Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 28
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4803 of 2001
Appeal (civil) 4808 of 2001
Special Leave Petition (civil) 13102 of 1996
Special Leave Petition (civil) 13107 of 1996
PETITIONER:
DISTRICT MINING OFFICER AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
TATA IRON & STEEL CO. & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 31/07/2001
BENCH:
G.B.Pattanaik, S.N.Phukan, B.N.Agrawal
JUDGMENT:
PATTANAIK,J.
DELAY CONDONED.
LEAVE GRANTED IN ALL THE SLPS.
THIS BATCH OF CASES RELATE TO THE CESS AND OTHER TAXES
ON MINERALS (VALIDATION) ACT, 1992 [HEREINAFTER REFERRED TO AS
’THE ACT’]. THE QUESTION FOR CONSIDERATION IS, BY THE
AFORESAID ACT, WHAT IN FACT HAS BEEN VALIDATED, IS IT ONLY THE
TAXES ON MINERALS ALREADY REALISED UNDER THE INVALID LAW OR
THE RIGHT TO LEVY TAX AND REALISE THE SAME, WHICH BECAME DUE
UPTO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991? SEVERAL CASES ARISING FROM DIFFERENT
STATES HAVE BEEN TAGGED ON TO THE MAIN MATTER ARISING OUT OF
THE JUDGMENT OF THE PATNA HIGH COURT, WERE LISTED TOGETHER,
BUT WE THINK IT APPROPRIATE TO DECIDE THE BIHAR MATTER, SO THAT
THE LAW LAID DOWN THEREIN WOULD BE FOLLOWED IN OTHER CASES.
INCIDENTLY, THE EARLIER JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT ARISING OUT OF
THE SAID VALIDATION ACT IN RELATION TO THE LEVY OF TAX ON
MINERALS IN THE STATE OF TAMIL NADU IN THE CASE OF
P. KANNADASAN AND ORS. VS. STATE OF TAMIL NADU AND
ORS., 1996(5) S.C.C. 670, IS REQUIRED TO BE RECONSIDERED AND
IT IS FOR THAT PURPOSE, THESE CASES HAVE BEEN REFERRED TO A THREE
JUDGE BENCH. IN THE CASE ARISING OUT OF THE JUDGMENT IN PATNA
HIGH COURT IN S.L.P.(CIVIL) NO. 13102-13107 OF 1996, THE
STATE THROUGH THE DISTRICT MINING OFFICER IS THE PETITIONER AND
BY THE IMPUGNED JUDGMENT, THE HIGH COURT THOUGH HAS
UPHELD THE VALIDITY OF THE VALIDATION ACT, BUT HAS HELD THAT
THE SAID VALIDATION ACT DOES NOT AUTHORISE THE RECOVERY OF
ANY TAX OR CESS AFTER 4.4.91, EVEN IF THE LIABILITY WAS INCURRED
UNDER THE VALIDATED LAWS BEFORE 4.4.1991 AND CONSEQUENTLY,
THE DEMAND RAISED BY THE STATE WERE QUASHED AND THE STATE
WAS RESTRAINED FROM TAKING ANY STEPS TO REALISE SUCH DEMAND.
BE IT BE STATED THAT A BATCH OF WRIT PETITIONS WERE FILED BY
SEVERAL ASSESSEES, ASSAILING THE LEGALITY OF THE DEMANDS RAISED
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 28
BY THE MINING AUTHORITIES FOR PAYMENT OF CESS IN RESPECT OF
SUCH DUES, WHICH WOULD BE LEVIABLE TILL 4TH OF APRIL, 1991. IN
THE BATCH OF CASES RELATING TO STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH, AFTER
THE JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT IN KANNADASAN’S CASE, THE STATE
OF MADHYA PRADESH ISSUED NOTICE TO SEVERAL ASSESSEES, RAISING
THE DEMAND AND SUCH DEMAND WAS ASSAILED BY FILING WRIT
PETITIONS IN THE HIGH COURT. APPLICATIONS HAD BEEN FILED IN
THIS COURT FOR GETTING THOSE WRIT PETITIONS TRANSFERRED, BUT NO
ORDER OF TRANSFER HAS BEEN PASSED BY THIS COURT AND AS SUCH
THE WRIT PETITIONS ARE STILL PENDING BEFORE THE HIGH COURT OF
MADHYA PRADESH AND WE, THEREFORE, DO NOT PROPOSE TO DEAL
WITH THOSE MATTERS, SINCE THE HIGH COURT CAN WELL DISPOSE OF
THE SAME, ON THE BASIS OF OUR JUDGMENT IN THE BIHAR CASE.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 9917 OF 1996, HOWEVER IS DIRECTED AGAINST
THE JUDGMENT OF MADHYA PRADESH HIGH COURT DATED
10.5.1995. BEFORE THE HIGH COURT, THE VALIDITY OF THE
ORDINANCE NO. 7 OF 1992 AS WELL AS CESS VALIDATION ACT 16 OF
1992 HAD BEEN ASSAILED. THE HIGH COURT, BY THE IMPUGNED
JUDGMENT UPHELD THE VALIDITY OF THE AFORESAID VALIDATION ACT.
WE ARE IN RESPECTFUL AGREEMENT WITH THE SAID CONCLUSION AND
HOLD THE VALIDATION ACT TO BE CONSTITUTIONALY VALID. HENCE NO
INTERFERENCE IS CALLED FOR IN THE CIVIL APPEAL. BUT THE DISPUTE,
WHETHER FRESH NOTICE COULD BE ISSUED FOR COLLECTION AND LEVY
OF DUES IN RESPECT OF LIABILITY ACCRUED TILL 4.4.91 IS THE SUBJECT
MATTER IN PENDING WRIT PETITIONS IN THE HIGH COURT. IN THE
CASES ARISING OUT OF THE JUDGMENT IN KARNATAKA HIGH COURT,
THE HIGH COURT HAS FOLLOWED THE JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT IN
KANNADASAN AND THUS UPHELD THE RIGHT OF THE STATE TO LEVY
DEMAND AND COLLECT, WHICH WAS COLLECTABLE UPTO 4.4.1991 AND
THE ASSESSEES ARE CHALLENGING THE SAID JUDGMENT IN THIS COURT.
SEVERAL WRIT PETITIONS WERE FILED UNDER ARTICLE 32,
CHALLENGING THE CONSTITUTIONAL VALIDITY OF THE VALIDATION ACT
AS WELL AS FOR QUASHING THE DEMAND NOTICES DATED 1.8.98 AND
2.9.98, ISSUED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF MINES AND ZOOLOGY IN
THE STATE OF KARNATAKA. IN THE CASES ARISING OUT OF JUDGMENT
OF ANDHRA PRADESH HIGH COURT, THE HIGH COURT FOLLOWED THE
JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT IN KANNADASAN AND UPHELD THE
CONSTITUTIONAL VALIDITY OF THE VALIDATION ACT AS WELL AS THE
RIGHT OF THE STATE TO MAKE THE DEMAND UPTO 4.4.1991 AND THIS
JUDGMENT OF THE ANDHRA PRADESH HIGH COURT IS BEING ASSAILED
BY THE ASSESSEES IN DIFFERENT SPECIAL LEAVE PETITIONS. IN
KANNADASAN’S CASE, WHICH ARISES OUT OF THE JUDGMENT OF
MADRAS HIGH COURT, AFTER THE JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT, REVIEW
PETITIONS WERE FILED BY THE ASSESSEES AND THIS COURT HAD
MERELY DIRECTED THOSE REVIEW PETITIONS TO BE TAGGED ON TO THE
SPECIAL LEAVE PETITIONS FILED AGAINST THE JUDGMENT OF PATNA
HIGH COURT, BUT IN THOSE PETITIONS, NO FORMAL NOTICE HAD BEEN
ISSUED TO THE STATE OF TAMIL NADU AND NECESSARILY THEREFORE,
THOSE REVIEW PETITIONS HAVE TO BE DE-LINKED AND ONLY AFTER
DISPOSAL OF THE SPECIAL LEAVE PETITIONS FILED, ARISING OUT OF THE
JUDGMENT OF PATNA HIGH COURT, THE REVIEW PETITIONS CAN BE
LISTED FOR OBSERVANCE OF FORMALITIES AND DISPOSAL.
THOUGH LARGE NUMBER OF COUNSEL ARGUED FOR DIFFERENT
SETS OF PERSONS, BUT BASICALLY TWO CONTENTIONS WERE ADVANCED.
ONE BY MR. RAKESH DWIVEDI, THE LEARNED SENIOR COUNSEL,
APPEARING FOR THE STATE OF BIHAR, CONTENDING THAT THE
VALIDATION ACT AUTHORISES THE STATE GOVERNMENTS TO LEVY AND
REALISE TAX WHICH WERE DUE UP TO THE DATE OF VALIDATION,
NAMELY, 4.4.1991 AND THERE SHOULD NOT BE ANY EMBARGO ON THE
STATE’S POWER TO REALISE THE SAME NOTWITHSTANDING THE FACT
THAT THE LIFE OF THE VALIDATION ACT WAS ONLY UPTO 4.4.1991.
THIS STAND OF MR. DWIVEDI, LEARNED SENIOR COUNSEL APPEARING
FOR THE STATE OF BIHAR WAS SUPPORTED BY MR. CHAUDHARY,
APPEARING FOR THE STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH, MR. SANJAY
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 28
HEGDE, APPEARING FOR THE STATE OF KARNATAKA AS WELL AS MR.
MARIARPUTHAM, APPEARING FOR THE STATE OF TAMIL NADU.
ACCORDING TO MR. DWIVEDI, THE JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT IN
KANNADASAN’S CASE SQUARELY COVERS THE POINT AND HAS RIGHTLY
BEEN DECIDED AND THE SAME DOES NOT REQUIRE ANY RE-
CONSIDERATION. ON BEHALF OF DIFFERENT SETS OF ASSESSEES,
ARGUMENTS WERE ADVANCED BY DIFFERENT COUNSEL, PARTICULARLY
BY MR. SHANTI BHUSHAN, MR. PARASARAN, MR. KK VENUGOPAL,
DR. A.M. SINGHVI, MR. AK GANGULI AND MR. RANJIT KUMAR,
ALL SENIOR COUNSEL, AND THE ESSENTIAL CONTENTION WAS THAT THE
PARLIAMENT IN FACT CAME FORWARD WITH THE VALIDATION ACT
AFTER DIFFERENT CESS ACTS WERE STRUCK DOWN ON THE GROUND OF
LACK OF LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE SOLELY TO ENSURE THAT THE LEVIES
COLLECTED ARE NOT REQUIRED TO BE REFUNDED BY THE STATES WHICH
WOULD HAVE A SERIOUS IMPACT ON THE STATE REVENUES OF THE
CONCERNED STATE GOVERNMENTS, AND THEREFORE, IN THE ABSENCE
OF ANY LAW SUBSEQUENT TO 4.4.1991 THE AUTHORITY TO COLLECT HAS
DISAPPEARED AND CONSEQUENTLY THE DECISION OF THIS COURT IN
KANNADASAN’S CASE HOLDING THAT NOT ONLY THE TAXES ALREADY
COLLECTED NEED NOT BE REFUNDED, BUT THE TAXES AND CESSES
WHICH HAVE NOT ALREADY BEEN COLLECTED ALSO BE COLLECTED IS NOT
CORRECT IN LAW. IT WAS ALSO FURTHER CONTENDED THAT THIS COURT
WHILE EXAMINING THE PROVISIONS OF THE VALIDATION ACT IN THE
LIGHT OF THE PURPOSE THAT WAS SOUGHT TO BE ACHIEVED BY THE
PARLIAMENT HAS NOT BORNE IN MIND THE VERY STATEMENT OF
OBJECTS AND REASONS AS WELL AS THE LANGUAGE OF SECTION 2 OF
THE VALIDATION ACT, AND THE ABSENCE OF A PROVISION IN THE
VALIDATION ACT, CORRESPONDING TO THE PROVISIONS CONTAINED IN
SECTION 6 OF THE GENERAL CLAUSES ACT. IT IS THE UNIFORM
CONTENTION OF ALL THE COUNSEL APPEARING FOR DIFFERENT SETS OF
ASSESSEES THAT THE JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT IN KANNADASAN
CONFERRING RIGHT ON THE STATE TO LEVY AND COLLECT THE TAXES ON
MINERALS, WHICH COULD BE LEVIABLE UNTIL 4TH APRIL, 1991, WOULD
RUN CONTRARY TO ARTICLE 265 OF THE CONSTITUTION AND WOULD
TRAVERSE BEYOND THE OBJECT OF THE VALIDATION ACT, AND
CONSEQUENTLY IT WOULD BE APPROPRIATE FOR THIS LARGER BENCH TO
RE-CONSIDER THE EARLIER JUDGMENT OF TWO JUDGE BENCH IN
KANNADASAN’S CASE.
BEFORE WE PROCEED FURTHER IN ENUMERATING AND
EXAMINING THE CONTENTIONS RAISED BY THE COUNSEL FOR THE
PARTIES, IT WOULD BE APPROPRIATE TO NOTICE THE HISTORY LEADING
TO THE ENACTMENT OF THE VALIDATION ACT. THE STATES OF ANDHRA
PRADESH, BIHAR, KARNATAKA, MADHYA PRADESH, TAMIL NADU,
MAHARASHTRA AND ORISSA HAD ENACTED SEVERAL LEGISLATIONS
AUTHORISING LEVY ON MINERALS. IN THE CASE OF INDIA CEMENT
LTD. VS. STATE OF TAMIL NADU - 1990 (1) SUPREME COURT
CASES 12, A SEVEN JUDGE BENCH OF THIS COURT CAME TO HOLD
THAT THE LEVY IN QUESTION IS ESSENTIALLY A LEVY ON MINERALS AND
IS RELATABLE TO ENTRIES 23 AND 50 OF LIST II, BUT ON ACCOUNT OF
DECLARATION MADE BY PARLIAMENT CONTAINED IN SECTION 2 OF
MINES AND MINERALS (REGULATION AND DEVELOPMENT) ACT,
1957, THE STATE LEGISLATURES HAVE BEEN DENUDED OF THE POWER
TO LEVY TAX ON MINERALS AND, AS SUCH, THE IMPOSITION OF TAX ON
MINERALS UNDER SECTION 115 OF THE TAMIL NADU PANCHAYAT
ACT, 1958 IS ULTRA VIRES. THIS COURT FURTHER HOLD THAT THE
EARLIER DECISION OF THIS COURT IN HRS MURTHY’S CASE - 1964
(6) SUPREME COURT REPORTS 666, HAS NOT BEEN CORRECTLY
DECIDED. SOMETIME THEREAFTER A THREE JUDGE BENCH OF THIS
COURT DECIDED THE CASE OF ORISSA CEMENT - 1991 SUPPL. (1)
SUPREME COURT CASES -430, AND FOLLOWING THE LARGER BENCH
DECISION OF THIS COURT IN INDIA CEMENT DECLARED IDENTICAL
LEVIES IMPOSED BY THE STATES OF ORISSA, BIHAR AND MADHYA
PRADESH TO BE INCOMPETENT AND VOID. THE COURT FURTHER HELD
THAT THE DECISION TO BE OPERATIVE PROSPECTIVELY WITH EFFECT
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 28
FROM THE DATE OF THE JUDGMENT I.E. 4.4.1991 SO FAR AS THE STATE
OF BIHAR IS CONCERNED, AND 22.12.1989 SO FAR AS ORISSA WAS
CONCERNED, THE DATE ON WHICH THE ORISSA HIGH COURT STRUCK
DOWN THE LEVY, AND 28.3.1989 SO FAR AS MADHYA PRADESH WAS
CONCERNED, THE DATE ON WHICH THE MADHYA PRADESH HIGH
COURT STRUCK DOWN THE LEVY. IT IS AFTER THE AFORESAID TWO
JUDGMENTS THE PARLIAMENT CAME FORWARD INITIALLY BY
PROMULGATING AN ORDINANCE, CALLED THE CESS AND OTHER TAXES
ON MINERALS (VALIDATION) ORDINANCE, 1992, AND THEREAFTER BY
REPLACING THE SAME BY ACT 16 OF 1992 WHICH WAS PUBLISHED IN
THE GAZETTE OF INDIA ON 4.4.1992. UNDER SECTION 2 OF THE
VALIDATION ACT THE PARLIAMENT BY LEGAL FICTION PURPORTS TO
HAVE ENACTED THE PROVISIONS OF THE ACTS MENTIONED IN THE
SCHEDULE KEEPING THE PROVISIONS OF SUCH ACT TO HAVE
REMAINED IN FORCE UPTO 4TH APRIL, 1991. THE SCHEDULE
CONSISTS OF 11 DIFFERENT ACTS, WHICH ACTS HAD BEEN DECLARED
BY THIS COURT TO BE ULTRA VIRES AS THE STATE LEGISLATURES WERE
DENUDED OF THEIR POWERS TO MAKE THOSE LAWS IN VIEW OF
DECLARATION MADE BY THE PARLIAMENT CONTAINED IN SECTION 2 OF
MINES AND MINERALS (REGULATION AND DEVELOPMENT) ACT,
1957. IN THE EYE OF LAW, THEREFORE, THOSE 11 ACTS MUST BE
HELD TO HAVE BEEN ENACTED BY THE PARLIAMENT UPTO 4TH APRIL,
1991. AFTER THE ENACTMENT OF THE VALIDATION ACT WRIT
PETITIONS WERE FILED IN THE HIGH COURT CHALLENGING THE VALIDITY
OF THE SAID VALIDATION ACT. THOSE WRIT PETITIONS HAVING BEEN
DISMISSED BY THE HIGH COURT, THE MATTER WAS CARRIED TO THIS
COURT IN KANNADASAN’S CASE AND THE SAID CASE WAS DISPOSED
OF BY JUDGMENT DATED JULY 26, 1996, REPORTED IN 1996 (5)
SCC, 670. A TWO JUDGE BENCH OF THIS COURT CONSIDERED THE 7
CONTENTIONS RAISED BY THE ASSESSEE AND REJECTED ALL THE
CONTENTIONS AND HELD AS FOLLOWS:-
(I) THAT BY ENACTING THE VALIDATION ACT, THE
PARLIAMENT DOES NOT SEEK TO OVER-TURN THE
DECISION RENDERED BY THIS COURT.
(II) A PERUSAL OF SECTION 2 OF THE IMPUGNED
ENACTMENT AND SECTION 2 OF THE 1969
VALIDATION ACT CONSIDERED IN KRISHNA
CHANDRA GANGOPADHYAYA WOULD SHOW
THAT SECTION 2 OF THE IMPUGNED ENACTMENT
IS A FAITHFUL REPRODUCTION AND REPETITION OF
SECTION 2 OF THE 1969 VALIDATION ACT,
WORD TO WORD. THE ONLY ADDITIONAL WORDS
ARE IN SECTION 2(1), VIZ. ’AND SUCH
PROVISIONS SHALL BE DEEMED TO HAVE
REMAINED IN FORCE UPTO THE 4TH DAY OF
APRIL, 1991.’
(III) THE PREAMBLE OF THE ACT STATING "TO
VALIDATE IMPOSITION AND COLLECTION OF
CESSES AND CERTAIN TAXES ON MINERALS
UNDER CERTAIN STATE LAWS" AS WELL AS THE
PROVISIONS OF THE VALIDATION ACT CREATE
THE LEVY AS WELL AS VALIDATE THE RECOVERY
ALREADY MADE AND THE EXPRESSION
’COLLECTION’ DOES NOT MEAN WHAT IS
ALREADY COLLECTED ALONE BUT MEANS THE
FUTURE COLLECTION AS WELL. NEITHER THE
PREAMBLE NOR SECTION 2 SAY THAT WHAT HAS
ALREADY COLLECTED ALONE IS VALIDATED.
(IV) THE CONTENTION OF THE ASSESSEE THAT A
PARLIAMENTARY ENACTMENT WILL NOT PERMIT
THE LEVY OF TAXES AND CESSES AT DIFFERENT
RATES IN DIFFERENT STATES IN THE COUNTRY AS
THAT WOULD BE DISCRIMINATORY AND
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 28
VALIDATION OF ARTICLE 14 OF THE
CONSTITUTION IS MISCONCEIVED AS
PARLIAMENT HAS INTERVENED AND BY
ENACTING THE IMPUGNED LAW IN EXERCISE OF
ITS UNDOUBTED POWER VALIDATED THE LEVY
AND ALL THAT FLOWS FROM IT.
(V) THE CONTENTION OF THE ASSESSEE THAT THE
DENUDATION OF THE POWER OF THE STATE
LEGISLATURE TO LEVY TAXES ON MINERALS IS NOT
AN ABSOLUTE AND UNLIMITED ONE, IS WHOLLY
MISCONCEIVED, PARTICULARLY IN VIEW OF THE
DECISIONS OF THIS COURT IN INDIA CEMENT
AND ORISSA CEMENT.
(VI) THE CONTENTION OF THE ASSESSEE THAT THE
TAXES REALISED BY VIRTUE OF THE VALIDATION
ACT CAN ONLY BE REALISED FOR THE PURPOSE
OF REGULATION OF MINES AND MINERALS
DEVELOPMENT IS ALSO BASED UPON A
MISCONCEPTION ABOUT THE LAW RELATING TO
TAXES AND WHAT IS LEVIED UNDER THE
IMPUGNED ENACTMENT IS A TAX/CESS AND NOT
A FEE AND AS SUCH, IT IS NOT NECESSARY THAT
ELEMENT OF QUID PRO QUO SHOULD BE
ESTABLISHED IN EACH AND EVERY CASE.
(VII) MERELY BECAUSE THE LEVY CREATED BY AN
ENACTMENT IS LIMITED TO A PARTICULAR
PERIOD, THE ACT ITSELF CANNOT BE SAID TO BE
A TEMPORARY STATUTE AND THE ACT VERY
MUCH CONTINUES IN FORCE AND WILL REMAIN
IN FORCE TILL PARLIAMENT CHOOSES TO REPEAL
IT AND, THEREFORE, SECTION 6 OF THE GENERAL
CLAUSES ACT SHOULD APPLY.
NOTWITHSTANDING THE CESSATION OF LEVY
CREATED BY SECTION 2(1) WITH 4TH DAY OF
APRIL, 1991, THE MACHINERY REQUISITE FOR
REALISING AND REFUNDING THE TAXES/CESSES
YET TO BE COLLECTED OR WRONGLY COLLECTED,
AS THE CASE MAY BE, IS KEPT ALIVE AND IT
CANNOT BE SUGGESTED WITH ANY
REASONABLENESS THAT THE SAID MACHINERY IS
KEPT ALIVE ONLY FOR THE PURPOSES OF
REFUNDING THE EXCESSIVELY COLLECTED TAXES
BUT NOT FOR COLLECTING/RECOVERING THE
UNCOLLECTED/UNRECOVERED TAXES AND CESSES.
WITH THE AFORESAID CONCLUSIONS THIS COURT DISMISSED THE
APPEALS PREFERRED BY THE ASSESSEE AGAINST THE JUDGMENT OF THE
MADRAS HIGH COURT.
THE PATNA HIGH COURT DISPOSED OF THE BATCH OF WRIT
PETITIONS ON 17TH JANUARY, 1996 BEFORE THE JUDGMENT OF THIS
COURT IN KANNADASAN’S CASE. IN THE IMPUGNED JUDGMENT THE
HIGH COURT HAS HELD THAT:
(A) THE PARLIAMENT HAS NOT ENACTED THE ENTIRE CESS ACT
OF 1880 BUT HAS MERELY RE-ENACTED THE PROVISIONS
CONTAINED THEREIN WHICH RELATE TO CESS AND OTHER
TAXES ON MINERALS;
(B) THE LAWS WHICH HAVE BEEN ENACTED BY THE STATE
LEGISLATURE ARE DEEMED TO HAVE BEEN ENACTED BY
THE PARLIAMENT.
(C) IT BECAME NECESSARY FOR THE PARLIAMENT TO
INTERVENE AND TO ENACT A LAW WITH A VIEW TO
PROTECT A STATE FROM THE CONSEQUENCES THAT
FOLLOWED DECLARATION MADE BY THE SUPREME COURT
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 28
IN INDIA CEMENT AND ORISSA CEMENT.
(D) THE PARLIAMENT TOOK PRECAUTION TO ITSELF RE-
LEGISLATE ON THE SUBJECT MATTER IN EXERCISE OF ITS
LEGISLATIVE POWER AND IT CHOSE TO LEGISLATE BY
INCORPORATION , A METHOD OF LEGISLATION WELL
RECOGNISED BY LAW.
(E) THE LAWS ENACTED WERE DEEMED TO HAVE REMAINED
IN FORCE UPTO 4TH APRIL, 1991.
(F) THE STATUTE IN QUESTION CAN BE DESCRIBED AS
PROMULGATED A TEMPORARY LEGISLATION.
(G) THE SUBMISSION THAT PARLIAMENT DID NOT HAVE THE
COMPETENCE TO LEGISLATE ON THE SUBJECT MATTER FELL
WITHIN THE EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION OF THE STATE
LEGISLATURE, PROCEEDS ON THE ERRONEOUS
ASSUMPTION THAT THE SUBJECT MATTER WITH WHICH THE
PARLIAMENT DEALT WITH IN THE VALIDATION ACT WAS A
STATE SUBJECT CONTAINED IN LIST II OF 7TH SCHEDULE.
(H) THE COMPETENCE OF PARLIAMENT TO MAKE ENACTMENT
IS BEYOND CHALLENGE.
(I) THE VALIDATION ACT CANNOT BE IMPUGNED ON THE
GROUND THAT IT SOUGHT TO RE-VALIDATE THE SAID ACT
WHICH WAS DECLARED UNCONSTITUTIONAL BY THE
SUPREME COURT. THE POWER OF THE PARLIAMENT TO
LEGISLATE RETROSPECTIVELY CANNOT BE DISPUTED.
CONSEQUENTLY THE PARLIAMENT HAD POWER TO
LEGISLATE ON THE TOPIC IT COULD MAKE AN ACT ON THE
TOPIC BY ANY DRAFTING MEANS INCLUDING BY
REFERENTIAL LEGISLATION.
(J) THERE IS NOTHING IN THE IMPUGNED ACT WITH REGARD
TO THE ASSIGNMENT OF THE TAXES COLLECTED OR ITS
DISTRIBUTION BETWEEN THE STATES. IT CANNOT
THEREFORE BE URGED THAT ANY PROVISION IN THE
IMPUGNED ACT RUNS CONTRARY TO THE CONSTITUTIONAL
SCHEME WITH REGARD TO THE ASSIGNMENT TO THE STATES
OF THE TAXES REALISED, OR THEIR DISTRIBUTION BETWEEN
THE STATES.
(K) CONSIDERING THE BACKGROUND, FACTS AND HAVING
REGARD TO THE PURPOSE FOR WHICH THE LAW WAS
PASSED AND THE OBJECTIVE SOUGHT TO BE ACHIEVED IT
CANNOT BE SAID THAT THE VALIDATION ACT WAS
DISCRIMINATORY MERELY BECAUSE DIFFERENT RATES OF
CESS ON ROYALTY WERE PRESCRIBED FOR DIFFERENT
STATES. THE DOMINANT OBJECTIVE OF THE ACT WAS TO
VALIDATE THE LEVIES ALREADY MADE, AND NOT TO
LEGISLATE ON THE SUBJECT BY NAMING A LAW IMPOSING
CESS ON ROYALTY. IT WAS BECAUSE OF THIS OBJECTIVE
WHICH THE LAW SOUGHT TO ACHIEVE, THAT THE LAW WAS
GIVEN A LIMITED LIFE I.E. TILL 4TH APRIL, 1991. THE
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY AND THE MARCH OF EVENTS, EARLIER
JUSTIFIED BY A SUPREME COURT JUDGMENT, COULD NOT
BE IGNORED BY THE PARLIAMENT AND, THEREFORE,
TAKING INTO ACCOUNT THE REALITY OF THE SITUATION, THE
PARLIAMENT WAS LEFT WITH NO OPTION BUT TO VALIDATE
THE LEVY OF CESS ON ROYALTY TILL 4TH APRIL, 1991, THE
DATE OF THE SUPREME COURT JUDGMENT IN ORISSA
CEMENT. ?THE LAW CEASES TO HAVE ANY EFFECT AFTER
THE DATE WHICH MAKES IT CLEAR THAT THE LEGISLATION
WAS NOT WITH A VIEW TO LEVY CESS ON ROYALTY, BUT
ONLY TO VALIDATE WHAT HAD HAPPENED IN THE PAST.
(L) SUB-SECTION (1) OF SECTION 2 OF THE ACT MAKES IT
CLEAR THAT THE IMPUGNED ACT DOES NOT ENACT BY
VALIDATION A PERPETUAL LAW BUT A TEMPORARY ACT.
(M) IN THE IMPUGNED ACT ADMITTEDLY THERE IS NO
PROVISION SIMILAR TO SECTION 6 OF GENERAL CLAUSES
ACT NOR IS THERE ANY SAVING CLAUSE WHICH MAY
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 28
JUSTIFY THE APPLICATION OF PRINCIPLES CONTAINED IN
SECTION 6 OF GENERAL CLAUSES ACT.
(N) THE ACT WAS PROMULGATED FOR A LIMITED PURPOSE.
THE PARLIAMENT INTERVENED AND GRANTED SANCTITY TO
LAWS DECLARED VOID BY THE SUPREME COURT ONLY
WITH A VIEW TO ABSOLVE THE STATES OF THEIR LIABILITY
TO REFUND THE TAXES ILLEGALLY COLLECTED AS THAT
WOULD HAVE CAST HEAVY FINANCIAL BURDEN ON THE
STATE. IT ALSO PROVIDED FOR THE SAME CUT OFF DATE
INSTEAD OF DIFFERENT CUT OFF DATES. THE PARLIAMENT
DID NOT INTEND TO KEEP ALIVE AFTER 4.4.91, THE
OBLIGATIONS OR LIABILITIES ACCRUED OR INCURRED UNDER
THE TEMPORARY LAWS AND, THEREFORE, DID NOT PROVIDE
FOR THE ENFORCEMENT OF SUCH OBLIGATIONS OR
LIABILITIES IN FUTURE. AS A RESULT THE TAXES COLLECTED
BEFORE 4.4.91 ARE NOT REQUIRED TO BE REFUNDED, BUT
THE ACT DOES NOT SANCTION THE RECOVERY OF ANY TAX
AFTER 4.4.91.
WITH THE AFORESAID CONCLUSIONS, THE DEMANDS MADE BY
THE STATE HAVING BEEN QUASHED AND THE STATE HAVING BEEN
RESTRAINED FROM TAKING ANY STEPS TO REALISE THE DEMANDS THE
STATE THROUGH ITS MINING OFFICER IS IN APPEAL BEFORE THIS COURT.
MR. RAKESH DWIVEDI, THE LEARNED SENIOR COUNSEL
APPEARING FOR THE STATE OF BIHAR CONTENDED THAT THE LANGUAGE
OF SECTION 2(1) OF THE VALIDATION ACT IS UNAMBIGUOUS AND IS
SUSCEPTIBLE OF THE ONLY CONSTRUCTION THAT THE RELEVANT LAW
SPECIFIED IN THE SCHEDULE WAS ENACTED BY THE PARLIAMENT AND
REMAINED VALID UPTO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991 AND CONSEQUENTLY, THE
STATE IS ENTITLED TO COLLECT THE CESS OR TAXES ON MINERALS,
WHICH BECAME PAYABLE UPTO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991. ABSENCE OF
ANY LAW SUBSEQUENT TO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991 WOULD NOT STAND AS A
BAR ON LEVY AND COLLECTION OF THE CESS AND TAXES ON MINERALS
AND ANY TAX OR CESS, WHICH IS VALIDLY LEVIABLE UNDER A VALID
LAW COULD BE COLLECTED EVEN AFTER THE EXPIRY OF THE LAW IN
QUESTION. THE HIGH COURT, THEREFORE, WAS IN ERROR IN LIMITING
THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 2(1) OF THE VALIDATION ACT BY
MAKING REFERENCE TO THE STATEMENT OF OBJECT AND REASONS.
MR. DWIVEDI FURTHER CONTENDED THAT THE PREAMBLE ALSO
UNEQUIVOCALLY INDICATES THAT THE ACT IS TO VALIDATE THE
IMPOSITION AND COLLECTION OF CESS AND CERTAIN OTHER TAXES ON
MINERALS UNDER CERTAIN STATE LAWS. NECESSARILY, THEREFORE, THE
RIGHT TO IMPOSE THE LEVY AND COLLECT THE SAME BY VIRTUE OF THE
VALIDATION ACT, CANNOT BE NULLIFIED OR TAKEN AWAY, MERELY
BECAUSE THE ACT HAD ITS LIFE TILL 4TH OF APRIL, 1991. MR.
DWIVEDI ALSO FURTHER CONTENDED THAT THE ACT ITSELF HAVING
BEEN ENACTED ON 4TH OF APRIL, 1992, THE DATE ON WHICH IT
RECEIVED THE ASSENT OF THE PRESIDENT AND WAS PUBLISHED IN THE
GAZETTE OF INDIA AND INDICATING THEREIN THAT THE ENACTMENT IN
QUESTION MUST BE DEEMED TO HAVE BEEN MADE BY PARLIAMENT
AND KEEPING THE PROVISIONS VALID UPTO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991 IS
CLEARLY SUGGESTIVE OF THE FACT THAT THE PARLIAMENT INTENDED TO
ENACT THE RELEVANT PROVISIONS OF THE STATE LAWS DEALING WITH
THE LEVY AND COLLECTION OF CESS AND TAXES ON MINERALS,
THEREBY, CONFERRING RIGHT UPON THE STATE TO MAKE THE LEVY AND
COLLECT THE SAME IN RESPECT OF THE MINERALS ON WHICH THE CESS
COULD BE LEVIABLE UPTO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991, AND UNLESS SUCH AN
INTERPRETATION IS GIVEN, THE VALIDATION ACT WOULD BE
MEANINGLESS AND WOULD NOT SUBSERVE THE PURPOSE FOR WHICH
PARLIAMENT BY DEEMING FICTION, LEGISLATE THE RELEVANT
PROVISIONS OF THE STATE ACTS, AS IF IT WAS AN ENACTMENT OF THE
PARLIAMENT. ADJUDGED FROM THIS STAND POINT, MR. DWIVEDI
CONTENDS THAT THE DECISION OF THIS COURT IN KANNADASAN’S
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 28
CASE, DOES NOT REQUIRE ANY RE-CONSIDERATION AND THE COURT
RIGHTLY HELD THAT THE VALIDATION IN QUESTION IS NOT ONLY IN
RELATION TO THE CESS ALREADY COLLECTED UNDER AN INVALID LAW, BUT
ALSO IN RELATION TO THE RIGHT OF THE STATE TO LEVY, DEMAND AND
COLLECT, WHICH WOULD BE COLLECTABLE UPTO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991.
ACCORDING TO MR. DWIVEDI, THE TWO FICTIONS ENGRAFTED IN
SECTION 2(1) OF THE VALIDATION ACT, MUST BE GIVEN FULL PLAY
AND EFFECT AND, THEREFORE, IN THE EYE OF LAW, A VALID STATUTE
ENACTED BY THE PARLIAMENT HAVING LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE FOR
THE SAME BEING OPERATIVE TILL 4TH OF APRIL, 1991, THERE IS NO
RHYME OR REASON TO DEBAR THE STATE FROM MAKING ANY DEMAND
OR COLLECT THE CESS, WHICH IS COLLECTABLE UPTO 4TH OF APRIL,
1991 ON THE MINERALS EXTRACTED. ACCORDING TO THE LEARNED
COUNSEL, THE IMPUGNED VALIDATION ACT IS A UNIQUE PIECE OF
LEGISLATION, BUT THE LEGISLATIVE INTENT IS APPARENT FROM THE
LANGUAGE USED AS WELL AS IN THE SETTINGS IN WHICH THE
ENACTMENT WAS MADE, CONFERRING THEREBY UPON THE STATE
GOVERNMENT, A RIGHT TO LEVY AND COLLECT TAXES IN RESPECT OF
THE PAST PERIOD, EVEN AFTER THE EXPIRATION OF 4TH OF APRIL, 1991.
MR. DWIVEDI URGED THAT IN CONSTRUING SUCH A UNIQUE PIECE OF
LEGISLATION, THE COURTS MUST ADOPT A DYNAMIC APPROACH AND IT
DOES NOT REQUIRE ANY ELABORATE ARGUMENT TO DISCOVER THE
LEGISLATIVE INTENT WHICH HAS BEEN WELL EXPRESSED IN THE
LANGUAGE USED IN THE STATUTE ITSELF. ACCORDING TO MR.
DWIVEDI, THE VALIDATION ACT CANNOT BE HELD TO BE A TEMPORARY
STATUTE AND REMAINS AS A VALID PIECE OF LEGISLATION, CONFERRING
THE RIGHT TO COLLECT AND MAKE THE LEVY, WHICH WOULD BE
COLLECTABLE UPTO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991 AND THE PROVISIONS OF
GENERAL CLAUSES ACT WOULD BE APPLICABLE. MR. DWIVEDI
URGED THAT THERE IS NO QUARREL WITH THE CONSTITUTIONAL
PROPOSITION ENGRAFTED IN ARTICLE 265 OF THE CONSTITUTION THAT
LEVY AND COLLECTION SHOULD BE BY AUTHORITY OF LAW. BUT IN
RESPECT OF MINERALS EXTRACTED UPTO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991, IF ANY
CESS OR TAX IS TO BE LEVIED AND COLLECTED IN ACCORDANCE WITH
THE MACHINERY PROVIDED FOR THE SAME, THAT RIGHT OF THE STATE
WILL NOT GET FRUSTRATED, MERELY BECAUSE THE LEGISLATION IN
QUESTION IN THE EYE OF LAW WAS EFFECTIVE TILL 4TH OF APRIL, 1991.
THE COUNSEL URGED THAT WHAT THE PARLIAMENT INTENDED, IS THAT
THE STATE COULD LEVY AND COLLECT CESS ON MINERALS EXTRACTED TILL
4TH OF APRIL, 1991, BUT WOULD NOT BE ENTITLED TO MAKE ANY LEVY
OR COLLECT CESS ON MINERALS EXTRACTED SUBSEQUENT TO 4TH OF
APRIL, 1991. ACCORDING TO MR. DWIVEDI, EVEN WHILE THE
RELEVANT ACT WAS STRUCK DOWN BY THE JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT
IN ORISSA CEMENT’S’CASE, IN THE VERY JUDGMENT, IT WAS
INDICATED THAT THERE WOULD BE NO LIABILITY ON THE PART OF THE
STATE TO REFUND THE CESS ALREADY COLLECTED TILL THE DATE OF THE
JUDGMENT I.E. 4.4.1991, AND IT WAS UNNECESSARY FOR THE
PARLIAMENT TO INCLUDE THAT ACT IN THE SCHEDULE AND VALIDATE
THE PROVISIONS OF THE ACT BY A DEEMING FICTION OF ENACTMENT
BY THE PARLIAMENT MERELY FOR THE PURPOSE OF ABSOLVING THE
STATE FROM THE LIABILITY OF REFUNDING THE CESS ALREADY
COLLECTED, AS SUCH A DIRECTION WAS PART OF THE JUDGMENT OF THIS
COURT IN ORISSA CEMENT CASE. IT CANNOT BE ASSUMED THAT
THE PARLIAMENT ENACTED THE PROVISIONS OF THE RELEVANT ACT UPTO
4TH OF APRIL, 1991 WITHOUT ANY PURPOSE OR OBJECT. IT WOULD,
THEREFORE, BE RATIONAL TO CONSTRUE THAT THE PURPOSE OF THE
ENACTMENT IN QUESTION WAS TO HAVE A VALID LAW TILL 4TH OF APRIL,
1991, THEREBY, CONFERRING THE STATE THE RIGHT TO LEVY AND
COLLECT ALL CESS AND TAXES ON MINERALS, WHICH WAS COLLECTABLE
UPTO THE 4TH OF APRIL, 1991. THE CONSTRUCTION PUT-FORTH BY THE
PATNA HIGH COURT IN THE IMPUGNED JUDGMENT IS, THEREFORE,
ERRONEOUS. WITH REFERENCE TO THE PRESS NOTE THAT WAS ISSUED
ON 17.2.1992, MR. DWIVEDI CONTENDS THAT THE EXPRESSION "THAT
THE GOVERNMENT HAS DECIDED TO VALIDATE THE COLLECTION OF
CESSES AND OTHER LEVIES UPTO 4.4.91" WOULD UNEQUIVOCALLY
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 28
INDICATE THAT THE COLLECTION ALREADY MADE AS WELL AS THE
COLLECTION TO BE MADE IN RESPECT OF THE COLLECTABLE DUES UPTO
4.4.91 WAS INTENDED TO BE VALIDATED. IT IS THE CONTENTION OF
THE LEARNED COUNSEL THAT ALL LEVIES WHICH WOULD BE VALIDLY
IMPOSABLE UPTO 4.4.91 COULD BE COLLECTED BY THE STATE AND
THAT WAS THE OBJECT FOR WHICH THE PARLIAMENT MADE THE
ENACTMENT. IT WAS ALSO URGED THAT IF THE LANGUAGE USED IN
SECTION 2(2) IS READ IN JUXTAPOSITION TO LANGUAGE USED IN
SECTION 2(1), IT WOULD BE APPARENT THAT SECTION 2(1) WAS NOT
CONFINED TO THE VALIDATION OF THE LEVY THAT HAS ALREADY BEEN
COLLECTED, BUT IT WAS A VALID LAW, MAKING THE STATE ENTITLED TO
COLLECT THE CESS REALISABLE UPTO 4.4.91. IN RESPONSE TO THE
CONCLUSIONS OF THE HIGH COURT ON THE QUESTION OF A SAVING
CLAUSE, MR. DWIVEDI CONTENDS THAT THE SAID ABSENCE OF A
SAVING CLAUSE IS NOT DECISIVE AND EVEN IF THE ACT IS HELD TO BE
A TEMPORARY ACT, IF THE LIABILITY IS OF AN ENDURING NATURE, THE
SAME WOULD SURVIVE EVEN AFTER THE EXPIRY OF THE ACT ITSELF, AS
WAS HELD BY THIS COURT IN THE CASE OF BHUPENDRA BOSE, 1962
SUPP. (2) S.C.R. 380. ACCORDING TO MR. DWIVEDI, BY
PROCESS OF RE-ENACTMENT OF THE STATE LEGISLATIONS BY THE
PARLIAMENTS ITSELF, THE PARLIAMENT WAS IN FACT BALANCING
BETWEEN THE PUBLIC INTEREST INVOLVED IN THE MATTER OF
DIRECTION OF REFUND BY THE SUPREME COURT AND AS SUCH WANTED
TO PLACE ALL THE STATES UNIFORMLY BY MAKING THE LEGISLATION
ENACTED TILL 4TH OF APRIL, 1991. IN THE MATTER OF BALANCING
SUCH PUBLIC INTEREST, IT WOULD BE UNREASONABLE TO HOLD THAT
PERSONS FROM WHOM TAX COULD NOT BE COLLECTED WOULD BE IN A
BETTER POSITION THAN THE PERSONS FROM WHOM THE TAX HAD
ALREADY BEEN COLLECTED. ON THE OTHER HAND, IT WOULD BE MORE
LOGICAL TO HOLD THAT LIABILITY TO PAY THE TAX ON THE MINERALS
EXTRACTED UPTO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991 WOULD BE UNIFORMLY APPLIED
AND, THEREFORE, THE STATE WOULD HAVE THE RIGHT TO MAKE THE
LEVY AND COLLECT THE SAME. WITH REFERENCE TO THE VARIOUS
VALIDATING ACTS AND THE PATTERN OF VALIDATION, AS
DEMONSTRATED BY THE ASSESSEES, MR. DWIVEDI CONTENDS THAT
WHILE CONSTRUING THE PROVISIONS OF A PARTICULAR STATUTE, THE
LANGUAGE USED IN THAT STATUTE IS OF PARAMOUNT CONSIDERATION
INASMUCH THE INTENTION OF THE LEGISLATURE IS WELL EXPRESSED IN
THE LANGUAGE USED. FURTHER THE DECISION OF THIS COURT IN
JOURA SUGAR MILLS, 1966(1) S.C.R. 523, AND THE RATIO
THEREIN WOULD SQUARELY APPLY TO THE CASE IN HAND AND,
THEREFORE, IT WOULD BE ONLY REASONABLE TO CONSTRUE THAT THE
STATE COULD RECOVER ALL THE CESS AND TAX ON MINERALS, WHICH
WOULD BE FOUND DUE UPTO 4.4.91 AND THERE SHOULD NOT BE ANY
FETTER ON THE POWER OF THE STATE TO COLLECT SUCH DUES MERELY
BECAUSE THE LIFE OF THE ACT HAS EXPIRED ON 4.4.91. ACCORDING
TO MR. DWIVEDI, THIS COURT WHILE DECIDING THE TRUE IMPORT AND
EFFECT OF THE VALIDATION ACT IN KANNADASAN’S CASE, BORNE IN
MIND THE BACKDROP OF A SPECIAL HISTORICAL SITUATION WHERE CESS
AND TAXES ON MINERALS WERE BEING COLLECTED BY DIFFERENT
STATES UNDER THEIR LAWS AT DIFFERENT RATES OVER A LONG PERIOD,
WHICH LAWS WERE STRUCK DOWN BY THE SUPREME COURT, ON THE
GROUND OF LACK OF LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE. THE DECISION
RENDERED BY THIS COURT IN KANNADASAN’S CASE, THEREFORE,
MUST BE HELD TO BE CORRECT AND DOES NOT REQUIRE ANY
RECONSIDERATION.
MR. CHAUDHARY, LEARNED COUNSEL APPEARING FOR THE STATE
OF MADHYA PRADESH IN THE TRANSFERRED APPLICATIONS SUPPORTED
THE ARGUMENTS ADVANCED BY MR. RAKESH DWIVEDI, APPEARING
FOR THE STATE OF BIHAR AND FURTHER CONTENDED THAT THE PURPOSE
OF THE VALIDATION ACT IS TO PROVIDE THE LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE
FOR THE ENACTMENT IN QUESTION UP TO 4TH APRIL, 1991. THE
CONSEQUENCES FLOWING THEREFROM WOULD CONFER AN UNFETTERED
RIGHT ON THE STATE GOVERNMENT TO IMPOSE AND COLLECT CESS AND
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 28
TAXES ON MINERALS WHICH WAS IMPOSABLE UP TO 4TH APRIL,
1991, AND THAT RIGHT CANNOT BE NULLIFIED MERELY BECAUSE THE
ACT REMAINED IN FORCE TILL 4TH APRIL, 1991. MR. CHAUDHARY
CONTENDED THAT THE AMPLITUDE OF THE SUBSTANTIVE PROVISION
CONTAINED IN SECTION 2(1) OF THE VALIDATION ACT CANNOT BE
CURTAILED BY LOOKING TO THE OBJECTS AND REASONS OF THE
LEGISLATION, AND JUDGED FROM THIS STAND POINT THE CONCLUSION
IS IRRESISTIBLE, AS WAS HELD BY THIS COURT IN KANNADASAN’S
CASE, THAT IT PERMITS BOTH LEVY AND COLLECTION EVEN AFTER
4.4.1991 IN RESPECT OF THE LIABILITIES ACCRUED UNTIL 4TH APRIL,
1991. IN SUPPORT OF THIS CONTENTION HE PLACED RELIANCE ON THE
DECISION OF THIS COURT IN THE CASE OF M/S. BURRAKUR COAL
CO. LTD. VS. THE UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS - 1962 (1) SCR
44. MR. SANJAY HEGDE, LEARNED COUNSEL APPEARING FOR THE
STATE OF KARNATAKA ADOPTED THE ARGUMENTS ADVANCED BY MR.
RAKESH DWIVEDI, APPEARING FOR THE STATE OF BIHAR. MR. N.N.
GOSWAMI, LEARNED SENIOR COUNSEL, APPEARING FOR THE UNION OF
INDIA, SUBMITTED THAT TO AVOID ANY DISCRIMINATION BETWEEN THE
GROUP OF PERSONS FROM WHOM THE CESS AND TAX ON MINERALS
HAVE BEEN COLLECTED, AND THE OTHERS FROM WHOM IT HAS NOT
BEEN COLLECTED THOUGH THEY ARE LIABLE, THE LEGISLATION IN
QUESTION EVEN THOUGH GOES BEYOND THE OBJECT, MUST BE
CONSTRUED TO HOLD THAT IT PERMITS LEVY AND COLLECTION OF THE
DUES WHICH WOULD BE COLLECTABLE UPTO 4.4.1991.
MR. SHANTI BHUSHAN, LEARNED SENIOR COUNSEL APPEARING
FOR THE ASSESSEE IN BIHAR CASE CONTENDED THAT ARTICLE 265 OF
THE CONSTITUTION PUTS AN EMBARGO THAT NO TAX COULD BE LEVIED
OR COLLECTED EXCEPT BY AN AUTHORITY OF LAW, AND IF, LAW IN
QUESTION NEVER REMAINED IN FORCE AFTER 4.4.1991 THEN THE
QUESTION OF CONFERRING RIGHT UPON THE STATE TO LEVY OR
COLLECTION DOES NOT ARISE. THE RIGHT TO LEVY AND COLLECTION,
WHICH WAS THERE WITH THE STATE HAVING DISAPPEARED WITH
EFFECT FROM 4.4.1991, THE DATE ON WHICH THE LIFE OF THE ACT
EXPIRES, UNLESS THERE IS ANY PROVISION CONFERRING THE RIGHT
UPON THE STATE TO MAKE LEVY OR COLLECT ANY LEVY, THAT
COLLECTION WOULD BE WITHOUT THE AUTHORITY OF LAW AND WOULD
CONTRAVENE ARTICLE 265 OF THE CONSTITUTION. ACCORDING TO MR.
SHANTI BHUSHAN, SECTION 2(1) OF THE VALIDATION ACT CANNOT BE
HELD TO BE AN ENACTMENT AND REPEAL, AS CONTENDED BY MR.
DWIVEDI, APPEARING FOR THE STATE OF BIHAR. THE LEARNED
COUNSEL URGED THAT IT IS TRUE THAT IN VIEW OF THE JUDGMENT OF
THIS COURT IN ORISSA CEMENT’S CASE IT WAS NOT NECESSARY FOR
THE PARLIAMENT TO MAKE THE ENACTMENT, BUT MERELY BECAUSE IT
WAS SO ENACTED IT CANNOT BE CONSTRUED WHICH IS NOT APPARENT
IN THE ACT ITSELF. ACCORDING TO THE LEARNED COUNSEL THE
VALIDATION ACT WAS ENACTED ONLY FOR PREVENTING ANY REFUND OF
THE TAX, ALREADY COLLECTED, AS IT WOULD HAVE GOT SERIOUS
REPERCUSSIONS ON THE STATE REVENUE, AND THAT IS ALSO EXPLICIT
FROM THE OBJECTS AND REASONS OF THE VALIDATION ACT, AS WELL
AS THE PRESS NOTE ISSUED, AND THEREFORE, THE HIGH COURT UNDER
THE IMPUGNED JUDGMENT WAS FULLY JUSTIFIED IN COMING TO THE
CONCLUSION THAT BECAUSE OF THE VALIDATION ACT, THE STATE
CANNOT BE SAID TO HAVE BEEN CONFERRED ANY RIGHT TO LEVY AND
COLLECT DUES, WHICH WAS COLLECTABLE UPTO 4.4.1991. MR.
SHANTI BHUSHAN CONTENDS THAT SECTION 2(2) OF THE VALIDATION
ACT, ON A PLAIN READING, WOULD SUGGEST, THAT IT VALIDATES ALL THE
PAST ACTS OF COLLECTION BUT HAS NOT CONFERRED ANY RIGHT TO
MAKE ANY FRESH COLLECTION OR LEVY ANY CESS ON MINERALS. MR.
SHANTI BHUSHAN CONTENDED THAT IN KANNADASAN’S CASE THIS
COURT CONSIDERED FROM A WRONG PREMISE, IN AS MUCH AS, WHAT
WAS NECESSARY FOR CONSIDERATION IS AS TO WHETHER THE RELEVANT
STATUTE WHICH LACK LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE AND WAS ENACTED IS
A TEMPORARY LEGISLATION OR NOT? AND AS SUCH, THE FACT THAT
PARLIAMENT DID NOT PROVIDE SAVING CLAUSE IS INDICATIVE OF THE
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 28
TRUE INTENTION, NAMELY, THE PARLIAMENT NEVER PERMITTED THE
STATES TO LEVY AND COLLECT THE LIABILITIES ALREADY ACCRUED, BUT
IT ONLY VALIDATED THE COLLECTION AND LEVY ALREADY MADE UNDER
AN INVALID LAW WHICH OTHERWISE THE STATE WOULD HAVE BEEN
LIABLE TO REFUND. MR. SHANTI BHUSHAN ALSO REFERRED TO THE
JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT IN JOURA SUGAR MILLS’ CASE- 1996 (1)
SCR- 523 AND POINTED OUT THE DIFFERENCE IN THE VALIDATION
ACT WHICH WOULD CLINCH THE ISSUE.
MR. PARASARAN, THE LEARNED SENIOR COUNSEL APPEARING FOR
THE RESPONDENTS IN SOME OF THE SPECIAL LEAVE APPLICATIONS,
ARISING OUT OF THE JUDGMENT OF THE PATNA HIGH COURT,
CONTENDED, THAT AS SEVERAL STATE LEGISLATIONS WERE BEING GIVEN
LIFE THROUGH PARLIAMENTARY ENACTMENT, THE PARLIAMENT THOUGHT
IT FIT TO PUT UP THE COMMON DATE FOR ALL THE STATE LAWS TILL THE
DATE OF THE JUDGMENT IN ORISSA CEMENT CASE, 4TH APRIL, 1991,
WITH THE SOLE OBJECT THAT NONE OF THE COLLECTION MADE WOULD
BE REQUIRED TO BE REFUNDED. BUT IN THE ABSENCE OF ANY
PROVISION IN THE VALIDATING ACT PROVIDING FOR A RIGHT TO MAKE
LEVY AND COLLECTION BEYOND THE DATE AND SINCE SECTION 6 OF THE
GENERAL CLAUSES ACT HAS NO APPLICATION IT WOULD BE WHOLLY
ILLEGAL TO HOLD THAT THE STATE CAN MAKE LEVY AND COLLECT TAX
EVEN AFTER 4.4.1991 IN RESPECT OF THE DUES WHICH WERE
COLLECTABLE UPTO THAT DATE. ACCORDING TO MR. PARASARAN, THE
PARLIAMENT CAME FORWARD BY FICTIONALLY ENACTING PROVISIONS
OF DIFFERENT STATE LAWS DEALING WITH THE TAX AND CESS ON
MINERALS AS AN ACT OF BALANCING PUBLIC INTEREST, AS OTHERWISE IT
WAS FELT THAT IT WOULD BE A SEVERE BLOW ON THE STATE REVENUE IF
THE STATE IS REQUIRED TO REFUND THE TAXES AND CESS ALREADY
COLLECTED. IT IS THUS CONTENDED BY MR. PARASARAN THAT THE
JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT IN KANNADASAN IS ERRONEOUS AND IT
MUST BE HELD THAT BY THE VALIDATION ACT, STATE WOULD NOT BE
LIABLE TO REFUND THE CESS ALREADY COLLECTED BUT NO RIGHT CAN BE
SAID TO HAVE BEEN CONFERRED UPON THE STATE TO MAKE ANY
FURTHER LEVY OR COLLECTION IN RESPECT OF DUES COLLECTABLE UP TO
4.4.91, AS WAS HELD IN KANNADASAN’S CASE.
MR. K.K. VENUGOPAL, LEARNED SENIOR COUNSEL APPEARING
FOR THE RESPONDENT HINDALCO IN SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION NO.
13106 OF 1996, CONTENDED WITH VEHEMENCE, THAT IN INDIA
CEMENT’S CASE AS WELL AS IN ORISSA CEMENT’S CASE THE
QUESTION FOR CONSIDERATION WAS WHETHER THE STATE LEGISLATURE
CAN MAKE ANY LAW/TAX ON MINERALS AND THIS COURT IN NO
UNCERTAIN TERMS HELD THAT THE STATE LEGISLATURE DID NOT HAVE THE
LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE. BUT HAVING HELD SO THE COURT
INNOVATED THE DEVICE OF PROSPECTIVE OVER RULING FOLLOWING THE
PRINCIPLE ENUNCIATED IN GOLAKNATH’S CASE. THE TRUE IMPORT IS
THAT THE PROSPECTIVE INVALIDATION WAS POSTPONED TILL 4.4.1991,
BUT THERE BEING NO LEGISLATION AFTER 4.4.1991 NOTWITHSTANDING
THE RE-ENACTMENT OF THE STATE LAWS BY THE PARLIAMENT UP TO
THAT DATE THERE CANNOT BE ANY AUTHORITY OF LAW TO MAKE ANY
DEMAND BY THE STATE OF ANY TAX OR CESS ON MINERALS.
ACCORDING TO MR. VENUGOPAL, THE LAWS HAVING MET A NATURAL
DEATH ON 4.4.1991 AND ONLY PAST ACTIONS HAVING BEEN SOUGHT
TO BE VALIDATED BY VIRTUE OF THE VALIDATION ACT NO POWER CAN
BE SAID TO HAVE BEEN CONFERRED ON THE STATES TO COLLECT THE
PAST LIABILITY INCURRED, BUT WHICH ARE NOT COLLECTED. EVEN IF
THERE HAS BEEN A LEVY BUT NOT COLLECTED PRIOR TO 4.4.1991
CANNOT BE PERMITTED TO BE COLLECTED IN THE ABSENCE OF ANY
VALID LAW, AS IN THAT EVENT IT WOULD CONTRAVENE ARTICLE 265.
ACCORDING TO MR. VENUGOPAL, IF THERE IS NO AUTHORITY OF LAW
AFTER 4.4.1991 THEN THERE WOULD BE NO QUESTION OF EITHER
IMPOSING LEVY OR COLLECTING LEVY, WHICH MIGHT HAVE BEEN
IMPOSED, AND JUDGED FROM THIS ANGLE THE JUDGMENT OF THIS
COURT IN KANNADASAN’S CASE MUST BE HELD TO BE WRONGLY
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 28
DECIDED.
DR. A.M. SINGHVI, THE LEARNED SENIOR COUNSEL, APPEARING
FOR THE ASSESSEE-RESPONDENT IN S.L.P.(CIVIL) NO. 13106/96
AND S.L.P.(CIVIL) NO. 15442-15443/98 CONTENDED THAT THE
INTENTION OF THE PARLIAMENT IN ENACTING THE VALIDATION ACT
WAS ONLY TO SAVE THE STATE GOVERNMENTS FROM REFUNDING THE
MONIES ALREADY COLLECTED UNDER STATUTES DECLARED VOID AB-
INITIO BY THE COURTS AND IT NEVER INTENDED TO CONFER A RIGHT
ON THE STATE TO MAKE ANY FRESH LEVY OR COLLECTION IN RESPECT OF
THE CESS AND TAXES, WHICH COULD BE COLLECTED UPTO 4.4.91, AS
CONTENDED BY MR. DWIVEDI, APPEARING FOR THE STATE OF BIHAR.
ACCORDING TO DR. SINGHVI, WHEN THIS COURT IN ORISSA
CEMENT’S CASE, FOLLOWING THE EARLIER JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
IN INDIA CEMENT, INVALIDATED LEVIES MADE UNDER DIFFERENT
STATUTES ENACTED BY THE STATES OF ORISSA, MADHYA PRADESH AND
BIHAR AND ISSUED A MANDAMUS, DIRECTING REFUND OF THE
MONIES COLLECTED UNDER SUCH VOID STATUTES, THE STATE
GOVERNMENTS WOULD HAVE BEEN UNDER A CONSTITUTIONAL
OBLIGATION TO CARRY OUT THE DIRECTIONS ISSUED AND WERE BOUND
TO REFUND THE MONIES COLLECTED FROM THE RESPECTIVE STATES
FROM THE DATE OF THE JUDGMENT OF THE HIGH COURT, WHICH
WOULD HAVE RUINOUS CONSEQUENCES ON THE STATES’ ECONOMY.
WHEN THE STATE GOVERNMENTS APPRISED THESE PROBLEMS TO THE
CENTRAL GOVERNMENT, THE PARLIAMENT INTERVENED AND TO SAVE
THE STATE GOVERNMENTS FROM REFUNDING THE MONIES COLLECTED,
ENACTED THE CESS AND OTHER TAXES ON MINERALS (VALIDATION)
ACT, 1992 TO VALIDATE IMPOSITION AND COLLECTION OF SUCH LEVIES
UNDER THE STATE LAWS WHICH WERE DECLARED VOID BY THE COURT.
THE STATEMENT OF OBJECT AND REASONS OF THE VALIDATION ACT
UNEQUIVOCALLY PROCLAIMS THAT THE ACT WAS PROMULGATED TO
VALIDATE COLLECTION OF SUCH LEVIES BY THE STATE GOVERNMENTS
UPTO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991. THE DATE 4.4.91 WAS CHOSEN BECAUSE
ON THAT DATE, THE SUPREME COURT DELIVERED THE JUDGMENT IN
ORISSA CEMENT CASE. TO BRING ABOUT THE UNIFORMITY AMONG
ALL THE STATES, THE CUT OFF DATE WAS SELECTED IN THE VALIDATION
ACT AS 4.4.91. PARLIAMENT ALSO CONSCIOUSLY DID NOT DESIRE OR
CHOOSE TO PRESCRIBE DIFFERENT DATES FOR DIFFERENT STATES IN THE
SCHEDULE TO VALIDATION ACT CONTAINING 11 ENACTMENTS IN
RESPECT OF 7 STATES. THE PARLIAMENT, THUS DEVISED THE METHOD
OF PROSPECTIVE OVERRULING AND THE LANGUAGE USED IN SUB-
SECTION (2) OF SECTION 2 OF THE VALIDATION ACT MAKES THE
INTENTION MORE EXPLICIT, AND AS SUCH IT MUST BE HELD THAT IT
ALLOWED THE STATES TO RETAIN THE AMOUNT OF CESS ALREADY
COLLECTED BUT DID NOT AUTHORISE TO MAKE ANY FRESH COLLECTION
WHICH HAS NOT BEEN COLLECTED UPTO 4.4.91. DR. SINGHVI
FURTHER CONTENDS THAT THE DELIBERATE AND CONSCIOUS OMISSIONS
BY PARLIAMENT OF A SAVING CLAUSE IN THE VALIDATION ACT,
PERMITTING LEVIES OR ACTIONS AFTER 4.4.91 POINTS TO THE ONLY
EFFECT THAT PARLIAMENT DID NOT INTEND ANY LEVY TO BE IMPOSED
OR ANY COLLECTION TO BE MADE AFTER 4.4.1991. HAD IT BEEN THE
INTENTION, THEN A SPECIFIC AND UNAMBIGUOUS SAVING CLAUSE
COULD HAVE BEEN PROVIDED AS WAS DONE IN JOARA SUGAR MILLS’
CASE 1966(1) S.C.R. 523 AND PRITHVI COTTON MILLS LTD.
CASE- 1969(2) S.C.C. 283. A BARE PERUSAL OF THE VALIDATION
ACT IN JOARA SUGAR MILLS’ CASE AND THE VALIDATION ACT IN THE
PRESENT CASE WOULD UNEQUIVOCALLY INDICATE THAT IN THE CASE IN
HAND, THE PARLIAMENT NEVER INTENDED TO CONFER A RIGHT ON THE
STATES TO COLLECT AND IMPOSE ANY LEVY SUBSEQUENT TO 4.4.91
AND ON THE OTHER HAND MERELY ALLOWED THE STATE TO RETAIN THE
COLLECTION ALREADY MADE. ACCORDING TO DR. SINGHVI IN
KANNADASAN’S CASE, THIS COURT DREW WRONG ANALOGY FROM
GANGOPADHAYAYA’S CASE AND HELD THAT THE PROVISIONS THEREIN
WERE IDENTICAL TO THE PROVISIONS IN THE VALIDATION ACT, WHICH
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 28
WAS UNDER CONSIDERATION. DR. SINGHVI FURTHER URGED THAT THIS
COURT IN KANNADASAN’S CASE, HAS NOT APPRECIATED THE FACT
THAT PARLIAMENT DELIBERATELY AND CONSCIOUSLY OMITTED TO
INCORPORATE A SAVING CLAUSE IN THE VALIDATION ACT. DR.
SINGHVI URGED THAT BY THE VALIDATION ACT LIFE WAS INFUSED INTO
VOID STATE STATUTES ONLY UPTO 4.4.91 AND CONSEQUENTLY, THE
LEVIES WHICH MAY HAVE ACCRUED PRIOR TO 4.4.91 COULD NOT BE
PERMITTED TO BE COLLECTED AFTER 4.4.91. WITH REFERENCE TO
ARTICLE 265 OF THE CONSTITUTION, THE LEARNED COUNSEL URGED
THAT THE CONSTITUTION OF INDIA IMPOSES A LIMITATION ON THE
TAXING POWER OF THE STATE IN SO FAR AS IT PROVIDES THAT NO TAX
CAN BE LEVIED OR COLLECTED EXCEPT BY AUTHORITY OF LAW. THUS,
NOT ONLY THE LEVY, BUT ALSO THE COLLECTION MUST BE ONLY BY
AUTHORITY OF LAW. THE EXPRESSION "AUTHORITY OF LAW" WOULD
MEAN THAT THERE SHOULD BE IN EXISTENCE, A LAWFUL ENACTMENT,
WHICH AUTHORISES THE LEVY OR COLLECTION OF A TAX. AFTER 4.4.91,
THERE BEING NO VALID LAW IN EXISTENCE, WHICH COULD AUTHORISE
COLLECTION OF THE LEVY OF CESS AND TAXES ON MINERALS, IT IS
DIFFICULT TO COMPREHEND HOW THE STATE COULD BE PERMITTED TO
MAKE THE LEVY AND COLLECTION OF THE DUES SUBSEQUENT TO
4.4.91. ACCORDING TO DR. SINGHVI, ANY INTERPRETATION OF THE
PROVISIONS OF THE VALIDATION ACT, AUTHORISING REALISATION OF
LEVY AFTER 4.4.91 FOR THE PAST PERIOD WOULD BE CONTRARY TO
EQUITY, JUSTICE AND FAIR-PLAY.
MR. GANGULI, THE LEARNED SENIOR COUNSEL, APPEARING FOR
THE INDIAN ALUMINIUM CO. LTD., RESPONDENT IN SLP(CIVIL) NO.
13104 OF 1996 AS WELL AS INTERVENOR INDIA CEMENT,
CONTENDED THAT THE JUDGMENT IN KANNADASAN’S CASE IS
ERRONEOUS IN THE TEETH OF THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 2(2) OF THE
VALIDATION ACT WHICH VALIDATES ONLY "CESSES OR OTHER TAXES
ON MINERALS REALISED UNDER ANY SUCH LAWS". ACCORDING TO MR.
GANGULI, THE JUDGMENT IN KANNADASAN, RUNS CONTRARY TO THE
PURPOSE AND INTENT OF THE VALIDATION ACT, AS INDICATED IN THE
STATEMENT OF OBJECTS AND REASONS AND THE LIMITED PURPOSE OF
THE VALIDATION ACT IS TO DECLARE THAT ENACTMENTS MENTIONED IN
THE SCHEDULE THERETO BE DEEMED TO HAVE BEEN ENACTED BY THE
PARLIAMENT AND BE DEEMED ALWAYS TO HAVE BEEN VALID, AS
REGARDS THE PROVISIONS RELATING TO CESSES AND OTHER TAXES ON
MINERALS ARE CONCERNED AND DECLARE THAT THE PROVISIONS
CONTAINED IN THE SAID ENACTMENTS BE DEEMED TO HAVE REMAINED
IN FORCE UPTO 4.4.91, THE DATE ON WHICH THIS COURT DELIVERED
THE JUDGMENT IN ORISSA CEMENT CASE. ACCORDING TO MR.
GANGULI, THE VALIDATION ACT MERELY DECLARES THAT THE LAWS
SPECIFIED IN THE SCHEDULE TO THE ACT SHALL BE DEEMED ALWAYS
TO HAVE BEEN AS VALID, AS IF THE PROVISIONS CONTAINED THEREIN
RELATING TO CESS AND OTHER TAXES ON MINERALS HAD BEEN ENACTED
BY THE PARLIAMENT, AND SUCH PROVISIONS SHALL BE DEEMED TO
HAVE BEEN REMAINED IN FORCE TILL 4TH OF APRIL, 1991. THUS ON
15TH OF FEBRUARY, 1992, THE PARLIAMENT MERELY DECLARED THAT IT
HAD ENACTED THE LAWS IN QUESTION IN THE PAST, AND THAT ALL THE
SAID LAWS STOOD EXPIRED EVEN BEFORE THE VALIDATION ACT ITSELF
CAME INTO FORCE. IN SUB-SECTION (1) OF SECTION 2, PARLIAMENT
DID NOT MAKE ANY FURTHER PROVISION, EXCEPT MAKING THE
AFORESAID DECLARATION. IN SUB-SECTION (2) OF SECTION 2, THE
PARLIAMENT DECLARED THAT ALL ACTIONS TAKEN, THINGS DONE, CESSES
AND OTHER TAXES ON MINERALS REALISED IN ANY OF THE STATE LAWS
SHALL BE DEEMED TO HAVE BEEN TAKEN OR REALISED AS IF SECTION 2
HAVE BEEN IN FORCE, WHEN SUCH ACTIONS WERE TAKEN, THINGS
DONE OR CESSES AND OTHER TAXES WERE REALISED, NOTWITHSTANDING
ANY JUDGMENT, DECREE OR ORDER OF ANY COURT. SUB-SECTION (2)
OF SECTION FURTHER PROVIDES THAT NO SUIT OR OTHER PROCEEDINGS
SHALL BE MAINTAINED OR CONTINUED IN ANY COURT FOR THE REFUND
OF CESSES AND OTHER TAXES REALISED UNDER ANY SUCH LAWS. THUS,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 28
WHILE THE FIRST PART OF THE DECLARATION IN SUB-SECTION (2)
ENTIRELY RELATES TO THE PAST ACTIONS, THE SECOND PART OF THE
DECLARATION ALSO RELATES TO PAST ACTIONS NAMELY CESSES AND
OTHER TAXES REALISED BUT THE EFFECT OF THE DECLARATION OPERATES
AS ON THE DATE OF COMING INTO FORCE THE ACT I.E. 15.2.1992.
SUB-SECTION (3) OF SECTION 2 INCORPORATES THE CONSTITUTIONAL
MANDATE IN ARTICLE 265 AND, THEREFORE, ANY AMOUNT PAID
WITHOUT THE AUTHORITY OF LAW BECOMES REFUNDABLE TO THE
ASSESSEE AND COULD NOT BE RETAINED BY THE STATE. SUB-SECTION
(3), THUS WAS ENACTED TO CLARIFY THAT ONLY TO A LIMITED EXTENT
SUCH PROCEEDINGS FOR REFUND OF TAXES COULD BE MAINTAINED,
AND IT INCORPORATES A LIMITED SAVING CLAUSE AND IS A SPECIAL
PROVISION REGARDING SAVING. PARLIAMENT, THUS DID NOT WISH
THAT THE GENERAL PRINCIPLES CONTAINED IN SECTION 6 OF THE
GENERAL CLAUSES ACT BE MADE APPLICABLE TO THE VALIDATION
ACT AND HENCE CHOSE TO ENACT A LIMITED SAVING CLAUSE, AS
CONTAINED IN SUB-SECTION (3) OF SECTION 2. THIS BEING THE
POSITION, THE PATNA HIGH COURT WAS FULLY JUSTIFIED IN
INTERPRETING THE PROVISIONS OF THE VALIDATION ACT AND IN
HOLDING THAT THERE IS NO RIGHT IN THE STATE TO MAKE ANY FRESH
LEVY OR COLLECTION AND ONLY THE LEVIES ALREADY COLLECTED WOULD
NOT BE REFUNDED. ACCORDING TO MR. GANGULI, THE ENACTMENTS
MENTIONED IN THE SCHEDULE REMAINED IN FORCE ONLY UPTO 4TH OF
APRIL, 1991 AND, THEREFORE, NEITHER THERE WOULD BE ANY
CHARGING PROVISION, NOR MACHINERY UNDER THE ACT MENTIONED
IN THE SCHEDULE AFTER 4TH OF APRIL, 1991, WHICH WOULD
AUTHORISE THE STATE TO MAKE ANY LEVY OR COLLECTION OF TAX
REFERABLE TO THE PERIOD PRIOR TO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991. ACCORDING
TO MR. GANGULI, THE DECISION OF THIS COURT IN KANNADASAN,
RELYING UPON THE CONSTITUTION BENCH DECISION IN JAORA SUGAR
MILLS’ CASE, MUST BE HELD TO BE ERRONEOUS, AS SPECIFIC
PROVISIONS CONTAINED IN SECTION 3 OF THE ACT IN JAORA SUGAR
MILLS’ CASE HAVE NOT BEEN PROPERLY APPRECIATED. WITH
REFERENCE TO SUB-SECTION (3) OF SECTION 2, MR. GANGULI
CONTENDS THAT THE SAME IS AN EXCEPTION TO THE SUBSTANTIVE
PROVISION CONTAINED IN SUB-SECTION(2) OF SECTION 2. IT IS CLEAR
FROM THE WORDINGS OF SUB-SECTION(3). ALL THAT SUB-SECTION (3)
PROVIDES IS THAT IF AN ASSESSEE HAD MADE AN APPLICATION FOR
REFUND WITHIN THE TIME PRESCRIBED BY THE STATE ENACTMENT, BUT
THE SAME HAD NOT BEEN REFUNDED, THEN THE EXCESS TAX PAID WILL
HAVE TO BE REFUNDED, EVEN THOUGH THE STATE ENACTMENT IN THE
EYE OF LAW REMAINED VALID TILL 4TH OF APRIL, 1991. ACCORDING
TO THE LEARNED COUNSEL, THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 6 OF THE
GENERAL CLAUSES ACT WOULD HAVE NO APPLICATION AND COULD NOT
BE INVOKED TO WIDEN THE LIMITED SAVING PROVISIONS IN SECTION
2(3). IN SUPPORT OF THE CONTENTION THAT NO FRESH TAX BEYOND
THE LIFE OF THE STATUTE BE PERMISSIBLE, THE COUNSEL RELIES UPON
THE DECISION OF THE COURT IN ROYALA CORPORATION 1970(1)
S.C.R. 639. MR. GANGULI URGED THAT THE ACT COULD NOT BE
INTERPRETED TO BE AN AUTHORISATION FOR IMPOSITION OF A FRESH
LEVY AND COLLECTION THEREOF, AFTER 4.4.1991, PERTAINING TO A
PERIOD PRIOR THERETO, SPECIALLY WHEN THERE IS NO EXPRESS
PROVISION TO THAT EFFECT IN THE IMPUGNED ACT.
MR. RANJIT KUMAR, APPEARING FOR THE PETITIONER INDIA
CEMENT LIMITED IN S.L.P.(CIVIL) NOS. 12994-12995 OF 1998,
SUBMITTED THAT WHAT HAS BEEN VALIDATED UNDER THE
PARLIAMENTARY ENACTMENT IS WHAT HAS BEEN ALREADY COLLECTED,
SO THAT THE STATE GOVERNMENTS WILL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY
REFUND AND IT NEVER AUTHORISED ANY IMPOSITION OR COLLECTION OF
THE LEVY AFTER 4.4.1991 EVEN FOR THE EARLIER PERIOD. ACCORDING
TO MR. RANJIT KUMAR, THE VERY LANGUAGE OF THE VALIDATION ACT
WHEN READ WITH THE STATEMENT OF OBJECTS AND REASONS, WOULD
MAKE IT EXPLICITLY CLEAR THAT IT DOES NOT AUTHORISE ANY FRESH
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 28
IMPOSITION OR COLLECTION FOR AN ANTERIOR PERIOD, IF THERE HAS
BEEN NO SUCH COLLECTION PRIOR TO 4.4.1991. IN OTHER WORDS, THE
ACT ONLY VALIDATES WHAT HAD BEEN ILLEGALLY COLLECTED AND THE
LACK OF LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE WAS CURED BY THE PARLIAMENT
STEPPING IN, FOR ENSURING THAT THE STATES WHICH WERE AFFECTED
BY THE JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT IN INDIA CEMENT CASE AND
ORISSA CEMENT CASE WOULD NOT BE REQUIRED TO REFUND.
ACCORDING TO MR. RANJIT KUMAR, THE STATEMENT OF OBJECTS
AND REASONS CAN BE WELL LOOKED INTO FOR ASCERTAINING THE
INTENTION OF THE PARLIAMENT IN ENACTING THE VALIDATION ACT AND
THE SAID STATEMENT OF OBJECTS AND REASONS ARE CATEGORICAL IN
TERMS AND ONLY REFERS TO WHAT HAD ALREADY BEEN COLLECTED,
WOULD NOT BE REQUIRED TO BE REFUNDED. ACCORDING TO THE
LEARNED COUNSEL, THE RELEVANT STATE LAWS, WHICH BECAME THE
CENTRAL LAW BY VIRTUE OF FICTIONAL RE-ENACTMENT, UNDOUBTEDLY
ARE TEMPORARY ACT AND AFTER THE EXPIRY DOES NOT ALLOW ANY
FURTHER ACTION UNDER THE EXPIRED ACT. IN SUPPORT OF THIS
CONTENTION, THE LEARNED COUNSEL PLACED RELIANCE ON THE
STATUTORY INTERPRETATION BY FRANCIS BENNION, FIRST EDITION,
PARAGRAPH 178 AS WELL AS CRAIES ON STATUTE LAW AT PAGES 407-
409. WITH REFERENCE TO THE OBSERVATIONS MADE BY THIS COURT
IN KANNADASAN THAT THE ACT MUST BE HELD TO BE AN ACT BY
INCORPORATION, MR. RANJIT KUMAR SUBMITTED THAT THE
LEGISLATION BY INCORPORATION OF PROVISIONS IN THE ACT HAS BEEN
HELD TO BE ARCHIVAL DRAFTING IN THE WORDS OF FRANCIS BENNION,
WHERE THE LEARNED AUTHOR STATES: "THE TECHNIQUE OF
INCORPORATION HAS RECEIVED SO MUCH JUDICIAL AND OTHER
CRITICISM THAT IT IS SELDOM USED TODAY". THE LEARNED AUTHOR
FURTHER STATES : "THE TECHNIQUE MAY BE CALLED ARCHIVAL
DRAFTING BECAUSE IT REQUIRES PERSONS APPLYING THE ACT AFTER A
CONSIDERABLE PERIOD HAS ELAPSED SINCE THE RELEVANT DATE TO
ENGAGE IN HISTORICAL RESEARCH IN ORDER TO FIND OUT WHAT THE LAW
THUS IMPORTED AMOUNTS TO". MR. RANJIT KUMAR ALSO PLACED
RELIANCE ON THE OBSERVATIONS MADE BY CRAIES ON STATUTE LAW,
7TH EDITION AT PAGE 29, TO THE EFFECT :- "LEGISLATION BY
REFERENCE, WHICH WAS INCREASING IN 1875, WAS DESCRIBED BY
THE SELECT COMMITTEE OF THAT YEAR AS MAKING AN ACT SO
AMBIGUOUS, SO OBSCURE AND SO DIFFICULT, THAT THE JUDGES
THEMSELVES CAN HARDLY ASSIGN A MEANING TO IT, AND THE
ORDINARY CITIZEN CANNOT UNDERSTAND TO IT, WITHOUT LEGAL ADVICE.
WITH THIS PARLIAMENTARY CRITICISM JUDICIAL OPINION COINCIDES".
ACCORDING TO MR. RANJIT KUMAR, THE ENHANCEMENT OF ROYALTY
BY ISSUANCE OF A NOTIFICATION BY THE CENTRAL GOVERNMENT
UNDER SECTION 9 OF THE MINES AND MINERALS (REGULATION &
DEVELOPMENT) ACT, 1957, AS NOTICED IN THE DECISION OF THIS
COURT IN THE CASE OF STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH VS.
MAHALAXMI FABRICS, 1995 SUPP.(1) S.C.C. 642, AND THE
OBSERVATIONS MADE BY THIS COURT IN THE SAID CASE THAT THE
AFORESAID NOTIFICATION WAS FOR THE PURPOSE OF ADEQUATELY
COMPENSATING THE STATES FOR THE LOSS THAT THEY HAVE SUSTAINED
ON ACCOUNT OF THE DECLARATION OF LAW MADE BY THIS COURT IN
INDIA CEMENT CASE AND ORISSA CEMENT CASE, AND THE
NOTIFICATION WAS HELD TO BE VALID, PROTECTING THE STATE
GOVERNMENTS FROM THE LOSS OF REVENUE IN THE FUTURE AND THE
VALIDATION ACT PROTECTING THE STATE GOVERNMENTS IN RESPECT
OF THE COLLECTION ALREADY MADE. CONSEQUENTLY, BY VIRTUE OF
THE VALIDATION ACT, THE STATE GOVERNMENTS WOULD RETAIN WHAT
HAD ALREADY BEEN COLLECTED BUT CANNOT CLAIM TO HAVE A RIGHT TO
MAKE ANY FRESH LEVY OR COLLECTION SUBSEQUENT TO 4.4.1991.
MR. RANJIT KUMAR ALSO URGED THAT THE INDIA CEMENT LIMITED
HAD CHALLENGED THE LEVY OF CESS, RIGHT FROM THE DATE OF
INCEPTION OF THE LEVY UNDER THE TAMIL NADU ACT AND THE HIGH
COURT HAD GRANTED STAY OF THE OPERATION OF THE ACT. EVEN
AFTER THE JUDGMENT OF THE HIGH COURT, WHILE THE MATTER WAS
PENDING IN THIS COURT IN APPEAL, THE STAY ORDER WAS OPERATING
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 28
AND THE ASSESSE, THEREFORE, NEVER PASSED ON THE CESS LEVIED TO
ANY CONSUMER NOR COULD IT DO SO BECAUSE THE COMMODITY WAS
A CONTROLLED COMMODITY AND THE LITIGATION ENDED WITH A
JUDGMENT IN FAVOUR OF THE ASSESSE. TO RE-OPEN SUCH CASES IN
THE GARB OF THE VALIDATION ACT AND SEEKING TO IMPOSE LEVY
AND COLLECTION FROM THE YEAR 1964 WOULD NOT ONLY BE
UNREASONABLE, BUT ALSO WOULD BE CONTRARY TO THE VERY
JUDGMENT PASSED INTER-PARTIES AND THE COURT HAVING STAYED
THE OPERATION OF THE ACT IN FAVOUR OF THE ASSESSEE. ACCORDING
TO MR. RANJIT KUMAR, THE ASSESSEE HAVING NOT COLLECTED THE
CESS FROM THE END USER, WOULD BE REQUIRED TO PAY THE SAME, IN
VIEW OF THE INTERPRETATION GIVEN BY THIS COURT IN
KANNADASAN’S CASE, AND SUCH A VIEW WILL BE WHOLLY
UNREASONABLE AND WOULD BE BEYOND THE OBJECT FOR WHICH THE
PARLIAMENT INTERVENED AND VALIDATED, TO SAVE THE STATE
GOVERNMENTS FROM A DIFFICULT FINANCIAL SITUATION. MR. RANJIT
KUMAR, LASTLY SUBMITTED THAT THE JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT IN
KANNADASAN MUST BE HELD TO BE WRONGLY DECIDED AND MUST
HAVE TO BE RECONSIDERED.
MR. AJIT KUMAR SINHA, APPEARING FOR BHARAT COKING
COAL LIMITED, PETITIONER IN SLP(CIVIL) NO. 7555 OF 1998,
SUBMITTED THAT THE VALIDATION ACT WAS TO CONFER THE AUTHORITY
OF LAW TO MEET THE REQUIREMENT OF ARTICLE 265 OF THE
CONSTITUTION . THE SAID NEED AROSE AS THE STATE WAS DENUDED
OF ITS COMPETENCE AND JURISDICTION TO LEVY CESS ON ROYALTY IN
THE OCCUPIED FIELD UNDER THE MMRD ACT, 1957. HE ALSO
BROUGHT TO OUR NOTICE THE FACT THAT WITH EFFECT FROM THE DATE OF
THE JUDGMENT OF THE HIGH COURT ON 6.11.90, THE PETITIONER
COMPANY STOPPED THE COLLECTION OF CESS FROM THE CONSUMERS
AND THE ORDER/JUDGMENT OF THE HIGH COURT DATED 6.11.90 WAS
ASSAILED BY THE STATE OF BIHAR IN CIVIL APPEAL NO. 3010-3024
OF 1991. THE COURT HAD PASSED AN ORDER TO THE FOLLOWING
EFFECT:-
"IN THE MEANTIME, WE HOLD THAT THE STATE
GOVERNMENT IS BOUND TO COMPLY WITH THE
JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT AND REFUND ALL AMOUNT
COLLECTED ON OR AFTER 4.4.1991. IF THERE IS ANY
DELAY BEYOND AUGUST, 1991 IN MAKING THE REFUNDS,
THE AMOUNT OF REFUNDS WILL BEAR INTEREST OF 18%
FROM 4.4.1991 TILL THE REFUND IS MADE."
NOTWITHSTANDING THE AFORESAID ORDERS, THE STATE GOVERNMENT
STARTED RAISING DEMAND BECAUSE OF THE VALIDATION ACT AND
WHEN THE COMPANY RAISED THE DEMAND AGAINST THE CONSUMERS,
THE CONSUMERS CHALLENGED THE SAME AND OBTAINED STAY ORDERS
FROM THE CALCUTTA HIGH COURT AS WELL AS THE RANCHI BENCH OF
PATNA HIGH COURT AND, THEREFORE, NO DEMAND COULD BE REALISED
IN VIEW OF THE ORDERS OF THE COURT. NOW UNDER SUCH SITUATION
IF THE PROVISIONS OF THE VALIDATION ACT ARE INTERPRETED IN THE
MANNER AS CONTENDED BY STATE OF BIHAR, AND IF THE JUDGMENT
OF THIS COURT IN KANNADASAN IS UPHELD, THEN THE PETITIONER-
COMPANY WOULD BE GROSSLY PREJUDICED, AS IT WOULD BE LIABLE
TO PAY CESS TO THE STATE GOVERNMENT AND YET COULD NOT COLLECT
THE SAME FROM THE CONSUMERS. ACCORDING TO THE LEARNED
COUNSEL, SECTION 2 OF THE IMPUGNED VALIDATION ACT DOES NOT
CREATE ANY FRESH LEVIES AND, THEREFORE, WHAT PURPORTS TO HAVE
BEEN VALIDATED IS THE COLLECTION ALREADY MADE AND BY NO
STRETCH OF IMAGINATION, A FRESH RIGHT TO MAKE ANY LEVY OR
COLLECTION.
IN THE CONTEXT OF THE SUBMISSIONS MADE BY THE COUNSEL
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 28
FOR DIFFERENT PARTIES, NOTED ABOVE, THE CRUTIAL QUESTION THAT
ARISES FOR CONSIDERATION IS WHAT REALLY PARLIAMENT INTENDED TO
VALIDATE BY ENACTING THE VALIDATION ACT? ON A PLAIN READING
OF SECTION 2(1) OF THE SAID ACT IT IS CRYSTAL CLEAR, THAT IT
PURPORTS TO VALIDATE CERTAIN STATE LAWS AND ACTIONS TAKEN AND
THINGS DONE THEREUNDER, BY PROVIDING THAT THE PROVISIONS
RELATING TO CESSES AND OTHER TAXES ON MINERALS FICTIONALLY MUST
BE HELD TO HAVE BEEN ENACTED BY THE PARLIAMENT, AND KEEPING
THOSE PROVISIONS ALIVE TILL 4TH APRIL, 1991. IT MAY BE BORNE IN
MIND THAT UNDER THE VALIDATION ACT PARLIAMENT NEVER RE-
ENACTED THE 11 ACTS MENTIONED IN THE SCHEDULE, BUT MERELY
PROVIDED THE LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE FOR THOSE PROVISIONS IN
THOSE ACTS WHICH RELATED TO CESSES OR TAXES ON MINERALS. THE
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY BEHIND THE ENACTMENT OF THE AFORESAID
VALIDATION ACT UNEQUIVOCALLY POINTS OUT TO THE FACT THAT THE
STATE LEGISLATURE HAD ENACTED DIFFERENT STATUTES CONFERRING
RIGHT OF LEVY AND COLLECTION OF CESS AND TAXES ON MINERALS, AND
THE SUPREME COURT CAME TO THE CONCLUSION THAT THE STATE
LEGISLATURE DID NOT HAVE THE RIGHT TO MAKE LAW CONFERRING RIGHT
TO LEVY AND COLLECTION ON MINERALS AS THE FIELD HAD BEEN
OCCUPIED BY THE UNION LEGISLATURE ON THE ENACTMENT OF THE
MINES AND MINERALS REGULATION AND DEVELOPMENT ACT, 1957.
THE JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT IN INDIA CEMENT AS WELL AS IN
ORISSA CEMENT NECESSARILY LEAD TO A SITUATION WHEREUNDER NOT
ONLY THE 11 ACTS MENTIONED IN THE SCHEDULE OF THE VALIDATION
ACT WERE DECLARED NULL AND VOID, BUT ALSO THE COLLECTIONS
MADE UNDER SUCH INVALID LAW BECAME REFUNDABLE. IT IS NO
DOUBT TRUE, THAT IN ORISSA CEMENT CASE THE SUPREME COURT
BORNE IN MIND THE PRINCIPLE OF PROSPECTIVE OVER-RULING, AS HAD
BEEN DONE IN GOLAKNATH’S CASE, INDICATED THE DATES WITH EFFECT
FROM WHICH THE JUDGMENT WOULD OPERATE BUT THE ACTS HAVING
BEEN DECLARED NULL AND VOID THE STATE GOVERNMENTS BECAME
APPREHENSIVE THAT A HUGE AMOUNT OF TAX, ALREADY COLLECTED
UNDER LAWS, FOR WHICH STATE LEGISLATURES DID NOT HAVE THE
COMPETENCE TO LEGISLATE WOULD BE REQUIRED TO BE REFUNDED.
THE PARLIAMENT ALSO WAS OF THE SAME OPINION, AS WOULD
APPEAR FROM THE STATEMENTS OF OBJECTS AND REASONS OF THE
VALIDATION ACT AND THE PARLIAMENT CAME FORWARD BY A UNIQUE
DEVICE OF PROVIDING LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE IN RESPECT OF
CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF THE STATE LAWS AND THAT TOO ONLY KEEPING
THE ACT ALIVE UPTO 4TH APRIL, 1991, THE DATE ON WHICH THE
SUPREME COURT DELIVERED THE JUDGMENT IN ORISSA CEMENT
CASE. IT IS IN THIS CONTEXT THE PROVISIONS OF THE VALIDATION ACT
AS WELL AS THE OBJECT FOR WHICH THE ACT WAS ENACTED WILL HAVE
TO BE ASCERTAINED. A STATUTE IS AN EDICT OF THE LEGISLATURE AND
IN CONSTRUING A STATUTE, IT IS NECESSARY, TO SEEK THE INTENTION OF
ITS MAKER. A STATUTE HAS TO BE CONSTRUED ACCORDING TO THE
INTENT OF THEM THAT MAKE IT AND THE DUTY OF THE COURT IS TO ACT
UPON THE TRUE INTENTION OF THE LEGISLATURE. IF A STATUTORY
PROVISION IS OPEN TO MORE THAN ONE INTERPRETATION THE COURT
HAS TO CHOOSE THAT INTERPRETATION WHICH REPRESENTS THE TRUE
INTENTION OF THE LEGISLATURE. THIS TASK VERY OFTEN RAISES THE
DIFFICULTIES BECAUSE OF VARIOUS REASONS, IN AS MUCH AS THE
WORDS USED MAY NOT BE SCIENTIFIC SYMBOLS HAVING ANY PRECISE
OR DEFINITE MEANING AND THE LANGUAGE MAY BE AN IMPERFECT
MEDIUM TO CONVEY ONE’S THOUGHT OR THAT THE ASSEMBLY OF
LEGISLATURES CONSISTING OF PERSONS OF VARIOUS SHADES OF
OPINION PURPORT TO CONVEY A MEANING WHICH MAY BE OBSCURE.
IT IS IMPOSSIBLE EVEN FOR THE MOST IMAGINATIVE LEGISLATURE TO
FORESTALL EXHAUSTIVELY SITUATIONS AND CIRCUMSTANCES THAT MAY
EMERGE AFTER ENACTING A STATUTE WHERE ITS APPLICATION MAY BE
CALLED FOR. NONETHELESS, THE FUNCTION OF THE COURTS IS ONLY TO
EXPOUND AND NOT TO LEGISLATE. LEGISLATION IN A MODERN STATE IS
ACTUATED WITH SOME POLICY TO CURB SOME PUBLIC EVIL OR TO
EFFECTUATE SOME PUBLIC BENEFIT. THE LEGISLATION IS PRIMARILY
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 28
DIRECTED TO THE PROBLEMS BEFORE THE LEGISLATURE BASED ON
INFORMATION DERIVED FROM PAST AND PRESENT EXPERIENCE. IT
MAY ALSO BE DESIGNED BY USE OF GENERAL WORDS TO COVER
SIMILAR PROBLEMS ARISING IN FUTURE. BUT, FROM THE VERY NATURE
OF THINGS, IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO ANTICIPATE FULLY THE VARIED
SITUATIONS ARISING IN FUTURE IN WHICH THE APPLICATION OF THE
LEGISLATION IN HAND MAY BE CALLED FOR, AND, WORDS CHOSEN TO
COMMUNICATE SUCH INDEFINITE REFERENTS ARE BOUND TO BE IN
MANY CASES LACKING IN CLARITY AND PRECISION AND THUS GIVING
RISE TO CONTROVERSIAL QUESTIONS OF CONSTRUCTION. THE PROCESS
OF CONSTRUCTION COMBINES BOTH LITERAL AND PURPOSIVE
APPROACHES. IN OTHER WORDS THE LEGISLATIVE INTENTION I.E., THE
TRUE OR LEGAL MEANING OF AN ENACTMENT IS DERIVED BY
CONSIDERING THE MEANING OF THE WORDS USED IN THE ENACTMENT
IN THE LIGHT OF ANY DISCERNIBLE PURPOSE OR OBJECT WHICH
COMPREHENDS THE MISCHIEF AND ITS REMEDY TO WHICH THE
ENACTMENT IS DIRECTED. THE AFORESAID PRINCIPLE WAS
ENUNCIATED AND APPLIED BY THIS COURT IN THE CASE OF STATE OF
HIMACHAL PRADESH VS. KAILASH CHAND MAHAJAN - 1992
SUPPL. (2) SCC 351. LORD SOMERVELL IN THE CASE OF
ATTORNEY-GENERAL VS. HRH PRINCE ERNEST AUGUSTUS
(1957) 1 ALL ER 49 HAS STATED "THE MISCHIEF AGAINST WHICH
THE STATUTE IS DIRECTED AND, PERHAPS THOUGH TO AN UNDEFINED
EXTENT THE SURROUNDING CIRCUMSTANCES CAN BE CONSIDERED.
OTHER STATUTES IN PARI MATERIA AND THE STATE OF THE LAW AT THE
TIME ARE ADMISSIBLE." IT IS ALSO A CARDINAL PRINCIPLE OF
CONSTRUCTION THAT EXTERNAL AIDS ARE BROUGHT IN BY WIDENING THE
CONCEPT OF CONTEXT AS INCLUDING NOT ONLY OTHER ENACTING
PROVISIONS OF THE SAME STATUTE, BUT ITS PREMBLE, THE EXISTING
STATE OF LAW, OTHER STATUTES IN PARI MATERIA AND THE MISCHIEF
WHICH THE STATUTE WAS INTENDED TO REMEDY. CHINNAPPA
REDDY, J. IN THE RESERVE BANK OF INDIA VS. PEARLESS
GENERAL FINANCE AND INVESTMENT CO. - (1987) 1 SCC 424,
HAD OBSERVED , "INTERPRETATION MUST DEPEND ON THE TEXT AND
THE CONTEXT. THEY ARE THE BASES OF INTERPRETATION. ONE MAY
WELL SAY IF THE TEXT IS THE TEXTURE, CONTEXT IS WHAT GIVES
COLOUR. NEITHER CAN BE IGNORED. BOTH ARE IMPORTANT. THAT
INTERPRETATION IS BEST WHICH MAKES THE TEXTUAL INTERPRETATION
MATCH THE CONTEXTUAL. A STATUTE IS BEST INTERPRETED WHEN WE
KNOW WHY IT WAS ENACTED. MOST FAIR AND RATIONAL METHOD FOR
INTERPRETING A STATUTE IS BY EXPLORING THE INTENTION OF THE
LEGISLATURE THROUGH THE MOST NATURAL AND PROBABLE SIGNS WHICH
ARE ’EITHER THE WORDS, THE CONTEXT, THE SUBJECT MATTER, THE
EFFECTS AND CONSEQUENCES, OR THE SPIRIT AND REASON OF THE LAW.
IN THE COURT OF LAW WHAT THE LEGISLATURE INTENDED TO BE DONE OR
NOT TO BE DONE CAN ONLY BE LEGITIMATELY ASCERTAINED FROM THAT
WHAT IT HAS CHOSEN TO ENACT, EITHER IN EXPRESS WORDS OR BY
REASONABLE AND NECESSARY IMPLICATION. BUT THE WHOLE OF WHAT
IS ENACTED ’BY NECESSARY IMPLICATION’ CAN HARDLY BE
DETERMINED WITHOUT KEEPING IN MIND THE PURPOSE OR OBJECT OF
THE STATUTE. A BARE MECHANICAL INTERPRETATION OF THE WORDS
AND APPLICATION OF LEGISLATIVE INTENT DEVOID OF CONCEPT OR
PURPOSE WILL REDUCE MOST OF THE REMEDIAL AND BENEFICENT
LEGISLATION TO FUTILITY. THE COURTS, HOWEVER, ARE ALWAYS
WARNED THAT THEY ARE NOT ENTITLED TO USURP LEGISLATIVE FUNCTION
UNDER THE DISGUISE OF INTERPRETATION AND THAT THEY MUST AVOID
THE DANGER OF DETERMINATION OF THE MEANING OF A PROVISION
BASED ON THEIR OWN PRECONCEIVED NOTIONS OF IDEOLOGICAL
STRUCTURE OR SCHEME INTO WHICH THE PROVISION TO BE INTERPRETED
IS SOMEHOW FITTED. BEARING IN MIND THE AFORESAID RULES OF
CONSTRUCTION AND EXAMINING THE PROVISIONS OF THE VALIDATION
ACT, THE CONCLUSION IS IRRESISTIBLE THAT THE PARLIAMENT ADOPTED
A UNIQUE DEVICE OF PROVIDING THE LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE TO
CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF DIFFERENT STATE LEGISLATIONS WHICH
LEGISLATIONS HAVE ALREADY BEEN STRUCK DOWN FOR LACK OF
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 28
LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE. AS THE PARLIAMENT THOUGHT THAT ON
ACCOUNT OF THE JUDGMENTS OF THE SUPREME COURT THE STATE
GOVERNMENTS WOULD BE LIABLE TO MAKE REFUND, OF CESS AND
OTHER TAXES COLLECTED BY THEM, WHICH WAS LIKELY TO HAVE A
SERIOUS IMPACT ON STATE REVENUE, AND TO PREVENT THE LIABILITY
OF REFUND, THE PARLIAMENT INTENDED TO VALIDATE COLLECTION OF
LEVIES ALREADY MADE BY THE STATE GOVERNMENTS UP TO 4TH APRIL,
1991. THIS CONCLUSION OF OURS IS BASED ON, NOT ONLY THE
LANGUAGE USED IN SECTION 2(1) BUT ALSO THE STATEMENT OF
OBJECTS AND REASONS, WHICH CLEARLY ENUNCIATES THE SAME.
THE STATEMENTS OF OBJECTS OF REASONS IS EXTRACTED
HEREINBELOW IN EXTENSO:-
"STATEMENT OF OBJECTS AND REASONS.-CERTAIN
STATE ACTS IMPOSING CESSES AND OTHER TAXES ON
MINERALS HAD BEEN STRUCK DOWN BY COURTS
INCLUDING THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA IN DIFFERENT
CASES. AS A RESULT OF JUDGMENTS IN THESE CASES,
STATE GOVERNMENT BECAME LIABLE TO REFUND CESSES
AND OTHER TAXES COLLECTED BY THEM. SINCE REFUND
WAS LIKELY TO HAVE A SERIOUS IMPACT ON STATE
REVENUES OF THE CONCERNED STATE GOVERNMENTS AND
HAVING REGARD TO THE FACT THAT IT IS EXTREMELY
DIFFICULT TO ENSURE THAT THE LEVIES COLLECTED ARE
REFUNDED TO THE LARGE NUMBER OF END USERS OF
MINERALS WHO HAVE ACTUALLY BORNE THE BURDEN OF
SUCH LEVIES, THE CESS AND OTHER TAXES ON MINERALS
(VALIDATION) ORDINANCE, 1992 (ORD. 7 OF 1992)
WAS PROMULGATED BY THE PRESIDENT ON THE 15TH
FEBRUARY, 1992, TO VALIDATE COLLECTION OF SUCH
LEVIES B BY STATE GOVERNMENTS UP TO THE 4TH DAY OF
APRIL, 1991."
THOUGH MR. DWIVEDI, THE LEARNED SENIOR COUNSEL, APPEARING
FOR THE STATE OF BIHAR, CONTENDED THAT THE PREAMBLE TO THE
EFFECT, "AN ACT TO VALIDATE THE IMPOSITION AND COLLECTION OF
CESSES AND CERTAIN OTHER TAXES ON MINERALS UNDER CERTAIN STATE
LAWS" IS MUCH WIDER THAN THE STATEMENT OF OBJECTS AND
REASONS AND IS IN CONSONANCE WITH THE LANGUAGE USED IN
SECTION 2(1) OF THE ACT. BUT, WE ARE OF THE CONSIDERED
OPINION, THAT THE EXPRESSION ’IMPOSITION AND COLLECTION’
WOULD MEAN, IMPOSITION ALREADY MADE OR COLLECTION ALREADY
MADE UNDER CERTAIN STATE LAWS AND THE PREAMBLE CANNOT BE
CONSTRUED TO MEAN TO CONFER A FURTHER RIGHT OF IMPOSITION AND
COLLECTION OF CESSES ON THE MINERALS EXTRACTED UP TO 4TH APRIL,
1991. THAT APART, THE VERY HEADING OF SECTION 2(1), NAMELY,
"VALIDATION OF CERTAIN STATE LAWS AND ACTIONS TAKEN AND
THINGS DONE THEREUNDER", WOULD SUGGEST THAT THE PARLIAMENT
BY LEGAL FICTION INJECTED LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE TO THE LAWS
ENACTED BY THE STATE LEGISLATURE AND GAVE LIFE TO SUCH LAWS
UPTO 4TH APRIL, 1991, THE DATE ON WHICH THE JUDGMENT OF THE
SUPREME COURT IN ORISSA CEMENT CASE WAS DELIVERED, FOR
THE PURPOSE OF VALIDATING THE ACTIONS TAKEN, THINGS DONE
UNDER SUCH LAWS DECLARED VOID BY THE SUPREME COURT. IT IS
NO DOUBT TRUE, THAT IN KANNADASAN’S CASE, A BENCH OF TWO
LEARNED JUDGES OF THIS COURT INTERPRETED THE PROVISIONS AND
HELD THAT THE EFFECT OF VALIDATION WOULD CONFER A RIGHT ON THE
STATE GOVERNMENT TO MAKE FRESH LEVY AND COLLECTION OF DUES
WHICH WAS COLLECTABLE UPTO 4TH APRIL, 1991, BUT WE ARE IN
RESPECTFUL DISAGREEMENT WITH THE AFORESAID CONCLUSION, AS IN
OUR CONSIDERED OPINION, NEITHER THE LANGUAGE OF SECTION 2(1)
NOR THE OBJECTS AND REASONS APPENDED TO THE VALIDATION ACT,
AS PREFATORY NOTE, STIPULATES THAT TO BE THE OBJECT, NOR EVEN
THE PARLIAMENT THOUGHT IT FIT TO HAVE A SAVING CLAUSE IN THE
VALIDATION ACT, AS WAS DONE IN JOARA SUGAR MILLS CASE. ON
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 28
A CONSTRUCTION OF THE PROVISIONS OF THE VALIDATION ACT, AND
BEARING IN MIND THE SITUATION UNDER WHICH THE ACT WAS
ENACTED AND A VOID ACT WAS GIVEN LIFE UPTO A PARTICULAR
PERIOD BY DRAFTING LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE FOR THE SAME IN THE
TEETH OF THE PROVISIONS CONTAINED IN ARTICLE 265 OF THE
CONSTITUTION, WE ARE PERSUADED TO ACCEPT THE ARGUMENTS
ADVANCED BY THE LEARNED COUNSEL APPEARING FOR THE ASSESSEE
IN DIFFERENT CASES, MR. SHANTI BHUSHAN, MR. KK VENUGOPAL,
MR. PARASARAN, DR. SINGHVI, MR. RANJIT KUMAR, AND OTHERS
THAT THE SAID VALIDATION ACT CANNOT BE CONSTRUED TO HAVE
CONFERRED A RIGHT TO MAKE LEVY AND COLLECTION OF CESS OR TAXES
ON MINERALS WHICH WAS COLLECTABLE UP TO 4TH APRIL, 1991, AS
WAS HELD IN KANNADASAN’S CASE, BUT IT MERELY VALIDATED THE
COLLECTIONS ALREADY MADE SO THAT THE STATE WILL NOT BE
BURDENED WITH THE LIABILITY OF REFUNDING THE AMOUNT, ALREADY
COLLECTED UNDER VOID LAW. IN OUR CONSIDERED OPINION,
THEREFORE, THE EARLIER DECISION IN KANNADASAN’S CASE TO THE
CONTRARY MUST BE HELD TO HAVE BEEN NOT CORRECTLY DECIDED.
AT THIS STAGE IT WOULD BE APPROPRIATE TO DISCUSS THE
PROVISIONS OF ARTICLE 265 OF THE CONSTITUTION AND ITS IMPACT
ON THE INTERPRETATION OF THE VALIDATION ACT. UNDER ARTICLE
265 OF THE CONSTITUTION, NO TAX SHALL BE LEVIED OR COLLECTED
EXCEPT BY AUTHORITY OF LAW. IT IS THUS EXPLICIT THAT NOT ONLY
THE LEVY, BUT ALSO THE COLLECTION OF A TAX MUST BE UNDER THE
AUTHORITY OF SOME LAW. THE AUTHORITY OF LAW REFERS TO A VALID
LAW WHICH IN TURN WOULD MEAN THAT THE TAX PROPOSED TO BE
LEVIED MUST BE WITHIN THE LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE OF THE
LEGISLATURE, IMPOSING THE TAX AND THE LAW MUST BE VALIDLY
ENACTED. IT MUST NOT ALSO CONTRAVENE THE SPECIFIC PROVISIONS
OF THE CONSTITUTION AND THE TAX IN QUESTION MUST BE
AUTHORISED BY SUCH VALID LAW. THE EXPRESSION "LEVY AND
COLLECTION" ARE USED IN ARTICLE 265 IN A COMPREHENSIVE SENSE
AND ARE INTENDED TO INCLUDE THE ENTIRE PROCESS OF TAXATION
COMMENCING FROM TAXING STATUTE TO THE TAKING AWAY OF THE
MONEY FROM THE CITIZEN. WHAT THE ARTICLE ENJOINS IS THAT
EVERY STAGE IN THIS ENTIRE PROCESS MUST BE AUTHORISED BY THE
LAW. THIS BEING THE POSITION, IN THE CASE IN HAND, SEVERAL
TAX LEGISLATIONS ENUMERATED IN THE SCHEDULE TO THE VALDIATION
ACT HAVING BEEN DECLARED ULTRA VIRES, ON THE GROUND THAT THE
STATE LEGISLATURE HAD NOT THE LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE TO
MAKE THE LEGISLATION, THERE EXISTED NO AUTHORITY OF LAW FOR
MAKING ANY LEVY OR COLLECTION OF TAX AND CESSES ON MINERALS.
THE PARLIAMENTARY INTERVENTION BY ENACTING THE VALIDATION
ACT AND GIVING IT RETROSPECTIVE EFFECT AND MAKING THE LAW
EXISTED TILL 4.4.91. WHAT HAS BEEN ACHIEVED IS A VALID AND
LEGAL TAXING PROVISION AND THEN BY FICTION, MAKING THE TAX
ALREADY COLLECTED TO STAND UNDER THE RE-ENACTED LAW. IN THE
ABSENCE OF ANY PROVISIONS IN THE VALIDATION ACT, THE RELEVANT
PROVISIONS OF THE STATE LAWS, WHICH STOOD EXPIRED ON
4.4.1991, TO HOLD THAT THE VALIDATION ACT AUTHORISES,
IMPOSING AND COLLECTION OF TAX AND CESSES ON MINERALS, EVEN
AFTER 4.4.1991, IN RESPECT OF THE MINERALS EXTRACTED TILL 4TH OF
APRIL, 1991, ON WHICH THE CESS WAS COLLECTABLE, WOULD
CONTRAVENE ARTICLE 265 OF THE CONSTITUTION, INASMUCH AS
THERE DID NOT EXIST ANY VALID PROVISION OR AUTHORITY OF LAW FOR
MAKING SUCH COLLECTION. IN THIS VIEW OF THE MATTER, WE ARE
PERSUADED TO AGREE WITH THE SUBMISSION MADE BY MR. SHANTI
BHUSHAN ON THIS QUESTION THAT THE PARLIAMENT NEVER INTENDED
TO CONFER AN AUTHORITY ON THE STATE GOVERNMENT TO MAKE ANY
FRESH LEVY AND COLLECTION OF THE CESS AND TAXES ON MINERALS,
WHICH WAS COLLECTABLE UPTO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991 UNDER THE
VALIDATION ACT AND THE JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT IN
KANNADASAN’S CASE, MUST, THEREFORE, BE HELD NOT TO HAVE
BEEN CORRECTLY DECIDED.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 28
LET US NOW EXAMINE THE QUESTION, AS TO WHETHER THE
STATUTE IS A TEMPORARY STATUTE OR NOT? WHEN WE EXAMINE THIS
QUESTION IN THE CASE IN HAND, WE ARE NOT EXAMINING THE
VALIDATION ACT, BUT WE ARE REQUIRED TO EXAMINE THE RELEVANT
PROVISIONS OF THE DIFFERENT STATE LAWS, INCLUDED IN THE
SCHEDULE TO THE VALIDATION ACT, WHICH LAWS HAD BEEN
DECLARED ULTRA VIRES BY THIS COURT IN THE DECISION OF INDIA
CEMENT AND ORISSA CEMENT, ON THE GROUND OF LACK OF
LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE AND THAT LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE HAS
BEEN PURPORTED TO HAVE BEEN CONFERRED BY VIRTUE OF A
DEEMING ENACTMENT BY PARLIAMENT AND FURTHER ENACTING THAT
SUCH PROVISIONS SHALL BE DEEMED TO HAVE BEEN REMAINED IN
FORCE UPTO THE 4TH DAY OF APRIL, 1991. A STATUTE CAN BE SAID
TO BE EITHER PERPETUAL OR TEMPORARY. IT IS PERPETUAL WHEN NO
TIME IS FIXED FOR ITS DURATION AND SUCH A STATUTE REMAINS IN
FORCE UNTIL ITS REPEAL WHICH MAY BE EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. BUT A
STATUTE IS TEMPORARY WHEN ITS DURATION IS ONLY FOR A SPECIFIED
TIME AND SUCH A STATUTE EXPIRES ON THE EXPIRY OF THE SPECIFIED
TIME, UNLESS IT IS REPEALED EARLIER. THE RELEVANT PROVISIONS OF
THE DIFFERENT STATE LAWS RELATING TO CESSES OR TAXES ON
MINERALS HAVING BEEN DEEMED TO HAVE BEEN ENACTED BY
PARLIAMENT AND HAVING BEEN DEEMED TO HAVE REMAINED IN
FORCE UPTO 4TH DAY OF APRIL, 1991 UNDER THE VALIDATION ACT,
THOSE LAWS RELATING TO CESSES OR TAXES ON MINERALS MUST BE
HELD TO BE TEMPORARY STATUTE IN THE EYE OF LAW. NECESSARILY,
THEREFORE, ITS LIFE EXPIRED AND IT WOULD BE DIFFICULT TO
CONCEIVE THAT NOTWITHSTANDING THE EXPIRY OF THE LAW ITSELF,
THE COLLECTING MACHINERY UNDER THE LAW COULD BE OPERATED
UPON FOR MAKING THE COLLECTION OF THE CESS OR TAX COLLECTABLE
UPTO 4.4.1991. ADMITTEDLY, TO A TEMPORARY STATUTE, THE
PROVISIONS OF SECTION 6 OF THE GENERAL CLAUSES ACT, 1897
WILL HAVE NO APPLICATION. VERY OFTEN LEGISLATURE ENACTS IN THE
TEMPORARY STATUTE A SAVING PROVISION, SIMILAR IN EFFECT TO
SECTION 6 OF THE GENERAL CLAUSES ACT, AS WAS DONE IN JOURA
SUGAR MILLS, 1966(1) S.C.R. 523. BUT IN THE ABSENCE OF
SUCH A PROVISION IN THE VALIDATION ACT IN QUESTION, WHICH HAS
PURPORTED TO HAVE CONFERRED THE LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE IN
RESPECT OF THE SEVERAL STATE LAWS MENTIONED IN THE SCHEDULE
AND KEPT IT ALIVE TILL 4.4.91, AND NOT BEYOND THAT DATE, THE LIFE
OF SUCH STATE LAWS STOOD EXPIRED ON 4TH OF APRIL, 1991.
CONSEQUENTLY, THERE WOULD BE NO RESIDUARY PROVISION OR
AUTHORITY OF LAW CONFERRING A POWER ON THE STATE TO MAKE ANY
LEVY OR COLLECTION OF CESS OR TAXES ON MINERALS, AFTER THE
EXPIRY OF THE RELEVANT LAWS. A TEMPORARY STATUTE EVEN IN THE
ABSENCE OF A SAVING PROVISION LIKE SECTION 6 OF THE GENERAL
CLAUSES ACT MAY NOT BE CONSTRUED DEAD FOR ALL PURPOSES AND
THE EFFECT OF EXPIRY IS ESSENTIALLY ONE OF THE CONSTRUCTION OF
THE ACT. THE LEADING AUTHORITY ON THE POINT IS THE CASE OF
STEAVENSON VS. OLIVER (1841) 151 ER, 1024. THESE
PRINCIPLES HAVE BEEN APPLIED BY THIS COURT IN THE CASE OF
STATE OF ORISSA VS. BHUPENDRA KUMAR BOSE AIR
1962(SC) PAGE 945, AND IT IS IN THIS CONTEXT, THE ARGUMENT
OF MR. DWIVEDI, REGARDING LAW OF AN ENDURING NATURE
REQUIRES CONSIDERATION. IN STATE OF ORISSA VS. BHUPENDRA
KUMAR BOSE, ON WHICH MR. DWIVEDI HEAVILY RELIED UPON,
WHAT AROSE FOR CONSIDERATION BEFORE THIS COURT, IS WHETHER
THE ELECTORAL ROLLS WERE IMPROPERLY PREPARED, AND THE COURT
HAVING DECLARED THE ELECTIONS INVALID AND VALIDATING THE
ORDINANCE, WHICH HAD BEEN PROMULGATED VALIDATING THE
ELECTIONS TO THE MUNICIPALITY AS WELL AS VALIDATING THE
ELECTORAL ROLLS PREPARED IN RESPECT OF OTHER MUNICIPALITIES.
WHEN THE VALIDITY OF THE ORDINANCE WAS ASSAILED BEFORE THE
HIGH COURT, THE HIGH COURT STRUCK DOWN THE ORDINANCE AS
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 28
HAVING CONTRAVENED ARTICLE 14 AND IT WAS HELD TO HAVE
OFFENDED ARTICLE 254(1) OF THE CONSTITUTION. ON APPEAL, THIS
COURT HELD THAT THE ORDINANCE DID NOT OFFEND ARTICLE 14 OF THE
CONSTITUTION AND THAT IT EFFECTIVELY REMOVED THE DEFECTS IN
THE ELECTORAL ROLLS FOUND BY THE FIRST JUDGMENT OF THE HIGH
COURT. WHEN ARGUMENTS WERE ADVANCED THAT THE INVALIDITY OF
THE ELECTORAL ROLLS AND THE ELECTIONS TO THE MUNICIPALITY DID
NOT REVIVE ON THE EXPIRY OF THE ORDINANCE, THAT WAS REPELLED
BY THIS COURT, THAT THE RIGHT THAT HAD BEEN CREATED BY THE
STATUTE NAMELY THE VALIDATING ORDINANCE, IS OF AN ENDURING
CHARACTER AND HAS VESTED IN THE PERSON CONCERNED, NAMELY THE
VOTERS, A RIGHT TO VOTE AS WELL AS THE ELECTED COUNCILORS. THAT
RIGHT CANNOT BE TAKEN AWAY MERELY BECAUSE THE ORDINANCE HAS
LAPSED, SINCE THE OBJECT OF THE ORDINANCE WAS TO REMOVE THE
INVALIDITY PERMANENTLY. IT IS IN THAT CONTEXT THE COURT
OBSERVED THAT IF THE RIGHT CREATED BY A STATUTE IS OF AN
ENDURING NATURE AND HAS VESTED IN THE PERSON, THAT RIGHT
CANNOT BE TAKEN AWAY, BECAUSE THE STATUTE BY WHICH IT
CREATED HAS EXPIRED. IN APPLYING THAT PRINCIPLES TO THE FACTS
OF THAT CASE, THE COURT OBSERVED:
"IN OUR OPINION, HAVING REGARD TO THE OBJECT
OF THE ORDINANCE AND TO THE RIGHTS CREATED BY THE
VALIDATING PROVISIONS, IT WOULD BE DIFFICULT TO
ACCEPT THE CONTENTION THAT AS SOON AS THE ORDINANCE
EXPIRED THE VALIDITY OF THE ELECTIONS CAME TO AN END
AND THEIR INVALIDITY WAS REVIVED. THE RIGHTS
CREATED BY THIS ORDINANCE ARE, IN OUR OPINION, VERY
SIMILAR TO THE RIGHTS WITH WHICH THE COURT WAS
DEALING IN THE CASE OF STEAVENSON AND THEY MUST BE
HELD TO ENDURE AND LAST EVEN AFTER THE EXPIRY OF THE
ORDINANCE."
APPLYING THE RATIO OF THE AFORESAID CASE TO THE CASE IN HAND
AND IN VIEW OF OUR CONCLUSION EARLIER AS TO THE TRUE OBJECT AND
IMPORT FOR WHICH THE VALIDATION ACT HAD BEEN ENACTED BY THE
PARLIAMENT, GIVING THE LIFE TO A STATE LAW TILL 4TH OF APRIL,
1991, IT IS NOT POSSIBLE FOR US TO HOLD THAT ANY RIGHT CAN BE
SAID TO HAVE BEEN CREATED IN FAVOUR OF THE STATE OF AN
ENDURING NATURE, WHICH COULD BE ENFORCED EVEN AFTER THE
EXPIRY OF THE LIFE OF THE ACT ITSELF. THE PARLIAMENT HAD
STEPPED IN AND HAD FICTIONALLY ENACTED CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF
THE STATE LAWS BEING CONFRONTED WITH THE SITUATION THAT THE
LIABILITY TO REFUND THE TAXES, ILLEGALLY COLLECTED WOULD HAVE A
DISASTROUS EFFECT ON THE STATE ECONOMY. IT WAS INDICATED ALSO
THAT A VALIDATION ORDINANCE HAD BEEN PROMULGATED BY THE
PRESIDENT TO VALIDATE COLLECTION OF SUCH LEVIES BY THE STATE
GOVERNMENT UPTO THE 4TH OF APRIL, 1991. IN THE CONTEXT, IT
OBVIOUSLY REFERS TO THE COLLECTION OF LEVIES ALREADY MADE AND
WOULD NEVER RELATE TO ANY COLLECTION TO BE MADE THEREAFTER. IN
THIS VIEW OF THE MATTER, WE ARE NOT IN A POSITION TO ACCEPT THE
SUBMISSION OF MR. DWIVEDI, APPEARING FOR THE STATE OF BIHAR
THAT ON ACCOUNT OF THE VALIDATION ACT, THE RELEVANT PROVISIONS
OF THE CESS ACT OF 1880, AS APPLICABLE IN THE STATE OF BIHAR,
CONFERRED AN INDEFEASIBLE RIGHT ON THE STATE GOVERNMENT TO
MAKE LEVY AND COLLECT CESS OR TAXES ON MINERALS, WHICH WAS
COLLECTABLE UPTO 4TH OF APRIL, 1991, EVEN AFTER THE EXPIRY OF
THE VERY LAW ITSELF. IN OUR CONSIDERED OPINION, THE DECISION OF
THIS COURT IN STATE OF ORISSA VS. BHUPENDRA KUMAR BOSE
CASE, WILL HAVE NO APPLICATION TO THE FACTS OF THE PRESENT CASE.
THE NEXT CASE, MR. DWIVEDI RELIED UPON WAS THE CASE OF R.C.
JALL VS. UNION OF INDIA, 1962 SUPP.(3) S.C.R., 436. IN THAT
CASE, AN ORDINANCE HAD BEEN PROMULGATED ON 26TH AUGUST,
1944 IN EXERCISE OF POWERS VESTED IN THE GOVERNOR GENERAL OF
INDIA UNDER SECTION 72 OF THE NINTH SCHEDULE TO THE
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 28
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA ACT, 1935 READ WITH INDIA AND BURMA
(EMERGENCY PROVISIONS) ACT, 1940, CALLED THE COAL
PRODUCTION FUND ORDINANCE, 1944, FOR CONSTITUTING A FUND FOR
FINANCING OF ACTIVITIES FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF PRODUCTION,
MARKETING AND DISTRIBUTION OF COAL AND COKE. THE SAID
ORDINANCE WAS A PERMANENT ONE AND WAS TO BE CONTINUED TO
BE IN FORCE TILL REPEALED, AS IS APPARENT FROM THE JUDGMENT OF
THIS COURT IN HANSRAJ MOOLJI’S CASE, 1957 S.C.R. 634. A
SECOND ORDINANCE WAS PROMULGATED, REPEALING THE EARLIER ONE
ON 26TH OF APRIL, 1947 AND IN THE REPEALING ORDINANCE, AN
EXPRESS TERM WAS THERE, MAKING THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 6 OF
THE GENERAL CLAUSES ACT, SHALL APPLY IN RESPECT OF THE REPEAL.
THE QUESTION AROSE WHETHER AFTER EXPIRY OF THE LIFE OF THE
REPEALING ORDINANCE ON NOVEMBER 01, 1947, WHAT WOULD BE
ITS EFFECT IN RESPECT OF THE LIABILITY CONTINUED IN RESPECT OF THE
PAST TRANSACTIONS? THIS COURT HELD THAT THE REPEALING
ORDINANCE HAD CONTINUED THE LIFE OF THE ORIGINAL , WHICH WAS A
PERMANENT ONE, IN RESPECT OF PAST TRANSACTIONS AND, THEREFORE,
THE EXPIRY OF ITS LIFE(LIFE OF REPEALING ORDINANCE) COULD NOT
HAVE ANY EFFECT ON THAT LAW TO THE EXTENT SAVED, AND,
THEREFORE, IT MUST BE HELD TO HAVE CONTINUED TO HAVE FORCE
UNDER ARTICLE 372 OF THE CONSTITUTION, UNTIL IT WAS ALTERED,
REPEALED OR AMENDED BY COMPETENT LEGISLATURE, AND
CONSEQUENTLY, IT CANNOT BE SAID THAT THE COAL CESS WAS LEVIED
OR COLLECTED WITHOUT THE AUTHORITY OF LAW. WE FAIL TO
UNDERSTAND HOW THIS DECISION WILL BE OF ANY ASSISTANCE TO THE
CASE IN HAND, WHERE THE ORIGINAL LAW NAMELY THE CESS ACT OF
1880, AS APPLICABLE IN THE STATE OF BIHAR, DID NOT HAVE THE
LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE AND AS SUCH WAS DECLARED VOID. BY
THE VALIDATION ACT, PARLIAMENT FICTIONALLY AND BY A DEEMING
PROVISION, ENACTED THE PROVISIONS OF THE INVALID LAW IN
RELATION TO CESS OR TAXES ON MINERALS AND THAT ALSO TILL 4TH OF
APRIL, 1991. THUS, THERE WAS NO PERMANENT LAW, AUTHORISING
THE LEVY WHICH WAS BEING VALIDATED BUT ON THE OTHER HAND BY
A FICTIONAL ENACTMENT, A LAW PERMITTING COLLECTION MADE UPTO
4TH OF APRIL, 1991 WAS ALLOWED TO BE RETAINED. AS HAS BEEN
OBSERVED EARLIER IN THE VALIDATION ACT, NO PROVISION HAS BEEN
MADE, CORRESPONDING TO THE PROVISION CONTAINED IN SECTION 6
OF THE GENERAL CLAUSES ACT, AND THEREFORE, AFTER THE EXPIRY OF
THE LIFE OF THE LAW THAT IS AFTER 4.4.1991, THERE CANNOT BE ANY
AUTHORITY OF LAW FOR MAKING ANY LEVY OR COLLECTION OF THE CESS
AND TAXES ON MINERALS. THIS DECISION ALSO WILL HAVE NO
APPLICATION TO THE CASE IN HAND. THE OTHER DECISION OF THIS
COURT RELIED UPON BY MR. DWIVEDI IS THE CASE OF M/S. VELJI
LAKHAMSI AND CO. AND OTHERS VS. M/S. BENETT COLEMAN
AND CO. AND OTHERS - 1977 (3) SCC 160. IN THIS CASE THE
QUESTION FOR CONSIDERATION WAS WHETHER THE MUNICIPAL
COMMISSIONER COULD ORDER DEMOLITION OF A BUILDING IN
EXERCISE OF POWER UNDER THE PROVISIONS OF CITY OF BOMBAY (
BUILDING WORKS RESTRICTION) ACT, 1944, AFTER THE EXPIRY OF THE
SAID ACT, WHICH WAS A TEMPORARY STATUTE? THIS COURT IN THE
AFORESAID CASE HELD THAT QUESTION WHETHER THE RESTRICTIONS,
RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS FLOWING FROM THE PROVISIONS OF A
TEMPORARY STATUTE WHICH CAME TO AN AUTOMATIC END BY EFFLUX
OF TIME EXPIRE WITH THE EXPIRY OF THE STATUTE OR WHETHER THEY
ENDURE AND SURVIVE AFTER THE EXPIRY OF THE STATUTE DEPENDS
UPON THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE STATUTE AND THE NATURE AND
CHARACTER OF THE RIGHTS, RESTRICTIONS AND OBLIGATIONS AND NO
RIGID AND INFLEXIBLE RULE CAN BE LAID DOWN IN THIS BEHALF. IT IS
IN THAT CONTEXT, THE COURT ALSO FURTHER OBSERVED THAT THE
TRANSACTIONS WHICH ARE CONCLUDED AND COMPLETED UNDER THE
TEMPORARY STATUTE WHILE THE SAME WAS IN FORCE OFTEN ENDURE
AND CONTINUE IN BEING DESPITE THE EXPIRY OF THE STATUTE AND SO
DO THE RIGHTS OR OBLIGATIONS ACQUIRED OR INCURRED THEREUNDER
DEPENDING UPON THE PROVISIONS OF THE STATUTE AND NATURE AND
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 28
CHARACTER OF THE RIGHTS AND LIABILITIES. APPLYING THE AFORESAID
RATIO TO THE CASE IN HAND, IT IS DIFFICULT FOR US TO HOLD THAT THE
STATE LAWS WHICH INFUSED LIFE INTO IT UNDER THE VALIDATION ACT
BY A FICTIONAL ENACTMENT OF THE LAWS BY PARLIAMENT AND
KEEPING IT ALIVE TILL 4TH APRIL, 1991, CAN AT ALL BE SAID TO HAVE
CREATED ANY RIGHT ON THE STATE TO LEVY AND COLLECT THE CESS AND
TAX ON MINERALS WHICH CAN BE HELD TO BE OF ENDURING NATURE SO
AS TO ENABLE THE STATE TO LEVY AND COLLECT EVEN AFTER THE EXPIRY
OF THE STATE LAWS IN QUESTION. CONSEQUENTLY, THE AFORESAID
DECISION IS ALSO OF NO ASSISTANCE TO THE STATE OF BIHAR. THE
ONLY OTHER CASE RELIED UPON BY MR. DWIVEDI IS THE CASE OF
T.VENKATA REDDY AND OTHERS VS. STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH
- 1985 (3) SCC 198. IN THIS CASE BY VIRTUE OF PROMULGATION
OF AN ORDINANCE CERTAIN POSTS WERE ABOLISHED, BUT THE
ORDINANCE COULD NOT BE MADE AN ACT AS THE STATE LEGISLATURE
DID NOT APPROVE OF THE SAME. THE QUESTION FOR CONSIDERATION
WAS WHETHER AFTER THE EXPIRY OF THE LIFE OF AN ORDINANCE, THE
POST WHICH STOOD ABOLISHED CAN BE SAID TO HAVE BEEN REVIVED?
THIS COURT, ON EXAMINING THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 3 OF THE
ORDINANCE ITSELF CAME TO HOLD THAT THE POST OF PART-TIME
VILLAGE OFFICERS STOOD ABOLISHED ON 6TH JANUARY, 1984 AND THE
EMPLOYEES CEASED TO BE EMPLOYEES OF THE STATE GOVERNMENT.
THESE MATTERS BECAME ACCOMPLISHED ON THAT DATE AND WERE
COMPLETED EVENTS AND CONSEQUENTLY EVEN IF THE ORDINANCE IS
ASSUMED TO HAVE CEASED TO OPERATE FROM A SUBSEQUENT DATE THE
EFFECT OF SECTION 3 OF THE ORDINANCE WAS IRREVERSIBLE EXCEPT
BY EXPRESS LEGISLATION. IN OUR CONSIDERED OPINION, THIS
DECISION IS ALSO OF NO ASSISTANCE TO SUPPORT THE CONTENTION OF
MR. DWIVEDI, APPEARING FOR THE STATE OF BIHAR, IN AS MUCH AS
WHILE INFUSING LIFE INTO THE VOID STATE LAWS BY FICTIONAL
PARLIAMENTARY ENACTMENT UNDER THE VALIDATION ACT AND
KEEPING IT ALIVE TILL 4TH APRIL, 1991, THE PARLIAMENT NEVER
CONFERRED ANY RIGHT UPON THE STATE GOVERNMENT TO MAKE ANY
LEVY OR COLLECT CESS WHICH HAVE NOT BEEN COLLECTED THOUGH
COLLECTABLE UPTO 4.4.1991. THE PARLIAMENT MERELY CONFERRED
THE LIFE TO THE VOID STATUTE BY FICTIONAL RE-ENACTMENT AND
GRANTING LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE FOR LIMITED PURPOSE SO THAT
THE STATE WOULD NOT BE CALLED UPON TO REFUND THE CESS ALREADY
COLLECTED UNDER SUCH VOID LAW. IN THE AFORESAID PREMISES, WE
DO NOT FIND MUCH FORCE IN THE CONTENTION OF MR. DWIVEDI
ABOUT THE ENDURING NATURE OF THE LAW IN QUESTION AND WE HOLD
THAT RELEVANT PROVISIONS OF THE STATE LAWS WHICH WERE
VALIDATED UNDER THE VALIDATION ACT AND WERE ALIVE TILL
4.4.1991 HAVING EXPIRED ON THAT DATE THERE IS NO AUTHORITY OF
LAW UNDER WHICH THE STATE WOULD RAISE ANY DEMAND OR MAKE
ANY COLLECTION OF CESS AND TAX ON MINERALS UNDER THE EXPIRED
PROVISIONS OF THE STATE LAWS. THE CONCLUSION OF THIS COURT IN
KANNADASAN’S CASE TO THE CONTRARY, THEREFORE, MUST BE HELD
TO BE NOT CORRECT IN LAW. IN ORISSA CEMENT CASE, THIS
COURT THOUGH DECLARED THE LEVY OF CESS TO BE UNCONSTITUTIONAL,
BUT FURTHER DIRECTED THAT THERE SHALL BE NO DIRECTION TO REFUND
TO THE ASSESSEE OF ANY AMOUNTS OF CESS COLLECTED UNTIL THE DATE
ON WHICH THE LEVY IN QUESTION HAS BEEN DECLARED
UNCONSTITUTIONAL. THIS DATE SO FAR AS BIHAR WAS CONCERNED,
WAS THE DATE OF THE JUDGMENT I.E. 4.4.91, IN CASE OF ORISSA, THE
DATE WAS 22ND DECEMBER, 1989 AND IN CASE OF MADHYA
PRADESH, THE DATE WAS 28TH OF MARCH, 1986. IT WAS HELD THAT
ANY CESS COLLECTED AFTER THE AFORESAID DATES BY THE RESPECTIVE
STATES HAS TO BE REFUNDED AND THE STATES CANNOT BE PERMITTED
TO RETAIN THE CESS COLLECTED. IT IS TO OBVIATE THE AFORESAID
DIFFICULTY, PARTICULARLY IN CASE OF STATES OF ORISSA AND MADHYA
PRADESH, THOUGH SUCH DIFFICULTY WAS NOT THERE IN CASE OF
BIHAR, THE PARLIAMENT CAME FORWARD WITH THE VALIDATION ACT.
IT IS TRUE, AS MR. DWIVEDI CONTENDED THAT THERE WAS NO
NECESSITY FOR INCLUDING THE BIHAR ACT IN THE SCHEDULE, SINCE
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 28
THE PARLIAMENT WAS ENACTING THE ACT ONLY TILL 4.4.1991, BUT
SINCE SEVERAL STATE LAWS WERE BEING RE-ENACTED AND 4.4.91
WAS THE LAST DATE OF THE JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT IN ORISSA
CEMENT, IT WAS THOUGHT FIT TO HAVE THE LEGISLATION EFFECTIVE
TILL 4.4.91 BUT FOR THE LIMITED PURPOSE, SO THAT THE STATE WOULD
NOT BE LIABLE TO REFUND ANY CESS WHICH IT MIGHT HAVE COLLECTED
EVEN SUBSEQUENT TO THE RELEVANT STATE LAWS HAVING BEEN
DECLARED UNCONSTITUTIONAL. WE FIND SUFFICIENT FORCE ALSO IN
THE CONTENTION OF MR. K.K. VENUGOPAL THAT THE LAW NEVER
EXISTED AFTER 4.4.1991 AND CONSEQUENTLY, THERE CANNOT BE ANY
RIGHT WITH THE STATE TO MAKE ANY LEVY OR COLLECTION OF THE CESS,
WHICH WAS COLLECTABLE UPTO 4.4.91. MR. VENUGOPAL IS RIGHT
IN HIS SUBMISSION THAT UNDER THE VALIDATION ACT, ONLY PAST
ACTIONS HAVE BEEN SOUGHT TO BE VALIDATED AND THAT TOO BY A
FICTIONAL ENACTMENT OF THE STATE LAWS BY THE PARLIAMENT,
KEEPING IT ALIVE TILL 4.4.91. THERE IS ALSO SOME FORCE IN THE
CONTENTION OF MR. VENUGOPAL THAT EVEN IF THERE MIGHT HAVE
BEEN AN IMPOSITION OF LEVY BUT NOT COLLECTED, THE SAME CANNOT
BE COLLECTED AFTER 4.4.91, AS THE MACHINERY FOR COLLECTION
WOULD NOT BE AVAILABLE AND PERMITTING ANY SUCH COLLECTION
BEYOND THAT DATE WOULD CONTRAVENE ARTICLE 265 AND SUCH AN
ACTION MAY BE VIOLATIVE OF ARTICLE 300A OF THE CONSTITUTION.
THE EXPRESSION "LAW" IN THE CONTEXT OF ARTICLE 300A MUST
MEAN AN ACT OF PARLIAMENT OR OF A STATE LEGISLATURE, A RULE OR
A STATUTORY ORDER HAVING THE FORCE OF LAW, AS HAS BEEN HELD BY
THIS COURT IN BISHAMBHAR DAYAL, 1982(1) SCC 39.
CONSEQUENTLY, IN THE ABSENCE OF ANY SUCH LAW AFTER 4.4.91
BEING IN FORCE, THE STATE CANNOT BE CONFERRED A RIGHT TO LEVY OR
COLLECTION AFTER 4.4.91.
WHEN PARLIAMENT ENACTED THE VALIDATION ACT AND
INFUSED LIFE INTO THE VOID ACT FOR LACK OF LEGISLATIVE
COMPETENCE, IT MUST BE ASSUMED THAT THE PARLIAMENT KNEW THE
CONSTITUTIONAL POSITION AND WAS FULLY AWARE OF THE POSITION OF
LAW AND THE NECESSITY OF PROVIDING A SAVING CLAUSE, IN THE
EVENT, THE PARLIAMENT INTENDED TO CONFER A RIGHT OF COLLECTION
AS WELL AS LEVY SUBSEQUENT TO 4.4.91. THE DELIBERATE AND
CONSCIOUS OMISSION OF THE SAVING CLAUSE BY THE PARLIAMENT, AS
CONTENDED BY DR. A.M. SINGHVI, IS OF CONSIDERABLE
SIGNIFICANCE AND CANNOT BE LIGHTLY BRUSHED ASIDE, AS
CONTENDED BY MR. DWIVEDI, APPEARING FOR THE STATE OF BIHAR.
IT IS TRUE THAT THE PATTERN OF VALIDATION, AS INDICATED BY MR.
PARASARAN, MAY NOT BE A CLINCHING FACTOR IN CONSTRUING THE
PROVISIONS OF THE ACT, BUT AT THE SAME TIME THE FACT THAT IN
JOARA SUGAR MILLS CASE AS WELL AS IN SOME OTHER CASES,
WHILE VALIDATING, LAWS HAVE BEEN ENACTED AND SAVING CLAUSE
HAS BEEN PROVIDED WHICH ARE IN PARI MATERIA WITH SECTION 6 OF
THE GENERAL CLAUSES ACT AND ABSENCE OF SUCH A PROVISION IN
THE PRESENT VALIDATION ACT IS IN CONSONANCE WITH THE VERY
OBJECT AND REASONS, AS APPENDED TO THE ACT. THE SAID OBJECT
BEING TO VALIDATE THE CESS AND TAXES ON MINERALS, ALREADY
COLLECTED UNDER A VOID LAW. DR. SINGHVI IS ALSO RIGHT IN HIS
SUBMISSION THAT THIS COURT IN KANNADASAN’S CASE DREW
WRONG ANALOGY FROM GANGOPADHYAY’S CASE AND ERRONEOUSLY
HELD THAT PROVISIONS THEREIN WERE IDENTICAL TO THE PROVISIONS
OF THE VALIDATION ACT OF 1992. SECTION 2(1) OF THE VALIDATION
ACT HAVING USED THE EXPRESSION "UPTO 4.4.91", IT
UNEQUIVOCALLY INDICATES THAT WHAT IS VALIDATED IS THE PROCESS
OF LEVY AND COLLECTION MADE UPTO THAT DATE AND NO FURTHER.
THIS BEING THE POSITION AND THE VALIDATION ACT NOT HAVING
PROVIDED ANY PROVISION, PERMITTING LEVY OR COLLECTION AFTER
4.4.91, WE ARE OF THE OPINION THAT THE ACT NEVER CONFERRED A
RIGHT OF LEVY OR COLLECTION AFTER 4.4.91. THE JUDGMENT OF
PATNA HIGH COURT, THEREFORE, MUST BE HELD TO BE IN ACCORDANCE
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 28
WITH LAW AND THE JUDGMENT OF THIS COURT IN KANNADASAN’S
CASE MUST BE HELD TO HAVE BEEN WRONGLY DECIDED.
IN KANNADASAN’S CASE, THIS COURT WHILE INTERPRETING
THE VALIDATION ACT, HELD THAT THE ACT AUTHORISES LEVY AND
COLLECTION EVEN AFTER 4.4.91, AS OTHERWISE, IT WILL BE HELD TO BE
DISCRIMINATORY AND VIOLATIVE OF ARTICLE 14 INASMUCH AS IF TWO
PERSONS WOULD BE EQUALLY LIABLE TO PAY, THE PERSON WHO HAS
PAID THE TAX WOULD BE AT THE DISADVANTAGE, THAN THE PERSON,
WHO DID NOT PAY AND CHALLENGE THE DEMAND THIS REASONING
OF THE COURT IN KANNADASAN RUNS CONTRARY TO THE
OBSERVATIONS OF THIS COURT IN MAFATLAL INDUSTRIES, 1997(5)
SCC 536, WHILE THIS COURT DEALING WITH THE PRINCIPLE OF
UNJUST ENRICHMENT, CATEGORICALLY STATED THAT A PERSON WHO HAS
NOT PAID AND HAS SUCCESSFULLY CHALLENGED THE DEMAND IN A
COURT OF LAW STANDS ON A DIFFERENT FOOTING FROM A PERSON WHO
HAS CHOSEN TO PAY AND HAS NOT CHALLENGED THE SAME. WE ARE,
THEREFORE, OF THE CONSIDERED OPINION THAT THIS COURT
ERRONEOUSLY HELD THAT ARTICLE 14 WOULD BE ATTRACTED UNLESS THE
PROVISION OF THE VALIDATION ACT IS INTERPRETED TO MEAN THAT IT
NOT ONLY VALIDATES THE COLLECTION MADE BUT ALSO ENTITLES FRESH
COLLECTION AND LEVY, EVEN AFTER 4.4.91 OF THE DUES WHICH WAS
COLLECTABLE UPTO 4.4.91.
THE CONTENTION ADVANCED BY THE STATE WITH REFERENCE TO
SECTION 2(3) OF THE VALIDATION ACT TO THE EFFECT THAT IT IS
INDICATIVE TO CONFER A SUBSTANTIVE POWER TO LEVY AND COLLECT
CESS AND OTHER TAXES ON MINERALS, IS IN OUR OPINION, WHOLLY
MISCONCEIVED. ALL THAT SUB-SECTION (3) OF SECTION 2 MEANS,
WHICH HAS BEEN INTRODUCED FOR REMOVAL OF DIFFICULTY IS THAT
NOTWITHSTANDING THE FACT THAT THE STATE LAW REMAINED IN FORCE
TILL APRIL, 1991, IF AN ASSESSEE HAS PAID MORE THAN WHAT HE IS
LEGALLY LIABLE TO PAY AND AN APPLICATION FOR REFUND HAD ALREADY
BEEN MADE, THEN HE WOULD HAVE THE RIGHT TO GET REFUND OF THE
EXCESS TAX PAID, EVEN THOUGH THE LIFE OF THE ACT EXPIRES ON
APRIL 04, 1991. THIS CAN BE HELD TO BE A LIMITED SAVING
CLAUSE, CONFERRING A RIGHT OF REFUND ON THE ASSESSEE, IF SUCH
ASSESSEE HAS PAID IN EXCESS OF WHAT IS DUE AND THE SAID
PROVISION CANNOT BE INVOKED TO GIVE A WIDER INTERPRETATION OF
SECTION 2(1) OR SECTION 2(2). IN THIS CONTEXT, WE ARE
PERSUADED TO ACCEPT THE SUBMISSION OF MR. GANGULI THAT THE
REMOVAL OF DIFFICULTY CLAUSE, ENGRAFTED IN SECTION 2(3) OF THE
VALIDATION ACT IS OF A LIMITED APPLICATION, DEALING WITH THE
RIGHT OF THE ASSESSEE TO GET REFUND OF THE EXCESS TAX PAID AND
BY NO STRETCH OF IMAGINATION COULD BE CONSTRUED TO HOLD THAT IT
CONCEIVES OF BOTH LEVY AND COLLECTION OF CESS AND TAXES ON
MINERALS BY THE STATE EVEN AFTER EXPIRY OF 4.4.1991.
IT WILL BE APPROPRIATE TO NOTICE ONE OF THE CONTENTIONS
RAISED BY MR. RANJIT KUMAR, APPEARING FOR INDIA CEMENT
LIMITED IN S.L.P.(CIVIL) NOS. 12993-12995 OF 1998 TO THE
EFFECT THAT NOTWITHSTANDING THE PROMULGATION OF THE TAMIL
NADU ACT, THE ASSESSEE CHALLENGED THE LEVY AND THE HIGH
COURT HAD GRANTED STAY OF THE LEVY AND COLLECTION OF CESS.
EVEN AFTER THE JUDGMENT OF THE HIGH COURT, WHILE THE APPEAL
WAS PENDING IN THIS COURT, THE STAY ORDER WAS OPERATING AND
THE ASSESSEE NEVER PASSED ON THE CESS COMPONENT TO THE
CONSUMER OR END USER, AND ALSO COULD NOT HAVE PASSED ON THE
SAME, AS THE COMMODITY WAS A CONTROLLED COMMODITY. IF
AFTER THIS LENGTH OF TIME, THE VALIDATION ACT IS INTERPRETED TO
MEAN A RIGHT BEING CONFERRED UPON THE STATE TO IMPOSE THE
LEVY AND COLLECTION OF THE SAME FROM 1964, IT WOULD WORK
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 27 of 28
OUT GROSS INJUSTICE TO THE ASSESSEE AND EVEN WOULD RUN
CONTRARY TO THE VERY JUDGMENT OF THE COURT INTER-PARTIES.
THOUGH THIS CONTENTION MAY NOT BE A CLINCHING ISSUE IN
INTERPRETING THE PROVISIONS OF THE VALIDATION ACT, BUT IT
CANNOT BE TOTALLY LOST SIGHT OF, AND IF ANY OTHER INTERPRETATION
IS PERMISSIBLE, THEN THE SAME MUST BE ADHERED TO, PARTICULARLY,
IN RELATION TO A TAXING STATUTE. WE DO FIND CONSIDERABLE FORCE
IN THE AFORESAID SUBMISSION, AS IN OUR VIEW, THE INTERPRETATION,
WE HAVE ALREADY GIVEN TO THE VALIDATION ACT WAS THE REAL
INTENTION OF THE PARLIAMENT AND IT NEVER INTENDED TO CONFER A
RIGHT OF COLLECTION OF CESS. IN AGREEMENT WITH THE CONCLUSION
ARRIVED AT BY PATNA HIGH COURT, WE HOLD THE VALIDATION ACT TO
BE VALID, BUT SUCH VALIDATED ACTS DO NOT AUTHORISE ANY FRESH
LEVY OR COLLECTION IN RESPECT OF LIABILITIES ACCRUED PRIOR TO
4.4.91, THOUGH IT PROHIBITS REFUND OF THE COLLECTION ALREADY
MADE PRIOR TO THAT DATE.
IN VIEW OF OUR CONCLUSIONS, AS AFORESAID, WE DO NOT FIND
ANY INFIRMITY WITH THE CONCLUSION OF THE DIVISION BENCH OF
PATNA HIGH COURT REQUIRING OUR INTERFERENCE WITH THE SAME.
THE SAID JUDGMENT OF THE DIVISION BENCH OF PATNA HIGH
COURT IS ACCORDINGLY UPHELD. C.A. NOS. 13102-13107 STAND
DISMISSED. THE BATCH OF CASES FROM THE JUDGMENT OF
KARNATAKA HIGH COURT ARE ALLOWED AND THE JUDGMENT OF
KARNATAKA HIGH COURT FOLLOWING THE DECISION OF THIS COURT IN
KANNADASAN’S CASE IS SET ASIDE. THE BATCH OF CASES ARISING
OUT OF THE JUDGMENT OF ANDHRA PRADESH HIGH COURT FOR THE
SELF SAME REASON ARE ALLOWED AND THE JUDGMENT OF ANDHRA
PRADESH HIGH COURT IS SET ASIDE. THE REVIEW PETITIONS FILED
IN THIS COURT FOR REVIEWING THE JUDGMENT OF KANNADASAN’S
CASE AT THE BEHEST OF THE ASSESSEES CANNOT BE DISPOSED OF,
NOTWITHSTANDING OUR CONCLUSION THAT THE DECISION OF THIS COURT
IN KANNADASAN’S CASE IS NOT CORRECT IN LAW IN AS MUCH AS NO
FORMAL NOTICE HAD BEEN ISSUED TO THE STATE OF TAMIL NADU.
NOTICE MAY, THEREFORE, BE ISSUED TO THE STATE OF TAMIL NADU
IN THOSE REVIEW PETITIONS WHEREAFTER THE REVIEW PETITIONS
COULD BE POSTED FOR DISPOSAL. SO FAR AS THE BATCH OF CASES
WHICH ARE PENDING BEFORE MADHYA PRADESH HIGH COURT,
THOUGH APPLICATION UNDER ARTICLE 139(A) HAD BEEN FILED FOR
GETTING WRIT PETITIONS TRANSFERRED, BUT NO ORDER OF TRANSFER HAD
BEEN PASSED AND, AS SUCH, THE WRIT PETITIONS ARE STILL PENDING
BEFORE THE HIGH COURT OF MADHYA PRADESH. IN THESE
CIRCUMSTANCES, THE TRANSFER APPLICATIONS FILED STAND DISPOSED
OF WITH THE DIRECTION THAT THE HIGH COURT WILL DISPOSE OF THE
PENDING WRIT PETITION IN THE LIGHT OF OUR JUDGMENT IN BIHAR
CASE. BUT CIVIL APPEAL NO. 9917/96 AGAINST THE JUDGMENT OF
MADHYA PRADESH HIGH COURT, DIRECTED AGAINST THE JUDGMENT OF
THE SAID COURT DATED 10.5.95, STANDS DISPOSED OF. SIMILARLY,
REVIEW PETITIONS NOS. 2363, 2364 AND 2365 OF 1998, FILED IN
CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 9913 OF 1996, 9912 OF 1996 AND 9905 OF
1996 ALSO STAND DISPOSED OF.
ALL THESE APPEALS AND APPLICATIONS STAND DISPOSED OF
ACCORDINGLY. THERE WILL BE NO ORDER AS TO COSTS.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 28 of 28