Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. GURUSWAMY & CO.ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MYSORE & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/09/1966
BENCH:
ACT:
Mysore Health Cess Act, 1962-Competence of the State
Legislature to levy health cess-Validity of Act-Cess whether
excise duty under item 1 of Schedule A of the Act.
Mysore Excise Act (Act 5 of 1901) s. 18, and Hyderabad
Abkari Act (Act 1 of 1916 F)-Levy of duty on liquor by way
of shop rent-Highest bidder given exclusive right to sell-
Such duty whether an excise duty within meaning of Entry 51
of List II of the Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
The Mysore Health Cess Act 1962 provided in s. 3 for the
levy and collection of a health cess at the rate of nine
naye paise in the rupee, inter alia, on the items of the
State revenue mentioned in Schedule A. Item 1 of Schedule A
mentioned duties of excise leviable by the State under any
law for the time being in force in any area of the State on
alcoholic liquors for human consumption (and opium etc.)
manufactured or produced in the State and for countervailing
duties levied on similar goods manufactured or produced
elsewhere. The Mysore Excise Act, 1901 empowered the State
Government to grant exclusive or other privilege of selling
by retail any country liquor or intoxicating drugs to any
person or persons on such conditions and for such period as
it thought fit. According to s. 18 of the Act the privilege
of sale in a specified shop was to be disposed of
periodically by public auction held by the excise
authorities. As a result of such public auctions held
subject to the terms and conditions notified by the State
Government the appellants were granted the exclusive
privilege of selling country liquor in certain arrack shops,
beer taverns and toddy shops in consideration of their
agreeing to pay specified ’shop rent’ thereon at the rate of
nine naye paise in the rupee. The appellants challenged the
levy of the health cess on the shop rent in writ petition
before the High Court and thereafter appealed to this Court
with the following contentions :
(1) That the Mysore Legislature was not competent to enact
the impugned Act because no entry in List It or List III
authorities a tax on tax or a health-tax and that if the
intention was to levy a surcharge on existing items of
revenue the State legislature could have easily used the
words ’surcharge’ or ’additional revenue’.
(2) Even if the impugned tax was valid the Act did not
empower the levy of health cess on shop rent because shop
’rent was not an excise duty falling within Schedule A -of
the impugned Act or Entry 51 of List II.
HELD:Per Subba Rao, C. J., Sikri and Dayal, JJ. (i) By the
impugned Act the State Legislature was levying a health cess
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on a number of items of State revenue or tax and it adopted
the form of calling it a cess and prescribed the rate of
nine naye paise in the rupee on the State revenue or tax.
Section 4 of the impugned Act makes it quite clear that the
cess is leviable and recoverable in the same manner as items
of land revenue, State revenue or tax. In the context, the
word on’ in s. 3 does not indicate that the subject matter
of taxation is land
549
revenue or State Revenue but that 9% of the land -revenue or
State revenue is to be levied and collected, the subject
matter remaining the same as in the law imposing land
revenue or any duty or tax. If we read ss. 3 and 4 together
the fact that the words ’surcharge’ or ’additional duty’
halve not been mentioned does not detract from the real
substance of the legislation. Accordingly the Mysore
Legislature Was competent to enact the law under the various
entries of List II which enable it to levy land revenue or
the duties of excise or the other taxes mentioned in s.
3(iii) of the impugned Act. [560 A-C]
(ii) For a duty to be a duty of excise it must be shown that
the duty has been levied on goods which have been produced
or manufactured, the taxable event being production or
manufacture of goods. However,, it is not easy to decide in
a particular case whether the particular levy is a levy in
respect of manufacture or production of goods. This
question has to be decided on the facts of each case but in
deciding it certain principles must be borne in mind.
First, one of the essential characteristics of an excise
duty is uniformity of incidence. Secondly, the duty must be
closely related to production or manufacture of goods. It
does not matter if the levy is made not at the moment of
production or manufacture but at a later stage. If a duty
has been levied on an excisable article but this duty is
collected from a retailer it does not necessarily cease to
be an excise duty. Thirdly, if a levy is made for the
privilege of selling an excisable article and the excisable
article has already borne the duty and the duty has been
paid, there must be clear terms in the charging section to
indicate that what is being levied for the purpose of the
privilege of sale is in fact a duty of excise. [562 E-F; 563
H]
There is no presumption that if no other taxable event has
intervened, the levy must be treated to be connected with
production or manufacture.
The levy in the present case was a payment for the exclusive
privilege of selling today from certain shops. The licencee
paid what he considered to be equivalent to the value of the
right. Secondly, it had no close relation to the production
or manufacture of toddy. Thirdly, the only relation it had
to the production or manufacture of toddy, was that it
enabled the licencee to sell it. But he might sell little,
less or more than he anticipated, depending on various
factors. Fourthly, toddy had already paid one excise duty
in the form of tree tax., but he need not tap himself.
Fifthly, the duty was not uniform in incidence because the
amount collected had no relation to the quantity or quality
of the produce but had only relation to what the Petitioner
thought be could recoup by the sale of the excisable
articles. What be recouped would depend upon the amount of
sales and the conditions prevailing during the licensing
year. Sixthly, there were no express words showing that
what was being realised by the appellants was an excise
duty. Seventhly the privilege of selling was auctioned well
before the goods came into existence. [564 B-E]
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For the above reasons the duty was not an excise duty within
the meaning of item (1) of Schedule A of the Health Cess Act
or Entry 51 of List 11 of the Constitution. The State of
Mysore had therefore no authority to levy and collect health
cess on shop rent. [567 G-H]
Per Bachawat J (concurring) : A charge for licence to sell
an excisable article may be a fee or a tax. If it is a tax,
it can satisfy the test of a duty of excise when it is so
connected with the manufacture or production of an article
as to be in effect a tax on the manufacture or production.
Otherwise such a tax does not fall within the classification
of a duty of excise. In the present case the shop rent was
not connect-
550
ed with the production or manufacture of arrack, beer or
toddy and was therefore not a duty of excise. The State
Legislature was not competent to make a law levying a
surcharge on the shop rent under Entry 5 1, List H. [584 C-
F]
Per Hidayatullah, J. (dissenting) : The persons who bid at
these auctions were themselves the producers or
manufacturers. They bid for the exclusive privilege or
selling which in so far as Government was concerned was a
means of collecting the anticipated excise duty at one go
from a producer or manufacturer before the goods became a
part of the general stock of goods in the country. In other
words the person who was charged was the producer or
manufacturer and the duty was levied from him before he
could sell or obtain liquor which had not borne excise duty
so far. The duty was therefore clearly a duty of excise
whether the matter was considered in the light of economic
theory, legislative practice or judicial authority. [572 D-
E]
Case law considered.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 15801588
and 1590-1600 of 1966.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated November 17, 1965
of the Mysore High Court in Writ Petitions Nos. 295 to 300,
453 and 914/63, 1076, 1175 to 1175, 2053 and 2076/64 and
1132, 1260, 1420 and 1321/65.
D. R. Venkatesa Iyer, O. C. Mathur, J. B. Dadachanji and
Ravinder Narain, for the appellants (in C. As. Nos. 1580-
1586 and 1588 of 1966).
M. K. Nambyar, D. -R. Venkatesa Iyer, O. C. Mathur, J. B.
Dadachanji and Ravinder Narain, for the appellants (in C.
As. Nos. 1590-1594, 1596 and 1599-1600 of 1966).
M. C. Setalvad, D. R. Venkatesa lyer, O. C. Mathur, J. B.
Dadachanji and Ravinder Narain, for the appellants (in C. As
Nos. 1597 and 1598 of 1966).
K. R. Chaudhuri, S. P. Satyanarayana Rao and K. Rajendra
Chaudhuri, for the appellant (in C. A. No. 1595 of 1966).
R. H. Dhebar, for the respondents (in C. As. Nos. 1580-
1586, 1588 and 1595 of 1966).
H. R. Gokhale, B. R. L. Iyengar and R. H. Dhebar, for the
respondents (in C. As. Nos. 1590-1600 of 1966).
The Judgment of SUBBA RAO, C.J. and SiKRi and RAGHUBAR
DAYAL, JJ. was delivered by SiKRi, J. HIDAYATULAH, J.
delivered a dissenting Opinion. BACHAWAT, J. delivered a
separate concurring Opinion
Sikri, J. These appeals are directed against the judgment of
the High Court of Mysore, dated November 17, 1965, disposing
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of 49 petitions filed under art. 226 of the Constitution.
The High Court disposed of the petitions by one common
judgment as
551
identical questions of law were involved in all of them. We
will also dispose of these appeals by this judgment because
they raise substantially identical questions of law. These
appeals may, however, be divided into two groups; one
dealing with the licences for the sale of Toddy and the
other dealing with the licences for the sale of arrack.
We may give the facts in one appeal, Civil Appeal No. 1590
of 1966, arising out of Writ Petition No. 1076 of 1964. The
appellant, M/s Guruswami & Co.-hereinafter referred to as
the petitioner filed writ petition alleging that the firm
was a licensed Excise contractor with its principal office
at Bangalore, and that it had been the licensee of the
Bangalore Urban group of 26 shops for the year July 1, 1963
to June 30, 1964. The petitioner continued to be the
licensee for the same group of shops with five more new
shops to be opened for two more years, viz., 1964-65 and
1965-66. The petitioner paid shop rent or the ’kist’ for
this group of toddy shops amounting to Rs. 3,61,116 a month
during the year 1963-64 and Rs. 4,41,216 a month for the
next two years. This kist amount was determined at the
tender-cum-auction sale of the exclusive privilege of
vending toddy in the shops of this group during the relevant
period. The petitioner paid amount equal to two months kist
as initial and security deposit for each of these years. It
was further stated that notice was given under the
notification dated April 20, 1963, that the exclusive
privilege of selling country liquors during the twelve
months, beginning from July 1, 1963, and ending with June
30, 1964, in the shops or groups of shops specified in
Schedules 1 and 11 of the notification, situated in the
district of Bangalore will be disposed of by tender-cum-
auction by the Deputy Commissioners of the respective
districts or other officers specially empowered by the
Deputy Commissioners for the purpose. The notification, in
para 16, mentioned rates of duty, price, etc. on the several
kinds of excisable articles. For instance, on molasses
arrack 35 U.P. the duty was Rs. 2.73 per litre, price Rs.
0.55 per litre and the minimum retail selling price Rs. 0 .
61 per decilitre. Under the head Toddy is given:
"Tree tax per tree
1. Date .. .. .. ... Rs. 7.50
2. Coconut .. .. .. ... Rs. 8.50
(per each half-year
ending December
and June)."
Then the minimum selling price of toddy is prescribed.It was
further stated in para 25 of the notification as follows:
"25.For the shops of Bangalore North and South
Taluks, City and Civil Area, tapping may be
allowed p, Cl/66-7
552
in such areas of Tumkur and Hassan Districts
or other Districts as may be notified by the
Excise Commissioner and the areas so notified
may at any time be altered by notification by
the Excise Commissioner.
For shops of Taluks of Bangalore, Rural
District, similar facilities may be given if
found necessary."
Para 18 of the notification further provides that "sales tax
and octroi at the prescribed rates and other taxes that may
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be levied under any other law shall also be payable."
The petitioner further alleged that he was paying tree rent
to the owners of toddy-yielding trees for allowing him to
draw today from the trees. The petitioner also paid
education and health cess at the prescribed rates in
pursuance of the condition in para No. 17 of the aforesaid
notification.
A similar notification was issued on April 27, 1964, for the
sale of excise privileges for 1964-65, and alternatively for
1965-66. It was mentioned in para 18 of this notification
that health cess at the rate of nine naye paise per rupee
shall also be payable on the shop rent and tree tax on toddy
and other duties of excise levied on the following articles
in accordance with the Mysore Health Cess Act (Mysore Act
No. 28 of 1962), hereinafter referred to as the impugned
Act, namely, (1) Mandya made Special Liquor; (2) I.M.F.L.;
(3) arrack; and (4) beer. The petitioner alleged that as a
result of the impugned Act it would have to pay Rs. 86,518
more as health cess for the year 1964-65.
The petitioner then challenged the impugned Act as ultra
vires on various grounds which need not be mentioned at this
stage. The petitioner claimed the following reliefs:
(a) to declare that the State of Mysore has no
authority to levy and collect ’health cess’
under the Mysore Health Cess Act 1962, and its
predecessor Act of 1951 on shop-rent, tree-
tax, tree-rent or any other item of revenue
payable by the petitioner in respect of its
business in toddy;
(b) to issue a writ, order or direction
quashing condition No. 18 in the notification
dated April 27, 1964, which relates to the
levy of health cess on their business of
toddy;
(c) to issue a writ of prohibition or order or
direction in the nature of a writ restraining
all or any of the respondents from enforcing
the above impugned condition or by any other
similar demand for payment of health cess
under the Health Cess Act; and
553
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(d) to issue a writ of mandamus directing refund of health
cess illegally collected from the petitioner or any other
consequential order and direction as may meet the ends of
justice, for refund of Health Cess already collected under
the provisions of the Health Cess Act of 1962 and 1951 in
respect of toddy.
We may mention that before the High Court a number of points
were raised which have not been debated before us. Before
the High Court it was agreed ’ by all the parties that the
levy made under the impugned Act was a tax though called a
cess. In view of this concession, the High Court considered
it unnecessary to examined the nature of the levy made under
the Act. The High Court held that the impugned Act, except
the Explanation to Clause 1 of Schedule A, was valid and it
accordingly allowed the petition only to the extent of
striking down the Explanation.
Mr. Nambyar, who appears for the appellants, in the appeals
connected with sale of toddy, has taken two main points
before us :
(a) That the Mysore Legislature was not competent to enact
the impugned Act because (a) the health cess under the
impugned Act was in reality a tax and not a mere cess; (b)
the State Legislature had no competence to levy a health
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tax; and (c) the levy was in substance a tax on tax not
permissible under the Constitution.
(2) If the impugned Act was valid, the Act did not empower
the levy of health cess on shop rent because shop rent did
not fall within Schedule A of the impugned Act or Entry 51
of List II.
We may mention that he conceded that the tree-tax was an
excise duty and he confined his case to shop rent or kist.
Before we deal with the points raised by the learned
counsel, it is necessary to set out the relevant provisions
of the Mysore Excise Act (Act V of 1901) and the impugned
Act. We may mention that in some -appeals the relevant law
is the Hyderabad Abkari Act No. 1 of 1316 Fasli, and not the
Mysore Excise Act, but it is common ground between the
parties that there is no material difference between the
provisions contained in the Mysore Excise Act and the Abkari
Act. The Mysore Excise Act was enacted in 1901. In S. 3(1)
it defined "excise revenue" to mean "revenue derived or
derivable from any duty, fee, tax, rent, fine or
confiscation imposed or ordered under the provisions of this
Act or of any other law for the time being in force relating
to liquor or intoxicating drugs". There was no definition
of the words "excise duty" in this Act at all. This Act
substantially followed the Madras Abkari Act, 1886 (Madras
Act 1 of 1886). It is interesting to note that the Madras
Abkari Act was amended by the Adaptation of
554
Indian Laws Order, 1937, and clause (22) was inserted in the
definition section, s. 3, as follows :
"(22) "excise duty" and "countervailing duty"
mean any such excise duty or countervailing
duty, as the case may be, as is mentioned in
item 40 of List 11 in the Seventh Schedule to
the Government of India, Act 1935."
But the definition of "abkari-revenue" continued to exist in
the Madras Abkari Act even after the Adaptation of Indian
Laws Order, 1937. Clause (14) of s. 3 of the Mysore Excise
Act defined " sale’ or "selling" as including any transfer
otherwise than by way of gift. Clause (18) defined
"manufacture" as including every process, whether natural or
artificial, by which any fermented spirituous or
intoxicating liquor or intoxicating drug is produced or
prepared, and also re-distillation and every process for the
rectification of liquor. Section 12 provides as under
"12. No liquor or intoxicating drug shall be
manufactured no hemp plant (Cannobis Sativa or
Indica) or coca plant (Erythroxylum coca)
shall be cultivated; no toddy-producing trees
shall be tapped; no toddy shall be drawn from
any tree; no portion of the hemp or coca plant
from which any intoxicating drug can be
manufactured shall be collected; no distillery
or brewery shall be constructed or worked;
no liqour shall be bottled for sale; and no
person shall use, keep, or have in his
possession any materials, still utensil,
implement or apparatus whatsoever for the
purpose of manufacturing any liquor other than
toddy or any intoxicating drug except under
the authority and subject to the terms and
conditions of a license granted by the Deputy
Commissioner in that behalf, or under the
provisions of Section 21:
Provided that the Government may, by
notification, direct that in any local area it
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shall not be necessary to take out a license
for the manufacture of liquor for bona fide
home consumption.
Licenses granted under this section shall
extend to and include servants and other
persons employed by the licensees and acting
on their behalf."
We have seen various acts which were in force In some of the
a provinces of British India and similar definition was
inserted In all then Acts; eg.
(1) The Punjab Excise Act (punjab Act-I of 1914)
(2) The Bombay Abkari Act (Bombay Act 5 of 1878)
(3) The Bengal Excise Act (Bengal Act 5 of 1909)
(4) The United Provinces Excise Act (U.P. Act 6 of 1910)
555
In short, the section prohibits the manufacture of liquor or
intoxicating drugs except under the provisions of the Act.
Section 15 prohibits the sale of liquor and intoxicating
drugs without license, and gives power to exempt sale of
toddy. Section 16 reads thus :
"It shall be lawful for the Government to
grant to any person or persons on such
conditions and for such period as may seem fit
the exclusive or other privilege-
(1) of manufacturing or supplying by whole-
sale, or
(2) of selling by retail, or
(3) of manufacturing or supplying by
wholesale and selling by retail, any country
liquor or intoxicating drugs within any local
area.
No grantee of any privilege under this section
shall exercise the same until he has received
a license in that behalf from the Deputy
Commissioner.
In such cases, if the Government shall, by
notification, so direct, the provisions of
section 12 relating to toddy and toddy-
producing trees shall not apply."
The notifications set out above may be taken have been
issued under s. 16 for the purpose of giving a privilege of
selling by retail [see S. 16(2)]. Sections 17 and 18 may be
set out in full :
"17. A duty shall, if the Government so
direct, be levied on all liquor and
intoxicating drugs-
(a) permitted to be imported under section
6; or
(b) permitted to be exported under section
7; or
(c) manufactured under any license granted
under section 12; or
(d) manufactured at any distillery
established under section 14; or
(e) permitted under section II to be
transported;
(ee) issued from a distillery or warehouse
licensed or established under section 12 or
section 14; or
(f) sold in any part of Mysore;
of such amount as the Government may, from
time to time, prescribe."
556
18. Such duty may be levied in one or more of
the following ways :-
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(a) by duty of excise to be charged in the
case of spirits or beer either on the quantity
produced in or passed out of a distillery,
brewery or warehouse licensed or established
under section 12 or section 14 as the case may
be; or in accordance with such scale of
equivalents, calculated on the quantity of
materials used or by the degree of attenuation
of the wash or wort, as the case may be, as
the Government may prescribe;
(b) in the case of intoxicating drugs, by a
duty to be rateably charged on the quantity
produced or manufactured or sold by wholesale
or issued from a warehouse licensed or
established under section 14;
(c) by payment of a sum in consideration of
the grant of any exclusive or other privilege-
(1) of manufacturing or supplying by whole-
sale; or
(2) of selling by retail or
(3) of manufacturing or supplying by whole-
,sale and selling by retail any country liquor
or intoxicating drug in any local area and for
any specified period of time;
(d) by fees on licensed for manufacture or of
sale;
(e) in the case of toddy, or spirits manu-
factured from toddy, by a tax on each tree
from which toddy is drawn, to be paid in such
instalments and for such period as the
Government may direct; or
(f) by import, export or transport-duties
assessed in such manner as the Government may
direct.
Provided that when there is a difference of
duty as between two license periods such
difference may be collected in respect of all
stocks of country liquor or intoxicating drugs
held by licensees at the close of the former
period."
It would be noticed that the words "a duty" occur in s. 17
and in S. 18(a) the words "duty of excise" occur. In the
Madras Abkari Act, 1886, S. 17, before the Adaptation Order,
1937, was also in
557
similar terms, but after the Adaptation -Order the opening
part of s.17 read as follows :
An excise duty or countervailing duty of such
amount as the State Government may prescribe
shall, if they so direct, be levied on all
excisable articles."
We may mention that "excisable article" was defined in S.
3(23) or the Madras Abkari Act to mean (a) any alcoholic
liquor for human consumption; or (b) any intoxicating drug.
Section 28 of the Mysore Excise Act is also relevant and the
relevant part reads as follows :
"All duties, taxes, fines and fees payable to
the Government direct under any of the
provisions of this Act or of any license or
permit issued under it, and all amounts due to
the Government by any grantee of a privilege
or by any farmer under this Act or by any
person on account of any contract relating to
the Excise revenue, may be recovered from the
person primarily liable to pay the same, or
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from his surety (if any), as if they were
arrears of land revenue........
Section 29 enables rules to be made and the rules throw some
light on the conditions of the license and the privilege
obtained by the petitioner. Section V of the Mysore Rules
regulating sales of excise privileges prescribes the
conditions applicable to toddy licenses. Condition No.
reads as follows :
"For the supply of toddy to his shops, the
licensee shall have the privilege of obtaining
subject to tree-tax rules, toddy-yielding
trees in the groves assigned to his shops or
groups of shops, and he shall be at liberty to
manufacture toddy from the trees in private
lands under private arrangements, between
himself and the owners of such lands........
Condition No. 2 further enables the Deputy Commissioner to
refuse to grant license for tapping certain trees.
Licensees are entitled to purchase toddy from any licensed
toddy shop-keeper on application to the Inspector or
Assistant Inspector who will grant the required permits on
proof of the necessity for the same in certain cases.
Condition No. 4 reads as follows :
"The licensee shall be responsible to
Government for all payments of instalments of
fees due on account of tree-tapping licenses
granted on his application in his own
name or
in the names of his nominees under the
conditions set forth therein and in the rules
relating thereto."
Condition No. 7 provides for tree rent at Rs. 0-8-0 per tree
on Government trees sought to be tapped. Condition No. 8
prescribes
558
conditions for tapping the trees Condition No. 17 enables
treetapping licenses to be given to the licensed toddy shop-
keepers.
Let us first examine the above provisions of the Mysore
Excise Act, and the rules and notifications made under it.
It appears to us that by ss. 12 and 15 of the Act
manufacture and sale of toddy is prohibited, but s. 16
enables the government to grant an exclusive or other
privilege, inter alia, of manufacturing or selling by
retail. It is the latter privilege which was auctioned
under the two notifications mentioned above. Section 17 is
the charging section and it is quite clear that the word
’duty’ in the opening sentence does not mean only excise
duty. If an import duty or export duty is levied under s.
17 it would not be an excise duty within Entry 51 List II.
Section 18 prescribes the modes of levy of the duties. We
are concerned with the mode mentioned in s. 18(c) (2), i.e.
by payment of a sum in consideration of the grant of
exclusive or other privileges of selling by retail. It is
noteworthy that s. 28 distinguishes amount due to the
government by any grantee of a privilege from duties, taxes
and fees.
Mr. Setalvad, who appears for the appellants in arrack
appeals draws our attention to the existence of the words
"duty of excise" in S. 18(a) and the absence of the word
"excise" in s. 18(b), and contends that apart from the
duties collected under s. 18(a) no other duty was excise
duty. We are unable to accept this contention because some
at least of the duties collected under s. 18(b) would be
excise duties. However, this much may be conceded that the
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Mysore Excise Act not only does not expressly call the duty
collected under s. 18(c) (2) an excise duty, but in s. 28
seems to mention it differently.
The licences granted to the petitioner were governed by
detailed regulatory provisions regarding sale, but condition
No. 2 makes it clear that the license is in the main for
selling. Further if he taps toddy he has to obtain toddy-
tapping licenses and pay fees.
We have already mentioned that the petitioner obtained the
privilege of selling toddy at certain shops by bidding at
auctions held in pursuance of the two notifications
mentioned above.
We may now notice the provisions of the Mysore Health Cess
Act, 1962. Section 3 is the charging section and reads as
follows :
"3. Levy of health cess-There shall be levied
and collected a health cess at the rate of
nine naye paise in the rupee on,-
(i) all items of land revenue;
(ii) the items of State Revenue mentioned in
Schedule A; and
559
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(iii) the items of taxes mentioned in Schedule B levied
under any law for the time being in force by a local
authority."
Section 4 reads thus
"4. Recovery of health cess-The health cess
payable under section 3 shall be levied,
assessed and recovered alongwith the items of
land revenue, State revenue or tax on which
such cess is levied, and the provisions of the
law and the rules, orders and notifications
made or issued thereunder for the time being
in force, shall apply to the levy, assessment
and recovery of the health cess as they apply
in respect of the levy, assessment and
recovery of the said items of land revenue,
State revenue or tax."
We are concerned with s. 3(ii), i.e. items of State revenue
mentioned in Schedule A, and these items in Schedule A are
as follows
"SCHEDULE A.
1. Duties of excise leviable by the State
under any law for the time being in force in
any area of the State, on the following goods
manufactured or produced in the State and
countervailing duties levied on similar goods
manufactured or produced elsewhere :-
(a) Alcoholic liquors for human consumption;
(b) Opium, Indian hemp and other narcotic
drugs and narcotics.
Explanation.-The duty of excise leviable under
this item includes the duties, payments, fees
and other amounts payable under section 18 of
the Mysore Excise Act, 1901, and similar
impost or payment by whatever name called
payable under any other law in force in any
area of the State of Mysore."
We have already mentioned that the Explanation has been held
by the High Court to be ultra vires. It will be noted that
the remaining part of Item I in Schedule A is in substance,
a reproduction of entry 51 of List 11 of the Constitution.
We may now take up the points raised by Mr. Nambyar.
Regarding the first point, he says that it is a tax on a tax
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 32
and as no entry in List II or List III mentions a tax on a
tax, or health tax, the impugned Act is invalid. He further
says that if it was the intention to levy a surcharge on
existing items of revenue, the legislature could have easily
used the words ’surcharge’ or ’additional duty" in
accordance with the existing legislative practice. He says
that it is not open to us to add or omit any words and that
the nature or identity of the subject-matter can only be
gathered from S. 3
560
which is the charging section. We are, however, not
impressed by any of these arguments. It seems to us clear
that the legislature was levying a health cess on a number
of items of State revenue or tax and it adopted the form of
calling it a cess and prescribed the rate of nine naye paise
in the rupee on the State revenue or tax. Section 4 of the
impugned Act makes it quite clear that the cess is leviable
and recoverable in the same manner as items of land revenue,
State revenue or tax. In the context, the word ’on’ in s. 3
does not indicate that the subject-matter of taxation is
land revenue or State revenue, but that 9 % of the land
revenue or State revenue is to be levied and collected, the
subject-matter remaining the same as in the law imposing
land revenue or any duty or tax. If we read ss. 3 and 4
together the fact that the words "surcharge’ or "additional
duty" have not been mentioned does not detract from the real
substance of the legislation. Accordingly we hold that the
Mysore Legislature was competent to enact the law under the
various entries of List II which enable it to levy land
revenue or ,the duties of excise, or the other taxes’
mentioned in s. 3(iii) of the impugned Act.
This takes us to the second point raised by the learned
counsel. He says that the shop rent is not a duty of excise
and does not fall within Entry 51 of List 11, or Schedule A
of the Act. We have already mentioned that he has conceded
that the tree-tax is an excise duty and we need not consider
the question of tree-tax at all. His argument in brief is
as follows :
The duty of excise is primarily a duty levied on manufacture
or production of goods, the taxable event being the
manufacture or production. He says that the taxable event
in this case is not manufacture or production. He further
says that the shop rent is the price given by the petitioner
for the privilege of selling toddy, i.e., for the privilege
of carrying on a business. This privilege of selling, he
says, had no relation to production or manufacture of toddy
because the production or manufacture of toddy was complete
before the petitioner started to sell toddy in his shops.
He further says that the petitioner pays tree-tax which is
an excise duty. He also contrasts the language of ss. 17
and 18 of the Mysore Excise Act and says that the words
"excise duty" are used in s. 18(a) and not in s. 18(c). He
has relied on a number of cases which we will presently
consider.
Mr. Gokhale, the learned counsel for the State, controverts
these arguments, but we may mention that he has not sought
to sustain the levy on shop rent on any other entry apart
from entry 51 of List II. Therefore, we should not be taken
to have expressed any opinion on the point whether levy on
shop rent or kist can be justified under any other entry in
List 11. The point was expressly put to him and he said
that he relied only on Entry 5 1, List 11.
561
Mr. Gokhale relies strongly on A. B. Abdulkadir v. The State
of Kerala(1), and says that the appeal cannot be decided
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against him without dissenting from the decision in that
case. Mr. Gokhale has put two propositions before us. He
says: (1) that every duty on goods produced or manufactured
is excise duty unless it is established that it is some
other duty; and (2) that, at any rate, if it is a levy made
from the stage of production to the stage of consumption it
is an excise duty. If in this period no other taxable event
has intervened then the levy must be treated to be connected
with production or manufacture and the method by which the
levy is collected is not decisive.
The nature of excise duty has been considered by the Federal
Court, the Privy Council and this Court on a number of
occasions, and it will serve no useful purpose to reproduce
the relevant portions of the judgments in these cases. It
will suffice if we mention two decisions of this Court and
the language employed by this court in those cases.
In R. C. Jall v. Union of India(2), Subba Rao, J., as he
then was, speaking for the Court, after noticing In re the
Central Provinces and Berar Act No. XIV of 1938,(3) The
Province of Madras v. Boddu Paidanna & Sons,(4) and
Governor-General in Council v. Province of Madras(s)
observed as follows :
"with great respect, we accept the principles
laid down by the said three decisions, in the
matter of levy of an excise duty and the
machinery for collection thereof Excise duty
is primarily a duty on the production or
manufacture of goods produced or manufactured
within the country. It is an indirect duty
which the manufacturer or producer passes on
to the ultimate consumer, that is, its
ultimate incidence will always be on the
consumer. Therefore, subject always to the
legislative competence of the taxing
authority, the -said tax can be levied at a
convenient stage so long as the character of
the impost, that is, it is a duty on the
manufacture or production, is not lost. The
method of collection does not affect the
essence of the duty, but only relates to the
machinery of collection for administrative
convenience. Whether in a particular case the
tax ceases to be in essence an excise duty,
and the rational connection between the duty
and the person on whom it is imposed ceased to
exist, is to be decided on a fair construction
of the provisions of a particular Act."
(1) [1962] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 741.
(2) (1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R. 436.
(3) [1939] F.C.R. 18.
(4) [1942] F.C.R.90.
(5) 72 I.A. 91.
562
Sinha, C. J., speaking for the Full Court in In re The bill
to amends. 20 of the Sea Customs Act 1878 etc.(1) quoted
with approval the passage set out above and added:
"This will show that the taxable event in the
case of duties of excise is the manufacture of
goods and the duty is not directly on the
goods but on the manufacture thereof We may in
this connection contrast sales tax which is
also imposed with reference to goods sold,
where the taxable event is the act of sale.
Therefore, though both excise duty and sales-
tax are levied with reference to goods, the
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two are very different imposts; in one case
the imposition is on the act of manufacture or
production while in the other it is on the act
of sale. In neither case therefore can it be
said that the excise duty or sales tax is a
tax directly on the goods for in that event
they will really become the same tax. It
would thus appear that duties of excise
partake of the nature of indirect taxes as
known to standard works on economics and are
to be distinguished from direct taxes like
taxes on property and income."
These cases establish that in order to be an excise duty (a)
the levy must be upon ’goods’ and (b) the taxable event must
be the manufacture or production of goods. Further the levy
need not be imposed at the stage of production or
manufacture but may be imposed later.
But it is not easy to decide in a particular case whether
the particular levy is a levy in respect of manufacture or
production of goods. It appears,to us that this question
has to be decided on the facts of each case, but in deciding
the question certain principles must be home in mind.
First, one of the essential characteristics of an excise
duty is uniformity of incidence. This characteristic was
mentioned by the Privy Council in Governor-General in
Council v.Province of Madras(2) in these terms :
"The tax imposed by the Madras Act is not a
duty of excise in the cloak of a tax on sales.
Lacking the characteristic features of a duty
of excise, such as uniformity of incidence and
discrimination in subject-matter, it is in the
general scope and in its detailed provisions a
"tax on sales."
This also seems to follow from the wording of the entry
itself. Entry 51 List 11 reads thus :
"Duties of excise on the following goods manu-
factured or produced in the State and
countervailing
(1) [1964] 3 S.C.R. 787
(2) [1945] F.C.R. 179.
563
duties at the same or lower rates on similar
goods manufactured or produced elsewhere in
India:-
(a) alcoholic liquors for human consumption;
(b) opium, Indian hemp and other narcotic
drugs
and narcotics;
but not including medicinal and toilet
preparations containing alcohol or any
substance included in sub-paragraph (b) of
this entry."
It is difficult to see how the State can fix countervailing
duties at the same or lower rates unless the rate of excise
as such is known or can be ascertained. Similarly, s. 64A
of the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1950, contemplates a
uniformity of incidence and reads thus
"64. A. In contracts of sale amount of
increased or decreased duty to be added or
deducted.
In the event of any duty of customs or excise
on any goods being imposed, increased,
decreased or remitted after the making of any
contract for the sale of such goods without
stipulation as to the payment of duty where
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duty was not chargeable at the time of the
making of the contract, or for the sale of
such goods duty paid where duty was chargeable
at that time,-
(a) if such imposition or increase so takes
effect that the duty or increased duty, as the
case may be, or any part thereof, is paid, the
seller may add so much to the contract price
as will be equivalent to the amount paid in
respect of such duty or increase of duty, and
he shall be entitled to be paid and to sue for
and recover such addition, and
(b) if such decrease or remission so takes
effect that the decreased duty only or no
duty, as the case may be, is paid, the buyer
may deduct so much from the contract price as
will be equivalent to the decrease of duty or
remitted duty and he shall not be liable to
pay, or be sued for or in respect of such
deduction."
Secondly, the duty must be closely related to production or
manufacture of goods. It does not matter if the levy is
made not at the moment of production or manufacture but at a
later stage. If a duty has been levied on an excisable
article but this duty is connected from a retailer it would
not necessarily cease to be an excise duty. Thirdly, if a
levy is made for the privilege of selling an excisable
article and the excisable article has already borne the duty
and the duty has been paid, there must be clear terms in the
charging
564
section to indicate that what is being levied for the
purpose of privilege of sale is in fact a duty of excise.
What is the true character or nature of the levy in this
case? First, it is a payment for the exclusive privilege of
selling toddy from certain shops. The licensee pays what he
considers to be equivalent to the value of the right.
Secondly, it has no close relation to’ the production or
manufacture of toddy. Thirdly. the only relation it has to
the production or manufacture of toddy is that it enables
the licensee to sell it. But he may sell little, less or
more than he anticipated, depending-on various factors.
Four’thly, toddy has already paid one excise duty in the
form of treetax. If the petitioner taps toddy he pays tree
tax, but he need not tap himself. Fifthly, the duty is not
uniform in incidence because the amount collected has no
relation to the quantity or quality of the product but has
only relation to what the petitioner thought he could recoup
by the sale of the excisable articles. What he recoups
would depend upon the amount of sales and the conditions
prevailing during the licensing year. Sixthly, there are no
,express words showing that what is being realised from the
petitioner is an excise duty. In fact what s. 16 of the
Mysore Excise Act says is that a privilege has been granted
to him for selling by retail. Section 28 refers
specifically to an amount due to the Government by any
grantee of the privilege and the legislature apparently did
not think that this amount would be covered by the
expression "all duties, taxes,fines and
fees payable to the Government occurring in s. 28.
Seventhly, the privilege of selling is auctioned well before
the goods come into existence. In this case it would be
noticed that the second notification dated April 27, 1964,
was for the sale during the next two years.
In view of these characteristics, can it be said to be an
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excise duty? In our opinion answer is in the negative. The
taxable event is not the manufacture or production of goods
but the acceptance of the license to sell. In other words,
the levy is in respect of the business of carrying on the
sale of toddy. There is no connection of any part of the
levy with any manufacture or production of any goods. To
accept the contention of the State would mean expanding the
definition of "excise duty" to include a levy which has
close relation to the sale of excisable goods. It is now
too late in the day to do so.
Our conclusion is supported by the observations of Gwyer,C.
J., in In re the Central Provinces and Berar Act XIV of
1938:(1)
"But here again after examining various
provincial Acts relating to the control of
alcohol, I have been unable to find any case
of excise duties payable otherwise
(1) [1939] F.C.R. 18, 54.
565
.lm15
than by the producers or manufacturers or persons corres-
ponding to them; I am speaking of course only of alcohol
manufactured or produced in the Province itself. The
Advocate-General of India referred us to an act of the
Central Provinces (Central Provinces Excise (Act No. 11 of
1915) which was said to make provision for the imposition of
an excise duty on retail sales. I have been unable to find
any such provision in the Act; it provides, it is true, as
do other provincial Acts, for lump sum payments in certain
cases by manufacturers and retailers, which may be described
as payments either for the privilege of selling alcohol, or
as consideration for the temporary grant of a monopoly; but
these are clearly not excise duties or anything like them.
Provision was also made in most provincial Acts for the
payment of licence fees in connection with the production or
sale of alcohol in the Province; but these fees are
mentioned in the Devolution Rules entry in addition to
excise duties and are therefore something different from
them."
Mr. Gokhale also relies on the legislative practice existing
before the Government of India Act, 1935, came into force
and his contention is that all the acts existing before the
Government of India Act, 1935, imposed excise duties and
collected them by auctioning the privilege of sale or
manufacture. The legislative practice is not of any
assistance because all duties collected under these Acts
were not excise duties. We are not concerned here with the
case of manufacture or the privilege of manufacture, and it
is not necessary for us to decide whether Chief Justice
Gwyer was right in so far as the auction of the privilege of
manufacturing excisable articles is concerned. But it is
interesting to note that even in Australia where a very wide
meaning has been given to the word "excise", a fee for a
mere licence to engage in business even if it be indirectly
connected with production or manufacture has not been held
to be an excise duty. The High Court of Australia held in
Peterswald v. Bartley() that the State Act imposing a
licence fee upon brewers as a condition precedent to the
carrying on of their business and punishing non-compliance
with its provisions was not opposed to S. 90 of the
Australian Constitution. It may be that Chief Justice Gwyer
had this case in mind when he made the observations
reproduced above. Recently in Dennis Hotels Pty Ltd. v.
Victoria,(2) the High Court of Australia, by majority, held
that S. 19(1)(a) of the Licensing Act, 1958 (Vic.) which
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imposed fees for a Victualler’s licence calculated at "equal
to the sum of six per centum of the gross amount (including
any duties thereon) paid or payable for all liquors which
during the 12 months ended on the last day of June preceding
the date of application for the
(1) I C.L.R. 497. (2) 33 A.L.J.R. 470.
566
grant or renewal of the licence was purchased for the
premises" was valid as it did not impose any excise duty
within s. 90 of the Australian Constitution.
It is now necessary to consider the decision of this Court
in A. B. Abdulkadir v. The State of Kerala.(1) This decision
is of course binding on us, but, in our opinion, this case
is distinguishable. The question before the Court was
whether Cochin Tobacco Act, 1084 (Cochin Act VII of 1084
M.E.) and Travancore Tobacco Regulation, 1087 (Travancore 1
of 1087 M.E.) were laws corresponding to the Central Excise
Act, and within ss. 11(1) and 13(2) of the Finance Act,
1450. The Court was not concerned with the question whether
the levies being made under these acts were strictly excise
duties within item 51 List 11, and this is quite apparent
from the fact that even though these acts also imposed
import duties, these were held in substance to be acts
corresponding to the Central Excise Act. Further the only
system in force for the collection of tobacco revenue was to
auction what was called A class and B class shops. There
was no other duty levied on tobacco at all. As we have
already said, it depends on the facts of each case whether
in view of the scheme of the act and the various provisions
and the rules the revenue being obtained is an excise duty
or not. It is true that Wanchoo, J., referred to the
practice of public auctions of the right to possess and sell
excisable goods, but what he said was that the amount
realised from these auctions was excise revenue; he did not
say that the amount realized was excise duty as such in the
strict sense of the term.
We may now deal with the propositions submitted by Mr.
Gokhale. The first point taken by Mr. Gokhale is not sound.
It is contrary to what has been consistently laid down by
this Court: that it must be shown in every case that the
duty has been levied on goods which have been produced or
manufactured, the taxable event being production or
manufacture of goods.
We also consider that his second proposition is not sound.
There is no presumption that if no other taxable event has
intervened, -the levy must be treated to be connected with
production or manufacture. This, as we have said above,
must depend upon the facts of each case. But it must be
positively shown that the taxable event for the duty which
has been levied is manufacture or production of the article.
We agree with his contention that the method of its
collection is not decisive but, in our opinion, in cases of
doubt it may throw some light on this question.
Mr. Setalvad, who appears in the appeals concerned with
licenses for arrack points out that para 29(a) of the
General Conditions applicable to all excise and opium
licenses specifically provides that the manufacturers of
arrack and other country spirits
(1) [1962] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 741.
567
as well as the licenses of arrack Bonded Depots are
prohibited from holding any interest in the retail vend of
arrack or in the vend of other country spirits and from
employing any person who has such interest. He says that
this strengthens his case because the money realised by the
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sale of licenses for vending arrack can have no relation to
the manufacture or production of arrack. There is force in
his contention.
In the result we hold that the health cess sought to be
levied under the impugned act on shop rent does not fall
within item 1 of Schedule A of the impugned act or entry 51
List II of the Constitution.
In W.P. No. 1076 of 1964 and in some other petitions in the
High Court the petitioners have challenged the validity of
the Mysore Health Cess Act, 1951. This Act was not referred
to in the course of arguments. Section 3 of the Health Cess
Act, 1951, reads thus:
"3. (1) There shall be levied and collected a
health cess at the rate of six pies in the
rupee on all items of land revenue and at such
rate not exceeding one anna in the rupee as
may be specified by Government by notification
on all other items of revenue o
n which
education cess is leviable.
(2) The Government may by notification levy
health cess at such rate not exceeding one
anna in the rupee as may be specified in the
said notification on such other items of
revenue as they deem fit."
No notification or notifications issued under s. 3 were
placed before us. We are, therefore, unable to say whether
the levy of the Health Cess under the Act of 1951 stands on
the same basis. Further no particulars are given in the
petitions as to the dates of payments and no reason is given
why the levy of Health Cess under the Act of 1951 was not
challenged earlier. In the circumstances we decline to
adjudge on the validity of the Health Cess Act, 1951, and
the notifications issued under it. The petitioners will,
however, be at liberty to file suits, if so advised, to
recover the amounts alleged to have been paid by them under
the Health Cess Act, 1951.
In the result the appeals are allowed and it is declared
that the State of Mysore had no authority to levy and
collect health cess under the Mysore Health Cess Act, 1962,
on shop rent, and an order or direction in the nature of
writ of mandamus be issued restraining the respondents from
enforcing the demand for payment of health cess under the
impugned Act, and further an order be issued directing the
respondents to refund the health cess illegally collected
under the Health Cess Act, 1962. There would be no order as
to costs.
up.CI/66-8
568
Hidayatullah, J. I regret I do not agree. I shall not
trouble myself with reciting the facts of these simple
cases. They will find ample mention in the judgment as I
deal with them. I shall, therefore, pass on at once to the
legal question on which I find myself in disagreement.
The Mysore Legislature passed the Mysore Health Cess Act,
1962 (Act 28 of 1962) on September 22, 1962 levying
retrospectively a health cess in the State of Mysore from
the 1st day of April, 1962. This cess is levied at the rate
of 9 paise per rupee, on (a) all items of land revenue, (b)
the items of State Revenues specified in the Act, in a
Schedule numbered A and (c) on all items of taxes levied,
under any law for the time being in force, by a local
authority and specified in Schedule B. The first of the
three items in Schedule A reads:
"1. Duties of excise leviable by the State
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under any law for the time being in force in
any area of the State, on the following goods
manufactured or produced in the State and
countervailing duties levied on similar goods
manufactured or produced elsewhere:-
(a) Alcoholic liquors for human consumption;
(b) Opium, Indian hemp and other narcotic
drugs and narcotics.
Explanation-The duty of excise leviable under
this item includes the duties, payments, fees
and other amounts payable under section 18 of
the Mysore Excise Act, 1901, and similar
impost or payment by whatever name called
payable under any other law in force in any
area of the State of Mysore.
The other two items in Schedule A are water rate and tax on
cinema to graph shows. In Schedule B are mentioned taxes on
(a) lands and buildings, (b) vehicles, (c) professions,
trades, callings and employments, and (d) advertisements.
We are concerned with Schedule A(i) quoted above. The cess
collected on that item is said by the appellants, for
various reasons, to be an illegal impost. They challenged
it by petitions under Arts. 226/227 of the Constitution
before the High Court of Mysore, but the High Court after
striking out the Explanation upheld the cess and hence these
appeals.
The appeals can be divided into two groups. Some are con-
cerned with toddy which is tapped from palm trees and the
others with arrak which is- prepared from molasses. Both
are country liquors and the difference in the kind of liquor
makes no difference to the questions of law and we may
forget it. These liquors are subject to excise laws in
force in the Mysore State but as different parts of the
State are governed by different Acts we have for consi-
569
deration the Mysore Excise Act passed as for back as 1901 by
the Ruler of the former Mysore State (Act No. V of 1901) and
the Hyderabad Abkari Act (No. 1 of 1316 F). The two Acts
are so alike in their provisions that no point depending on
any difference was made before us and I shall, therefore,
refer to the Mysore Act throughout. What I say about it
will apply, with suitable adaptation to the Hyderabad Act.
Under the Mysore Excise Act import, export and transport of
liquor is banned except under a permit and on payment of
duty, if any, to which the liquor may be made liable under
the Act. The Act also bans the manufacture of liquor, the
tapping of toddyproducing trees, the drawing of toddy from
trees, the construction of a brewery or distillery, the
bottling of liquor for sale, except under the authority or
subject to the terms and conditions of a license granted by
the Deputy Commissioner or by a person to whom the exclusive
privilege of manufacturing toddy has been granted. Sale of
liquor except under a license is prohibited. The Act,
however, makes it lawful for the Government to grant to any
person or persons on such conditions and for such period as
may deem fit the exclusive or other privilege of
manufacturing or supplying by wholesale, or selling by
retail or of manufacturing or supplying by wholesale and
selling by retail, any country liquor within a local area.
But such grantee must obtain a license from the Deputy
Commissioner (s. 16). A duty, if Government so directs, is
leviable on all liquor imported or exported or manufactured
under a license or manufactured at a distillery or permitted
to be transported or issued from a licensed distillery or a
licensed warehouse or sold in any part of Mysore, of such
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amount as the Government may from time to time, prescribe
(S. 17). There are various ways of levying the duty. These
are described in s. 18 which may be reproduced here:
"18. How duty may be imposed.
Such duty may be levied in one or more of the
following ways:-
(a) by duty of excise to be charged in the
case of spirits or beer either on the quantity
produced in or passed out of a distillery,
brewery or warehouse licensed or established
under section 12 or section 14 (b) as the case
may be; or in accordance with such scale of
equivalents, calculated on quantity of
materials used or by the degree of attenuation
of the wash or wort, as the case may be, as
the Government may prescribe;
(b) in the case of intoxicating drugs, by a
duty to be rateably charged on the quantity
produced or manufactured or sold by wholesale
or issued from a warehouse licensed or
established under section 14;
570
(c) by payment of a sum in consideration of
the grant of any exclusive or other privilege-
(1) of manufacturing or supplying by
wholesale, or
(2) of selling by retail, or
(3) of manufacturing or supplying by wholesale
and selling by retail any country liquor or
intoxicating drug in any local area and for
any specified period of time;
(d) by fees on licenses for manufacture or
sale;
(e) in the case of toddy, or spirits
manufactured from toddy, by a tax on each tree
from which toddy is drawn, to be paid in such
instalments and for such period as the
Government may direct; or
(f)by import, export or transport-duties
assessed in such manner as the Government may
direct.
Provided that when there is a difference of
duty as between two license periods such
difference may be collected in respect of all
stock of country liquor or intoxicating drugs
held by licensees at the close of the former
period."
We are concerned mainly with (c) and (e) above and one of
the questions is whether these fall within item (1) of
Schedule A of the Act already set out in full.
The appellants are licensed excise contractors who have pur-
chased in auction the exclusive privilege to sell liquor at
liquor shops at fixed places. They have obtained the
exclusive right for 1-2 years and are paying the amount of
their bid by monthly instalments which are popularly known
as shop rent, although the instalment has no element of rent
in it. I shall avoid the term shop rent because it raises
an image which takes the mind away from the auction of the
exclusive privilege to sell liquor. The notification
calling for tenders before the auction specified the price
per litre at which liquor may be sold and the amount of duty
per litre payable. In this way the duty which may be passed
on to the consumer is fixed. ’the advantage of the auction
system is that Government collects the duty at once and the
contractor buys the privilege and is not concerned to pay
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the duty as he manufactures or sells his manufactured goods.
He also hopes to make a profit, and often does, although he
may sometime suffer a loss. This is really taking a
composition amount as duty without having to go to the
trouble of calculating the duty or recovering it as manufac-
ture or sales proceed. The system has been in vogue as long
as Abkari Laws have existed in India and the Acts passed are
uniformly the same. For the excise contractor it is in a
sense a specu-
571
lative venture. In addition to this there is leviable a
tree tax for the right to tap toddy from trees and tree rent
is also payable to the owner of toddy trees.
The Health Cess is not a new levy. It existed as far back
as 1951 and was at first at the rate of one anna per rupee.
The health tax is made payable with the monthly kist above-
mentioned, the tree tax and other duties of excise. The
appellants do not object to the payment of the health cess
levied on the tree ’tax but raise objections to its being
levied on the amount of the kist. It may be mentioned here
that every excise contractor who obtains this privilege by
auction is assigned tree groves earmarked for the shop and
is entitled to tap or draw toddy and, if he obtain an arrak
shop, also to manufacture arrak. In fact, he sells at the
shops his own produce or manufacture and pays a tax on the
tapping of trees, the amount bid by him for the privilege of
selling and in addition pays the health cess on both these
sums at nine paise per rupee. Where he sells beer or such
other liquor he obtains his supplies from breweries and
distilleries at fixed prices which do not include excise
duty.
Now the health cess is first assailed on the ground that
there is no entry ’health cess’ as such in the legislative
entries. The word , cess’ is used in Ireland and is still
in use in India although the word rate has replaced it in
England. It means a tax and is generally used when the levy
is for some special administrative expense which the name
(health cess, education cess, road cess etc.) indicates.
When levied as an increment to an existing tax, the name
matters not for the validity of the cess must be judged of
in the same way as the validity of the’ tax to which it is
an increment. By Schedule A(1) read with s. 3 of the Act, it
is collected as an additional levy with a tax, which, as
described in Schedule A, is undoubtedly one within the
powers of the State Legislature and has been so even prior
to the Constitution. The question, however, is whether the
amount paid for the exclusive privilege of selling liquor is
an excise duty for if it is not then the health cess is also
not an excise duty and however immune the original impost
may be from attack, because of the protection the
Constitution gives to old taxes, the new addition will not
be equally protected, unless it can justify itself under the
Constitution. To that question which is the core of this
case I shall address myself after dealing with another minor
objection which need not detain us long.
It is contended that the Legislature had no jurisdiction to
impose the cess retrospectively from a prior date. This
contention has no substance. Excise duty may be increased
or decreased. This is to be found in almost all parts of
the Commonwealth. English examples are the Finance Acts of
1894 (57 & 58 Vict. c. 30), 1900 (63 & 64 Vict. c. 27). 1901
(I Edw. VII c. 7), 1902 (2 Edw.
572
VII c. 7), 1927 (17 & 18 Geo V c. 10) and several others.
In Australia the Excise Tariff 1921-23, 1936, 1921-48
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increased the excise duty retrospectively. In Canada
Customs Tariff Act (18 & 19 Geo V c. 17), 1 Edw VIII c. 37,
3 Geo VI c. 43 are examples. In India the Tariff Act
formerly contained provisions enabling change of duty
retrospectively. Now they are found in the Sale of Goods
Act (s. 64A). The validity of such retrospective levy has
been upheld in Chhotabhai Jethabhai Patel and Co. v. The
Union of India and Another.(1) It must be remembered that
Parliament when it imposes taxes has many ancillary powers,
and can interfere with vested rights by validating past
unlawful collections and by making retrospective laws.
This brings me to the main question whether the amount for
which the exclusive privilege of selling liquor is sold by
auction can be said to be a duty of excise. In this
connection I must bring to the fore and emphasise certain
matters which must not be lost sight of. The persons who
bid at these auctions are themselves the producers and
manufacturers. They bid for the exclusive privilegd of
selling which in so far as Government is concerned, is a
means of collecting the anticipated excise duty at one go
from a producer or manufacturer before the goods become a
part of the general stock of goods in the country. In other
words, the person who is charged in the producer and
manufacturer and the duty is levied from him before he can
sell or obtains liquor which has not borne excise duty so
far. The short question is: Is this a duty of excise? My
emphatic answer is that it is, whether the matter is
considered in the light of economic theory, legislative
practice or judicial authority. I shall examine the
question from these three angles.
Before I deal with the economic theory I must say that I am
aware that the economists’ definitions were not treated as
conclusive by the Privy Council in Toronto v. Lamba(2) and
by Sulaiman J. in In re C.P. & Berar Act No. XIV of 1938(3)
although in the first case Lord Hobhouse commended reference
to works on Economics and Lord Thankerton in Attorney
General v. King come Navigation Co.(4) actually used Mill’s
definition of direct and indirect taxes. In this connection
it is not necessary to refer to many books. In the
Encyclopedia of Social Sciences "Excise" is described as a
tax on commodities of domestic manufacture levied either at
some stage of manufacture or before sale to home consumer.
It is also pointed out that the excise duty may be levied on
the raw material or the finished article or it may attach to
an intermediate stage of the production process. This is
also endorsed by Findlay Shirras Science of Public Finance
(1936) Vol. II Chapter XXVH. It will thus appear that
excise duty does not cease to be an excise
(1) [1962] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 1.
(3) [1939] F.C.R. 18 at 58.
(2) (1887) 12 A.C. 575, 581, 582.
(4) 1934] A.C. 45 at 51.
573
duty when it is levied at any stage from raw material to
finished article before sale to consumer. As Gwyer C. J.
observed in the In re The C.P. & Berar case(1) its primary
and fundamental meaning is that of a tax on articles
produced or manufactured in the taxing country for home
consumption. In the economist’s view therefore, a tax on
toddy, arrak, tavern beer or spirits distilled in India for
home consumption is an excise duty and it can be levied from
the stage of raw material to finished goods or at any
intermediate stage. In economic theory the manner of
collection does not enter into the discussion provided the
tax is in respect of the home produced goods destined for
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home consumption.
Turning now to the legislative practice I find that excise
duties were collected by auction of the exclusive privilege
to sell excisable articles, in every State of India and as
far back as the first Abkari Act. In fact the method is so
universal that Findlay Shirras makes a special mention of
the contract system under which rights to manufacture or
vend spirit or liquor is disposed of by tender or sale. In
view of the existing practice which had grown hoary by then,
the Devolution Rules while including Excise in the Provin-
cial Subjects (Rule 3 Schedule 1 Part 11) framed entry No.
16 as follows:-
"16. Excise, that is to say, the control of
production, manufacture, possession,
transport, purchase and sale of alcoholic
liquor and intoxicating drugs, and the levying
of excise duties and license fees on or in
relation to such articles, but excluding, in
the case of opium, control of cultivation,
manufacture and sale for export".
It will be noticed that this entry follows closely the
provisions of the Abkari Acts which are in their turn copied
by s. 17 of the Mysore Act. These statutes, as I have said
already, existed for several decades. Excise duty was thus
considered leviable by the auction system and special
constitutional recognition was given by the Government of
India Act and the Devolution Rules. The Government of India
Act, 1935 did not repeat the Devolution Rule entry in one
place. It put the entire subject of intoxicating liquors
within the legislative competence of the Provinces by entry
31 in List II. The power to levy excise duties was divided
between the Centre and the States. By entry 45 of the
Central List in the 7th Schedule duties of excise on tobacco
and goods manufactured or produced in India, other than
those mentioned in the Provincial List, were given to the
Centre. The Provincial List by entry 40 included excise
duty on alcoholic liquors for human consumption manufactured
or produced in the Province and countervailing duties at the
same or lower rates on similar goods manufactured or
produced elsewhere in India. The whole of the power to levy
excise duty on alcoholic liquors for human comsumption was
(1) [1939] F.C.R. 18 at 58.
574
passed on to the Provinces. The subject of excise duties
was thus plenary in so far as alcoholic liquors were
concerned and this power was no whit less than the power
conferred by the Devolution Rules and no limitation could be
read into it. Excise duty on alcoholic liquors could be
collected at all stages from production till they were
parted with to the consumer. The present Constitution has
repeated the entries and the same classification of excise
duties as in the Constitution Act of 1935 except for a few
changes with which we are not concerned. It would thus
appear that the legislative practice is entirely in support
of collection of excise duty by the contract system. I am
reminded of the dictum of Lord Blackburn in Trustees of
Clyde Navigation v. Laird & Sons(D in which a departmental
practice extending there over 18 years was said to raise a
strong prima facie ground for thinking that there must be
some legal ground on which it could be rested. Here the
practice is over a century old and has not been questioned
under three different constitutional documents till today.
The judicial interpretation of the relevant entries has not
militated against, the above practice but has rather
supported it. In Governor General in Council v. The Province
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of Madras(2) Lord Simonds observed that "the term ’duty of
excise’ is a somewhat flexible one: it may, no doubt, cover
a tax on first and, perhaps, on other sales: it may in a
proper context have an even wider meaning." After approving
the definition of ’excise’ given by the Federal Court in the
In re C.P. & Berar case, Lord Simods observes:
"...... Consistently with this decision their
Lordships are of opinion that a duty of excise
is primarily a duty levied on a manufacturer
or producer in respect of the commodity
manufactured or produced. It is a tax on
goods not on sales or the proceeds of sale of
goods. Here again, their Lordships find
themselves in complete accord with the
reasoning and conclusions of the Federal Court
in the Boddu Paidanna case.(3) The two taxes,
the one levied on a manufacturer in respect of
his goods, the other on a vendor in respect of
his sales, may, as is there pointed out, in
one sense overlap.. But in law there is no
overlapping. The taxes are separate and
distinct imposts. If in fact they overlap,
that may be because the taxing authority
imposing a duty of excise,. finds it
convenient to impose that duty at the moment
when the excisable article leaves the factory
or workshop for the first time on the occasion
of its sale. But that method of colle
cting the
tax is an accident of administra-
(1) (1883) 8 A.C. 658.
(3) (1942] F.C.R. 90.
(2) 721 I.A. 91.
575
tion; it is not of the essence of the duty of
excise, which is attracted by the manufacture
itself. That this is so is clearly
examplified in those excepted cases in which
the Provincial, not the Federal, legislature
has power to impose a duty of excise. In such
cases there appears to be no reason why the
Provincial legislature should not impose a
duty of excise in respect of the commodity
manufactured and then a tax on first or other
sales of the same commodity. Whether or not
such a course is followed appears to be merely
a matter of administrative convenience. So,
by parity of reasoning may the Federal
legislature impose a duty of excise on the
manufacture of excisable goods and the
Provincial legislature impose a tax on the
sale of the same goods when manufactured.
The above passage clearly shows that where the power to levy
sales-tax as well as excise duty resides in the same
legislature, the levy of excise duty may be made at some
earlier stage but so long as the tax is levied in respect of
manufacture there can be no objection that it was not levied
at the stage when the goods left the manufacturer for the
first time.
Fine distinctions were drawn in the Federal Court case
because the Act considered there was concerned with sales-
tax, not on alcoholic liquors but on petroleum and
lubricants, which were excisable by the Centre. The
question, therefore, arose whether the tax which the Central
Provinces and Berar Legislature was levying was an excise
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duty within the power of the Federal Legislature of sales-
tax within the powers of the Provincial Legislature of the
Province. Under that constitutional system, which allowed
the levy of Duty of excise to the Centre and the levy of
sales-tax on the same goods to the Provinces, the line had
to be drawn at a point where the goods left the producer or
the manufacturer. The Centre then would be on the right
side of the line so long as it taxed the goods with the
producer or the manufacturer and the tax was related to the
production of manufacture of the goods and the Provinces on
their side of the line if they taxed the sale. But if the
Centre put the tax on the sale it would clash with the
powers of the Provincial Legislature and vice-versa. Such a
contingency does not arise here when the same legislature
has all the powers in respect of the goods from production
to consumption. Such a legislature may collect the excise
duty as excise duty at any stage so long as the tax is not
purely a sales tax on the sale of goods. Short of this,
excise duty can be collected in any way the legislature
thinks convenient.
In R. C. Jall v. Union of India(1) the following
observations are found:-
(1) [1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R. 436.
576
"With great respect, we accept the principles
laid down by the said three decisions in the
matter of Ievy of an excise duty and the
machinery for collection thereof. Excise duty
is primarily a duty on the production or
manufacture of goods produced or manufactured
within the country. It is an indirect duty
which the manufacturer or producer passes on
to the ultimate consumer, that is, its
ultimate incidence will always be on the
consumer. Therefore, subject always to the
legislative competence of the taxing
authority, the said tax can be levied at a
convenient stage so long as the character of
the impost, that is, it is a duty on the
manufacture or production, is not lost. The
method of collection does not affect the
essence of the duty, but only relates to the
machinery of collection for administrative
convenience. Whether in a particular case the
tax ceases to be in essence an excise duty,
and the rational connection between the duty
and the person on whom it is imposed ceased to
exist, is to be decided on a fair construction
of the provisions of a particular Act."
There is a slight difference between the Privy Council case
and the case of this Court. In the former excise duty was
said to be primarily a duty levied on a manufacturer or
producer in respect of the commodity manufactured or
produced while in the Supreme ,Court case it was said to be
primarily a duty on the production or manufacture of goods
produced or manufactured within the country. It is useless
to enter into a discussion which of the two is the proper
way to describe a duty of excise since the Supreme Court
case is binding on me and the description there given has
again been applied in In re The Bill to Amend s. 20 of the
Sea ,Customs Act, 1878, and s. 3 of the Central Excises and
Salt Act, 1944(1) although without fresh discussion.
But even if the tax is treated as a duty on production, it
is clear that the goods which were taxed were produced or
manufactured in India and were not to bear the tax for any
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other reason. As the tax was in relation to the production
or manufacture of goods it was clearly a duty of excise. As
Gwyer C. J. said in the In re C.P. & Berar(2) case:
"The ultimate incidence of an excise duty. a
typical indirect tax, must always be on the
consumer, who pays as he consumes or expends;
and it continues to be an excise duty, that
is, a duty on home-produced or home-manufac-
tured goods, no matter at what stage it is
collected. The definition of excise duties is
therefore of little assistance in determining
the extent of the legislative power to impose
804, 822.
(2) [1939] F.C.R. 18.
577
.lm15
them; for the duty imposed by a restricted legislative power
does not differ in essence from the duty imposed by an
extended one."
In fact Gwyer C. J. cited with approval Patton v. Brady(1)
where it was observed:
"Within the scope of the various definitions
we have quoted, there can be no doubt that the
power to excise continues while the consumable
articles are in the hands of the manufacturer
or any intermediate dealer, and until they
reach the consumer. Our conclusion then is
that it is within the power of Congress to
increase an excise, as well as a property tax,
and that such an increase may be made at least
while the property is held for sale and before
it has passed into the hands of the,
consumer".
The learned Chief Justice pointed out that this was true
when there was no competing legislature and observed in
another passage as follows:-
"The expression ’duties of excise’, taken by
itself, conveys no suggestion with regard to
the time or place of their collection. Only
the context in which the expression is used
can tell us whether any reference to the time
or manner of collection is to be implied. It
is not denied that laws are to be found which
impose duties of excise at stages subsequent
to manufacture or production; but, as far as I
am aware, in none of the cases in which any
question with regard to such a law has arisen
was it necessary to consider the existence of
a competing legislative power."
Referring to the Australian case of Commonwealth Oil Refine-
ries Ltd. v. South Australia(2) the Chief Justice observed:-
"But a closer examination of the judgments
delivered shows that the majority of the
Judges took the view that the duty on the
first sale of the commodity was in fact a tax
on the producer and for that reason a duty of
excise without doubt".
He thus approved of these cases, as he says, by relating the
duty back to the stage of production, even though the person
made liable for payment was not (and indeed could seldom
have been) the original producer himself". (p. 52).
All these observations have my respectful concurrence and in
my judgment they are a true exposition of the width of the
expression "duty of excise" when it is used in a context in
which it has not to compete with the exercise of a rival
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power Looked
(1) (1901) 184 U.S. 608, at 623.
(2) (1926) 38 C.L.R. 408.
578
at in this way the tree tax and the composition amount
obtained by the auction of the right to bring to sale home
produced alcohol is a proper excise duty. It certainly is
not shop rent even if the amount is payable by monthly
instalments and is described loosely as rental, or Baithak
or shop rent.
The objections to the views I have propounded here may be
noted. It was argued that there is no close relation of the
tax or levy to production or manufacture and it is related
to the ability to sell, that the duty is not uniform because
it has no relation to quantity or quality, that the
collection of the duty is before the excisable goods come
into existence, and that there is already a tree tax which
is of the nature of excise duty. It is also said that if
the right is auctioned how can countervailing duties at the
same or lower rates be charged. I think none of them is a
valid argument. Firstly, we must recognize the ambit of the
entry and the fact that we are dealing with a legislature
which enjoys plenary powers. Next we must bear in mind that
goods on which excise duty is being demanded are produced or
manufactured in the State and the State can legitimately
subject them to a payment of excise duty. The levy is thus
in respect of goods produced or manufactured in the State
and is on production or manufacture. The method of
collection does not change the nature of the tax or run
counter to any legislative power, rival or other. The duty
is uniform. Each notification fixes the amount of duty
payable and the sale price including the duty. Where goods
have first to be obtained from breweries or distilleries the
price at which they can be got (which price does not include
excise duty) is also fixed. The excise contractor who bids
at the auction knows the fixed sale price, the amount of
duty which his bid would represent and then estimates the
likely sales and bids for the privilege. The right to
collect excise duties is thus farmed to him for a lump
payment which the State takes as the excise duty in final
settlement. As I said the business of excise contractors is
a speculative business. Government is not concerned with
whether they sell more or less. The Government fixes the
upset price for such auctions based on statistics of sales
and consumptions available to it and is quite satisfied when
the highest bid is satisfactory. To say that such a
collection of excise duty renders the levy into a rent for a
shop is to miss the reality.
Nor do I see any difficulty in the matter of countervailing
duties. The rate of duties is fixed and the ditty may be
collected at that rate on liquor produced elsewhere in India
without infringing the Constitution. In all such matters a
broad view of the matter has to be taken. Machinery
sections do not enter into the rate but only the charging
section does. if the privilege to sell
579
liquor produced in the State and that produced elsewhere in
India are both auctioned on the condition that the duty on
both kinds of liquor is the same, the requirements of the
constitutional provision as to countervailing duties would
be amply satisfied. It would be making a fetish of equal
rates if one wanted absolute equality not only in rates but
in everything. Further imposition of countervailing duties
is not compulsory. The legislature need not impose them if
it cannot make them equal.
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The view I have taken is fortified by two cases of this
Court which are precedents to follow in the decision of the
case in hand. In Cooverjee B. Bharucha v. The Excise
Commissioner, Ajmer and others(1) in dealing with Excise
Regulation 1 of 1915, the amounts raised by public auction
and described as fees were held to be more in the nature of
taxes than fees. Revenue was collected by the grant of
contracts to carry on trade in liquors and these contracts
were sold by auction. The grantee was given a license on
payment of the auction price. If this was treated not as a
fee but as a tax it could only be justified as an excise
duty. The power to raise excise revenue was exercisable
only through the imposition of excise duties and it is
obvious that the levy was regarded as a duty of excise.
There was otherwise no other power under which revenue could
be raised. Describing the tax Mahajan C. J. made the
following observations:-
"The pith and substance of the regulation is
that it raises excise revenue by imposing
duties on liquor and intoxicating drugs by
different methods and it also regulates the
import, export, transport, manufacture, sale
and possession of intoxicating liquors.
Section 18 says that the Chief Commissioner
may lease to any person, on such conditions
and for such period as he may think fit, the
right of manufacturing of supplying by
wholesale, or of both, or of selling by
wholesale or by retail, or of manufacuturing
or of supplying by whole, or of both and of
selling by retail any country hquor or
intoxicating drug within any specified
area........
The second case A. B. Abdulkadir and other v.
The State of Kerala and another(2) is even
clearer. There a system of auctions for the
collection of tobacco revenue was in force in
Travancore Cochin. After the coming into
force of the Constitution the Finance Act,
1950 (25 of 1950) extended the Central Excises
and Salt Act, 1944 to Travancore-Cochin State.
A question arose whether this levy on tobacco
corresponded to the excise duty
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 873,877,878.
(2) [1962] Sup. 2 S.C.R. 741,754,755.
580
under the Finance Act, because if it did, then by s. 13(2)
of the Finance Act the State law stood repealed. It was
held that the amounts realized by the auctions were what
would be duty under s. 3 of the Central Act. This Court
observed:
"We have already indicated that the essence of the duty
of excise as held by the Federal Court and the Privy Council
is that it is a duty on the goods manufactured or produced
in the taxing country. Further as generally the duty is on
the goods produced or manufactured it is paid by the
producer or manufacturer, though as in the case of all
indirect taxes it is passed on eventually to the consumer in
the shape of being included in the price and is thus really
borne by the consumer. Further the cases on which reliance
has been placed on behalf of the State also show that laws
are to be found which impose duty of excise at stages
subsequent to manufacture or production. As a matter of
fact, even in British India before 1935 there used to be
public auctions of the right to possess and sell excisable
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goods like country liquor, ganja and bhang and the amount
realised was excise revenue
. It seems under the circumstances that the auction
system which was in force was only a method of realising
duty through the grant of licences to those who made the
highest bid at the auctions."
It is argued that the words used here are "excise
revenue" and not "excise duty". It is hardly a question of
semantics. The distinction sought to be made is without a
difference. Wanchoo J. had discussed the nature of excise
duty before proceeding to compare the auction money with
duties of excise and he found that sale of the privilege to
the highest bidder was a method of realising "duty" and he
obviously meant excise duty.
These two cases are binding. I was a party to the
second case and on reconsidering it in the light of
arguments now advanced I find that it furnishes a complete
answer and is indistinguishable on the slender ground that
the expression "excise revenue" or "duty" have been used
and not the expression "excise duty". To hold otherwise is
to depart from this and the earlier case and to overrule
them.
I am, therefore, of the opinion that the so called shop-
rent was only a means of collecting excise duty and the
health cess which was an additional levy along with the
excise duty was perfectly valid. Being a new tax it cannot
be described as a tax on tax. The earlier tax only furnished
a measure. I would accordingly confirm the decision of the
High Court and dismiss the appeals with costs.
581
Bachawat, J. The Mysore Health Cess Act, 1962 (Mysore Act
No. 28 of 1962) levied a health cess at the rate of nine
naya paise in the rupee on (1) all items of land revenue,
(2) the items of State Revenues mentioned in Schedule A and
(3) the items of taxes levied by any local authority and
mentioned in Schedule B. The Act, on its true construction,
levied a surcharge and increased the amounts of the existing
imposts. There was no levy of a new head of tax or of a tax
on a tax.
The Act levied a health cess inter alia on the following
item of State Revenue mentioned in Schedule A:
"(1)Duties of excise leviable by the State
under any law for
the time-being in force in any area of the
State, on the following goods manufactured or
produced in the State and countervailing
duties levied on similar goods manufactured or
produced elsewhere:-
(a) Alcoholic liquors for human consumption.
(b) Opium, Indian hemp and other narcotic
drugs and narcotics.
"Explanation-The duty of excise leviable under
this item includes the duties, payments, fees
and other amounts payable under section 18 of
the Mysore Excise Act, 1901, and similar
impost or payment by whatever name called
payable under any other law in force in any
area of the State of Mysore."
The Explanation to item 1, Schedule A was struck down by the
High Court. There is no appeal by the State, and this part
of the order of the High Court has become final.
The Mysore Excise Act, 1901 (Mysore Act No. 5 of 1901) is in
force in the old Mysore area of the Mysore State. Section
16 empowers the State Government to grant exclusive or other
privilege of selling by retail any country liquor or
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intoxicating drugs to any person or persons on such
conditions and for such period as it thinks fit. The
privilege of sale in a specified shop is disposed of
periodically as a result of a public auction held by the
excise authorities. The amount paid for the grant of this
privilege is called the shop rent. Sections 17 and 18 show
that this payment is the levy of a duty. It is common case
that similar law and practice prevail in the old Hyderabad
area of the State, where the Hyderabad Abkari Act (No. 1 of
1316 Fasli) is in force. Both the Acts continue to be in
force by virtue of Art. 372 of the Constitution.
As a result of public auctions held subject to the terms and
conditions notified by the State Government, the appellants
were granted the exclusive privileges of selling liquor in
certain arrack shops, beer taverns and toddy shops in
consideration of their agree-
582
ing to pay specified shop rents and health cess thereon at
the rate of nine naya paise in the rupee.
Counsel for the State submitted that shop rent is a duty
of excise, the Mysore Cess Act, 1962 levied a surcharge on
this duty and the State Legislature was competent to make
this levy, having regard to Entry 51, List II of Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution.
The subject of duties of excise and fees in connection
therewith is divided between the Union and the States, see
Entries 84 and 96, List I and Entries 51 and 66, List II.
The power to make laws with respect to duties of excise
carries with it the ancillary power to make licensing laws
for preventing the evasion of the .duty. See Chaturbhai. M.
Patel v. The Union of India(1). The subject of intoxicating
liquors, that is to say, their production manufacture,
possession, transport, purchase and sale is exclusively
assigned to the States under List II, Entry 8. In this
background the expression "excise" iS often used to denote
the entire subject of the control of production,
manufacture, possession, transport purchase ’and sale of
alcoholic liquor and intoxicating drugs and the levying of
excise duties and license fees on and in relation to such
articles, and it was used in that sense in Entry 16 in the
list of provincial subjects in the Devolution .Rules of
1920. Though an excise law may contain provisions for the
control of production, manufacture, possession, transport,
purchase and sale of the excisable .commodity, it does not
follow that a tax on these several activities 1s a duty of
excise.
What then is a duty of excise on goods manufactured or
produced locally ? It is not a tax on property, see In re
Sea Customs Act(2), nor is it a tax on sales, In re The
Central Provinces and Berar Act No. XIV of 1938(3) nor a tax
on the first sale of goods, Governor-General in Council v.
Province of Madras(4). The language of the Entries in List
I, Entry 84 and Entry 51, list II is necessarily qualified
by the language of other Entries coveting other fields Of
taxation.
Likewise, a duty of excise is not a tax on income or on
professions, trades, callings and employments. It is not a
tax on the capital ’value, nor is it a duty. on the export,
import, transport, carriage or ,entry of goods.
Shortly put, the duty of excise is a tax in respect of
the manufacture or production of goods. There can be no
controversy that a tax levied on a manufacturer or producer
with reference to the quantity or value of the article
produced at the moment of its production is a duty of
excise. But the levy may be made in other ways,
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,(1) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 362. (2) [1964] 3 S.C.R.
787, 804, 822.
(3) [1939] F.C.R. 18. (4) [1945] F.C.R.
179.
583
and it may then become necessary to ascertain the real
character of the tax. In determining whether the tax is a
duty of excise, several tests may be suggested. Is the tax
levied on the manufacturer or producer? Is it levied with
reference to the value, quantity, weight or volume of the
goods? Does it affect the goods as subjects of manufacture
or production" Is it a levy at the stage of or in connection
with the manufacture or production? None of these tests is
conclusive or decisive. A duty of excise may be collected
at such time, in such manner and on such person as may be
convenient or beneficial to the revenue, e.g. by a levy on
the producer with reference to the quantity or value of the
article produced, when it leaves the factory, see Governor-
General in Council v. Province of Madras (1) at p. 193 by a
levy on the producer of toddy with reference to the toddy
producing tree, or by a levy on the consignee of coal
despatched from the colliery by means of a surcharge on
freight, R. C. Jall v. Union of India (2). The Court
examines the substance of the levy. If it is a tax in
respect of the manufacture or production of goods, it is a
duty of excise, however it may have been collected or
realised.
If the duty of excise is levied with reference to the
quantity, volume, weight or value of the goods, each unit
will bear the same amount of tax. But the incidence of the
duty on the goods will not necessarily be uniform, where the
levy is by a rate on each toddy producing tree, see s, 18(e)
of the Mysore Excise Act, 1901, or on each acre of hemp
producing land, see s.26(1) of the C.P. & Berar Excise Act,
1915. Every tree and every acre of land may not produce the
same quantity, volume, weight or value of the excisable
commodity. Normally, the ultimate incidence of the tax is
on the consumer, but the producer may not be able to pass on
the tax to the consumer in all cases, see Chholabhai
Jethabhai Patel v. The Union of Indian(3).
The question is whether the revenue realised at a public
auction of the privilege to sell an excisable commodity is a
duty of excise his method of raising revenue is specifically
authorised by many Provincial Acts and laws of Princely
States. In Coverjee B. Bharucha v. The Excise Commissioner
and the Chief Commissioner, Ajmer and others (4) this Court
held that the price realised at such public auction held
under the Ajmer Excise Regulation 1 of 1915 was more in the
nature of a tax than a license fee. In A. B. Abdulkadir v.
The State of Kerala (5), Wanchoo, J. said that such an
auction under the Cochin Tobacco Act, 1084 M.E. and the
Travancore Tobacco Regulation, 1087 M.E. was a method of
realising duty on tobacco and the substantial part of the
income from the auction was in the nature of excise duty.
These laws
(1) [1945] F.C.R. 179. (2) [1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R.
436.
(3) [1962] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 1. (4) [1954] S.C.R. 873, 882.
(5) [1962] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 741.
C.1/66-9
584
were passed. by law-makers whose powers were not fettered by
legislative lists, and the question whether the levies were
duties of excise within Entry 84, list 1 and Entry 51, List
11 did not arise for decision in the two cases. Section 18
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of the C.P. and Berar Excise Act, 1915 empowered the State
Government to lease the right of selling liquor or
intoxicating drug to any person on such conditions and for
such period as it might think fit. In re Tile Central
Province and Berar Act No. XIV of 1938 (1) at p. 54, Gwyer,
C. J. observed that the lump sum payments for the privilege
of selling alcohol under the aforesaid Act were clearly not
excise duties or anything like them.
My conclusion may be stated briefly. A charge for a license
to sell an excisable article may be a fee or a tax. If it
is a tax, it can satisfy the test of a duty of excise, when
it is so connected with the manufacture or production of the
article as to be, in effect, a tax on the manufacture or
production. Otherwise, such a tax does not fall within the
classification of a duty of excise.
The arrack license gives the privilege of sale of attack
distilled in a Government distillery. The licensee is not a
producer of arrack. He obtains the arrack on payment of the
price and the prescribed duty per litre. He has no
connection with the production of the liquor. Likewise, the
beer license gives the privilege of sale of country beer or
porter in beer taverns. The beer is brewed elsewhere.
There is a prescribed duty per bulk litre of beer. The
charge paid for the license to sell either arrack or beer
has no connection with the production of the liquor. The
toddy license gives the privilege of sale of toddy. The
licensee is not necessarily a producer of toddy. If he
produces toddy, he pays tax at the prescribed rate on each
tree from which toddy is drawn. As a producer of toddy he
pays the tree tax. The charge for the toddy license has no
connection with the production of toddy. The shop rent or
the charge for the license to sell arrack, beer or toddy
does not satisfy the test of a duty of excise.
As the shop rent is not a duty of excise, the state
legislature is not competent to make a law levying a
surcharge on the shop rent under Entry 51, List. II. The
Mysore Health Cess Act, 1962, in so far as it purports to
levy a surcharge on the shop rent cannot be sustained under
Entry 51, List 11. I express no opinion on the question
whether this levy under the Mysore Health Cess Act. 1962 can
be justified under some other Entry in List 11, But as
counsel for the State did not seek to justify the levy under
any other Entry, I am bound to hold that the Act, so far as
it makes this levy, is unconstitutional.
(1) [1939] F.C.R. 18.
585
In their writ petitions, the appellants claimed refund of
the health cess collected from them under the Mysore Health
Cess Act, 1962 and the Mysore Health Cess Act, 1951.
Counsel for none of the parties addressed any argument on
the question of refund or on the question of the validity of
the Mysore Health Cess Act, 1951. The entire records of all
the tenders-cum-auctions are not before us. It is not quite
clear whether the surcharge of nine naya paise in the rupee
on the shop, rent, though called a health cess, can be
justified independently of the Health Cess Act 1962. Under
the Mysore Excise Act and the Hyderabad Abkari Act, the
State Government could grant the exclusive privileges of
sale of liquor on such terms and conditions as it thought
fit. It could impose the condition that the grantees would
pay a fixed shop rent and a surcharge of nine naya paise in
the rupee thereon. A charge of Rs.500/as shop rent and a
surcharge of nine naya paise in the rupee thereon are, in
effect, a charge of Rs. 545/- for shop rent. The appellants
can not claim refund of the surcharge called the health cess
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on shop rent, if it was or could be collected by the State
Government by virtue of its powers under the existing excise
Acts. On the other hand, the State Government is liable to
refund the surcharge if it was and could be collected under
the Mysore Health Cess Act 1962 only. In the absence of
arguments and fuller materials, the point is left open.
In the result, the appeals are allowed in part, it is
declared that the Mysore Health Cess Act, 1962, so far as it
makes a levy of health cess on shop rent is beyond the
powers of the State legislature and is invalid. The
question whether the Mysore Health Cess Act, 1951 is valid
as also the question whether the appellants are entitled to
refund of the health cess collected from there are left
open, and they are relegated to a suit.
ORDER
in accordance with the Opinion of the majority the appeals
are allowed. There would be no order as to costs. G. C.
G.C
586