sales of finished goods of new units set up
in the backward areas of the State. The Government also
issued notification under Section 85 of the Central Sales
Tax Act to the sales of finished goods of such units from
payment of Central Sales Tax. These tax exemption benefits
were accorded to the new industries by way of (I) incentives
for development of industries in backward areas, (2)
promotion of the dispersion of industries all over the
State, (3) the industrialisation of backward areas and (4)
for creating employment opportunities in the backward areas.
By virtue of the exemption notifications issued by the
Government in exercise of its powers under Section 41, the
industries engaged in the production of edible as well as
non-edible oils set up in backward areas came to enjoy the
benefit of exemption from paying purchase tax/sales tax.
Subsequently, the Government came to realise that the
sales tax exemption given under the Package Scheme of
Incentives, 1979 for a period ranging from 5 to 9 years
without any limit had conferred far more benefits on some of
the industries concerned than what the Government had in
mind when the notifications granting tax exemptions were
made and that the exemption facility was not only adversely
affecting the Government’s finances but was also placing the
existing small scale units on a comparative disadvantage.
The Government, therefore, passed a Resolution on July 5,
1982 (No. IDL-7082/(3559))/ IRD-8) to modify the Package
Incentives Scheme and the benefits following therefrom in
order to limit the benefit to 1()()% of the fixed capital
investment of the small scale units. Since the Package
Scheme of Incentives, 1979 provided for giving notice of six
months for any change or modification in the scheme, the
modified scheme dated 5th July, 1982 was proposed to be
brought into force in respect of small scale units, with
PG NO 76
effect from 10th January, 1983. The Government, however,
noticed that during the intervening period of notice, a
number of small scale units, particularly the oil units,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 9
tried to take advantage of the unlimited incentives to the
disadvantage of the existing units and also caused loss to
the public exchequer in respect of the revenue from sales
tax. The small scale units also sought to take advantage of
the decision of the Bombay High Court in Tapti Oil
Industries and Anr. v. State of Maharashtra & Ors., [ 1984]
56 STC 193 by claiming benefit of tax exemption without any
limit, thereby causing a continuing loss to the revenue.
The Government, therefore, considered it would not be
expedient in the public interest to continue the concession
and, that suitable provision must immediately be made in the
Act so as to limit the benefit of the exemption from payment
of sales tax under the Package Incentive Schemes to the
extent of 100% of the gross fixed capital investments of the
eligible units as approved at the time of the grant of
eligibility certificate or to such other lower ceiling of
percentage that may have been provided for under the
eligibility certificate issued to the small scale unit.
Since both the Houses of the State Legislature were not in
Session, the Government passed Ordinance No. 5 of 198 and
inter alia introduced Section 41A which read as under:
"41A. (1) Notwithstanding any things contained in this
Act or in any judgment, decree or order of any Court or T
Tribunal to the contrary. on and after the date of
commencement of the Bombay Sales Tax (Amendment ) Ordinance.
1985 (hereinafter in this section referred to as the
commencement date’’) the cumulative quantum of benefit drawn
or availed of by any registered dealer of an Eligible Unit
in respect of payment of any tax by virtue of the exemption
granted under the provisions of section 4] shall not exceed
one hundred per cent of the gross fixed capital investment
of the Eligible Unit as approved at the time of grant of
Eligibility Certificate, or such other lower ceilings of
percentage, if any, as may be provided under the Eligibility
Certificate issued in accordance with the provisions of any
Package Scheme of Incentives.
(2) Where, in the case of any registered dealer of an
Eligible Unit the cumulative quantum of benefit availed of
by him, has exceeded the limit laid down in sub-section (I)
on the commencement date, or exceeds such limit on any day
PG NO 77
after the commencement date, then the Eligibility
Certificate shall cease to have any effect in relation to
the exemption from payment of tax under this Act or under
the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, and the Certificate of
Entitlement shall stand automatically cancelled on the
commencement date or any such day, as the case may be, and
such registered ’dealer shall not be entitled to claim any
further benefit of exemption from payment of such tax under
the Eligibility Certificate of the Certificate of
Entitlement on or after the commencement date or any such
day, as the case may be, and the dealer shall surrender the
Certificate of Entitlement together with all the unused Form
BC which have been attested by the Sales Tax authorities to
the Commissioner forthwith and in any case within 15 days
from the commencement date or any such day.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in subsections
(I) and (2), no registered dealer of an Eligible Unit shall
be entitled to claim any benefit of exemption from payment
of any tax beyond the period covered by the Eligibility
Certificate and the provisions of sub-section (2) regarding
surrender of the Certificate of Entitlement together with
the unused Form BC shall mutatis mutandis apply to such
registered dealer "
The Ordinance came to be replaced by the Amendment Act,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 9
1985 under the Amending Act the Government made certain
modifications and directed that the withdrawal of the tax
exemption benefit will stand confined to the edible oil
units only. Section 41A, as introduced in the main Act by
the Amending Act No. XV of 1985 reads as follows:
"41A. Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act or
in any judgment, decree or order of any Court or Tribunal to
the contrary, on and after the date of commencement of the
Bombay Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1985 (hereinafter in this
section referred to as "the commencement date"), the
Eligibility Certificate granted to any Registered dealer of
an Edible Oil unit in accordance with the provisions of any
Package Scheme of Incentives shall cease to have any effect
in relation to the exemption from payment of tax under this
Act or under the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, and the
Certificate of Entitlement issued in favour of such
PG NO 78
Registered dealer by the Commissioner under entry 136 of the
Schedule to the notification issued under section 41 shall
stand automatically cancelled on the commencement date and
such Registered dealer shall not be entitled to claim any
further benefit of exemption from payment of such tax under
the Eligibility Certificate or the Certificate of
Entitlement on and after the commencement date, and he shall
surrender the Certificate of Entitlement with all the unused
Form BC which have been attested by the Sales Tax
authorities to the Commissioner forthwith and in any case on
or before the 31st day of August, 1985, unless he has
already surrendered the same earlier."
Section 8 of the Amendment Act which repealed Ordinance
V of 1985 further provided as follows:
"8.(2) It is hereby declared that notwithstanding
anything contained in section 7 of the Bombay General
Clauses Act, 1904, on such repeal, the following
consequences shall ensue:
(a) The Eligibility Certificate and the Certificate of
Entitlement issued to any Registered dealer of the Eligible
Unit other than the Registered dealer of Edible Oil Unit
shall not be deemed to have been cancelled; and
(b) Where the Certificate of Entitlement and the unused
Form BC are surrendered by any Registered dealer of the
Eligible Unit other than Registered dealer of Edible Oil
Unit, the same shall be restored to the Registered dealer,
who has surrendered the same;
(c) The Registered dealer of the Eligible Unit other
than the Registered dealer of Edible Oil Unit shall be
deemed to have been entitled to claim the same benefits of
exemption of sales tax to which he was entitled before the
commencement of the said Ordinance;
(d) Any Sales Tax on sale of finished goods recovered by
any Registered dealer of the Eligible Unit other than the
Registered dealer of Edible Oil Units during the period from
the commencement of the said Ordinance till the publication
of this Act in the Official Gazette, shall be paid into
PG NO 79
Government Treasury alongwith the return and the tax so paid
shall stand forfeited to the State Government and thereupon
the provisions of sub-section (6) of Section 38 shall
mutatis mutandis apply to the tax so forfeited."
Thus it may be seen that by reason of Act XV of 1985,
the sales tax exemption facility originally granted under
the Package Scheme of Incentives 1979 to all small scale
units newly started stood withdrawn only in so far as edible
oil units are concerned, and not to small scale units
engaged in producing non-edible oils.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 9
By a trade circular No. DED 1485/2591ADM-3 dated
15.10.1986. it was clarified that an edible oil unit under
the Act XV of 1985 would mean a unit engaged in
(i) delinting, decorticating or processing of groundnuts
or other oilseeds’
(ii) crushing of groundnuts or other oilseeds and
manufacture of edible oil;
(iii) refining of edible oil; or
(iv) hydrogenation of edible oil.
It was also clarified that the Act would not be
applicable to "units producing and selling non edible oils
and that units manufacturing and selling "washed cottonseed
oil",: Soyabean raw oil (Grade l)" and "un-refined sunflower
cake oil" would not fall under the category of units
manufacturing edible oil and as such those units will be
entitled to avail of the tax benefits even after 1.8.1985,
provided that the eligibility certificate specifically made
mention of the particular oil as the finished product
produced and sold by the concerned eligible unit. The trade
circular stated that the clarification was being given
"after obtaining the opinion of the concerned department of
the Government of India about what constitute edible oil and
non edible oils".
Notwithstanding the Amended Sections and the trade
circular the petitioners who are engaged in producing washed
cottonseed oil tried to contend before the authorities that
washed cottonseed oil would also fall in the category of
edible oil and that several technical authorities have given
their opinion to that effect and as such the extension of
PG NO 80
sales tax exemption facility to units engaged in the
production of non edible oils was against law and was not
only depriving the government of its legitimate revenue but
was also detrimentally affecting the interests of the old
units which were engaged in producing washed cottonseed oil
etc. These contentions were not accepted by the State
Government with the result that the withdrawal of the tax
exemption provision remained confined only to the units
engaged in producing edible oils and not to units engaged in
producing non edible oils.
Aggrieved by this position the petitioners have come
forward with this petition under Article 32 of the
Constitution. Two contentions were advanced by the learned
counsel for the petitioner to assail Section 41 of the Act.
It is apposite to mention here that in his petition the
petitioner has not impugned the validity of Section 41A
which disentitles only the units producing edible oil from
having the continued benefit of tax exemption. This factor
by itself weakens in the attack of the petitioner on the
constitutional validity of Section 41. Leaving aside this
aspect of the matter, we will now consider the specific
grounds on which Section 41 is assailed.
In the first place it is stated that while the
government realised. at the time of passing the Ordinance
that the lax exemption scheme granted in favour of all the
newly started eligible units had conferred tax benefits
transcending by far the limits of assistance contemplated by
the government and that the tax exemption benefits were
adversely affecting the public exchequer as well as the old
units and had, therefore, made Section 41A introduced by the
Ordinance applicable to all eligible units which had been
given the benefit of tax exemption. the revised Section 41A
introduced by Act XV of 1985 had restricted the withdrawal
provision only to the units engaged in producing edible oil
and has allowed the other eligible units to continued to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 9
have the unfair advantage of tax exemption benefit. The
second argument was that washed cottonseed oil is also an
item of edible oil although it required some processing for
making it fit for human consumption and therefore, the new
units which were engaged in producing washed cotton seed
oil should also be classified as units producing edible oils
so that those new units, should also pay purchase tax and
sales tax in the same manner the petitioner was paying. By
way of extension to the second contention it was pointed Out
that while the old units had to pay purchase tax, sales tax,
turn over tax etc. totaling Rs.1,650 per metricton, the new
units producing the same washed cottonseed oil got away
scot-free without paying any tax and they stood placed in a
very advantageous position.
PG NO 81
On an examination of the contentions we find that
neither of them has any merit. Section 41 has been in the
statute book eversince the Act was enacted. It has been
provided in order to enable the State Government to grant
exemption from payment of purchase tax and sales tax of any
specified class of sales or purchases if such grant of
exemption was felt justified. It is open to the Government
to give the benefit of tax exemption either to the full
extent or to a partial extent The Section itself states that
the power of exemption is being conferred on the government
in order to enable it to act in public interest. It is not,
therefore as if power. has been given to the government to
act in an arbitrary manner or for conferring largess on any
section of manufacturers or traders. In exercise of its
powers under Section 41 the government has been granting
exemption by means of several notifications in favour of
various trades and industries as and when the circumstances
warranted the granting of exemption in public interest. It
can, therefore, be safely taken that Section 41 has with
stood the test of time and has enabled the government to
promote public interest, by granting tax exemption benefit,
whenever needed.
One of the contentions advanced by the petitioner’s counsel
was that while the power of exemption can be granted on any
specified class of sales or purchases from payment of tax,
the government was not entitled to grant exemption only in
favour of new units set up in backward areas from the
payment of purchase tax, sales tax and central sales tax. In
other words the argument was that if the Government wanted
to grant exemption in favour of such units, then the
government should have granted the benefit of tax exemption
to all the units in backward area which were engaged in the
production of he same type of goods as the new units were
engaged in. We are unable to accept this contention because
the exemption granted in favour of the of the new units has
a sound economic and public policy underling it. The policy
has been set out by he government in he counter affidavit
filed b it in W.P. No. 1527of 1987 in the following manner.
"I submit that these benefits are in accordance with the
policy of the Government to give Sales Tax incentives to he
new Units in backward a areas in order to achieve dispersion
of industries, industrialisation of back wad areas as also
of he purposes of creating employment opportunities in he
backward areas and as such exemption is granted in he large
public interest in order to enable the new units o
successfully compete with the older. Units in he initial
yeas of production in order to occasion sufficient foothold
PG NO 82
in an established industry. I further submit that this
classification is reasonable in all respects and is not at
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 9
all arbitrary as established Units have several advantages
over new Units in as much as the overhead assets are less
and hence no fundamental right is infringed in any manner of
the old Units . "
It cannot, therefore, be contended that the old units
should also have been granted the same benefit as new units
since both the units are engaged in the manufacture of the
same type of products. Infact such a policy, if followed by
the government, would not only fail to provide incentive to
the new industries but would also place the new units at a
comparative disadvantage in being made to face stiff
competition with older units which have been established at
lesser cost and which have stabilised themselves in the
field by successfully running the units for a number of
years. The words in Section 41 exempt any specified class of
sales or purchases" could well be construed as applying to
the grant of exemption to the new units because the sales
and purchases effected by new entrants would constitute a
specified class by themselves in contra distinction with the
class of sales and purchases effected by the older and
seasoned units.
In so far as the second contention is concerned, viz.
that washed cottonseed oil would also fall in the category
of edible oils inspite of the fact that it has to be
processed still further for being made fit for human
consumption. we find that the contention is not a tenable
one. The petitioner had contended before the government that
washed cottonseed oil is also one type of edible oil but the
government have rejected this contention stating that since
washed cottonseed oil cannot be made use of without further
processing for direct human consumption, it would not fall
in the category of edible oil. This position is not
controverted by the petitioners and, therefore, as long as
the washed cottonseed oil that is produced is sold without
further processing it will not constitute edible oil. The
government therefore. are well within their powers in
refusing to accept the petitioner’s contention that washed
cottonseed oil is also edible oil and, therefore all the new
units which are engaged in the manufacture of washed
cottonseed oil should also be rendered ineligible from
enjoying the benefit of tax exemption as has been done in
the case of units producing edible oil.
Yet another contention of the petitioner’s counsel was
that the term ‘oil’ would include edible as well as non
PG NO 83
edible oil and therefore, there was no reason or
justification for the government to have removed the benefit
of tax exemption to units manufacturing edible oil alone and
allow the continuance of the benefit of tax exemption to new
units producing non edible oil. Even this contention is
devoid of substance because even though edible and non
edible oils may fall under the general heading of ‘Oils’
they undoubtedly constitute two seperate groups which are
capable of distinct classification on intelligible basis.
Lastly, coming to the argument that new units engaged in
producing non edible oil derive a huge benefit by way of tax
exemption while the older units stand penalised and getting
crushed out of existence, the government have examined the
matter fully and found that the new units engaged in the
production of edible oil alone have derived undue advantage
by reason of the tax exemption, and that the other eligible
units engaged in the manufacture of other products including
non edible oils have not derived benefit to such an extent
as to justify revocation of the tax exemption benefit. This
assessment exercise falls purely within the domain of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 9
Executive and it is not for the Court to see whether other
edible units also derive huge benefits and as such
government ought to have revoked the tax exemption benefit
in their cases as well. As already stated the classification
between units engaged in producing edible oils and non
edible oils is on an intelligible and sustainable basis and
as such the Court cannot hold that the government should
treat both kinds of units alike and direct the withdrawal of
the tax exemption benefit in the case of non edible oil
producing units also.
For all these reasons we hold that Section 41 of the
Bombay Sales Tax Act is not violative of Articles 14, 19 and
21 of the Constitution as alleged by the petitioner in W.P.
No. 1521 of 1987.
In the result W.P. No. 1521 of 1987 will stand
dismissed. There will he no order as to costs.
R.S.S. Petition dismissed.