Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KHYERBARI TEA CO. LTD. & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF ASSAM
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
13/12/1963
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1964 AIR 925 1964 SCR (5) 975
CITATOR INFO :
R 1970 SC 129 (10)
E 1970 SC1864 (5)
R 1971 SC1737 (47)
RF 1972 SC1804 (11)
F 1975 SC 583 (13)
RF 1975 SC1443 (21)
MV 1975 SC2065 (35,60)
RF 1975 SC2299 (606)
F 1976 SC 182 (18)
R 1977 SC1686 (5)
RF 1980 SC 898 (64)
RF 1981 SC 463 (16,26,34)
RF 1981 SC 991 (13)
E&R 1982 SC 902 (19)
MV 1982 SC1325 (31,32)
R 1983 SC1155 (13,20,23,25)
RF 1990 SC 313 (24)
E 1990 SC 772 (1,3)
RF 1990 SC 781 (13)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Arts. 301, 304(b) and Seventh
Schedule,List II, Entry 56-Assam Taxation (on Goods carried
by Road or on Inland Water-ways) Act (Assam Act X of 1961)-
Constitutional validity.
HEADNOTE:
This petition challenges the constitutional validity of the
Assam Taxation (on Goods carried by Road or on Inland Water-
ways) Act, 1961. The previous Act of 1954 having been
declared constitutionally invalid by this Court in Atiabari
Tea Co. Ltd. v. State of Assam [1961] 1 S.C.R. 809, the
Assam Legislature with the previous sanction of the
President of India under Art. 304(b) of the Constitution,
passed the impugned Act with retrospective effect from the
date on which the Act of 1954 had been promulgated and its
provisions were except for certain additional provisions
substantially the same. The Assam High Court which was
moved under Art. 226 of the Constitution held that the Act
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was constitutionally invalid. The State of Assam applied
for and obtained certificates to appeal to this Court. The
present petitioners moved this Court under Art. 32 of the
Constitution. Since petitioner No. 1 was a company and as
such its petition was incompetent, petitioner No. 2, the
Manager of the company, was heard and some of the
respondents in the appeals to be preferred by the State of
Assam were allowed to intervene in the present proceedings.
The case of petitioner No. 2 was that the company exported
tea grown and manufactured in its own garden from Goalpara
in Jalpaiguri District to Calcutta. The booking station and
the destination were both in West Bengal, the total distance
between them being 689 miles of which only 1-1/2 to 2 miles
of inland waterways lay in the State of Assam. The tea was
carried by railway from Goalpara to Dhubrighat and
thereafter by ferries on inland waterways and transhipped to
steamers at the said Ghat. It was contended that ss. 3 and
34, which were the material provisions of the Act, were
invalid and that the Assam Legislature was incompetent to
enact the said provisions which constituted unreasonable
restrictions on the freedom of trade guaranteed by Art. 301
and infringed Art. 19(1)(g) of the Constitution.
Held. (per Gajendragadkar, Wanchoo, Das Gupta and Ayyangar
JJ.), As the impugned Act was not found to be compensatory
by the High Court nor was it claimed to be so by the State
the only question that fell to be decided in this petition
was whether the restrictions imposed by the impugned Act
were
976
reasonable and in the public interest within the meaning of
Art. 304(b) of the Constitution.
Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd. v. State of Assam, [1961] 1 S.C.R.
809, and Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd. v. State of
Rajasthan, [1963] 1 S.C.R. 491, explained.
The entries in the three lists in the Seventh Schedule must
be given the widest possible interpretation. Power
conferred on the Legislature to levy tax must be widely
construed so as to include the power to select the taxable
articles, to fix the rates, to prescribe the machinery for
recovery, to prevent evasion and to prescribe the procedure
for determining the amount payable by any individual. It
could not be assumed that Entry 56 of List II, in giving the
Legislature the power to enact the impugned Act, required
that the tax must be levied only against the owner of the
goods that were carried or against persons who carried
them,, If the tax was really levied on goods carried, the
Legislature was free to prescribe the machinery for its
recovery.
R.C. Jall v. Union of India. [1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R. 436,
Sardar Baldev Singh v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Delhi &
Ajmer. [1961) 1 S.C.R. 482 and Orient Paper. Mills Ltd. v.
State of Orissa. [1962] 1 S.C.R. 549, referred to.
Section 3(1) of the impugned Act which imposed the tax and
s. 3(2) which made the producer liable to pay it could not
therefore be impugned on the ground of legislative
incompetence.
M’ Cullock v. Maryland, (1819)4 L. Ed. 579, considered.
But the machinery set up for recovery of the tax should have
a rational connection with the tax. The absence of such a
nexus between them would make the tax liable to attack as
being unjustified under Entry 56.
Article 304(b), properly construed, does not require that
laws passed under it must always be prospective. It was not
correct to say that once the State Legislature passed an Act
without recourse to that Article and it was struck down, it
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could not reenact that Act under the Article and give it
retrospective effect. That Article contemplates
restrictions and-not prohibitions and the rule that
prohibitory legislation cannot have retrospective operation
can have no application.
Punjab Province v. Daulat Singh., L.R. 73 I.A. 59, held
inapplicable.
M.P. V. Sundararamier & Co. v. State of Andhra Pradesh
[1958] S.C.R. 1422, applied.
M/s. West Ramanand Electric Distribution Co. Ltd. v. State
of Madras. [1963] 2 S.C.R. 747, referred to.
Nor could it be said that a restrictive statute passed under
Art. 304(b) with retrospective operation must necessarily
defeat the scheme of Part XIII of the Constitution.
977
The mere fact that a validating taxing statute has
retrospective operation does not necessarily change the
character of the tax sought to be recovered by such
retrospective operation. The proviso to s. 3(2) of the
impugned Act was not retrospective in character and did not
change the character of the tax.
Rai Ramkrishna v. State of Bihar [1964] 1 S.C.R. 897
referred to.
A law enacted under Art. 304(b) with the previous sanction
of the President, does not necessarily take away the
jurisdiction of the Court to consider whether the
restrictions imposed by it are reasonable and in the public
interest. The observation in Atiabari Tea Co.’s case in
this regard should not be taken as conclusive on the point.
Although there is a presumption in favour of the
constitutionality of a statute, if it is proved that it
invades fundamental rights under Art. 19(1), the onus shifts
on to the State and it must justify its validity under Art.
19(6). Onus under Art. 304(b) is still more in favour of
the citizen as it clearly purports to restrict the freedom
of trade.
Saghir Ahmad v. State of U.P. [1955] 1 S.C.R. 707, applied.
Hamdard Dawakhana. (Wakf) Lal Kuan, Delhi v. Union of India.
(1960] 2 S.C.R. 671, referred to.
The impugned Act by making the producer liable for the tax
under s. 3(2) proviso or by assessing the tax on a flat rate
on weight instead of by the ton and mileage method, could
not be said to have imposed unreasonable restrictions. The
law of taxation is a balance of complex considerations and
if the Legislature thought that a flat rate was just and
fair to the tea trade as a whole no exception could be taken
to it.
It was not correct to say that s. 34 of the impunged Act was
discriminatory or infringed Art. 19(1) (g). It was not
discriminatory in that it selected- only tea and jute for
taxation. The Legislature had full freedom to determine
which articles it should tax, in what manner and at what
rate.
Raja Jagannath Baksh Singh v. State of U.P. [1963] 1 S.C.R.
220 and East India Tobacco Co. v. State of Andhra Pradesh,
[1963] 1 S.C.R. 404, referred to.
The power of this Court to strike down a taxing statute for
contravention of Arts. 14, 19 or 301 must be exercised with
circumspection. It is only in cases of such statutes as are
clearly confiscatory in character that the power of this
Court can be invoked or exercised.
K.T.Moopil Nair v. State of Kerala, [1963] 3 S.C.R. 77,
referred to.
The impugned Act was not colourable legislation in any
sense.The power of legislation carried with it the power to
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make the, law
1 SCI/64-62
978
retrospective And the passing of a validating Act is
essentially subsidiary to that power conferred by the
relevant legislative List.
Nor was the Act extra-territorial in its application.
Whether the goods are carried for a long or a short distance
had no bearing on legislative competence under Entry 56 List
11 under which the impugned Act was enacted. Since the
goods were carried, although over a very small part of
inland waterways in Assam, the doctrine of nexus, applicable
to such cases, was satisfied.
Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. v. State of Bihar, [1958] S.C.R.
1355, referred to.
The word ’carried’ in Entry 56, List 11 is of wider
denotation than ’import’ and the Act could not be impugned
on the ground that the goods carried and taxed did not join
the mass of goods in the State of Assam itself.
Central India Spinning and Weaving and Manufacturing Co.
Ltd. v. Munkipal Committee, Wardha, [1958] S.C.R. 1102, held
inapplicable.
The power to levy the tax conferred by Entry 56, List 11,
was not controlled by the Tea Act, 1953, passed by the
Parliament under List I. Nor was it correct to say that the
River Boards Act, 1956, imposed a bar on the Assam
Legislature to pass the impugned Act.
Per Sarkar, J.-Entries in the Legislative Lists have to be
read in their widest amplitude. So read there could be no
doubt that the Assam Legislature was competent under Entry
56 of List II to provide for the realisation of the tax in
the manner most suitable to it. The words of the Entry were
wide enough to enable the Legislature to realise the tax
either from the producer, even though he did not carry it,
or from the person who actually carried it.
Under the proviso to s. 3(2) of the Act, a notification
could not be issued with retrospective effect. That proviso
made the producer liable for realisation of the tax from the
purchaser from the date appointed by the notification. If
the notification appointed a past date, it would be
incompetent.
It was not correct to say that a statute contemplated by
Art. 304(b) cannot be retrospective. A legislature
competent to pass a law can pass it with retrospective
effect. If the flow of the trade could be restricted
prospectively, it could be restricted retrospectively as
well. The restrictions imposed by Art. 304(b) stand on the
same footing as those under Art. 19(6).
There is no prohibition in Art. 304 and, therefore, it could
not be said that it did not contemplate retrospective
operation. It provides for reasonable restrictions on the
freedom of trade and therefore permits and does not
prohibit.
Punjab Province v. Daulat Singh L.R. 73 I.A. 59, held
inapplicable.
979
Entry 56 of List II does not require that the tax imposed
must be measured according to the distance they are carried.
A flat rate is not wanting in reasonableness. It would not
be wrong to say that since a tax is collected in public
interest and for public good the burden imposed by it on
trade would prima facie be reasonable in the public
interest.
The legislature has the power to pick, and choose the
articles on which to impose the tax and such choosing cannot
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by itself amount to discrimination. The Act applies to all
who are concerned with the carriage of tea and jute.
Raja Jagannath Baksh Singh v. State of Bihar, [1963] 1
S.C.R. 220, referred to.
Section 34 of the impugned Act did not violate Art. 14 of
the Constitution, nor could it be said that it was a
colourable legislation.
A validating Act, passed under the same legislative power
under which the invalid Act was passed, would not amount to
colourable legislation.
Gajapati Narayan Deo v. State of Orissa, [1954] S.C.R. 1,
referred to.
Since the Assam Legislature had the power to impose the tax
on carriage of goods, however short the distance over which
they were carried, the impugned Act could not be said to be
bad for extra-territoriality.
Quaere as to on whom the onus of proving the reasonableness
of a restriction imposed by a statute on which its constitu-
tionality depends lies.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL, JURISDICTION : Writ Petiton No. 134 of 1962.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for the
enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
S.K. Niyogi and S.C. Mazumdar, for the petitioners.
B.C. Barua, Advocate-General, Assam, M.C. Setalvad, R.B.
Datar and Naunit Lal, for the respondents.
G.S. Pathak, A.N. Sinha and B.N. Ghosh, for the interveners.
December 13, 1963. The Judgment of P.B. Gajendragadkar,
K.N. Wanchoo, K.C. Das Gupta and N. Rajagopala Ayyangar JJ.
was delivered by Gajendragadkar J. A. K. Sarkar J.
delivered a separate Opinion.
980
GAJENDRAGADKAR J.-The present writ petition by which the two
petitioners Khyerbari Tea Co. Ltd., and M. Sudhir Chandra
Guha, Manager of the said Company, seek to challenge the
validity of the Assam ; Taxation (On Goods, Carried by Road
or on Inland Waterways) Act, 1961 (No. 10 of 1961)
(hereinafter called ’the Act’), is a sequel to the decision
of this Court in the case of Atiabari Tea Co., Ltd. v. The
State of Assam(1). To this petition have been impleaded
three respondents, the State of Assam, the Commissioner of
Taxes, the taxing authority appointed under s. 6 of the Act,
and the Superintendent of Taxes, Dhubri Division. We will
refer to the State of Assam as the respondent hereafter.
The respondent had, passed a similar Act No. 13 of 1954
which had received the assent of the Governor on the 9th
April,, 1954. The validity of the said Act was challenged
by the petitioners and certain other producers of tea by
filing writ petitions before the Assam High Court. The
Assam High Court dismissed the writ petitions and held that
the impugned Act of 1954 was valid. The said judgment was
pronounced by the High Court on the 6th of June, 1955. The
petitioners whose writ petitions had been dismissed, then
preferred appeals to this Court by special leave, and they
also, moved this Court by writ petitions under Art. 32 of
the Constitution. These matters were heard by this Court in
the case of Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd.(1) and by its judgment
delivered on the 26th September, 1960, the said impugned Act
was struck down as being unconstitutional. Thereafter, the
Act with which we are concerned in, ’the , present
proceedings was passed by the Assam Assembly. It received
the assent of the President on the 6th April, 1961. The
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relevant terms of the Act are, on the whole, substantially
similar to the terms of the earlier Act which was struck
down, The Act has made certain additional provisions to
which we will refer later. The petitioners contend that the
operative provisions of the Act are invalid, and so, they
pray for issue of an appropriate writ
(1) (1061] 1 S.C.R. 809.
981
or order directing the respondent not to enforce the
operative provisions, against them. Petitioner No. 1 is a
company and as such," it has no right to move this Court
under Art. 32. This position is conceded by Mr. Mazumdar
for the petitioners. Petitioner No. 2 who is the Manager of
Petitioner No. 1 is, however, a citizen of India and as
such, he is entitled to challenge the validity of the Act
inasmuch as the respondent threatens to take action in
pursuance of the material provisions of the Act’ against the
company of which he is the Manager. Mr. Setalvad does not
dispute the right of petitioner No. 2 to move this Court by
a petition under Art. 32.
After the Act was passed and it came into force, the
question about the scope and effect of the provisions
contained in Part XIII of the Constitution which had been
dealt with by this Court in the case of Atiabari Tea Co.(1)
came to be considered. by a larger Bench in the case of the
Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd. v. The State of
Rajasthan(2), and the decision of this larger Bench was
-pronounced on the 9th April, 1962. Since the Act has been
passed by the Assam Legislature with the previous sanction
of the President directly as a result of the decision. of
this Court in the case of Atiabari Tea Co, the present
proceedings can be appropriately described as an after-math
of the said decision.
It appears that 487 persons moved the Assam High Court by
writ petitions under Art. 226 of the Constitution impeaching
the validity of the Act. These writ petitions were
considered.by a Division Bench of the said High Court and
they were allowed on the 1st August, 1963. The two learned
Judges who constituted the Division Bench have delivered
concurring judgments and held that,, the Act is invalid. On
some of the points urged by the petitioners before them, the
two learned Judges have differed, in the result, they agreed
in taking the view operative provisions of the Act were
unconstitu-
(1) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 809.
(2) [1963] 1 S.C.R.491.
982
tional. The respondent State of Assam then moved the High
Court for certificates to enable it to come to this Court in
appeal against the decision of the High Court in the said
487 writ petitions. The High Court has granted
certificates, but the said appeals will take long to become
ready; and so, 12 of the petitioners who are respondents in
some of the said appeals were allowed to intervene in the
present proceedings. In fact by arrangement between
Mr.Mazumdar who appeared for the petitioners before us and
Mr.pathak who represents the interveners, the principal
argument has been urged before us by Mr. Pathak and we
expressly told Mr. Pathak that since our decision on the
present writ petition would govern the decision of the
appeals which the respondent is going to bring to this Court
against the decision of the Assam High Court, we would
permit him to raise all points in support of the view taken
by the Assam High Court and would not confine him to the
points which have been taken by the petitioners in their
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petition before us. In fact, the Assam Judgments in
question have been filed by the Interveners, and Mr. Pathak
has invited our attention to the main findings recorded in
those judgments. Normally, counsel for interveners is not
allowed a right of reply, but having regard to the fact that
Mr.Mazumdar requested us to allow Mr. Pathak to lead him in
the present proceedings, we have allowed both Mr. Pathak and
Mr. Mazumdar to open the case,, and have heard both of them
in reply.
Petitioner No. 25 case is that petitioner No. 1, the
company, carries on the business of manufacturers wholesale
dealers and exporters of tea at Jalpaiguri in the State, of
West Bengal. The business of the said garden is managed by
petitioner No. 2 and is subject to the control and direction
of the company. Naturally, the remuneration ’and prospects
of petitioner-No. 2 depend upon the good and economical
management and the prosperity of the business of the
Company. The petition avers that at all material
983
times the company exported the tea grown and manufactured by
it in its tea garden by Railway from Garopara Railway
Station in the district of Jalpaiguri to the Calcutta port.
It is common ground that Calcutta Port is the principal tea
market in the country for sale for consumption at home as
well as for export overseas. According to the. petition,
the tea was delivered packed in chests to the North Eastern
Railway Administration at Garopara Rly. Station and the
rate charged by the said Administration was paid to it for
carrying the goods to Calcutta. It is clear that both the
booking station and the station of destination are in the
State of West Bengal. When the tea thus travels from
Garopara to Calcutta, it hag to traverse a short distance of
about 67 miles through Assam to Dhubri Ghat, on the bank of
the River Brahmaputra. It appears that by an arrangement
between the Railway and the I.G.N. and R.S.N. Co. Ltd. these
goods. are taken over by ferries on inland waterways and’
are transshipped to steamers at the said Ghat. The steamers
,hen carry the goods through the Brahmaputra in Assam up to
Mankind; the distance between Dhubri Ghat and Mankachar is
about 1 1/2 to 2 miles. In their journey, the steamers
cover a distance of about 572 miles in Pakistan territory,
and then they reach the Calcutta Port. The total distance
covered by the journey of the goods is about 689 miles.
Petitioner No. 2 contends that the material provisions of
the Act are invalid, because the Assam Legislature was not
competent to enact the said provisions. It is also urged
that the said provisions are unconstitutional because they
constitute an unreasonable restriction on the freedom of
trade guaran teed by Art. 301, as-well-as petitioner No. 2’s
run mental right guaranteed by Art. 19(1)(g) of the Con-
stitution. The validity of the Act is also challenged on
some other grounds which Would be dealt with later.
These pleas are denied by the respondent and it is urged on
its behalf that the Act is constitutional, that it has been
passed under Art. 304(b) after obtain-
984
ing the previous sanction of the President; that its
material provisions are in no sense unreasonable and that
the restrictions imposed by them on the freedom of trade are
reasonable restrictions and are required in the ’public
interest. It is also alleged that the said restrictions are
reasonable and in the interests of the general public and as
such, they are saved by clause (6) of Art. 19.
Before dealing with these contentions, it is necessary to
indicate at the outset the effect of the two judgments to
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which we have already referred. In the case of the Atiabari
Tea Co. Ltd.(1), three views were expressed. Sinha C.J.,
held that the freedom conferred by Art. 301 did not mean
freedom from taxation simpliciter but only from the erection
of trade barriers, tariff walls and imposts which had a
deleterious effect on the free flow of trade, commerce and
intercourse. According to his view, the earlier Assam Act
did not contravene Art. 301 and was valid. This view put a
somewhat narrow construction on the scope and effect of the
provisions contained in Art. 301.
Shah J., on the other hand, placed a very wide construction
on the said provision and held that the freedom of trade
guaranteed by the said Article included not only freedom
from discriminative tariffs and trade barriers but also from
all taxation on commercial intercourse. As such, he held
that the said Act was unconstitutional.
The majority view was that the freedom of trade guaranteed
by Art. 301 was wider than that contained in s.. 297 of the
Government of India Act, 1935, which meant that taxes which
directly and immediately impeded: the freedom of trade would
come within the mischief of Art. 301. According to this
view, Art. 301 provides that the flow of trade shall run
smooth and unhampered by any restriction either at the
boundaries of the States or at any other points inside the
States themselves; and if any Act imposes any direct
restrictions on the movement of goods,
(1) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 809.
985
it attracts the provisions of Art. 301. On the majority
view, if the impugned tax imposes a restriction on the
movement of trade, the Act could be sustained if it complied
with the provisions of Art. 304(b). In regard to the Act
with which the Court was then concerned, the majority
judgment observed that it may be that one of the objects in
passing the Act was to enable the State Government to raise
money to keep its roads and waterways in repairs; but that
object may and can be effectively achieved by adopting
another course of legislation; if the said object is
intended to be achieved by levying a tax on the carriage of
goods, it can be so done only by satisfying the requirements
of Art. 304(b).
In the Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd. case(1), the
majority view expressed by Das J. on behalf of himself and
Kapur & Sarkar JJ was that if a tax is compensatory in
character, it cannot be said to fall within the mischief of
Art. 301. According to this view, a clarificatory rider was
added to the majority view expressed in the case of the
Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd. (2) by providing that regulatory
measures or measures imposing compensatory taxes for the use
of trading facilities do not come within the purview of the
restrictions contemplated by Art. 301, and such measures
need not comply with the requirements of the provisions of
Art. 304(b).
Subba Rao J., who delivered a separate judgment concurring
with the conclusion reached by Das J., preferred to
emphasise that taxing statutes which would escape the
mischief of Art. 301 could be appropriately described as
regulatory. He, therefore, held that the Rajasthan Motor
Vehicles Taxation Act (No.11 of 1951) with which the Bench
was dealing, was regulatory in character and as such, not
unconstitutional. In other words, whereas Das, Kapur and
Sarkar JJ., upheld the validity of the Act on the ground
that it was either compensatory or regulatory, Subba Rao J.,
preferred to base his decision mainly on the ground that it
was regulatory.
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(1) [1963] 1 S.C.R. 491.
(2) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 809.
986
The minority view which has been expressed by Hidayatullah
J., on behalf of himself and Ayyangar and Madholkar JJ.,
assumed that though regulatory taxing statutes may be said
to fall outside Art.30,compensatory taxing statutes cannot
make the same claim. According to this view, if a taxing
statute was sought to be justified on the ground that the
tax imposed by it was compensatory in character, that could
be done only by adopting the procedure prescribed by Art.
304(b). It may be noticed that the scope of the regulatory
statutes as discussed by Hidayatullah J., is much narrower
than the scope of the regulatory statutes as considered by
Subba Rao J.
In the result, the majority view expressed in the case of
the Atiabari Tea Co.(1), was substantially accepted by the
majority of the learned Judges constituting the larger Bench
which heard the Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd. (2)
case, but a corollary was added to the said view as we have
just indicated.
The majority view in the Atiabari case("’ proceeded on the
basis that the Australian decisions which dealt with the
scope and effect of s. 92 of the Australian Constitution
would be of no assistance in constraing the effect of the
provisions in part XIII of our Constitution, because the
legislative, historical and political background, the
structure and the effect of the relevant provisions
contained in Part XIII were in material particulars
different from those of s. 92 of the Australian
Constitution; s. 92 is absolute in terms and on its literal
construction, admits of no exceptions. The Australian
decisions, therefore, had to introduce distinctions, such as
compensatory or regulatory tax laws in order to take laws
answering the said description out of the purview of s. 92.
In our Constitution, however, though Art. 301 is worded
substantially in the same way as s. 92, Art. 302 and 304
provide for reasonable restrictions being imposed on the
freedom of trade subject to the requirements of the said two
Articles, and so, the problem facing judicial decisions in
Australia and in this country
(1)[1611] 1 S.C.R. 809.
(2) [1963] 1 S.C.R. 491.
987
in ragard to the freedom of trade and the restrictions which
it may be permissible to impose on it, is not exactly the
same. The minority view expressed by Hidayatullah J., has
pointedly referred to this aspect of the matter. That, in
brief, is the position of the two decisions of this Court in
Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd.(1) and Automobile Transport
(Rajasthan) Ltd. (2) cases respectively.
It would immediately be noticed that though the majority
view in the Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) case(2)
Substantially agreed with the majority decision in the case
of Atiabari Tea Co.(1), there would be a clear difference
between the said two views in relation to the scope and
effect of the provisions of Art. 304 (b). According to the
majority view in the case of Atiabari Tea Co., if an Act is
passed under Art. 304(b) and its validity is impeached, then
the State may seek, to justify the, Act on the ground that
the restrictions imposed by it are reasonable and in the
public interest, and in doing so, it may, for instance, rely
on the fact that the taxes levied by the impugned Act are
compensatory in character. On the other hand, according to
the majority decision in the Automobile Transport
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(Rajasthan) (2) case, compensatory taxation would be outside
Art. 301 and cannot therefore, fall under Art. 304(b). If
in the present case it had been urged before us that the tax
levied by the Act is compensatory in character, it would
have been necessary to consider the question once again by
constituting a larger Bench. It will be recalled that the
Act with which we are concerned has been passed by the Assam
Legislature directly as a result of the decision of this
Court in Atiabari Tea Co.’s case(1); that decision was that
if the tax imposed by the Act was compensatory in character
then the Act could be sustained only if it was passed after
complying with the provisions of Art. 30-4(b). The Assam
Legislature has accordingly adopted the said procedure and
passed the Act. If the Act had been compensatory in
character, it would have become necessary for us to consider
the
(1) [1961] 1 S.C.R 809.
(2) [1963] 1 S.C.R. 491.
988
whole position once again, because it would obviously be
unfair and unjust that the earlier Act should have been
struck down though it was compensatory in character and in
testing the validity of the present Act, it should be open
to the petitioners to contend that its compensatory
character is irrelevant to the enquiry under Art. 304(b).
In the present case, the Assam High Court which dealt with
the 487 writ petitions has found that the Act is not
compensatory, and Mr. Setalvad has not urged before us that
the Act is in fact compensatory. That is why we are
proceeding to deal with the merits of the dispute between
the parties in the present case on that basis. The main
question, therefore, would be that the tax imposed by the
Act not being compensatory in character, are there any
reasons to justify the respondent’s contention that the
restrictions imposed by it are reasonable and in the public
interest?
Let us then consider the broad features of the Act and its
material provisions before dealing with the several points
urged before us. The Act consists of 34 sections. As we
have already noticed, the Bill was introduced after
obtaining the previous sanction of the President, and the
Act has been passed in accordance with the provisions of
Art. 304(b). The preamble to the Act provides that the Act
has been passed to provide for the levy of a tax on certain
goods carried by road or on inland water-ways in the State
of Assam and to validate certain taxes imposed on goods
carried by road or on inland waterways and for certain other
connected matters. Section 1(3) provides that the Act shall
be deemed to have had effect as from the 24th April, 1954,
and shall remain in force till the 31st March, 1962. In
other words, the Act takes effect from the date when the
earlier Act was to have taken effect, and its life continues
for one year after it received the assent of the President
and became effective. Section 2, inter alia, defines a
producer as meaning "a producer of tea and includes the
person in charge of the garden where tea is produced." The
Act is concerned with
989
tea and jute, but in the present proceedings, we are dealing
with the petitioners whose interest lies in tea. Section 3
of the Act deals with the liability to tax, and since its
validity is seriously impugned by the petitioners, it is
necessary to read it:
"(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act,
there shall be levied a tax on (a)
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manufactured tea and (b) jute in bales carried
by motor vehicle, , cart, trolley, boat,
animal and human agency or any other means
except railways and airways in such manner and
in respect of such period and at such rate as
specified in the Schedule.
(2) Such tax levied on manufactured tea
shall be realised from the producer and that
levied on jute shall be realised from the
dealer;
Provided that where tea is sold at the factory
premises, the producer shall be liable for
realisation of tax from the purchaser with
effect from such date as the Government may,
by notification, appoint, for the carriage of
such tea as provided in this section and the
producer shall be liable for the payment of
such tax notwithstanding the fact that the tea
is not carried by the producer;
Provided further that no tax shall be levied
under this Act on any jute or tea in respect
of which such tax has already been paid."
Section 4 provides that the tax shall be charged on the
total net weight carried during a return period. Section 5
deals with the problem of determining the weight. Section 6
prescribes the taxing authorities. Section 7 requires the
return to be submitted by the producer and makes appropriate
provisions in that behalf. Section 8 deals with licensing;
s. 9 covers the problem of assessment and it provides that
the Commissioner may, by an order in writing, assess the
producer and determine the tax payable by him on the basis
of his return. Section 10 deals with cancellation of
assessment; s. 11 makes a provision
990
for assessment in cases of evasion and escape and authorises
the Commissioner within two years of the expiry of the
period in question to serve on the producer a notice
requiring him to furnish a return, and empowers him to
proceed to assess or reassess the producer as provided by
it. Section 12 deals with rectification. Section 13
provides for penalty for non-submission of returns and
evasion of taxes. Under s. 14 it is provided that
assessment is no bar to prosecutions and penalties. Section
15 makes the tax payable by the representative of a deceased
producer. Sections 16 and 17 deal with appeals and
revision, while s. 18 prescribes for the computation of the
period of limitation for the said two remedies. The notice
of demand is provided for by s. 19, and the period when the
tax is to be paid is laid down by s. 20. Section 22
prescribes the mode of recovery; s. 23 provides for refunds;
and s. 24 for employers’ prosecution for failure to furnish
returns. Section 25 provides that no court shall take
cognizance of any offence under the Act or under the rules
made under it, except with the previous sanction of the
Commissioner. Section 26 permits composition of offenses.
Section 27 imposes an obligation on the producer to maintain
and preserve account books; s. 28 confers power on
appropriate authorities to require the production of
accounts. Section 29 bars civil suits. Section 30 empowers
the appropriate authority to take evidence; s. 31 deals with
the delegation of powers; s. 32 confers power on the Govern-
ment to make rules; s. 3 3 repeals the earlier Act of 1954
and s. 34 makes provisions by way of validation. Since this
last section has also been challenged, it is necessary to
read it:
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"34. (1) Any rule made, any liability
incurred, any tax levied or realised, any
returns furnished, any proceedings commenced,
any notification published, any action taken
or anything whatsoever done under the
provisions of the Act repealed, shall be
deemed to have been made, incurred, levied,
realised, furnished, commenced,
991
published, taken or done under the
corresponding provisions of this Act.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
any judgment, decree or order of any court,
all taxes imposed or realised or purporting to
have been imposed or realised under the Act
repealed shall for all purposes be deemed to
be, and to have been, validly imposed or
realised and accordingly-
(a) no suit or other proceeding shall be
maintained or continued in any court against
the Government or any person or authority
whatsoever for the refund of any taxes so
paid; and
(b) no court shall enforce any decree or
order directing the refund of any taxes so
paid."
The Schedule to the Act gives the rates for respective
periods and these rates correspond to the rates prescribed
by the earlier Act for the period covered by it and
prescribes new rates for the period thereafter. Rules have
been made under s. 32(1) and Forms prescribed for the making
of returns. That, in brief, is the scheme of the Act.
It has been urged before us by Mr. Pathak that s. 3 which is
the charging section, is outside the legislative competence
of the Assam Legislature. The Act purports to have been
passed by virtue of the legislative power conferred on the
State Legislature under Entry 56 in List 11 of the Seventh
Schedule. This Entry reads thus: "Taxes on goods and
passengers carried by road or on inland waterways." It will
be recalled that Entry 30 in List 1 deals with carriage of
passengers and goods by railway, sea or air, or by national
waterways in mechanically propelled vessels, and so, Entry
56 in List II does not cover cases falling under Entry 30 in
List 1. It is only in regard to goods and passengers carried
by road or inland waterways that the State Legislature can
pass a law imposing taxes. Mr. Pathak’s contention is that
s. 3 read with the proviso to sub-section (2)
992
clearly contemplates that the primary and the sole liability
to pay the tax on tea has been placed on the producer even
in cases where the tea in question may have been sold at the
tea garden before it is carried. In other words, the
contention is that in cases where tea is carried by the
purchaser, it is only the purchaser of the tea which is
carried who can be taxed, and since the producer is taxed
even in such cases, the taxation itself is beyond the
legislative competence of the State Legislature. This
argument proceeds on the assumption that the proviso lends
colour to the construction of s. 3(2). Section 3(1) is
enacted in terms of Entry 56 and it purports to indicate
what the taxable event is. Section 3(2) makes the producer
liable to pay the tax and the proviso to s. 3(2) enables the
-producer to recover the tax from the purchaser with effect
from such date as the Government may, by notification,
appoint; this date was notified as 1St May, 1961. It is
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clear that the proviso is prospective, but Mr. Pathak
suggests that the proviso can be explained only on the basis
that s. 3(2) includes cases where tea, has been sold by the
producer before it is carried, and in that sense the
producer has been made liable to pay the tax even in regard
to tea which has been sold by him before it is carried.
On the other hand, Mr. Setalvad argues that s. 3(2) is
confined to cases where the producer himself carries tea and
his suggestion is that the proviso which has been added by
the present Act and which was not included in the earlier
Act seeks to make the purchaser liable to pay the tax in
case tea which is carried has been purchased by him before
it leaves the garden. He wants us to read the proviso as
creating an obligation on the purchaser to pay the tax and
as making the producer liable to recover the tax from the
purchaser as the Agent of the State. In support of his
argument that s. 3(2) cannot be read to include cases where
tea has been sold before it is carried, Mr. Setalvad has
referred us to the fact that when the corresponding
provision in the earlier Act was construed by the Assam High
Court, it was
993
held that where tea is sold before it is carried, the pro-
ducer is not liable and no tax can be recovered from him,
vide H. P. Barua v. State of Assam(1). He also emphasises
the fact that the proviso is prospective in operation, and
so, it indicates that it cannot lend colour to the
construction of section 3(2).
It is, however, not easy to accept Mr. Setalvad’s
construction. The words used in the proviso show( that the
producer has been made liable for realisation of the tax
from the purchaser, but there are no words imposing a
liability on the purchaser to pay the tax and no penalty is
prescribed in case he fails to pay the tax to the producer.
The relevant forms prescribed for making returns, also
continue to be the same as under the old Act and do not
contemplate cases where the purchaser may have to make
returns. In the present proceedings, we are not concerned
with the case of any purchaser, and so, it is unnecessary
for us to pronounce a definite opinion on the construction
of s. 3. We would, therefore, proceed to deal with Mr.
Pathak’s argument on the basis that s. 3(2) makes the
producer liable even in. cases where tea has been sold by
him to a purchaser before it is carried away from the
garden.
This argument of legislative incompetence seems to assume
that Entry 56 requires that the tax must be levied by the
State legislature on goods which are carried only against
the owner of the goods that are carried, or against the
persons who carry them. We do not see any Justification for
introducing such limitations in the said Entry. It is
hardly necessary to emphasise that Entries in the three
Lists in the Seventh Schedule which confer legislative
competence on the respective Legislatures to deal with the
topics covered by them must receive the widest possible
interpretation; and so, it would be unreasonable to read in
the Entry any limitation of the kind which Mr. Pathak’s
argument seems to postulate. Besides, it is well-settled
that when a power is conferred on the Legislature to levy a
tax, that power itself must
(1)SCI.R. 1955 Assam 249.
1 SCI/64 --- 63
994
be widely construed; it must include the power to impose a
tax and select the articles or commodities for the exercise
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of such power; it must likewise include the power to fix the
rate and prescribe the machinery for the recovery of the
tax. This power also gives jurisdiction to the Legislature
to make such provisions as, in its opinion, would be
necessary to prevent the evasion of the tax. In imposing
taxes, the legislature can also appoint authorities for
collecting taxes and may prescribe the procedure for
determining the amount of taxes payable by any individual;
all these provisions are subsidiary to the main power to
levy a tax and, therefore, once it is shown that the tax in
question has been levied on goods carried, it would be open
to the legislature to prescribe the machinery for recovering
the said tax. As was observed by Chief Justice Marshall in
M’Culloch v. Maryland(" "the power of taxing the people and
their property is essential to the very existence of Govern-
ment, and may be legitimately exercised on the objects to
which it is applicable to the utmost extent to which the
Government may choose to carry it". This statement of the
law must, however, be read subject to the condition that
even tax statutes have to satisfy the test of reasonableness
prescribed by clause (6) of Art. 19, and the fundamental
right of equality before law guaranteed by Art. 14 as well
as the test prescribed by Art. 301.
Reverting then to s. 3(1), we ought to add that the said
section in terms expressly makes the carriage of goods the
taxable event, and s. 3(2) makes the producer liable to pay
the tax only on goods carried. If the goods produced in the
tea garden are not carried, there is no occasion to pay the
tax. That being so, the fact that the Legislature has
adopted the machinery of making the producer responsible for
the payment of the tax and liable for it in that sense
cannot introduce any element of legislative incompetence
which would vitiate the statute.
It may be conceded that when the legislature constructs a
machinery for the recovery of the taxes
(1) [1819] 4 L. ed. 579, 607
995
which it is within its competence to impose, the said
machinery should have some rational or intelligent
connection with the tax. In the absence of a rational nexus
between the producer and the tax on goods carried, it may be
open to a citizen to contend that the tax is not one
justified by Entry 56. But can we say that between the
producer of tea and the tax which is levied on the tea
carried from his garden, there is no rational nexus?
Considerations of administrative convenience as well as
considerations of facility in recovering the tax cannot be
treated as irrelevant in this context. The tea which is
taxed has been produced by the producer and even when he
sells it to a purchaser, it is obvious that it would be
carried away and not left with the producer, and so, the
legislature may have thought that it would be appropriate to
make the producer liable to pay the tax.
It may also be relevant to bear in mind that the cases of
sale of tea before it is carried cannot be too many. As we
have already seen, the earlier Act did not include the
proviso and that seems to suggest that usually, it is the
producers who produce the tea in their gardens and carry it
to Calcutta either for sale, or for home consumption, or for
export. In fact, the petitioners before us are producers
who have carried their own product from their tea gardens to
Calcutta, and we were told that amongst the 487 persons who
moved the Assam High Court by their writ petitions, not one
was a purchaser; everyone was a producer who carried his own
goods. Apart from these facts, however, it is impossible to
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sustain the argument that it is not competent to the
legislature to devise a proper and appropriate machinery to
recover a tax which it is competent to the legislature to
levy.
This question has been frequently considered by this Court
and the power of the Legislature to create appropriate
machinery to recover a tax, or to prevent the evasion of the
payment of the tax has been consi-
996
stently recongised. In R. C. Jall v. Union of India(1)
while dealing with the question about the power of the
legislature to decide at what ’stage and from whom excise
duty should be recovered, this Court held that subject
always to the legislative competence of the taxing
authority, the tax can be levied at a convenient stage so
long as the character of the impost is not lost. The method
of collection does not effect the essence of the duty but
only relates to the machinery of collection for
administrative convenience. While enunciating this
principle, this Court, however, took the precaution of
adding that "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".
In Sardar Baldel, Singh v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Delhi
& Ajmer(2) , this Court was called upon to consider the
validity of s. 23A of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. At
the relevant time, the said section gave power to the
appropriate authority to make an order that the
undistributed portion of the assessable income of the
company shall be deemed to have been distributed as
dividends and provided that thereupon the proportionate
share thereof of each shareholder shall be included in his
income for assessment. The argument which was urged before
this Court was that the Company and its shareholders are
different persons and, therefore, s. 23A was invalid
inasmuch as under entry 54 of List 1 a law could be passed
imposing a tax on a person on his own income. This argument
was, however, rejected because this Court took the view that
the Entries in the Lists should be read in a very wide
manner so as to include all subsidiary and ancillary
matters. That is why Entry 54 was held to authorise not
only the imposition of a tax, but also an enactment which
prevents the tax being evaded.
(1) [1962] Supp. 3 S.R. 436.
(2) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 482.
997
Similarly, in the Orient Paper Mills Ltd. v. The State of
Orissa(1), this Court has observed that the power to
legislate with respect to a tax comprehends the power to
impose the tax, to prescribe machinery for collecting the
tax, to designate the officers by whom the liability may be
enforced and to prescribe the authority, obligations and
indemnity of those officers. Therefore, we do not think Mr.
Pathak is right in contending that merely because in a few
cases where tea may be sold at the garden before it is
carried, the producer is made liable to pay the tax, s. 3
itself is outside the legislative competence of the Assam
Legislature.
Then, Mr. Pathak argues that the Act which has been passed
under Art. 304(b) cannot act retrospectively. The argument
is that when an Act is passed under Art. 304(b) after
introducing the Bill with the previous sanction’ of the
President, it must always and in every case operate
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prospectively. The scheme of Part XIII according to Mr.
Pathak, clearly shows that if the State Legislature wants to
avail itself of the provisions of Art. 304(b), it cannot
purport to pass an Act in the first instance without taking
recourse to Art. 304(b) and if the said Act is struck down,
then take recourse to the said Article and make the law
retrospective. If the State Legislature makes a law without
taking recourse to Art. 304(b) and the law is struck down,
the matter must end there and the provisions of the said law
cannot be revived by a subsequent law passed under Art.
304(b) by making its operation retrospective. If such a
process is allowed, it would materially affect the
significance and the validity of the provisions. contained
in Art. 301; that is one aspect of the matter.
The other aspect of the argument is that a law passed under
Art. 304(b) really imposes restrictions and so, the
principle that a law creating prohibitions can operate only
prospectively, must govern the present case. In support of
this argument, Mr. Pathak has relied on the decision of the
Privy Council
(1) [1962] 1 S.C.R. 549.
998
in the case of Punjab Province v. Daulat Singh"’. In that
case, the Privy Council had occasion to deal with s. 5 of
the Pujab Alienation of Land Act (Indian Act XIII of 1900)
considered in the light of the provisions of s. 298 of the
Government of India Act, 1935. Section 298(2) provides that
nothing in this section shall affect the operation of any
law which (a) prohibits, either absolutely or subject’ to
exceptions, the sale or mortgage of agricultural land there-
in described. The Privy Council held that s. 5 of the
impugned Act which created such a prohibition could not
operate retrospectively because the word " prohibits" can
only mean the forbidding of a transaction, and such a
direction is appropriate only in respect of transactions to
take place subsequently to the date of the direction, and
cannot include an attempt to reopen or set aside
transactions already completed, or to vacate titles already
acquired. It would thus be seen that this decision turned
essentially upon the use of the word "prohibits" in s.
298(2) , and so, it would be unreasonable to extend the said
decision to the cases falling under Art. 304(b) particularly
when the restriction imposed is not of such a character as
to amount to prohibition.
A similar argument was in fact rejected by this Court in
the case of M.P.V. Sundararamier & Co. v. The State of
Andhra Pradesh(2). What was urged before this Court in that
case was that the principle laid down by the Privy Council
in the case of Punjab Province(1) should be extended to a
law to which Art. 286(2) of the Constitution applied. In
rejecting this contention this Court observed that the Privy
Council’s decision proceeded solely on the connotation of
the word "prohibits" in s. 2982’ of the Government of India
Act, 1935, and can be of no assistance in the construction
of Art. 286(2) wherein the word does not occur. What this
Court has observed about Art. 286(2) as it formerly stood in
the Constitution applies with greater force to Art. 304(b).
It is true that there are some provisions
(1) 73 I. A. 59.
(2) [1958] S.C.R. 1422.
999
in the Constitution which prohibit retrospective legislation
as, for instance, Art. 20(1) & (2) vide M/s West Ramnand
Electric Distribution Co. Ltd. v. State of Madras(1). But
Art. 304(b) cannot be construed to mean that a law passed
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under it must in every case be prospective. If a Statute is
passed under Art. 304(b) retrospectively, its reasonableness
may, of course, fall to be considered on the merits in a
given case but that is not to say that in no case can a
statute be passed under the sain Articles to operate
retrospectively.
Then as to the argument about the scheme of Part XIII, we do
not see how a statute passed under Art. 304(b) would always
and necessarily defeat the said scheme if its provisions are
made retrospective. It is not disputed by Mr. Pathak that a
taxing statute can be passed retrospectively, and it is
conceded that if such a statute is passed, it would not be
possible for any person to challenge its validity on the
ground that it affects the citizens’ fundamental right under
Art. 19(1)(g). If such a challenge is made, it would be
easily met by the plea that a taxing statute, though
retrospective in its operation. can be reasonable and in the
public interest within the meaning of clause (6) of Art. 19.
Therefore, if a taxing statute can, in a given case, operate
retrospectively and its validity cannot be successfully
challenged under Art, 19, we do not see how a similar
challenge could be sustained against a taxing statute which
has been passed under Art. 304(b). The freedom of trade
guaranteed by Art. 301 is no doubt of very great importance
to the political and economic unity of the country; but the
freedom guaranteed to the individual is no less important;
just as in the case of a challenge to the validity of a
statute under Art. 19 the court has to consider whether the
restrictions imposed by the statute are reasonable and in
the interests of the general public, so in dealing with a
challenge to the validity of a statute passed under Art.
304(b) the court has to consider whether the restrictions
(1) [1963] 2 S.C.R.747p.761.
1000
imposed by it are reasonable and are required in the public
interest. The impact of the restrictions on the
individual’s right has to be judged in one case, whereas the
impact of the restrictions on the freedom of trade has to be
judged in the other; but basically, it is the invasion of a
guaranteed right whose validity is being examined in either
case; and so, if the law can be retrospective in one case,
there is no reason why it cannot be retrospective in the
other. We are, therefore, satisfied that there is no
substance in the plea raised by Mr. Pathak that the Act is
invalid solely because it operates retrospectively.
It is then faintly suggested that the retrospective
operation of s. 3, in substance, changes the character of
the tax. The argument is that the proviso to s. 3(2)
enables the producer to recover the tax from the purchaser
in case the goods are sold to a purchaser before they are
carried, whereas such a provision did not exist in the past
and in that sense, the retrospective operation changes the
character of the tax. We have already noticed that the
proviso in question is not retrospective in operation, and
so, this argument has to be tested by reference to the
remaining portion of s. 3(2). Thus tested, it is difficult
to accept it as sound. In this connection, we may refer to
the recent decision of this Court in Rai Ramkrishna v. State
of Bihar(1) where a similar plea was rejected and it was
pointed out that this Court has consistently held that the
mere fact that a validating statute operates retrospectively
does not justify the contention that the character of the
tax sought to be recovered by such retrospective operation
is necessarily changed.
The next question to consider in dealing with the validity
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of the Act which has been passed under Art. 304(b) is the
extent of the dispute that is justifiable in law. Art.
304(b) provides that notwithstanding anything in Art. 301 or
Art. 303 the Legislature of a State may by law impose such
reasonable restrictions on the freedom of trade, commerce or
(1) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 897.
1001
intercourse with or within that State as may be required in
the public interest, provided that no Bill or amendment for
the purposes of clause (b) shall be introduced or moved in
the Legislature of a State without the previous sanction of
the President. It would thus be clear that an Act passed
under Art. 304(b) can be held to be valid if it is shown
that the restrictions imposed by it are reasonable and in
the public interest. It is true that before
Bill is introduced in that behalf, the previous sanction of
the President has been obtained; but that does not take away
the jurisdiction of the Court to consider the question as to
whether the Act passed with the previous sanction of the
President satisfies the requirements of Art. 304(b). Since
Art. 304(b) permits restrictions to be imposed on the
freedom of trade, the Constitution has made it clear that
the said restrictions can be sustained only if they are
reasonable and are required in the public interest. This
position is not disputed by Mr. Setalvad before us. It is
true that in the case of Atiabari Tea Co.(1), whilst
contrasting the provisions of Art. 302 with those of Art.
304(b) the majority judgment has observed that prima facie
the requirement of public interest may be said to have been
satisfied by the previous sanction of the President and it
is only the reasonableness of the restrictions which may
fall to be considered in proceedings before the Court.
However,, this point did not directly arise for the decision
of the Court, and so, those observations should not be read
as definitely expressing the opinion that the requirement of
public interest does not become the subject-matter of ad-
judication in proceedings before the Court when the validity
of an Act passed under Art. 304(b) is questioned.
That takes us to the question about the onus of proof in
these proceedings. It may be that in most cases, the
question about the onus of proof would turn out to be merely
of academic. importance, because when one considers the
reasonableness of a given
(1) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 809
1002
restriction, one inevitably enquires also whether the said
restriction is not unreasonable; but since the point about
the onus has been argued before us, it is necessary that we
should deal with it. Mr.Setalvad contends that in dealing
with the question about the constitutionality of any
statute, we must draw an initial presumption in favour of
the constitutionality of the statute, and he suggests that
this initial presumption will cover even the requirement
that the restriction must be reasonable and in the public
interest as required by Art. 304(b). The same argument has
been urged by him in regard to the presumption in so far as
the petitioners’ fundamental right under Art. 19 (1)(g) is
concerned. He urges that in determining the content of the
individual’s fundamental right under Art. 19(1)(g), we must
take into account Art. 19(1)(g) as well as the limitations
placed on it by clause (6) of Art. 19. The fundamental
right to carry on the trade is not an absolute right; it can
be regulated and controlled by law which imposes
restrictions on the said right, provided the said
restrictions are reasonable and in the interests of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 35
general public, and so, the contention is that when we speak
about the initial presumption of constitutionality, it means
that the court should assume that the restrictions imposed
by the statute are reasonable and in the interests of the
general public, unless the contrary is shown.
On the other hand, Mr. Pathak strenuously argues that the
initial presumption would be rebutted as soon as it is shown
that the fundamental right under Art. 19(1)(g ) is invaded
by a statute, or the freedom of trade guaranteed by Art. 301
is assaulted by the impugned statute. Once a citizen shows
that the impugned statute invades either his individual
fundamental right, or the right of freedom of trade, the
presumption has worked itself out and the onus shifts to the
State to show that the invasion amounts to a restriction
which is reasonable, or it is in the interests of the
general public.
It may be conceded that, prima facie, there is some force in
the argument raised before us by Mr.
1003
Setalvad. If the freedom guaranteed to an individual
citizen is not absolute and its content must be determined
by reading Art. 19(1)(g) and clause (6) of Art. 19 together,
it can perhaps be said that the initial presumption cannot
be rebutted merely by showing that the freedom under Art.
19(1)(g) has, prima facie, been invaded. But we do not
think it necessary to pursue this matter any further,
because we are satisfied that the question raised by Mr.
Setalvad is concluded against him by a decision of this
Court.
In Saghir Ahmad v. The State of U.P.(1) where this Court was
dealing with the invasion of the citizens’ fundamental right
under Art. 19(1)(g), it has been observed that when the
enactment on the face of it is found to violate a
fundamental right guaranteed under Art. 19(1)(g), it must be
held to be invalid, unless those who support the legislation
can bring it within the purview of the exception laid down
in clause (6) of Art. 19. If the respondents do not place
any materials before the Court to establish that the
legislation comes within the permissible limits of clause
(6), it is surely not for the appellants to prove negatively
that the legislation was not reasonable and was not
conducive to the welfare of the community. It is true that
on several occasions, this Court has generally observed that
a presumption of constitutionality arises where a statute is
impeached as being unconstitutional, but as has been held in
the case of Saghir Ahmad(1) in regard to the fundamental
right under Art. 19(1)(g) as soon as the invasion of the
right is proved, it is for the State to prove its case that
the impugned legislation falls within clause (6) of Art. 19.
The position may be different when we are dealing with Art.
14, because under that Article the initial presumption of
constitutionality may have a larger sway inasmuch as it may
place the burden on the petitioner to show that the impugned
law denied equality before the law, or equal protection of
the laws. We may in this connection refer to the
observations made by this Court in the case of Hamdard
(1) [1955] 1. S.C.R. 707, 726.
1004
Dawakhana (Wakf) Lal Kuan, Delhi v. Union of India(1).
Another principle which has to be borne in mind in examining
the constitutionality of a statute, it was observed, is that
it must be assumed that the legislature understands and
appreciates the needs of the people and the laws it enacts
are directed to problems which are made manifest by
experience and that the elected representatives assembled in
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a legislature enact laws which they consider to be
reasonable for the purpose for which they are enacted.
Presumption is, therefore, in favour of the constitu-
tionality of an enactment. It is significant that all the
decisions to which reference is made in support of this
statement of the law are decisions under Art. 14 of the
Constitution. Mr. Setalvad has fairly conceded that in view
of the decision of this Court in the case of Saghir
Ahmad(2), it would not be open to him to contend that even
after the invasion of the fundamental right of a citizen is
proved under Art. 19(1)(g), the onus would not shift to the
State. In our opinion, the said decision is a clear
authority for the proposition that once the invasion of the
fundamental right under Art. 19(1) is proved, the State must
justify its case under cl. (6) which is in the nature of an
exception to the main provisions contained in Art. 19(1).
The position with regard to the onus would be the same in
dealing with "lie law passed under Art. 304(b). In fact, in
the case of such a law, the position is somewhat stronger in
favour of the citizen, because the very fact that a law is
passed under Art. 304(b) means clearly that it purports to
restrict the freedom of trade. That being so, we think that
as soon as it is shown that the Act invades the right of
freedom of trade, it is necessary to enquire whether the
State has proved that the restrictions imposed by it by way
of taxation are reasonable and in the public interest within
the meaning of Art. 304(b). This enquiry would be of a
similar character in regard to cl. (6) of Art. 19.
That naturally takes us to the question as to whether the
respondent has shown that the restric-
(1) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 671, 679.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 707, 726.
tions imposed by the Act by levying a tax on the movement of
tea can be said to be reasonable and in the public interest.
The decision of this question will inevitably involve the
balancing of the importance of freedon of trade as against
the requirements of public interest. Art. 304(b)
necessarily postulates that considerations of public
interest may require and justify the imposition of
restrictions on the freedom of trade, provided they are
reasonable. In determining the reasonableness of the
restrictions we will have to bear in mind again the
importance of freedom of trade and the requirements of
public interest. It is a question of weighing one relevant
consideration against another and harmonising both the
competing interests so as to serve the public interest in
the end. This process of assessment may not always be easy,
but, nevertheless, we must try to weigh the pros and cons
urged before us by both the parties and decide whether the
tax levied by the Act satisfies the requirement prescribed
by Art. 304(b). In support of his case, Mr. Pathak has
emphasised the fact that the producer has been made liable
for goods even when they are sold before they are carried.
In other words, the argument which he urged in support of
his case that the Act was beyond the legislative competence
of the State Legislature, has been again pressed by him into
service in support of the plea that the restriction is
unreasonable. We are not impressed by this plea.
It is then urged that the serious infirmity in the Act is
that it levies a flat rate in respect of goods carried.
Normally, the method which should have been adopted by the
Act is what is sometimes described as the ton-mileage
method, i.e., levy the tax according to the weight of the
goods carried and the distance over which they are carried.
Since the Act imposes a flat rate merely on the weight, the
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burden, imposed by it is unreasonable.
On the other hand, Mr. Setalvad strongly urges that the tax
constitutes a reasonable restriction in the public interest,
because it purports to raise revenue
1006
for public purposes. As we have already seen, tax laws have
to stand. the scrutiny of Art. 19. That being so, as soon
as the validity of a tax law is challenged under Art. 19,
the State would be entitled to rely on the fact that the
revenue raised by the tax law serves public purpose and that
is its basic justification for being treated as a reasonable
restriction on the individual’s fundamental right under Art.
19(1)(g). It would, therefore. follow that the
consideration on which Mr. Setalvad relies is not
irrelevant, though its significance and importance cannot be
over-rated. In this context, it may, however, be legitimate
to bear in mind that the revenue is required by the State to
raise money in order to carry on the function of government
and to sustain the manifold welfare activities undertaken by
it. Similarly, the fact that the President has given
previous sanction to the introduction of the Bill may
conceivably be relevant, because the Constitution seems to
contemplate that the sanction of the President would
indicate that the Central Government had applied its mind to
the problem and had come to the conclusion that the proposed
tax is reasonable and in the public interest. But we must
hasten to add that the significance of his consideration
cannot also be exaggerated.
Mr. Setalvad urges that evidence in the case shows that the
State has levied the tax on the goods carried because it
wants to utilise the income for the purpose of keeping the
roads in order and to meet the huge expenses incurred in
maintaining the waterways in the State. In the affidavit
filed on behalf of the respondent, details have been given
about the expenditure incurred by the State on roads and
waterways from year to year, and the revenue received by it
form the carriage tax during the same period. The affidavit
points out that tea and the jute are the main products of
the State of Assam and in order to have a regular and easy
flow of trade, the State has to maintain the roads. The
trade in these commodities through waterways is cheaper and,
therefore, the State has also to incur large sums on
maintaining the waterways The statement filed in
1007
the affidavit clearly shows that every year the expenditure
incurred is very much more than the revenue received from
carriage tax. It may perhaps be that since the ton-mileage
method has not been adopted in imposing the tax, the State
may not be able to claim that the tax is compensatory in
character. Usually, compensatory character may be claimed
for a tax of this kind, provided the extent of the service
rendered by the State by raising the tax is shown and it is
also proved that the recovery of the tax has some relation
to the rendering of the said service. That is why Mr.
Setalvad has not argued that the tax in question is
compensatory in character. He, however, suggests that under
Art. 304(b) it would be open to him to sustain the
restriction imposed by the tax on the ground that the tax is
levied not merely to raise general revenue for the State
which itself is a public purpose, but that the tax is raised
and utilised for keeping the waterways and the roads in good
condition in the State. In our opinion, there is
considerable force in these contentions.
Then we turn to the main point urged by Mr. Pathak that the
flat rate introduces an element of unreasonableness in the
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levy of the tax. It is necessary to bear in mind that
having regard to the interests of the trade as a whole, a
flat rate may in some cases be reasonable. If different
rates are levied by reference to the distance over which the
tea is carried before it reaches the Calcutta Port, it would
obviously mean that some producers of tea would have to pay
more taxes than others and that would introduce an element
of unfair competition between the producers of tea
considered as a class. We are referring to this aspect of
the matter to emphasis the fact that the legislature has to
consider several relevant factors before deciding how a
particular tax should be levied. The law of taxation is in
the ultimate analysis the result of the balancing of several
complex considerations, and so, it would be unreasonable to
insist upon the application of a general rule that if a tax
is levied at a flat rate, it must be treated as
unreasonable.
1008
In the present case, the legislature may have considered the
requirements of the trade carried on by the producers of tea
and may have thought that a flat rate would be just and fair
to the trade as a whole. These are questions which must
normally be left to the legislature to decide. Therefore,
we do not think that the main ground on which the
reasonableness of the tax levied by s. 3 was impeached by
Mr. Pathak, can be sustained.
Mr. Pathak further contended that s. 34 of the Act is
unconstitutional inasmuch as it is discriminatory and
imposes an unreasonable restriction on the citizens’
fundamental right to trade under Art. 19(1)(g). We have
already cited s. 34. The argument that the restriction
imposed by s. 34 is unreasonable, proceeds on the assumption
that sub-section (2) prohibits a producer from ventilating
his grievance against irregular, excessive, or illegal levy
of the tax before any forum, and such a prohibition, it is
urged, is patently unreasonable. We are satisfied that the
assumption on which the argument is founded is completely
misplaced. What s. 34(2)(a) prohibits is merely a suit or
the other proceeding in any court. It does not prohibit the
remedy of an appeal or revision specifically provided by
sections 16 & 17 of the Act.
Then it is urged that s. 34(1) makes an invidious
distinction between producers who had been ordered to pay
the tax under the earlier Act and who took no steps to
challenge the said levy either by an appeal or revision, and
those who had adopted the remedy of an appeal or revision
under the said Act. In the case of the latter category of
producers the appeals and revisions would be continued and
dealt with as though the said proceedings had been adopted
under the relevant provisions of the Act. whereas assess-
ments which had been closed under the earlier Act cannot be
reopened by the producers by filing an appeal or revision
after the Act was passed. We do not think there is any
substance in this argument. Persons who had taken
proceedings by way of appeal or revision under the earlier
Act are, on this argu-
1009
ment, treated as of the same class as persons who had taken
no such proceedings, and that, in our opinion, is not
justified because the two categories are not same or similar
in character. Besides, an argument of this kind is purely
hypothetical and not based on any material facts. It is
very difficult to assume that producers who were taxed under
the earlier Act paid the tax without preferring an appeal or
revision though they had a grievance against the validity or
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regularity of the assessment order. Therefore, we do not
think the challenge to the validity of s. 34 can be
sustained.
A similar challenge has been made against the validity of s.
24 which prescribes punishment for the three categories of
offences specified by it under clauses (1), (2) & (3). The
argument is that since the earlier Act was struck down as
unconstitutional, if any producer had knowingly submitted
false returns or had knowingly produced incorrect account,
or had contravened the relevant provision of s. 8(1), it
could not be said that he was guilty of any offence, and so,
he could not have been prosecuted under the corresponding
provision of the earlier Act which also was s. 24, that
being so, s. 24, of the present Act which purports to
operate retrospectively would be invalid. There may be some
force in this contention; but we do not see how the
petitioners can be permitted to challenge the validity of s.
24 when it is not alleged by them that any action is
proposed to be taken against them under the said section.
In dealing with petitions under Art. 32, this Court would
naturally confine the petitioners to the provisions of the
impugned Act by which their fundamental rights are either
affected or threatened. That is why we are not satisfied
that it is necessary to decide the question about the
validity of s. 24 in the present proceedings.
That takes us to the question whether the tax levied by the
Act can be said to be discriminatory and as such,
unconstitutional because it has selected only tea and jute
as objects of taxation. The argument
I/SCI/64-64
1010
appears to be that the legislature should have taxed other
commodities along with tea and jute and in so far as only
tea and jute have been selected for the purpose of taxation,
Art. 14 has been contravened. This argument is entirely
fallacious. It is not disputed that tea and jute are the
main products of the State of Assam and it is not surprising
that the Assam Legislature, therefore, levied tax on the
said two articles. Besides, the legislature which is
competent to levy a tax must inevitably be given full
freedom to determine which articles should be taxed, in what
manner and at what rate, vide Raja Jagannath Baksh Singh v.
The State of U.P.(1). It would be idle to contend that a
State must tax everything in order to tax something. In tax
matters, "the State is allowed to pick and choose districts,
objects, persons, methods and even rates for taxation if it
does so reasonably. The Supreme Court of the United States
of America has been practical and has permitted a very wide
latitude in classification for taxation"(2). This approach
has been approved by this Court in the case of East India
Tobacco Co. v. State of Andhra Pradesh .(3).
It is, of course, true that the validity of tax laws can be
questioned in the light of the provisions of Arts. 14, 19;
and Art. 301 if the said tax directly and immediately
imposes a restriction on the freedom of trade; but the power
conferred on this Court to strike down a taxing statute if
it contravenes the provisions of Arts. 14, 19 or 301 has to
be exercised with circumspection, bearing in mind that the
power of the State to levy taxes for the purpose of govern-
ance and for carrying out its welfare activities is a
necessary attribute of sovereignty and in that sense it is a
power of paramount character. In what cases a taxing
statute can be struck down as being unconstitutional is
illustrated by the decision of this Court in K.T. Moopil
Nair v. The State of Kerala (4). In that case, a careful
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examination of the scheme of the relevant provisions of the
Travancore-Cochin
(1)[1963] 1 S.C.R, 220.
(2) Willis on Constitutional Law’p. 587.
(3) [1963] 1 S.C.R. 404, 409.
(4) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 77.
1011
Land Tax Act (No. 15 of 1955) satisfied this Court that the
said Act imposed unreasonable restrictions on the
fundamental rights of the citizens, conferred unbridled
power on the appropriate authorities, introduced
unconstitutional discrimination and in consequence, amounted
to a colourable exercise of legislative power. It is in
regard to such a taxing statute which can properly be
regarded as purely confiscatory that the power of the Court
can be legitimately invoked and exercised. In our opinion,
it would be idle to suggest that a tax imposed by the Act in
the present case should be struck down because it has taxed
only tea and jute.
The next contention to which reference must be made is that
the Act is a colourable exercise of legislative power and
should also be regarded as confiscatory for the reason that
it has been passed substantially for the purpose of
validating the recoveries made under the earlier Act and
enforcing the assessment orders passed under the Act. We
have already seen that the Act is retrospective in character
and came into force from the date on which the earlier Act
was applied. We have also noticed that the prospective
operation of the Act was limited to one year from the date
on which it was published. In fact, a subsequent Act had
been passed by the Assam Legislature (Act No. 16 of 1962)
and this Act has adopted a somewhat different procedure and
prescribed a different machinery for the recovery of the tax
imposed by it. Section 3 of this Act makes the owner liable
to pay the tax and s. 2(7) defines the owner as meaning the
owner of a taxable vehicle and includes in that category the
four types of persons specified by clauses (a) to (d) of s.
2(7). The argument, therefore, is that the Act was
deliberately passed by the legislature merely for the
purpose of recovering dues to which it had originally made a
claim under the earlier Act which was unconstitutional and
that, it is suggested, makes the Act open to the charge that
it represents a colourable exercise of legislative power.
We are satisfied that there is
1012
no substance in this argument. It is not disputed that the
power to make a law necessarily includes the power to make
the provisions of the law retrospective. It is also not
disputed that it is within the competence of a legislature
to pass validating Acts, because the power to pass such
validating Acts is essentially subsidiary to the main power
of legislation on the topics included in the relevant List.
Therefore, if the legislature felt that the infirmity in the
earlier Act could be cured and it proceeded to comply with
the requirements of Art. 304(b), it cannot be said that a
law passed -under Art. 304(b) is void, because the
legislature has thereby attempted to recover taxes which
could not be recovered under the earlier Act owing to the
constitutional infirmity in the said Act. The exercise of
legislative power which has resulted in the passing of the
present Act cannot, in our opinion, be said to be colourable
in any sense.
Is the Act extra-territorial in its application ? That is
the next question which calls for an answer, In support of
the plea of extra-territoriality, it is urged that the
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petitioners are all residents of Bengal, that they carry on
their tea business in Calcutta, and it is only on the very
narrow ground that in its passage from tea garden to
Calcutta the tea in question has to cross a distance of a
mile and a half in Assam that the tax purports to make the
producers from Bengal liable under s. 3(2). This argument
also is entirely misconceived. Entry 56 in List II empowers
the Assam Legislature to levy a tax on goods carried.
Whether the goods are carried for a long distance or a short
distance cannot effect the question of the legislative
competence of the legislature. It is the carriage goods
through Assam that is the taxing event and since the
physical carriage of goods through a part of Assam is not
denied, it is difficult to see how a challenge to the
validity of the Act on the ground that it is extra-
territorial in character could be sustained. The doctrine
of nexus has been applied in considering the validity of tax
statutes in this country in the Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd.
v. The State of Biliar(1). Das
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1355.
1013
C.J., who spoke for the Court has examined the genesis of
the doctrine of nexus, has considered the relevant judicial
decisions bearing on the point and has expressed the
conclusion of the Court that the said doctrine can be
invoked to sustain the validity of tax statutes. The nexus
in question must be rational, but it would be impossible to
accede to the argument that the sufficiency of nexus can be
a matter for adjudication before the Court. In the present
case, undoubtedly, tea has been carried over a part of the
inland waterways in Assam and that satisfies the test of
nexus. The argument of extra-territoriality must,
therefore, fail.
Mr. Mazumdar has urged before us three subsidiary points in
addition to the points argued by Mr. Pathak. He
contends that the tax levied by the Act is invalid because
a tax can be levied on goods carried only if the said
goods join the mass of goods in the taxing State, In the
present case the goods had not entered the mass of goods in
the State of Assam at any stage; they just traveled for a
very short distance on their way from the tea garden, to the
Calcutta Port and that cannot attract a tax under Entry 56
of List 11. In support of this argument, Mr. Mazumdar has
invited our attention to the decision of this Court in The
Central India Spinning and Weaving and Manufacturing Co.
Ltd., the Empress Mills, Nagpur v. The Municipal Committee,
Wardha(1). In that case, this Court was considering the
scope and effect of s. 66(1)(c) of the C.P. and Berar
Municipalities Act, 1922, and the decision turned upon the
true interpretation of the’ words "imported into". In that
connection, the legislative history of the octroi duty was
examined and it was held that the concept of import requires
that. the goods which are brought into must mix,-up with the
mass of the property, in the local area where the goods are
alleged to have been imported.. If the goods are just
carried and not mixed with the mass of the property in the
area through which they are carried, they cannot be said to
have been imported into that
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1102.
1014
area. We do not see how this decision which turned
essentially upon the true significance of the concept of
import can have any relevance where the tax with which we
are concerned is a tax on goods carried. The word "carried"
is of much wider denotation, and it would be unreasonable to
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limit its scope by introducing considerations which are
relevant in dealing with the question of import. Therefore,
we do not think that’ the attempt to change the validity of
the Act on the ground that the carried goods which are taxed
do not join the mass of goods in the State of Assam, can
succeed.
Mr. Mazumdar has also urged that so far as the petitioners’
goods are concerned, they are substantially carried by the
railway and should, therefore, be field to be outside the
purview of s. 3 of the Act. We have already seen that the
operation of the Act is confined to the goods carried by
road or by an inland waterways and the goods carried
entirely by the railway are outside its scope. The question
which Mr. Mazumdar has raised before us is that having
regard to the long distance which the tea chests have
travelled between the tea gardens and the Calcutta Port, it
should be held that a short distance of 1-1/2 to 2 miles
which they travelled by inland waterways does not alter the
character of their journey; it is, on the whole, a journey
made by the railway, and so, the goods must be deemed to
have been carried by railway throughout. This argument also
is misconceived. As we have just indicated, the length of
the distance over which the goods are carried has no
relevance to the point. It is the physical fact of carriage
of goods through a part of Assam that attracts the levy of
the tax imposed by s. 3. Besides, the definition of railway
to which Mr. Mazumdar invited our attention contained in s.
3 of the Indian Railways Act (No. 9 of 1890) itself shows
that the carriage of the goods over the inland waterways
cannot be brought within the scope of the definition.
Section 3(4) defines the railway as meaning a railway for
any portion of a railway, for the public carriage
passengers,
1015
animals or goods, and includes, inter alia, all ferries,
ships, boats and rafts which are used on inland waters for
the purposes of the traffic of a railway and belong to or
are hired or worked by the authority administering the
railway. It is common ground that the ferries by which tea
chests of the petitioners are carried over the inland
waterways in Assam do not belong to the railway, nor are
they hired or worked by the authority of the railway to
which the goods were consigned for carriage. In fact, s.
74E of the Railway Act which, after amendment, has become
s.76D in 1961, clearly brings out the fact that when any
goods are tendered to a railway administration for carriage
by railway and have been booked through over a railway or
any other transport system not belonging to the railway
administration, the person who tenders the goods shall be
deemed to have contracted with the railway and the said
other transport system separately. Therefore, the argument
based on the fact that the goods have been entrusted to the
railway for through carriage, and so, the carriage of the
goods should be held to be outside the purview of s. 3 of
the Act, cannot be sustained.
That leaves only one more point urged by Mr. Mazumdar to be
considered. Mr. Mazumdar contends that the tax is invalid
for the reason that tea which is one of the objects taxed
has been covered by the Central Tea Act (Act No. 29 of 1953)
and he argues that since the Central Act has been passed by
reference to the relevant Entry in List 1 in the Seventh
Schedule, it is not open to the State Legislature to pass a
taxing statute in respect of tea. It is true that the Tea
Act has made several provisions in regard to tea and has
constituted a Board to deal with the problems enumerated in
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the other provisions of the said Act; but one has merely to
glance through the relevant provisions of the Tea Act to
realise that the scope and purpose of the said Act is
entirely different from the scope and purpose of the taxing
Act with which we are concerned. The pith and substance of
the taxing statute is the levy of a tax
1016
on tea, which is carried in the State of Assam and the right
to levy such a tax cannot be said to have been taken away
merely by the fact that a Tea Act had been passed by the
Central Legislature which is referable to the relevant Entry
in List 1 of the 7th Schedule. The power to levy a tax
which has been conferred on the State Legislature by Entry
56 cannot, therefore, be said to be controlled by the Tea
Act in question. ’It would be noticed that List I does not
contain any Entry by which the Central Legislature can pass
an Act levying a tax on goods carried which can be said to
control Entry 56 in List 11. That being so, we, must hold
that there is no substance in the argument that the State
Legislature has no power to levy a tax on tea which is
carried over- a part of the area of the State of Assam.
A similar argument was urged by Mr. Mazumdar on the strength
of the provisions contained in the River Boards Act, 1956
(No. 49 of 1956). Mr. Mazumdar suggested that the
Brahmaputra River over a part of whose stream the tea chests
are carried is governed by the provisions of the River
Boards Act and that imposes a ban on the power of the Assam
Legislature to pass an Act in respect of goods carried over
the Brahmaputra River. What we have said about the
objection ’raised by Mr. Mazumdar on the strength of the Tea
Act applies with equal force to the present argument.
The result is, the petition fails and is dismissed with
costs.
SARKAR J.-I agree that the petition fails but I wish to say
a few words of my own.
The petition challenges the validity of the Assam Taxation
(on Goods Carried by Road or on Inland Water-ways) Act,
1961. (Act 10 of 1961), passed by the Legislature of the
State of Assam. There are two petitioners, one of whom is a
limited company and cannot, therefore, admittedly maintain
the petition which is under Art. 32. It is conceded that
the petition is maintainable by the other petitioner, an
1017
officer of the Company, as he is interested in the rights of
the Company. No question of the competency of the petition
was, therefore, raised on behalf of the respondents who are
the State of Assam and two of its officers concerned with
the collection of the tax under the Act.
The petitioner Company is the owner of a tea estate in
Jalpaiguri in the State of West Bengal. One of the grounds
on which the validity of the Act is challenged is that the
Act imposes an unreasonable restriction on the trade of the
Company. The respondents contend that the Act is valid in
view of the provisions of Art. 304(b) and also cl. (6) of
Art. 19 of the Constitution. They say that the-restriction
imposed by the Act is reasonable. Article 301 of the
Constitution provides that subject to the other provisions
of Part XIII, trade, commerce and intercourse throughout the
territory of India shall be free, and the relevant part of
Art. 304 is in these terms:
"Notwithstanding anything in article
301......... the Legislature of a State may by
law-
(a)..........................................
(b) impose such reasonable restrictions on
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the freedom of trade, commerce or intercourse
with or within that State as may be required
in the public interest:
Provided that no Bill or amendment for the
purposes of clause (b) shall be introduced or
moved in the Legislature of a State without
the previous sanction of the President."
It is not in dispute that the sanction of the President
contemplated in the proviso to Art. 304(b) had been obtained
in connection with the impugned Act. That Act had, however,
a predecessor which bore the same title and was Assam Act 13
of 1954 but for which no sanction of the President under
Art. 304(b) had been obtained. In Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd. v.
The State of Assam(1), this-Court by a majority held that as
Act 13 of 1954 imposed a tax on the carriage of
(1)[1961]1 S.C.R. 809.
1018
goods it constituted a direct restriction on the free
movement of trade and as no sanction of the President had
been obtained in respect of it was void. No question arose
there as to the reasonableness of the restriction imposed by
the Act. The other members of the Court who constituted the
minority expressed dissenting opinions but no useful purpose
will be served by referring to them. As a result of the
opinion of the majority Act 13 of 1954 became void.
Article 301 and the succeeding articles in Part XIII,
including Art. 304, were again considered by another and a
larger bench of this Court in The Automobile Transport
(Rajasthan) Ltd. v. The State of Rajasthan.(1) Das J., with
whose judgment Kapur J., and myself were associated,
accepted the interpretation of Art. 301 by the majority in
the Atiabari Tea Co. case (2) as correct, but stated that
regulatory measures such as rules laying down speed limit or
lights to be carried by, vehicles and other rules of the
road as also measures imposing compensatory taxes such as,
taxes collected for maintaining the roads or bridges, were
not restrictions within Art. 301 as such measures really
facilitated trade rather than restrict it. It was,
therefore, said by Das J.,that such measures need not
comply with the requirements of the proviso to Art. 304(b)
of the Constitution. As I apprehend the judgment of Subba
Rao J., in that case, he seems to have taken the same view
though he used the description ’regulatory measure’ to
include measures laying down the rule of the road as also
measures intended to raise funds for construction and
maintenance of roads. This was the opinion of the majority
of the Court in that case. It is unnecessary to refer to
the other opinion expressed in it.
Neither of these cases, however, has any bearing on the case
in hand for it is not contended by the respondents that the
impugned Act was a compensatory measure. It was of course
not a regulatory measure as laying down a rule of the road.
Indeed
(1)[1963] 1 S.C.R. 491.
(2) [1961] 1 S.C.R, 809.
1019
it Was not contended that the impugned Act did not impose
restrictions on the movement of trade. In view of the
sanction of the President which had been ,obtained in the
present case, the only question concerning the freedom
guaranteed by Art. 301 was whether the restriction imposed
by the Act was reasonably required in the public interest.
It was said that the impugned Act (Act 10 of 1961) is
practically in the same terms as the predecessor Act of 1954
but that by itself would not bring the impugned Act within
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the mischief of the decision in the Atiabari Tea Co.(1) case
for that case held the earlier Act invalid only on the
ground that the sanction of the President had not been
obtained. No question was canvassed there as to the
reasonableness of any restriction imposed by the Act. The
sanction of the President, as already stated, was obtained
for the impugned Act. I should however state here that
apart from the point about the reasonableness of the
restrictions imposed on trade by the Act, there were other
attacks on it. These will be mentioned later.
The impugned Act came into force on April 15, 1961, and
imposed a tax on manufactured tea and jute carried by any
means other than railway and airways. This case is not,
however, concerned with any carriage of jute. The Act was
given a retrospective operation as it was to be deemed to
have effect from April 24, 1954, being the date on which the
predecessor Act, (Act 13 of 1954), came into force.
Further, the Act was to remain in force till March 31, 1962,
that is, for about a year only; see s. 1(3). It has since
been replaced by another Act, namely, Act 16 of 1962. It
may be that as this last mentioned Act was in contemplation,
the impugned Act was given a short term of life. This Act
further stated that the tax collected under Act 13 of 1954
would be deemed to have been collected under the
corresponding provisions contained in it.
There is one other matter to which I would like to refer
before I proceed to consider the points argued
(1) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 809.
1020
at the bar. I have said that the tea estate of the peti-
tioner Company was in West Bengal and not in Assam. Its
practice was to book its tea from a railway station in West
Bengal for carriage to Calcutta for sale there. Now what
the railway did was to carry the tea to another of its
stations called Dhubri Ghat on the river Brahmputra situate
in Assam. The railway had arranged for the transshipment of
the tea there from its wagons to) steamers belonging to a
carrier company at Dhubri Ghat and these steamers carried
the tea by inland waterways to Calcutta. The steamers in
the course of their journey passed through one and a half
mile or two miles of Assam waterways, about 572 miles of
Pakistan waterways and 165 miles of West Bengal waterways,
before reaching Calcutta. The tax was levied in respect of
the carriage of the tea for about two miles on Assam
waterways.
At the hearing in this Court learned counsel appearing in
support of the petition really attacked only two sections of
the impugned Act, namely, ss. 3 and 34. Section 3, which is
the charging sections is in these terms:
S. 3. (1) Subject to the provisions of this
Act, there shall be levied a tax on (a)
manufactured tea and (b) Jute in bales carried
by motor vehicle, cart, trolley, boat, animal
and human agency or any other means except
railways and airways in such manner a,-Id in
respect of such period and at such rate as
specified in the Schedule.
(2) Such tax levied on manufactured tea
shall be realised from the producer and that
levied on jute shall be realised from the
dealer:
Provided that where tea is sold at the factory premises, the
producer shall be liable for realisation of tax from the
purchaser with effect from such date as the Government, by
notification, appoint, for the carriage of such tea as
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provided in this section and the producer shall be liable
for the payment of such tax notwithstanding
1021
the fact that the tea is not carried by the producer:
x x x x x
The first contention was that the section was beyond the
legislative competence of the State Legislature. It is not
in dispute that the Act had been passed under the powers
contained in Item 56 of List II in the Seventh Schedule to
the Constitution which authorised a State Legislature to
pass laws imposing "taxes on goods and passengers carried on
roads or on inland waterways". It was said that under this
entry a tax could be levied only on the person who carried
the goods but the proviso to s. 3(2) showed that even where
a producer was not himself carrying the tea, he was liable
for the tax and, therefore, the Act levied the tax not
really on goods carried by road or waterways and was for
that reason, ultra vires the State Legislature and void. It
may be that there is nothing in s. 3 imposing directly a tax
on the purchaser of the tea even when he is the person
carrying it. It seems to me however that under Item 56 of
List II it was competent for the legislature to provide for
the tax being realised from the producer in the way it has
been done in the Act. It is wellknown that the entries in
the legislative lists have to be read with all possible
width and amplitude. An entry authorising the levy of a tax
of a particular kind would justify that levy in the manner
best suited for collecting it The purchasers of tea would be
mostly parties in Calcutta. The State of Assam may find it
difficult to realise the tax from them. It may, therefore,
legitimately provide that the tax may be realised from the
producer even where he does notches the tea for otherwise
the tax may be evaded. Then again, under s. 3 tax is
leviable only when tea has been carried by road or inland
water-ways. It is clear, however, that it was the action of
the producer, namely, the sale by him, which alone caused
the carriage of the tea; without the sale there would have
been no occasion for the purchaser to carry the tea. If he
did not actually
1022
carry the tea himself, he certainly brought about its
carriage. Therefore, he might under Item 56 of List 11 be
made liable for the carriage of the tea just as much as the
person actually carrying it. I am unable to see why the
words of Item 56 of List 11 would not cover both.
I do not think it necessary to decide the question raised at
the bar whether the producer mentioned in sub-s. (2) of s. 3
refers only to a producer who himself carries the tea
produced by him. Even if the word ’producer’ in that sub-
section includes one who does not himself carry the tea, a
tax can be legitimately levied on him when the tea is
carried as a result of its sale by him and for facility of
collection of the tax.
It was next said that the proviso in s. 3 may, if effect is
given to it from a past date, impose a tax on a producer
which he could not collect from the purchaser. It was
pointed out that if he was made liable by the notification
mentioned in the proviso in respect of sales which had
already taken place, he would have to pay the tax personally
as the sales having taken place, he could no more collect
the tax from the purchaser. It was contended that this
would make the restriction put by the Act unreasonable and
also make the provision incompetent as outside Item 56 of
List 11 for the reasons earlier mentioned. It was also said
that this would create a discrimination between producers
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hit by such retrospective notification and those whose sales
came after the date when the notification was published.
All these reasons, it was contended, would make the proviso
illegal and void. I think the whole contention is imaginary
and unfounded. It is based on the notification being given
a retrospective effect but I am clear in my mind that under
the proviso a notification cannot be issued with
retrospective effect. Under the proviso the producer is
made liable for realisation of the tax from the purchaser
from a date appointed by the notification. The noti-
fication, therefore, necessarily contemplates a situation
1023
in which the producer can collect the tax from a
purchaser.He cannot of course do so in respect of past
sales. Therefore, the notification if it appointed a past
date would be incompetent.
The next contention is that the Act must be held to be void
as it had been given retrospective operation. This
contention was founded on the argument that a statute
contemplated by Art. 304(b) cannot be retrospective. I am
unable to see why not. Without more, when a legislature has
the power to pass a law it can pass a law having a retros-
pective operation. This, I do not think, was disputed.
What was said was that the terms of Art. 304 indicated that
it was not intended that a retrospective law would be passed
under it. It was argued that the law contemplated there was
one which put restrictions on the freedom of the flow of
trade and, therefore, if the trade had once ’flown’ it could
not be restricted and so a retrospective effect could not be
given to a law passed under the Article. I am unable to
appreciate this argument. If the flow of trade in future
can be restricted, then I do not see why a trade which has
flown in the past cannot be restricted retrospectively. It
is not disputed that a restriction which can be imposed
under cl. (6) of Art. 19 can be imposed retrospectively.
There is no reason why the same position should not obtain
in regard to the restrictions contemplated by Art. 304(b).
It was then said that the effect of Art. 304 was to prohibit
the doing of a thing and a prohibition by its very nature
could only be in respect of the future and, therefore, a
retrospective restriction would be outside the Article.
This argument was sought to be supported by reference to
Punjab Province v. Daulat Singh(1) where the Judicial
Committee said that where a legislature had power to make a
law prohibiting something, it would not in exercise of that
power prohibit that thing from a past date because the word
’prohibit’ in the nature of it, referred only to a
prospective prohibition. But I do not
(1) L.R. 73 I.A. 59.
1024
find any prohibition in Art. 304. The effect of Arts. 301
and 304 is that the freedom of trade is not to be restricted
by law passed by a State except by a law imposing a
reasonable restriction on it in the interest of the-public
and passed with the sanction of the President. It then
comes to this that the freedom can be restricted by a law
which has to satisfy the two conditions. Article 304,
therefore, permits and does not prohibit. There is no scope
for applying here the Punjab Province case(1).
The next point to which I wish to refer is that the
restriction imposed by the tax levied under the Act is not
reasonable. A question was raised as to on whom the onus to
prove the reasonableness of the restriction lies. It was
said that it has been held by this Court in Saghir Ahmad v.
The State of U.P.(2) that the onus lies on the State. It
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must be conceded that it does seem to have been so held
there. On the other hand, however, there is a very large
number of cases where it is said that there is a presumption
as to the constitutionality of a statute and that,
therefore, the onus of showing that it is unconstitutional
is on the party so alleging: see the cases collected in
Hamdard Dawakhana (Wakf) Lal Kuan v. Union of India(’-’).
No doubt these cases dealt with the question of
constitutionality arising from discrimination, that is,
under Art. 14 of the Constitution, but I am unable to see
that makes a difference on the question of onus. These
cases say that the presumption of constitutionality arises
because "it must be assumed that the legislature understands
and appreciates the need of the people and the laws it
enacts are directed to problems which are made manifest by
experience and that the elected representatives assembled in
a legislature enact laws which they consider to be
reasonable for the pupose for which they are enacted.
Presumption is, therefore, in favour of the
constitutionality of an enactment":
Hamdard Dawakhana (Wakf)(3) case at p. 679.
(1) L.R. 73 I.A. 19 (2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 707, 727.
(3)[1960] 2 S.C.R. 671, 679.
1025
If the Legislature is to be presumed to know that an Act
which makes a distinction is justified because the people
with whom it is concerned are distinguished from the others
by an intelligible differentia having a rational relation to
the objects of the Act, that being the test to save a
statute from being held to be discriminatory, then I do not
see why it cannot be presumed that knowing the people and
their needs, the legislature has passed a law which imposes
reasonable restrictions on their activities. It was said
that the restriction is permitted by cl. (6) of Art. 19
which contains an exception and that an exception has to be
proved by the party who wants to take advantage of it. That
does not seem to me to be a proper way of reading a
constitution and this rule of construction must, in my view,
give way to the rule of presumption of constitutionality.
It may also legitimately be said that there is no exception;
the real fundamental right is what is left after the
restriction has been imposed and, therefore, the citizen
alleging violation of his fundamental right must also show
that the restriction is unreasonable. It is not necessary
to pursue the matter further- or to pronounce finally on it
now because for one thing, the observation in Saghir Ahmad’s
(1) case is there’ and for another, nothing turns on onus in
this case. I have only mentioned it as it is a matter
which, to my mind, requires consideration when the question
properly arises.
The first ground on which it was said that the Act imposed
an unreasonable restriction was that the rates imposed by it
were flat rates. The rates were prescribed in the Schedule
mentioned in s. 3 and different rates were fixed for
different periods of time but in respect of each period
there was one rate, for example, between June 1, 1954, and
June 30, 1955, the rate was one pice per pound. The point
made was that the tax being a tax on carriage it becomes an
unreasonable restriction if the tax did not vary with the
distance over which the thing was carried. Put that way, it
would really seem not a question of
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R 707, 727.
1 SCI/64--65
1026
reasonableness but a question of legislative competence. I
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am wholly unable to see that Item 56 in List 11 requires
that the tax imposed must be measured according to the
distance over which the goods are carried. Tested by the
scale of reasonableness also, a flat rate does not seem to
me to be wanting in that quality. One may well ask why is a
flat rate not reasonable? I find no answer. Why is a rate
depending on the distance carried more reasonable? Again I
find no answer. If the rate varied with distance, then it
is conceivable that in many cases the burden would be much
heavier. How could that have been more reasonable? The
only effect of a flat rate may be that people who carry for
a short distance pay as much as those who carry a longer
distance. I do not see that this can make the levy
unreasonable.
Now let me look at the question from another point of view.
To start with it would not be wrong to say that since a tax
is collected in public interest and for public good the
burden imposed by it on trade would prima facie be
reasonable in the public interest. There is no reason to
think that the burden imposed by this Act is onerous, that
it is such as would crush the trade by putting a weight on
it which it could not carry. Furthermore it has been
established on the affidavit that the Government spends on
roads and facilities on waterways much more than what is
collected in the shape of tax on the goods carried. That
also is a consideration which goes to establish the
reasonableness of the levy. The petitioner has not been
able to put before us anything which would destroy the
effect of these considerations. The fact that the Act
imposes the tax with retrospective effect cannot by itself
also make the restriction unreasonable. For the reasons
earlier mentioned, it may still be reasonable.
I now proceed to consider the charge of discrimination. It
was said that the Act offended Art. 14 because it taxed only
tea and jute and no other article. But I am unable to see
that. this is discrimination.
1027
The Act applies to all who are concerned with the carriage
of tea and jute. No doubt it does not apply to the carriage
of other goods but as has been said, "it is for the
legislature to decide on what objects to levy": see Raja
Jagannath Baksh Singh v. The State of Uttar Pradesh(1). The
legislature must pick and choose and such picking and
choosing cannot by itself amount to discrimination.
Besides, it is common knowledge that tea is a very
prosperous industry in Assam and is certainly more fit to
bear the, burden of taxation than most other industries
there.. The flat rate of tax imposed also creates no
discrimination for it applies the same rate to all. It has
not been shown that in fact a discrimination has arisen.
Then it was said that s. 34 of the Act amounted to a
violation of Art. 14. That section is in these terms:-
S.34. (1) Any rules made, any liability in-
curred, any tax levied or realised, any
returns furnished, any proceedings commenced,
any notification published any action taken or
anything whatsoever done under the provisions
of the Act repealed, shall be deemed to have
been made, incurred, levied, realised,
furnished, commenced, published, taken or done
under the corresponding provisions of this
Act.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
any judgment, decree or order of any court,
all taxes imposed or realised or purporting to
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have been imposed or realised under the Act
repealed shall for all purposes, be deemed to
be, and to have been, validly imposed or
realised and accordingly-
(a) no suit or other proceeding shall be
maintained or continued in any court against
the Government or any person or authority
whatsoever for the refund of my taxes so paid;
and
(1) [1963] 1 S.C. R. 220, 234
1028
(b) no court shall enforce any decree or
order directing the refund of any taxes so
paid.
It was first said that the sub-section prevented people from
whom tax had been collected under Act 13 of 1954, from
taking proceedings in court, while those subjected to the
tax only under the impugned Act were not so prevented.
If by ’Proceedings in court’ are meant proceedings outside
those for which the Acts provide, then such proceedings
cannot be taken by persons from whom tax is collected under
the present Act either: see s. 29. Therefore the Act makes
no discrimination as alleged. If proceedings by way of
appeal and otherwise for which provision is made in the Acts
themselves are to be considered, then also there is no
discrimination. Under the earlier Act there were provisions
for appeal etc. and if one had filed an appeal I under that
Act, that appeal had to be deemed to have been filed under
the impugned Act. Likewise, in respect of every other kind
of proceeding contemplated in the earlier Act. If one has
not chosen to take these proceedings under that Act, he
cannot complain. That would not be a case of discrimination
by the Act but would be giving up by a party of his rights
under it. Therefore the position of a tax payer is the same
under both the Acts.
We were also referred to s. 24 of the Act. That section
provides for ’prosecution for failure to do certain things
required by the Act to be done. It was contended that as
the section had been given retrospective operation, it had
the effect of making something which was not an offence when
done, an offence by an ex post facto law: It is not
necessary to go into that question for it is purely
academic. It has not been suggested that the petitioner has
been affected by it.
Another point argued was that the Act was only a colourable
exercise of legislative power under Item 56 of List 11. The
contention was that the Act had nothing to do with tax on
carriage of goods but was really passed to retain what had
been collected
1029
under an Act which this Court had declared invalid. That of
course is not on the face of it wholly correct, for the Act
operated prospectively also. But apart from that this
contention which was based on s. 34(1) of the Act is wholly
unacceptable to me. Such a contention would make it
impossible to pass an Act validating a taxing statute. Such
Acts have very often been passed. A validating Act is
passed under the legislative power under which the invalid
law had been purported to be passed and it had been held
that where legislative power exists, it could not be said
that the exercise of that power was colourable: Gajapatti
Narayan Deo v. State of Orissa(1). See also M.P. V.
Sundararamier & Co. v. The State of Andhra Pradesh.(2)
The last thing to which I wish to refer is the contention
that the Act was bad as it had extraterrestrial operation.
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It was said that to the petitioner it applied only because
the tea was carried over inland waterways in Assam for about
a mile and a half only. Apparently, the argument is that
this distance is too trivial. But it seems to me beyond
question that if the goods were carried for any distance
over the territory of Assam, however short that distance
might be, the Assam Legislature would have full jurisdiction
to impose a tax on such carriage. This point is, therefore,
also without any merit.
Mr. Mazumdar raised certain other points and these have been
dealt with by my brother Gajendragadkar. I do not wish to
add anything to what he has said concerning them.
I would, therefore, dismiss the petition.
Petition dismissed.
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 1. (2) [1958] S.C.R, 1422.
1030