Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MORVI MUNICIPALITY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF GUJARAT AND ORS.WITHJUNAGADH NAGARPALIKAV.STATE OF
DATE OF JUDGMENT31/03/1993
BENCH:
SAWANT, P.B.
BENCH:
SAWANT, P.B.
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
KASLIWAL, N.M. (J)
CITATION:
1993 AIR 1508 1993 SCR (2) 803
1993 SCC (2) 520 JT 1993 (2) 529
1993 SCALE (2)380
ACT:
Municipalities: Gujarat Municipalities Act 1963.
Sections 2(1), 2(17), 53, 99, 99(1), 99(1)(i), 99(1)(e), 105
to 112/Rules 2(7), 4, 5--Municipalities--Property
tax--Annual letting value of building or land or both--To be
determined on the basis of annual standard/fair rent under
Rent control Act
Assessment--Procedure--Limitation-Municipality to complete
the authentication of the assessment list before 31st July-
Whether directory in nature.
Gujarat Municipalities Rules:
Rules 4 and 5-Validity of.
HEADNOTE:
Some tax-payers of the appellant-Municipality filed a writ
petition in the High Court challenging the validity of the
rules made by it for the levy of consolidated property tax
on lands and buildings and also the assessment list prepared
and authenticated by the Municipality for the year 1967-68,
1968-69 and 1969-70. It was contented before the High Court
that Rules 2(7), 4 and 5 of the Rules of the consolidated
property tax on the lands and buildings were ultra vires
section 99(1) (i) and the proviso (e) to it read with
section 2(1) of the Act, and that the assessment lists for
the years 1967-68, 1968-69 and 1969-70 were invalid since
they were prepared without following the procedure laid down
in Sections 105 to 112 of the Act.
The High Court upheld the validity of Rules 2(7) and 4 and
struck down the validity of Rule 5. It also declared that
the tax collected by the 803
804
Municipality for the assessment years 1968-69 and 1969-70 in
excess of the amounts which may be determined in accordance
with the principles laid down was without the authority of
law and struck down the assessment list for the year 1967-68
on the ground that it was not prepared in compliance with
the procedure I aid down in Sections 105 to 112 of the Act.
Being aggrieved by the High Court’s decision the appellants
preferred the present appeals.
Allowing the appeals, this Court,
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HELD: 1. It is not the value of occupation of the property
to the tenant, but the rental income from it to the owner
which is to be taken into consideration while estimating the
reasonable return that a landlord can expect from his
property. While estimating or calculating the annual rent
which might reasonably be expected from such property, the
provisions of such legislation have to be taken into
consideration. Different rent restriction legislations have
described the maximum rent recoverable under them
differently such as standard rent, fair rent etc. Hence the
annual letting value of the building or land or both to
which the rent restriction legislation is applicable cannot
exceed the annual standard or fair rent. It is the annual
standard/fair rent which alone, therefore, can form the
basis of the assessment of the property tax by the local
authority. [809 E-G]
1.2. Since there is no non-obstante clause in the Gujarat
Municipalities Act, 1963, this Court refrains from going
into the question of non-obstante clause in the provisions
of the Act levying property tax.
[810-C]
13. If the expression ’annual letting value’ in rule 4 is
read as the annual letting value as determined by the outer
limit prescribed by the standard or fair rent under the rent
restriction legislation applicable to the premises, which in
the present cast is the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging
House Rates Control Act, 1947, the validity of the said rule
cannot be assailed. [811-B]
1.4. Rule 5 mandates the actual rent received to be taken
into consideration for fixation of the annual letting value,
even if it is in excess of the standard rent fixed under the
rent restriction legislation, which is contrary to the
interpretation placed by this Court on the expression
’annual letting value". The correct mode of getting over
the difficulty is to
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amend Rule 5 itself suitably to take care of such properties
Instead of keeping it on the rule book as it is. There is
nothing to prevent the Municipality from introducing a new
rule in place of the said rule.
[812B-E]
1.5. Even without Rule 5 and on the basis of Rule 4 as it
is, the annual letting value can be calculated on the basis
of the standard rent where the rent restriction legislation
is applicable. Where it is not applicable, nothing prevents
the Municipality from assessing the properties on the basis
of the actual rent received under the same Rule 4 itself.
[811-F]
1.6. Rule 5 is to be read as being applicable only to the
properties which are not governed by the provisions of the
Rent Control Act. As far as the properties which are
amenable to the provisions of the Rent Control Act are
concerned, their annual letting value will be calculated
only on the basis of the standard rent determined or
determinable under tile said Act. Where the standard rent
is determined by the Civil Court, of course under the rent
restriction legislation, the annual letting value will be
determined on the basis of such standard rent. The rule,
however, goes further and says that in other cases, viz.,
(1) where the standard rent is not determined and (2) even
if it is determined, where actual rent charged is in excess
of the standard rent, it is the actual rent, which will be
taken as the basis for calculating the annual letting value.
The latter two situations do not make distinction between
the properties to which the rent restriction legislation is
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applicable and the properties to which it is not applicable.
In other words, under the rule, even where the rent
restriction legislation is in force, it is the actual rent
which will be taken as the basis for calculating the annual
letting value if the standard rent is not determined by the
Court. [817-D, 818 E-F]
1.7. Rule 5, to the extent it enables the authorities to
take the actual rent as the basis for calculating the annual
letting value, will apply to the properties to which the
rent restriction legislation. which in the present case is
the Bombay Rent, Hotel and Lodging Housing Rates Control
Act, 1947, does not apply. [819-B]
The Corporation of Calcutta v. Smt. Padma Debi and Others,
[1962] 3 SCR 49; Corporation of Calcutta v. Life Insurance
Corporation of India, [1971] 1 SCR 248, Guntur Municipal
Council v. Guntur Town Rate Payers
806
Association [1971] 2 SCR 423 and Dewan Daulat Rai Kapoor and
Others
v. New Delhi Municipal Committee & Others, [1980] 1 SCC 685,
relied on.
Municipal Corporation Indore v. Smt. Ratnaprabha and
Others, [1976] 4 SCC 622, referred to. [809-D]
2. Section 112 in the context in which it appears is both
directory and enabling in nature insofar as it requires the
Municipality to authenticate the list before 31st July of
the official year. That the provisions are no more than
directory is clear from the fact that they provide that if
the Municipality fails to do its duty, the State Government
way complete the work by appointing person(s) to do it.
This is as it should be since the ,various provisions of the
Act show that the revenue and the expenditure of the
Municipality, among others, is controlled and regulated by
the State Government Further the Section requires that the
Municipality should complete the authentication of the
assessment list before a particular date which, in the
present case happens to be, 31st July of the year. It was
necessary to incorporate in the section the said provision
to give enough time to the State Government to step in and
authenticate the list before the end of the official year.
The official year is the same for the Municipality as well
as the State Government and for the purposes of budgeting,
the provision that the assessment list should be
authenticated by the particular date was necessary to be
incorporated. In any case neither the Municipality is
prevented from authenticating it beyond 31st July nor is the
person or persons appointed by the State Government
prevented from doing so beyond 31st March of the official
year. [816 E-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1374 of 1974
From the Judgment and Order dated 13/14-2-1974 of the
Gujarat High Court in Special Civil Application No. 220 of
1970.
WITH
Civil Appeal No. 1776 of 1980
From the Judgment and Order dated 21.4.1980/2.5.1980 of the
Gujarat High Court in Special Civil Application No. 942 of
1976.
B.K. Mehta and H.S. Parihar for the Appellant.
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Dave, Ms. Meenakshi Arora, Anip Sachthey for the
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Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SAWANT, J. Civil Appeal No. 1374/1974
Some tax-payers of the appellant Morvi Municipality [the
’Municipality’] had filed a writ petition in the High Court
challenging the validity of the rules made by it for the
levy of consolidated property tax on lands and buildings and
also the assessment lists prepared and authenticated by the
Municipality for the years 1967-68, 1968-69 and 1969-70.
There is no dispute that the concerned rules have been made
by the Municipality under Section 271 (1) read with Section
99 (1) of the Gujarat Municipalities Act, 1963 [the ’Act’].
The relevant contentions of the writ petitioners who are the
respondents before us, before the High Court were as follows
1. Rules 2 (7), 4 and 5 of the Rules of the
consolidated property tax on the lands and
buildings were ultra vires Section 99 (1) (i)
and proviso (e) to it read with Section 2 (1)
of the Act.
2. The assessment lists for the years 1967-68,
1968-69 and 1969-70 were invalid since they
were prepared without following the procedure
laid down in Sections 105 to 112 of the Act.
The High Court upheld the validity of Rules 2 (7) and 4. No
appeal is preferred against that part of the High Court’s
decision. We are, therefore, concerned in this appeal only
with the validity of Rule 5 which has been struck down by
the High Court. The High Court has also declared that the
tax collected by the Municipality for the assessment years
1968-69 and 1969-70 in excess of the amounts which may be
determined in accordance with the principles laid down by it
in the judgment under appeal, was without the authority of
law. So far as the assessment lists for the said two years
are concerned, we are concerned in this appeal only with the
validity of the excess amount. However, as far as the
assessment list for the year 1967-68 is concerned, it has
been struck down in its entirety by the High Court also on
the ground that it was not prepared in compliance with the
procedure laid down in Sections 105 to 112 of the Act.
Hence, we have to
808
consider the validity of the entire assessment for the said
year.
Rules 4 and 5 have obviously been made by the Municipality
to give effect to Section 99 (1) (i) which provides for
imposition of taxes on buildings or lands situate within its
limits. That section reads as follows:
"99. Taxes which may be imposed. (1) Subject
to any general or special orders which the
State Government may make in this behalf and
to the provisions of sections 101 and 102, a
municipality may impose for the purposes of
this Act any of the following taxes, namely :-
(i) a tax on building or lands situate within
the municipal borough to be based on the
annual letting value or the capital value or a
percentage of capital value of the buildings
or lands or both;"
Further, Clause (e) of the second proviso to sub-section (1)
of Section 99 reads as follows:
"(e) the municipality in lieu of imposing
separately any two or more of the taxes
described in clauses (i), (vii), (ix) and (x)
except a special water-rate may impose a
consolidated tax assessed as a tax on
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buildings or lands or both situated within the
municipal borough."
Since the Municipality has chosen to impose the tax on the
basis of the "annual letting value" of the buildings and
lands and not on the basis of the capital value or
percentage of capital value, we have to ascertain in the
present case the precise connotation of the expression
"annual letting value". Section 2 (1) of the Act defines
the expression "annual letting value" as follows:
"(1) ’annual letting value’ means the annual
rent for which any building or land,
exclusive- of furniture of machinery contained
or situate therein or thereon might reasonably
be expected to let from year to year, and
shall include all payments made or agreed to
be made by a tenant to the owner of the
building or land on account of occupation,
taxes under any law for the time being in
force, insurance or other charges incidental
to his tenancy"
809
The crucial expressions in the above definition are "might
reasonably be expected to let’ and ’all payments made or
agreed to be made by a tenant to the owner on account of
occupation." Shri Mehta, the learned counsel for the
Municipality contended that the said expressions unmis-
takably indicate the actual rent received by the landlord
from his tenant. According to him, the reasonable rent
means the rent which a willing tenant will pay to the
willing owner and the agreement between the parties would
indicate the same and no more and no less. He further
argued that the standard rent under the rent restriction
legislation was only one of the factors relevant for the
estimation of the reasonable expectation of the rent from
the property and was not the sole basis of such rent and
hence the assessment can be made on the basis of the actual
rent received.
2. It is not necessary for us to go into a detailed
discussion of the ’pros and cons of the question since the
question is no longer res Integra. The decisions of this
court rendered in The Corporation of Calcutta v. Smt. Padma
Debi and others, [1962] 3 SCR 49, Corporation of Calcutta v.
Life Insurance Corporation of India, [1971] 1 SCR 248,
Guntur Municipal Council v. Guntur Town Rate Payers
Association [1971] 2 SCR 423 and Dewan Daulat Rai Kapoor and
Others v. New Delhi Municipal Committee and Others, [1980] 1
SCC 685 have consistently held that it is not the value of
occupation of the property to the tenant, but the rental
income from it to the owner which is to be taken into
consideration while estimating the reasonable return that a
landlord can expect from his property. It has also been
held there that wherever the rent is restricted on account
of the operation of the rent restriction legislation, the
outer limit of the reasonable rent that can be expected from
the property stands defined by such restriction. Hence,
while estimating or calculating the annual rent which might
reasonably be expected from such property, the provisions of
such legislation have to be taken into consideration.
Different rent restriction legislations have described the
maximum rent recoverable under them differently such as
standard rent, fair rent etc. Hence the annual letting
value of the building or land or both to which the rent
restriction legislation is applicable cannot exceed the
annual standard or fair rent. It is the annual
standard/fair rent which alone, therefore, can form the
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basis of the assessment of the property tax by the local
authority. It is true that although a four-judge Bench of
this Court as early as in Padma Debi’s case [Supra], had
taken this view which has been reiterated in the other
decisions cited above, a three-Judge Bench of this Court in
a decision in Municipal
810
Corporation Indore v. Smt. Ratnaprabha and Others, [1976] 4
SCC 622 has held that the actual annual rent received by the
owner of the property notwithstanding the application of the
rent restriction legislation can provide a basis for
assessment of the property tax. However, this view taken in
the above case has been explained in Dewan Daulat Rai
Kapoor’s case [Supra], which is the latest decision of this
Court on the point. It has been pointed out there that the
said view in the case of the Municipal Corporation, Indore
[supra] turned on the presence of the non obstante clause
’notwithstanding anything contained in any other law" in the
provisions of the Act levying the property tax there. Since
in the present Act, namely, the Gujarat Municipalities Act,
1963, there is no such non obstante clause, the view taken
there would not apply to the present case. Shri Mehta,
learned counsel appearing for the Municipality did not press
his further contentions that the presence or the absence of
such non obstante clause would not make any difference to
the proposition laid down there that the annual letting
value should always be based upon the actual annual rent
received and not on the standard or fair rent under the rent
restriction legislation. We, therefore, refrain from going
into the said question in the present case and leave the
point open for consideration, if necessary, in future cases.
For our purpose, it is sufficient to proceed on the footing
that the annual letting value has to be determined, as held
in the aforesaid three decisions of this Court, keeping in
mind the outer limit down in the rent restriction
legislation.
Rule 4 of the Municipality is as under:
"4. The tax on open lands and buildings shall
be levied in accordance with the following
rate.
1. The buildings which are used for
residential purpose shall be levied on the
annual letting value by the percentage as
follows:-
x x x x x x
2. The buildings which arc used for non-
residential purpose shall be levied on the
annual letting value by the percentage as
follows:-
x x x x x x
811
It merely prescribes that the tax that may be levied on
buildings used both for residential and non-residential
purposes will be on the basis of the annual letting value by
the percentages prescribed therein, Hence if the expression
"annual letting value’ in the said rule is read as the
annual letting value as determined by the out limit
prescribed by the standard or fair rent under the rent
restriction legislation applicable to the premises, which in
the present case is the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging
House Rates Control Act, 1947, the validity of the said rule
cannot be assailed. The High Court has, therefore, rightly
upheld it.
3. However, Rule 5 with the validity of which we are
concerned here, reads as follows:
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"5 (a). The rental actually realised in each
case of the buildings, shops and lands which
are let, shall be considered to be the annual
letting value, but if the assessment officer
has reasons to believe that the rent shown in
the rent note or in account, does not
represent the correct letting value, then the
case of such properties he [officer] shall
assess the reasonable annual letting value
according to his own decision.
(b) In the case of buildings which are sublet,
the rent paid by the occupier shall be taken
as annual letting value.
(c) In the case of the buildings used by the
owner himself, the annual letting value, shall
be fixed with the rent derived from the
properties [buildings] which are let nearby.
The assessment officer will not assess the
annual letting value more than 6-1/4% of the
capital value in the case of the properties
noted in sub-rule C."
It will be apparent that the rule seeks to lay down the mode
of working out the annual letting value of the property.
According to the rule, it is to be worked out by taking the
actual rental realised as the basis. However, where the
assessment officer has reason to believe that the rent shown
in the rent note or in the accounts does not represent the
correct letting value, the rule permits the officer to
assess the reasonable annual
812
letting value according to his own decision. In clause (c)
the rule states that so far as the buildings used by the
owner himself are concerned, the annual letting value should
be fixed with reference to the rent derived from the
properties which are let nearby.
It is clear that to the extent the rule mandates the actual
rent received to be taken into consideration for fixation of
the annual letting value, even if it is in excess of the
standard rent fixed under the rent restriction legislation,
it is contrary to the interpretation placed by this Court on
the expression "annual letting value". It is for this
reason that the High Court has struck down the whole of the
said rule. Shri Mehta does not dispute the premise that
where the rent restriction legislation is applicable, Rule 5
will have to be read down to mean that the annual letting
value is to be fixed only on the basis of the annual
standard rent. However, he contends that it is not
necessary to strike down the said rule for there may be
properties which are not governed by the rent restriction
legislation and their annual letting value can be determined
unrestricted by the provisions of the rent restriction
legislation. His grievance is that since the High Court has
struck down the rule, instead of reading it down to bring it
in conformity with the judicial decisions, the Municipality
is hampered in assessing the properties to which the rent
restriction legislation does not apply. Shri Mehta may be
right there, if there are such properties within the limits
of the Municipality. The correct mode of getting over the
difficulty is to amend Rule 5 itself suitably to take care
of such properties instead of keeping it on the rule book as
it is. There is nothing to prevent the Municipality from
introducing a new rule in place of the said rule.
Even without Rule 5 and on the basis of Rule 4 as it is, the
annual letting value can be calculated on the basis of the
standard rent where the rent restriction legislation is
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applicable. Where it is not applicable, nothing prevents
the Municipality from assessing the properties on the basis
of the actual rent received, under the same Rule 4 itself.
However, pending the framing of the new rule, Rule 5 as it
can be interpreted as being applicable only to such
properties which are not governed by the rent restriction
legislation. Hence the decision of the High Court will have
to be modified to the extent the High Court has struck down
the said rule instead of allowing it to remain on the rule
book confining its operations only to those properties which
are not governed by
813
the, Rent Control Act.
4. Coming now to the assessment list for 1967-68 which is
struck down in its entirety by the High Court, we are afraid
that the High Court has misinterpreted the provisions of
Sections 105 to 112 of the Act which relate to the
assessment of taxes on properties. Section 105 provides for
preparation of an assessment list containing the particulars
mentioned therein such as the address and description of the
property, the name(s) of the owner, the valuation based on
the annual letting value, of the amount of tax assessed
thereon etc. Section 106 indicates the person(s) primarily
liable for tax and the procedure to be followed when the
name of such person cannot be ascertained. Section 107
provides for the publication of notice when the assessment
has been completed and the right of the owner or occupier of
the property included in the list or any agent of such
person, to inspect the list, and to make extracts therefrom.
Section 108 then provides for a public notice of a date
before which the objections to the valuation or assessment
in the assessment list, shall be made and of the hearing of
objections. Sub-section (3) of Section 108 provides for the
hearing of objections by the Executive Committee of the
Municipality constituted under Section 53 of the Act. Upon
hearing of the objections and disposing them of, the
Executive Committee is required to cause the result thereof
to be noted in the book kept for the purpose. The Executive
Committee is also empowered to amend the assessment list, if
necessary, in accordance with the result of the hearing.
However, before any amendment is made in the assessment
list, the reasons thereof are required to be recorded in the
book concerned. This sub-section also provides that the
powers and duties of the Executive Committee under it, may
be transferred to any other committee appointed by the
Municipality or with the permission of the Development
Commission to any officer or pensioner of the Government.
Sub-section (4) of the said section provides that as and
when in respect of any property the objections made under
the section have been disposed of and the amendment required
by sub-section (3) have been made in the assessment list,
the said list, so tar as such properties are concerned.
shall be authenticated by the signature of the Chairman and
at least one other member of the Executive Committee. If
the Executive Committee’s powers and functions under sub-
section (3) have been transferred to any other committee or
to an officer or pensioner of the Government, the
authentication is to be made by the signatures of
814
not less than 2 members of such Committee or of the officer
or pensioner as the case may be. The person or the persons
so authenticating the list have to certify that no valid
objection has been made to the valuation and assessment of
the property contained in the list except in the cases in
which amendments have been made therein. Sub-section (5) of
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the said Section then provides that the lists so
authenticated shall be deposited in the Municipal Office and
shall be open for inspection to an owners and occupiers of
the property entered in the list or to their agents. Sub-
section (6) states that subject to such alterations made
therein under the provisions of Section 109 and to the
result of any appeal or revision under that Section, the
entries in the assessment list so authenticated and
deposited shall be accepted as conclusive evidence (i) for
the purposes of the Municipal taxes and of the valuation of
the annual letting value and [ii] for the purposes of the
tax for which such assessment list has been prepared and the
amount of the tax leviable on such properties in any
official year in which the fist is in force.
Section 109 gives power to the Executive Committee to amend
the assessment list if any entry in respect of any property
has been either omitted from or erroneously made therein
through fraud, accident or mistake. It also gives power to
the Executive Committee to amend the list if any building
has been constructed, altered or reconstructed either in
whole or part, after the preparation of the assessment list.
Section 110 provides that where any building or any portion
of such building which is liable to payment of tax is
demolished or removed otherwise than by an order of the
Executive Committee, the person primarily liable for the
said tax has to give notice to the Chief Officer of the
Municipality.
Section 111 states that it shall not be necessary to prepare
a new assessment list every year subject to the condition
that the assessment list shall be completely revised every
four years. The Chief Officer is given power to adopt the
valuation and assessment contained in the list for any year
such alteration as may be deemed necessary for the year
immediately following. However, the provisions of Sections
107, 108 and 109 are applicable to the said list as if a new
assessment list has been completed at the commencement of
the official year.
The ’official year’ has been defined in Section 2 (17) of
the Act to mean the year commencing on the first day of
April.
815
Section 112, then gives power to the State Government to
appoint a person to authenticate the assessment list in case
of default by the Municipality in authenticating it. It
states that where in any year, a new assessment list is
prepared or a list is revised or the valuation and assess-
ment contained in the list for the year immediately
preceding is adopted with or without alterations, such new,
revised or adopted assessment list shall be authenticated in
the manner provided by Section 108 at any time not later
than 31st of July of the official year to which the list
relates. If the list is not so authenticated, then the
State Government shall appoint such person or persons as it
thinks fit, to prepare, revise or adopt and authenticate the
assessment list. Such person or persons have to authenti-
cate such list at any time before the last day of the
official year, i.e., 31st March of the year to which the
list relates. The section also states that Sections 105 to
108 and Section 111 shall, so far as may be necessary, apply
to the preparation, revision or adoption of the list as the
case may be by the person or persons appointed by the State
Government.
5. Section 99, among others, of the Act to which we have
already made a reference earlier, empowers the Municipality
to impose various taxes, fees and cesses as a source of
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revenue for discharging its duties and functions. The tax
on buildings or lands or both, is only one of such taxes.
This tax can be recovered separately or as the consolidated
tax along with general water rate and lighting tax as
provided in Clause (e) of the second proviso to sub-section
(1) of Section 99. The provisions contained in Sections 105
to 112 above only relate to the preparation of an assessment
list of properties which are liable to such tax. They are
procedural in nature and the charging section for the tax is
Section 99 of the Act. Section 99 itself does not provide
for any limitation of time on the imposition of tax. The
High Court has, however, read limitation of time in Section
112 on the authentication of the assessment list. According
to the High Court, the period of limitation for the
Municipality to authenticate the list is upto 31st July of
the official year to which the list relates, and in default
by the Municipality. the period of limitation for the person
appointed by the State Government is upto the 31st March of
the said official year. What is further. according to the
High Court, the Municipality cannot authenticate the
assessment list beyond 31st July of the official year and it
is the person (s) appointed by the State Government alone
who can do so and that too upto 31st March of that official
year. It is difficult to accept this reasoning. According
to us, the High Court has erred in reading in the provisions
of H
816
Section 112 an intention by the legislature to lay down a
period of limitation either for the Municipality or for the
person or persons appointed by the State Government. It is
obvious that Section 112 in the context in which it appears
is both directory and enabling in nature insofar as it
requires the Municipality to authenticate the list before
31st July of the official year. That the provisions are no
more than directory is clear from the fact that they provide
that if the Municipality fails to do its duty, the State
Government may complete the work by appointing a person(s)
to do it. This is as it should be since the various
provisions of the Act show that the revenue and the
expenditure of the Municipality, among others, is controlled
and regulated by the State Government. Further the Section
requires that the Municipality should complete the
authentication of the assessment list before a particular
date which, in the present case happens to particular date
which, in the present case happens to be, 31st July of the
year. It was necessary to incorporate in the section the
said provision to give enough time to the State Government
to step in and authenticate the list before the end of the
official year. The official year is the same for the
Municipality as well as the State Government and for the
purposes of budgeting, the provision that the assessment
list should be authenticated by the particular dates was
necessary to be incorporated. However, even Section 112
which is procedural in nature, does not state that the list
which is authenticated by the Municipality after 31st July
of the official year and by the person appointed by the
Government after 31st March of the same official year would
be invalid. On the contrary, when the Municipality fails to
authenticate the assessment list till 31st July of the
official year, the section empowers the State Government to
appoint a person or persons to authenticate the same. It
was also necessary to prescribe some time limit for the
authentication by the person so appointed and hence the
section provides that person(s) so appointed shall
authenticate it by 31st March of the official year. In any
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case, neither the Municipality is prevented from
authenticating it beyond 31st July nor is the person(s)
appointed by State Government prevented from doing so beyond
31st March of the official year. In the present case, there
was an additional factor which was relevant to be taken into
consideration. The Municipality had levied the property tax
for the first time in the official year 1967-68 and the
State Government felt that it should be given time to
authenticate the same before 31st March, 1968. That is the
reason why the State Government did not appoint a person to
authenticate the list after 31st July 1967, even though the
Mun-
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cipality had failed to do so. Instead, the State Government
had extended the time for the Municipality to do so, till
31st March, 1968. The step taken by the government was in
conformity with the interpretation of the provisions of
Section 112 which, as stated earlier, are only directory and
enabling in nature. The High Court has, therefore, erred in
holding that the Municipality could not authenticate the
assessment list after July, 1967 and it is only the State
Government which could do it. This the High Court did, as
stated earlier, by reading 31st July, 1967 as the period of
limitation for the Municipality to authenticate the list for
the official year 1967-68. There is no dispute that the
Municipality authenticated the list by 28th March, 1968.
The finding of the High court that the assessment list for
the year 1967-68 is void and illegal is, therefore, clearly
wrong.
6.In the result, we set aside the finding of the High Court
that Rule 5 is ultra vires the Act and hold that ’the same
is to be read as being applicable only to the properties
which are not governed by the provisions of the Rent Control
Act. As far as the properties which are amenable to the
provisions of the Rent Control Act are concerned, their
annual letting value will be calculated only on the basis of
the standard rent determined or determinable under the said
Act. We, further, set aside the decision of the High Court
striking down the assessment list for 1967-68 and hold that
the said assessment list is validly authenticated and the
taxes can be recovered on the basis of the same. The appeal
is allowed accordingly with no order as to costs.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1776/1980
7. In the present case, Rule 5 of the rules made by the
appellant Junagadh Municipality [’the Municipality] under
Section 271 (1) and Section 99 (1) (i) of the Act has been
struck down by the High Court to the extent it provides for
calculating the annual letting value on the basis of actual
rent, as being ultra vires Section 99 (1) (i) read with
Section 2(1) of the Act. The relevant portion of the said
Rule 5 reads as follows:
"In the case of buildings or lands. which are
let. the rent which is the actual rent, or in
the case where the standard rent is determined
by the Civil Court, the same shall in such
case be considered to be the annual letting
value, unless the executive committee or the
special committee on the Chief Officer or his
delegate entrusted with the
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work of valuation has reasons to believe that
the rent shown in the rent note or account
does not represent the correct letting value
or is collusive or is not determined by the
Court on merits as the case may be in which
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case reasons for such belief shall be stated
in the decision provided that in case rent
actually charged is in excess of the rent as
determined by the Court at any time the rent
actually charged shall be considered to be the
annual letting value.’
8. It is not necessary to repeat what we have discussed on
the subject in the accompanying appeal, viz., C.A. No. 1374
of 1974. Suffice it to say that in the present case, the
rule itself has provided that where the standard rent is
determined by the Civil Court, of course under the rent
restriction legislation, the annual letting value will be
determined on the basis of such standard rent. The rule,
however, goes further and says that in other cases, viz.,
[1] where the standard rent is not determined and 121 even
if it is determined, where actual rent charged is in excess
of the standard rent, it is the actual rent, which will be
taken as the basis for calculating the annual letting value.
The latter two situations do not make distinction between
the properties to which the rent restriction legislation is
applicable and the properties to which it is not applicable.
In other words, under the rule, even where the rent
restriction legislation is in force, it is the actual rent
which will be taken as the basis for calculating the annual
letting value if the standard rent is not determined by the
Court. The High Court has, therefore, rightly struck down
the rule to the extent that it applies to properties to
which the rent restriction legislation is applicable. In
view of what we have stated in the accompanying appeal, we
see no reason to take a different view.
However, Shri Mehta appearing for the Municipality is right
in contending that it is not necessary to declare the rule
ultra vires Section 99(1) read with Section 2 because it
also provides for assessing the annual letting value of
property on the basis of the actual rent. That part of the
rule which enables the authorities to take the actual rent
as the basis for calculating the annual letting value can be
read down to apply only to those properties to which the
rent restriction legislation does not apply. We agree with
him there, if there are such properties within the limits of
the
819
Municipality.
9. We, therefore, allow the appeal set aside the decision of
the High Court striking down the part of the rule which
enables the authorities to adopt actual rent as the basis
for calculating the annual letting value of the properties.
Instead, we declare that Rule 5, to the extent it enables
the authorities to take the actual rent as the basis for
calculating the annual letting value, will apply only to the
properties to which the rent restriction legislation which
in the present case is the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging
House Rates Control Act, 1947, does not apply.
The appeal is allowed accordingly with no order as to costs.
V.M. Appeal allowed.
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