Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JAORA SUGAR MILLS (P) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/04/1965
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 416 1966 SCR (1) 573
CITATOR INFO :
R 1966 SC 764 (29)
RF 1972 SC2455 (14)
E 1975 SC1389 (11,13,15,17)
D 1976 SC 182 (24)
R 1979 SC 537 (6)
F 1979 SC1972 (5,6)
R 1982 SC1012 (2,4)
ACT:
The Sugar Cane Cess (Validation) Act, 1961 (Central Act 38
of 1961), s. 3-State Acts levying Sugar-cane Cess found to
be ultra vires--Central Act adopting provisions of State
Acts and validating assessments and collections made
thereunder--Central Act, whether valid.
HEADNOTE:
Under the Madhya Pradesh Sugarcane (Regulation of Supply and
Purchase) Act 1958 (1 of 1959) a cess was levied on
sugarcane and for this purpose a sugarcane factory was
treated as a ’local area’.In the Diamond’ Sugar Mills case
it was held by this Court that such a levy was not valid.
Following this decision the Madhya Pradesh High Court struck
down s. 23, which was the charging section of the aforesaid
Madhya Pradesh. Act No. 1 of 1959. There were Acts in
several other States which suffered from the same infirmity
and to meet the situation Parliament passed the Sugarcane
Cess (Validation Act 1961 (38 of 1961). The Act made valid,
by s. 3, all the assessments and collections made before its
commencement under the various State Arts and laid down that
all the provisions. of the State Acts as well as the
relevant notifications, rules etc. made under the State Acts
would be treated as part of s. 3; further. the said section
was to be deemed to have existed at all material times when
the cess was imposed, assessed and collected under the State
Acts. The, appellant, a sugar factory, was asked to pay the
cess for the years 1959-60 and 1960-61. It however,
challenged the levy in a writ petition before the High
Court. The High Court having dismissed the petition, the.
appellant came to this Court with certificate.
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The contentions urged on behalf of the appellant were : (1)
What the validation of the Act had done was to attempt to
cure the legislative incompetence of the State Legislatures
by validating State Acts which were invalid on the ground of
absence of legislative competence in the respective State
Legislatures; (2) Parliament had passed the Act in question
not for the purpose of levying a cess of its own, but for
the purpose of enabling the respective states to retain the
amounts which they had illegally collected. The Act was
therefore a colourable piece of legislation; (3) The Act had
not been passed for the purposes of the Union of India and
the recoveries of cesses which were retrospectively
authorised by it were not likely to go into the Consolidated
Fund of India; (4) The sugarcane crushing season was between
October 1, and June 30th. ’Me Cane Development Council
which was constituted on August 26, 1960 was not in
existence throughout the period covered by the demand for
the year 1950-60. ’Me demand was a ’fee’ and it was illegal
to recover such a wee for a period during which the council
did not exist at all and could have rendered no service
-whatever.
HELD:(i) In view of the decision of this Court in
Diamond Sugar Mills it was obvious that the cess in question
was outside the legislative competence of the States. This
very conclusion led to the irresistible inference that
Parliament would have legislative competence to deal with
the subject-matter in question, having regard to Art. 248
read with Entry
524
97 in List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution.
Thus the legislative competence of Parliament to levy a cess
such as was imposed by s. 3 of the Sugarcane Cess
(Validation) Act 1961 (Central Act 38 of 1961) was not in
doubt.
Diamond Sugar Mills Ltd. & Anr. v. Slate of Uttar Pradesh &
Anr. [1961] 3 S.C.R. 243, referred to.
(ii)When an Act passed by a State Legislature is invalid on
the ground that the State Legislature did not have
legislative competence to deal with the topics covered by
it, then even Parliament cannot validate such an Act,
because the effect of such attempted validation, in
substance, would be to confer legislative competence on the
State legislature in regard to a field or topic which, by
the relevant provisions of the schedules to the
Constitution, is outside its jurisdiction. Where a topic is
not included within the relevant List dealing with the
legislative competence of the Slate Legislatures,
Parliament, by making a law cannot attempt to confer such
legislative competence on the State Legislatures. [531 G]
But s. 3 of the impugned Act does not purport to validate
the invalid State Statutes. What Parliament has done by
enacting the said section is not to validate the invalid
State- statutes, but to make a law concerning the cess
covered by the said Statutes and to provide that he said law
shall come into operation retrospectively. Parliament knew
that the relevant State Acts were invalid because the State
Legislatures were not competent to enact them. Parliament
also knew that it was fully competent to make an Act in
respect of the subject-matter covered by the said invalid
State Statutes. Parliament however decided that rather than
make elaborate and long provisions in respect of the
recovery of cess, it would be more convenient to make a
compendious provision such as is contained in s. 3. The
plain meaning of s. 3 is that the material and relevant
provisions of the State Act as well as the provisions of
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notifications, orders and rules issued or made thereunder
are included in s. 3 and shall be deemed to have been
included at all material times in it. In other words what
s. 3 provides is that by its order and force the respective
cesses will be deemed to have been recovered, because the
provisions in relation to the recovery of the said cesses
have been incorporated in the Act itself. The command under
which the cesses would be deemed to have been recovered
would, therefore, be the command of Parliament. [532 C-H]
(iii)Where a challenge to the validity of a legal
enactment is made on the ground that it is a colourable
piece of legislation, what has to be proved to the
satisfaction of the court is that though the Act ostensibly
is within the legislative competence of the legislature in
question, in substance and in reality it covers field which
is outside its legislative competence. In passing s. 3
however Parliament exercised its undoubted legislative
competence to provide for the recovery of the specific(]
cesses and commissions in the respective State areas from
the date and in the manner indicated by it. The Act could
not therefore be attacked on the ground of being a
colourable piece of legislation. [533 F-H]
K.C. Gajatpati Narayan Dea & Ors. v. State of Orissa,
[1954] S.C.R.1 relied on.
(iv)The validity of an Act must be judged in the light of
the legislative competence of the legislature which passes
the Act and may have to be examined in certain cases by
reference to the question as to Whether fundamental right of
citizens have been improperly contravened, or to other
considerations which may be relevant in that behalf. But
normally it would be inappropriate, indeed illegitimate, to
hold an enquiry into the manner in which the funds raised by
an Act would be dealt with when
525
the court is considering the question about the validity of
the Act itself. Therefore it was impermissible to contend
that the Act was invalid because the funds in question would
not go into the Consolidated Fund of India. [535 E-H]
(v)If collections are made under statutory provisions
which are invalid because they deal with a topic outside the
legislative competence of the State Legislature, Parliament
can in exercise of its undoubted legislative competence,
pass a law retrospectively validating the said collections
by converting their character from collections made tinder
the State Statutes to that of collections made under its own
statute operating retrospectively. To hold otherwise would
be to cut down the width and amplitude of the legislative
competence conferred on Parliament by Art. 248 read with
Entry 97 in List I of the Seventh Schedule. [536 C-E]
(vi)The functions of the Cane Development Council as
prescribed by s. 6 of the Madhya Pradesh Act show that the
Council is expected to render service to the mills like the
appellant and so it can be safely assumed that the
commission which was authorised to be recovered under s. 21
of the Madha Pradesh Act is a ’fee’. The imposition of a
fee is generally supported on the basis of quid pro quo.
The Council was however constituted for the first time on
August 26, 1960. In other words the Council was not in
existence throughout the periods covered by the demand
relating to the year 1959-60. It did not render any service
at all during the said period. On the special facts of the
case no amount could therefore be validly claimed by way of
commission for the year 1959-60. [537 A-B; 538 C-D]
H. H. Sudhindra Thirtha Swamiar v. Commissioner of Hindu
Religious and Chtartible Endowments, Mysore, [1963] Supp. 2
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S.C.R., referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 531 of 1964.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated September 24, 1963
of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc. Petition No. 130
of 1962.
G. S. Pathok, Rameshwar Nath, S. N. Andley, P. L. Vohra,
for the appellant.
M. Adhikari, Advocate-Gencral for the State of Madhya
Pradesh and 1. N. Shroff, for the respondents.
G.S. Pathak, B. Dutta, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur
and Ravinder Narain, for interveners Nos. 1 and 2.
V. M. Lmaye and S. S. Shukla, for intervener No. 3.
G. S. Pathak, B. Dutta, S. N. Vakil, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C.
Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for intervener No. 4.
C. B. Agarwala and O. P. Rana, for intervener No. 5.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Gajendragadker, C.J. The principal question of law which
arises in this appeal is in regard to the validity of the
Central Act-
526
the Sugarcane Cess (Validation) Act, 1961 (No. 38 of 1961)
(hereinafter called ’the Act’). It arises in this way. The
appellant, Jaora Sugar Mills (Pvt.) Ltd., is a Private
Limited liability Company incorporated under the Indian
Companies Act. Its registered office is it Jaora within the
premises of the Sugar Mills owned by it. The appellant
manufactures sugar and carries on the business, inter alia,
of the production and sale of the said commodity since 1955
when it was incorporated. The sugarcane season for the
manufacture of sugar generally covers the period December to
March, and the sugarcane crushing season usually begins on
the 1st of October and ends on the 30th June.
Respondent No. 1, the State of Madhya Pradesh, enacted the
Madhya Pradesh Sugarcane (Regulation of Supply and Purchase)
Act, 195 8 (No. 1 of 1959) (hereinafter called ’the Madhya
Pradesh Act’). Section 23 of the said Act made a sugarcane
cess payable as prescribed by it. Rules 60 to 63 of the
Madhya Pradesh Sugarcane (Regulation of Supply & Purchase)
Rules, 1959, made under the said Act, provide for the method
of collection of cess. Section 21 of the said Act
prescribes for the payment of commission to the Cane
Development Council which was proposed to be constituted
under s. 5. Rules 45 to 47 prescribe the quantum of
commission payable to the said Council and refer to the
manner in which the said payment has to be made.
The validity of S. 23 of the Madhya Pradesh Act was
challenged before the Madhya Pradesh High Court under
Article 226 of the Constitution in The Bhopal Sugar
Industries v. State of Madhya Pradesh (Misc. Petition No.
27 of 1961). Before the writ petition challenging the
validity of the said Act came to be heard before the said
High Court, a similar provision in the U.P. Sugarcane Cess
Act, 1956 (U.P. Act XXII of 1956) had already been struck
down by this Court as unconstitutional in Diamond Sugar
Mills Ltd. & Anr. v. The State of Uttar Pradesh and Anr.(1).
The common feature of the charging sections in both the
Madhya Pradesh and the U.P. Acts was that they authorised
the respective State Governments to impose a cess on the
entry of cane into the premises of a factory for use.
consumption or sale therein. It was urged before this Court
in the case of Diamond Sugar Mills Ltd.(1) that the premises
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of a factory was not a ’local area’ within the meaning of
Entry 52 in List II of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution, and so. the Act passed by the U.P. Legislature
was beyond its competence. This argument was upheld. "We
are of opinion", observed Das Gupta J., who spoke for the
majority of the Court, "that the
(1) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 242 at p. 256.
527
proper meaning to be attached to the words "local area" in
Entry 52 of the Constitution (when the area is a part of the
State imposing the law) is an area administered by a local
body like a municipality, a district board, a local board, a
union board, a Panchayat or the like. The premises of a
factory is, therefore, not a "local area." Following this
decision the Madhya Pradesh High Court struck down S. 23 of
the impugned Madhya Pradesh Act in the Bhopal Sugar
Industries, and allowed the writ petition to that extent.
This decision was pronounced on August 31, 1961.
The validity of S. 21 of the Madhya Pradesh Act prescribing
the payment of commission to the Cane Development Council,
was also challenged before the Madhya Pradesh High Court by
the Bhopal Sugar Industries Ltd. by another writ petition
(Misc. Petition No. 340 of 1961). The said High Court held
that the: commission directed to be paid by the impugned
section was a "fee" and the delegation to the State
Government to implement the said provision by prescribing
Rules thereunder amounted to valid delegation and as such,
the impugned section was not open to any effective
challenge. In the result, S. 21 was upheld. This decision
was pronounced on January 30, 1962.
It appears that as a result of the decision of this Court in
the case of Diamond Sugar Mills(1), the U.P. Sugarcane Cess
(Validation) Act, 1961 was passed by the Central Legislature
on March 21, 1961 (No. IV of 1961), and it received the
assent of the President the same day. It may be mentioned
that the decision of this Court in the case of Diamond Sugar
Mills(2) was pronounced on December 13, 1960, and Parliament
thought that it was necessary to validate the imposition and
collection of cesses made under the said Act and so, the
U.P. Sugarcane Cess (Validation) Act, 1961 was passed.
Parliament, however, realized that there were several other
State Acts which suffered from the same infirmity, and so,
on September 11, 1961, the Act with which we are concerned
in the present proceedings, was passed. It has also
received the assent of the President the same day. This Act
purports to validate the imposition and collection of ceases
on sugarcane under ten different Acts passed by the
Legislatures of seven different States. Section 3 of the
Act is the main validating section. Section 5 purported to
amend the, specified provisions in the U.P. Sugarcane Cess
(Validation) Act, 1961. The said section was brought into
force at once, and the remaining provisions of the Act were
to.
(1) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 242.
528
come into force in the respective States as from the dates
which may be specified in that behalf by a notification
issued by the Central Government and published in the
Official Gazette. The relevant date, so far as the
respondent State is concerned, is December 26, 1961..
On March 17, 1962, respondent No. 2, the- Collector of
District Ratlam, issued a notice to the appellant demanding
payment of sugarcane cess at the rate prescribed by the
respondent State under the relevant Rules. The said notice
also demanded payment of cane commission for the years 1959-
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60 and 1960-61, as prescribed by the relevant Rules.
The appellant challenged the validity of these demands and
addressed respondent No. 2 in that behalf. It alleged that
both the demands were invalid, because the Act under the
authority of which they purported to have been made, was
itself ultra vires and unconstitutional. In respect of the
demand for cane commission for the year 1959-60, the
appellant fired an additional (,round that the Cane
Development Council itself had come into existence on August
26, 1960, and so, it was not permissible for respondent No.
2 to make a demand for commission in respect of the year
1959-60. It was also alleged that the demand for cane
commission at the flat rate of 3 nP, per maund was not
related to the services proposed to be rendered by the said
Council and as such, was invalid.
These pleas were resisted by the respondents. It was urged
on their behalf that the impugned Act was valid, and that
the demands made by respondent No. 2 for the recovery of the
cess and the commission were fully justified. On these the
Madhya Pradesh High Court considered the, two broad issues
which arose before it. It has held that the provisions of
the impugned Act are constitutionally valid, and that the
demand for cess made by respondent No. 2 could not be
effectively challenged. In regard to the demand for cane
commission, the High Court was not impressed by the plea
made by the appellant, particularly in relation to the
sugarcane season of 1959-60 and it hold that even though the
Council may not have come into existence, a demand could be
made with a view to provide for the constitution of the said
Council and thus enable it to afford service and assistance
to the mills like the appellant. That is why the High Court
rejected the, appellant’s contentions in that behalf and
dismissed its writ petition. This judgment was pronounced
on September 24, 1963.
The appellant then applied for and obtained a certificate
from the High Court and it is with the said certificate that
it has come
529
to this Court by appeal. That is how the principal question
which arises for our decision is whether the High Court was
right in holding that the Act is constitutionally valid. A
subsidiary question also falls to be decided and that has
relation to the demand for commission for the year 1959-60.
The Constitutional position with regard to the legislative
competence of the State Legislatures on the one hand, and
the Central Legislature on the other in respect of the cess
in question is not in doubt. We have already referred to
the decision of this Court in Diamond Sugar Mills(1), and in
view of the said decision, it is obvious that the cess in
question was outside the legislative competence of the
States. This very conclusion leads to the irresistible
inference that Parliament would have legislative competence
to deal with the subject-matter in question having regard to
Art. 248 read with Entry 97 in List I of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution. Article 245(1) provides,
inter alia, that subject to the provisions of this
Constitution, Parliament may make laws for the whole or any
part of the territory of India; and the relevant Entry
relates to any other matter not enumerated in List 11 or
List III including any tax not mentioned in either of those
Lists. Article
248 provides :
"(1) Parliament has exclusive power to make
any law with respect to any matter not
enumerated in the Concurrent List or State
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List.
(2) Such power shall include the power of
making any law imposing a tax not mentioned in
either of those Lists."
It is not disputed that if Parliament intended to make a law
in regard to the levy of a cess such as has been prescribed
by s. 3 of the Act, its legislative competence is not open
to doubt. Mr. Pathak for the appellant, however, contends
that what the Act purports to do, and in fact and in
substance has done, is to validate the invalid State
Statutes: the Act, in other words, does not represent
provisions enacted by Parliament as such, but it represents
an attempt made by Parliament to validate laws which are
invalid on the ground that the State Legislatures which
enacted the said laws, had no legislative competence to do
so. That is the main ground on which the validity of the
Act has been challenged before us. This ground has, no
doubt, been placed before us in two or three different
forms.
(1) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 242.
530
Before dealing with these contentions, it is necessary to
refer to the provisions of the Act. The Act purports to
have been passed to validate the imposition and collection
of cesses on sugarcane under certain State Acts and to amend
the U.P. Sugarcane cess (Validation) Act, 1961. Section 5
which has achieved this latter purpose has already been
mentioned. With the said section we are not concerned in
the present appeal. Section 1(2) provides for the date from
which the provisions of the Act shall come into force in
different States; and as we have already noticed, the
relevant dates for the respective States would be the dates
which would be the notification issued by the Central
Government and published in the Official Gazette. Section 2
is a definition section; S. 2(a) defines "cess" as meaning
the cess payable under any State Act and includes any sum
recoverable under any such Act by way of interest or
penalty. Section 2(b) defines a "State Act" as meaning any
of the ten Acts specified by it which were in force in the
seven respective States from time to time, by way of
amendment or adaptation. Then the ten State Acts are
enumerated under this sub-section. Section 3 is the
validating section, and it is necessary to read it. Its
heading is validation of imposition and collection of cesses
under State Acts. It reads thus :-
"3. (1) Notwithstanding any judgment, decree
or order of any Court, all cesses imposed,
assessed or collected or purporting to have
been imposed, assessed or collected under any
State Act before the commencement of this Act
shall be deemed to have been validly imposed,
assessed or collected in accordance with law,
as if the provisions of the State Acts and of
all notifications, orders and rules issued or
made thereunder, in so far as such provisions
relate to the imposition, assessment and
collection of such cess had been included in
and formed part of this section and this
section had been in force at all material
times when such cess was imposed, assessed or
collected; and accordingly,-
(a)no suit or other proceeding shall be
maintained or continued in any Court for the
refund of any cess paid under any State Act;
(b) no Court shall enforce a decree or order
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directing the refund of any cess paid under
any State Act; and
(c) any cess imposed or assessed under any
State Act before the commencement of this Act
but not collected before such commencement may
be recovered (after)
531
assessment of the cess, where necessary) in
the manner provided under that Act.
(2) For the removal of doubts it is hereby
declared that nothing in sub-section (1 )
shall be construed as preventing any person-
(a) from questioning in accordance with the
provisions of any State Act and rules made
thereunder the assessment of any cess for any
period; or
(b) from claiming refund of any cess paid by
him in excess of the amount due from him under
any State Act and the rules made thereunder."
Section 4 provides that nothing in this Act shall be
construed as validating section 1 1 of the Bombay Sugarcane
Cess Act, 1948 (Bombay Act No. 82 of 1948) and accordingly
the said section shall be omitted. Section 5 refers to the
amendment of U.P. Sugarcane Cess (Validation) Act, 1961.
That, in brief, is the position with regard to the
provisions of the Act.
Mr. Pathak contends that what the Act has done is to attempt
to cure the legislative incompetence of the State
Legislatures by validating Acts which were invalid on the
ground of absence of legislative competence in the
respective State Legislatures. His case is that if an Act
is invalid not because the Legislature enacting the impugned
Act has no legislative competence, but because some of its
provisions contravene the fundamental rights of citizens
unjustifiably, it is possible to validate the said Act by
removing the invalid provisions from its scope. Similarly,
if an Act passed by the State Legislature is substantially
valid, but is invalid in regard to a portion which
trespasses in a field not within the legislative competence
of the State Legislature, it would be possible to validate
the Act by removing the invalid portion from its scope. In
fact. if the invalid provision is severable from the rest of
the Act, courts dealing with the question of its validity
may strike down the invalid portion alone and uphold the
validity of the remaining part of the Statute. But where an
impugned Act passed by a State Legislature is invalid on the
ground that the State Legislature did not have legislative
competence to deal with the topic covered by it, then even
Parliament cannot validate such an Act, because the effect
of such attempted validation, in substance, would be to
confer legislative competence on the State Legislature in
regard to a field or topic which, by the relevant provisions
of the Schedules in the Constitution, is outside its
jurisdiction. This position is not and cannot be disputed.
If it is shown that the impugned
532
Act purports to do nothing more than validate the invalid
State Statutes, then of course, such a validating Act would
be outside the legislative competence of Parliament itself.
Where a topic is not included within the relevant List
dealing with the legislative competence of the State
Legislatures, Parliament, by making a law, cannot attempt to
confer such legislative competence on the State
Legislatures.
The difficulty in accepting Mr. Pathak’s argument, however,
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arises from the fact that the assumption on which the whole
argument is founded, is not justified on a fair and
reasonable construction of s. 3.Section 3 does not
purport to validate the invalid State Statutes. What
Parliament has done by enacting the said section is notto
validate the invalid State Statutes, but to make a law
concerningthe cess covered by the said Statutes and to
provide that the said law shall come into operation
retrospectively. There is a radical difference between the
two positions. Where the Legislature wants to validate an
earner Act which has been declared to be invalid for one
reason or another, it proceeds to remove the infirmity from
the said Act and validates its provisions which are free
from any infirmity. That is not what Parliament has done in
enacting the present Act. Parliament knew that the relevant
State Acts were invalid, because the State Legislatures did
not possess legislative competence to enact them.
Parliament also knew that it was fully competent to make an
Act in respect of the subject-matter covered by the said
invalid State Statutes. Parliament, however, decided that
rather than make elaborate and long provisions in respect of
the recovery of cess, it would be more convenient to make a
compendious provision such as is contained in S. 3. The
plain meaning of s. 3 is that the material and relevant
provisions of the State Acts as well as the provisions of
notifications, orders and rules issued or made thereunder
are included in s. 3 and shall be deemed to have been
included at all material times in it. In other words, what
s. 3 provides is that by its order and force, the respective
cesses will be deemed to have been recovered, because the
provisions in relation to the recovery of the said cesses
have been incorporated in the Act itself. The command under
which the cesses would be deemed to have been recovered
would, therefore, be the command of Parliament, because all
the relevant sections, notifications, orders, and rules have
been adopted by the Parliamentary Statute itself. We are,
therefore, satisfied that the sole basis on which Mr.
Pathak’s argument rests is invalid, because the said basis
is inconsistent with the plain and clear meaning of s. 3. As
we have already indicated, Mr. Pathak does not dispute-and
rightly that it is competent to Parliament
533
to make a law in respect of the cesses in question, to apply
the provisions of such a law to the different States, and to
make them retrospective in operation. His whole contention
is based on what he records to be the true scope and effect
of s. 3. If the construction which he places on s. 3 is
rejected, the argument about the invalidity of the Act must
likewise be rejected.
The same contention has been placed before us by Mr. Pathak
in another form. He suggests that the Act in question is a
colourable piece of legislation. His case is that when
Parliament realised that as a result of the invalidity of
different State Statutes the respective States were faced
with the problem of refunding very large amounts to the
persons from whom the cesses were recovered, it has passed
the present Act not for the purpose of levying a cess of its
own, but for the purpose of enabling the respective States
to retain the amounts which they have illegally collected.
This aspect of the matter, says Mr. Pathak makes the Act a
colourable piece of legislation. We are not impressed by
this argument.
The challenge to the validity of a Statute on the ground
that it is a colourable piece of legislation is often made
under a disconnection as to what colourable legislation
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really means. As observed by Mukherjea J., in K. C.
Gajapati Narayan Deo and Others v. The State of Orissa(1)
"the idea conveyed by the expression ’colourable legislation
is that although apparently a Legislature in passing a
statute purported to act within the limits of its powers,
yet in substance and in reality it transgressed these
powers, the transgression being veiled by what appears, on
proper examination, to be a mere presence or disguise." This
observation Succinctly and effectively brings out the true
character of the contention that any legislation is
colourable legislation. Where a challenge is made on this
-round, what has to be proved to the satisfaction of the
Court is that though the Act ostensibly is within the
legislative competence of the Legislature in question, in
substance and in reality it covers a field which is outside
its legislative competence. It would be noticed that as
soon as this aspect of the matter is borne in mind, the
argument that the Act is a colourable piece of legislation
takes us back again to the true scope and effect of the
provisions of S. 3. If the true scope and effect of s. 3 is
as Mr. Pathak assumes it to be, then, of course, the Act
would be void on the -round that it is a colourable piece of
legislation. But if the true scope and effect of s. 3 is as
we have already held it to be, then in passing the Act,
Parliament has
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 1 at p. II.
534
exercised its undoubted legislative competence to provide
for the recovery of the specified cesses and commissions in
the respective State areas from the dates and in the manner
indicated by it. When demands were made for the recovery of
the said cesses, they will be deemed to have been made not
in pursuance of the State Acts but in pursuance of the
provisions of the Act itself. Therefore, we do not think
there is any substance in the argument that the Act is
invalid on the ground that it is a colourable piece of
legislation.
Mr. Pathak has raised another contention against the
validity of the Act. He argues that the Act has not been
passed for the purposes of the Union of India, and the
recoveries of cesses which are retrospectively authorised by
it are not likely to go in the Consolidated Fund of India.
He contends that the recoveries have already been made by
the respective States and they have gone into their
respective Consolidated Funds. In support of this argument,
Mr. Pathak has referred to the general scheme of the
devolution of revenues between the Union and the States
which is provided for by the relevant Articles contained in
Part XII of the Constitution and he has relied more
particularly on the provisions of Act. 266. Article 266, no
doubt, provides for two different Consolidated Funds and
Public Accounts, one in relation to India and the other in
relation to the respective States. it
reads thus:-
"266. (1) Subject to the provisions of article
267 and to the provisions of this Chapter with
respect to the assignment of the whole or part
of the net proceeds of ,certain taxes and
duties to States, all revenues received by the
Government of India, all loans raised by that
Government by the issue of treasury bills,
loans or ways and means advances and all
moneys received by that Government in
repayment of loans shall form one consolidated
fund to be entitled "the Consolidated Fund of
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India", and all revenues received by the
Government of a State, all loans raised by
that Government by the issue of treasury
bills, loans or ways and means advances and
all moneys received by that government in
repayment of loans shall form one consolidated
fund to be entitled "the Consolidated Fund of
the State".
(2)All other public moneys received by or on
behalf of the Government of India or the
Government ,of a State shall be credited to
the public account of
535
India or the public account of the State, as
the case may be.
(3)No moneys out of the Consolidated Fund of
India or the Consolidated Fund of a State
shall be appropriated except in accordance
with law and for the purposes and in the
manner provided in this Constitution".
It will be noticed that the contention raised by Mr. Pathak
on the basis of Art. 266 makes an assumption and that is
that the cesses already recovered by the different States
will not be transferred to the Consolidated Fund of India,
but will remain with the respective States; and that such a
position would invalidate the law itself. We are not
prepared to accept this argument as well. What happens to
the cesses already recovered by the respective States under
their invalid laws after the enactment of the impugned Act,
is a matter with which we are not concerned in the present
proceedings. It is doubtful whether a plea can be raised by
a citizen in support of his case that the Central Act is
invalid because the moneys raised by it are not dealt with
in accordance with the provisions of Part XII generally or
particularly the provisions of Art. 266. We will, however,
assume that such a plea can be raised by a citizen for the
purpose of this appeal. Even so. it is difficult to
understand how the Act can be said to be invalid because the
cesses recovered under it are not dealt with in the manner
provided by the Constitution. The validity of the Act must
be judged in the light of the legislative competence of the
Legislature which passes the Act and may have to be examined
in certain cases by reference to the question as to whether
fundamental rights of citizens have been improperly
contravened, or other considerations which may be relevant
in that behalf. Normally. it would be inappropriate and
indeed illegitimate to hold an enquiry into the manner in
which the funds raised by an Act would be dealt with when
the Court is considering the question about the validity of
the Act itself. As we have just indicated, if the taxes of
cesses recovered under an Act are not dealt with in the
manner prescribed by the Constitution, what remedy a citizen
may have and how it can be enforced, are questions on which
we express no opinion in this appeal. All we are consider-
ing at this stage is whether even on the assumption made by
Mr. Pathak, it would be permissible for him to contend that
the Act which is otherwise valid, is rendered invalid
because the funds in question will not go into the
Consolidated Fund of India.
L7Sup.165-6
536
In truth, this argument again proceeds on the basis that
Parliament has passed the Act not for the purpose of
treating the recoveries made as those under its provisions
retrospectively enacted, but for the purpose of validating
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the said recoveries as made under the invalid State Acts;
and we have already pointed out that s. 3 completely
negatives such an assumption. Therefore, we do not think
that Mr. Pathak is right in contending that the provisions
of the Act are invalid in any manner.
It would thus be seen that though Mr. Pathak presented his
argument in three different forms, in substance his
grievance is very simple. He says that s. 3 of the Act does
not purport to act prospectively; it acts merely
retrospectively and its effect is just to validate
collections illegally made in pursuance of invalid statutory
provisions enacted by State Legislatures. So. the crucial
question is: if collections are made under statutory
provisions which are invalid because they deal with a topic
outside the legislative competence of the State
Legislatures, can Parliament, in exercise of its undoubted
legislative competence, pass a law retrospectively
validating the said collections by covering their character
from collections made under the State Statutes to that of
the collections made under its own Statute operating retros-
pectively ? In our opinion, the answer to this question has
to be in the affirmative, because to hold otherwise would be
to cut down the width and amplitude of the legislative
competence conferred on Parliament by Art. 248 read with
Entry 97 in List I of the Seventh Schedule. Whether or not
retrospective operation of such a law is reasonable, may
fall to be considered in certain cases; but that
consideration has not been raised before us and in the
circumstances of this case, it cannot validly be raised
either. We must, therefore, hold that the High Court was
right in rejecting the appellant’s case that the Act was
invalid, and hence no demands could be made under its
provisions either for a cess or for commission.
There is, however, one subsidiary question which still
remains to be considered and that has relation to the demand
for cess commission for the year 1959-60. The appellant’s
case is that this demand is invalid. The material facts in
relation to this point are not in dispute. We have already
noticed that the sugarcane crushing season is usually
between 1st October and the 30th June, and that the Cane
Development Council was constituted for the first time on
August 26, 1960. In other words, the Council was not in
existence throughout the period covered by the demand in
question which relates to the year 1959-60. Section 21 of
the
537
Madhya Pradesh Act provides for the payment of commission on
purchase of cane; and Rules 45 to 47 prescribe the manner in
which the said payment has to be made. It is true that the
functions of the Cane Development Council as prescribed by
S. 6 of the said Act show that the Council is expected to
render service to the mills like the appellant; and so, it
can be safely assumed that the commission in question which
was authorised to be recovered under s. 21 of the Madhya
Pradesh Act initially, and which will now be taken to have
been recovered under s. 3 of the Act is a "fee". Mr. Pathak
contends that it is plainly illegal to recover such a fee
for a period during which the council did not exist at all
and could have rendered no service whatever. It is well
settled that the imposition of a fee is generally supported
on the basis of quid pro quo, and so, it is urged that the
impugned recovery for the year 1959-60 is plainly without
any quid pro quo and as such, cannot be enforced. The High
Court did not accept this argument, because it held that the
doctrine of quid pro quo did not require that actual service
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must be rendered first before a fee can be levied or
demanded. In support of this view, the High Court has
relied upon certain observations made by this Court in H. H.
Sudhindra Thirtha Swamiar v. Commissioner for Hindu
Religious and Charitable Endowments, Mysore(1), While
rejecting the contention which was raised before this Court
in that case that the levy prescribed by S. 76(1) of the
Madras Religious Endowments Act, 1951 (No. XIX of 1951) was
invalid, Shah, J., who spoke for the Court observed: "A levy
in the nature of a fee does not cease to be of that
character merely because there is an element of compulsion
or coerciveness present in it, nor is it a postulate of a
fee that it must have direct relation to the actual services
rendered by the authority to individual who obtains the
benefit of the service. If with a view to provide a
specific service, levy is imposed by law and expenses for
maintaining the service are met out of the amounts
collected, there being a reasonable relation between the
levy and the expenses incurred for rendering the service,
the levy would be in the nature of a fee and not in the
nature of a tax". The High Court thought that these
observations justified the view that a fee could be validly
recovered from the appellant by way of commission to be paid
to the Cane Development Council, even though the Council may
not have come into existence during the whole of the period
in question. In our opinion, the High Court has ignored the
context in which the Said observations were made has
misjudged their effect. It is not necessary for us decide
(1) [1963] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 323.
538
whether the service must be rendered for the whole of the
period covered by the fee, or whether it is necessary that
the service must be rendered first and the fee can be
recovered thereafter. These fine and academic questions are
not relevant in the present case, because it is not even
suggested that during the whole of the period any service
whatever was rendered by the Council at all. In this
connection, it is necessary to bear in mind the fact that s.
23(1) of the Madhya Pradesh Act required, inter alia, that
the commission had to be paid to the Council at the rate and
in the proportion prescribed by it. Other statutory
provisions including the Rules further provided that the
failure to pay the said commission on the occasion of the
purchase, would entail the liability to pay interest and
the, said commission along with the interest was made
recoverable as arrears of land revenue. Having regard to
these provisions, it seems to us very difficult to accept
the view that the commission which had to be paid to the
Council fell to be paid even though the Council was not in
existence at all throughout the sugar crushing season in
question. On the special facts of this case, therefore, we
are satisfied that no amount could be validly claimed by way
of commission for the year 1959-60. The notice of demand
(Annexure D) which has been issued in that behalf shows that
the cane commission 3 NP per maund which has been demanded
from the appellant by respondent No. 2 for the years 1959-60
and 1960-61, amounts to Rs. 1,26,152/86 nP. It is common
ground that out of this amount, Rs. 54,037.57P represents
the commission for the year 1959-60. We must accordingly
hold that the demand made by respondent No. 2 for the
payment of cess commission for the year 1959-60 amounting to
Rs. 54,037.57P is invalid and the notice to that extent must
be cancelled.
In the result, the appeal substantially fails and the order
passed by the High Court is confirmed, subject to the
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modification in regard to the demand for the payment of cane
commission for the year 1959-60. There would be no order as
to costs.
Appeal dismissed and Order modified.
539