Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAZA BULAND SUGAR CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MUNICLPAL BOARD, RAMPUR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/10/1964
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 895 1965 SCR (1) 970
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1966 SC 693 (10)
R 1968 SC 90 (6)
D 1968 SC 98 (11)
R 1969 SC 244 (14)
RF 1970 SC 58 (5)
R 1973 SC1041 (13)
RF 1974 SC1185 (13)
D 1976 SC 714 (30,40,68)
R 1977 SC 536 (17)
RF 1977 SC1055 (5)
E 1978 SC 306 (14,15)
RF 1983 SC 558 (20,22)
F 1989 SC1160 (27)
ACT:
U.P. Municipalities Act, 1916, ss. 131(3), 94(3) and 135(3)-
Municipal Water Tax-Procedure for levy-Provisions in
relevant State for publication of tax proposals whether
directory for mandatory-Effect of publication of
notification imposing tax in Government Gazette.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company challenged the imposition of water-tax
by the Rampur Municipal Board in a petition under Art. 226
of the Constitution of India on the ground that the tax had
not been imposed according to law inasmuch as the proposals
and draft rules had been published by the Board in an Urdu
paper whereas according to the mandatory provisions of s.
131(3) read with s. 93(3) of the U.P. Municipalities Act,
1916, they should have been published,in a Hindi paper. The
High Court dismissed the petition but granted a certificate
under Art. 133(1)(c).
The questions for consideration were whether the whole of s.
131(3) was mandatory, or the part of it requiring
publication in the manner laid down in s. 94(3) i.e., in a
Hindi newspaper was merely directory; and whether the
publication in the Government Gazette of the notification
imposing the tax was not conclusive proof, as provided in s.
135(3), of the prescribed procedure having been observed.
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HELD: (Per GAJENDRAGADKAR" C. J., WANcHoo and RAGHUBAR
DAYAL JJ.)-(i) Section 131(3) can be divided into two parts-
the first one providing that the proposal and draft rules
for a tax intended to be imposed should be published for the
objections of the public, if any, and the second laying down
that the publication must be in the manner laid down in s.
94(3). Considering the object of the provisions for
publication-namely to enable the public to place its
viewpoint before the Board-it Is necessary to hold that the
first part of the section is mandatory, for to hold
otherwise would be to render the whole procedure prescribed
for the imposition of taxes nugatory. The second part of
the section is, however, merely directory. What it
substantially requires is that the publication should be in
Hindi in a local paper, and if that is done that would be
compliance with s. 94(3). In the instant case publication
was made in Hindi in a local paper which on the evidence
seems to have good circulation in Rampur. There is no
regularly published local Hindi newspaper. There was, in
the circumstances, substantial compliance with the
provisions of s. 94(3) in this case. [977 E-F; 978 D-F; 980
C; 981 A-B]
(ii) Section 135(3) provides that a notification of the
imposition of tax in the Government Gazette was conclusive
proof that the tax had been imposed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act. Whether such a notification will
save a tax which has been imposed without at all complying
with one of the mandatory provisions of the relevant law was
a question that did not directly arise in the case. In the
instant case there had been compliance with the mandatory
part of s. 131(3) and substantial compliance with the second
part. Therefore a. 135(3) applied to the case
971
and the objection that the tax was not validly imposed could
not succeed. [983 B-D; 983 D-E].
K. Kamaraja Nadar v. Kunju Thevar, [1959] S.C.R. 583, relied
on.
State of U.P. v. Manbodhan Lai Srivastva, [1958] S.C.R. 533
and
Berar Swadeshi Vanaspati v. Municipal Committee, Shegaon,
[1962] 1 S.C.R. 596, distinguished.
Montreal Street Railway Company v. Normandin, (1917) L.R.,
A.C. 170, Azimulla v. Suraj Kumar Singh, A.I.R. (1957) All.
307 and Municipal Board, Hapur v. Raghuvendra Kripal, 1960
A.L.I. 185, referred to.
Per HIDAYATULLAH J.-A Municipal Committee enjoys powers of
taxation not as a legislature but as a delegate of the
legislature. Taxes levied by it are in effect levied by the
Government. What the Municipality does in exercise of the
delegated power can be effective only if the conditions laid
down with the grant of the power are complied with and the
Government- finally approves the tax. Once the Government
after giving its approval has notified its imposition in the
Government Gazette the tax is deemed to be conclusively
imposed in accordance with the procedure laid down. [985 H
to 986 D]
Some conditions which are laid down are for the protection
of taxpayers and some others are for ministerial operations.
The first kind are fundamental and cannot be overlooked.
Conditions which promote dispatch or provide for ministerial
operation are directory and substantial compliance is
sufficient. [986 G]
The direction to publish the notice in a paper published in
Hindi regarded as sufficient compliance in the case. [987 C-
D]
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The Berar Swadeshi Vanaspati v. Municipal Committee,
Shegaon, [1962] 1 S.C.R. 596, relied on.
Per MUDHOLKAR J.-Where a verb used in a provision governs
two different matters it cannot be given one meaning insofar
as it relates to one matter and another meaning insofar as
it relates to another matter.[988 F]
Since s. 94(3) is clearly directory it is immaterial to
consider whether s. 131(3) is directory or mandatory or to
read it as partly one and partly the other and depart from
the normal rule of construction which discountenances
reading a word in a provision in two different senses. [988
G-H]
The essential requirement of s. 94(3) is publication in a
local newspaper. Where the requirement is satisfied, the
omission to obtain a direction from the State Government
permitting publication in a newspaper other then one in
Hindi language is not of much consequence. Upon this view
the question whether s. 131(3) is mandatory or whether s.
135(3) has become void by reason of Art. 13(1) of the
Constitution or whether it ran cure a defect resulting from
non-compliance with a mandatory provision does not at all
arise for consideration. [989 B-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 23 of 1964.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated May 12, 1961 of
the Allahabad High Court in Civil Misc. Writ No. 3588 of
1958.
M. C. Setalvad, K. C. Jain and B. P. Maheshwari, for the
appellant.
972
S. N. Andley, Rameshwar Nath and P. L. Vohra, for the res-
pondent.
The Judgment of P. B. GAJENDRAGADKAR, C.J., K. N.WANCHOO and
RAGHUBAR DAYAL JJ., was delivered by WANCHOO J. M.
HIDAYATULLAH and J. R. MUDHOLKAR JJ. delivered separate
Opinions.
Wanchoo J. This is an appeal on a certificate granted by the
Allahabad High Court. The appellant is a public limited
company and owns two sugar factories situate in the city of
Rampur. The factories comprise a number of buildings
including some for residential purposes also. The Municipal
Board of Rampur (hereinafter referred to as the respondent)
decided to impose water tax in Rampur as provided under S.
128(1) (x) of the U.P. Municipalities Act, No. 11 of 1916
(hereinafter referred to as the Act). The procedure for the
imposition of tax by the Municipal Board under the Act is
provided in ss. 131 to 135 of the Act Section 131 provides
that when a Board desires to impose a tax, it shall by
special resolution frame proposals specifying the tax, the
persons or class of persons to be made liable, and the des-
cription of property or other taxable thing or circumstance
in respect of which they are to be made liable, the amount
or rate leviable from each such person or class of persons,
and any other matter required by the Rules framed by the
State Government. The Board has also to prepare a draft of
the rules which it desires the State Government to make in
respect of the tax, namely, for assessment, collection,
exemption and other matters relating to tax, [s. 131(2)].
Section 131(3) which is important for our purposes reads
thus :
"The Board shall, thereupon publish in the
manner prescribed in section 94 the proposals
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framed under sub-section (1) and the draft
rules framed under subsection (2) along with a
notice in the form set forth in Schedule III."
Section 132 provides for procedure subsequent to framing
proposals and permits any inhabitant of the municipality
within a fortnight from the publication of the notice, to
submit to the Board an objection in writing to all or any of
the proposals. The Board has to take these, proposals into
consideration and pass orders thereon by special resolution
and if it thinks necessary it can modify the proposals. if
the proposals and the rules (if any) are modified, the
modified proposals and rules are again published. It is
open to any inhabitant of the municipality again to object
to the modified proposals, and if any such objection is
made, it
973
is dealt with in the same manner as objections to the
original proposals. When the proposals have been finally
settled, the Board has to submit them along with the
objections to the prescribed authority or the State
Government, as the case may be, under s. 133 of the Act.
The prescribed authority or the State Government has the
power thereunder to sanction the proposals or to return them
to the Board for further consideration or sanction them
without modification or with such modification not involving
an increase of the amount to be imposed as it deems fit.
Section 134 provides that when the proposals have been
sanctioned, the State Government has to take into
consideration the draft rules submitted by the Board and
make such rules under s. 296 of the Act as it thinks fit.
When the rules have been made the order of sanction and a
copy of the rules has to be sent to the Board, which
thereupon by special resolution has to direct the imposition
of the tax with effect from the date to be specified in the
resolution. Section 135 then provides that a copy of the
above resolution has to be submitted to the State Government
or the prescribed authority, as the case may be. Upon
receipt of such copy, the, State Government or the
prescribed authority, as the case may be, has to notify in
the official gazette the imposition of the tax from the
appointed day and the imposition of the tax is in all cases
subject to the condition that it has been so notified under
s. 135 (2). Then comes s. 135 (3), which reads as follows
"A notification of the imposition of a tax
under subsection (2) shall be conclusive proof
that the tax has been imposed in accordance
with the provisions of this Act."
Section 94 (3) which provides for the manner
of publication reads thus :-
"Every resolution passed by a Board at a
meeting shall, as soon thereafter as may be,
be published in a local paper published in
Hindi and where there is no such local paper,
in such manner as the State Government may, by
general or special order, direct."
According to the respondent, it followed the procedure pro-
vided under the Act for the imposition of the tax and after
following the procedure the tax came to be imposed from
April 1, 1957 at the rate of 10 per centum of the annual
value of lands and buildings. After the tax was thus
imposed, the respondent sent notices of demand to the
appellant requiring it to pay water tax for the years 1957-
58 and 1958-59. This was done on
974
October 7, 1958. It may be added that under s. 129 of the
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Act there are certain restrictions subject to which water
tax can be imposed and one of the restrictions is that the
tax shall not be imposed, where the unit of assessment is a
plot of land or a building, on any such plot or building of
which no part is within a radius to be fixed by rule in this
behalf for each municipality from the nearest standing or
other waterwork whereat water is made available to the
public by the Board. In the present case this limit has
been fixed by the rules at 600 feet.
The appellant objected to the payment of water tax demanded
from it, and one of its objections was that it was exempt
under S. 129 (a), as there was no standpipe or other
waterwork whereat water was made available to the public by
the respondent within 600 feet of the buildings of the
factory, the Central Office or the Govan Colony, except that
some buildings outside the main Raza Sugar Factory were
within 600 feet.
The respondent however rejected the objections, and
threatened to recover the amount by coercive process. The
appellant then filed a writ petition before the High Court
in December 1958 and a large number of grounds were taken in
the writ petition in support of its case that it was not
liable to pay water tax, including certain constitutional
objections to the vires of the Act itself. The appellant
failed in the High Court on all points and ’has come up in
appeal before us on a certificate granted by the High Court.
In the present appeal however only two points have been
urged before us on behalf of the appellant. We are
therefore not ;concerned with the other points raised in the
High Court and shall confine ourselves to the two points
urged before us, namely-
(1) There was no publication as provided by s. 131(3) read
with s. 94(3) of the Act, and as the provision of s. 131(3)
is mandatory and was not complied with, all subsequent
action taken for the imposition of the tax was bad for non-
compliance with a mandatory provision and therefore the tax
itself was not levied according to law and could not be
realised; and
(2) the tax could not be levied on most of the premises
belonging to the appellant as there was no standpipe or
other waterwork whereat water was made available to the
public by the respondent within 600 feet of all of the
buildings of the appellant.
975
We shall first consider the ground as to publication and
three questions fall to be decided in that behalf : (first),
is publication as provided in s. 131 (3) mandatory or
directory, for it is contended on behalf of the respondent
that publication under s. 131(3) is merely directory;
(secondly), was the publication in this case strictly in
accordance with the manner provided in s. 94(3); and
(thirdly), if the publication was not strictly in accordance
with the manner provided in s. 94(3), is the defect curable
under s. 135(3)?
The question whether a particular provision of a statute
which on the face of it appears mandatory, inasmuch as it
uses the word "shall"as in the present case-is merely
directory cannot be resolved by laying down any general rule
and depends upon the facts of each case and for that purpose
the object of the statute in making the provision is the
determining factor. The purpose for which the provision has
been made and its nature, the intention of the legislature
in making the provision, the serious general inconvenience
or injustice to persons resulting from whether the;
provision is read one way or the other, the relation of the
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particular provision to other provisions dealing with the
same subject and other considerations which may arise on the
facts of a particular case including the language of the
provision, have all to be taken into account in arriving at
the conclusion whether a particular provision is mandatory
or directory.
The respondent strongly relies on the State of U.P. v. Man-
bodhan Lal Srivastava(1), where Art. 320(3) (c) of the
Constitution was held to be directory and not mandatory, and
contends that the principle of that case applies with full
force to the facts of the present case. If is therefore
necessary to consider that case before we consider the facts
of the present case in the light of the circumstances to
which we have referred above and which are helpful in
determining whether a particular provision is mandatory or
directory. Article 320(3) (c) provides for consultation
with the Public Service Commission on all disciplinary
matters affecting a person serving under the Government of
India or the Government of a State in a civil capacity, and
the language of the Article is mandatory in form, as it
provides that the Public Service Commission shall be
consulted. This Court relied on the following observations
of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Montreal
Street Railway Company v. Normandin(2) in that connection:-
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 533.
(2) [1917] L.R. A.C. 170.
976
"The question whether provisions in a statute
are directory or imperative has very
frequently arisen in this country, but it has
been said that no general rule can be laid
down, and that in every case the object of the
statute must be looked at.... When the
provisions of a statute relate to the
performance of a public duty and the case is
such that to hold null and void acts done in
neglect of this duty would work serious
general inconvenience, or injustice to persons
who have no control over those entrusted with
the duty, and at the same time would not
promote the main object of the Legislature, it
has been the practice to hold such provisions
to be directory only, the neglect of them,
though punishable, not affecting the
validity
of the acts done."
That was a case where the jury., lists had not been revised
as required by law. Following the principle laid down in
that case, this Court held that Art. 320(3) (c) itself
contemplates three grounds: (i) that the proviso to Art. 320
itself contemplates that regulations may be made specifying
matters in which either generally, or in any particular
class of cases or in particular circumstances it shall not
be necessary for a Public Service Commission to be
consulted; (ii) that the advice of the Public Service
Commission was not binding on the Government, and in the ab-
sence of such binding character it was difficult to see how
non-compliance with the provisions of Art. 320(3) (c) could
have the effect of nullifying the final order passed by the
Government; and (iii) that Art. 311 was not in any way
controlled by Art. 320 and there was no provision in the
Constitution expressly or otherwise providing that the
result of non-compliance with Art. 320(3) (c) would be to
invalidate the proceedings ending with the final order of
the Government. It was also pointed out in that case that
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an examination of the terms of Art. 320 showed that the word
"shall" appeared in almost every paragraph and every clause
or sub-clause of that Article. If it were held that the
provisions of Art. 320 (3) (c) were mandatory in terms, the
other clauses or sub-clauses of that Article would have to
be equally held to ’be mandatory. If they were so held, any
appointments made to the public services without observing
strictly the terms of these sub-clauses in cl. (3) of Art.
320 would adversely affect the person so appointed to a
public service, without any fault on ’his part and without
his having any say in the matter, and this ’could not have
been intended by the makers of the Constitution. ’Thus this
Court approximated Art. 320(3) (c) to a statutory
977
provision like the one which came up for consideration in
Montreal Street Railway Company’s case(1) and held that if
the Article were construed as mandatory, it would cause
serious general inconvenience, and injustice to persons who
had no control over those entrusted with the duty. That
decision was clearly based on the special facts in that case
dealing with appointments and dismissals of public servants
and the duty of the Government to consult the, Public
Service Commission in that behalf and cannot and should not
be extended to cases based on a different set of facts. As
the Judicial Committee itself pointed out the question
whether provisions in a statute are directory or mandatory
cannot be decided by laying down a general rule and in every
case the object of the statute must be looked at. That case
therefore in the circumstances is of little assistance to
the respondent, except insofar as it lays down the principle
that no general rule can be laid down for determining the
question whether a provision in a statute is directory or
mandatory, and that every case will have to be judged on the
basis of the object of the statute concerned.
This brings us to the examination of the facts and circums-
tances of the present statute in the light of what we have
said above as to the criteria for determining whether a
provision in a statute is mandatory or directory. The
provision with which we are concerned, namely, S. 131(3),
can be divided into two parts. The first part lays down
that the Board shall publish proposals and draft rules along
with a notice inviting objections to the proposals or the
draft rules so published within a fortnight from, the
publication of the notice (see Sch. III). The second part
provides for the manner of publication and that manner is
according to s’ 94(3). We shall first deal with what we
have called the first part of S. 131(3). This provision
deals with taxation. The object of providing for
publication of proposals and draft rules is to invite
objections from the inhabitants of the municipality, who
have to pay the tax. The purpose of such publication
obviously is to further the democratic process and to
provide a reasonable opportunity of being heard to those who
are likely to be affected by the tax before imposing it on
them. It is true that finally it is the Board itself which
settles the proposals with respect to taxation and submits
them to Government or the prescribed authority, as the case
may be,, for approval. Even so we have no doubt that the
object behind this publication is to find out the reaction
of tax payers generally to the taxation
(1) [1917] L.R. A.C. 170.
978
proposals, and it may very well be in a particular case that
the Board may drop the proposals altogether and may not
proceed further with them, if the reaction of the tax-payers
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in general is of disapprobation. Further the purpose served
by the publication of the proposals being to invite
objections, in particular from the tax-payers, to the tax
proposed to be levied on them, the legislature in its wisdom
thought that compliance with this part of s. 131(3) would
essentially carry out that purpose. In the circumstances if
we are to hold that this part of s. 131(3) was merely
directory, the whole purpose of the very elaborate procedure
provided in ss. 131 to 135 for the imposition of tax would
become meaningless, for the main basis of that procedure is
the consideration of objections of tax-payers on the
proposals of the Board. If such publication is merely
directory, the Board can proceed to levy the tax without
complying with them and that would make the entire elaborate
procedure provided in the Act before a tax is imposed
nugatory. We are therefore of opinion that this part of s.
131(3) is mandatory and it is necessary to comply with it
strictly before any tax can be imposed. We shall consider
the interpretation of s. 135(3) later, but we have no doubt
that in the present case, in spite of s. 135(3), the
legislature intended that there must be publication as provided
in what we have called the first part of s. 131(3). We therefore
hold that this part of S. 131(3) is mandatory considering
its language, the purpose for which it has been enacted, the
setting in which it appears and the intention of the
legislature which obviously is that no tax should be imposed
without hearing tax-payers. Lastly we see no serious
general inconvenience or injustice to anyone if this part of
the provision is held to be mandatory; on the other hand it
will be unjust to tax-payers if this part of the provision
is held to be directory, inasmuch as the disregard of it
would deprive them of the opportunity to make objections to
the proposals, and the draft rules. We therefore hold that
this part of s. 131(3) is mandatory.
Turning now to the second part, which provides for the
manner of publication, that manner is provided in S. 94(3)
already set out above. It seems to us that when the
legislature provided for the manner of publication it did
not intend that manner should be mandatory. So long as
publication is made in substantial compliance with the
manner provided in s. 94(3), that would serve the purpose of
the mandatory part of the section which provides for
Publication. It would therefore, not be improper to hold
that the manner of publication provided
979
in s. 94(3) is directory and so long as there is substantial
compliance with that the purpose of the mandatory part of s.
131(3) would be served. In this connection we may refer to
K. Kamaraja Nadar v. Kunju Thevar(1). In that case, a
question arose whether s. 117 of the Representation of the
People Act (No. 43 of 1951) was mandatory or directory.
That section required that a petitioner filing an election
petition had to enclose with the petition a Government
Treasury receipt showing that a deposit of one thousand
rupees had been made by him either in a Government Treasury
or in the Reserve Bank of India in favour of the Secretary
to the Election Commission as security for the costs of the
petition. This Court analysed this provision and observed
that it consisted of three parts : namely, (i) the
Government Treasury receipt must show that such deposit had
been actually made in a Government Treasury or in the
Reserve Bank of India; (ii) it must also show that it had
been made in favour of the Secretary to the Election
Commission; and (iii) it must further show that it had been
made as security for the costs of the petition. The
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question then arose whether the words ’in favour of the
Secretary to the Election Commission" were mandatory in
character so that if the deposit had not been made in favour
of the Secretary to the Election Commission as therein
specified the deposit even though made in a Government
Treasury or in the Reserve Bank of India and as security for
the costs of the petition would be invalid and of no avail.
This Court held that these words in s. 1 17 were directory
and not mandatory in their character, and that the essence
of the provision contained in s. 117 was that the Petitioner
should furnish security for the costs of the petition and
should enclose along with the petition a Government Treasury
receipt showing that a deposit of one thousand rupees had
been made by him either in a Government Treasury or in the
Reserve Bank of India to be at the disposal of the Election
Commission to be utilised by it in the manner authorised by
law and was under its control and payable on a proper
application being made in that behalf to the Election Com-
mission or to any person duly authorised by it to receive
the same, be he the Secretary to the Election Commission or
any ,one else. If this essential requirement was complied
with, no literal compliance was at all necessary with the
words "in favour of the Secretary to the Election
Commission" appearing in that section. Though, therefore,
the making of the deposit and the presentation of the
receipt thereof along with the petition was
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 583.
L2Sup./65 --
980
held to be mandatory, this Court hold that the form in which
-the deposit should be made was only directory. The
principle of that case in our opinion applies to the manner
of publication provided in S. 94(3) in the present case. As
we have said already the essence of s. 131(3) is that there
should be publication of the proposals and draft rules so
that the tax-payers have an opportunity of objecting to them
and that is provided in what we have called the first part
of s. 131,(3); that is mandatory. But the manner of
publication provided by s. 94(3) which we have called the
second part of s. 131(3), appears to be directory and so
long as it is substantially complied with that would be
enough for the purpose of providing the tax-payers a
reasonable opportunity of making their objections. We are
therefore of opinion that the manner of publication provided
in s. 131(3) is directory.
Let us see what s. 94(3) requires and what has been done in
this case. That section requires the publication to be made
in a local paper and that local paper must be one published
in Hindi. It further provides that where there is no such
local paper, the publication may be made in such manner as
the State Government may by general or special order direct.
In the present case, the publication has been made in a
local paper, but that local paper is not published in Hindi;
it is published in Urdu, though the actual publication of
the resolution in the present case was in Hindi. The
contention on behalf of appellant is that this is no
compliance with s. 94(3). It appears that there is a local
paper published in Hindi also in Rampur, but the evidence is
that it is published very irregularly. It is urged that if
there was no local paper published regularly in Hindi in
Rampur, then the direction of the State Government should
have been sought for the manner of publication. It may be
accepted that there has not been strict compliance with the
provisions of S. 94(3) inasmuch as the publication has not
been made in a local paper published in Hindi. We must
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however point out that if s. 94(3) is interpreted literally,
all that it requires is that the publication must be in a
local paper and that local paper must be published in Hindi,
though the actual publication of the resolution may not be
in Hindi. That does not seem to us to be the real meaning
of s. 94(3) and what it substantially requires is that the
publication should be in Hindi in a local paper, and if that
is done that would be compliance with s. 94(3). Now what
has happened in this case is that the publication has been
made in a local paper which on the evidence seems to have
good circulation in Rampur and the actual resolution has
been published in Hindi, though the paper itself is
published in Urdu. It seems to us therefore that there is
substantial compliance with the provisions of s. 94(3) in
this case, even though there is a technical defect inasmuch
as the local paper in which the publication has been made is
published in Urdu and not in Hindi. But what has happened
in this case is in our opinion substantial compliance with
s. 94(3) and as we have held that provision to be directory
it must be held that s. 131(3) has been complied with.
This brings us to the third point, namely, the effect and
interpretation of s. 135(3) which we have already set out.
That sub-section provides that a notification made under s.
135(2) shall be conclusive proof that the tax has been
imposed in accordance with the provisions of the Act. It
has been urged on behalf of the respondent that the
publication has been made as required by s. 135(2) in the
official gazette and therefore is conclusive proof that the
tax had been imposed in accordance with the provisions of
the Act, i.e., all the provisions of the Act had been
complied with. It is urged that once a notification has
been made as required by s. 135(2), s. 135(3) raises an
irrebuttable presumption that all the provisions of the Act
have been complied. with and therefore it was not open
to,the appellant to raise the question of non-compliance
with the provisions of s. 131(3) read with s. 94(3) at all
in the present case. Reliance in this connection has been
placed on the Berar Swadeshi Vanaspati v. Municipal
Committee, Shegaon(1). In that case s. 67(8) of the C.P. &
Berar Municipalities Act, 1922 came up for consideration.
That section was in terms similar to the terms of s. 135(3).
This Court held in that case that as the provision of s.
67(7) which correspond to s. 135(2) here, had been complied
with, that was conclusive evidence of the tax having been
imposed in accordance with the provisions of that Act, and
it could not be challenged on the ground that all the
necessary steps had not been taken. Now what happened in
that case was that the necessary publication was made as
required by law and objections were invited to the proposed
tax. Only one objection was filed in that case and that
objection was considered by the Board and rejected. The
other procedural provisions were complied with and tax was
imposed and a final notification made
(1) [1962] 1 S.C.R. 596.
982
under S. 67 (7) of that Act. Imposition of the tax was
challenged on the ground that the Board did not take into
consideration the objections filed. The evidence in that
case was that the Board had taken into consideration the
objections filed and had rejected them on grounds which the
appellant (in that case) thought were not proper. It was in
those circumstances that this Court held that sub-s. (8) of
s. 67 was conclusive.
The present case is in our opinion similar to that case.
Here also the publication was made, as- we have already
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pointed out in compliance with what we have called the first
part of s. 131(3). Further the manner of publication was in
substantial compliance with s. 94(3). Therefore, as there
was substantial compliance with the provisions of s. 94(3),
s. 135(3) would in our opinion come to the help of the
respondent and it must be held that all necessary steps had
been taken.
It is however contended on behalf of the respondent that s.
135(3) goes further and means that where it applies, the tax
must be held to be imposed in accordance with the provisions
of the Act, even though none of the procedural provisions
may have been complied with at all. It is enough to say
that the question in this form does not arise before us
directly for we have held that there was publication in
compliance with s. 131(3) though the manner was not
strictly, in accordance with s. 94(3). We do not think it
necessary in the present case to decide what would happen if
there was no compliance at all with the various procedural
provisions including s. 131(3) by a Board before imposing a
tax and the evidence consisted only of a notification under
S. 135(2). It has been held by the Allahabad High Court in
a number of cases that if there is no compliance with the
procedural provisions in s. 131 to s. 134, the mere
notification under s. 135(2) would not be sufficient to
impose a tax and S. 135(3) would not save such tax: (see
Azimulla v. Suraj Kumar Singh(1) and Municipal Board, Hapur
v. Raghuvendra Kripal(2). These are cases in which certain
procedural provisions were not complied with at all and the
High Court held that S. 135(3) would not save the tax in
such cases. We do not think it necessary to express any
opinion on this question for it does ’not arise in the
present case. We may however point out that the decision in
the Berar Swadeshi Vanaspathi’s case(1) is not a case where
there was no compliance whatsoever with procedural
provisions all that had happened in that case was that the
objections had
(1) A.I.R. (1957) All. 307. (3) [1962] 1 S.C.R. 596.
(2) 1960 A.L.J. 185.
983
been taken into consideration by the Board though they were
rejected for reasons which were considered by the appellant
in that case to be not sufficient. In that case therefore
there was compliance with the provisions of the Act and all
that we need say is that case is no authority for the
proposition that even if there is no compliance whatsoever
with a mandatory provision of a statute relating to
procedure for the imposition of a tax, a provision like s.
135(3) of the Act or S. 67(8) of’ the C.P. & Berar Municipal
Act would necessarily save such imposition. If s. 135(3)
means that where there is substantial compliance with the
provisions of the Act that would be conclusive proof that
they have been complied with there can be no valid objection
to such a provision. But if the section is interpreted to
mean, as is urged for the respondent, that even if there is
no compliance whatever with any mandatory provision relating
to imposition of tax and the only thing proved is that a
notification under s. 135(2) has been made, the tax would
still be good, the question may arise whether s. 135(3)
itself is a valid provision. For present purposes however
it is unnecessary to decide that question. In the present
case the mandatory part of s. 131(3) has been complied with
and its directory part has been substantially complied with
and so s. 135(3) will apply and the objection that the tax
is not validly imposed must fail.
This brings us to the second point raised before us. So far
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as that is concerned, it is enough to say that it is mainly
a question of fact whether the buildings or any of them
belonging to the appellant are within 600 feet of the
standpipe. The restriction imposed in cl. (a) of s. 129 is
that water-tax can be levied on a building where any part of
it is within a radius fixed by rules which in the present
case is 600 feet from the nearest standpipe or water-work
whereat water is made available by the Board to the public.
What is contended on behalf of the appellant is that these
words mean that there should be standpipe or water-work from
which water is made available to the public by the
respondent and that it is not enough if underground pipes
carrying water are passing within 600 feet. It seems to us
that this contention of the appellant is correct. The
restriction in s. 129(a) is that no water-tax can be levied
on a building which is more than a certain distance fixed by
the rules from a standpipe or other water-work from which
water is made available to the public. The restriction that
water should be made available to the public within the
specified distance does not mean that if pipes carrying
water pass underground that would be enough. What is
required is that water
984
should be made available to the public from the nearest
standpipe or other water-work and that requires that there
must be something above the ground from which the public can
draw water. But even so, the question is one of fact and
the High Court has pointed out that there was dispute on
this question of fact and there was no sufficient material
before it to enable it to come to a definite finding whether
all the buildings of the appellant were beyond the radius of
600 feet from the nearest standpipe. In this state of the
evidence the question must be left open and the appellant
can pursue such remedies as he may be advised to take.
The appeal therefore fails and is hereby dismissed with
Hidayatullah J. I agree that this appeal should be dismissed
but would like to say a few words about the failure to
publish the notice in strict compliance with the provisions
of s. 94(3) of the U.P. Municipalities Act. The procedure
for the imposition of a tax by the Municipality has been
analysed by my learned brother Wanchoo very succinctly. I
agree generally with all he has said but as I view the
matter differently on the construction of ss. 131 (3), 94(3)
and 135(3) of the Act, I shall briefly give the reasons for
my decision on that part of the case.
The general scheme of taxation in the Act is this: After the
Municipal Committee or Board decides to impose a tax it is
required to frame proposals by a special resolution [s.
131(1)] and to frame rules which it desires the State
Government to make relative to the assessment, collection
etc., of the tax [s. 131(2)]. Section 131(3) then provides:
"The Board shall, thereupon, publish in the
manner prescribed in section 94 the proposal
framed under subsection (1) and the draft
rules framed under subsection (2) along with a
notice in the form setforth in Schedule III."
This enables any inhabitant affected by the proposal to
object. The Municipal Committee or the Board then considers
the objections and passes orders on the objections but if it
modifies the proposals or the rules it publishes them a
second time and the whole procedure has to be gone through
again. When there is no modification or the proposals or
rules are finally settled, the original proposals and rules,
if any, have to be forwarded to Government. Government may
accept the proposals and the rules or may send them back for
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further consideration. The proposals and the rules when
finally sanctioned by Government are returned to the
Municipality which imposes the tax with effect from a
specified date by passing a fresh resolution. This does not
impose the tax proprio vigore. The resolution has to be
submitted to Government and when it is notified in the
official Gazette, the tax is imposed from the appointed
date. Section 153 (3) then provides
"A notification of the imposition of a tax
under subsection (2) shall be conclusive proof
that the tax has been imposed in accordance
with the provisions of the Act."
The tax here was imposed by Rampur
Municipality and the notices were published in
an Urdu newspaper called "Aghaz" though the
notices were in Hindi. Section 94(3) of the
U.l. Act provides:
"Every resolution passed by a Board at a
meeting shall, as soon thereafter as may be
published in a. local paper published in Hindi
and where there is no such local paper in such
manner as the State Government may, by general
or special order, direct."
There was in Rampur another newspaper which was published in
Hindi but its circulation was admittedly very poor. The
newspaper selected for publication, though in Urdu, was
widely read, and the notice itself was in Hindi. Thus there
was a local paper with a wide circulation and there was a
notice in Hindi. The only breach was that the paper was not
’published in Hindi’. There was, clearly no literal
compliance with s. 94(3). Two questions, therefore, arise :
(a) Is section 94(3) mandatory ? and
(b) If section 94(3) is not strictly
complied with whether section 135(3) makes the
notification conclusive against the defect ?
In my judgment the answers to these questions depend upon
the nature of the functions of a Municipal Committee and its
powers of imposing a tax.
A Municipal Committee enjoys powers of taxation not as a
legislature but as a delegate of the legislature. Taxes
levied by it are in effect levied by Government. They are
allowed to be imposed and retained by the Municipality to
perform its functions and to pay for its expenses. The
whole procedure is shortened in this way, otherwise
Government would be required to levy taxes and to give the
proceeds to the Municipality. However, the final
986
word lies with Government and the legislature makes this the
vital condition in the imposition of the tax. What the
Municipality does in consequence of the power so conferred,
it can only effectively do if the conditions laid down with
the grant of power are followed and Government finally
approves of the tax. the manner of its imposition and manner
of its collection. Once Government has approved of the
Resolution and published it in the Gazette the tax is deemed
to be conclusively imposed in accordance with the procedure
laid down. The legislation on the subject is then complete
and the tax derives its legislative validity from the
legislature’s will.
Now ss. 131-135 lay down the procedure. All the conditions
apparently seem equally obligatory because every condition
is couched in mandatory language. The crux of the problem
before us is whether all the conditions are to be treated as
mandatory or all of them as directory or some of them as of
one kind and some of the other kind ? What is the test to
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apply and if a distinction is to be made, on what principle?
In my opinion, the way to look at the matter is this. A tax
to be valid must be imposed in accordance with the
Municipalities Act. The Act lays down conditions some of
which are devised for the protection of the taxpayers and
some others for ministerial operations connected with the
method or system of imposing the tax or for promoting
dispatch, efficiency and publicity etc. All conditions of
the first kind must, of course, be regarded as mandatory,
because they lie at the very root of the exercise of the
power. Thus preparation of assessment rolls, hearing of
objection, framing of assessment rules are all mandatory.
Similarly, conditions involving the passing of resolutions
by the necessary majority at special meetings after proper
notice to members are fundamental and cannot be overlooked.
If a defect of a fundamental kind occurs it would (in the
absence of curative provision) remain even if Government
gave its sanction See Scadding v. Lorant(1) (affirming Sub-
Nom) (2) and Joshi Kalidas v. Dakor Town Municipality(3).
Conditions which promote despatch or provide for ministerial
operations are usually directory and although compliance
with them is also necessary it is sufficient if the
compliance is substantial.
It may be accepted that a provision for a notice to the tax-
payers informing them about the proposal to impose a
Particular tax and the rules made for the imposition, is
fundamental. Such
(1) 3 H.L.C. 418-10 E.R. H.L. 164.
(2) 13 Q.B. 706.
(3) I.L.R. 7 Bom. 399.
987
a provision, if ignored, would frustrate the very policy of
the law that there should be no tax without an opportunity
to object, and to ignore it would ordinarily be fatal.
Similarly the direction at. The notice should be published
in a local newspaper is also an integral part of the Scheme.
The same purpose cannot be achieved by proclaiming by beat
of drum or distributing hand-bills or publishing a notice in
a newspaper not circulating locally. There is no option
there because if the notice cannot be-published in a local
newspaper the section goes on to provide for alternative
modes of publication to be determined by Government. The
sub-section, however, goes further and says that the
newspaper must be one that is published in Hindi. I would
be disposed to consider this further direction as not
fundamental. If a newspaper is selected which is very
widely read in the locality but is not in Hindi and the
notice is published in Hindi, I imagine the intention of the
law is better promoted than if another newspaper published
in Hindi with next to no circulation is selected. There is
no doubt a departure from the letter of the law but the
departure promotes the very object and purpose of it. I
would regard such a provision as directory. It is a
provision for the guidance of the Municipality and not
something which can be said to be essential to the validity
of the imposition.
It seems to me that it is not necessary at all to go into
the niceties of the distinction between mandatory and
directory provisions in general or in relation to the
provisions of the U.P. Municipalities Act in particular.
The legislature has itself furnished the solution by
enacting s. 135(3) which indicates the consequences of an
omission. It lays down emphatically a rule of evidence
which precludes courts from making inquiries into the
minutiae of the procedure with a view to declaring the
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imposition invalid. The legislature is quite content to
enact that Government should review the proposals, the rules
and the procedure before accepting the resolution imposing
the tax and that after this is done and a notification
issues all questions about the procedural part of the
imposition must cease. The legislative will takes over from
that stage and the tax is imposed as validly as if the
legislature itself imposed it. Whether one reads s. 135(3)
as enacting an absolute rule of evidence (and I am in favour
of reading it as such-See: The Berar Swadeshi Vanaspati v.
Municipal Committee, Shegaon) (1) or as merely related to
venial defects, errors or omissions, it is plain that it
must at least protect the imposition of water-tax in Rampur
against a flaw in procedure of the
(1) [1962] 1 S.C.R. 596.
988
kind we are dealing with or it would serve no purpose at
all. This provision, therefore, ’serves to cure the breach
of the direction which was intended to serve merely as a
guide to the municipalities, and it precludes courts from
inquiring into such a breach. That was a matter for
Government to take into consideration before according its
approval and Government must be deemed to have approved this
other mode of publication which, it is clear enough it could
have permitted to be followed in the first instance under
the latter part of s. 94(3) itself.
Subject to these reasons for holding the tax to be valid I
agree that the appeal be dismissed with costs.
Mudholkar J. I agree that the appeal be dismissed but on the
point of law urged before us I would like to state my
reasons separately.
I find it difficult to construe sub-s. (3) of s.131 as
partly directory and partly mandatory; that is to say, that
the requirement of publication is mandatory but the
requirement of the manner of publication is not mandatory
but only directory. To construe the section that way would
be giving two different meanings to the verb "shall"
occurring in the provision which governs both publication as
well as the manner of publication. "Shall" can, according
to the authorities, no doubt be construed literally and,
therefore, as being mandatory or, liberally and thus being
only directory depending upon the object of the provision in
which it occurs, the connected provisions and other similar
matters. But it seems to me on principle that when a verb
used in a provision governs two different matters it cannot
be given one meaning in so far as it relates to one matter
and another meaning insofar as it relates to another matter.
The provisions of s. 94(3) are clearly directory inasmuch as
a deviation from the mode of publication prescribed therein
--that is publication in a local newspaper in the Hindi
language is contemplated by it. The requirement of s.
131(3) is publication in the manner provided for in S. 94-
which is actually provided in sub-s. (3) of S. 94. Since
the latter provision is directory it is immaterial to
consider whether S. 131(3) is directory or mandatory or to
read it as partly one and partly the other and depart from
the normal rule of construction which discountenances read-
ing a word in a provision in two different senses.
While a mandatory provision must be strictly complied with,
substantial compliance is sufficient with respect to a
directory
989
provision. There has been substantial compliance with the
provisions of s. 94(3) since the proposals were in fact
published in the Hindi language in a local newspaper. The
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only departure from the letter of the law was not obtaining
the permission of the State Government for publishing the
proposals in an Urdu newspaper. In my view the essential
requirement of s. 94(3) is publication in a local newspaper.
Where this requirement is satisfied, the omission to obtain
a direction from the State Government permitting publication
in a newspaper other than one in the Hindi language is not
of much consequence.
Upon this view the question whether s. 131(3) is mandatory
or whether s. 135(3) has become void by reason of Art. 13(1)
of the Constitution or whether it can cure a defect
resulting from non-compliance with a mandatory provision do
not at all arise
for consideration.
Appeal dismissed..
990