Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Special Leave Petition (civil) 9680 of 1999
PETITIONER:
STATE OF HARYANA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S.MARUTI UDYOG LTD. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/09/2000
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas & R.P. Sethi.
JUDGMENT:
SETHI,J.
Leave granted.
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What is the ambit and scope of the words "unable to pay
the whole of the amount of tax assessed" used in proviso to
Sub-section (5) of Section 39 of the Haryana General Sales
Tax Act, 1973, is the question of law requiring our
interpretation in this appeal by special leave. It is
contended on behalf of the appellant that the inability
mentioned in the proviso refers to the financial position of
the assessee, whereas the respondents contend that the words
"unable" used in the Section is of wider amplitude being not
restricted to only financial position of the assess.
In order to determine the rival contention it is
necessary to have a resume of the facts leading to the
filing of the present appeal. The respondent, M/s.Maruti
Udyog Limited a public limited company (hereinafter referred
to as "the Company"), having its factory at Gurgaon in the
State of Haryana is engaged in the business of manufacture
and sale of various types of cars, namely, Maruti 800, Omni
and Esteem, etc. along with their spare parts. The Company
is a registered dealer under the Haryana General Sales Tax
Act, 1973 (hereinafter referred to as the "Act") and the
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 (hereinafter referred to as the
"Central Act") with the Excise & Taxation Officer, Gurgaon.
For the Assessment Year 1986-87, the Company was assessed to
tax by the Excise & Taxation Officer, Gurgaon vide his
orders dated 20th November, 1990 under the Act and the
Central Act. On 16th March, 1992, the Deputy Excise &
Taxation Commissioner (I), Gurgaon served a notice on the
Company proposing to suo motu revise the assessment orders
of the Excise & Taxation Officer, Gurgaon dated 20th
November, 1990 on the grounds that the orders were illegal
and improper for the reasons specified in the notice served.
Subsequently, the suo motu revised assessment orders were
passed enhancing the gross turnover of the Company by adding
excise duty in the turnover returned by it and assessed by
the Excise & Taxation Officer, Gurgaon disallowing part of
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the amount of rebate allowed by the Assessing Authority.
The turnover of Omni product was taxed at the rate of 10%
instead of 6% treating the same as "Vans". Aggrieved by the
aforesaid order, the Company filed an appeal before the
Haryana Sales Tax Tribunal (hereinafter referred to as the
"Tribunal"), challenging the enhancement of turnover along
with an application for stay of recovery of demand and
entertainment of appeal without prior payment of tax and
interest as required under Sub-section (5) of Section 39.
The application was rejected on 29th June, 1992 and the
Company given time to deposit the entire amount within a
period of one month.
Feeling aggrieved, the Company filed writ petition
No.10088 of 1992 in the High Court of Punjab and Haryana at
Chandigarh which was disposed of on 7.8.1992 directing the
Company to furnish bank guarantee for the additional demand
for entertainment of appeal, instead of depositing the whole
amount in terms of Sub-section (5) of Section 39 of the Act.
The appeal filed by the Company was disposed of by the
Tribunal by remanding the case to Deputy Excise and Taxation
Commissioner for fresh decision after giving the Company a
reasonable opportunity of being heard. The Deputy Excise
and Taxation Commissioner vide its order dated 29th March,
1994 again revised the orders and created additional demand
of Rs.23,10,995/- under the Act and Rs.78,44,607/- under the
Central Act.
Feeling aggrieved, the Company again filed an appeal
before the Tribunal along with application for stay of
recovery of demand and entertainment of appeal without prior
demand of tax and interest. Such application was rejected
on 7.9.1994 giving the Company time to deposit the entire
demand by 30th November, 1994. The Company again filed writ
petition No.16537 of 1994 in the High Court against the
order of the Tribunal rejecting its application. On
5.12.1994, the High Court quashed the order of the Tribunal
and directed it to pass a speaking order after hearing the
Company in accordance with law. The Tribunal vide its order
dated 20th February, 1998 rejected the application of the
Company relying upon a Full Bench Judgment of Punjab &
Haryana High Court in M/s.Emerald International Ltd.,
Ludhiana v. State of Punjab & Ors. [STI (1997) Pb. & Hn.
High Court 113] and directed the Company to deposit the
amount within a period of one month. Not satisfied, the
Company again filed writ petition No.6932 of 1998 in the
High Court which was allowed on 4.12.1998 vide the judgment
impugned in this appeal.
Before appreciating the legal position, it is necessary
to refer to the averment made by the Company in its
application seeking stay of recovery of demand and
entertainment of appeal without prior payment of tax and
interest. The only ground taken in that application was:
"That the petitioner has not collected any additional tax
from the customers and is unable to deposit the amount of
additional demand created by patently illegal orders."
Section 39 of the Act confers a right of appeal upon the
assessee against any original order including an order under
Section 40 passed under the Act and the Rules made
thereunder. Sub-section (5) thereof provides:
"No appeal shall be entertained unless it is filed
within sixty days from the date of the order appealed
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against and the appellate authority is satisfied, that the
amount of tax assessed and the penalty and interest, if any,
recoverable from the persons has been paid.
Provided that the said authority, if satisfied that the
person is unable to pay the whole of the amount of tax
assessed, or the penalty imposed, or the interest due, he
may, if the amount of tax and interest admitted by the
appellant to be due has been paid, for reasons to be
recorded in writing, entertain the appeal and may stay the
recovery of the balance amount subject to the furnishing of
a bank guarantee or adequate security in the prescribed
manner to the satisfaction of the appellate authority."
Provided further that in the case of an appeal against
any order which has to be communicated by the appropriate
authority to the appellant, the period of sixty days shall
commence from the date of receipt of the copy of the order
by the appellant and in the case of an appeal against any
other order made under this Act, the time spent in obtaining
the certified copy of the order shall be excluded in
computing the period of sixty days."
There cannot be any dispute that right of appeal is the
creature of the statute and has to be exercised within the
limits and according to the procedure provided by law. It
is filed for invoking the powers of a superior court to
redress the error of court below, if any. No right of
appeal can be conferred except by express words. An appeal,
for its maintainability, must have a clear authority of law.
Sub-section (5) of Section 39 of the Act vests a discretion
in the appellate authority to entertain the appeal if it is
filed within sixty days and the amount of tax assessed along
with penalty and interest, if any, recoverable from the
persons has been paid. The aforesaid restriction is subject
to the proviso conferring discretion upon the appellate
authority to dispense with the deposit of the amount only on
proof of the fact that the appellant was unable to pay the
amount. Before deciding the appeal, the appellate authority
affords an opportunity to the party concerned to either pay
the amount or make out a case for the stay in terms of
proviso to Sub-Section (5) of Section 39 of the Act. Once
the conditions specified under sub-section (5) of Section 39
are complied with, the appeal is born for being disposed of
on merits after hearing both the sides.
Interpreting the word "entertain" in relation to the
filing of an appeal, as is also the mandate of Sub-Section
(5) of Section 39 of the Act this Court in Lakshmiratan
Engineering Works Ltd. vs. Asstt.Commissioner (Judicial)
I, Sales Tax, Kanpur Range, Kanpur and another (AIR 1968 SC
488) observed:
"To begin with it must be noticed that the proviso
merely requires that the appeal shall not be entertained
unless it is accompanied by satisfactory proof of the
payment of the amount of tax admitted by the appellant to be
due. A question thus arises what is the meaning of the word
’entertained’ in the context? Does it mean that no appeal
shall be received or filed or does it mean that no appeal
shall be admitted or heard and disposed of unless
satisfactory proof is available? The dictionary meaning of
the word ’entertain’ was brought to our notice by the
parties, and both sides agreed that it means either to deal
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with or admit to consideration. We are also of the same
opinion. The question, therefore, is at what stage can the
appeal be said to be entertained for the purpose of the
application of the proviso? Is it ’entertained’ when it is
filed or is it ’entertained’ when it is admitted and the
date is fixed for hearing or is it finally ’entertained’
when it is heard and disposed of? Numerous cases exist in
the law reports in which the word entertained or similar
cognate expressions have been interpreted by the courts.
Some of them from the Allahabad High Court itself have been
brought to our notice and we shall deal with them in due
course. For the present, we must say that if the
legislature intended that the word ’file’ or ’receive’ was
to be used, there was no difficulty in using those words.
In some of the statutes which were brought to our notice
such....under Order 41 Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure
it is stated that a memorandum shall not be filed or
presented unless it is accompanied etc. in S.17 of the
Small Causes Courts Act, the expression is ’at the time of
presenting the application’. In Section 6 of the Court Fees
Act, the words are ’File’ or ’shall be received’. It would
appear from this that the legislature was not at a loss for
words if it had wanted to express itself in such forceful
manner as is now suggested by counsel for the State. It has
used the word ’entertain’ and it must be accepted that it
has used it advisedly. The word has come in for examination
in some of the cases of the Allahabad High Court and we
shall now refer to them.....
In our opinion these cases have taken a correct view of
the word ’entertain’ which according to dictionary also
means ’admit to consideration’. It would, therefore, appear
that the direction to the Court in the proviso to S.9 is
that the Court shall not proceed to admit to consideration
an appeal which is not accompanied by satisfactory proof of
the payment of the admitted tax. This will be when the case
is taken up by the Court for the first time. In the
decision on which the Assistant Commissioner relied, the
learned Chief Justice (Desai C.J.) holds that the words
"accompanied by" showed that something tangible had to
accompany the memorandum of appeal. If the memorandum of
appeal had to be accompanied by satisfactory proof, it had
to be in the shape of something tangible, because no
tangible thing can accompany a document like the memorandum
of appeal. In our opinion, making ’an appeal’ the
equivalent to the memorandum of appeal is not sound. Even
under Order 41 of the Code of Civil Procedure the
expressions "appeal" and "memorandum of appeal" are used to
denote two instinct things. In Wharton’s Law Lexicon, the
word ’appeal’ is defined as ’the judicial examination of the
decision by a higher court of the decision of an inferior
court. The appeal is the judicial examination; the
memorandum of appeal contains the grounds on which the
judicial examination is invited. For purposes of limitation
and for purposes of the rules of the Court it is required
that a written memorandum of appeal shall be filed. When
the proviso speaks of the entertainment of appeal, it means
that the appeal such as was filed will not be admitted to
consideration unless there is satisfactory proof available
of the making of the deposit of admitted tax."
The object of Sub-section (5) of Section 39 of the Act
is to ensure the deposit of amount claimed from an assessee
in case of an appeal filed against the tax demanded.
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However, power is given to the Appellate Tribunal to relieve
him from the rigor of above restriction under the
circumstances spelt out in the proviso of the aforesaid
Section. Sub-section (5) regulates the exercise of right of
appeal conferred upon an assessee under Section 39 of the
Act, the object being to keep in balance the right of the
aggrieved person and the right of the State to speedy
recovery of tax. The Full Bench of the Punjab & Haryana
High Court in M/s.Emerald International Ltd. (supra)
considered the scope of Section 39(5) of the Act and
concluded:
"As a sequal to our discussion on the question of law
referred to us the following conclusions can be deduced:
(a) The appeal is a creation of a statute and in case a
person wants to avail of the right of appeal, he has to
accept the conditions imposed by the statute.
(b) The right of appeal being a creature of Statute the
legislature could impose conditions for exercise of such a
right. Neither there is a constitutional nor legal
impediment for imposition of such a condition.
(c) The right of appeal is neither natural nor inherent
attaching to a litigation and such a right neither exists
nor can be assumed unless expressly given by the Statute.
(d) Even if, this Court was to interpret the bare
provisions of two Statutes, i.e., The Punjab General Sales
Tax Act and the Haryana General Sales Tax Act, it could
safely be held that there is a complete bar to the
entertainment of an appeal by the Appellate Authority
without the payment of tax amount unless the Authority is
satisfied that the dealer is unable to pay the amount so
assessed and only in the situation the appellate authority
for the reasons to be recorded in writing can entertain the
appeal without deposit of the payment of such amount.
(e) Neither on the wording nor in view of the spirit of
the Punjab and Haryana Acts is possible to hold that the
Appellate Authority should see the prima facie nature of the
case while hearing the stay matter.
(f) The factum of tax assessed being illegal cannot be a
relevant consideration for grant of stay by an appellate
authority.
(g) The High Court in exercise of its jurisdiction under
Article 226 of the Constitution of India in rarest of the
rare cases in the given facts and circumstances, can grant
stay and waive the condition of pre-deposit of tax and the
existing alternative remedy in such circumstances would be
no ground to refuse interference."
We find substance in the submission of Mr.K.T.S. Tulsi,
Senior Advocate that the inability mentioned in the proviso
refers to the paying capacity and financial position of the
Company and its scope cannot be widened to the extent as
suggested by Mr.Nariman. The word "pay" with its
grammatical variation and cognate expressions, when used
with reference to the tax amount, means "deliver and render"
the amount, it indicates the discharge of an obligation
rather than an investment of money. "To pay" is a generic
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term and the rest of the proviso refers to the modes of
payment. It may mean the payment of the amount of tax
assessed. The dictionary meaning of the "payment" is the
performance of an obligation for the delivery of money. In
legal contemplation "payment" is the discharge of an
obligation by the delivery of money or its equivalent. The
word "unable" used in the proviso has been defined to mean
’not having sufficient strength, power and means’. In
relation to money, it means insufficiency of funds. It
follows, therefore, that the inability to pay the amount is
referable to the paying capacity of the person concerned and
not his legal or actual liability to pay the amount
demanded. It has to be kept in mind that the payment made
under the proviso only enables the appellate court to
entertain the appeal for adjudication and does not decide
the rights of the parties.
The Act has been enacted and the right of appeal
provided with a dual purpose of protecting the interests of
the assessee and also to safeguard the interests of the
Revenue. The provision appears to have been made to explore
further sources for raising Revenue of the State. This
Court in Assistant Collector of Central Excise, Chandan
Nagar, West Bengal v. Dunlop India Ltd. & Ors. [1985 (1)
SCC 260] oberved that "..No governmental business or for
that matter no business of any kind can be run on mere bank
guarantees. Liquid cash is necessary for the running of a
Government as indeed any other enterprise. We consider that
where matters of public revenue are concerned, it is of
utmost importance to realise that interim orders ought not
to be granted merely because a prima facie case has been
shown. More is required."
In the instant case the prayer was made to grant stay on
the ground that "the petitioner has not collected any
additional tax from the customers and is unable to deposit
the amount of additional demand created by patently illegal
orders". The respondent Company nowhere mentioned to or
referred its inability to pay the amount on account of its
alleged financial difficulties or incapacity to make the
requisite payment. The legality of the additional demand
created could not be made the basis for insisting to
entertain the appeal without prior payment, as that would
have required the determination on the merits of the appeal.
Relying upon the Full Bench judgment of the jurisdictional
court in M/s.Emerald International Ltd.’s case, the Tribunal
was competent in passing the order (Annexure P-8) which was
impugned in the High Court. The Division Bench of the High
Court was not justified in ignoring the Full Bench judgment
and the judgment of another Bench of coordinate jurisdiction
while allowing the writ petition of the Company. The
Division Bench even failed to mention the circumstances
which justified the passing of the order for allowing the
writ petition with direction to the Tribunal for disposal of
the appeal on furnishing of the bank guarantee by the
Company. Merely because the Tribunal had insisted upon the
payment of the amount in terms of proviso to Sub- section
(5) of Section 39 of the Act, should not have annoyed the
court while granting the relief in exercise of its powers
under Article 226 of the Constitution. The impugned order
being contrary to settled principles of law cannot be
sustained and is accordingly set aside.
Shri R.F. Nariman, learned counsel made a last and
alternative plea that in case this Court is not inclined to
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uphold the impugned judgment, a relief may be granted to the
respondent for dispensing with the deposit of the interest
portion at least on the amount of Central sales tax assessed
by the order challenged in the statutory appeal. Since no
such plea was made before the appellate Tribunal, we are not
considering such a plea now. However, we permit the
respondent to make such a plea before the appellate Tribunal
after depositing the entire balance amount. If any such
plea is made within 15 days after depositing the entire
balance amount, the appellate Tribunal shall take a decision
thereon before considering the statutory appeal on merits.
The appeal is disposed of accordingly.