Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
I.T.C. LTD. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KARNATAKA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/05/1985
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION:
1985 SCR Supl. (1) 145 1985 SCALE (2)515
ACT:
Constitution of India, Seventh Schedule. Entry 52 of
List I, and Entries 22 and 66 of List II-"Industries"-
Tobacco Board Act 1975 (Central Act) passed for the
development of tobacco industry-State Act subsequently
included tobacco in its Schedule and levied market fee on
tobacco or its products-Whether the provisions of the State
Act repugnant to the Central Act on this point.
Karnataka Agricultural Produce Marketing (Regulation)
(Amendment) Act 1966, Section 65 Enhancement and collection
of market fee-Whether it should have direct nexus between
services randered and the amount collected-Levy of market
fee found to be bad in law-Fee collected-Whether it should
be refunded-Whether the State legislature competent to
validate levy declared by Court as bad in law.
HEADNOTE:
On 19th May, 1975, the State Government amended s. 65
of the Karnataka Agricultural Produce Marketing (Regulation)
Act, 1966 by the Karnataka Agricultural Produce Marketing
(Regulation) (Amendment) Act 24 of 1975. Sub-Section (1) of
S. 65 as it stood after the amendment provided that the
Market Committee shall levy and collect market fee from
every seller in respect of agricultural produce sold by such
seller in the market area at the rate of one rupee per
hundred rupees of the price of such produce sold. Sub
Section (2) laid down that the market Committee shall levy
and collect market fee from every buyer in respect of
agricultural produce bought by such buyer in the market area
at such rate as may be specified in the bye-laws. Sub-
Section (3) stated that every market committee shall credit
to the Karnataka Motor Vehicles Taxation Act, 1957, the
market fee collected under sub-section (1) for being spent
for the purpose of construction, repair, improvement and
maintenance of rural roads in the State. On 2th September,
1978, the High Court struck down the amended section 65(1)
and (3) of the Act and upheld the levy on buyers at the rate
of one rupee per one hundred rupees under s. 65(2) of the
Act in Rajasekhariah’s case (ILR (1978) Karnataka 1939).
Thereafter, the Karnataka Ordinance 2 of 1979 was
promulgated amending ss. 63 and 65 of the Act. Section 63
was amended with retrospective effect from 19.5.1975 by
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substituting in clause (ii) of sub-section (1) of S. 63 the
words "transport and marketing" for the word "marketing".
The amended S. 65(a) validated market fee levied and
collected under sub-section (1) of S. 65 for the period
19.5.1975 to 28.9.1978; (b) omitted the amended sub-section
(1) of S. 65 with effect from 28.9.1978; (c) enhanced the
maximum permissible limit of market fee levied and
146
and collected from buyers of specified agricultural produce
under sub-section (2) of S. 65 from one per cent to two per
cent; and (d) omitted sub-section (3) of S. 65 as if it
never existed in the Statute. The Ordinance was later
replaced by the Karnataka Agricultural Produce Marketing
(Regulation) (Amendment) Act 17 of 1980 which also numerated
for the first time cardamom and tobacco as an agricultural
produce for the purpose of the Act. The Tobacco Board Act
1975 (Act No. 4 of 1975) which had been passed for the
development of the tobacco industry under the control of the
Union was already in existence before tobacco was included
in the Schedule to the Act, Section 42 of that Amendment Act
validated the levy and collection of market fee during the
period 19.5.1975 to 28.9.1978. Pursuant to the amendment
made to sub-section 2 of S. 65 of the Act, all the Market
Committees in the State of Karnataka except the Mangalore
Market Committee amended the bye-law by enhancing the levy
under S. 65(2) of the Act from one per cent to two per cent
on the directions of the Chief Marketing Officer and without
following the procedure laid down in S. 148 of the Act.
The appellants/traders filed writ petitions in the High
Court challenging the enhancement of the levy from one per
cent to two per cent as well as the collection of market fee
from sellers during the period 19.5.1975 to 28.9.1978. The
High Court directed the Chief Marketing Officer to furnish
in respect of each market committee a comprehensive
statement in a tabulated form setting out certain factors
which may be relevant for considering the question of
enhancement of market fee. During the hearing of the writ
petitions, the respondent State promulgated Karnataka
Ordinance No. 22 of 1981 dispensing with the requirement of
the previous publication contemplated in S. 148 of the Act
in relation to making of bye-laws and amendments thereof
with retrospective effect.
The High Court held (1) that s. 65(1) as substituted by
the Act 17 of 1980 and S. 42 of the Amendment Act were
unconstitutional and liable to be struck down on the grounds
(1) that before S. 65(3) was struck down, the levy and
collection of market fee under S. 65(1), as it then stood
were for the benefit of the Karnataka Roads and Bridges Fund
constituted under the Karnataka Motor Vehicles Taxation Act,
1957, and that event which had happened, namely, crediting
of the market fee to that Fund cannot be reversed by the
subsequent amendment of S. 65(1) and introduction of S. 42
in the Amendment Act 17 of 1980; (ii) that as per the
decision of the Supreme Court in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case
rural roads are primarily and essentially intended for the
benefit of the public and the class of market fee payers
are, as part of the general public, entitled to the benefit
of their user and the market fees cannot be levied on and
collected from them for that purpose, more so because the
rural roads constructed, improved, repaired and maintained
with the market fee collected did not become the property of
the market committees or shed their character as public
roads; (2) that sub-section 65(2) does not confer
uncanalised and excessive power on market committees in the
matter of fixing the rate of market fee and that there are
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adequate statutory guidelines and safeguards; (3) that on
the materials placed, the levy ought nor to fail for want of
quid pro quo. However, having regard to the infirmities
noticed in the estimates the High Court is unable to say
with any confidence that the enhancement of fee was
147
totally justified; (4) that S. 3 of the amending Ordinance
22 of 1981 validated the bye-law, notwithstanding the fact
that the affected interests were not heard because that
right has been taken away by s.3 and 5 of the amending
Ordinance 22 of 1981. However the Chief Marketing Officer’s
direction can be regarded as his previous sanction for
amending the bye-laws; (5) the question whether S. 65(2)
must be held to imply an obligation on the part of the
market committees to hear affected interested parties,
before the rate of fee was fixed was left open in the
judgment; (6) that the provisions of the Act in so far as
marketing of cardamom is concerned, are repugnant to the
provisions of the Cardamom Act (Central Act 42 of 1965) but,
so far as the provisions of the Tobacco Board Act, 1975
(Central Act) are concerned it makes provisions only in
relation to Virginia tobacco and not all varities of tobacco
and the Act is not repugnant to the provisions of the
Tobacco Board Act, and all that is necessary for the Market
Committee is to obtain auctioneer’s licence under the
provisions of the Tobacco Board Act.
In the appeals and writ petitions to this Court the
appellants and petitioners/traders contended that the
enhancement of the market fee from one per cent to two per
cent of the price of the specified agricultural produce is
invalid on two grounds : (1) that the item of expenses
envisaged for the rural roads has gone with the striking
down of s.65(1) and (3) of the Act and the omission of
clause (3) of s.65 from the Act by the Amendment Act 17 of
1980. However, the amount collected under that sub-section
will take care of the proposed expenditure envisaged in the
estimates and projections for the improvement of the
services in the regulated markets; and (ii) that reduction
of the enhanced levy from two per cent to one per cent
subsequently by the State Government shows that there was no
justification for the enhancement of the market fee from one
per cent to two per cent; (2) that the amendment of the bye-
laws made for enhancement of the market fee from one per
cent to two per cent was not in accordance with the
procedure laid down by s. 148 of the Act and ss. 3, 5(a) and
5(b) of Ordinance 22 of 1981 promulgated during the pendency
of the writ petitions in the High Court would not cure the
defect; (3) that S.65(1) as substituted by Act 17 of 1980,
read with s.42 of the Amending Act, seeking to validate the
collection of market fee on "sellers" made under the old
s.65(1) of the Act is constitutionally invalid, and (4) the
High Court erred in holding that the Tobacco Board Act, 1975
covers only Virginia tobacco and is not repugnant to the
provisions of ss.8(2)(a), 8(3) and 12 of the Tobacco Board
Act and r.35 of the Rules made under that Act.
On behalf of the respondents it was contended that quid
pro quo was established in respect of 73 out of 93 market
committees falling in categories ‘A’, ‘B’, ‘C’ and ‘D’ for
enhancement of the market fee from one per cent to two per
cent and no further enquiry was needed in view of Kewal
Krishan Puri’s case. (2) that there is no repugnancy between
the Act and the Tobacco Board Act, 1975, (3) that after
s.65(3) has been omitted from the Act there was no question
of striking down S.65(1) as substituted by the Amendment Act
17 of 1980 and since S.42 of the Amendment Act has validated
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the levy, there is no question of refund of the market fee
collected under S.65(1).
148
Dismissing all the civil appeals, special leave
petitions and the writ petitions except C.A. No. 629 of
1983.
(Per majority; Fazal Ali and Vardarajan, JJ.-Sabyasachi
Mukharji, J. dissenting)
^
HELD : 1 (i) A close and careful analysis of Articles
245 and 246 shows that the Constitution strikes a just
balance between the powers of the Parliament and the State
Legislatures but reserves to itself the right to legislate
in exceptional cases even in matters appearing in the State
List. This is the logical result and the necessary
concomitant of clause (4) of Art. 246. [168 E]
(1)(ii) The cardinal principles justifying the
competency of the respective legislatures with respect to
the entries concerned are : (a) Entries in each of the Lists
must be given the most liberal and widest possible
interpretation and no attempt should be made to narrow or
whittle down the scope of the entries; (b) the application
of the doctrine of pith and substance really means that
where a legislation falls entirely within the scope of an
entry within the competence of a State legislature then this
doctrine will apply and the Act will not be struck down; (c)
the consideration of encroachment or entrenchment of one
List in another and the extent thereof is also well
established. If entrenchment is minimal and does not affect
the dominant part of some other entry, which is not within
the competence of the State Legislature, the Act may be
upheld as constitutionally valid; (d) the nature and
character of the scope of the entries having regard to the
touch stone of the provisions of Arts. 245 and 246; and (e)
the doctrine of occupied field has a great place in the
interpretation as to whether or not a particular legislature
is competent to legislate on a particular entry. This means
that when the field is completely occupied by List I, then
the State legislature is wholly incompetent to legislate and
no entrenchment or encroachment, minimal or otherwise, by a
State legislature is permitted. In other words, where, the
field is not wholly occupied, then a mere minimal
encroachment or entrenchment would not affect the validity
of the State legislation. [168 F-H; 169 B-C; F-H]
The five principles have to be read and construed
together and not in isolation-where, however, the Central
and the State legislation cover the same field then the
central legislation would prevail. It is also well settled
that where two Acts, one passed by the Parliament and the
other by a State legislature collide and there is no
question of harmonising them, then the Central legislation
must prevail. There may also be cases where despite an entry
being in List II, the Parliament may under the provisions of
Art. 246(3) take over that particular field and legislate on
that subject which will debar the State legislature from
adding or passing any such legislation which has been taken
over under Art. 246(3). [170 B-D]
S.P. Mittal v. Union of India & Ors. [1985] 1 SCC 51;
Delhi Cloth & General Mills Co. Ltd. v. Union of India &
Ors. [1983] 4 SCC 167; Subrahmanyan Chettiar v. Muttuswami
Goundan AIR [1941] F.C. 47: Zaverbhai Amaidas v. State of
Bombay [1955] 1 SCR 799; Deep Chand v. State of U.P.
149
JUDGMENT:
(Proprietary) Ltd. v. State of West Bengal & Ors. [1962]
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Supp. 3 SCR 1; State of Orissa v. M.A. Tulloch & Co. [1964]
4 SCR 461; Sudhir Chandra Nawn v. Wealth Tax Officer,
Calcutta & Ors. [1969] 1 SCR 108; Baijnath Kedia v. State of
Bihar & Ors. [1970] 2 SCR 100, relied upon.
(2) Once the Centre takes over an industry under Entry
52 of List 1 and passes an Act to regulate the legislation,
the State legislature ceases to have any jurisdiction to
legislate in that field and if it does so, that legislation
would be ultra vires of the powers of the State legislature.
[174 H]
(3)(i) In the instant case, by virtue of Notification
No. 374(3) dated 31.5.80 the Central Government made
applicable ss. 10 and 11 of the 1975 Act to the State of
Maharashtra, West Bengal, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu and Uttar
Pradesh. By making Rule 35 in the Tobacco Board Rules, 1976
(enacted under s. 12 of the 1975 Act) the Market Committees
were debarred from auctioning or dealing in tobacco or its
products unless they were registered with the Board.
Admittedly the market Committees of the State of Karnataka
had not been registered with the Tobacco Board under the
1975 Act and were, therefore, incapable of rendering any
service at all. By a letter dated 15.9.83 the Tobacco Board
rejected the application made by the Karnataka State to
allow it to participate in auctioning the tobacco products.
It is manifest, therefore, that by virtue of the aforesaid
steps taken by the central legislation the field of tobacco
stood completely occupied and there was no room for
application of the doctrine of pith and substance nor would
the question of incidental entrenchment arise in such cases.
[165 F-H; 167 C-D]
(3)(ii) Even if the President’s assent would have been
taken it would not validate the Karnataka Act of 1980 so far
as the Tobacco Industry is concerned because Art. 254(2)
applies only to matters contained in the Concurrent List and
has nothing to do with matters enumerated in List I or List
II. Thus, the Karnataka Act of 1980 would have absolutely no
application to entry 52 of List I which are fully occupied
by the Central Act of 1975. [175 C]
This being the position, this Court strikes down that
part of the Karnataka Act which takes in itself the power to
levy market fee on tobaco or its products. Even if the
products may be sold in the markets in Karnataka or near
about the same place situated in that States, the power to
levy fee will not belong to that State; it will remain with
the Centre which would regulate the sale and purchase of
tobacco. [175 F]
Per Mukharji, J. (dissenting) :
1. The provisions of the Karnataka Marketing Act and
Tobacco Board Act and the Rules are not inconsistent. The
cardinal rule of interpretation is that the words should be
read in their ordinary natural and grammatical meaning. But
words in a constitutional document conferring legislative
powers should also be construed most liberally and in their
widest amplitude. On the construction of the Central Act
read with the rules it is clear that the Central Act and the
declaration made by section 2 of the Act cover all kinds of
tobac-
150
cos. Whether a particular legislation or enactment is within
the competence of particular legislature must be judged
after finding out the pith and substance, in other words,
the true nature and character, of the legislation in
question and secondly the entries in the list should be
given liberal and generous construction. All the entries
should be construed in harmonious manner so as to avoid
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conflict. In case of conflict, however, in respect of
entries where both the State and the Centre can legislate,
the Central legislation would prevail over the State
Legislation in view of the provisions of Articles 245 to 254
of the Constitution. [278 B; 271 E; 272 C; 271 C-D]
Navinchandra Mafatlal v. C I.T. Bombay, [1955] 1 SCR
829 at page 836-37, Baijnath v. Bihar State [1970] 2 S.C.R.
100 at 113, Kannan Devan Hills Co. v. Kerala, [1973] 1 SCR
356 at 369, Ganga Sugar Co. Ltd. v. State of U.P, [1980] 1
SCR 769 at 781, referred to.
2. (i) It is well-settled principle that Article 246
recognised the principle of Parliamentary supremacy in the
field of legislation in case where both legislatures have
competence to legislate (emphasis supplied). The
constitutional scheme is that Parliament has full and
exclusive power to legislate with respect to matters in List
I and has also power to legislate with respect to matters in
List III. A State Legislature has exclusive power to
legislate with respect to matters in List II, excluding the
matters falling in List I and has also concurrent power to
legislate with respect to matters falling in List III
excluding the matters falling in List I. The dominant
position of the Central Legislature with regard to matters
in List I and List III is established. [272 F-G]
2. (ii) The principles of repugnancy in Indian
Constitution are well-settled. These are as follows :-
(a) A legislation, which in its pith and substance,
falls within any of the entries of List I of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution, would be exclusively within
the competence of the Parliament. [276 B]
(b) A legislation falling exclusively, in its pith and
substance, within any of the entries in List II of the
Seventh Schedule, would be within the exclusive competence
of the State Legislature; [276 B]
(c) A Central law which in its pith and substance,
falls within any entry in List I would be valid even though
it might contain incidental provisions in List II which may
contain ancillary provisions which might touch on any entry
of List I incidentally; [276 C]
(d) A State law which, in its pith and substance, is
within any entry in List II would be valid even though it
might incidentally touch upon a subject falling within List
I; [276 D]
(e) A Central law, which in its pith and substance,
dealt with a subject falling within List II would be bad and
ultra vires the Constitution. Similarly, a State law which
in its pith and substance dealt with a matter falling within
List I would be invalid and ultra vires the Constitution;
and [276 E-F]
151
(f) The concept of repugnancy arises only with regard
to laws dealing with subjects covered by the entries falling
in List III, in respect of which both Parliament and State
Legislature are competent to legislate. Under Article 254 of
the Constitution, a State law passed in respect of a subject
matter comprised in List III would be invalid if its
provisions were repugnant to a law passed on the same
subject by Parliament. The repugnancy would arise only if
both the laws cannot exist together. Repugnancy does not
arise simply because Parliament and the States pass law on
the same subject. There can not be any repugnancy in respect
of State laws passed in respect of matters falling in pith
and substance in List II or in respect of Central laws
passed on subjects falling in List I. Parliament cannot
legislate on a State subject and State cannot legislate on a
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Central subject. If either trenches upon the field of the
other, the law will be ultra vires. [276 G-H; 277 A]
Subramanyam v. Muthuswamy, [1940] 45 C.W.N. (FC) 1=AIR
1941 FC 47 at 58, Sudhir Chand v. Wealth Tax Officer,
Calcutta, [1969] 1 SCR 108 at 113 Ch. rika Ramji & Others
Etc. v. State of Uttar Pradesh & Others, [1956] SCR 393,
State of Orissa v. M.A. Tulloch Co. [1964] 4 SCR 461 at 477,
M/s. Rochst Pharmaceuticals Ltd. & Others Etc. v. State of
Bihar and Others etc, Ramesh Chandra Etc. v. State of U.P.
Etc., [1983] 4 SCC 45 and The Calcutta Gas Company
(Proprietary) Ltd. v. The State of West Bengal and Others,
[1962] 3 Supp. SCR 1 referred to.
3. While it is true that in the spheres very carefully
delineated, the Parliament has supremacy over State
Legislatures, supremacy in the sense that in those fields
Parliamentary legislation would hold the field and not the
State legislation-but to denude the State Legislature of its
power to legislate where the legislation in question in pith
and substance i.e. in its true nature and character, belongs
to the State field, one should be chary to denude the State
of its power to legislate and mobilise resources because
that would be destructive of the spirit and purpose of India
being a Union of States. States must have power to raise and
mobilise resources in their exclusive fields. [280 B-C]
4. (i) In the instant case the Karnataka Marketing Act
deals with the subject of market in entry 28 read with entry
66 of List II. Such Acts are covered by entry 28 of List II
exclusively unlike entries 23, 24, 26 and 27. It is
important to bear in mind that entry 28 is not subject to
withdrawal into list I by Parliament as under entries 52 and
54 of List I and entry 33 of List III. The State Act is not
on a subject in List III-nor is the Central Act a law
relating to any subject in List III. Therefore, there cannot
be any question of repugnancy. Section 31 of the Central Act
makes it clear that it does not derogate from any law but
enacts something in addition. Essentially the Central Act
was for the development of the industry of tobacco and,
incidentally, certain provisions for better sale of tobacco
through certain auction platforms had been made. There is
nothing in the Act or in the Rules which indicate that it is
inconsistent with or cannot be operated along with the
marketing regulations. [277 F-G; 279 B-C]
4. (ii) It is fully manifest that both Act can operate
in their respective fields and there is no repugnancy if
both the Acts are considered in the light
152
of their respective true nature and character. While giving
due weight to Centre’s supremacy in the matters of
legislation, the States’ legitimate sphere of legislation
should not be unnecessarily whittled down-because that would
be unwarranted by the spirit and basic purpose of the
constitutional division of powers-not merely allocation of
power by the Constitution but invasion by Parliamentary
legislations. By complying with the State Act, the Central
Act can function to serve the purpose and object of the
Central Act, but if only the Central Act was to prevail, the
State Act of marketing for coffee would become non est-
wholly unnecessary and undesirable. The Marketing Act is
essentially an Act to regulate the marketing of agricultural
produce; control of coffee industry would not be defeated if
the marketing of coffee is done within the provisions of the
Marketing Act. It must therefore be held that the State Act
should prevail. One should avoid corroding the State’s ambit
of powers of legislations which will ultimately lead to
erosion of India being a Union of States. [279 F-G; 280 D-E]
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The Calcutta Gas Company (Proprietary) Ltd. v. The
State of West Bengal and Others, [1962] 3 Supp. SCR 1,
followed.
Per majority, Fazal Ali and Mukharji, JJ.-Varadarajan,
J. dissenting.
Per Fazal Ali, J.
1. (i) The levying of market fee on the sale and
purchase of agricultural products in the markets is not a
static event but is an ever changing concept. It has to be
medulated and adapted to the requirements and necessities of
the society, the expanding needs of the nation and the ever
increasing trends of the rise in prices. In other words,
this is a dynamic concept which keeps on changing. Thus it
is impossible to lay down a hard and fast rule which would
apply for all times to come. Therefore, the decision in
Kewal Krishan Puri’s case cannot be held to be law for all
times to come irrespective of the period nor was this
decision meant to lay down any such principle. [161 H; 162
B]
(ii) The one cardinal principle which flows from Kewal
Krishan Puri’s case is that any fee or money realised should
not be diverted to any other purpose except for the benefit
of the purchaser/seller. What would be the nature of the
service, when and how it should be rendered and in what
measure is entirely a matter for the market committees to
decide or determine. So long as the money is realised, even
though on the higher side, but in spent on the extention and
expansion of the markets, market yards, market facilities,
godowns, rest houses, buildings, even roads leading up to
the markets, that would be fully within the concept of a fee
and could not be labelled as a tax on the purchasers at the
auction of goods or articles in the market. [161 H; 159 E]
In the instant case, though the fee appears to be on
the higher side but there is unimpeachable evidence to show
that the entire amount realised has not been spent on some
other object or purpose but has been kept in reserve for
developing the markets during the course of the coming 10-12
years. Though this period is large but it cannot be said
that there is no nexus between the services rendered and the
fee realised. Whether the development
153
takes place immediately or in the course of a few years, so
long as it is done within a reasonable period it cannot be
said that the fee amounts to a tax and is, therefore, ultra
vires. [161 B-C]
Kewal Krishan Puri & Anr. v. State of Punjab & Ors.
[1979] 3 SCR 1217, Southern Pharmaceuticals & Chemicals,
Trichur & Ors. etc. v. State of Kerala & Ors. etc. [1982] 1
SCR 519 and Sreenivasa General Traders & Ors. v. State of
Andhra Pradesh, [1983] 3 SCC 353 referred to.
Per Mukharji, J.
1. Section 65(2) did not confer any arbitrary power and
there was no excessive delegation of legislative power to
the market committees and therefore not vitiated on that
account. The question whether on a proper construction of
section 65(2) there was any obligation on the part of the
marketing committee to hear the parties was rightly left
upon by the High Court with certain observations and
directions contained in its judgment. So far as the High
Court held against the contentions of the appellants that
bye-laws were invalid for want of previous publication or
for want of consulting the interests affected, I am also in
respectful agreement for the reasons discussed by the High
Court which need not be reiterated again. The principle of
audi alteram partem has application only to judicial, quasi-
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judicial and administrative functions and not to any
legislative functions. [270 A-D]
The Tulsipur Sugar Co. Ltd. v. The Notified Area
Committee, Tulsipur, [1980] 2 SCR 1111 at pages 1118 to
1121, Avinder Singh etc. v. State of Punjab & Anr. Etc.,
[1979] 1 SCR 845, referred to.
2. (i) It is well-settled that though there must be
some special services to the payers of the fees to be a fee
it is not necessary that all the services must be to the
payers of the fees nor can the correlation between payment
of fee and services rendered be established with
mathematical exactitude. It is permissible in the modern set
up to take into account projections into future and not only
the present services can be utilised for justifying the
imposition of fee. All planning, projects into the future
for its existence and survival. Any incidental benefit to
those other than the payers of the fee is not decisive of
the fact whether it is a ‘tax’ or a ‘fee’. It is necessary
to find out the primary object and essential purpose of the
imposition (emphasis supplied). If the primary object and
essential purpose of the imposition be service of some
special kind to the users of the market or payers of fee
other consequences or other benefits to others do not in the
least affect the position. The concept of benefit to the
users of market must be looked at from a broad common sense
point of view, taking an integrated view. The proper
principles are : (1) that there should be relationship
between service and fee, (2) that the relationship is
reasonable cannot be established with mathematical
exactitude in the sense that both sides must be equally
balanced; (3) in the course of rendering such services to
the payers of the fee if some other benefits accrue or arise
to others quid-pro-quo is not destroyed. The concept of
quid-pro-quo should be judged in the context of the present
days-concept of markets which are expected to render various
services and provide various amenities
154
and these benefits cannot be divorced from the benefits
accruing incidentally to others; (4) that a reasonable
projection for the future years of practical scheme is
permissible; (5) services rendered must be to the users of
those markets or to the subsequent users of those markets as
a class. Though fee is not levied as a part of common burden
yet service and payment cannot exactly be balanced; and (6)
the primary object and the essential purpose of the
imposition must be looked into. [256 B-E; 260 F-H]
Kewal Krishan Puri v. State of Punjab, AIR 1980 S.C.
1008, H. H. Shri Swamiji of Shri Admar Mutt, etc. v. the
Commissioner, Hindu Religious & Charitable Endowments
Department & Ors. [1980] 1 SCR 368; Ramesh Chandra etc v.
State of U.P. etc. [1980] 3 SCR 104; Municipal Corporation
of Delhi and Others v. Mohd. Yasin, [1983] 3 SCC 229;
Southern Pharmaceuticals & Chemicals Trichur & Ors. Etc. v.
State of Kerala & Ors. Etc. [1982] 1 SCR - 19; Sreenivasa
General Traders and Others v. State of Andhra Pradesh and
Others, [1983] 4 SCC 353; Amar Nath Om Parkash & Ors. etc.
v. State of Punjab & Ors. Civil Appeal Nos. 4500 and 4501 of
1984 (decided on 19.11.1984), relied upon.
In the instant case, having regard to the detailed
analysis of the expenditure of the various market
committees, it could not be said that the expenditure and
appropriation of fee was so disproportionate to the projects
actual and projected that it could be said that the levy
lost the character of fee. [261 B]
2. (ii) Construction of rural roads giving facilities
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for going to the market is a special service primarily and
directly intended for the benefit of the users of market.
If, without rural roads, markets could not be reached and
the functions for which the market committees were
constituted could not be performed, if it is of fundamental
importance that there should be a net work of roadways if
effective aid is to be given to buyers and sellers of goods
for marketing their products, then the fact that the public
streets and roads as trustees would be of no consequence in
considering such realisation as fee. [267 B; 268 B-C]
In the instant case, the High Court was error in
holding that the second major defect noticed in the law
authorising the levy on the sellers in Rajasekhariahs case
namely construction of rural roads would not qualify being
reckoned as a special service to the class of persons paying
the fee, had not been cured or removed by the law which
sought to validate the levy. The Act which sought to
validate the levy contributed to the ‘Karnataka Roads and
Bridges Fund" was for the maintenance of rural roads which
forms an integral part of the facilities for marketing of
the goods. Therefore this court is unable to sustain the
findings of the High Court of Karnataka that section 65(1)
as substituted by Section 20 of the Act 17 of 1980 as well
as section 42 of the Amending Act was not constitutionally
valid and was liable to be struck down. These sections are
constitutionally valid in view of the perspective in which
the concept of fee has to be judged. [268 D-G]
Amar Nath Om Parkash & Ors. etc. State of Punjab &
Ors., Civil Appeal No. 4500 and 4501 of 1984 (decided on
19.11.1984), followed.
155
Municipal Corporation of Delhi and Others v. Mohd.
Yasin, [1983] 3 SCC 229, relied upon.
3. The validity of a validating law has to be judged
mainly be judging, firstly whether a legislature possesses
competence over the subject matter i.e., whether by
validation, the legislature exercises competence over the
subject matter and secondly whether by validation the
legislature has removed the defect which the court had found
in the previous law and thirdly whether it is consistent
with the provisions of part III of the Constitution. Section
42 of the Amending Act is valid and by virtue of the said
section, there cannot be any order for refund in the instant
case. [266 G; 269 F]
Misrilal Jain etc. etc. v. State of Orissa and
Another., AIR 1977 SC 1686-[1977] 3 SCR 714: Shri Prithvi
Cotton Mills Ltd. Anr. v. Broach Borough Municipality &
Ors., AIR 1970 SC 192=[1970] 1 SCR 388; Municipal
Corporation of City of Ahmedabad, etc. v. New Shorock Spg &
Wvg. Co. Ltd. etc., AIR 1970 SC 1292=[1971] 1 SCR 288; I.N.
Sakeena v. The State of Madhya Pradesh, AIR 1976 SC 2650
[1976] 3 SCR 237; relied upon.
4. Section 42 of the Amending Act has specifically
provided against refund of levy of fees already collected.
At no stage was it claimed or stated that the traders had
paid market fees themselves. The appellants before this
Court are buyers in the market but they themselves are
trading in the commodities purchased by them. On further
sale of the commodities as traders they have recovered the
fees from their purchasers. Therefore, in view of section 42
of the Amending Act which provided for the validation of the
levy of market fee and which provided further by section
42(1)(b) and (c) that no proceedings for refund would lie,
there cannot be any order of refund in the instant case.
[269 A-B; D]
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5. (i) The High Court was competent to give directions
and the same were within the competence of the High Court
while dealing with grievances made under Article 226 of the
Constitution to ensure that appropriate statuary authorities
acted according to law after properly ascertaining the facts
and for the purpose of rending fully justice to the parties.
[261 H; 262 A]
5. (ii) Courts of today cannot and do not any longer
remain passive with the negative attitude, merely striking
down a law or preventing something, being done. While it is
true that if a law is bad, the Court must strike it down, if
the law by and large and in its true perspective is of a
social purpose if implemented in a particular manner could
be valid, then the Court can and should ensure that
implementation should be done in such particular manner and
give directions to that effect. [263 A-B]
In the instant case, the High Court having found, that
basically and essentially the fee was justified on the
theory of quid pro quo, the Court was entitled to give
positive directions regards the manner the money should be
spent. [263 C]
156
Per Varadarajan, J. (dissenting)
1. There is no correlation between the enhancement of
the rate of the market fee leviable under s. 65(2) from one
per cent to two per cent and the services rendered or
proposed to be rendered by the Market Committees and,
therefore, the enhancement is invalid in law, It is not
necessary to establish the element of quid pro quo in regard
to market fees with arithmetical exactitude, but an amount
of fee must be earmarked for rendering services to the
buyers in the notified market area and a good and
substantial portion of it must be shown to be expended for
those purposes. The good and substantial portion earmarked
for rendering services may be in the neighbourhood of two
thirds or three-fourths and it must be shown with reasonable
certainty as being spent for rendering services of the kind
mentioned in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case. [213 F; 213 B-C]
In facts and circumstances of the case, the High Court
should have held that there is no correlation and that there
is no justification for enhancement of the rate of the
market fee. The learned judges of the High Court have failed
to exercise the jurisdiction vested in them by law by not
recording any finding one way or the other on the question
of correlation, and that they have clothed the Market
Committees and the Chief Marketing Officer with their
jurisdiction to decide the question whether the enhancement
is justified and if not justified to effect a down-ward
revision wherever necessary. [220 A-B]
Kewal Krishan Puri v. State of Punjab, [1973] 3 SCR
1217, followed.
2(i) Enhancement of the rate of market fee leviable
under s. 65(2) of the Act by Amendments of the bye-laws from
one per cent to two per cent of the price of the notified
agricultural produce is invalid in law for non-compliance
with the law laid down in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case. If the
market fee is sought to be raised, proper budgets,
estimates, balance-sheets showing the money in hand and in
deposit, expenditure on projects to be undertaken etc.
should be carefully prepared. Then and only then there may
be a legal justification for raising the rate of the market
fee further to a reasonable extent, for only then the
authorities will be able to know the correct position and to
decide reasonably as to what extent the raising of the
market fee can be justified, taking an over-all view of the
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matter. [228 C; 213 C-D]
2 (ii) Admittedly, there was no previous publication as
required by s. 148(1) as it stood at the relevant time, and
that requirement is purported to have been dispensed with
retrospectively by s 3 of Ordinance 22 of 1981. Market fee
is not a tax which is imposed by law passed by a Legislature
where the interests affected are or are supposed to be
represented unlike the market fee the enhancement whereof is
made by subordinate legislation by way of amendment of the
relevant by-laws by the Market Committees. That is why the
provision for previous publication was made in s. 148(1) of
the Act as it stood at the relevant time. Previous approval
can only be of some
157
proposal or resolution of the Market Committees for during
one or the other of the things required to be done under the
provisions of the Act. When undisputably there was no such
resolution or proposal by the Market Committees for
enhancement of the rate of the market fee, it is difficult
to see how the direction of the Chief Marketing Officer
given to the Market Committees to amend the bye-laws for
raising the rate of the market fee from one per cent to two
per cent can be considered to be his approval. The right of
the affected interests of being heard before the Market
Committees could raise the rate of the market fee being a
right available to them under the principles of natural
justice cannot be denied to them even by omitting in s.
148(1) the clause relating to previous publication of the
proposal to make or amend any bye-law under s. 148 of the
Act. In any event the amendment has not taken away the
requirement of previous approval of the Chief Marketing
Officer, and since there was no resolution or proposal of
the Market Committees to enhance the rate of the market fee
before the Chief Marketing Officer gave the direction to the
Market Committees to amend the bye-laws for ralsing the
market fee the direction cannot be taken as previous
approval of something which was not in existence at that
time. Therefore, the amendment of the bye-laws made for
enhancement of the rate of the market fee from one per cent
to two per cent is invalid in law notwithstanding s. 3 of
Ordinance 22 of 1981 and s. 12 of Karnataka Act 4 of 1982.
[222 E; G-H; D-E ; 223 D-F]
In the present cases, none of these requirements was
satisfied before the market fee was raised. The Market
Committees had no such material before them before they
raised the rate of the market fee from one per cent
uniformly to two per cent by amendment of the bye-law on the
more direction of the Chief Marketing Officer. Therefore the
enhancement of the market fee from one per cent to two per
cent by amendment of the bye-law under the directions of the
Chief Marketing Officer without complying with the
principles of law laid down in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case is
bad in law The same would be the position even if the
amendment to the bye-law was made in accordance with s. 148
of the Act as it stood before the amendment by the Ordinance
22 of 1981. [213 E; 214 G-H]
3. The High Court has erred in giving the direction
dated 30.11.1981 to the Chief Marketing Officer for
furnishing a comprehensive statement in respect of each of
the Market Committees in a tabular form. The High Court has,
thus, given an opportunity to the Market Committees to fill
up the lacuna since the materials supplied thereafter by way
of Ex. R-1 to R-111 and similar statements perused by the
High Court were not available either on the date of the
amendment of the bye-law enhancing the rate of the market
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fee from one per cent to two per cent or even on the dates
on which the Writ Petitions were filed in the High Court.
[215 D-E]
4. S. 65(1) of the Act as substituted by the Amendment
Act 24 of 1975 and Act 17 of 1980, and s. 42 of Amendment
Act 17 of 1980 in so far as it seeks to save what has been
done under s. 65 (1) of the Act are unconstitutional and
have been rightly struck down by the High Court; the quid
pro quo for the levy under substituted s. 65 (1) on sellers
was the construction, repair, improve-
158
ment and maintenance of rural roads which is no longer
permissible to be done out of moneys collected as market
fees There is thus no quid pro quo to any extent for the
levy under the substituted s. 65 (1) of the Act and
therefore, it fails, and it is not protected even by s. 42
of the Amendment Act 17 of 1980 and has been rightly struck
down by the High Court. S 42 of the Amendment Act 17 of 1980
in so far as it seeks to save the levy and collection of
market fee on sellers under the substituted s. 65 (1) cannot
also stand. [226 H; 227 A-B
5. There shall be no refund of the market fees
collected under the substituted s. 65 (1) or excess fee
collected under s. 65 (2) either by the State Government or
by any of the Market Committees. [227 H]
The market fee collected from sellers under the
substituted s. 65 (1) must have been credited to the
Karnataka Roads and Bridges Fund and used for the purpose of
construction, repair, improvement and maintenance of rural
roads which are undoubtedly for the benefit of the general
public. The excess fee collected under s. 65 (2) of the Act
also must have been utilised for the purposes contemplated
by the Act. The persons from whom they have been collected,
sellers and buyers, would naturally have passed on the levy
to those who purchased the agricultural produce from them
and the levy must have ultimately been borne by the
consumers of the produce. Any refund would go to unjust
enrichment of the persons from whom they have been
collected. In these circumstances no order for refund of the
market fee collected under the substituted s. 65 (1) and the
excess market fee collected under s. 65 (2) of the Act could
be made in these cases. [227 F-H]
M/s. Amarnath Om Prakash & Ors. v. State of Punjab
[1975] 3 SCR 475 followed.
Southern Pharmaceuticals and Chemicals v. State of
Kerala & Ors. etc. [1982] 1 SCR 519, Mahant Sri Jagannath
v. State of Orissa, [1954] SCR 1046, Rathilal Param Chand
Gandhi v. State of Bombay, [1954] SCR 1055, Sreenivasa
General Traders & Ors. v. State of Andhra Pradesh, [1983] 3
SCR 843 and Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Mohd. Yasin,
[1983] 3 SCR 229, referred to.
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION :Civil Appeal Nos. 605-
2526, 3528-3632, 4356-5278, 6977-7173, 7514-8199, 8921-9939,
of 1983 and Special Leave Petitions Nos. 3419-20 and 7087-
7111 of 1983 and Writ Petition No. 6859 of 1982.
From the Judgment and Order dated 25.1.1982 of the
Karnataka High Court in Civil Writ Petition No. 12133 of
1979.
Soli J. Sorabjee, Dr. Y.S. Chitale, V.M. Tarkunde, S.N.
Kacker, S.N. Haksar, Mrs. A.K. Verma, Aditya Narain, D.N.
Misra, E.R. Inder Kumar, Mukul Mudgal, Mrs. S. Ramachandran,
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P.H. Parekh, Mrs. Manju Sharma, Ms. Divya K. Bhalla, S.S.
Javali, B.P. Singh, and Ranjit Kumar for the appearing
Appellants.
159
P.R. Mridul, S.T. Desai, H.B. Datar, R.P. Bhatt, K.L.
Sharma, A.K. Sen, B.G. Sridharan, Devendra Singh, Mrs. Bina
Tamta, R.B. Datar, Swaraj Kaushal, V.C. Brahmraijappa, K.N.
Madhysoodhnan, E.C. Vidyasagar, M. Veerappa, Ashok Kumar,
B.G. Shreedharan and R.B. Datar for the Respondents.
The following Judgments were delivered
FAZAL ALI, J. I have carefully gone through the
judgment of my learned Brother, Mukharji, J., on the
question of fee levied by the Karnataka State on the
agricultural produce brought to the market for sale in that
State. The theory of nexus between the fee levied and the
services rendered cannot be reduced to a ritualistic formula
so as to close it in a straitjacket nor can it be weighed in
golden scales All that is necessary is that there should be
a direct nexus between realisation of fees and the services
rendered. What would be the nature of the services, when and
how it should be rendered and in what measure is entirely a
matter for the market committees to decide or determine. So
long as the money is realised, even though on the higher
side, but is spent on the extention and expansion of the
markets, market yards, market facilities, godowns, rest
houses, buildings, even roads leading up to the markets,
that would be fully within the concept of a fee and could
not be labelled as a tax on the purchasers at the action of
goods or articles in the market. It is, however, difficult
to lay down any hard and fast rule for determining the
extent and contours of the services that should be rendered
by the Government while imposing a fee. All that the law
requires is that the amount of fee realised from the
purchasers should be spent for the purposes of the market.
For instance, if the fee is on the higher side but the
excess amount is reserved for the present or future
expansion of the market, the provision for making further
facilities, the building up of roads upto the point of
markets so as to benefit the purchasers and make there task
easier to collect all their goods at one place or to build
rest houses for their stay while transacting their business
in which case any reasonable fee levied by the market
committees would be justifiable. It may be that sometimes
there may be a huge rush of arrivals of goods and the
purchasers/sellers may have to wait for a day or two or even
a week to buy or sell the goods in such cases it will be
sufficient if the fee realised, even if it is in excess, is
reserved exclusively for the purpose of expansion and
development of the markets or market buildings or roads
leading up to the markets.
160
I am not persuaded to accept the argument that the
facts of the present case are fully covered by the decision
of this Court in Kewal Krishan Puri & Anr. v. State of
Punjab & Ors.(1) That case must be read in the light of the
peculiar facts before the Court. I do not consider this to
be an authority for all times to levy a fee of Rs. 2 or Re.
1 per 100 in all cases irrespective of the merits of the
case. The problem of marketing in a developing country like
ours has assumed very large proportions and the market fees
are required to provide excellent facilities for extension,
expansion and development of markets. In doing so, the
Government can construct roads by converting rural roads
into tarred ones in order to provide all possible
convenience to the purchasers and boost up the sales. What
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Kewal Krishan Puri’s case decided was that in the facts of
that case there was no clear nexus between the fee and the
services rendered. In Southern Pharmaceuticals & Chemicals,
Trichur & Ors. etc. v. State of Kerala & Ors. etc.,(2) A.P.
Sen, J. speaking for the Court observed thus :
"the Constitution did not contemplate it to be an
essential element of a fee that it should be credited
to a separate fund and not the consolidated fund. It is
also increasingly realised that the element of quid pro
quo stricto senso is not always a sine qua non of a
fee.
... ... ...
Our attention has been drawn to the observations in
Kewal Krishan Puri & Anr. v. State of Punjab & Ors. 1
(1979 (3) SCR 1217 at 1230) :
The element of quid pro quo must be established
between the payer of the fee and the authority charging
it. It may not be exact equivalent of the fee by a
mathematical precision, yet, by and large, or
predominantly, the authority collecting the fee must
show that the service which they are rendering in lieu
of fee is for some special benefit of the payer of the
fee.
To our mind, these observations are not intended
and meant as laying down a rule of universal
application."
161
The one cardinal principle which flows from Kewal
Krishan Puri’s case (supra) is that any fee or money
realised should not be diverted to any other purpose except
for the benefit of the purchaser/seller. In the instant
case, though the fee appears to be on the higher side but
there is unimpeachable evidence to show that the entire
amount realised has not been spent on some other object or
purpose but has been kept in reserve for developing the
markets during the course of the coming 10-12 years. Though
this period is large but it cannot be said that there is no
nexus between the fee realised. Whether the development
takes place immediately or in the course of a few years, so
long as it is done with in a reasonable period, it cannot be
said that the fee amounts to a tax and is, therefore, ultra
vires.
In Sreenivasa General Traders & Ors. v. State of Andhra
Pradesh,(1) this Court observed as follows:
"With greatest respect, the decision in Kewal
Krishan Puri’s case does not lay down any legal
principle of general applicability.
... ... ...
The traditional view that there must be actual
quid pro quo for a fee has undergone a sea change in
the subsequent decisions.. In determining whether a
levy is a fee, the true test must be whether its
primary and essential purpose is to render specific
services to a specified area or class, it may be of no
consequence that the State may ultimately and
indirectly be benefited by it... However,
correlationship between the levy and the services
rendered (sic or) expected is one of general character
and not of mathematical exactitude."
I might observe here that the levying of market fee on
the sale and purchase of agricultural products in the
markets is not a static event but is an ever changing
concept. It has to be modulated and adapted to the
requirements and necessities of the society, the expanding
needs of the nation and the every increasing trends sf the
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rise in prices. In other words, this is a dynamic concept
which
(1) [1983] 3 S.C.R. 353.
162
keeps on changing. For instance, it cannot be said that what
is good for the 70 crores people of today will also hold
good when the population jumps to 75 crores or even more in
the course of another 5-10 years. Thus, it is impossible to
lay down a hard and fast rule which wôõld apply for all
times to come. Therefore, the decision in Kewal Krishan
Puri’s case cannot be held to be law for all times to come
irrespective of the period nor was this decision meant to
lay down any such principle. I, therefore, with due respect,
agree with the observations made and the detailed survey
done by Brother Mukharji, J. This disposes of the first limb
of the question of levy of fee so far as the agricultural
produce in Karnataka State is concerned.
Civil Appeal No. 629 of 1983
This now brings me to the second important question,
viz., whether the Karnataka Government was entitled to levy
fee on the goods or the various products and sub-products of
tobacco. The question is not free from doubt. Since the
inception of this Court, which was the precursor of the
Federal Court, it has been laid down that the various
entries found in the three Lists of the Seventh Schedule of
the Constitution of India are demarcated fields of
legislation and their contours and limits have been
expressely described in the entries mentioned in the said
three Lists. each State is free and independent to legislate
on the field which is covered by the State List (List II) or
the Concurrent List (List III). So far as List I is
concerned that is reserved purely for Parliament for any
legistation to be made. So far so good. The most knotty and
difficult problem arises when we find that there is some
sort of an inconsistency or convict or collision between the
two Lists (List I and II) whether the State List or the
Union List should prevail. the instant case we are really
concerned with the question of tobacco industry. Entry 52 of
List I (Union List) which lays down and fixes the subjects
of legislation to be made by Parliament may be extracted
thus:
"52. Industries, the control of which by the Union
is declared by Parliament by law to be expedient in the
public interest."
Two problems, however, may arise. The word ’Industries’
is very wide and has been used in the other two Lists also.
Where a particular industry falls clearly within the four
corners of entry
163
No. 52 then the State has no jurisdiction to legislate on
that particular field if that field is occupied and the
doctrine of occupied field A would apply. Difficulty arises
in borderline cases where an industry has been declared by
the Centre under entry 52 of List I and this entry overlaps,
to a great extent, the corresponding entry in List II. The
question arises as to whether the Central List would prevail
or the State List.
In the instant case what has happened is that although
the tobacco industry has been notified as having been taken
over under entry 52 of List I yet the Karnataka State
started levying fee on the tobacco or its products. In order
to appreciate whether or not the field was fully occupied
and there could not be encroachment on this fee by the
Karnataka State a brief history of the Central legislation
may be given.
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As already mentioned, entry 52 of List I authorises the
Central legislature (Parliament) to take over any industry
it likes, tobacco being no exception. It is also not
disputed that by virtue of the Tobacco Board Act, 1975, (for
short, referred as ’1975 Act’). The Parliament chose to
occupy the entire field tobacco industry which includes all
kinds of tobacco and its by-products and not merely Virginia
tobacco. It may be necessary to extract a few relevant
portions from the Act:-
"2.It is hereby declared that it is expendent in
the public interest that the Union should take under
its control the tobacco industry.
3.(a) "Board" means the Tobacco Board
established under section 4;
(d)"dealer" means a dealer in tobacco;
(f) "export" and "import" mean, respectively,
taking out of, or bringing into, India, by land, sea or
air;
4.(3) The head office of the Board shall be at
Guntur in the State of Andhra Pradesh and the Board
may, with the previous approval of the Central
Government, establish offices or agencies at other
places in or outside India.
164
7. (1) The Board may appoint such committees as A
may be necessary for the efficient discharge of its
duties and performance of its functions under this Act.
8. (1) It shall be the duty of the Board to
promote, by such measures as it thinks fit, the
development under the control of the Central Government
of the tobacco industry.
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of the
provisions of sub-section (1), the measures referred to
therein may provide for-
(a) regulating the production and curing of
virginia tobacco having regard to the demand therefore
in India and abroad;
(c) maintenance and improvement of existing
markets, and development of new markets outside India
for Indian virginia tobacco and its products and
devising of marketing strategy in consonance with
demand for the commodity outside India, including group
marketing under limited brand names;
(cc) establishment by the Board of auction
platforms, with the previous approval of the Central
Government, for the sale of virginia tobacco by
registered grower or curers, and functioning of the
Board as an auctioner at auction planteforms
established by or registered withit subject to such
conditions as may be specifited by the Central
Government;
(g) purchasing virginia tobacco from growers when
the same is considered necessary or expedient for
protecting the interests of the growers and disposal of
the same in India or abroad as and when considered
appropriate;
(i) sponsoring, assisting, coordinating or
encouraging scientific, technological and economic
research for the promotion of tobacco industry,
(i) Such other matters as may be prescribed.
165
14 A (1). Where Virginia tobacco is sold at any
auction platform established by the Board under this
Act, A it shall be competent for the Board or for any
officer of the Board authorised by it in this behalf to
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levy fees, for the services rendered by the Board in
relation to such sale, at such rate not exceeding two
per cent of the value of such tobacco as the Central
Government may from time to time by notification in the
Official Gazette, specify.
(2) The fees levied under sub-section (1) shall be
collected by the Board or such officer, equally from
the seller of the virginia tobacco and the purchaser of
such tobacco, in such manner as may be prescribed.
20. (1) The Central Government may, by order
published in the Official Gazette, make provision for
prohibiting, restricting or otherwise controlling the
import or export of tobacco products, either generally
or in specified classes of cases.
(2) All tobacco and tobacco products to which any
order under sub-section (1) applies, shall be deemed to
be goods of which the import or export has been
prohibited under section 11 of the Customs Act, 1962
and all the provisions of that Act shall have effect
accordingly."
By virtue of Notification No 374(3) dated 31.5.80 the
Central Government made applicable ss. 10 and 11 of the 1975
Act to tho States of Maharashtra, West Bengal, Gujarat,
Tamil Nadu & Uttar Pradesh. It may, however, be mentioned
that by making Rule 35 in the Tobacco Board Rules, 1976
(enacted under s. 12 of the 1975 Act) the Market Committees
were debarred from auctioning or dealing in tobacco or its
products unless they were registered with the Board. It is
also admitted that the Market Committees of the State of
Karnataka had not been registered with the Tobacco Board
under the 1975 Act and were, therefore, incapable of
rendering any service at all. Though some Markets are
situated in Karnataka State but that, to my kind, makes no
difference because the Central legislation applies to the
whole country. This appears to be the constitutional scheme
of the three Lists which separately demarcate their fileds
and
166
it is now well settled that one cannot encroach on the
other. For A instance, take the case of Railways which is
mentioned in List I and is fully covered by the entry in
that List. Though the railways may pass through various
States it can neither be contended nor imagined that each
State would be competent to legislate by passing regulations
or Acts for the working of the railways with respect to
areas through which they pass. This is exactly the case
here. When the Parliament took over the tobacco industry
without any preconditions or permutations and combinations
and established a Tobacco Board for regulating the sale and
purchase of tobacco under entry 52 of List I the entire
field of tobacco industry was fully occupied and nothing
remained for the States to do, and thus neither the doctrine
of entrenchment nor that of pith and substance would have
any application.
The crucial point for determination in this cases is
whether the Karnataka State had any jurisdiction to encroach
upon the limits of entry 52 of List I and the court will
have to closely examine the encroachment or entrenchment and
the extent of the same. Where the court is of the opinion
that the encroachment or entrenchment amounts to defeating
the very object sought to be subserved by the Central
legislation then the Central legislation must prevail. Where
it is a borderline case and covered almost fully by List II
but in the course of the implemention of the same there is
an entrenchment or encroachment which is only minimal, the
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question of the doctrine of pith and substance will come in
to play and the State will be justified in legislating over
the subject concerned.
In the instant case we are concerned only with List I
(Union List) and List II (State List) of Seventh Schedule.
The matter in dispute falls within the four corners of entry
52 of List I and entries 28 and 66 of List II. It h not
disputed as discussed above that by virture of the 1975 Act
the central legislation had taken within its ambit the
entire tobacco industry. The matter does not rest here
alone. It appears that the central legislation made a
provision for sale and distribution of tobacco products
through the Tobacco Board and sellers were directed to be
registered with the Board. Clause (cc) of sub-s. (2) of s. 8
of the 1975 Act enjoins establishment of auction platforms
with the approval of the Central Government for sale of
tobacco products. Section 12 of the 1975 Act deals with
registration of Exporters, packers, auctioneers and dealers
of tobacco and may be reproduced thus:
167
"12. No person shall export tobacco or any tobacco
products or function as a packer, auctioneer of, or
dealer A in, tobacco unless he registers himself with
the Board in accordance with the rules made under this
Act."
Section 13 states that virginia tobacco shall be sold
only at in auction platform registered with the Board and
runs thus:
"13. No registered grower or curer shall sell or
cause to be sold virginia tobacco elsewhere than at an
auction platform registered with the Board in
accordance with rules made under this Act, or
established by the Board under this Act."
By a letter dated 15.9.83 the Tobacco Board rejected
the application made by the Karnataka State to allow it to
participate in auctioning the tobacco products. It is
manifest therefore that by virtue of the aforesaid steps
taken by the central legislation the field of tobacco stood
completely occupied and there was no room for application of
the doctrine of pith and substance nor would the question of
the incidental entrenchment arise in such cases.
I shall now discuss the law on the subject which has
been well settled by a long course of decision of the
Federal Court, the Privy Council, House of Lords and this
Court. Before doing that it may be necessary to extract the.
relevant provisions of Arts. 245 and 246 of the Constitution
which may be extracted thus:
"245. Extent of laws made by Parliament and by the
Legislatures of State
(1) Subject to the provisions of this
Constitution, Parliament may make laws for the whole or
any part of the territory of India, and the Legislature
of a State may make laws for the whole or any part of
the State.
(2) No law made by Parliament shall be deemed to
be invalid on the ground that it would have extra
territorial operation-
246. Subject-matter of laws made by Parliament and
by the Legislatures of States
168
(1) Notwithstanding anything in clauses (2) and
(3), Parliament has exclusive power to make laws with
respect to any of the matters enumerated in List I in
Seventh Schedule (in this Constitution referred to as
the "Union List).
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(3) Subject to clauses (1) and (2), the
Legislature of any State has exclusive power to make
laws for such State or any part thereof with respect to
any of the matters enumerated in List II in the Seventh
Schedule (in this Constitution referred to as the
"State List").
(4) Parliament has power to make laws with respect
to any matter for any part of the territory of India
not included (in a State) not with standing that such
matter is a matter enumerated in the State List."
A close and careful analysis of these two Articles
shows that the Constitution strikes a just balance between
the powers of the Parliament and the State Legislatures but
reserves to itself the right to legislate in exceptional
cases even in matters appearing in the State List. This in
fine is the logical result and the necessary concomitant sf
cl. (4) of Art. 246.
It is also not disputed that under s. 2 of the 1975 Act
the entire tobacco industry was taken over by the Central
Government. Having thus narrated the admitted facts I would
now proceed to the merits of the appeals. To begin with, I
might indicate the cardinal principles justifying the
competency of the respective legislatures with respect to
the entries concerned:-
(1) Entries in each of the Lists must be given the
most liberal and widest possible interpretation
and no attempt should be made to narrow or whittle
down the scope of the entries. This is a well
settled principle of law and was reiterated in a
recent decision of this Court in S.P. Mittal v.
Union of India Ors.(l) where this Court observed
thus:-
(1) [1983]1 S.C.R. 51.
169
"It may be pointed out at the very outset that the
A function of the Lists is not to confer powers. They
merely demarcate the legislative fields. The entries in
the three Lists are only legislative heads or fields or
legislation and the power to legislate is given to
appropriate legislature by Articles 245 and 248 (sic
246) of the Constitution.
(2) The application of the doctrine o f pith and
substance really means that where a legislation falls
entirely within the scope of an entry within the competence
of a State legislature then this doctrine will apply and the
Act will not be struck down, the doctrine of pith and
substance has been summarised in the case of Delhi Cloth
General Mills Co. Ltd. v. Union of India & Ors.(1) where
Desai, J. speaking for the Court made the following
observations:
"To resolve the controversy if it becomes
necessary to ascertain to which entry in the three
Lists, the legislation is referable, the Court has
evolved the doctrine of pith and substance. If in pith
and substance, the legislation falls within one entry
or the other but some portion of the subject-matter of
the legislation incidentally trenches upon and might
enter a field under another List, then it must be held
to be valid in its entirety, even though it might
incidentally trench on matters which are beyond its
competence."
(3) The consideration of encroachment or entrenchment
of one List in another and the extent thereof is also well
established. If the entrenchment is minimal and does not
affect the dominant part of some other entry, which is not
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within the competence of the State Legislature, the Act may
be upheld as constitutionally valid.
(4) The nature and character of the scope of the
entries having regard to the touch stone of the provisions
of Arts. 245 and 246.
(5) The doctrine of occupied field has a great place in
the interpretation as to whether or not a particular
legislature is competent to legislate on a particular entry.
This means that when the field is completely occupied by
List I, as in this case, then the State
(1) [1931] 4 S.C.C. 167.
170
legislature is wholly incompetent to legislate and no
entrenchment or A encroachment, minimal or otherwise, by a
State legislature is permitted. In other words, where the
field is not wholly occupied, than a mere minimal
encroachment would not affect the validity of the State
legislation.
Thus, in my opinion, the five principles have to be
read and construed together and not in isolation-where
however, the Central and the State legislation cover the
same field then the central legislation would prevail. it is
also well settled that where two Acts, one passed by the
Parliament and the other by a State legislature, collide and
there is no question of harmonising them, then the Central
legislation must prevail.
There may also be cases where despite an entry being in
List II, the Parliament may under the provisions of Art.
246(3) take over that particular field and legislate on that
subject which will debar the late legislative from adding or
passing any such legislation which has been taken over under
Act. 246(3).
Now to the authorities. As far back as 1941, the
Federal Court, while interpreting the ideal provisions of
the Government of India Act of 1935 in Subrahmanyan Chettiar
v. Muttuswami Goundan( observed thus.
"In [1921] 2 A.C. 91, Lord Haldane after stating
’the rule of exception’ applicable to the heads of ss.
91 and 92, added:
Neither the Parliament of Canada nor the
Provincial Legislature have authority under the Act to
nullify, by implication any more then expressly,
statutes which they could not enact.
...
While the Federal Legislature is given power, it
is expressly provided that "a Provincial Legislature
has not power to make laws with respect to any of the
matters enumerated in List I.. On a very strict
interpretation of s. 100, it would necessarily follow
that from all matters in
(1) A.l.R. 1941 F.C. 47.
171
List II which are exclusively assigned to Provincial
Legislatures, all portions, which fall in List I or A
List III must be excluded. Similarly, from all matters
falling in List III, all portions which fall in List I
must be excluded. The section would then mean that the
Federal Legislature has full and exclusive power to
legislate with respect to matters in List I, and has
also power to legis- late with respect to matters in
List III. A Provincial Legislature has exclusive power
to legislate with respect to List II, minus matters
falling in List I, or List III; has concurrent power to
legislate with respect to matters in List III, minus
matters falling in List I. In its fullest scope, S. 100
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would then mean that if it happens that there is any
subject in List II which also falls in List I or List
III, it must be taken as cut out from List II.. If a
subject falls exclusively in List 11 and no other list,
then the power of the Provincial Legislatures is
supreme. But it does also fall with in List I, then it
must be deemed as if it is not included in List II at
all. Similarly, if it also falls in List III, it must
be deemed to have been excluded from List II But the
rigour of the literal interpretation is relaxed by the
use of the words "with respect to" which as already
pointed out only signify "path and substance," and do
not forbid a mere incidental encroachment. But, even if
such an incidental encroachment may be ordinarily
permissible, the field may not be clear. There may be
competency and yet repugnancy also. The question is how
to prevent a clash if the trespass is on a field
already occupied by a Central Legislation."
In the above case their Lordships relied on the leading
case reported in [1921] 2 A. C. 91. To the same effect is a
decision of this Court in Zaverbhai Amaidas v. State Bank of
Bombay(l) where the following observations were made:
"The principle embodied in section 107 (2) and
article 254 (2) is that when there is legislation
covering the same ground both by the Central and by the
Province both of them being competent to enact the
same, the la v of the Centre should prevail over That
of the State."
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R 799.
172
In Deep Chand v. State of U.P. & Ors. (1) same
principles of repugnancy have been reiterated and the three
principles laid down by Nicholas were fully approved by
Subba Rao, J. thus:
"Nicholas in his Australian Constitution, 2nd
Edition, page 303, refers to three tests of
inconsistency or repugnancy
"(1) There may be inconsistency in the actual terms of
the competing statutes;
(2) Though there may be no direct conflict, a State
law may be inoperative because the Commonwealth
law, or the award of the Commonwealth Court, is
intended to be complete exhaustive code; and
(3) Even in the absence of intention, a conflict may
arise when both State and Commonwealth seek to
exercise their powers over the same subject
matter."
Repugnancy between two statutes may thus be
ascertained on the bases of the following three
principles:
(1) Whether there is direct conflict between the two
provisions;
(2) Whether Parliament intended to lay down an
exhaustive code in respect of the subject matter
replacing the Act of the State Legislature, and
(3) Whether the law made by Parliament and the law
made by the State Legislature occupy the same
field."
In The Calcutta Gas Company (Proprietary) Ltd. v. State
of West Bengal & Ors.(2) the same view seems to have been
taken where the following observations were made:
(1) [1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 8.
(2) [19621 Supp. 3 S.C.R. 1.
173
"It may, therefore, be taken as a well settled
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rule of construction that every attempt should be made
to harmonize the apparently convicting entries not only
of different Lists but also of the same List and to
reject that construction which will rob one of the
entries of its entire centre and make it nugatory."
(Emphasis ours)
Thus, indeed if I accept the agrument of the Karnataka
Government, which seems to have found favour with Brother
Mukharji, J. I would really be robbing the 1975 Act of its
entire content and essential import by handing over the
power of legislation to the State Government which per se
has been taken over by Parliament under Art. 246 by the
1975, Act.
The case of State of Orissa v. M.A. Tulloch & Co.(l)
appears to be a direct authority on the question at issue,
viz., if the Central Act and the State Act collide the
inevitable consequence would have to be that the Central Act
will prevail over the State Act and the latter will have to
yield. In this connection, this Court observed thus:
"Repugnancy arises when two enanctments both
within the competence of the two Legislatures collide
and when the Constitution expressly or by necessary
implication provides that the enanctment of one
Legislature has superiority over the other then to
the extent of the repugnancy the one supersedes the
other.. The best of two legislation containing
contradictory provisions is not, however, the only
criterion of repugnancy, for if a competent legislature
with a superior efficacy expressly or impliedly evinces
by its legislation an intention to cover the whole
filed, the enactments of the other legislature whether
passed before or after would be overborne on the ground
of repugnance."
(Emphasis supplied)
To the same effect is another decision Or this Court in
Sudhir Chandra Nawn v. Wealth Tax Officer, Calcutta &
Ors.(2) when Shah, J. Observed thus:
"Exclusive power to legislate conferred upon
Parliament is exercisable, not with standing anything
contained
(1) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 461.
(2) [1969] 1 S.C.R. 108.
174
in cls. (2) & (3), that is made more emphatic by
providing A in cl. (3) that the Legislature of any
State has exclusive power to make laws for such State
or any part thereof with respect to any of the matters
enumerated in List II in the Seventh Schedule, but
subject to cls. (1) and (2). Exclusive power of the
State Legislature has therefore to be exercised subject
to cl. (1) i. e., the exclusive power which the
Parliament has in respect of the matters enumerated in
List I. Assuming that there is a conflict between entry
86 List I and entry 49 List II, which is not capable of
reconciliation, the power of Parliament to legislate in
respect of a matter which is exclusively entrusted to
it must supersede pro tanto the exercise of power of
the State Legislatere."
(Emphasis supplied)
Practically the same view has been taken in Baijnath
Kedia v. State of Bihar & Ors.(1) where the following
observations were made :-
"It is open to Parliament to declare that it is
expedient in the public interest that the control
should rest in Central Government. To what extent such
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a declaration can go is for Parliament to determine and
this must be commensurate with public interest. Once
this declaration is made and the extent laid down, the
subject of legislation to the extent laid down becomes
an exclusive subject for legislation by Parliament. Any
legislation by the State after such declaration and
trenching upon the field disclosed in the declaration
must necessarily be unconstitutional because that filed
is abstracted from the legislative competence Or the
State Legislature. This proposition is also self-
evident that no attempt was rightly made to contradict
it."
(Emphasis supplied)
Thus, it would appear that in view of the recent
decisions, once the Centre takes over an industry under
entry No. 52 of List I and passes an Act to regulate the
legislation, the State legislature ceases to have any
jurisdiction to legislate in that field and if it does
(1) [1970] 2 S.C.R. 100,
175
so, that legislation would be ultra vires of the powers of
the State legislature.
I might mention here a reference made by Brother
Mukharji J. to the fact that the Karnataka State Legislature
passed an Act of 1980 by which the Tobacco Industry was
taken within its ambit but, the assent of the President was
not taken as required by Article 254 (2). This takes us no
where because in the first place as the assent of the
President was not taken, the Karnataka Act of 1980 was
wholly incompetent. Moreover even if the President’s assent
would have been taken it would not validate the Karnataka
Act of 1980 so far as the Tobacco Industry is concerned
because Article 254(2) applies only to matters contained in
the Concurrent List and has nothing to do with matters
enumerated in List I or List II. Thus, the Karnataka Act of
1980 would have absolutely no application to entry 52 of
List I which was fully occupied by the Central Act of 1975
as referred to above. This circumstance, therefore, is of no
consequence.
On a careful consideration, therefore, of the facts and
circumstances of this case I express my respectful dissent
with the view taken by Brother Mukbarji, J., on this point
and hold that so far as the case of the I.T.C. (C.A. No. 629
of 1983) is concerned, the Government of Karnataka had no
jurisdiction to levy any market fee because that directly
collides with the 1975 Act as indicated above.
This being the position, 1, therefore, strike down that
part of the Karnataka Act which takes in itself the power to
levy market fee on tobacco or its products. Even if the
products may be sold in the p markets in Karnataka or near
about the same place situated in the State, the power to
levy fees will not belong to that State: it will remain with
Centre which would regulate the sale and purchase of
tobacco. It may be reiterated at the risk of repetition than
an application for registration with the Tobacco Board was
made by the Karnataka Government which was, however,
rejected by the Board. This indirectly shows that the
Government of Karnataka was aware that it could not encroach
on the field which was fully occupied by tho Centre by
virtue of the 1975 Act.
Before closing the judgment I would like to give a
rough and ready example to illustrate my constitutional
point of view in t figurative sense. Suppose there are two
fields belonging to A and B.
176
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The area of A’s field is 500x200 metres. There is another
adjacent A field belonging to comprising 400xl00 metres. A’s
possession covers every nook and corner of the entire field
leaving nothing vacant. It is manifest that cannot encroach
or entrench on the field of A. Conversely, if A is in
possession of the entire field leaving, however, a small
portion (30x20) metres vacant, would be justified in
encroaching on that particular part of the vacant field.
This is how we have to construe the provisions of the
Central and State entries in List I and List II in
accordance with the provisions of Arts. 245 and 246 of the
Constitution.
Having regard to these circumstances I allow the appeal
of the I.T.C.. (C.A. No. 629 of 1983) and quesh the order of
the Market Committees of Karnataka levying fee on tobacco
and its products. To this extent, therefore, I dissent from
the view taken by Brother Mukharji, J. for whom I have the
greatest respect. There will, however, be no order as to
costs and any fee realised will not be refunded and it will
be for the Centre and the State to adjust and work out the
equities of adjustment.
VARADARAJAN, J. The Mysore Agricultural Produce
Marketing (Regulation) Act. 1966 came into force on 1-5-
1968. Now known as the Karnataka Agricultural Produce
Marketing (Regulation) Act, 1966 it will be hereinafter
referred to as ’the Act’. S. 65(1) of the Act as it
originally stood directed Market Committees in the State to
levy and collect market fee from buyers in respect of
specified agricultural produce at rate which may not be more
than thirty paise per one hundred rupees of the price of the
agricultural produce in such manner and at such times as may
be specified. Clause (2) of S. 65 stated that for the
purpose of clause (1) all notified agricultural produce
leaving a yard shall, unless the contrary is proved be
presumed to have been brought within such yard by the
persons in possession of such produce. Pursuant to S. 65 {1)
the market fee appears to have been fixed by all the market
committees in the State of Karnataka at thirty paise per one
hundred rupees of the price paid to the buyers.
S. 2 of the Karnataka Agricultural Produce Marketing
(Regulation) Amendment Act. 20 of 1973 which came into force
on 23-10-1973 amended S. 65 of the Act by substituting the
words "thirty paise". in sub-section (1) of S. 65 of the Act
by the words "one rupee". That Amendment Act was passed in
replacement of
177
the Karnataka Ordinance 5 of 1973 which was repealed by S. 4
of that Act with the necessary saving clause by way of the
proviso. The market Committees accordingly raised the market
fee to the maximum limit of one per cent of the sale price
by amendment of the byelaws. The enhancement of the market
fee from thirty paise to one rupee per one hundred rupees of
the price paid to buyers was upheld by the High Court in the
decision rendered on 17.12.1974 in W. P- No. 537 of 1974
(Vaman Rao v. Agricultural Produce market Committee, Sagar).
Subsequently the Act was further amended by the Karnataka
Agricultural Produce Marketing (Regulation) Amendment Act 24
of 1975 which came into force on 19.5.1975. S 2 of that
Amendment Act substituted S.65 of the Act by a new section,
which read:
"65. Levy of market fees-
(1) The market committee shall levy and collect
market fees from every seller in respect of
agricultural produce sold by such seller in the market
at the rate of one rupee per hundred rupees of the
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price of such produce sold;
(2) The Market Committee shall levy and collect
market fees from every buyer in respect of agricultural
produce bought by such buyer in the market area as may
be specified in the bye-laws (which shall not be more
than one rupee per one hundred rupees of such produce
bought) in such manner and at such times as may be
specified in the bye-laws;
(3) Every Market Committee shall notwithstanding
anything contained in this Act, credit to the Karnataka
Roads and Bridges Fund. constituted under the Karnataka
Motor Vehicles Taxation Act, 1957. the market fees
collected under sub-section (1) for being spent for the
the purpose of construction, repairs improvement and
maintenance of rural roads in the State."
This amendment provided for the levy and collection of
market fees by market committees on and from the seller of
specified agricultural produce sold in the market area at
one rupee per one hundred rupees of the price of such
produce sold and for crediting
178
the market fees so collected to the Roads and Bridges Fund
constituted under the Karnataka Motor Vehicles Taxation Act,
1957 for being spent for the construction, repair,
improvement and maintenance of rural roads in the State.
The levy of market fees on sellers of specified
agricultural produce by the amendment of S 65 of the Act and
the appropriation of the market fee collected under that
sub-section from sellers to the credit of the Roads and
Bridges Fund under sub-section (3) was challenged in
Rajasekhriah’s case(1) In that case the High Court struck
down the amended s. 65(1) and (3) of the Act and upheld the
levy on buyers under S.65 (2) of the Act in the judgment
delivered on 28.9.1978 following the decision dated
17.12.1974 rendred in Vaman Rao’s case (supra) so for as the
lavy in buyers is concerned.
On 30 6.1968 Karnataka Ordinance 2 of 1979 was
promulgated making some amendments to ss. 63 and 65 of the
Act. S. 63 which deals with the powers and duties of market
Committees was amended with retrospective effect from
19.5.1975 so as to substitute in clause (ii) of sub-section
(1) of S.63 the words "transport and marketing" for the
word, marketing" In Sub-section (2)(a) of S.63 with
reference to the duties, of the Marketing Committees, after
item (1) the amendment stated:
"provide either independently or along with some
other authority necessary facilities for the transport
of notified agricultural produce to the yard in such
manner as may be prescribed."
S.65 was ammended (i) validating market fees levied and
collected under sub-section (1) of S. 65 for the period from
19.5.1975 to 28.9.1978; (ii) omitting the amended sub-
section (1) of S. 65 with effect from 28.9.1978; (iii)
enhancing the maximum permissible limit of market fee levied
and collected from buyers of specified agricultural produce
under sub-section (2) of S. 65 from one per cent to two per
cent, and (iv) omitting sub-section (3) of S. 65 as if it
never existed in the Statute.
The Karnataka Agriculture Produce Marketing
(Regulation) Amendment Act 17 of 1980 which came into force
on 9.5.1980 seems
(1) I.L.R. [1978] Karnataka 1939,
179
to have been passed in replacement of Ordinance 16 of 1979
which in turn was promulgated in replacement of Ordinance 2
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of 1979. S. A 42 of that Amendment Act validating the levy
and collection of market fee during the period from
19.5.1975 to 28.9.1978 which was struck down in
Rajasekhariah’s case (supra) reads:
"42.Validati on of levy of market fee etc.-(1)
Not- withstanding anything contained in any decree,
order or judgment of any court, or other authority any
levy or collection of market fee made or purported to
have been made, any action taken or thing done in
relation to such levy or collection under the
provisions of the principal Act before the commencement
of this section shall be deemed to be as valid and
effective as if such levy or collection or action or
thing had been made, taken or done under the principal
Act as amended by this Act and accordingly-
(a) all acts, proceedings or things done or action
taken by any market committee in connection with the
levy and collection of such market fee shall, for all
purposes be deemed to be or to have always been made,
done or taken in accordance with law;
(b) no suit or other proceedings shall be
maintained E or continued in any court or before any
authority for the refund to any such market fee; and
(c) no court shall enforce any decree or order
directing the refund of any such fee.
(2) (a) The Karnataka Agricultural Produce
Marketing (Regulation) (Second Amendment) Ordinance,
1979 (Karnataka Ordinance No 16 of 1979) is hereby
repealed.
(b) Notwithstanding such repeal, any action taken
or any appointment, notification, order, scheme, rule,
form or bye-law made or issued from deemed to have been
taken, made or issued under the Karnataka Agricultural
Produce Marketing (Regulation)( Amendment) Ordinance,
1979 shall be deemed to have been taken, made or issued
under this Act as if this Act were in force at all
relevant times and any reference therein to the said
Ordinance
180
shall be deemed to be a reference to this Act and they
A shall continue in force accordingly unless and until
superseded by any action taken or any appointment,
notification, order, scheme, rule, form or bye-law made
or issued under this Act or any other law."
Section 20 of the Amendment Act 17 of 1980 amended S.65
of the Act thus -
"In S.65 of Principal Act, (1) for sub-section (1)
the following sub-section shall be deemed to have been
substituted with effect from 19th day of May 1975
namely:-
(1) In respect of agricultural produce sold in the
market area there shall be levied and collected by the
Market Committee thereof, from every seller market fees
at the rate of one per cent of the sale proceeds of the
produce so sold;
(2) Sub-section (1) as so substituted shall be and
shall deemed to have been omitted with effect from the
29th day of September, 1978;
(3) In Sub-section (2) for the words "one rupee"
the words "two rupees" shall be substituted;
(4) Sub-section (3) shall and shall be deemed
always to have been omitted."
Thus the levy of market fee subject to a maximum of one
per cent of the sale price of specified agricultural produce
on sellers for the period from 19.5.1975 has been done away
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with effect from 28.9.1978 and sub-section (3) of s. 65
which provided for crediting the market fee levied and
collected from sellers of specified agricultural produce to
the Roads and Bridges Fund has been omitted as if it never
existed in S. 65 of the Act by the Amendment Act 17 of 1980.
Pursuant to the amendment made to sub-section (2) of S.
65 of the Act enhancing the maximum limit of the market fees
leviable on buyers under the station from one per cent to
two per cent, all the
181
Market Committees in the State of Karnataka except the
Mangalore Market Committee amended the bye-laws for
enhancing the levy A under s. 65 (2) of the Act from one per
cent to two per cent.
The traders filed writ petitions in the High Court
challenging the enhancement of the levy from one per cent to
two per cent as well as the collection of the market fee
from sellers during the period from 19.5.1975 to 28.9.1978.
After the hearing of the writ petitions commenced in the
High Court in October-November, 1981, Ordinance of 1981 was
promulgated dispensing with the requirement of the previous
publication contemplated in S. 148 of the Act in relation to
making of bye-laws and amendments thereof with retrospective
effect. After the High Court delivered the judgment in the
Writ Petitions on 25.1.1982 upholding the enhancement of the
market fee on buyers from one per cent to two percent the
market fee leviable under S. 65 (2) on buyers has been
reduced by all the Market Committees by the Circular No.
SMD-268/PGN-83 dated 27.2.1982 to one per cent pursuant to
the declaration of the policy of the Government.
The principal challenge before the High Court was as
to: (i) the constitutional validity of Sec 65 (1) of the Act
as substituted by the Amendment Act 17 of 1980 which sought
to validate the levy and collection of market fees from
sellers of specified agricultural produce during the period
of its operation between 19.5.1975 when S. 65(1) was
introduced in the place of the old S. 65 by sub-section (2)
of the Amendment Act 24 of 1975 and when it was struck down
by the High Court in Rajasekhariah’s case (supra); (ii)
enhancement of the market fee from one per cent to two per
cent of the price of the specified agricultural produce by
amendment of the bye-law pursuant to the raising of the
maximum limit from one per cent to two per cent by the
Amendment Act 17 of 1980 on two grounds, namely, want of
sufficient quid pro quo and violation of the requirement of
prior publication and subsequent sanction of the amendment
to the bye-law by the Chief Marketing Officer contemplated
in S. 148 of the Act, and (iii) inclusion of certain items
of agricultural produce such as cardamom and tobacco in the
schedule to the Act. The levy and collection of market fees
from sellers during the period from 19.5.1975 to 28.9.1978
was sought to be validated by the aforesaid amendment
because by reason of the judgment of the High Court in
Rajasekhariah’s case (supra) the State was exposed to the
liability to refund the market fees collected during that
period. The High Court found that S. 65 (1) as substituted
by the Amendment Act 17
182
of 1980 and even S. 42 of that Amendment Act was not
constitutionally valid and are liable to be struck down. The
reason is that before S. 65 (3) was struck down the levy and
collection of market fees under S. 65 (1), as it stood then,
were for the benefit of the Karnataka Roads and Bridges Fund
constituted under the Karnataka Motor Vehicles Taxation Act,
1957 and that the event which had happened, namely crediting
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of the market fees to that Fund cannot be reversed by the
subsequent amendment of S. 65 (1) and the introduction of S.
42 in the Amendment Act 17 of 1980. The High Court rejected
the submission of the learned Advocate General that several
crores of rupees collected under S. 65 (1) from sellers had
actually been spent for the construction, improvement,
repair and maintenance of rural roads, culverts and bridges
and therefore, the Government was obliged to have recourse
to the amendment and also to introduce S. 42 in the
Amendment Act 17 of 1980 as not acceptable, and relying on
the decision of this Court in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case(l)
the High Court held that rural roads are primarily and
essentially intended for the benefit of the public and the
class of market fee payers are, as part of the general
public, entitled to benefit of their user and the market
fees cannot be levied on and collected from them for that
purpose, more so because the rural roads constructed,
improved, repaired and maintained with the market fees
collected did not become the property of the market
committees or shed their character as public roads. This
appears to be the main reason for the High Court striking
down S. 65 (1) as substituted by S. 20 of the Amendment Act
17 of 1980 and also the validating S. 42 of that Amendment
Act.
As regards S. 65 (2) relating to market fees on buyers
the High Court rejected the contention that the sub-section
confers uncanalised and excessive power on market committees
in the matter of fixing the rate of market fees and held
that there are adequate statutory guidelines and safeguards.
On the question of the validity of the bye-law for
enhancing the market fees from one per cent to two per cent
the High Court found that after the maximum permissible
limit of the market fee was raised under S. 65 (1) by the
Amendment Act 17 of 1980 from one per cent to two per cent
from 19.1.1980 the Chief Marketing Officer issued
instructions to the market committees for amending
(1) [1973] 3 S.C.R. 1217.
183
the bye-laws in order to raise the market fee from one per
cent to two per cent and he subseqently sanctioned the
enhancement after A the bye-laws were accordingly amended by
the market committees.
The learned counsel for the petitioners invited the
attention of the High Court to the following passage
occurring at page 952 of volume 24 of Halsbury’s Laws of
England, Third Edition: B
"The bye-law to be valid must be reasonable.
Unless it is manifestly unjust, capricious, or partial
in the operation or involves oppressive, gratuitous
inferences with the rights of those subject to it the
question of its reasonableness is one to be decided by
the authority making it."
It was contended before the High Court that the very
process by which the amendment to the bye-law for enhancing
the market fee from one per cent to two per cent was made is
without any application of the mind of the market committees
to the relevant criteria and it should, therefore, be struck
down on that ground. It was contended that the amendment of
S. 65 (2) providing for enhancement of the maximum
permissible limit of the market fee from one per cent to two
per cent became effective from 30.6.1979 and that the Market
Committees lost no time in mechanically raising the market
fee from one per cent to two per cent without any
application of the mind to the question whether such
enhancement was justified having regard to the financial
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resources available and the funds required to meet the
outlay on the services proposed to be provided in the near
future and without preparing any budget estimates and
balance sheet and considering them before deciding upon the
quantum of enhancement and without giving an opportunity of
being heard about the matter to the affected interests. On
the other hand, for the Market Committees it was contended
that the right to be heard was a creature of S. 148 (1) of
the Act and not in recognition of or corollary to any
obligation which could be said to be inherent in or implied
from S. 65 (2) and that what was given by the Statute was
taken away by the Stature and the Court not go against it.
It was also contended for the writ petitioners before
the High Court that in S. 148 as it originally stood then it
was provided that subject to the provisions of the Act and
the Rules made under S. 146 and with the previous sanction
of the Chief Marketing Officer a
184
Market Committee may, after previous publication in the
prescribed A manner, make bye-laws for the regulation of the
business and the conditions of trading in the market area
and that every bye-law made under that section shall be
published in the prescribed manner. The question of increase
in the rate of the market fee would perhaps fall under item
XXXIII of S. 148 (2) which reads as:
"Any other matter in respect of which by-laws are
required to be made or may be made under the Act."
It was submitted before the High Court that there was no
compliance with the requirement of previous sanction add
previous publication in the prescribed manner in regard to
the amendment of the bye-law for enhancing the rate of
market fee leviable under s. 65 (2) from one per cent to two
per cent. The High Court has observed that there was no
answer to that criticism in regard to the validity of the
amendment to the bye-law for raising the market fee from one
per cent to two per cent and therefore the State Government
promulgated Ordinance 22 of 1981 when arguments before the
High Court were coming to a close amending S. 148 as also
ss. 134 and 158 of the act. The amendment introduced by that
Ordinance omitted the words "after previous publication in
the prescribed manner" which occurred in S.148 of the Act
with retrospective effect from the date of commencement of
the Act. Sec. 3 of the amending Ordinance 22 of 1981
validated the bye-law notwithstanding the fact that the
affected interest were not heard in any manner. The High
Court has observed that this amendment took away the
obligation of prior hearing of the affected interests on the
ground that the persons affected have no right to be heard
before statutory rules or bye-laws are made unless the right
is conferred by the Statute and that the right has been
taken away by ss. 3 and 5 of the amending Ordinance 22 of
1981. The High Court found that in this case the Chief
marketing Officer himself has issued directions to the
market Committees to amend the bye-laws for enhancing the
market fee from one per cent to two per cent and the bye-
laws were accordingly amended by the market committees and
the Chief Marketing Officer thereafter accorded sanction.
The High Court has held that the Chief marketing Officer’s
direction can be regarded as his previous sanction for
amending the bye-laws.
185
However, the learned Judges themselves do not appear to
have been quite happy about what had happened, for they have
observed A para 61 of their judgment thus:
"The question might, however, become a live
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issue if the Market Committees were to amend the bye-
laws made under s. 65(2) of the Act in future without
such an opportunity of hearing effected interests."
Even the learned Advocate General appearing for the
State and the learned Counsel appearing for the market
Committees stated before the High Court, though according to
them no obligation of hearing the affected interests was
implicit in s. 65(2), that it would be eminently desirable
that the Market Committees adopt some reasonable procedure
in that behalf and that the amendment to s. 148 made by the
Ordinance was only intended to cure the defect in making the
impugned bye-laws and avoid great public inconvenience which
may result from the invalidation of the bye-laws and that
there was no intention to make the deletion a permanent
feature. They submitted that any reasonable procedure which
may be suggested by the High Court would be adopted in
practice even if there was no such legal compulsion. In view
of that request by the learned Advocate General and learned
Counsel for the Market Committee the High Court has observed
in its judgment thus:
"It appears to us that before a Market Committee
proposes to amend a bye-law to make an upward revision
of the rate of fee, in future, the Market Committees
must, first follow the directions of the Supreme Court
at para 55 in KEWAL KRISHAN PURI’S case (supra). It
would also be proper for the Market to prepare a
statement containing the particulars of the development
works and services intended to be undertaken out of the
market fee receipts together with cost-projections
thereof, also setting out the likely period of
execution. The plans and estimates for all civil
engineering works should be prepared and sanctioned as
prescribed in Rules 70 and 71 of the Rules framed under
the Act. Then the Market Committees should notify the
proposals calling for objections and suggestions from
the affected interests with in a stipulated period, not
being less then one month. The mode of inviting
objections and suggestions may be,
186
in addition to the publication on the Notice Board of
the A Market Committee’s Office, by appropriate
publication in a daily news-paper, having circulation
in the area. Those who wish to file objections or offer
suggestions shall be entitled to inspection of the
statements containing the estimates, costs and other
financial projections. The Market-Committees shall take
into consideration the objections and suggestions so
offered and here the interest affected before amending
the bye-laws revising the fee. This appears to be the
minimal requirement of a hearing of the interests
affected. The Market-Committees shall, of course, be at
liberty to adopt a more comprehensive procedure. The
C.M.O. should also look into the objections and
suggestions before according his sanction. All that we
need say at this stage is that following of such a
procedure would help the market committees to render
better and efficient service, and the bye-laws framed
after following such a procedure would be beyond
reproach on procedural grounds, obviating needless and
avoidable litigation."
Point No. 12 framed in para 7 of the judgment of the
High Court relates to the question of justification for
enhancement of the market fee payable under s. 65(2) of the
Act from one per cent to two per cent and roads thus:
"Whether the enhancement of market fees leviable
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under s. 65(2) of the Act from one per cent to two per
cent brought about by amendment of the bye-laws of the
Market Committees in unsupportable in law and fails for
want of correlation with the value of services rendered
to the payers of the fees."
The High Court has observed:
"In 1974 when the levy had come to be challenged
in Vaman Rao’s case, (supra) the several market
committees had filed financial projections for a I S
year period ll from 1974-75 to show the estimated
income and expenditure. Just about that time all the
market committees had occasion to prepare and furnish
similar financial proposals to the Chief Marketing
Officer in connection
187
with certain proposals for development with the aid of
a loan from the World Bank. As learned counsel wanted A
the Court to examine these proposals also having regard
to the principles and guide lines laid down by the
Supreme Court in Kewa1 Krishan Puri’s case (supra). we
directed by over order dated 30.11.1981, the Chief
Marketing Officer to furnish in respect of each
respondent Market Committee, a comprehensive statement
in a tabular from, setting out the following amongst
other particulars:
1. The year of establishment of the Market-Committee.
2. Amount actually spent for capital or developmental
works from the beginning till 30.6:1974.
3. The particulars (in metric tonnes) of the total
annual arrivals of all notified agricultural
commodities for the three years 1978-79, 1979-80
and 1980-81.
4. Average daily arrivals (in metric tonnes) for the
years 1978-79, 1979-80 and 1980-81.
5. Total amount of market-fee collected for the years
1978-79, 1979-80 and 1980-81.
6. Revenue expenditure incurred for the years 1978-
79, 1979-80 and 1980-81.
7. Cash on hand or in banks or in the form of invest-
ment as on 1-7-1981.
8. Items of developmental works originally envisaged
(for a period of 15 years during 174-75 to 1988-
89) together with item-vise estimated cost
thereof; revised estimates, if any, itemwise;
progress inexecution in terms of financial outlays
of work, itemwise in respect of each item up to
1.7.1981; balance remaining to be executed (in
terms of money) with break up for the future years
upto 1988-89 if the work to be completed in
instalments in future; any deletion of or
alteration in the items of work envisaged in 1974
75; and any other additional developmental works
proposed after 1974-75."
188
In response to this order, the Chief Marketing
Officer has filed the statements which are at Exhibits
R-l to R-111, In addition, several of the respondent-
Market Committee have filed statements which though not
in the same form also contain similar information."
The petitioners before the High Court made fourfold
submissions regarding those statements. they are:
(1) Exs. R-1 to R-l 11 are totally at variance with the
corresponding estimates furnished for the same period in
1974-75 and they have been prepared only in order to supply
an artificial quid pro quo for enhancement of the levy and
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are merely show-pieces on paper to get over the present
challenge;
(2) the vagaries and disparities in the proportion of
the pro posed development of market yard to market yard are
so glaring that no authority in the position of the Chief
Marketing Officer would reasonably approve such unco-
ordinated and disproportionate development of the regulated
markets;
(3) many of the items of works envisaged in the
development such as constructions of shops, godowns and like
are unrelated to the concept of special service to the
buyers and cannot be reckoned as qualifying for correlation.
If these impermissible items are deleted from the estimates,
the Market Committees would not be in a position to
establish the requisite quid pro quo; and
(4) a substantial part of the proposed financial
outlays relates to what are called rural markets the outlays
on which could not be reckoned as for rendering special
service to the buyers.
After considering the above proposals and estimate and
the arguments advanced at length about them and after taking
into consideration the proceedings of the National Seminar
on Rural Markets Development held in New Delhi during
December 1979 in which it is stated that in Karnataka the
Panchayats manage the rural markets as agents of the Market
Committees and 75 per cent of the revenues is given to the
Panchayats for managing the markets and the remaining 25 per
cent is taken by the Market Committees, the High Court has
held that the outlays on the establishment of rural markets
cannot be held to be impermissible for the purpose of
reckoning correlation.
189
The High Court has observed:
"Indeed, in the proposals for the development of
the Market-Committees, it is legitimate to expect a
scientific consistency and adherence to some broad
norms of development. Under the ’Act’ the Chief
Marketing Officer is required to sanction the budgets
of these Market Committees. Any project for development
must take into account, and be reasonably related to,
factors such as the quantum of notified agricultural
produce handled annually at the markets; the increase
thereof expected in the reasonable near future; the
market-fee and other annual incomes; the potentialities
for expansion and the like. Any proposals for growth
and development are to be scientific, they ought to be
sensible. In quite a few cases they prima facie appear
to be neither. There ought to be some broad-norms
reconciling the actualities and potentialities of the
markets on the one -hand and the ambitions of
development of the Market Committees and the financial
outlays proposed thereon on the other. The criticism
that the proposals for development disclose no
uniformity or consistency with any norms cannot be said
to be without justification. In several cases markets
with decidedly lesser potentialiaties for expansion and
handling lesser quantum than other markets propose to
spend sums on development which are several times
higher than those proposed by those other markets.
It is no doubt true that uniform standards,
though desirable, may not be practical in all cases and
the requirement of a market which handles, say ten
thousand tonnes of cotton every year might differ very
widely from those of a market which may handle the same
tonnage of some other notified produce which though in
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terms of weight may be equivalent but in terms of
volume be very much lesser. A market which deals
prodominantly with some seasonal commodities may have
its own special problems and requirements. But in some
cases before us even where there are similarities in
the nature of the produce and in other circumstances,
the ambitions for development are irreconcilably
disparate. Even amongst markets which are similarly
situate from the point of view
190
of the market fee income, quantum of produce handled A
and transacted; potentialities for expansion and levels
of development XX already reached, the proposals reveal
a wide divergence. There is admittedly no uniformity or
standardisation of norms for growth even broadly and
each Market-Committee has its own plans of growth
adhoc.
Indeed the Indian Standards Institution has
standardised the pattern of regulated markets
classifying them into ’A’, ’B’, ’C’, ’D’, and ’E’
classes based on the quantum of the notified
agricultural produce handled therein annually. The
assessment of the marketing projects in Karnataka made
by experts of the Inter national Development
Association in connection with the World Bank aid for
development of the markets has classified and graded
the markets based on certain well accepted common-
criteria. The cost-projections for various classes of
markets are also made therein. The present proposals
have obviously not kept any of them in view. One
explanation was that the whole concept of marketing is
expanding and these precipitious 7 are not now
apposite. However, the wide divergence in the plans for
development lends some credence to the criticism of the
petitioners that the estimates were not taken seriously
even by the Market-Committees or the C.M.O.
..... ........ ........... ............
..... ........ ........... ............
But apart from such basic infrastructures which
stand on a different footing, the benefit of
utilitarian projects relatable to and developed from
fee resources must be available to the payers of the
fee for at least a considerable part of the period
covered by the financial estimates and projections. The
logic of some of the Market-Committees in this behalf,
if pushed to its logical or illogical conclusions,
would mean that the present generation of fee-payers
would pay for services which would only be available to
the next-generation. In our opinion levy of fee cannot
be justified on such wholly prospective services "
191
After considering in some detail the proposals and
estimates on the assumption that they are correct the
learned Judges of the High A Court have observed:
"The upshot of the above discussion is that though
we are unable to hold, on the material placed before us
by the petitioners, that the levy ought to fail for
want of quid pro quo however, having regard to the
infirmities noticed in the estimates and the financial
projections of the proposed developmental works on the
basis of which the enhancement is sought to be
justified, we are also unable to say with any
confidence and without reservations that the
enhancement of fee, depending as it does on those
estimates is totally justified. Some time-bound
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directions to which we will refere presently for a
second look at the estimates by the statutory
authorities are required to be issued in this behalf.
Indeed, having regard to the wide range of the
apparently inexplicable disproportions in the
developmental projects of the various Market-Committees
both the learned Advocate-General and the Learned
counsel for the Market-Committees, stated that there
was obvious scope-in our opinion an imperative need-for
some rationalisation of the pattern of development of
market-yards based upon and related to the relevant
factors such as quantum and nature of agricultural
produced handled by the markets; potentialities of
development of the market in reasonably near future and
the like. It is neither possible nor advisable to lay
down exhaustively all the criteria that may become
relevant to the task. However, the need for such an
exercise to regulate the development to these market-
yards on a scientific, rational and uniform basis was
accepted by all the parties."
A time-bound schedule has to be prescribed for the
Chief Marketing Officer, as the authority under the
’Act’, approving the budgets, to evolve and standardise
broad and general norms, taking into account the
observations made in the course of this order, both for
infra-structural and developmental works and services,
on as uniform a basis as may reasonably be feasible,
for the various markets depending upon their
classification to be made
192
by the C.M.O on the basis of such criteria as he A may
deem relevant and also to evolve corresponding cost
patterns of the projects with suitable unbuilt indicia
for escalation of cost-structures, from time to time,
proportional to the rise in the price of material.
These norms shall operate as broad and general guide-
lines for the development of regulated markets and
shall be kept in view of the market-committees in
planning developmental projects. Departure from these
norms and standards shall, of course, be permissible on
grounds of special requirements of individual regulated
markets depending upon their specific individual
problems and requirements. At the time of sanction of
the budgets of the Market Committees the C.M.O. should
scrutinise the budgets with reference to and applying
the broad-norms and criteria evolved and adopted by him
so that the programme and the projects of development
for the next 8 years are need based and are as far as
may be on a uniform and rational basis.
The learned Advocate-General and the learned
counsel for the Market-Committees concede that this
exercise is necessary and beneficial as indeed the
matter involved an outlay of nearly 145 crores of
rupees in the next 8 years on the regulated markets.
Accordingly, the C.M.O. shall within 4 months from
now evolve and standardise these norms and
specifications and circulate the same to the Market-
Committees. Respondent Market-Committees in categories
’C’, ’D’ and ’E’ in Para-80 supra will, within 3 months
there from, revise their proposals for development in
accordance with these norms and specifications,
departures from standard specification being
permissible if the special conditions peculiar to the
particular markets so require and compel. The C.M.O.
will again scrutinise these revised proposals and their
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cost projections and if, upon such scrutiny, is of
opinion that the present 2% market-fee of any Market
Committee in the category ’C’, ’D’ and ’E’ supra is
unjustified, the C.M.O. will make appropriate orders
under S. 150 of the Act directing the Market-Committee
or Committees concerned to amend their bye-laws to
193
effect an appropriate downward revision in the quantum
of the fee. Wherever the C.M.O. is of the opinion,
after A an examination of the proposals, that there is
no need to make a downward revision, he shall make a
specific note in the behalf. These orders shall be made
within a period of 8 months from now."
This is the gist of the discussion of learned Judges of
the High Court in regard to the above point No. 12 framed by
them on the question whether enhancement of the market fees
leviable under. S. 65 (2) of the Act from one per cent to
two per cent brought about by the amendment of the bye-laws
of the Market Committees is unsupportable in law and fails
for want of correlation with the value of services rendered
to the payers of the fee. The learned Judges have stated at
the end of the point in para 7 of their judgment that the
discussion relating to the point is in paras 75 to 110 and
that the finding is in para 111. Para 111 extracted above
consists only of the direction given by the learned Judges
of the High Court to the Chief Marketing Officer. The
learned Judges have not expressed their opinion one way or
the other in para 111 as regards the justification for the
enhancement of the market fees leviable on buyers under
section 65 (2) of the Act from one per cent to two per cent
by amendment of the bye-laws though earlier in para 107 they
have observed that they
"are unable to hold, on the material placed before
us by the petitioners that the levy ought to fail for
want of quid pro quo; however, having regard to the
infirmities noticed in the estimates and financial
projections of the proposed developmental works on the
basis of which the enhancement is sought to be
justified, we are also unable to say with any
confidence and without reservations that the
enhancement of the fee, depending as it does on those
estimate is totally justified. Some time bound
directions to which we will refer presently, for a
second look at the estimates of the statutory
authorities are required in this behalf."
and they have given the same in para 109 of their judgment.
Dealing with the provisions of the Cardamom Act, 1965
and the rules made thereunder, in paras 34 to 38 of the
judgment the
194
High Court bas held that the provisions of the Act in so far
as A marketing of cardamom is concerned, are repugnant to
the provisions of the Cardamom Act (Central Act 42 of 1965).
But in paras 41 and 42 the High Court has held that the
Tobacco Board Act, 1975 makes provision only in relation to
Virginia tobacco and not all varieties of tobacco and the
Act is not repugnant to the provisions of the Tobacco Board
Act and all that is necessary is for the Market Committee to
obtain auctioneer’s licence under the provisions of the
Tobacco Board Act. Proceeding on the basis that the Tobacco
Board Act is in relation only to Virginia tobacco and not
all varieties of tobacco the High Court has observed that
any intention of the "Superior Legislature" (meaning
Parliament) to cover the whole field and make a
comprehensive law in regard to marketing of tobacco is not
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manifest in the Central enactment and that the two
legislations can co-exist and operate cumulatively.
I have set out above the gist of the High Court’s
decisions on the points regarding which alone arguments were
advanced before this Court in the Writ Petitions, Civil
Appeals and Special Leave Petitions. They are:
(1) That the provisions of S. 65 (1) of the Act ar
substituted by the Amendment Act 17 of 1980 and also
the validating S. 42 of that Amendment Act in so far as
it seeks to validate the levy of market fee on sellers
of notified agricultural produce during the period from
19.5.1975 to 28.9.1978 are unconstitutional and void;
(2) That the Chief Marketing Officer shall within
four months from the date of the judgment evolve and
standardise the norms and specifications and circulate
the same to the Market Committees is direction given by
the High Court. This was done by the High Court as it
was conceded by the learned Advocate General appearing
for the Market Committees that the exercise suggested
by the High Court in para 109 of the judgment is
’necessary and beneficial as indeed that the matter
involved an outlay of nearly 145 crores of rupees in
the next 8 years on the regulated markets";
(3) That the provisions of the Act are repugnant
to the Cardamom Act, 1965 and the Rules framed there.
195
under but not the provisions of the Tobacco Board Act,
1975; and
(4) That a writ of mandamus be issued to direct
the State Government and the Market Committees to
refund to the Writ petitioners who had approached the
High Court and had the benefit of the issuance of writs
of mandamus for the refund of the sellers’ market fees
actually paid under S. 65 (1) in cases where the
mandamus issued had not been complied with by the
respondents in the writ petitioners in view of the
validating provision contained in S. 42 of the
Amendment Act 17 of 1980 on such writ petitioners
filing their claims in writing before the Market
Committees concerned, and in the second category of
cases where the writ petitioners had not approached the
High Court earlier their claims for refund of the
market fee paid by them as sellers shall be confined to
the market fees paid under S. 65 (1) within a period of
3 years immediately preceding the presentation of the
writ petitions, and the same procedure as in the case
of the other class of writ petitioners shall be
followed.
Mr. Soli J. Sorabjee appearing for most of the
appellants and the petitioners in the writ petitions and
special leave petitions (namely traders) advanced arguments
on all the above points. Mr. S.N. Kackar appearing for the
appellants in Civil Appeals Nos. 1247 to 1474 of 1983
adopted the arguments of Mr. Sorabjee and supplemented it
with his own. Mr. Bhatt appearing for the State advanced
arguments in the State’s appeals filed. against the High
Court’s decision invalidating S. 65 (1) as substituted by
the Amendment Act 17 of 1980 and also S. 42 of that
Amendment Act and the direction for the refund of the market
fees collected under s. 65 (1) as substituted by that
Amendment Act. Mr.. A.K. Sen appearing for the Market
Committees advanced arguments on the validity of the
amendment of the bye-laws made for enhancement of the market
fees on buyers leviable under s. 65 (2) of the Act, while
Mr. S.T. Desai, Dr. Y S. Chitale and late Mr. P.R. Mridul
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appearing for the Market Committees advanced arguments
supporting the High Court’s judgment that the provisions of
the Act are not repugnant to those of the Tobacco Board Act,
1975.
196
The submissions of Mr. Sorabjee in short are these:
The item of expenses envisaged for the rural roads has
gone with the striking down of s. 65 (1) and (3) of the Act
and the omission of clause (3) of s. 65 from the Act by the
Amendment Act 17 of 1980 from the date of its commencement
as if it never existed on the statute book. The amount
collected under that sub-section will take care of the
proposed expenditure envisaged in the estimates and
projections for the improvement of the services in the
regulated markets and therefore the enhancement of the
market fee from one per cent two per cent of the price of
the specified agricultural produce is invalid. The reduction
of the enhanced levy from two per cent to one per cent by
the Circular No. SMD-268/RGN-83 dated 27.2.1984 issued
pursuant to the State Government’s decision shows that the
State Government and the Market Committees prefer this
course to the exercise suggested by the High Court to be
completed within eight moths of the judgment and that there
was no justification for the enhancement of the market fee
from one per cent to two per cent by amendment of the bye-
law relating to the levy of market fee under s. 65 (2) of
the Act. The amendment of the bye-laws was not in accordance
with the procedure laid down by s. 148 of the Act for making
bye-laws and amendments thereto for want of previous
approval of the Chief Marketing Officer and previous
publication of the proposed amendment and hearing of the
affect interests, and ss. 3, 5 (a) and 5 (b) of Ordinance 22
of 1981 promulgated when the hearing of the Writ Petitions
in the High Court was in progress would not cure the defect-
In the course of the arguments before the High Court it was
specifically conceded that there was no compliance with the
requirement of s. 148 in making the amendment of the bye-law
for enhancement of the market fee from one per cent to two
per cent. But on 17.12.1981 Karnataka Ordinance 22 of 1981
was promulgated, and ss. 3 and 5 (a) thereof stated:
"3. Amendment of section 148-ID section 148 of the
principal Act, in sub-section (1), the words "after
previous publication in the prescribed manner", shall
be and shall be deemed always to have been omitted.
5 (a) all acts, proceedings or things done or
action taken by the State Government or by the Market
Committees or by any other authority in connection with
the levy Of collection of market fec shall for all
purposes
197
be deemed to be and to have always been done or taken
in accordance with law"
and s. 5 (b) stated that:
"no suit or other proceedings shall be instituted,
maintained or continued in any court or before any
authority for refund of any such market fee or for
questioning the validity of any action or thing taken
or done under the said bye-laws and no court shall
recognise or enforce any decree or order declaring the
said bye-laws or any action or thing taken or done
thereunder as invalid on the ground that the bye-laws
were made with- out giving reasonable opportunity to
persons likely to be affected thereby to file their
objections and suggestions, or otherwise without
following the procedure prescribed.’’
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Ss. 3, 5 (a) and 5 (b) have been replaced by ss. 12 and
14 of the Karnataka Agricultural Produce Marketing
(Regulation) (Amendment) Act, 1982. The amendment of the
bye-law made for enhancement of the market fee from one per
cent to two per cent is not in accordance with law. The High
Court has practically held so as can be seen from the
direction given by it in para 61 of the judgment as to what
should be done before a market committee amends its bye-law
to make an upward revision of the rate of market fee in the
light of the submission made by the learned Advocate General
appearing for the State and the learned Counsel appearing
for the Market Committees that it will be eminently
desirable that the Market Committees should adopt some
reasonable procedure in that behalf and that the amendment
of s. 148 (1) of the Act made by Ordinance 22 of 1981 was
only intended to cure the defect in the making of the
impugned amendment of the bye-law to avoid great public
inconvenience which will result from the invalidation of the
bye-law and that there was no intention to make the deletion
a permanent feature, and any reasonable procedure which may
be suggested by the High Court would be adopted in practice
even if there was no such legal compulsion. There were no
resolutions, estimates or projections of the market
Committees for making improvements to the regulated markets
immediately or within the near future before the bye-law was
amended for enhancing the market fee from one per cent to
two per cent under the directions of
198
the Chief Marketing Officer, and Exs. R-1 to R-l l l and
other statements referred to in the High Court’s judgment
were prepared long after the date of filing of the Writ
Petitions in the High Court and only pursuant to the
directions given by the High Court for that purpose on
30.11.1981. The High Court was not satisfied even with those
estimates, projections and statements and has therefore
issued the directions contained in paras 109 and 111 of the
judgment and those directions have been given in respect of
all the Market Committees and not in respect of only 8 or 4
Market Committees in categories ’C’, ’D’ and ’E’ as
contended by Mr. A.K. Sen. Enhancement of the market fee
from one per cent to two per cent is not justified. The High
Court erred in holding that the Tobacco Board Act, 1975
covers only Virginia tobacco and is not repugnant to the
provisions of the Act, ignoring the provisions of ss. 8 (2)
(a), 8 (3) and 12 of the Tobacco Board Act and r. 35 of the
Rules made under the provisions of that Act. Though
reference is made in s. 8 (2) (a) to (g) of that Act to
Virginia tobacco clause (h) relates to "promoting the
gradation of tobacco at the level of growers", clause (1)
relates to "sponsoring, assisting, co-ordinating or
encouraging scientific, technological and economic research
for the promotion of tobacco industry", and s.’ (3) says
that:
"without prejudice to the generality of the
provisions of subjection (1) and subject to priority
being given to matters specified in sub-section (2),
the measures referred to in sub-section (1) may also
provide in relation to tobacco, other than Virginia
tobacco, for all or any of the matters specified in
clauses (c) to (g) of sub-section (2) and for this
purpose any reference in those clauses to Virginia
tobacco shall be construed as including a reference to
tobacco other than Virginia tobacco".
S. 12 of the Act says that:
"no person shall export tobacco or any tobacco
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products or function as a packer, auctioneer of, or
dealer in, tobacco unless he registers himself with the
Board in accordance with the rules made under this
Act."
R. 35 of the Tobacco Board Rules, 1976 relates to
registration as exporter or packer or auctioneer of, or
dealer in tobacco.
199
Clauses (c) to (g) of s. 8 (2) read thus:
"(c) maintenance and improvement of existing
markets, and development of new markets outside India
for Indian Virginia tobacco and its products and
devising of marketing strategy in consonance with
demand for the commodity outside India, including group
marketing under limited brand names;
(cc) establishment by the Board of auction plat
forms, with the previous approval of the Central
Government, for the sale of Virginia tobacco by
registered growers or curers, and functioning of the
Board as an auctioneer at auction platforms established
by or registered with it subject to such conditions as
may be specified by the Central Government;
(d) recommending to Central Government the minimum
prices which may be fixed far purposes of Virginia
tobacco with a view to avoiding unhealthy competition
amongst the exporters;
(e) regulating in other respects Virginia tobacco
marketing in India and export of virginia tobacco
having due regard to the interests of growers,
manufacturers and the nation;
(f) propagating information useful to the growers,
dealers and exporters (including packers) of Virginia
tobacco and manufacturers of Virginia tobacco products
and others concerned with Virginia tobacco and products
thereof, and
(g) purchasing Virginia tobacco from growers when
the same is considered necessary or expedient for
protecting the interests of the growers and disposal of
the same in India or abroad as and when considered
appropriate";
These clauses (c) to (g) would apply to tobacco also in
view of s. g (3) of the Tobacco Board Act.
Mr. Kacker adopted the arguments of Mr. Sorabjee and
supplemented it with his own. His submissions are these:
200
Before sub-section (3) of s. 65 was struck down in
Rajasekhariah’s case (supra) on 28.9.1978 several crores of
rupees bad been collected under s. 65 (1) from 19.5.1975
when it was amended by Amendment Act 24 of 1975 to 28.9.1978
and that amount must be sufficient to meet the estimates and
projections envisaged in Exs. R-l to R-111 and other
statements prepared and produced by the Market Committees
pursuant to the High Court’s directions issued on 30.11.1981
having regard to the fact that subsection (3) of s. 65 under
which that amount had to be credited to the Roads and
Buildings Fund has been struck down in Rajasekhariah’s case
(supra) and that sub-section has been omitted from the Act
as if it never existed in it. The Market Committees had
surplus fund with them in 1979 and they bad no scheme for
effecting improvements to the regulated markets then they
enhanced the market fee from one per cent to two per cent
under sub-section (2) of s. 65 of the Act by amending the
bye-law except the statements produced in Vaman Rao’s case
(supra) in 1974. The statements Exs. R-1 to R-111 and other
statements produced in the High Court were not in existence
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when the Writ Petitions were presented in the High Court.
The market fee has been since reduced to one per cent with
effect from 1.4 1984. The High Court should not have given
an opportunity to the Market Committees to fill up the
lacuna by preparing and producing Exs. R- I to R- 111 and
the other statements when the Writ Petitions were being
heard in the High Court.
On the other hand, Mr. A.K. Sen submitted his arguments
which may be summarised thus:
As many as 4298 Writ Petitions were filed in respect of
93 Market Committees. Clear quid pro quo was established in
respect of 73 Market Committees falling in categories ’A’,
’B’, ’C’ and ’D’ for enhancement of the market fee from one
per cent to two per cent and no further enquiry was needed
on the principles laid down in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case
(supra). The High Court found that reconsideration of the
financial projections by the Market Committees was necessary
only in regard to 8 out of the remaining 20 Market
Committees, and it was entitled to give the directions which
had been given to the Chief Marketing Officer to re-examine
them. There is no repugnancy between the Act and the Tobacco
Board Act, 1975.
Mr. Bhatt submitted that after s. 65 (3) has been
omitted from the Act as if it never existed in it there was
no question of striking
201
down s. 65 (1) as substituted by the Amendment Art 17 of
1980, that s. 42 of that Amendment Act has validated the
levy and there is no A question of the refund of the market
fee collected under s. 65 (1) as the fee collected under the
Act has to be used for the purposes envisaged by the Act and
than in any event the refund could be only to the Market
Committees and not to the traders.
It is not necessary for me to refer to the arguments of
Mr. S.T. Desai, Dr. Y.S. Chitale and late Mr. P.R. Mridul
regarding the question of repugnancy of the provisions of
the Act with those of the Tobacco Board Act, 1975 as my
learned brother Murtaza Fazal Ali, J. has dealt with that
question in his judgment and I agree with him in that
regard. I wish to add that the learned Judges of the High
Court have disposed of this matter of repugnancy between the
Act and the Tobacco Board Act, 1975 in two short paras 41
and 42 without much of a discussion under the belief that
the Tobacco Board Act, 1975 concerns only Virginia tobacco
and not other varieties of tobacco. They have held after
some discussion in paras 34 and 38 of their judgment that
the Act is repugnant to the Cardamom Act which is almost
similar to the Tobacco Board Act in its scope and operation.
The consequence is that cardamom has to be taken out of the
schedule to the Act. No appeal has been filed against that
part of the High Court’s judgment. The Act relates to
markets falling under entry 28 of List II (markets and
fairs) while the Tobacco Board Act falls under entry 52 of
List I (industries) of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution. Industries would certainly include marketing
of the products. The Act would therefore be repugnant to the
Tobacco Board Act in view of Art. 254 (1) of the
Constitution. The attention of the learned Judges does not
appear to have been focussed on s. 8 (3) and s. 12 of the
Tobacco Board Act extracted above and r. 35 of the Rules
framed under that Act, a perusal of which would show that
the Tobacco Board Act covers tobacco of all varieties in
regard to matters required to be done by the Market
Committees under the provisions of the Act. The High Court
has thus erred in holding that the provisions of the Act are
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not repugnant to the Tobacco Board Act, 1975 and that they
can co-exist and operate cumulatively.
In the course of arguments both sides invited this
Court’s attention to a number of decisions- I think it is
sufficient if reference is made to only five of them and
also to the decision of this Court in Civil Appeals Nos.
4500-4501 of 1984 (M/s. Amarnath Om Prakash
202
& Others v. State of Punjab and Food Corporation of India v.
State of A Punjab) disposed of on 19.11.1984. The first of
those decisions is of Mathew, Bhagwati and Untwalia, JJ. in
State of Maharashtra & Ors. v. The Salvation Army,(l) In
that decision Mathew, J. speaking for the Bench observed:
"We do not think any such levy for investment or
diversion of the surplus would be consistant with the
principle behind the levy of fee. While we do not think
it necessary that all available surplus in a year or
for some years should always go in for reducing the
rate of contribution for the subsequent year or years,
we are of the view that the organisation cannot be
allowed to accumulate an unreasonable amount,
unreasonable in the sense that the amount might not be
reasonably required for the proper and afficient
working of the organisation in a foreseeable future. No
hard and fast rule applicable - in all contingencies
can be formulated. The Court will have to draw a line
somewhere when surplus must be the taken into
consideration for reducing the levy of contribution. In
drawing the line, the Court will have to look into the
nature of the organisation, the potentiality for its
growth, the multiplication in its work consequent on
its expansion for rendering the services visualised by
the Act and the necessity for capital expenditure in
the near future, as also the amount of levy collected
or expected to be collected in a year. is already
stated the Division Bench was of the view that the
stage when the surplus must be taken into account to
determine the character of the levy was reached by the
end of March 31, 1958 when the available surplus came
to Rs. 30, 44, 541/-. The Division Bench was alive to
the desirability of locating the head office and
regional offices in buildings to be owned by the
organisation and incurring of capital expenditure in
that behalf. The Charity Organisation bas purchased a
building worth about Rs. 30 lakhs. Even according to
the Division Bench, investment of the surplus in
buildings for locating the head and regional offices
cannot be said to be diversion of the surplus for
purposes alien to the object of the organisation,
namely, the better administration of the trusts."
(1) [1975] 3 S.C.R. 475.
203
This decision indicates what should be borne in mind
when there is a complaint that the market fee already levied
is A excessive or before any further increase in the levy is
made.
The second decision is that of a Bench of five learned
Judges of this Court (Chandrachud, C.J. and Bhagwati,
Untwalia, Murtaza Fazal Ali and Pathak, JJ ) in Kewal
Krishan Puri v. State of Punjab (supra) where the purpose
for which Marketing Development Fund and Market Committee
Funds levied and collected under the Punjab Agricultural
Produce Markets Act, 1961 and justification for enhancement
of the rate of market fee from two per cent to three per
cent came up for consideration. This appears to be a leading
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decision on this subject. It has been relied upon not only
by Mr. Sorabjee and Mr. Kacker but also by Mr A.K. Sen. In
that case, Untwalia, J. speaking for the Bench observed
thus:
"Such a fee cannot be utilised for the purpose of
rendering all sorts of facilities and services for the
benefit of agriculturists throughout the area. It may
be very necessary to render such services to the
agriculturists; rather, they must be rendered. But the
laudable end in itself cannot justify the means to
achieve that end if the means have got no sanction of
the law .. ... ... ... ... ...
From a conspectus of the various authorities of
this Court we deduce the following principles for
satisfying the tests for a valid levy of market fees on
the agricultural produce bought or sold by licensees in
a notified market area:
(1) That the amount of fee realised must be earmarked
for rendering services to the licensees in the
notified market area and a good and substantial
portion of it must be shown to be expended for
this purpose,
(2) That the services rendered to the licensees must
be in relation to the transaction of purchase or
sale of the agricultural produce.
(3) That while rendering services in the marketing
area for the purposes of facilitating the
transactions of
204
purchase and sale with a view to achieve the
objects of the marketing legislation it is not
necessary to confer the whole of the benefit on
the licensees but some special benefits must be
conferred on them which have a direct, close and
reasonable correlation between the licensees and
the transactions.
(4) That while conferring some special benefits on the
licensees it is permissible to render such service
in the market which may be in the general interest
of all concerned with the transactions taking
place in the market.
(5) That spending the amount of market fees for the
purpose of augmenting the agricultural produce,
its facility of transport in villages and to
provide other facilities meant mainly or
exclusively for the benefit of the agriculturists
is not permissible on the ground that such
services in the long run go to increase the volume
of transactions in the market ultimately
benefiting the traders also. Such an indirect and
remote benefit to the traders is in no sense a
special benefit to them.
(6) That the element of quid pro quo may not be
possible, or even necessary, to be established
with arithmetical exactitude but even broadly and
reasonably it must be established by the
authorities who charge the fees that the amount is
being spent for rendering services to those on
whom falls the burden of the fee.
(7) At least a good and substantial portion of the
amount collected on account of fees, ma be in the
neighbourhood of two-thirds or three-fourths, must
shown with reasonable certainty as being spent for
rendering services of the kind mentioned
above.................... The benefit of market
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fee, therefore, has to be correlated with the
transactions taking place at the specified place
in the market area and not in the whole of the
area.
205
Supposing a market has been established consisting
of principal market yard or sub-market yards at a
particular place where there is no facility for the
carts or the trucks and other vehicles to go, then
approach roads, and if necessary even culverts and
bridges may be constructed, or repaired out of the
Market Committee Fund. Such an expenditure within the
limited limit will be with the object of facilitating
the taking place of the transactions of purchase and
sale in the market and will confer some special
benefits to the traders apart from a share of the
benefit going to the agriculturist who are not required
to share the burden of the market fee. But as we have
pointed out above, if one were to give a very wide
meaning to this phrase of construction and repair of
approach roads, culverts and bridges to say that such
construction can be permitted anywhere in the market
area for the facility of the agriculturists which
ultimately will benefit the traders also, then the
whole concept of correlation of fee and its character
of having an element of quid pro quo will dwindle down
and become an empty formality.
If many of the purposes mentioned in the Act, as
we have shown above, are outside the ambit of the
service element and fall within the realm of the
governmental functions, then it is plain that to say by
generalisation that the fee money can be spent for the
purposes of objects of the Act is not quite correct.
The High Court points out that the money cannot be
spent in construction of governmental activities for
providing main roads in the State. How, then, the
Market Committees can be made to contribute a very big
chunk of their market fee income in the construction of
link roads through all villages ? To put the matter
logically, if a link road is to be constructed from a
village to the main road for enabling an agriculturist
to trans-
206
port his produce up the main road then the Market
Committee should be under an obligation to construct or
at least to maintain the main road also in order to
enable that agriculturist to reach the market which may
be at a distance of 20 miles from the link road. It is
plain that construction of such link roads is as much a
part of the R governmental activity as that of the main
roads.
The impost must be correlated with the service to
be rendered to the payers of the fees in the sense and
to the extent we have pointed out above. Again the High
Court fell into an error in paragraph 15 of the
judgment when, while upholding the construction and
repair of approach roads, culverts and bridges in the
larger sense of the term, it said:
’If the approach roads, culverts or bridges
are in such a bad shape that they would become
hinderance in the mobility of the produce from one
part of the notified market area to the principal
market yard, then the worst suffer or would be the
grower for whose benefit the Act has been
enacted.’
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It may be as was submitted before us that it is
not imperative either for the Market Committees or the
Board to prepare balance-sheets because their accounts
are audited by Government auditors but for the purpose
of raising the market fee any further, the balance-
sheet will give a truepicture of the position along
with the budgets and estimates. Then, and then only
there may be a legal justification for raising the rate
of the market fec further to a reasonable limit."
The third decision is of Chinnappa Reddy, A.P. Sen and
Baharul Islam, JJ. in Southern Pharmaceuticals and Chemicals
v. State of Kerala & Ors. etc.(1) where Sen, J. speaking for
the Bench has observed at page 542 thus:
(1) [1982]1 S.C.R. 519.
207
"It is also increasingly realised that the element
of quid pro quo stricto senso is not always a sine qua
DOn of A a fee. It is needless to stress that the
element of quid pro quo is not necessarily absent in
every tax."
It has to be noticed that the observation was made by
the learned Judge in a case in which the appellants who were
manufacturers of medicinal and toilet preparations
containing alcohol challenged the constitutional validity of
certain provisions of the Kerala Abkari Act, 1967. In the
earlier part of the judgment Sen, J. has observed:
"The distinction between a ’tax’ and ’fee’ is well
settled. The question came up for consideration for the
first time in this Court in the Commissioner, H.R.E.
Madras v. Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Shirur Mutt
(1954 SCR 1005). Therein, the Court speaking through
Mukherjee, J. quoted with approval the definition of
’tax’ given by Latham, C.J. in Matthews v. Chickory
Marketing Board (60 CLR 263). In that case the learned
Chief Justice observed:
’A tax is a compulsory exaction of money by
public authority for public purposes
enforceable by E law and is not payment for
cervices rendered.’
Coming now to fees, a fee is generally defined to
be a charge for a special service rendered to
individuals by some Governmental agency.
If, as we hold, a fee is regarded as a sort of
return or consideration for services rendered, it is
absolutely necessary that the levy of fees should on
the face of the legislative provision, be correlated to
the expenses incurred by Government in rendering the
services."
The same view was taken in Mahant Sri Jagannath v.
State of Orissa(1) and Rathilal Param Chand Gandhi v. State
of Bombay.(2)
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 1046.
(2) 119541 S.C.C. 1055.
208
Therefore, the aforesaid observation of Sen, J. that it is
now increasingly realised that the element of quid pro quo
stricto senso is not always a sine qua non of a fee and that
it is needless to stress that the element of quidpro quo is
not necessarily absent in very tax cannot be made applicable
to the facts of the present cases which relate to market
fees where the element of quid pro quo is absolutely
necessary.
The fourth decision is A.P. Sen, Venkataramiah and R
Misra, JJ, in Sreenivosa General Traders & Ors. v. State of
Andhra Pradesh(1) where Sen, J. speaking for the Bench has
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observed:
"There is no generic difference between a tax and
a fee. Both are compulsory exactions of money by public
authorities. Compulsion lies in the fact that payment
is enforceable by law against a person in spite of his
unwillingness or want of consent. A levy in the nature
of a fee does not cease to be of that character merely
because there is an element of compulsion or
coerciveness present in it, nor is it a postulate of a
fee that it must have direct relation to the actual
service rendered by the authority to each individual
who obtains the benefit of service. It is now
increasingly realised that merely because the
collections for the services rendered or grant of a
privilege or licence are taken to the consolidated fund
of the State and not separately appropriated towards
the expenditure for rendering the service is not by
itself decisive.. .. ...... It is also increasingly
realised that the element of quid pro quo in the strict
sense is not always a sine qua non for a fee. It is
needless to stress that the element of quid pro quo is
not necessarily absent in every tax."
The above decision arose out of proceedings taken under
the Andhra Pradesh (Agricultural Produce and Livestock)
Market Act, 1966. With respect, it is not possible to agree
with the above observation that there is no generic
difference between a tax and a fee and the element of quid
pro quo in the stricto senso is not always a sine qua non
for a fee in view of my learned brother Sen’s approval in
Southern Pharmaceutical and Chemical’s case (supra) of the i
(1) [1983] 3 S.C.R. 843.
209
distinction pointed out by Latham, C.J. in Matthews v.
Chickory Marketing Board (supra) between a tax and fee and
that it is A absolutely necessary that levy of fee should on
the face of the legislative provisions be correlated to the
expenses incurred in rendering services and the learned
Judge’s observation in that decision that the same view was
reiterated by this Court in Mahant Sri Jagannath Ramanuj
Das’s case (supra), Rathilat Param Chand Gandhi’s case
(supra) and also in view of the decision of the larger Bench
of five Judges of this Court in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case
(supra) that quid pro quo is a necessary element of the
market fee. The fifth decision is of Desai and Chinnappa
Reddy, JJ. in Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Mohd.
Yasin(1) where my learned brother Chinnppa Reddy, J.
speaking for the Bench has observed:
"Though a fee must have relation to the services
rendered or the advantages conferred, such relation
need not be direct, a mere casual relation is enough."
D
That was a case where the Delhi Municipal Corporation
purported to enhance the fee for slaughtering animals in the
slaughter houses from 25 paise to one rupee per animal in
the case of sheep, goats and pigs and from one rupee to
eight rupees per animal in the case of buffaloes. With
respect, it is not possible to accept this view having
regard to the decision of a large Bench of this Court in
Kewal Krishan Puri’s case (supra) which is relied upon by
both sides in these cases as stated above.
(1) [1983] 3 S.C.R. 229,
210
observation. In Kewal Krishan Puri’s case (supra) while the
construction of link roads has been welcomed by the learned
Judges, it has been observed:
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"Uplift of villages and helping the agriculturists
by all means is the duty and the obligation of the
State no doubt and it has to do it by incurring
expenses out of the public exchequer consisting of the
income from various kinds of taxes etc."
Referring to the observations of A.P. Sen. J. in Sreenivasa
General Traders’s case (supra) Chinnappa Reddy, J. has
observed in his judgment thus:
"He also draw attention to the increasing
realisation that the element of quid pro quo in the
strict sense was not always a sine que non for fee. Nor
was the element of quid pro quo necessarily absent in
every tax. He further pointed out that an insistence
upon a good and substantial portion of an amount
collected on account of fee, say in the neighbourhood
of two-thirds or three-fourths, being shown with
reasonable certainty as having been spent for rendering
services in the market to the payer of the fee could
not be a rule of universal application, and that it was
a rule which had necessarily to be confined to the
special facts of Kewal Krishan Puri’ s case (supra).
Other wise, it would affect. the validity of marketing
legislations undertaken throughout the country during
the past half a century. We agree with the view of Sen,
J. that the observations extracted by him from Kewal
Krishan Puri’s case were not really necessary for that
case and we also agree with the clarification of the
observation made by Sen, J.
With respect, I am not able to see how an why the
observations made in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case (supra) have
to be confined to the special facts of that case. Kewal
Krishan Puri’s case arose out of proceedings taken under the
Punjab Agricultural Produce Markets Act, 1961 which is an
Act for the better regulation of the purchase, sale, storage
and processing of agricultural produce and for the
establishment of markets for agricultural produce in that
State. The objects of that Act and the Act with which we are
211
concerned in these cases are almost the same. The maximum
rate of market fee which could be levied by the various
market committees under s. 23 of the Punjab Act was fifty
paise for every hundred rupees. The fee was raised from time
to time. A number of writ petitions were filed in the High
Court challenging the power of the Board to increase the
levy. That is what has happened in these cases arising under
the Act which relates to Karnataka State. The question
whether quid pro quo was necessary and to what extent and
what should be done by the Market Committees before the fee
could be raised fell for considration in that case as in
these cases. In Sreenivash General Traders’ case (supra)
which arose under the Andhra Pradesh (Agricultural Produce
and Livestock) Markets Act, 1966 the market fee which was 25
paise per hundred rupees was C raised to 50 paise in 1972
and eventually to one rupee for every hundred rupees. The
contention was that increase in the rate of market from 50
paise to one rupee was illegal on the ground that there was
no correlation between the increase and the services
rendered. That is exactly the position in the present case
where the increase was from one per cent to two per cent of
the price paid by the buyers. Therefore, with respect I an
unable to see how and why what l-as been decided in Kewal
Krishan Puri’s case (supra) should he confined to the facts
of that case alone. Again with respect, I consider myself
bound by the decision in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case and that
even the Bench of which I am one of three is bound by that
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decision having regard to the principles governing
precedents and the necessity to avoid confusion in the minds
of the High Courts and Subordinate Courts as regards the
correct view to be followed by them. Fortunately, in these
cases, as stated above, both sides relied upon the decision
in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case (supra) which inter alia laid
down of following principles:
1. That the amount of fee realised must be earmarked
for rendering services to the licensees in the notified
market area and a good and substantial portion of it
must be shown to be expended for this purpose;
2. That the element of quid pro quo may not be
possible or even necessary to be established with
arithmetical exactitude;
3. That at least a good and substantial portion of
the amount collected on account of fees, may be in the
neighbourhood of two-thirds or three-fourths, must
212
be shown with reasonable certainty as being spent for
rendering services of the kind mentioned in the
judgment; and
4. That if the market fee is sought to be raised
proper budgets, estimates and balance-sheets showing
the balance of the money in hand and in deposit, the
estimated income and expenditure etc. should be
carefully prepared.
It may be that it is not imperative either for the
Market Committee or the Board (Chief Marketing officer in
the present cases) to prepare balance-sheets because their
account are audited by Government auditors for the purpose
of raising market fee any further. The balance-sheet will
given a true picture of the position also with the budgets
and estimates and then and only then there may be legal
justification for raising the market fee to a reasonable
extent. On drawing the correct balance-sheets and preparing
correct estimates and budgets the authorities will be able
to know the correct position to decide reasonably as to what
extent the raising of the market fee can be justified taking
an over-all picture of the matter.
It may be noticed that even the High Court has given
similar directions to the Market Committees and the Chief
Marketing Officer to see whether there is justification for
increasing the market fee from one per cent to two per cent
on the invitation of the learned Advocate General appearing
for the State and the learned Consel appearing for the
Market Committee as stated above.
Now that I have set out the facts and the decision of
the High Court to the extent necessary and the arguments of
the learned counsel for the parties and the lay bearing on
the questions involved as It understand the same I proceed
to record my findings. The principles of law laid down by
the Bench of five learned Judges of this Court in Kewal
Krishan Puri’s case (supra) so long as they have not been
dissented from, varied or set aside by a larger Bench are
binding, with respect, not only on smaller Benches of this
Court but also undoubtedly on the High Courts and other
Subordinate Courts and parties similarly placed. I have
already pointed out that the facts and the points which
arose for consideration in
213
Kewal Krishan Puri’s case (supra), Sreenivasa General
Traders’ case (supra) and the present cases are broadly
similar. All these cases relate to market fees and the
enhancement thereof. I have set out the seven points laid
down by this Court in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case (supra) in
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the earlier part of my judgment and four of those points
which have a direct bearing on these cases in the preceding
paras. It 16 not necessary to establish the element of quid
pro quo in regard to market fees with arithmetical
exactitude, but an amount of fee must be earmarked for
rendering services to the buyers in the notified market area
and a good and substantial portion of it must be shown to be
expended for those purposes. The good and substantial
portion earmaked for rendering services may be in the
neighbourhood of two-thirds or three-fourths and it must be
shown with reasonable certainly as being spent for rendering
services of the kind mentioned in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case
(supra). If the market fee is sought to be raised, proper
budgets, estimates, balance-sheets showing the money in hand
and in deposit, expenditure on projects to be undertaken
etc. should be carefully prepared. Then and only then there
may be a legal justification for raising the rate of the
market fee further to a reasonable extent, for only then the
authorities will be able to know the correct position and to
decide reasonably as to what extent the raising of the
market fee can be justified, taking an over-all view of the
matter. But in the present cases, none of these requirements
was satisfied before the market fee was raised The Market
Committees had no such material before them before they
raised the rate of the market fee from one per cent
uniformly to two per cent by amendment of the bye-law on the
mere direction of the Chief Marketing Officer. These facts
are not in dispute. Therefore, with respect, the High Court
erred in law in not applying the principle of law laid down
by this Court in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case (supra) and
failing to strike down the enhancement of the market fee
from one per cent to two per cent on account of the failure
to comply with the principles laid down in Kewal Krishan
Puri’s case (supra). The State Government and the Market
Committees appear rightly to have retraced their steps by
reducing the rate of the market are from two per cent to one
per cent by the Circular No. SMD-268/ RGN-83 dated 27.2 1984
with effect from 1.4.1984. The learned Judges of the High
Court themselves do not appear to have been quite happy
about how the enhancement of the market fee had been made,
for they have observed in para 61 of their judgment, as
mentioned above, that the question might become a live issue
if the Market Committees were to amend the bye-laws made
under s.l48
214
read with s.65(2) of the Act in future without giving an
opportunity to the affected interests of being heard in
regard to the proposed enhancement. Even the learned
Advocate General appearing for the State and the learned
Counsel appearing for the Market Committees had stated
before the learned Judges of the High Court that it would be
eminently desirable that the Market Committees should adopt
some reasonable procedure in that behalf and that the
amendment to s.148 of the Act made by Ordinance 22 of 1981
dispensing with the need for prior publication and hearing
of the affected interests was only intended to cure the
defect in making the impugned amendment to the bye-law for
avoiding ’great public inconvenience which may result from
the invalidation of the bye-law and there was no
intention to make the deletion, brought about by the
Ordinance, a permanent feature’. They submitted before the
learned Judges of the High Court that any reasonable
procedure which may be suggested by them would be adopted in
future ’even if there is no such legal compulsion’. In these
circumstances, the High Court has observed: "It appears to
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us that before the Market Committees propose to amend a bye-
law to make an upward revision of the rate of fee, in
future, the Market Committees must first follow the
directions of the Supreme Court (given) in para 55 in Kewal
Krishan Puri’s case". The learned Judges have thereafter
given the directions contained in the judgment in that case
as mentioned above. With respect, I am unable to see how the
directions given by this Court in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case
(supra) should be followed only in future and how there is
no compulsion in law for the Market Committees to follow the
directions already given by this Court in that case and how
this could be dispensed with or ignored for the purpose of
the impugned enhancement. with respect I think that the High
Court has erred in not applying the principles of law laid
down by this Court in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case (supra) and
in observing that they should be applied only in future. In
these circumstances, I hold that the enhancement of the
market fee from one per cent to two per cent by amendment of
the bye-law under the directions of the Chief Marketing
Officer without complying with the principles of law down in
Kewal Krishan Puri’s case (supra) is bad in law. The same
would be the position even if the amendment to the bye-law
made in accordance with s. 148 of the Act as it is stood
before the amendment by the Ordinance 22 of 1981.
Point No. 12 in para 7 of the High Court’s judgment
relating to the question of enhancement of the market fee
reads thus:
215
"Whether the enhancement of market fee leviable
under s. 65(2) of the Act from one per cent to two per
A cent brought about by the amendment of the bye-law
responnents-Market-Committees is unsupportable in law
and fails for want of correlation with the value of
services rendered to the payers of the fee."
The burden cast on the appellants is to prove the
negative. The appellant are bound to succeed in the light of
the decision in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case (supra) if they
prove that the enhancement of the market fee was made
without complying with the law laid down in that case. That
has been established by the appellant without any manner of
doubt whatsoever.
As rightly contended by Mr. Kacker the High Court has
erred in giving the direction dated 30.11.1981 to the Chief
Marketing Officer for furnishing a comprehensive statement
in respect of each of the Market Committees in a tabular
form as indicated in para 69 of the impugned judgment, set
out in the earlier part of this judgment. The High Court
has, thus, given an opportunity to the Market Committees to
fill up the lacuna since the materials supplied thereafter
by way of Exs. R- I to R- 111 and similar statements perused
by the High Court were not available either on the date of
the amendment of the bye-law enhancing the rate of the
market fee from one per cent to two per cent or even on the
dates on which the Writ Petitions were filed in the High
Court. The High Court has erred in giving the direction and
granting an opportunity to the Market Committees to fill up
the lacuna. I do not agree with Mr. A.K. Sen that the High
Court was entitled to do so.
The High Court has found even Exs . R- I to R- 111 and
the other statements prepared and furnished pursuant to its
order dated 30.11 1981 not sufficient to sustain the
enhancement of the fee. This is clear from what the High
Court has stated in paras 107 to 111 of its judgment which
is extracted for ready reference:
"107. The upshot of the above discussion is that
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though we are unable to hold, on the material placed
before us by the petitioners, that the levy ought to
fail for want of quid pro quo, however having regard to
the infirmities noticed in the estimates and financial
projections of the proposed developmental works on the
basis of which the
216
enhancement is sought to be justified, we are also
unable to say with any confidence and without
reservations that the enhancement of fee depending as
it does on those estimates is totally justified. Some
time-bound directions to which we will refer presently
for a second look at the estimates by the statutory
authorities are required to be issued in this behalf.
108. Indeed, having regard to the wide range of
the apparently inexplicable disproportions in the
developmental projects of the various Market-
Committees both the learned Advocate-General and the
learned Counsel for the Market Committees, stated that
there was obvious scope-in our opinion an imperative
need-for some rationalisation of the pattern of
development of market-yards based upon and related to
the relevant factors such as quantum and nature of
agricultural produce handled by the markets;
potentialities of development of the market in the
reason ably near future and the like. It is neither
possible nor advisable to lay down exhaustively all the
criteria that may become relevant to the task. However
the need for such exercise to regulate the development
to these market yards on scientific rational and
uniform basis was accepted by all the parties.
109. A time-bound schedule has to be prescribed
for the Chief Marketing Officer, as the authority under
the ’Act, approving the budgets, to evolve and
standardise broad and general norms, taking into
account the observations made in the course of this
order, both for infra-structural and developmental
works and services, on as uniform a basis as may
reasonably be feasible, for the various markets
depending upon their classification to be made by the
C.M.O. On the basis of such criteria he may deem
relevant and also to evolve corresponding cost patterns
of the projects with suitable inbuilt indicia for
escalation of cost structures, from time to time,
proportional to the rise in the price of material.
These norms shall operate as broad and general guide-
lines for the development of regulated markets and
shall be kept in view of the market committees in
planning developmental projects.
217
Departure from these norms and standards shall, of
course, be permissible on grounds of special
requirements of individual regulated markets depending
upon their specific individual problems and
requirements. At the time of sanction of the budgets of
the Market-Committees the C.M.O. should scrutinise the
budgets with reference to and applying the broad-norms
and criteria evolved and adopted by him so that the
programme and the projects of development for next 8
years are need based and are as far as may be, on a
uniform and rational basis.
110. The learned Advocate-General and the learned
counsel for the Market Committees concede that this
exercise is necessary and beneficial as indeed the
matter involved an outlay of nearly 145 crores of
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rupees in the next 8 years on the regulated markets.
111. Accordingly, the C.M.O. shall within 4 months
from now evolve and standardise these norms and
specifications and circulate the same to the Market
Committees. Respondent-Market-Committees in categories
’C’, ’D’ and ’E’ in Para-80 supra will, within 3 months
therefrom, revise their proposals for development in
accordance with these norms and specifications,
departures from standard specification being
permissible if the special conditions peculiar to. the
particular markets so require and compel. The C.M.O.
will again scrutinise these revised proposals and their
cost-projections and if, upon such scrutiny, is of
opinion that the present 2% market-fee cf any Market-
Committee in the category ’C’, ’D’ and ùE’ supra is
unjustified, the C.M.O. will make appropriate orders
under s. 150 of the Act directing the Market Committee
or Committees concerned to amend their bye-laws to
effect an appropriate downward revision in the quantum
of the fee. Wherever the C.M.O. is of the opinion,
after an examination of the proposals, that there is no
need to make a downward revision, he shall make a
specific note in the behalf. These orders shall be made
within a period of 8 months from now."
What the High Court has stated in paras 107 to 110 and
in the first sentence of para 111 would apply to all the
Market-Committees
218
which had enhanced the market fee from one per cent to two
per A cent, and the Chief Marketing Officer has been given
four months time from the date of the judgment to evolve and
standaries the norms and specifications and to circulate the
samo to the Market Committees. After giving such a direction
the learned Judges of the High Court have given some other
direction to the Market Committees falling in categories
’C’, ’D’ and ’E’ mentioned in para 80 of their judgment,
namely "within three months therefrom they should revise
their proposals for development in accordance with the norms
and specifications. Then the Chief Marketing officer will
again scrutinise these revised proposals and their cost
projections, and if upon such a scrutiny he is of the
opinion that the present two per cent of market fee of any
Market Committee in categories ’C’ ’D’ and ’E’ is
unjustified, he will make the appropriate orders directing
the Market Committees concerned to amend their bye-laws to
effect an appropriate downward revision in the quantum of
the fee and wherever he is of the opinion after examination
of the proposals that there is no need to make a downward
revision he shall make a specific not in this behalf and he
shall make these orders within a period of eight months from
the date of the judgment". It is not clear why after giving
the general direction in respect of all the Market
Committees which had enhanced the market fee from one per
cent to two per cent the learned Judges of the High Court
thought it necessary to give another set of directions to
the Market Committee falling in categories ’C’ ’D’ and ’E’.
This confusion was perhaps responsible for Mr. A.K. Sen
contending seriously in the course of his arguments that the
directions given by the High Court relate to only 8 or 4 of
the Market Committees falling in categories ’C’ ’D’ and ’E’.
It is not possible to accept this argument for the reason
that the High Court has not recorded any finding on Point
No. 12 to the effect that there is sufficient correlation in
respect of all the Market Committees except 8 or 4 of the
market Committees falling in categories ’C’, ’D’ and ’13’.
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After setting out Point No. 12 in para 7 of their judgment
the learned Judges of the High Court have indicated that the
discussion relating to that point is in paras 75 to 110 and
that the finding is in para 111. As stated earlier, a
perusal of paras 107 to 110 and first sentence in para 111,
especially para 110, would show that the direction has been
given by the learned Judges in respect of all the Market
Committees which had enhanced the fee from one per cent to
two per cent. The learned Judges have stated in para 110
that the learned Advocate General appearing for the State
and the learned Counsel appearing for the
219
Market Committees conceded that the exercise suggested by
the learned Judges in para 109 of there judgment is
necessary and beneficial as the matter involved an outlay
of nearly 145 crores of rupees in the next eight years on
the regulated market. Surely, an outlay of 145 croces of
rupees could not be in respect of only 8 or 4 of the Market
Committees falling in categories ’C’, ’D’ and ’E’. The
learned Judges of the High Court have observed in para 107
øf their judgment that having regard to the infirmities
noticed in the estimates and financial projections of the
proposed developmental works on the basis of which the
enhancement is sought to be justified they "are unable to
say with any confidence and without reservations that the
enhancement of the fee depending, as it does, on these
estimates is totally justified", and that some time-bound
directions to which they would refer for having a second
look at the estimates of the statutory authorities are
required to be issued. There is nothing in these
observations of the High Court to indicate that they are
confined to only 8 or 4 of the market Committees falling in
categories ’C’, ’D’ and ’E’. The learned Judges of the High
Court have no doubt observed in the first sentence in para
107 that on the materials placed before them by the writ
petitioners they cannot hold that the levy ought to fail for
want of quid pro quo. With respect I think that there is
some confusion in this part of the judgment of the High
Court which has given room for argument of Mr. A.K. Sen that
the directions have been given only in repect of 8 or 4 of
the Market Committees falling in categories ’C’, ’D’ and
’E’.As stated earlier the learned Judges of the High Court
have not recorded any finding on Point No. 12 to the effect
that correlation is established satisfactorily in regard to
all the Market Committees which had enhanced the market fee
from one per cent to two per cent except 8 or 4 of the
Market Committees falling in categories ’C’, ’D’ and ’E’.
The direction given in para 111 is stated under Point No. 12
in para 7 of the impugned judgment to be the finding on that
point relating to correlation. I, therefore, agree with Mr.
Sorabjee that the directions given in paras 107 to 110 and
the first sentence in para 111 of the impugned judgment
relate to all the Market Committees which had enhanced the
market fee from one per cent to two per cent and not to only
8 or 4 of the Market Committees falling in categories ’C’,
’D’ and ’E’ and that in view of the observation made in para
107 that having regard to the infirmities noticed in the
estimates and financial projections of the proposed
development works on the basis of which alone the
enhancement is sought to be justified they are unable to say
with any confidence and without reservations
220
that the enhancement of the fee is totally justified, they
should have held that there is no conelation and that there
is no justification for the enhancement of rate of the
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market fee. For these reasons, I hold that there is no
correlation and that there is no justification for the
enhancement of the market fee from one per cent to two per
cent. I am constrained to observe that the learned judges of
the High Court have failed to exercise the jurisdiction
vested in them by law by not recording any finding on Point
No. 12 one way or the other, namely, that there is or no
correlation, and that they have clothed the Market
Committees and the Chief Marketing Officer with their
jurisdiction to decide the question whether the enhancement
is justified and if not justified to effect a downward
revision wherever necessary.
In view of what has been stated above about the
enhancement of the market fee the question whether the
amendment of the bye laws for raising the rate of the market
fee from one per cent to two per cent has been validly male
or not becomes academic and is, however, considered for the
sake of completeness. According to s. 148 (1) of the Act as
it stood on the date of the amendment of the bye-laws for
enhancing the rate of the market fee from one per cent to
two per cent and on the dates on which the Writ Petitions
were filed in the High Court "subject to the provisions of
this Act and the rules made thereunder under s. 146 and with
the previous sanction of the Chief Marketing Officer a
market committee may, after previous publication in the
prescribed manner, make bye-law for regulation of the
business and the conditions of trading in the market area.
Every bye-law made in this section shall be published in the
prescribed manner". As stated earlier, the question of
market fee would fall under s. 148 (2) (XXXiii) of the Act.
It was contended before the High Court that there is no
compliance with the requirement of previous sanction and
previous publication in the prescribed manner in regard to
the amendment of the bye-laws for raising the market fee
leviable under s. 65 (2) of the Act from one per cent to two
per cent. The High Court has observed that finding no answer
to that criticism in regard to the amendment of the bye-laws
the State Government has come forward with Ordinance 22 of
1981 when the arguments in the Writ Petitions were coming to
a close. That Ordinance has since been replaced by the
Karnataka Act 4 of
1982. ss. 3 and 5 of the Ordinance which have been replaced
by ss. 2 and 114 the Amendment Act may be extracted for easy
reference:
221
"3. Amendment of section 148.-In section 148 of
the principal Act, in sub-section (1), the words ’after
previous publication in the prescribed manner", shall
be and shall be deemed always to have been omitted."
"5. Validation-Nothwithstanding anything contained
in any judgment, decree or order of any court or other
authority, any bye-law made or purporting to have been
made, and levy or collection of market fee made and any
action or thing taken or done in relation to such levy
or collection under the provisions of the principal
Act, before the commencement of this Ordinance shall be
deemed to be as valid and effective as if such bye-law
or levy or collection or action or thing had been made,
taken or done under the principal Act as amended by
section 2 and 3 of this Ordinance and accordingly,-
(a) all acts, proceedings or things done or action
taken by the State Government or by the Market Commit
tee or by any other officer of the State Government or
of the Market Committee or by any other authority in
connection with the levy or collection of the market
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fee shall, for all purposes, be deemed to be and to
have always been done or taken in accordance with law;
and
(b) no suit or other proceedings shall be instituted,
maintained or continued in any Court or before any
authority for refund of any such market fee or for
questioning the validity of any action or thing taken
or done under the said bye-laws, and no court shall
recognise or enforce any decree or order declaring the
said bye-laws or any action or thing taken or done
thereunder as invalid on the ground that the bye-laws
were made without giving reasonable G opportunity to
persons likely to be affected thereby to file their
objections and suggestions, or otherwise without
following the procedure prescribed".
Previous publication referred to in s. 148(1) as it
originally stood before the amendment to the bye-la vs for
enhancing the rate
222
validates the amendment to the bye-laws made without such
previous publication without giving an opportunity to the
affected interests of being heard in the matter. The High
Court has found that in these cases the Chief Marketing
Officer himself had given directions to the Market
Committees to amend the bye laws for enhancing the market
fee from one per cent to two per cent and the bye-laws were
amended by the Market Committees accordingly and that the
Chief Marketing Officer’s direction to amend the bye-laws
for enhancing the rate of the market fee can be regarded as
his previous approval. I am unable to agree with this view
of the learned Judges of the High Court. Previous approval
can only be of some proposal or resolution of the Market
Committees for doing one or the other of the things required
to be done under the provisions of the Act. When
undisputably there was no such resolution or proposal by the
Market Committees for enhancement of the rate of the market
fee I am unable to see how the direction of the Chief
Marketing Officer given to the Market Committees to amend
the bye-laws for raising the rate of the market fee from one
per cent to two per cent can be considered to be his
approval. Admittedly, there was no previous publication as
required by s. 148(1) as it stood at the relevant time, and
that requirement is purported to have been dispensed with
retrospectively by s. 3 of Ordiance 22 of 1981. It is seen
from the impugned judgment that it was submitted before the
learned Judges of the High Court that the affected
interests’ right of being heard was conferred by the Statute
and it has been taken away by the subsequent amendment to
the Statute with retrospective effect and that there is.
therefore, no ground for the affected interests to complain.
No such submissions were, however, made in this Court.
Market fee is not a tax which is imposed by law passed by a
Legislature where the interests affected are or are supposed
to be represented unlike the market fee the enhancement
whereof is made by subordinate legislation by way of
amendment of the relevant bye-law by the Market Committees.
That is why the provision for
previous publication was made in s. 148(1) of the Act as it
stood at the relevant time. It is not possible to accept the
contention that the right given by law was taken away by law
and cannot, therefore, be
223
claimed by the affected interests, for though it was
mentioned in s. 148(1) of the Act as it stood at the
relevant time it was a right A which was available to the
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affected interests under the principles of natural justice
of being heard before the enhancement could be made. The
High Court appears to have been aware of this position and
to have not been quite happy about how the enhancement of
the market fee has been brought about, for the learned
Judges have observed in para 61 of their judgment that the
question might become a live issue if the Market Committees
were to amend the bye-laws in future without giving an
opportunity of being heard to the affected interests. Even
the learned Advocate General appearing for the State and the
learned Counsel appearing for the Market Committees had
stated before the learned Judges of the High Court that the
amendment to s. 148(1) made by the Ordinance was only
intended to cure the defect in making the impugned bye-laws
to avoid great public inconvenience and that there was no
intention to make the deletion of the requirement of
previous publication a permanent feature. The right of the
affected interests of being heard before Market Committees
could raise the rate of the market fee being a right
available to them under the principles of natural justice
cannot be denied to them even by omitting in s. 148(1) the
clause relating to previous publication of the proposal to
make or amend any bye-law under s. 148 of the Act. In any
event the amendment has not taken away the requirement of
previous approval of the Chief Marketing Officer, and since
there was no resolution or proposal of the Market Committees
to enhance the rate of the market fee before the Chief
Marketing Officer gave the direction to the Market
Committees to amend the bye-laws for raising the market fee
the direction cannot be taken as previous approval of
something which was not in existence at that time. I,
therefore, hold that the amendment of the bye-laws made for
enhancement of the rate of the Market fee from one per cent
to two per cent is invalid in law notwithstanding s. 3 of
Ordinance 22 of 1981 and s. 12 of Karnataka Act 4 of 1982.
S. 65(1) of the Act as it originally stood provided for
Market Committees to levy and collect market fees from
buyers in respect of agricultural produce bought by (V any
trader or other person in the yard and (ii) any trader
outside the market or sub-market in the market area, at such
rate as may be specified in the bye-laws (which will not be
more than thirty paise per one hundred rupees of the price
of the specified agricultural produce) in such manner and at
such times as may be specified in the bye-laws. S. 65(2)
laid down that for the purposes of sub-section (1), all
notified agricultural
224
produce leaving a yard shall, unless the contrary is proved,
be presumed to have been bought within such yard by the
person in possession of such produce. S. 65 was amended by
Amendment Act 24 of 1975 which came into force on 19.5.1975.
S. 2 of that Amendment Act substituted s. 65 of the
principal Act as amended by Act "0 of 1973 by a new section
which read as:
"S. 65. Levy of market fees.-
(1) The market committees shall levy and collect
market fees from every buyer in respect of agricultural
produce sold by such seller in the market area at the
rate of one rupee for one hundred rupees of the price
of such produce sold;
(2) the market committees shall levy and collect
market fees from every buyer in respect of agricultural
produce bought by such buyer in the market area at such
rate as may be specified in the bye-laws (which shall
not be more than one rupee per hundred rupees of the
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price of such produce bought) in such manner and at
such times as may be specified in the bye-laws;
(3) every market committee shall, not withstanding
anything contained in this Act, credit to the Karnataka
Roads and Bridges Fund constituted under the Karnataka
Motor Vehicles Act, 1957 market fees collected under
sub-section (1) for being spent or the purpose of
construction, repair, improvement and maintenance of
rural roads in the State."
Market fee was levied on the sellers for the first time
under s. 65(1) as substituted and the entire collection made
under that sub-section had to be credited to the Karnataka
Roads and Bridges Fund for being spent for the purposes of
construction, repair improvement and maintenance of rural
roads in the State. Sub sections (1) and (3) of s. 65 of the
Act, as substituted by Amendment Act 24 of 1975 were struck
down on 28 9.1978 by the decision in Rajasekhariah’s case
(supra). Subsequent to that decision s. 65 of
225
the principal Act as substituted by Amendment Act 24 of 1975
was amended by s. 20 of Amendment Act 17 of 1980 thus: A
"S. 20. Amendment of section 65.-In section 65
of the principal Act,-
(1) for sub-section (1), the following sub-section
shall be and shall be deemed to have been
substituted with effect from 19th day of May, 1975
namely:-
"(1) In respect of the agricultural produce
sold in a market area, there shall be levied and
collected by the market committee there of, from
every seller, market fees at the rate of one per
cent of the sale proceeds of the produce so sold;
(2) Sub-section (1) as so substituted shall be and
shall be deemed to have been omitted with effect
from the 23th day of September, 1978;
(3) in sub-section (2), for the words "one rupee", the
words "two rupees" shall be substituted;
(4) sub-section (3) shall be and shall be deemed
always to have been omitted."
The result of the amendment was that the levy and
collection of market fees on and from sellers of
agricultural produce at One per cent of the price of the
agricultural produce sold in the market area had been
restricted to the period from 19.5.1975, the date on p which
Amendment Act 24 of 1975 which substituted the new s. 65 in
the place of the original section 65 came into force upto
28.9.1978, the date on which the substituted sub-sections
(1) and (3) of s. 65 were struck down in Rajasekhariah’s
case (supra), and the substituted sub-section (3) was
omitted by Amendment Act 17 of 1980 as if it never existed
in the Statute. S. 42 of Amendment Act 17 of 1980 relates to
validation of market fees-etc. and reads:
"S. 42 Notwithstanding anything contained in any
decree, order of judgment of any court, or other
authority, any levy or collection of market fee made or
purported to have been made, any action taken or thing
done in relation to such levy or collection under the
226
provisions of the principal Act before the commencement
A of this section shall be deemed to be as valid and
effective as if such levy or collection or action or
thing had been made, taken or done under the principal
Act as amended by this Act and accordingly,-
(a) all acts, proceedings or things done or action
taken by any market committee in connection with
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the levy and collection of such market fee shall,
for all purposes, be deemed to be or to have
always been made, done or taken in accordance with
law;
(b) no suit or other proceedings shall be maintained
or continued in any court or before any authority
for the refund of any such market fee; and
(c) no court shall enforce any decree or order
directing the refund of any such fee;
... ... .... "
The market fee levied on and collected from sellers
under the substituted s. 65(1) of the Act went to the credit
of the Karnataka Roads and Bridges Fund under sub-section
(3). Sub-section (3) had been omitted by Amendment Act 17 of
1980 as if it never existed in the Statute as mentioned
above. The High Court, following this Court’s decision in
Kewal Krishna Puri’s case (supra) has held that rural roads
are essentially and primarily intended for the benefit of
the public and the class of market fee payers as part of the
general public is entitled to the benefit of their user and
the fee cannot be levied on and collected from them for
being spent for the purpose of construction, repair,
improvement and maintenance of such roads, more so because
rural roads, even if constructed, repaired, improved or
maintained from the market fee collected under the Act, do
not become the property of the Market Committees and shed
their character as public roads. Expenditure of market fees
for construction of roads, main or rural, is impermissible
in view of the decision in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case
(supra), and even s 65(3) has been omitted as if it never
existed in the Statute after it was struck down in
Rajasekhariah’s case (supra). The quid pro quo for the levy
under substituted s 65(1) on sellers was the construction,
repair, improvement and maintenance of rural roads which is
no longer permissible
227
to be done out of moneys collected as market fees. there is
thus no quid pro quo to any existent for the levy under the
substituted s. 65(1) of the Act and therefore, it fails, and
it is not protected even by s. 42 of the Amendment Act 17 of
1980 and has been rightly struck down by the High Court. S.
42 of the Amendment Act 17 of 1980 in so far as it seeks to
save the levy and collection of market fee on sellers under
the substituted s. 65(1) cannot also stand. The High Court
is, therefore, right in its finding on this aspect of the
case.
In the Act there is no provision in regard to the
market fee like s. 23A of the Punjab Agricultral Produce
Markets Act sub-section (1) thereof reads thus:
"Notwithstanding anything contained in any
judgment, decree or order of any court it shall be
lawful for a market committee to retain the fee levied
and collected by it from a licensee in excess of that
leviable under s. 23 if the burden of such fee was
passed on by the licensee to the next purchaser of the
agricultural produce in respect whereof such fee was
levied and collected."
In Civil Appeals Nos. 45()0-4501 of 1984 decided on
19.11.1984 this Court has held that what s. 23A of the
Punjab Act does is to prevent unjust enrichment by means of
a refund to which the person claiming it has no moral or
equitable entitlement. The market fee collected from sellers
under the substituted s. 65(1) must have been credited to
the Karnataka Roads and Bridges Fund and used for the
purpose of construction, repair, improvement and maintenance
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of rural roads which are undoubtedly for the benefit of the
general public. The excess fee collected under s. 65(2) of
the Act also must have been utilised for the purposes
contemplated by the Act. The persons from whom they have
been collected, sellers and buyers, would naturally have
passed on the levy to those who purchased the agricultural
produce from them and the levy must have ultimately been
borne by the consumers of the produce. Any refund would go
to unjust enrichment of the persons from whom they have been
collected. In these circumstances I do not think that any
order for refund of the market fee collected under the
substituted s. 65(1) and the excess market fee collected
under s. 65(2) of the Act could be made in these cases .
228
To summarise, my findings are:
(1) S. 65 (1) of the Act as substituted by
Amendment Act 24 of 1975 and Act 17 of 1980, and s. 42
of Amendment Act 17 of 1980 in so for as it seeks to
save that has been done under s. 65 (1) of the Act are
unconstitutional and have been rightly struck down by
the High Court;
(2) Enhancement of the rate of market fee leviable
under s. 65 (2) of the Act by amendments of the bye-
laws from one per cent to two percent of the price of
the notified agricultural produce is invalid in law for
non-compliance with the law laid down in Kewal Krishan
Puri’s case (supra);
(3) There is no correlation between the
enhancement of the rate of the market fee leviable
under s. 65(2) from one per cent to two per cent and
the services rendered or proposed to be rendered by the
Market Committees and, therefore, the enhancement is
invalid in law;
(4) Amendment of the bye-laws made for enhancement
of the rate the market fee leviable under s. 65 (2) of
the Act from one per cent to two per cent is invalid in
law;
(5) The provisions of the Act are repugnant to the
Tobacco Board Act, 19,6 and, therefore, tobacco is
liable to be removed from the schedule; and
(6) There shall be no refund of the market fees
collected under the substituted s. 65 (1) of excesss
fee collected under s. 65 (2) either by the State
Government or by any of the Market Committees.
The appeals, writ petitions and special leave petitions
are disposed of accordingly. The Market Committees shall pay
costs of Rs. 15,000 to the parties represented by Mr.
Sorabjee and Rs. 10,000 to the parties represented by Mr.
Kacker.
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. Some Writ petitions out of a
large number of petitions, nearly 4298 in number arising out
of The Karnataka Agricultural Produce Marketing (Regulation)
Act, 1966 (hereinafter referred to as the ’Act’) were take
up by the High
229
Court of Karnataka for hearing and disposed of by one common
judgment as one or more of the contentions in those
petitions were A common, and all the petitions were heard
together by the High Court of Karnataka so as to afford
opportunities to learned counsel appearing in the cases to
address arguments. These were disposed of by a common order
which was representative of the contentions urged at the
hearing of the argument. The learned judges directed B that
the remaining writ petitions which had been heard along with
those cases would be disposed of, in convenient batches,
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following the findings on the various contentions recorded
in that order.
These appeals arise out of the said order. In these
appeals we were concerned with the provisions of the Act as
well as (1) the challenge to the constitutional validity of
section 65 (1) of the Act as substituted by The Karnataka
Agricultural Produce Marketing (Regulation) (Amendment) Act,
1980 (hereinafter referred to as the (Amending Act’) which
sought to validate the market fee levied on the "sellers of
notified agricultural produce" under section 65 (1), for and
during the period of its operation, prior to its being
struck down by the Karnataka High Court in Rajasekhariah’ v.
Tiplur Agrl. Produce Marketing Committee & Anr.(l) (2) to
the enhancement of market fee from 1% to 2% effected by the
various Market Committees by amending the bye-laws after
permissible maximum levy of the fee on the buyers under
section 65 (2) was raised to 2 per cent by the said Amending
Act, the challenge being both on the ground that the
amendment of bye-laws was made in violation of the mandatory
requirements of prior publication and prior sanction
contemplated by section 148 and on the ground that the
enhancement of fees fail for want of quid-pro-quo; and (3)
to the inclusion of certain items such as wood, cardamom,
sugarcane, tobacco in the list of notified agricultral
produce incorporated in the Schedule to the Act.
On 1st May, 1968, the Act came into force. Section 65
of the Act as originally stood directed the Market
Committees to levy and collect Market fees from the buyers
in respect of agricultural produce by-
(i) any trader or other person in the yard, and
(1) 19791 Karnataka L.J. p. 43.
230
(ii) any trader outside the market or sub-market in tho
A market area.
Section 65 of the Act was amended on 20th October, 1973
by The Karnataka Act No. 20 of 1973 raising the maximum fee
leviable by a Market Committee from 30 paise to one rupee.
On the 17th December, 1974, the enhancement of the
market fee from 30 paise to one rupee made by the amendment
of the bye laws by some of the Market Committees was
challenged by the traders-buyers of the agricultural produce
before the High Court of Karnataka in Writ Petition No. 537
of 1974 and the connected writ petitions in the case of K.S.
Vaman Rao v. The Agricultral Produce Market Committee. Sagar
and the High Court by its judgment dated 17th December, 1974
held that the levy authorised by the section was in the
nature of a fee and after scrutinising the estimate of
expenditure of each of the Market Committees spread over a
period of 15 years and the amount recoverable by way of fees
thereto held that there was correlation between the services
rendered and the amount of fees collected.
On 19th May, 1975, section 65 of the Act was
substituted by a new section (Act No. 24 of 1975). The
substituted section reads as follows:-
"65. Levy of Market Fees-(1) The Market Commit tee
shall levy and collect market fees from every seller in
respect of agricultural produce sold by such seller in
the market area at the rate of one rupee per one
hundred Rupees of the price of such produce sold.
(2) The Market Committee shall levy and collect
market fees from every buyer in respect of agricultural
produce bought by such buyer in the market areas at
such rate as may be specified in the bye-laws (which of
such produce bought) in such manner and at such times
as may be specified in the bye-laws.
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(3) Every Market Committee shall, notwithstanding
anything contained in this Act, credit to the Karnataka
Motor Vehicles Taxation Act, 1957, the market fees
collected under sub-section (1) for being spent for the
231
purpose of construction, repair, improvement and
maintenance of rural roads in the State."
By Act No. 14 of 1976 passed on 24th January, 1976
which replaced and earlier Ordinance. section 65 (1) was
amended by insertion of a proviso to section 65 (1) as
under:-
"Provided that the State Government may, by order
in public interest, exempt any Market Committee from
such levy and collection in respect of any agricultural
produce."
On 1st June, 1976, by the Amending Act No. 43 of 1976,
the following changes were made:-
(a) By section 2 of the amending Act, the word
"MARKETING" was substituted for the words "buying
and selling" in the long title to the Act.
(b) By section (3) of the amending Act, the word
’MARKETING" was substituted for the words "buying
and selling" in the preamble to the Act.
(c) By section (4) of the amending Act a new clause 18
(A) was inserted as under:-
"18 (A) "Marketing" means buying and selling of
agricultural produce and includes grading,
processing, storage, transport, packaging, market
information and channels of distribution.
"On or about 1978 judgment was delivered by the High
Court of Karanataka in the case of Rajasekhariah v. Tiptur
Agricultural Produce Marketing Committee and Anr. (supra).
By the said judgment, the High Court struck down section 65
(1) and (3) of the Act which authorised the levy and
collection of market fee on the sellers of agricultural
produce, and the High Court in the said judgment also
considered the levy of market fee at the rate of 1 per cent
on the buyers of the agricultural produce levied and
collected by certain Market Committees and upheld such levy
on the buyers of agricultural produce following the earlier
judgment dated 17th December, 1974 in Vaman Rao’s case
mentioned hereinbefore,
272
On or about the 30th June, 1979 Ordinance No. 2 was
promulgated which brought about the following changes:-
(a) Section 63 of the Act which deals with powers and
duties of the Market Committees was amended with
retrospective effect from 19-5-1975 so as to
provide that in clause (ii) of sub-section (1) of
section 63, the words "Transport and Marketing"
shall be substituted for the word "Marketing" in
the said clause. Clause (ii) of sub-section(l) of
section 63 was amended to provide for "it shall be
the duty of the Market Committee to provide such
facilities for transport and marketing of
agricultural produce therein".
(b) In sub-section (2) of section 63 of the Act and in
clause (a) thereto, the following was inserted
after item (1):
"(ia) Provide either independently or along
with some other authority necessary facilities for
the transport of notified agricultural produce to
the yard in such manner as may be prescribed."
(c) Section 65 of the Act was amended to provide for
the following consequences:
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(i) The Market fee levied and collected under sub
section (1) of section 65 of the Act for the
period 19-5-1975 to 28-9-1978 was validated.
(ii) Sub-section (1) of section 65 was deemed to
have been omitted with effect from 28-9-1978.
(iii)Sub-section (2) of section 65 of the Act
providing for the levy of Market fee on the
buyers of the agricultural produce was
amended by enhancing the maximum permissible
levy there to from 1 per cent to 2 per cent.
(iv) Sub-section (3) of section 65 of the Act
which dealt with the crediting of the Market
fee levied and collected under sub-section
(1) was always deemed to have been omitted.
233
Pursuant to the amendment of sub-section (2) of section
65 of the Act enhancing the maximum Market fee leviable
thereto A from I per cent to 2 per cent, all the Market
Committees in the State (except that of Mangalore) amended
the bye-laws by enhancing the Market fee leviable under sub-
section (2) of section 65 of the Act from 1 per cent to 2
per cent and on such enhancement of the market fee from I
per cent to 2 per cent, all the buyers-traders filed writ
petitions before the High Court assailing the said enhanced
levy.
By Karnataka Ordinance No. 14 of 1979, on 2nd November,
1979, the earlier Ordinance, namely Ordinance No. 2 of 1979
was repealed. Another Ordinance on the same lines as
Ordinance No. 2 of 1979 was promulgated on 3rd November,
1979. On 9th May, ]980, Karnataka Act No. 17 of 1980
containing the same changes were brought as noticed in the
ordinance mentioned before.
Hearing of these writ petitions before the High Court
commenced in October-November, 1981. Section 148 of the Act
was amended by Karnataka Ordinance No. 22 of 1981 during the
hearing of these writ petitions and by the said Ordinance
the conditions of previous publication contemplated in
section 148 of the Act was dispensed with retrospective
effect. We shall have to advert to these provisions
subsequently.
Judgment was delivered by the High Court of Karnataka
on 25th January, 1982 in these writ petitions. Thereafter
the rate of market fee payable under section 65 (2) of the
Act was reduced from 2 per cent to I per cent by all the
market committees by Circular dated 27th February, 1984. As
mentioned hereinbefore, these appeals challenge the said
judgment.
Several contentions were urged before the learned trial
judge and some of these contentions were pressed before us.
One of the questions posed was, whether section 65 (1) of
the Act (as substituted by the Amending Act 17 of 1980) read
with section 42 of the said Amending Act retrospectively
validating the levy and collection of market fees on the
sellers at one per cent for the period between 19-5-1975 and
28-9-1978 was constitutionally valid. By the said
234
amending Act it was provided that the following sub-sections
shall A be deemed to have been substituted with effect from
19th May, 1975, namely:-
"(1) In respect of the agricultural produce sold
in a market area, there shall be levied and collected
by the market committee thereof, from every seller,
market fees at the rate of one per cent of the sale
proceeds of the produce so sold;
(2) Sub-section (1) as so substituted shall be and
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shall be deemed to have been omitted with effect from
the 28th day of September, 1978."
It was contended on behalf of the petitioners before
the High Court that section 65 (l) as substituted by Act 17
of 1980 read with section 42 of the Amending Act, seeking to
validate the collection of market fee on "sellers" made
under the old section 65 (1) was constitutionally invalid.
It must be kept in view that this validation had become
necessary in view of the judgment of this Court in
Rajasekharioh’s case (supra) striking down sub-sections (1)
and (3) of section 63 of the Act as these then stood. The
present substituted section 65 (1) read with section 42 of
the Amending Act sought to validate the collections of
market fee on sellers made when the earlier section 65 (l)
was operative.
The High Court in the case of Rajasekhariah’s case
struck down section 65 (1) (3) on grounds as follows:
"(a) The though the fees levied under sub-section
(1) of section 65 were required to be spent on
construction, repair, improvement and maintenance of
rural roads, the construction or repair or improvement
and maintenance of Rural roads was not one of the
obligatory functions of the Market committees under the
Act; and the construction and maintenance of rural
roads, which were public roads, were the primary
responsibility of the State and its instrumentalities
such as the authorities under the Karnataka
Municipalities Act, 1976; Karnataka Municipalities Act,
1964; etc.
235
(b) Secondly, having regard to the essential
element in the concept of fee requiring some special
benefit by A way of quid-pro-quo, "to flow to the class
of persons on whom fee is levied, the construction and
maintenance of public roads could not be said to
constitute or provide any such special benefit to the
payer of the fee who, as members of the public were
entitled to the use and benefit of public roads and
that they could not be compelled to pay a fee for what
they, in common with the general public, were otherwise
entitled to as of right."
Pursuant to the judgment in Rajasekhariah’s case, the
State was exposed to the liability for refund of fee
collected for the period between 19-5-1975 when sub-sections
65 (1) and (3) were introduced by the Amending Act 24 of
1975 and 28-9-1978 when the judgment was pronounced. By the
Act 17 of 1980, this levy was sought to be validated and the
fee retained by the State Government.
After discussing the rival submissions and after
discussing the legal principles and the decisions in the
cases of Misrilal Jain v. State of Orissa,(l) Shri Prithvi
Cotton Mills Ltd. v. Broach Borough Municipality,(2)
Ahmedabad Corporation v. New Shirock Spg. and Wvg. Co.
Ltd.,(8) I.N. Saxena v. State of M.P.,(4) and the
Commissioner, Hindu Religious Endowments, Madras v. Sri
Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutt,(5) the High
Court of Karnataka distinguished fee and tax and then
referred to the case of Kewal Krishan Puri v. State of
Punjab.(") Reliance was also placed on the observations of
this Court in Southern Pharmaceuticals and Chemicals v.
State of Kerala(7) and then the Court addressed itself to
the question whether construction of rural roads for which
fee was levied on the sellers can be said to be a special
service primarily and directly intended for the benefit of
the class which paid the fee.
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(1) A.I.R.1977 S.C.1686.
(2) A.I.R.1970 S.C.192.
(3) A.I R. 1970 S.C. 1292.
(4) A.I.R. 1976 S.C.2250.
(5) A.I.R. 1954 S.C.282.
(6) A I. R.1980 S.C. 1008.
(7) A.I.R.1981 S.C.1863.
236
After discussing several decisions, Karnataka High
Court felt that the second major defect noticed in the law
in the case of Rajasekhariah’s case namely the construction
of rural roads could not qualify for being reckoned as
special service to a class of persons paying the fee had not
been cured or removed by the law which sought to validate
the levy and in view of these circumstances,
the Court came to the conclusion that section 5 (1) as
substituted by section 20 of the Amending Act 17 of 1980 as
well as section 42 of the Amending Act was not
constitutionally valid and was liable to be struck down.
As mentioned before several other contentions and
submissions
were urged before the learned trial Judge but before us the
following main submissions were urged:
(1) There was no quid-pro-quo between the imposition of
fees and the services rendered, (2) In so far as the
Amending Act 17 of 1980 sought to validate the taxes
realised following the defects mentioned in Rajasekhariah’s
case valid or not, and, if not, whether the appellants were
entitled to refund of any amount ? (3) Is imposition of
market fee on Tobacco valid ? (4) Is the deletion of the
provisions for previous publication in section 148 proper
and valid ?
I will, however, notice the other contentions briefly
raised in those writ petitions.
It was contended that the Act as amended by Act 17
so far as marketing of cardamom was concerned, was repugnant
to The Cardamom Act. 1965. The High Court held that
Karnataka Legislature was not entitled to impose market fee
so far as cardamom was concerned. It may be noted before the
High Court that the inclusion of cardamom in the Act was
contended to be bad in view of entry 52 of List I and entry
33 of List III but it appears the question was not
considered in the light of entry 52 of List I and entry 28
of List II in the present case. The High Court, further,
found that the rules framed under the Cardamom Act were at
variance with the present Act. So far as sugar-cane was
concerned it was held that sugarcane was outside the pale of
the present Act. The Government has not appealed against the
findings so far as cardamom was concerned. In so far as the
High Court held that
237
sugarcane was outside the pale of the Act, no argument
impugning that finding was canvassed before us.
It was for the first time by the Amending Act 17 of
1980 that tobacco was enumerated as an agricultural produce
for the purpose of the Act. It may be borne in mind that the
Amending Act 17 of 1980 for the first time enumerated
tobacco for the purpose of the "Act". The amending Act was
not reserved for the consideration of the President.
On a consideration of the provisions of the Tobacco
Board Act, 1975 and the present Act, after discussing
various contentions, the High Court held that there was no
repugnancy and conflict as between the provisions of Tobacco
Board Act, 1975 and the present Act.
One of the main contentions urged before the High Court
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and reiterated before us was whether the Act in so far as it
provided for regulating the marketing of tobacco is
unconstitutional as being repugnant to the Central Act and
on the same topic marketing of tobacco is regulated by
Tobacco Board Act, 1975. It should be borne in mind that
there was a declaration under section 2 of the Central Act
namely Tobacco Board Act, 1975 pursuant to entry 52 of List
I regarding tobacco. It was contended that tobacco after the
declaration under section 2 of the Tobacco Board Act became
part of entry 52 of List I and it was submitted that once
the declaration has made, any legislation by the State after
such declaration trenching upon the field disclosed in the
declaration must necessarily be unconstitutional because
that field or area according to the appellants was excluded
from the legislative competence of the State Legislature.
Entry 52 of List I reads as follows:-
"Industries, the control of which by the Union is
declared by Parliament by law to be expedient in the
public interest."
There has been a declaration by the Union that the
control of tobacco industry has been taken over in public
interest. Thereafter Tobacco Board Act, 1975 being Act 4 of
1975 was passed for the development under the control of the
Union of the tobacco industry. Chapter II of the said Act
deals with the establishment and constitution of the Board.
Section 7 permits the Board to appoint committees
238
as might be necessary for the efficient discharge of its
duties and A performance of its functions under the Act.
Sub-section (2) of section 7 enjoins that the Board shall
have powers to co-opt members. Section 8 of the Tobacco
Board Act, 1975 deals with the functions of the Board and
empowers by sub-section (1) of section 8 of the Tobacco
Board the duty to promote, by such measures as it thinks
fit, the development under the control of the Central
Government of the tobacco industry. Sub-section (2) of
section of the said Act lays down different functions of
the Board and, inter alia, by clause (a) permits regulating
the production and curing of virginia tobacco having regard
to the demand therefor in India and abroad. Clause (cc) of
section 8 (2) empowers the Board as follows:
"establishment by the Board of auction platforms,
with the previous approval of the Central Government,
for the sale of virginia tobacco by registered grower
or curers, and functioning of the Board as an
auctioneer at action platforms established by or
registered with it subject to such conditions as may be
specified by the central Government."
Section 10 provides for registration of the growers of
virginia tobacco. Section 13 provides that no registered
grower or curer shall sell or cause to be sold virginia
tobacco elsewhere than at an auction platform registered.
with the Board in accordance with the rules made under this
Act or established by the Board under this Act. Section 14
deals with the application, cancellation, fees and other
matters relating to registration. Section 14A deals with the
power to levy fees for the services rendered by the Board in
relation to such sale at such rate not exceeding two per
cent of the value of such tobacco as the Central Government
may specify.
Section 11 provides that no person other than a
registered curer shall cure or undertake the curing of
virginia tobacco unless he registers himself as a curer with
the Board in accordance with the rules made under the Act.
Chapter V deals with the control by Central Government
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of import and export of tobacco and tobacco products. There
are provisions under section 21 for the issuance of
directions by the Central Government and by section 22 of
returns and reports.
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Chapter VI deals with the penalties and offences by the
companies. Section 31 provides that the provisions of the
said Act shall be in A addition to, and not in derogation
of, the provisions of any other law for the time being in
force. Section 32 provides for the power of the Central
Government to make rules. Section I provides that the Act
will come into force on such date as the Central Government
may by notification in the Official Gazette appoint and
proviso of sub-section 1 empowers that different dates may
be appointed for different provisions of the Act and for
different States or different parts thereof. Under sub-
section (3) of section I of Tobacco Board Act, 1975, by
Notification dated 31st May, 1980, the Central Government
appointed 31st May, 1980 as the date on which sections 10
and 11 would come into force in the States of Maharashtra,
West Bengal, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu and Uttar Pradesh.
Section 13 of the Tobacco Board Act is important
because it empowered that no registered grower or curer
shall sell or cause to be sold virginia tobacco elsewhere
than at an auction platform registered with the Board in
accordance with the rules made under the Act. There was some
confusion at the stage of the argument as to on what date it
has come into force or even if it has not specially come
into force in the State of Karnataka, by the passing of the
Act itself, the Center has sufficiently expressed its
intention to occupy the field so as to exclude the operation
of any activity by the State. Our attention has, however,
been drawn to a Notification being Notification No. S. 0 665
(E) dated 31st August, 1984 whereby section 13 of the said
Act came into force in the State of Karnataka from 1st day
of September, 1984. I have already noted the provision of
section 13 of the said Act. It may be mentioned that this
notification as such would be of no assistance to us because
this notification came into force subsequent to the writ
petitions and after hearing in these matters was concluded.
It was the contention on behalf of the petitioners that by
declaration under entry 52 of List I and by the passing of
the Act in question i.e. Tobacco Board Act, 1975, tobacco
became an occupied field of Central Parliament and would
prevail over the ’Act’ irrespective of any separate
notification making Tobacco Board Act, 1975, applicable to
the State of Karnataka. In exercise of powers under section
32 of Tobacco Board Act, 1975 the Central Government was
empowered to make rules. These are known as Tobacco Board
Rules, 1976. Rule 33 of chapter VII provides for
registration of growers, curers, exporters, packers and
auctioneers of, and dealers in tobacco,
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The High Court was of the view that unlike the law
governing A the marketing of Cardamom and Sugarcane, the
Tobacco Act did not cover the marketing of tobacco in its
entirety but only covered a part of the area of the topic of
marketing of tobacco. According to the High Court the two
legislations could co-exist and operate cumulatively. The
High Court was of the view that any intention of the
superior legislature to cover the whole field to make a
comprehensive law with regard to marketing of tobacco was
not manifest in the legislation. The High Court noted that
it was not disputed during the arguments that the only
provision on what might be called the area of marketing
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covered under the Tobacco Act was the one requiring the
auctioneers of tobacco to hold a licence for establishment
of auction platforms. The High Court was of the view that as
long as the market committees became such licensees, there
was no further requirement under the Tobacco Board Act which
could be said to render the provisions of the ’Act’
regulating marketing of tobacco under the Act repugnant to
or irreconcilable. It may , however, be noted that by
letters dated 15th September, 1983 and 23rd September, 1983
appearing at pages 462 and 466 of the Paper Book, it was
pointed out on behalf of the petitioners before this Court
that the market committees had not even upto that date been
registered under the Tobacco Board Act, 1975, in the first
letter written to the Market Committee it was stated that
the market J committee could not be given registration
because these lacked certain necessary qualifications and
was therefore incapable of rendering any service at all.
Here it may have to be borne in mind that section 12 of the
Tobacco Board Act, 1975 enjoins that no person shall export
tobacco or any tobacco products or function as a packer,
auctioneer of, or dealer in, tobacco unless he registers
himself with the Board in accordance with the rules made
under this Act.
The High Court took the view that on the limited aspect
of marketing provided for Tobacco Board Act, 1975 it only
made provisions in relation to virginia tobacco and not for
all varieties of tobacco. The High Court therefore was of
the view that the provisions of the Act were not repugnant
to the Tobacco Board Act, 1975 and all that was necessary
for the market committees was to obtain auctioneer’s licence
under the provisions of Tobacco Act 1 and’ or to get the
necessary qualifications so as to be able to obtain
necessary licence. The High Court came to the conclusion
that provisions of the Act in relation to the regulation of
tobacco were
241
not repugnant to the Act. The High Court further noted that
neither the Union of India nor the Tobacco Board had been
impleaded as parties to the writ applications before the
findings on these contentions were strenuously challenged
before us on behalf of the appellants. On behalf of the
appellants, it was urged that tobacco was covered by entry
52 of List I by virtue of the declaration under section 2 of
the Tobacco Board Act, 1975 namely the Central Government.
It was submitted that once a declaration had been made under
section 2, pursuant to Entry 52, the Parliament had
exclusive competence to legislate every aspect or activity
pertaining to tobacco and the State would have no competence
to legislate on that topic.
Reference was made to the decision in the case of
Baijnath Kedia v. State of Bihar & Ors.(1)
I need not detain ourselves on the permissibility of
the regulation of marketing of cardamom under the Act,
because the same was not canvassed before us.
So far as the point relating to ’wood’ and ’forest
produce’ was concerned, the High Court felt that this point
was concluded by the pronouncement of this Court in Ram
Chandra Kailash Kumar & Co. v State of U.P.(2) In any event
we are not concerned with this controversy as the same was
not canvassed before us.
lt was contended that section 65(2) of the Act gave an
uncanalised and excessive power to the market committees in
the matter of specifying the rate of fee. The upper limit
for the levy was fixed at 2 per cent. It could only be
related to the notified agricultural produce sold in the
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market. The concept of fee is itself a further limitation-
The High Court therefore was unable to accept the submission
that section 65(2) was bad for excessive delegation of
legislative powers.
It was contended that the bye-laws were unreasonable
and without proper criteria. Reliance was placed before the
High Court on the decision in the case of Maneka Gandhi v.
Union of India (3)
(1) [1970] 2 S.C.R. 100 at 113.
(2) A.l.R. 1980 S.C. 1124.
(3) A.l.R. 1978 S.C. 597,
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and Ajay Hasia etc. v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi & Ors. etc.
(1). The A High Court has, however, found that the
legislative measure could not be invalidated on the ground
that the relevant criteria was not shown to have been taken
into account in making the legislation. Reliance was placed
in Tulsipur Sugar Co. v. Notified Area Committee, Tulsipur
(2) and in the said case on the observations of Megary, J-
in rates v. Lord Hailsham of St. Marylebone (3) the
following effect:
"...... Let me accept that in the sphere of the so
called quasi judicial the rules of natural justice run,
and that in the administrative or executive field there
is a general duty of fairness. Nevertheless, these
consecrations do not seem to me to affect the process
of legislation whether primary or delegated. Many of
those affected by delegated legislation, and affected
very substantially, are never consulted in the process
of enacting that legislation; and yet they have no
remedy .. ."
I am in respectful agreement with the aforesaid view.
It may further be noted that a minister or any other body in
making legislation was not subject to rules of natural
justice. See in this connection Prof. Wade’s ’Judicial
Review of Administrative Action ’, 4th Edn. page 185 at 192
(De Smith). Though we are in general agreement with the
aforesaid view, the High Court, however, did not detain
itself on this point because the High Court, was of the view
that the fixation of market fee was challenged not because
the persons concerned were not heard but because there was
no quid pro quo.
The High Court felt that the challenge to the doctrine
of ultra vires on the basis that hearing of interests
affected was an imperative requirement, not in compliance
with rules of natural justice but as a duty implicit in the
nature of the power. Section 148(1) of the Act, as it
originally stood provided that a market committee could
frame bye-laws after previous publication in the prescribed
manner and also with the previous sanction of the Chief
Marketing Officer. The contention was that no procedure
having been prescribed by the
(1) A.l.R. 1981 S.C. 487.
(2) A.l.R. 1980 S.C. 882.
(3) [1972] I W.L.R. 1371.
243
rules, the concepts implicit in previous publication and
incorporated in section 23 of the General Clauses Act, 1897
were attracted. It was A urged that there had been no
compliance with the requirement of previous sanction and
publication contemplated in this section. As the narration
of events indicated before, an Ordinance was introduced
namely Karnataka Ordinance No. 22 of 1981 during the period
when the arguments in these cases were coming to a close
before the High Court. The amendment sought to amend
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sections 137,148 and 158 of the principal Act. By section 3
of the Ordinance which amended section 148 of the principal
Act, the words "after previous publication in the prescribed
manner" occurring in section 148(1) of the principal Act had
been deleted with retrospective effect i. e. from the date
of commencement of the Act itself. It was contended that the
requirement of hearing of interests affected was not merely
a procedural requirement of Section 148 of the Act but an
exercise inherent in the exertion of power of delegated
legislation. The very concept of ’fee’ and the determination
of its extent and incidence by subordinate legislation would
require for its reasonable exercise an opportunity for the
interests affected being heard, it was submitted.
On behalf of the Market-committees and the Government,
it was contended that on a proper construction of section
65(2) of the Act, such an implication of a duty to hear
affected interests did not at all arise. Any argument of
such a statutory implication could not survive the amendment
made by Ordinance of 17th December, 1981 which, in turn,
clearly took away the obligation of prior hearing.
The High Court was of the opinion that the authorities
relied on before it indicated that the opportunity of
consultation and hearing P of affected interests were merely
informal and extra-judicial. The High Court referred to the
observations in Wade’s Administrative Law and referred to
certain decisions.
The High Court was of the view that persons affected
did not have any right to be heard before the statutory
rules or bye-laws were made unless the right was conferred
by the statutes.
The High Court ultimately came to the conclusion that
in the batch of cases, this was not of much importance on
the ground that by specific and express provisions of
section 5 (a) of the amending Ordinance which validated
these bye-laws notwithstanding the fact that affected
interest were not heard in any manner.
244
The Advocate-General stated before the High Court that
A though there was no obligation, it would be eminently
desirable to consult or ascertain the views of those who
would be affected and the High Court, therefore, observed
that before a market-committee proposed to amend a bye-law
to make an upward revision of rate of fee, in future, the
market committee could follows the directions of this Court
in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case and the High Court, suggested
certain means. Ultimately, the High Court came to the
following conclusions:
(a) Section 65(2) of the Act did not confer an
unguided, arbitrary power and there was no excessive
delegation of legislative power to the market-
committees and therefore not vitiated on that account;
(b) The question whether, upon a proper
construction, section 65(2) must be held to imply an
obligation on the part of the market committees to hear
affected interested parties before the rate of fee was
fixed, was left open with certain observations made in
that judgment.
(c) The contention that challenged the bye-law for
want of previous sanction under section 148(1) of the
Act was not accepted.
It had been contended before the High Court that there
was discrimination on the ground that there was levy of the
same rate of fee on all types of produce. The High Court
repelled this contention relying mainly on the decision of
this Court in the case of Ganga Sagar Corporation Ltd. v.
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The State of Uttar Pradesh and Others.(1)
One of the main contentions urged before the High
Court was that there was no quid-pro-quo. The High Court
examined this contention with reference to the factual
details.
The High court referred to the decision in the case
of Kewal Krishan Puri (supra) and observed that the
following seven principles were laid down by this Court:
(1) The amount of fee realised must be ear-market for
rendering services to the licensees in the
notified
(1) A.I.R. 1980 286.
245
market area and a good and substantial portion of
it must be shown to be expanded for this purpose.
(2) The services rendered to the licensees must be in
relation to the transactions of purchase or sale
of the agricultural Produce.
(3) While rendering services in the market area for
the purpose of facilitating the transactions of
purchase and sale with view to achieve the objects
of the marketing legislation it is not necessary
to confer the whole of the benefit on the
licensees but some special benefits must be
conferred on them which have a direct, close and
reason- able correlation between the licensees and
the transactions.
(4) While conferring some special benefits on the
licensee, it is permissible to render such service
in the market which may be in the general interest
of all concerned with transactions taking placed
in the market.
(5) While spending the amount of market fees for the
purpose of augmenting the agricultural produce,
its facility to transport in villages and to
provide other facilities meant mainly or
exclusively for the benefit of the agriculturists
is not permissible on the ground that such
services in the long run go to increase the volume
of transaction in the market ultimately benefiting
the traders also. Such an indirect and remote
benefit to the traders is in no sense a special
benefit to them.
(6) The element of quid-pro-quo may not be possible or
even necessary to be established with arithmetical
exactitude but even broadly and reasonably it must
be established by the authorities who charge the
fees that the amount is being spent for rendering
services to those on whom falls the burden of the
fee.
(7) At least a good and substantial portion of the
amount collected on account of fees, may be in the
246
neighbourhood of two-thirds or three-fourths must
be shown with reasonable certainty as being spent
for rendering services of the kind noted before.
The High Court by an order dated 30th November, 1981
had directed the Chief Marketing Officer to furnish in
respect of each marketing committees a comprehensive
statement in a tabulation from setting out certain factors
which were relevant for determination of this question.
These factors have been mentioned in the judgment of the
High Court. Such statements or similar statements were duly
filed.
The High Court noted that out of 33 market committees
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which were involved, 2 were tobacco markets. Market
committees whose routine recurring annual revenue
expenditure was somewhere in the nature of 45 to 60% of the
market-fee receipt formed one group. The High Court felt
that in the case of these market committees even though
revenue expenditure did not sufficiently establish the
requisite degree of correlation. It was reasonable to assume
that having regard to the extent of infrastructural
facilities available in most of the modest allocations on
future development work of non-controversial kind will bring
about the correlation required to pass the test of market
fee.
The High Court observed that the market committees
where the routine recurring annual revenue expenditure
itself was over 60% of the receipts of the market-fee at 2%
thereby established a broad and substantial correlation. In
the case of these markets, the High Court felt that no
further investigation was required.
In this class of cases were included 33 market
committees. Their names are tabulated at page 140 of the
High Court judgment (page 314 of the Paper Book). These
market committees were classed as Category ’A’.
The High Court at page 315 of the Paper Book (page 141
of the judgment) tabulated other markets and the High Court
felt that in case of those markets, estimates for
developmental work need not also be subjected to minute
examination. These markets were 16 in number and mentioned
in the judgment of the High Court namely, (1) Doddaballapur,
(2) Gubbi, (3) Sira, (4) Jamkhandi, (5) Kundgoi.
247
(6) Laxmeshwar, (7) Siruguppa, (8) Aurad, (9) Gulbarga, (10)
Nalwar, (11) Shorapur, (12) Yadgir, (13) Yelburga, (14)
Kollegal, (15) Bhadravati and (16 Manvi. These are classed
as Category ’B’.
The next category was market committees whose routine
annual revenue expenditure plus proposed outlays on
infrastructural and developmental works which were
indubitably relatable to services to the buyers showed a
broad correlation. These were about 14 in number and
mentioned at pages 142-143 of the judgment (pages 315-316 of
the Paper Book). These market committees were classed as
Category C.
In Category ’D’, the High Court mentioned ten markets
where there were proposals for outlays on account of
permissible items of expenditure vis-a-vis the Buyers-fee.
Then the High Court in Category ’E’ dealt with markets
whose I. financial estimates required to be individually
examined. These were the regulated markets of Bangalore,
Hubli, Sagar, Bijapur. Raichur, Gadag, Tiptur and Siddapur.
The High Could was of the opinion that correlation of fee
and services could not be reckoned on the basis of receipts
and expenditure for one or two years only.
The High Court noted and in our opinion rightly, that
these regulated markets were yet in developmental stage, a
stage which should be marked by rapid growth. The initial
planning and the infrastructure must be taken into account,
not only potentialities for growth and expansion in the
immediate near future but also long range possibilities. But
apart from such basic infrastructure, which stood on a
different footing, the benefit of utilitarian projects
relatable to and developed from fee resources must be
available to the payers of the fee for at least a
considerable part of the period, covered by the financial
estimates and projections. The High Court noted that if the
logic of some of the market committees in this behalf, is
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pushed to its logical or illogical conclusions, would mean
that the present generation of fee-payers would pay for
services which would only be available to the next
generation The High Court was of the view that levy of fee
could not be justified on such wholly prospective services.
The High Court, however, was of the view that during the
period of execution of the works particularly at the
formative stages of the markets the actual benefit of the
services
248
might not be available to the payers of the fees; but if the
execution A of the work is so planned as to apply over the
years in future as to be incapable of providing any service
to the class of fee-payers for and during at least a
considerable part of the unit of time-in these cases a 15
years’ period from 1974-75 to 1988-89 fixed by the market
committees themselves then the concept of quid-pro-quo would
dwindle down to something which could not be characterised
as illusory..
The High Court then dealt in detail with the category
of markets mentioned herein before classed as Category ’E’.
It was contended that buyers of different kinds of produce
were differents, therefore service to one kind of buyers
would not be service to the other kind of buyers. Such
argument based on the dichotomy of service as between buyers
of different kinds of goods for example, buyers of rice and
buyers of vegetables, was rightly rejected by the High
Court. Such an argument ignored practical and working
problems.
On a detailed examination of the factual position, the
High Court was of the view that it should go by financial
projections made. These aspects were directed to be examined
by the Chief Marketing Officer and the market committees in
terms of certain directions that the High Court gave which I
shall mention later.
The High Court, however, felt that on the basis of the
estimate as these stood the enhanced levy could not be
quashed.
So far as Hubli market committee was concerned, the
High Court dealt with it in detail. Amongst the items which
were specially mentioned was an item of outlay of Rs. 150
lakhs proposed for construction of large godowns, second
item was of Rs. 60 lakhs for construction of shops and small
godowns; and the third item was the proposed outlay on the
’museum’ and the fourth item was the estimated outlay of Rs,
75 lakhs for acquisition of 466 acres of land.
After detailed examination of these projects, the High
Court was of the view that the market committees would
perhaps be in a position to establish a broad and general
correlation of 66 per cent
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On the basis of its present proposals and the High Court
came to the conclusion that these were not unreasonable.
As mentioned hereinbefore, there was an outlay of Rs.
75 lakhs on the aquisition of land. The provisions of Rs. 75
lakhs was a modest estimate and it could not be said to be
unreasonable. So far as the outlay on museum was concerned,
it was an essential amenity for dissemination of ideas and
it was therefore valid.
The High Court then examined in detail the markets of
Sagar, Bijapur, Raichur, Tiptur, Gadag and Siddapur. The
High Court for the reasons recorded and taking all factors
into consideration came to the conclusion that though there
was room for criticism, on the whole, however taking all the
relevant factors into consideration it could not be said
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that the projections were unreasonable.
I am in agreement with the High Court that there was
limitation on the powers of the Court in a controversy of
this nature. In ascertaining whether the necessary
correlation between the services and fee existed or not,
what was required to be examined was only a broad and
general correlation not an equivalence with arithmetical
accuracy and precision. The Court was neither equipped for,
nor should it permit itself, the role of inspecting auditors
much less should it assume the role of technical experts.
The other aspect which should be borne in mind was that in
scrutinising the items of work and services undertaken by
market committee, in case of this kind where the controversy
was confined to the existence of correlation. the exercise
was not whether the items of work should or should not be
undertaken by the market committees. The question was
somewhat different. The courts merely examined whether the
outlays on the concerned works and services qualified was a
special service vis-a-vis the ’Fee’.
The High Court as a result of the discussion of the
aforesaid markets came to the conclusion that it was unable
to hold on the materials placed before it that the levy
ought to fail for want of quid-pro-quo. However, having
regard to the infirmities noticed in the estimates and the
financial projections of the proposed developmental works on
the basis of which the enhancement was sought to be
justified, they were unable to say with any confidence and
without reservations that the enhancement of fee, depending
as it did on those
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estimates was totally justified. The High Court was of the
opinion A that some time bound program was necessary to be
given for a second look at the estimates. At the invitation
of the Advocate General and the counsel for the Market
Committee, the High Court was of the opinion that there was
obvious scope and imperative need for giving some directions
and the High Court gave certain directions which are
contained in paragraphs 109 onwards of the judgment of the
High Court. This part of the judgment has come in for
criticism because on behalf of the petitioners/appellants,
it was contended that in fact the High Court had abandoned
its obligation to come to a finding whether there was quid-
pro-quo or not when there was a challenge on that point.
Therefore, it was contended that there was no quid-pro-quo
established in respect of these markets. On the other hand
it was contended that the High Court did come to the
conclusion that there was quid-pro-quo but the High Court
gave certain directions which it was competent to give. This
position will be dealt with in this judgment later.
The High Court came to the following conclusions
(a) that the provisions of section 65(1) of the
Karnataka Agricultural Produce Marketing (Regulation)
Act, ;966 and section 42 of the Karnataka Act 17 of
1980 in so far as and to the extent these sought to
validate the levy of market fee on sellers for the
period between 19.5.1975 and 28.9.1978 were declared
unconstitutional and void;
(b) the provisions of the Karnataka Agricultural
Produce Marketing (Regulation) Act, 1966, in so far as
these sought to provide for the regulation of marketing
of cardamom was concerned, were held to be repugnant to
the provisions of Cardamom Act, 1965:
(c) the provisions of the Karanataka Agricultural
produce Marketing (Regulation) Act, 1966, in so far as
these sougth to regulate the marketing of sugarcane was
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concerned, were held to be repugnant to the provisions
of the Sugarcane (Control) Order, 1956, a statutory
order made under section 3 of the Essential Commodities
Act, 1955;
251
(d) the High Court directed that Chief Marketing
Officer should, within four months from the date of the
A judgment of the High Court, evolve and standardise
specifications and norms with regard to the
infrastructural and developmental requirements for the
market-yards and sub-market yards and communicate the
same to the market committees in terms indicated. If,
upon such scrutiny, the market-fee under section 65(2)
now being levied at 2 per cent was found, in respect of
any market committee, to be excessive and without quid
pro quo, the Chief marketing Officer should make orders
under section ] 5() directing a suitable reduction in
the quantum of the market fee of the market-committees
concerned.
So far as the prayer for issue of mandamus directing
refund of sellers’ market-fee paid under section 65(1)
sought by producer sellers and trader-sellers who had
earlier approached the High Court was concerned, the High
Court directed that mandamus should issue. In so far as
producer-sellers and other petitioners who were trade
sellers who had paid sellers fee under section 65(1) of the
Act, a mandamus to the State Government and to the concerned
Market Committees was directed to be issued in terms
indicated in the judgment of the High Court.
With the other directions of the High Court for refund
and otherwise, it is not necessary to detain ourselves..
The following broad questions were canvassed before us
for consideration in these appeals:
(1) Whether the government and the market
committees had been able to establish that there was
quid-pro-quo and as such levy of fee and the increase
of fee from 1 per cent to 2 per cent was justified? It
may be mentioned that after this judgment, the levy was
decreased from 2 per cent to I per cent again.
(2) Whether there could or should be refund of any
of these amounts to any of the parties?
(3) Whether the High Court had come to any
definite conclusion in respect of the eight Market
Committees mentioned hereinbefore?
252
(4) Whether the High Court had abandoned its A
jurisdiction in not coming to a definite conclusion
about the required correlation to sustain quid pro quo
for the imposition of market fees?
(5) Whether the High Court was competent to give
directions to the Market Committees in the manner it
had done?
(6) Whether in respect of marketing of tobacco,
the State Government was entitled to legislate or
whether in view of the fact that there was a
declaration under item 54 of List I of the VIIth
Schedule, or whether the State Legislature had no
competence to legislate on this point as such the
impugned legislation was ultra-vires ?
(7) Whether the amendment of section 148 of the
Act as mentioned aforesaid whereby the opportunity of
previous publication was deleted was valid or not?
It is necessary now to deal with the contentions that
arise in these appeals as enumerated hereinbefore. The
rationale and the necessity for the imposition of fees in
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contra-distinction of ’tax’ have been recognised for a long
time. Our Constitution has recognised the distinction
between ’taxes’ and ’fees’. Entry 66 of List II of VII
Schedule speaks of ’fees’ in respect of the matter
enumerated in List It. Similarly, Entry 96 of List I of VII
Schedule speaks of fees’ in respect of matters mentioned in
List 1. Entry 97 of List I speaks of ’tax’. The classic
distinction between the two was reiterated in the
observations of J. Latham in the case of Matthews v. Chicory
Marketing Board (60 Commonwealth Law Report p. 263). A ’tax’
is a compulsory exaction of money by public authority for
public purposes enforceable by law and is not payment for
services rendered. In the case of The Commissioner, Hindu
Religious Endowments Madras v. Sri Lakshmindra Thirtha
Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutt.,(l) this court reiterated that
’the distinction between a tax and a fee lies primarily in
the fact that a tax is levied as part of a common burden,
while a fee is a payment for a special benefit or
__ privilege’.
(1) 119541 S.C.R. 1005,
253
From time to time in several decisions the need for
imposition of fees by the market-committees have been
emphasised and A examined. Rajamanner, C.J. and T.L.
Venkatarama Aiyar, J. in the case of Kuttf Keya v. The State
of Madras(l) dealt with the marketing legislation and need
for the same and referred to the report of the Royal
Commission on Agriculture in India. The decision of the
Madras High Court was affirmed by a Constitution Bench of
this Court in the case of Arunachala Nadar v. State of
Madras(2) where Subba Rao, J. referred to the background of
the marketing legislation. It is not necessary to deal in
detail with the said decisions,
Most of these decisions were reviewed by this Court in
judging the validity of fees imposed in the case of Kewal
Krishan Puri (supra). Several principals deduced from the
decision in Kewal Krishan Puri’s case have been noted
hereinbefore. Prior thereto the question was considered in
the case of Government of Andhra Pradesh v. Hindustan
Machine Tools Ltd.(3) which was noted in Kewol Krishan
Purl’s case. Kewal Krishan Puri’s case specifically noted
that the element of quid pro quo might not possible of even
necessary to be established with arithmetical exactitude
even broadly and reasonably it must be established by the
authority which charged the fees that the amount was being
spent for rendering services to those on whom fell the
burden of the fee. At least a good and substantial amount
collected on account of fees might be in the neighbourhood
of 2/3rd or 3/4th must be shown with reasonable certainty as
being spent for rendering services to those from whom the
fees are realised. The Court, however, noted that while
conferring special benefits to the licensees or payers of
fees, it was permissible to render other services in the
market which might be in the general interest of all
concerned in respect of transactions that take place in the
markets. Services rendered to the licenses must be in
relation to the transactions of purchase or sale of produce
in the market. It is not necessary, however, to confer the
whole of the benefit on the licensees but some special
benefits must be conferred on them which have a direct,
close, and reasonable correlation between the licencees and
transactions. But imposition of fees for general benefit
like augmenting the agricultural produce, its facility of
transport in villages and to provide other
(1) A.T.R. 1943 MAD 621.
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(2) A.I.R. 1959 S.C. 300.
(3) [1975] Supp. S.C.R. 394.
254
facilities meant mainly or exclusively for the benefit of
agriculturists A was not permissible on the ground that such
service in the long run augmented the volume of transaction
in the market ultimately benefiting the traders. Such and
indirect benefit could not be considered to be sufficient
quid-pro-quo to justify imposition of market-fee.
This question was examined in the case of H.H. Shri
Swamiji of Shri Admar Mutt, etc. v. the Commissioner, Hindu
Religious & Charitable Endowments Department & Ors(l) The
correlation was again reviewed in the decision in the case
of Ramesh Chandra etc. v. State o f U P. etc.(2) This
question was again examined by this Court in the case of
Municipal Corporation of Delhi and Others v. Mohd. Yasin.
(3) There this Court reiterated that the mere fact there
others besides those paying the fees were also benefited did
not detract from the character
of the fee. Tn fact the special benefit or advantage to the
payers of the fees might even be secondary as compared with
the primary motive of regulation in the public interest. The
Court was not expected to assume the role of a cost
accountant. It is neither necessary nor expedient to weigh
too meticulously the cost of the services rendered etc.
against the amount of fees collected so as to evenly balance
the two. A broad correlationship was all that was necessary.
Quid pro quo in the strict sense is not the one and only
true index of a fee; nor is it necessarily absent in a tax.
A.P. Sen, J. in the said decision observed at page 235 of
the report as follows:-
"What do we learn from these precedents? We learn
that there is no generic difference between a tax and a
fee, though broadly a tax is a compulsory exaction as
part of a common burden, without promise of any special
advantages to classes of tax payers whereas a fee is a
payment for services rendered, benefit provided or
privilege conferred. Compulsion is not the hallmark of
the distinction between a tax and a fee. That the money
collected
(1) [1980] I S.C R. 368.
(2) [1980] 3 S.C.R. 104.
(3) 11983] 3 S.C.C. 229.
255
does not go into a separate fund but goes into the con
solidated fund does not also necessarily make a levy a
A tax. Though a fee must have relation to the services
rendered, or the advantages conferred, such relation
need not be direct; a mere casual relation may be
enough. Further, neither the incidence of the fee nor
the service rendered need the uniform. That others
besides those paying the fees are also benefited does
not detract from the character of the fee. In fact the
special benefit or advantage to the payers of the fees
n-ay even be secondary as compared with the primary
motive of regulation in the public interest. Nor is the
court to assume the role of a cost accountant. It is
neither necessary nor expedient to weigh too
meticulously the cost of the services rendered etc.
against the amount of fees collected so as to evenly
balance the two. A broad correlationship is all that is
necessary. Quid pro quo in the strict sense is not the
one and only true index of a fee, nor it is necessarily
absent in a tax."
In the case of Southern Pharmaceuticals & Chemicals
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Trichur & Ors. Etc. v. State of Keral & Ors. Etc.(1) This
view as again reiterated at page 542 of the report, A.P.
Sen, J. Observed as follows:-
"It is now increasingly realised that merely
because the collections for the services rendered or
grant of a privillege or licence, are taken to the
consolidated fund of the State and are not separately
appropriated towards the expenditure for rendering the
service is not by itself decisive. That is because the
Constitution did not contemplate, it to be an essential
element of a fee that it should be credited to a
separate fund and not to the consolidated fund. It is
also increasingly realised that the element of quid pro
quo stricto senso is not always a sine quo non of a
fee. It is needless to stress that the element of quid
pro quo is not necessarily absent in every tax."
(1) [1982]1 S.C.R. 519.
256
The learned judge at page 543 of the report observed
that the A traditional concept of quid pro quo was
undergoing a transformation.
It is not necessary, however, for the purpose of this
case to express any opinion as to whether the traditional
concept of quid pro quo is undergoing any transformation and
if so to what extent? Even on the basis of traditional
concept it is well-settled that though there must be some
special services to the payers of the fees, to be a fee it
is not necessary that all the services must be to the payers
of the fees nor can the correlation between payment of fee
and services rendered be established with mathematical
exactitude. It is permissible in the modern set up to take
into account projections into future and not only the
present services can be utilised for justifying the
imposition of fee. All planning, project into the future for
its existence and survival.
Any incidental benefit to those other than the payers
of the fee is not decisive of the fact whether it is a ’tax’
or a ’fee’. It is necessary to find out the primary object
and essential purpose of the imposition (emphasis supplied).
If the primary object and essential purpose of the
imposition be service of some special kind to the users of
the market or payers of fee, other consequences or other
benefits to others do not in the least affect the position.
The concept of benefit to the users of market must he looked
at from a broad commonsense point of view, taking an
integrated view. In today’s world you cannot build a good
market if the accesses through which the produce comes to
the market are not maintained. However, at what point the
roads will begin and at what point the roads will end to be
able to justify the roads necessary to maintain solely the
market, appears to be highly theoretical and unreal question
in the modern concept of integrated development.
In the case of Sreenivasa General Traders and Others v.
State Of Andhra Pradesh and Others(1), a bench of three
judges of this Court had to deal with this question. The
said decision reiterated the distinction between a fee and a
tax and observed that a tax was levied as part of a common
burden, while a fee was for payment of a specific benefit or
privilege although the special advantage was secondary to
the primary motive of regulation in public interest
(1) [1983] 4 S.C.C. 353.
257
According to this decision in determining whether a levy was
of fee, the true test must be whether its primary and
essential purpose was A to render specific services to a
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specified area or class; it might be of no consequence that
the State might ultimately and directly be benefited by it.
There must, however, be a reasonable relationship between a
levy of fee and the services rendered to the payers of fees.
According to this decision, Kewal Krishan Puri’s case did
not lay down any legal principle of general applicability.
Sreenivasa General Traders’ case (supra) was approved by
another decision of the bench of three learned judges in the
case of Amar Nath Om Parkash & Ors. etc. v. State of Punjab
& Ors.(l) (Judgment delivered by O. Chinnappa Reddy, J.).
Prior to all this, in the case of State of Maharashtra
& Ors. v. The Salvation Army, Western India Territory(1),
this Court had to consider the question of fee under Bombay
Public Trust Act, 1950. The Court noted that fee was defined
as a charge for a special service rendered to individuals by
the Government or some other agency like a local authority
or statutory corporation. The amount of fee levied was
supposed to be based on expenses incurred in rendering the
services, though in many cases the cost was arbitrarily
assessed. This Court noted that fees were generally uniform
but absence of uniformity was not a criterion on which alone
it could be said that levy was in the nature of a tax. As a
fee was regarded as a sort of return or consideration for
services rendered, it was necessary that levy should be
correlated to the expenses incurred in rendering the
services. This Court in Salvation Army’s case reiterated
that in might not however be possible to prove in every case
that the fees collected always approximated to the expenses
that were incurred in rendering the particular kind of
services or in performing any particular work for the
benefit of certain individuals. In that case, the Court
found that revenue expenditure was about 62 per cent of the
amount of revenue receipts from 1953 to 1970 and this was
considered approximate correlation and the Court held that
the levy was in the nature of a fee. The Court dealt with
the question of G capital expenditure and observed that the
expenditure in constructing buildings for locating the head
offices and regional offices and the increase in allowances
or other amenities to the staff had also to be
(1) Civil Appeal Nos. 4500 and 4501 of 1984-(judgment
delivered by 19.1 1.1984).
(2) [1975] S.C.R. 475,
258
included in the cost of services. The Court observed that
when A there was a surplus it could not immediately be said
that the surplus must necessarily go in reduction of the
rate of contribution to be levied thereafter. This Court was
of the view that it was neither expedient nor prudent to lay
down any abstract proposition that whenever there was
surplus in a particular year or years that surplus must
always be taken into consideration and the rate of
contribution should be reduced for the next year or
subsequent years. An organisation like the Salvation Army
had to incur capital expenditure for the better allowances
or other amenities to the staff and these had to be
included. tn after taking into account the capital and other
expenditure necessary for efficient functioning of an
organisation for the better administration of Trust a very
large surplus was still left then, the Court noted that the
question would arise whether then it was permissible for the
organisation to continue the levy at the rate which would
only result in further surplus and to invest the surplus
solely for earning income or to divert the surplus for other
objects. The Court noted that it was not necessary that all
available surplus should always go in reducing the rate of
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contribution for subsequent years, the organisation could
not be allowed to accumulate unreasonable amounts i.e.,
amounts which might not reasonably be required for proper
and efficient working of the organisation. In drawing the
line, however, the Court would have to look into the nature
of the organisation, the potentiality of its growth, the
multiplication in its work consequent or its expansion for
rendering to services visualised and the necessity for
capital expenditure in near future and also the amount of
levy collected or expected to be collected. It may be
mentioned that in the case of Indian Mica & Micanite
Industries Ltd. v. State of Bihar & Ors.(1) whether in a
particular case there was a correlation or not is
essentially a question of fact.
As has been noted estimates had been filed on behalf of
the various market committees before the High Court. These
estimates were criticised on behalf of petitioners-
appellants as being totally at variance with the
corresponding estimates furnished for the same period and
furnished for 1974-75. The present estimates and
projections, it was submitted on behalf of the appellants,
were prepared only with a view to supply an artificial quid
pro quo for the enhanced levy and were merely show-pieces on
paper to get over the
(3) [1971] Supp. S.C.R. 319.
259
present challenge. It was further contended that having
regard to the pace of growth and performance levels over the
past seven years A out of the fifteen years period, it was
unreasonable to expect that the huge developmental
activities now projected for the next eight years were
really intended to be acted upon.
Secondly, it was submitted that the disparities and
variance in the proportion of the proposed development from
market-yard to market-yard were so glaring that no authority
in the position of the Chief Marketing Officer could
reasonably approve of such uncoordinated and disjointed
development of the regulated markets.
Thirdly, it was urged that many items of work envisaged
in the development schemes such as construction of shops,
godowns and the like were unrelated to the concept of
special service to the buyers and could not be reckoned as
qualified for correlation, and that if these impermissible
items were deleted from the estimates, the market committees
would not be in a position to establish the requisite quid-
pro-quo.
Fourthly, it was said that a substantial part of the
proposed financial outlays related to development of what
were called "Rural Markets" and these outlays were
ineligible to be reckoned as special service to the buyers.
The High Court in its judgment analysed these
submissions and contentions carefully with reference to the
financial statements and projections filed by the market-
committees and these statements were discussed at
considerable length by the High Court.
In the context of the said contentions urged on behalf
of the appellants, the High Court had examined the said
statements and projections and recorded findings on these in
its judgement. The High Court had also given certain
directions. It was, therefore, submitted that the market fee
on the buyers of the agricultural produce was originally
levied at 3 ) p. which was increased to I per cent and was
further increased from l per cent to 2 per cent and the said
enhancement of market fees was thus challenged by the
appellants on the ground of non-existence of quid pro quo
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and the respondents-market committee attempted to justify
the enhanced levy of 2 per cent on the basis of the
statements and projections
260
mentioned hereinbefore. The High Court noted that that were
certain inaccuracies and lack of particulars in the
projections but the High Court ultimately came to the
conclusion that on the materials placed before it on the
basis of the principles of la v as discussed by the High
Court, it could not be said that there was no quid-pro quo.
On the other hand it was contended on behalf of the
appellants that there was a total failure on the part of the
respondents to discharge the burden for sustaining the
enhanced levy of market fee, it was urged that the High
Court consequent to its findings referred to above, ought to
have quashed the bye-laws of the market committees in
respect of categories C, and mentioned hereinbefore.
According to the appellants, the enhanced market fee from
30th June, 1979 could not be supported.
The contention of learned counsel for the appellant was
that tho findings of the High Court with reference to eight
committees in category ’E’ were untenable. On the other hand
on behalf of the respondents it was submitted that out of
the 93 market committees, in respect of 73 market committees
falling under categories A, B, C D, a clear quid pro quo was
established and no further enquiry was needed on the
principles laid down by this Court.
Having examined the nature of the transactions and the
principles of law applicable to this case as I have noted
before, I am of the opinion that the High Court was right in
its conclusion.
The proper principles discernible from these decisions
are; (1) there should be relationship between service and
fee, (2) that the relationship is reasonable cannot be
established with mathematical exactitude in the sense that
both sides must be equally balanced, (3) in the course of
rendering such services to the payers of the fee if some
other benefits accrue or arise to others, quid-pro-quo is
not destroyed. The concept of quid-pro-quo should be judged
in the context of the present days-a concept of markets
which are expected to render various services and provide
various amenities and these benefits cannot be divorced from
the benefits accruing incidentally to others, (4) a
reasonable projection for the future years of a practical
scheme is permissible and (5) services rendered must be to
the users of those markets or to the subsequent users of
those markets as a class. Though fee is not levied as a part
of common burden yet service and payment cannot exactly be
balanced. (6) The primary
261
Object and the essential purpose of the imposition must be
looked into.
Having regard to the detailed analysis of the
expenditure of the various market committees, we agree with
the conclusion of the High Court that it could not be said
that the expenditure and appropriation of fee was so
disproportionate to the projects actual and projected that
it could be said that the levy lost the character of fee. An
analysis of the High Court’s judgment would indicate that
out of 93 market committees about which the High Court was
concerned, in respect of 73 market committees falling under
categories A, B, & D, a clear quid-pro-quo was established
on a reasonable view. In respect of the 20 market committees
falling in category of, the High Court found that with
regard to the 8 committees only, final projections for the
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purpose of correlating the fees charged and the services
rendered required individual consideration. These were
Bangalore, Hubli. Sagar, Bijapur, Raichur, Tiptur, Gadag and
Siddapur. The High Court found that the projected
expenditure was relatable to and referrable to the services
rendered and to be rendered to the payers of the fee. While
the High Court observed that the levy of fee was justified,
the High Court laid down certain guidelines and norms for
the market committees for the future.
The High Court examined in detail the estimates of each
of the market committees. The High Court felt that even if
some of the items of expenditure which were specifically
challenged and which the High Court noted were not strictly
permissible, on the basis of the remaining works there was
ground to hold that there was requisite measure of
correlation between fees collected and intended to be
collected and services rendered and intended to be rendered
but the High Court felt that for proper working of statutory
bodies like the market committees, general directions about
the future expenditure should be given.
As we have mentioned hereinbefore, at the invitation of
Advocate-General and the counsel for the market committees,
the High Court gave certain directions. It is not necessary
in disposing of these appeals to deal in detail with the
specific directions given. The High Court was competent to
give these directions. We accept the submissions urged on
behalf of the respondents that these directions were within
the competence of the High Court while
262
dealing with the grievances made under Article 226 of the
Constitution to ensure that appropriate statutory
authorities acted according to law after properly
ascertaining the facts and for the purpose of rendering full
justice to the parties. (See for the nature of directions
the High Court is capable of giving under Article 226 of the
Constitution Bandhua Mukti Morcha v. Union of India & Ors(l)
See also the decision in the case of State of Kerala v.
Kumari T.P. Roshana & Anr.(3) In the case of Kewal Krishan
Puri & Anr. v. State of Punjab & Others, (supra) this Court
had given certain directions for future guidance of the
authorities.
For the purpose of how the Court can mould its
directions in order to give relief in a particular
situation, we may refer to the nature of directions given by
the American Supreme Court, in abolishing racial
discrimination and the judicial efforts made with attending
difficulties, and how the Supreme Court of America
formulated by trial and error the process of making the
relief effective to the discussions in Corwin’s The
Constitution and what it means today’ 14th Edn pages 504-
511].
Therefore, the High Court, while finding that there was
a correlation between the services rendered and the fees
charged with regard to the eight market committees, directed
the Chief Marketing Officer to make certain enquiries on
certain principles of correlation and directed the surplus,
if found, on such enquiry, to be appropriately adjusted in
the’ future by way of reductions of fees.
Pursuant to the above directions in respect of eight
Marketing committees, the Chief Marketing Officer went into
the facts. After the Marketing Committees had submitted
their budgets and the projections, these have been approved
by the Chief Marketing Officer. After such approval, the
concerned Marketing Committees have passed appropriate
resolution for giving effect to the norms laid down and the
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projects approved. This has been stated in the affidavit
filed by the Chief Marketing Officer in reply to special
leave petition. (See the affidavit filed by the Chief
Marketing Officer in the Belgana Marketing Committee
petition). This, in our opinion is a constructive approach.
(1) [1984]3 S.C.C. 161 at 240-242.
(2) [1965] 2 S.C.R. 974.
263
Courts of today cannot and do not any longer remain
passive with the negative attitude, merely striking down a
law or preventing A something being done. ’Thou shall not
do’t’ used to be the previous form of remedy encouraged by
Courts. But the new attitude is towards positive affirmative
actions, directions people or authorities concerned that
’thou shall do’t’ in this manner. While it is true that if a
law is bad, the Court must strike it down, if the law by and
large and in its true perspective of a social purpose if
implemented in a particular manner could be valid, then. the
Court can and should ensure that implementations should be
done in such particular manner and give directions to that
effect. In the instant case the High Court having found with
which finding we are in agreement, that basically and
essentially the fee was justified on the theory of quid pro
quo, the Court was entitled to give positive directions in
the manner the money should be spent.
Another argument on this aspect was that estimate of
Tiptur Market Committee showed that there was a surplus Rs.
72 lakhs in the year ending 1982. It was contended that so
long as this surplus remained, there was no case for
increasing market fee from I percent to 2 percent. It was
also submitted that according to the projections filed and
the estimated expenditure for the future upto 1988-89 there
would be a surplus of about Rs. 3 crores at the end of 1988-
89. But reading the projections properly it appears that
though estimated earning would be Rs. 3.26 crore at the end
of 1988-89; at the same time the estimate showed the
projected expenditure from 1981-82 to 1988-89 would amount
to Rs. 4.28 crores. These projections are not imaginary, and
if the Market committee, in the present trend of inflation
and the need for modern markets, had taken these F
projections into consideration, the same cannot be condemned
as unreasonable. Thus looked at, it appears that the extra
expenditure of estimates showed a projected loan for the
deficit.
In the aforesaid view of the matter, we are of opinion
that the High Court was right in holding (a) that the quid
pro quo necessary to be established in these types of fees
has been established, (b) that the projections have been
properly taken into consideration and they are reasonable
projections, (c) the directions given by the High Court were
within the competence of the High Court to meet the ends of
justice.
264
In the premises the first question reserved for our
consideration A must be answered by saying that the High
Court is right in holding that the increase was justified.
Necessarily point No. 3 must also be answered by saying that
the High Court had come, in the facts and circumstances of
the case, to a definite conclusion of this aspect in respect
of eight market committees mentioned hereinbefore. The High
Court had not abandoned, for the reasons mentioned herein
before, its jurisdiction in not coming to a definite
conclusion about the requisite correlation to sustain the
quid-pro-quo for the imposition of the market fee. I am also
of the opinion that the High Court was competent for the
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reasons indicated hereinbefore to give directions to the
market committees in the manner it had done. Point Nos. l,
3, 4 & 5 mentioned hereinbefore are therefore disposed of in
favour of the respondents in the manner indicated herein
before.
So far as to the question of refund of the amount of
the market fees to any of the party is concerned. 11 will
briefly have to note the position arising out of the
judgment of the High Court.
It was contended on behalf of the appellants that
section 65(1) as substituted by Act 17 of 1980, read with
section 42 of the Amending Act, seeking to validate the
collection of market fee on "sellers" made under the old
section 65 (1) of the Act is constitutionally invalid. The
validation became necessary as mentioned hereinbefore in
view of the judgment of the, Karnataka High Court in the
case of Rajasekhariah (supra). The present substituted
section 65(1) read with section 42 of the Amending Act seeks
to validate the collection of market fee on sellers made
when the earlier section 65(1) was operative. We have set
out the relevant provisions and the background of the
challenge to the Act.
The High Court of Karnataka in its impugned judgment
had set out exhaustively the grounds upon which the said
High Court has (previously in Rajasekhariah’s case struck
down section 65 (1) (3) of the Act. Pursuant to the judgment
in Rajasekhariah’s case, the State was exposed to the
liability to refund the fee collected for the period from
19.5.1975 when section 65(]) and (3) were introduced by the
Amending Act 21 of 1975 and 28.9.1978 when that judgment was
pronounced. By the said Act of 1980, the levy was sought to
be validated and the fee retained by the State Government.
The High Court noticed the relevant substitution First, by
virtue of
265
sub-section 1(2) of section 19 of the amending Act, the
amendment had been deemed to have come into force on
19.5.1975- in other A words making it retrospective.
Secondly by clause (ii) of subsection 63 and item (ii) of
clause (a) of sub-section (2) of section 63 as amended, the
expression "Marketing" was substituted by the words
"transport and marketing". In clause (ii) of sub-section (2)
of section 63, item (ia) was newly introduced making the
provision for, either independently or along with some other
authority, necessary facilities for the transport of
notified agricultural produce from and to the yard, as one
of the obligatory functions of the market committees.
Thirdly, section 20 of the Amending Act brought about
certain changes in the structure of section 65 while making
such amendment retrospective with effect from 19.5.1975-
being the date on which it was originally introduced.
The High Court has set out section 42 of the Amending
Act which validated the levy of market fee etc. It was urged
before the High Court that the market recollected from the
sellers between 19.9.1975 and 28.9.1978 under the old
section 65(1) had gone to the credit of and merged in the
"Karnataka Roads and Bridges Fund" constituted under the
Karnataka Motor Vehicles Taxation Act and the market fees
have obviously been spent for the purposes and objects of
"Karnataka Roads and Bridges Fund", and by deleting section
65(3)-even if it be with retrospective effect - the events
that have factually happened pursuant to section 65(3) when
it was operative, could not be reversed. The effect Or the
amendment was not, it was submitted, before the High Court,
to put the funds back into the coffers of the respective
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market committees enabling them to spend them for such of
the purposes authorised by the Act as would afford
correlation by way of service to the fee. It was further
contended that all that, at best. the amendments could be
said to have achieved was that providing "facilities for
transport" which was not one of the duties and functions of
the market committees earlier had now been made as one of
their duties and functions. It was urged that even if the
"facilities for transport" could be said to include
construction of rural roads, only the first defect or
infirmity pointed out in Rajasekharih’s case could be said
to have been cured or removed but not the more important
one, the second.
Learned Advocate-General contended that the only ground
on which the previous judgment invalidated the levy on the
sellers was
266
that the market committees were not statutorily charged with
the A duty of constructing and maintaining rural roads, and
now that, the duty of providing, either independently or
along with any other authority, necessary facilities for
transport, which included the making of roads in the market
area leading to and from the marketyards, the defect noticed
in the law has been removed and the legal basis for the levy
supplied. Learned Advocate-General submitted that as a
result of Rajasekhariah’s case the State was exposed to a
liability to refund several crores of rupees which had been
realised by way of sellers fee under section 65(1), and
which according to him, had, in fact, been spent for
providing facilities for transport in the form of
construction, improvement and repair and maintenance of
rural roads.
The High Court noticed the relevant provisions and the
principles of law which should govern the power of the
legislature to cure any defect in law with retrospective
effect and to validate acts done or taken under defective
law which were declared invalid by the courts on any around.
It is well-settled that if such validating law cures
the constitutional vice from which the earlier legislation
suffered, the validation must be given effect to. These
principles are well-settled by the decisions of this Court
in the cases of Misrilal Jain etc. etc. v. State of Orissa
and Another(l), Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd. & Anr. v.
Broach Borough Municipality & Ors. ( ’), Municipal
Corporation of the City of Ahmedabad, Etc. v. New Shorock
Spg. & Wvg. Co. Ltd., Etc (B) and l.N. Saksena v. The State
of Madhya Pradesh.(4) The tests are well settled and it is
not necessary to reiterate those. The validity of a
validating law has to be judged mainly by judging, firstly
whether a legislature possesses competence over the subject
matter i.e., whether by validation, the legislature exercise
competence over the subject matter and secondly whether by
validation the legislature has removed the defect which the
court had found in the previous law and thirdly whether it
is consistent with the provisions of Part III of the
Constitution.
(1) A.I.R. 1977 S.C. 1686=[1977] 3 S.C.R. 714.
(2) A.l.R. 1970 S.C. 192=[1970] 1 S.C.R. 388.
(3) A.I.R. 1970 S.C. 1292=[1971]1 S.C.R. 288.
(4) A.l.R. 1976 S.C. 2250=[1976} 3 S.C.R. 237.
267
The High Court was of the view that facilities for
rural roads could not be a ground for collection of fees.
The High Court was A further of the view that this was
concluded by the decision of this Court in Kewal Krishan
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Puri’s case (supra).
l have set out hereinbefore the principles to be
governed in case of judging the correlation between
’service’ and ’fee’ and the changing pattern of this
concept. Construction of rural roads giving facilities for
going to the market is a special service primarily and
(directly intended for tile benefit of the users of market.
Market could not be reached and people cannot go and come
from the market if there are no good rural roads to reach
those markets. This view has been recently reiterated by
this Court after discussing several authorities in the case
of M/s Amar Nath Om Parkash & Ors. Etc. v. The State Punjab
& Ors. Etc. (supra) where it was held that it was of
fundamental importance that there should be a network of
roadways if effective aid was to be given to farmers to
transport and market their produce. In this connection
reliance may be placed also on the observations of this
Court in the case of Municipal Corporation Delhi v. MOJId.
Yasin (supra) where it was reiterated that the fact that
others besides those paying the fees are o benefited did not
detract from the characted of the fee. The Court observed
that in fact the special benefit or advantage to the payers
of the fees might even be secondary as compared with the
primary motive of regulation in the public interest. Quid-
pro-quo in strict sense is not the one and only true index
of a fee as we have mentioned hereinbefore.
Judged by this concept, in my opinion, the High Court
was in error in view of the principles we have discussed
about the concept of fee and therefore rural roads for
construction, improvement and maintenance of which sellers
fees have been applied could be said to be an obligation of
the market committee. Now that has been made function and
obligation of the market committees by the amendment with
retrospective effect which we have noticed before. The
learned Advocate-General had stated before the High Court
that the funds from the "Karnataka Roads & Bridges Fund"
collected from these fees have in fact been spent for the
rural roads, the facilities for which are for the benefit of
the users of the markets. In the facts and circumstances it
should be presumed and assumed that the funds spent by the
"Karnataka Roads & Bridges Fund" under the Motor Vehicles
Act have in fact been spent as an agency of the market
268
committees in discharge of the functions and obligations of
these A committees. In view of the amended provisions of the
statute which we have mentioned providing facilities for
transport is one of the obligations of the market
committees. In my opinion, realisation of fees for such
facilities would be justified and valid. If, as we have
discussed, without rural roads, markets could not be reached
and the functions for which the market committees were
constituted could not be performed, if it is of fundamental
importance that there should be a network of roadways if
effective aid is to be given to buyers and sellers of goods
for marketing their products, then in my opinion, the fact
that the public streets and roads are public properties and
the State holds such streets and roads as trustees would be
of no consequences in considering such realisation as fees.
The contribution to the "Karnataka Roads and Bridges
Fund" maintainable under Motor Vehicles Act having been made
as an agency of the market committees for the construction
of these roads which facilitated the purpose of the market
committees as amended by the Amending Act. I am, therefore,
of the opinion that the High Court was in error in holding
that the second major defect noticed in the law authorising
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the levy on the sellers in Rajasekhariah’s case (supra)
namely construction of rural roads would not qualify being
reckoned as a special service to the class of persons paying
the fee, had not been cured or removed by the law which
sought to validate the levy. The Act which sought to
validate the levy contributed to the "Karnataka Roads and
Bridges Fund" was for the maintenance of rural roads which,
as I have noticed, forms an integral part of the facilities
for marketing of the goods. I am therefore unable to sustain
the findings of the High Court of Karnataka that section
65(1) as substituted as Section 20 of the Act 17 of 1980 as
well as section 42 of the Attending Act was not
constitutional valid and was liable to be struck down. I
hold that these are constitutionally valid in view of the
perspective in which the concept of fee has to be judged in
the light of the decision I have referred to hereinbefore.
If that is the position then no question of refund would
really arise, in view of the provisions of the said Act as
amended by Act 17 of 1980 and section 42 of the Act 17 of
1980 as it validated the market fee on sellers between
19.5.1975 and 28.9.1978. The funds collected had remained
with the Government and have been spent for purposes which
are valid purposes in view of the amendment. So no question
of refund arises.
269
In any event I am of the opinion that there should not
be any refund in the facts and circumstances of the case,
Section 42 of the A Amending Act has specifically provided
against refund of levy of fees already collected, I am
therefore of the opinion that such a provision was valid. At
no stage was it claimed or stated that the traders had paid
market fees themselves. The appellants before this Court are
buyers in the Market but they themselves are trading in the
commodities purchased by them. On further sale of the
commodities as traders they have recovered the fees from
their purchasers. For this purpose reliance may be placed on
the observations of this Court in the decision in the case
of D. Cawasji & Co. Etc. Etc. v. The State of Mysore &
Anr.(1) Most of these have been discussed in the recent
decision of this Court in the case of Amar Nath Om Parkash &
Ors. (supra) and in that view of the matter and in view of
section 42 of the Amending Act which provided for the
validation of the levy of market fee and which provided
further by section 42(1)(b) & (c) that no proceedings for
refund would lie, in my opinion, in so far as the High Court
had directed to refund in certain cases as indicated in the
judgment of the High Courts I am unable to sustain that part
of the order and that order is set aside. I may mention that
when there was no provision like section 42 of the Amending
Act and there was a liability of refund n the case of Shiv
Shenkar Dal Mills Etc.. Etc v. State of Haryana & Ors
Etc.(x), this Court had evolved certain procedure for
utilisation of the funds collected so as to avoid undue
enrichment. In view of the principles discussed above and
the cases noted in the aforesaid decision in Amar Nath Om
Parkash & Ors. case (supra), we are of the opinion that
section 42 of the Amending Act is valid and by virtue of the
said section, that cannot be any order for refund in the
instant case. It must be borne in mind that the High Court
has given specific directions for utilisation of the surplus
fund in certain matters to the market committees. Point (2)
noted above is thus disposed of.
The next question that arises is whether the amendment
of the bye-laws enhancing the market fee was invalid for
want of compliance with the mandate of section 148 of the
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Act requiring previous publication and previous sanction of
the Chief Marketing Officer. The High Court had exhaustively
discussed this matter and I have
(1) [19751 2 S.C.R. 511.
(2) 11980]1 S.C.R. 1170.
270
referred to this discussion before and had come to the
conclusion A that section 65(2) did not confer any arbitrary
power and there was no excessive delegation of legislative
power to the market committees and therefore not vitiated on
that account. The question whether on a proper construction
of section 65(2) there was any obligation on the part of the
marketing committee to hear the parties was left open with
certain observations and directions contained in paragraph
61 of the judgment of the High Court. I am in respectful
agreement with that direction of the High Scud.
So far as the High Court held against the contentions
of the appellants that bye-laws were invalid for want of
previous publication or for want of consulting the interests
affected, I am also in respectful agreement for the reasons
discussed by the High Court which need not to be reiterated
again, with that view. The principle of audi alteram partem
has application only to judicial, quasijudicial and
administrative functions and not to any legislative
functions See The Tulsipur Sugar Co. Ltd. v. The Notified
Area Committee,Tulsipur.(’), S.A. de Smith ’ Judicial Review
of Administrative Action ’, 4th P.dn. pages 181 to 183. In
any event the rule of ’audi alteram partem’ is applicable in
exercise of the States’ power of taxation-See Avinder Singh
Etc. v. State of Punjab & Anr. Etc (2) This disposes of
point no. (7).
The next contention canvassed before us was whether in
view of the Tobacco Board Act, 1975, hereinafter referred to
as the Central Act and the issue of the notification dated
31st August, 1984 by which section 13 of the Central Act was
made applicable in the State of Karnataka, in so far as the
Central Act dealt with the marketing of tobacco, the State
legislature was not competent to pass this enactment. It was
submitted that tobacco was covered by entry 52 of List I by
virtue of the declaration under section 2 of the Central
Act. It was submitted that the High Court has erred by not
acting in the parity of reasoning adopted in respect of
Cardamom Act. As I have noticed that in case of Cardamom
Act, 1965, the High Court was of the opinion in the impugned
judgment that the said Act was not within the competence of
the State Legislature. Yet neither the market committees nor
the State Government had preferred any appeal in respect of
that finding. It was sought to be
(1) [1980] 2 S.C.R. 1111 at pages 1118 to 1121.
(2) [1979]1 S.C.R. 845.
271
impressed before this Court that the same reasoning should
apply in view of the similarity of provisions of the Central
Act as with A Cardamom Act as it should have been held
logically by the High Court that the State Legislature was
not competent to extend marketing provisions to tobacco in
the State Act. Tobacco was brought within the network of the
Act by virtue of Karnataka Act 17 of 1980.
Two broad principles should be borne in mind in
deciding the controversy of this nature. One is whether a
particular legislation or enactment is within the competence
of particular legislature must be judged after finding out
the pith and substance, in other words the true nature and
character, of the legislation in question and secondly the
entries in the list should be given liberal and generous
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construction. All the entries should be construed in
harmonious manner so as to avoid conflict. In case of
conflict, however, in respect of entries where both the
State and the Centre can legislate, the Central legislation
would prevail over the State Legislation in view of the
provisions of Articles 245 to 254 of the Constitution. It
was submitted that the effect of the declaration under
section 2 of the Central Act pursuant to Entry 52 of List I
is that the Parliament has exclusive competence to legislate
upon every aspect or activity pertaining to ’tobacco’
including marketing thereof and the State would have no
competence to legislate on that topic. As mentioned
hereinbefore a declaration under Entry 52 of List I of-Vllth
Schedule has been made in respect. Of tobacco. Entry 52 of
the said list provides ’Industries, the control of which by
the Union is declared by Parliament by law to be expedient
in the public interest.’
It is well-settled that the cardinal rule of
interpretation is that the words should be read in their
ordinary natural and grammatical meaning. But words in a
constitutional document conferring legislative powers should
also be construed most liberally and in their widest
amplitude. See Navinchandra Mafatlal v. C. 1. T. Bombay(l).
On behalf of the appellants reliance was placed on the
observations in the case of Baijnath v. Bihar State(2) that
once a declaration was made, any legislation by the State
after such declaration trenching upon the field disclosed in
the declaration must necessarily be unconstitutional because
that field is abstracted from the legislative competence of
the State Legislature. See Kannan
(1) [1955]1 S.C.R. 829 at page;836-37.
(2) [1970] 2 S.C.R. 100 at 113.
272
Devan Hills Co. v. Kerala(1) and Ganga Sugar Co. Ltd. v.
State of U.P..(2) where dealing with the sugar industry,
this Court observed that it was undisputed that sugar
industry was a controlled industry, within the meaning of
entry 52, List I of 7th Schedule and therefore, the
legislative power of Parliament covered enactments with
respect to industries having regard to Article 246(1) of the
Constitution. If the impugned legislation invaded Entry 52
it must be repulsed by the Court.
It was urged that in the instant case declaration under
section 2 of the Central Act was in respect of the tobacco
industry and not any particular type of tobacco as held by
the High Court that it was only virginia tobacco. Therefore,
there was no warrant for restricting or limiting the width
and amplitude of the words "tobacco industry" and confining
it to a particular type or kind of tobacco.
So fast as it was submitted that the Central Act was
not concerned with virginia tobacco only but covered other
tobaccos the High Court was in error. On the construction of
the Central Act read with the rules it appears to us that
the said Central Act and the declaration made by section 2
of the said Act covers all kinds of tobaccos.
It is well-settled principle that Article 246
recognised the principle of Parliamentary supremacy in the
field of legislation in case where both legislatures have
competence to legislate (emphasis supplied). The
constitutional scheme is that Parliament has full and
exclusive power to legislate with respect to matters in List
I and has also power to legislate with respect to matters in
List III. A State Legislature has exclusive power to
legislate with respect to matters in List II, excluding the
matters falling in List I or List III and has also
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concurrent power to legislate with respect to matters
falling in List III excluding matters falling in List I. The
dominant position of the Central Legislature with regard to
matters in List I and List III is established. See in this
connection the decision in Subrohmanyam v. Muthuswamy.(3)
Justice Suliaman in that case observed that the rigour of
that literal interpretation of section 100 of the Government
(1) [1973]1 S.C.R. 356 at 369.
(2) 11980] I S.C.R. 769 at 781.
(3) [1940] 45 C.W.N. (FC) I=A.I.R. 194] FC 47 at 57-58.
273
Of India Act, 1935 with which Federal Court was concerned in
that decision was relaxed by the use of the words "with
respect to which A only signify pith and substance" and do
not forbid a mere incidental encroachment. This is also the
position that emerges from Article 246(1) of the
Constitution.
It was submitted on behalf of the appellants that the
power of the State Legislature with respect to matters in
List II was made subject to the power of Parliament to
legislate with respect to matters in List I and therefore
followed that if any entry in List I and List II appeared to
overlap, if these appeared partly to cover the same field,
the field of legislation covered by the entry in List I must
be considered to be taken out of the scope of the entry in
List Il and C reserved to be only dealt with the Parliament.
In other words, to that extent the power of the State
Legislature must be considered to be curtailed and the field
must be held to have been occupied by the Centre.
In the present case the Central Act, it was urged, fell
within entry 52 of List I. To the extent that Karnataka
State Act, by amending the Schedule brought tobacco within
the provisions of the State Act, it was urged that it was
beyond the competence of the State Legislature and it had
encroached upon the Union List.
It was, further, submitted that in any event that the
competence of the Parliament to legislate in respect of a
matter which is exclusively entrusted to it must supersede
pro-tanto the exercise of power of the State Legislature.
Reliance was placed on Sudhir Chand v. Wealth Tax Officer,
Calcutta(1). But in resolving the rights of component units
of federal or quasi-federal set up (to which category,
however, Indian Constitutional set up belongs-no
Constitutional pundit has yet been able to say) earnest
endeavour should be made to avoid a conflict between two
competing enteries, as to too liberal an interpretation
given to both of them might create a clash. Therefore it was
urged that the competence of the Karnataka State Legislature
will regard to marketing of tobacco and levy of market fee
thereon under entry 28 read with entry 66 of List lI which
is "markets and fairs" stood pro-tanto superseded by the
exercise of the Parliamentary power under entry 52 read with
entry 96 of List I.
(1) [1969] S.C.R. 108 at 113,
274
It was urged that in the case of Cit. Tika Ramji &
Others Etc. A v. The State of Uttar Pradesh & Others(l),
this Court rejected the contentions that all sugarcane
legislation linked to sugar industry was sugar legislation.
Furthermore, on the facts of the case, the Court came to the
conclusion that the impugned Act did not concern itself at
all with the controlling or licensing of sugar industry or
with the production or manufacture of sugar or with trade
and commerce in sugar and therefore, there was no trenching
upon the Union List by the impugned State Act. Reliance was
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placed on the observations at pages 422-23 of the said
decision, mentioned hereinbefore. Reliance was also placed
at pages 783-84 in the case of Ganga Sugar Co. Ltd v. State
of U.P. (supra)
It was submitted on behalf of the appellants that the
State Legislature lost its competence because the field was
occupied by Parliament in view of the declaration under
section 2 of the Central Act. It was evident, it was urged,
that the intention to cover the whole field has been
expressed by the Central Act and as intended, the Central
Act is complete and exhaustive Code in respect of tobacco.
Consequently, the enactment of the subsequent State
Legislation was overborne on the ground of repugnancy.
Reliance was placed on the decision in the case of State of
Orissa v. M.A. Tulloch & Co.(2).
The following submissions were placed before us on the
around of repugnancy:
(1) There may be inconsistency in the actual terms of
the competing statutes. (See R.V. Brishbane
Licensing Court, [19201 28 C.L.R. 23.
(2) There may be no direct conflict and the State law
may be inoperative because the Commonwealth law or
the award of the Commonwealth Court was intended
to be a complete exhaustive code (Clyde
Engineering Co. Ltd. v. Cowburn [1926] 37 C.L.R.
466).
(3) Even in the absence of intention, a conflict may
arise when both State Legislature- and Common
wealth
(1) [1956] S.C.R. 393.
(2) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 461 at 477.
275
seek to exercise their powers on the same subject
Victoria v. Commonwealth, [1937] 58 C.L.R. 618;
Wenn Attorney General (Vict.) [1948] 77 C.L.R. 84)
Nicholas, Australian Constitution 2nd Edn at p.
303. Tikaramji [1956] SCR 393 at 424-425. Deep
Chand v. State of U.P. [1959] Suppl. 2 SCR p. 8 at
43. Ex-Parte Mclean [1930] 43 C.L.R. 472 at 483
and the observations of Justice B.N. Rau in the
Calcutta decision of G.P. Stewart v. B.K Roy
Choudhury (AIR 1939 Cal 628 at 634). As Sir B.N.
Rau mentioned in Stewart v. Brogendra Kishore- the
principles deducible from these cases seem to be-
if the dominant law has expressly or impliedly
evinced its intention, an intention to cover the
whole field, then a subordinate law in the same
field is repugnant and, therefore, inoperative,
whether and to what extent in a given case the
dominant law evinces such an intention must
necessarily depend on the language of the
particular law.
Applying these tests, it would be apparent, it was
submitted by the appellants that the State Act was repugnant
to the Central Act.
It was finally submitted that in any event without
prejudice to other submissions that so far as tobacco was
concerned, no service had in fact been rendered by the
market committees nor could they in law be rendered because
of legal constraints imposed by the provisions of the
Central Act and, in particular, section 12 and rule 35 of
the Tobacco Board Rules, 1976. By virtue of section 12, the
Market Committees could not auction or deal in tobacco at
all unless these were registered with the Board in
accordance with the Central Act.
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It was evident from the letters dated 15.9.1983 and
23.9.1983 at pages 462 and 466 of the Paper Book that the
market committees had not been and even today registered
under the Central Act and were therefore incapable of
rendering any service at all. For this reason there was
complete failure of quid-pro-quo and therefore there cannot
be any charge of fees by enacting State legislation on
tobacco.
276
It appears that the principles of repugnancy in Indian
Constitution are well-settled. These are as follow:
(1) A legislation, which in its pith and substance,
falls within any of the entries of List I of the
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution, would be
exclusively within the competence of the
Parliament.
(2) A legislation falling exclusively, in its pith and
sub stance, within any of the entries in List II
of the Seventh Schedule, would be within the
exclusive competence of the State Legislature.
(3) A Central law which in its pith and substance,
falls within any entry in List I would be valid
even though it might contain incidental provisions
in List II which may contain ancilliary provisions
which might touch on an entry of List I
incidentally.
(4) A State law, which in its pith and substance,
within any entry in List II would be valid even
though it might incidentally touch upon a subject
falling within List I.
(5) A Central law, which in its pith and substance,
dealt with a subject falling within List Il would
be bad and ultra vires the Constitution.
Similarly, a State law which in its pith and
substance dealt with a matter falling within List
I would be invalid and ultra vires the
Constitution.
(6) The concept of repugnancy arises only with regard
to laws dealing with subjects covered by the
entries falling in List III in respect of which
both parliament and State Legislature are
competent to legislate. Under Article 254 of the
Constitution, a State law passed in respect of a
subject matter comprised in List III would be
invalid if its provisions were repugnant to a law
passed on the same subject by Parliament. The
repugnancy arose only if both the laws could not
exist together. Repugnancy does not arise simply
because Parliament and the States pass’ law on the
same subject. There cannot be any
277
repugnancy in respect of State laws passed in
respect of matter falling pith and substance in
List II or in A respect of Central laws passed on
subject falling in List I. Parliament cannot
legislate on a State subject and Slate cannot
legislate on a Central subject. If either trenches
upon the field of the other, law will be ultra
vires. See in this connection M/s Hoechst
Pharmaceuticals Ltd. & Others Etc. v. State of
Bihar and Others (1) etc., Ramesh Chandra Etc. v.
State of U.P, Etc. (supra) at page 135 and The
Calcutta Gas Company (Proprietary) Ltd. v. The
State of West Bengal and Others.(a) Like entry 25
of List II-Gas and Gas Works-without any
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limitation of entry 28 in List II-in respect of
any legislation which is in substance and true
nature deals with ’markets and fairs’ read with
entry 66 of the said List has complete ascendency
and there cannot be any intrusion of that filed by
another entry-See in this connection the
discussion on "Union & State Relation under the
Indian Constitution"-M.C. Setalvad-p. 48, 49. In
Calcutta Gas Company’s case (supra) by comparison
of entry 7 and entry 52 of List I with entry 25 of
List Il, this Court upheld State legislation of
take over the Gas industry in spite of declaration
under entry 52.
In the present case the Karnataka Marketing Act deals
with the subject of market in entry 28 read with entry 66 of
List II. Such Acts are covered by entry 28 of List II
exclusively unlike entries 23,24,26 and 27. It is important
to bear in mind that entry 28 is not subject to withdrawal
into List I by Parliament as under entries 52 and 54 of List
I and entry 33 of List III. The State Act is not on a
subject in List III - nor is the Central Act a law relating
to any subject in List III. Therefore, there cannot be any
question of repugnancy. Section 31 of the Central Act makes
it clear that it does not derogate from any law but enacts
something in addition.
In the High Court, counter-affidavits were filed to
establish the quid-pro-quo and rendering of the services to
the traders including
(1) [1983] 4 S.C.C. 45.
(2) [1962] 3 Supp. S.C.R. 1.
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tobacco merchants by the respective six market committees.
In fact A before the High Court, no contention, as it
appears from the judgment impugned, was at all advanced on
the question of services to tobacco trade in the markets
concerned. In fact they are entitled to the same services as
other traders as provided by the Act. The provisions of the
Marketing Act and Tobacco Board Act and the Rules are not
inconsistent.
It is therefore necessary to note the true nature and
character of the Acts namely the Karnataka Agricultural
Produce Marketing Act, 1966 and the Central Act. The
Marketing Act is an Act as the preamble states, for the
better regulating of buying and selling of agricultural
produce and establishment and a administration of markets
for agricultural produce and whereas it was thought
expedient to provide for the better regulation of buying and
selling agriculture produce and establishment of markets for
agricultural produce and matters connected therewith that
the State Act was passed. I have noted some of the salient
features of the Act. The Act was to regulate the sale and
purchase of agricultural produce and ’tobacco’ was
introduced by Act 17 of 1980 as one of the agricultural
produces and thereby it was sought to be brought within its
purview. The Act constituted different market committees. It
laid down the functions, duties of the market committees and
matters incidental thereto. It imposed obligations to impose
fees for better maintenance of markets, in other words for
better administration of markets. The Central Act was an Act
to provide for the control of the union of tobacco industry.
How better to control the industry of tobacco was the object
of the Center11 Act. For this purpose I have noted the
salient features of the Act, the functions and duties of
Tobacco Board, the regulation of production and disposal of
virginia tobacco.
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Clause (cc) of sub-section (2) of section 8 of the
Central Act authorised the Board to establish auction)
platforms with the approval of the Central Government for
sale of tobacco and for the functioning of the Board as an
auctioneer and that the platforms established by or
registered with the Board subject to such conditions as may
be specified by the Central Government- Section 12 of the
Central Act provides that no person shall export tobacco or
any tobacco products or function as a packer, auctioneer of,
or dealer in, tobacco unless the registers himself with the
Board in accordance with the Rules made under the Act.
Section 13 of the Central Act states that no registered
grower or curer shall sell or cause to be sold virginia
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tobacco elsewhere than at an auction platform registered
with the Board in accordance with the rules made under this
Act or established by the Board under this Act. Section 31
of the Central Act specifically mentions that the same is in
addition to, and not in derogation of, the provisions of any
other law for the time being in force. Tobacco was brought
within the marketing Act in 1980 and section 13 of the
Tobacco Board Act, 1975 was made applicable in the State of
Karnataka only on 31st August, 1984 by the notification
referred to hereinbefore. Therefore essentially the Central
Act was for the development of the industry of tobacco and,
incidentally, certain provisions for better sale of tobacco
through certain auction platforms had been made. There is
nothing in the Act or in the Rules which indicate that it is
inconsistent with or cannot be operated along with the
marketing regulations. It is true that for this purpose
certain sanction under the Act is required.
Rule 35 of the Tobacco Board Rules provides for
registration as exporter, or packer Of auctioneer of or
dealer in tobacco and lays down certain provisions. By
virtue of section 12 of the Central Act, the market
committees cannot auction or deal with tobacco at all unless
they are registered with the Board in accordance with the
Act.
In a letter written on 15.9.1983 in respect of an
application made by the Marketing Committee, Honsur, State
of Karnataka, the Tobacco Board refused the-application on
certain grounds mentioned in that letter. That indicated
that it was thought that the Market committees should apply
to the Tobacco Board for registration, yet on 13th of
October, 1983, Tobacco Board applied to the Market committee
for the grant of licence to it. The position is not clear-
but it is fully manifest that both Acts can operate in their
respective fields and there is no repugnancy if both the
Acts are considered in the light of their respective true
nature and character. While giving due weight to Centre’s
supremacy in the matters of legislation, the States’
legitimate sphere of legislation should not be unnecessarily
whittled down-because that would be unwarranted by the
spirit and basic purpose of the constitutional division of
powers-not merely allocation of power by the Constitution
but invasion by Parliamentary legislations. If in spite of
declaration under entries 7 and 54 of List I in respect of
Gas, the State Legislature can still legislate for the
nationalisation of Gas industry as was held in Calcutta Co.
(Prop.) Ltd v. State of West Bengal (supra) because entry 25
of
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List II, it cannot be said that no legislation regulating
the market A can be done by the State of Karnataka in spite
of entry 28 read with entry 66 of List II because of
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declaration under entry 52 of List I in respect of tobacco
industry. That would be inconsistent and illogical See also
P.D. Shamdaswami v. Central Bank of India.(l)
While it is true that in the spheres very carefully
delineated the Parliament has supremacy over State
Legislatures, supremacy in the the sense that in those
fields, Parliamentary legislation would hold the field ands
not the State legislation-but to denude the State
Legislature of its power to legislate where the legislation
in question in pith and substance i.e. in its true nature
and character, belongs to the State field, one should be
chary to denude the State of its powers to legislate and
mobilise resources-because that would be destructive of the
spirit and purpose of India being a Union of States. States
must have power to raise and mobilise resources in their
exclusive fields. In the instant case by complying with the
State Act. the Central Act can function to serve the purpose
and object of the Central Act, but if only the Central Act
was to prevail, the State Act of marketing for coffee would
become non est-wholly unnecessary and undesirable result.
The Marketing Act is essentially an Act to regulate the
marketing of agricultural produce, control of coffee
industry would not be defeated if the marketing of coffee is
done within the provisions of the Marketing Act. It must
therefore be held that the State Act should prevail. One
should avoid corroding the State’s ambit of powers of
legislations which will ultimately lead to erosion of India
being a Union of States.
The contentions OD behalf of the appellants therefore,
on this point have to be rejected. As to who should obtain
licence or as to who would have to be registered, the Market
Committee or the Tobacco Board is a question which should be
settled by proper adjudication.
Some argument has been built upon the fact that though
more or less identical in nature, in respect of the Cardamom
Act, 1965, it was held that the State Legislature was not
competent to enact the Cardamom Act, 1965 in view of the
declaration under entry 52 of List I of the Seventh
Schedule. It was therefore suggested that it would not be
correct to take inconsistent views in respect of this Act
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 391 at 394.
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as against the Tobacco Board Act. As noticed before, the
contention of validity of the Cardamom Act on the ground of
entry 28 of A List II of the Seventh Schedule was not
canvassed. Furthermore, it was held that the rules under the
Cardamom Act which were framed were in variance with the
present Act. The Government had accepted the findings of the
High Court so far as Cardamom Act is concerned. Had it been
otherwise and had it been examined by this Court for the
reasons which are noted herein, what would have been the
result it is difficult to state. In any event, in this
background that cannot be any reason far less a compelling
reason to hold that Tobacco Board Act was within the
competence of the State Legislature for the reasons
indicated in this judgment. Therefore that cannot be any
argument for consideration at all.
In so far as the High Court directed the refund as
indicated before, the appeals by the Government are allowed
to that extent and the orders of the High Court are set
aside. The other appeals by the parties, are, for the
reasons mentioned hereinbefore, dismissed. Parties will bear
and pay their own costs throughout.
In view of the majority decision, all the civil
appeals, special leave petitions and writ petition except
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civil appeal No. 629 of 1983 (Karnataka Market Fee matters)
are dismissed without any order as to costs.
Civil appeal No.629 of 1983(I.T.C.) however is allowed
and the judgment of the High Court is set aside. There will,
however be no order as to costs in this case and any fee
realised will not be refunded.
M.L.A. Appeals and Petitions dismissed.
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