Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHREE MAHAVIR OIL MILLS & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF JAMMU & KASHMIR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/11/1996
BENCH:
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, SUHAS C. SEN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 29TH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1996
Present:
Hon‘ble Mr.Justice B.P. Jeevan Reddy
Hon’ble Mr.Justice S.C. Sen
Harish N.Salve, Sr.Adv. Ms.Bina Gupta, Alok Agarwal,
Ramesh Singh, Ms.Rakhi Verma, Advs. with him for the
Appellant.
M.L.Verma, Sr Adv, J.Manhas and Pawan Kumar, Advs. with
him for State
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
B.P.JEEVAN REDDY,J.
Leave granted.
The State of Jammu & Kashmir seeks to encourage and
promote the industrialisation of the State - like every
other State in the country. Edible oil industry is one such.
Because of certain inherent problems, the cost of production
of edible oil in Jammu & Kashmir is said to be higher than
the cost of production of similar edible in the adjoining
States with the result that the manufacturers of edible oil
in the adjoining State are able to sell their products in
Jammu & Kashmir at a price lower than the price at which the
local manufacturers are able to sell. This is said to have
created a situation where the local industries are the
prospect of closure; at any rates they were not able to
compete with the out-State manufacturers. They approached
their government, which is seeking to protect their interest
by inter alia exempting them totally from the levy of sales
tax on the sale of their products. That has given rise to
the writ petition from which the present appeal arises on
the Jammu and Kashmir High Court dismissing the writ
petition, they have approached this Court.
The Jammu & Kashmir Sales Tax Act contains four
Schedules. Each of the Schedules carries a particular rate
of sales tax. Edible oils were previously included in
Schedule-D which prescribes the rate of tax at four percent.
On December 20, 1993, edible oils were shifted from
Schedule-D to Schedule-C, which prescribes the rate of the
tax at eight percent. (It is stated that S.R.O.213 of 1993
issued on December 3, 1993 shifting edible oils from
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Schedule-D to Schedule-C was rescinded within about a week
thereafter but was re-issued as S.R.O.124 of 1994 on May
27,1994).
With a view to protect the local edible oil industry,
the Government of Jammu & Kashmir issued S.R.O.93 of 1991 on
March 7, l991 under Section 5 of the Jammu & Kashmir Sales
Tax Acts, 1962 directing that "the goods manufactured by a
dealer operating as a small scale industrial unit in the
State and registered with Director of Industries and
Commerce, Handicrafts or Handloom Development, subject to
the conditions specified belows shall be exempted from
payment of tax to the extent and for the period specified in
the Schedule forming Annexure-A". All the units
manufacturing edible oil in the State are small scale
industrial units as defined by the Jammu & Kashmir
Government. (It appears that initially the limit was an
investment of Rupees ten lakhs according to which one unit
in the State did not qualify as a small scale industrial
unit. Subsequently, it is stated the limit of investment was
raised to Rupees thirty lakhs, as a result of which the said
unit also fell under the definition of small scale unit).
The exemption was total and the period of exemption was five
years-which, has later been extended by another five years.
The result of the orders aforementioned was that while
until December, 1993/May, 1994, the manufacturers of edible
oil in other States were obliged to pay sales tax on the
sales effected by them in the State of Jammu & Kashmir at
the rate of four percent, the local manufacturers were
totally exempted therefrom. In December, 1993/May. 1994, the
rate of tax was raised from four percent to eight percent,
as stated above. With the raising of the rate of sales tax
to eight percent, the outside manufacturers were obliged to
pay at eight percent while the local manufacturers were
exempt fully. It is them local manufaturers were exempt
fully It is then that some of the outside manufacturers
including the appellants herein, approached the Jammu &
Kashmir High Court by way of writ petitions which were
dismissed by a learned Single Judge. The Letters Patent
Appeals preferred by the appellants have also been dismissed
by the Division Bench relying mainly upon the decision of
this Court in Video Electronics Private Limited [190 (3)
S.C.C.87].
Sri Harish Salve, learned counsel for the appellants,
assailed the correctness of the judgment of the High Count
on several grounds. Counsel submitted that the orders of the
Government of Jammu & Kashmir exempting all the edible oil
industries in the State from payment of sales tax
unconditionally amounts to discriminating against the out-
State manufacturers which is prohibited by Articles 301 and
304 of the Constitution. Counsel submitted that Part-XIII of
the Constitution prohibits raising of fiscal barriers by the
States, for such barriers are bound to interfere with the
free movement of trade and commerce throughout the territory
of India. Raising of protective walls may be justified in
international trade. The Government of India can and has
been providing several such protectionist measures all these
years to encourage the growth and establishment of
industries, in the country and to protect them from
competition from foreign manufactures. But similar measures
cannot be provided by the State governments internally,
i.e., within the country. The Parliament can, no doubt, be
such measures but not the State Government, and certainly
not without the prior sanction/assent of the President of
India. Learned counsel submitted that the decision in Video
Electronics has not been correctly understood by the High
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Court and that it does not purport to support the impugned
measure. Learner counsel relied upon several decisions
rendered by this Court under Part-XIII in support of his
submissions.
On the other hand, Sri M.L.Verma. learned counsel for
the State of Jammu & Kashmir, placed strong reliance upon
the ratio and upon certain observations made in Video
Electronics. Notwithstanding certain minor differences,
learned counsel submitted, the principle of the said
decision clearly applies to the facts of this case. Sri
Verma submitted that when the rate of tax was four percent
and the exemption in favour of local manufacturers was
operating, the appellants never protested. Only when the
rate of tax was raised from four to eight percents with the
exemption in favour of local manufacturers continuing, the
appellants came forward with writ petitions. If they were
not aggrieved when the rate was four percents they cannot
equally be aggrieved merely because the rate is raised to
eight percent. Counsel brought to our notice certain figures
relating to turn-over of the appellants within the state of
Jammu & Kashmir and emphasised that the impugned measure has
not really hurt the appellants‘ business and that the volume
of their turn-over continues to rise notwithstanding the
impugned measure. The submission is that the appellants can
have no real or genuine grievance in the matter. Coupled
with this, Sri Verma submitted, is the need for protecting
the local manufacturers. Because of the peculiar economic
conditions prevailing in the State, the cost of production
of the local manufacturers is substantially higher than the
cost of production of edible oil in the adjoining States or
in other States in the country. Unless the impugned
protective measure is provided to the local manufacturers,
Sri Verma submitted, it was not possible for the local
manufacturers to survive in the market. They would have been
eliminated from their business and trade by the out-State
manufacturers who are able to sell their goods at a lesser
price. The purpose of the impugned measure, Sri Verma
submitted, is, therefore, laudable. It is not directed
against the out-State manufacturers but only towards saving
the local ones. Even otherwise, counsel submitted, the
principle of classification relevant under Article 14 has
been held by this Court to be equally applicable under
Article 304 and if so, it must be held that the
classification made between local and out-State
manufacturers is a reasonable one and designed to further
the aforesaid laudable object.
Article 301 declares that "subject to the other
provisions of this part, trade, commerce and intercourse
throughout the territory of India shall be free". An
exception is, however, provided in favour of Parliament by
Article 302 which says that "Parliament may by law impose
such restrictions on the freedom of trade, commerce or
intercourse between one State and another or within any part
of the territory of India, as may be required in the public
interest". The power conferred upon the Parliament by
Article 302 is, however, qualified by a rider provided in
clause (1) of Article 303 which says that the power
conferred upon the Parliament by Article 302 shall not
however, empower the Parliament - or the legislature of
State - "to make any law giving, or authorising the giving
of, any preference to one State over another, or making, or
authorising the mating of any discrimination between one
State or another, by virtue of any entry relating to trade
and commerce in any of the Lists in the Seventh Schedule".*
Clause (2) of Article 303, is in the
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It is not very clear why clause (1) of Article 303 uses
the words "nor the legislature of a State" when Article 302
does not refer to the legislature of a State at all.
Probably, the idea was to declare affirmatively in the
interest of removing any doubt - that even a legislature of
a State shall not have the power to make any law giving or
authorizing the giving of any preference to one estate over
another or making or authorising the making of any
discrimination between one state and another by virtue of
their power to make a law with reference to the entries
relating to trade and commerce in the Seventh schedule.
Further, the additional of words "by virtue of any entry
relating to trade and commerce of any of the Lists in the
Seventh Schedule" at the end of the clause have also given
rise to a good amount of controversy, which we shall refer
to later, to the extent relevant.
nature of a classification. It says that "nothing in
clause (1) shall prevent Parliament from making any law
giving, or authorising the giving of, any preference or
making, or authorising the making of, any discrimination if
it is declared by such law that it is necessary to do so for
the purpose of dealing with a situation arising from
scarcity of goods in any part of the territory of India".
Article 304 deals with the power of the State legislatures.
It begins with a non-obstante clause "Notwithstanding
anything in article 301 or article 303". Article 303 was
also referred to in this non-obstante clause evidently for
the reason that clause (1) of Article 303 refers to "the
legislature of a State" besides referring to Parliament.
Article 304 contains two clauses. Clause (a) states that
"the legislature of a State may by law -- (a) impose on
goods imported from other States or the Union territories
any tax to which similar goods manufactured or produced in
that State are subject, so, however, as not to discriminate
between goods so imported and goods so manufactured or
produced". The wording of this clause is of crucial
significance. The first half of the clause would make it
appear at first flush that it merely states the obvious: one
may indeed say that the power to levy tax on goods imported
from other States or Union territories flows from Article
246 read with Lists II and III in the Seventh Schedule and
not from this clause. That is of course so, but then there
is a meaning and a very significant principle underlying the
clauses if one reads it in its entirety. The idea was not
really to empower the State legislatures to levy tax on
goods imported from other States and Union territories -
that they are already empowered by other provisions in the
Constitution - but to declare that power shall not be so
exercised to discriminate against the imported goods vis-a-
vis locally manufactured goods. The clauses though worded in
positive language has negative aspect. It is, in truth, a
provision prohibiting discrimination against the imported
goods. In the matter of levy of tax - and this is important
to bear in mind - the clause tells the State Legislatures -
’tax you may the goods imported from other States/Union
Territories but do not, in that processs discriminate
against them vis-a-vis goods manufactured locally’. In
short, the clause says levy of tax on both ought to be at
the same rate. This was and is a ringing declaration against
the States creating what may be called "tax barriers" - or
fiscal barrier", as they may be called - at or along their
boundaries in the interest of freedom of trade, commerce and
intercourse throughout the territory of India, guaranteed by
Article 301. As we shall presently point out, this clause
does not prevent in any manner the States from encouraging
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or promoting the local industries in such manner as they
think fit so long as they do not use the weapon of taxation
to discriminate against the imported goods vis-a-vis the
locally manufactured goods. To repeat, the clause bars the
States from creating tax barriers - or fiscal barriers, as
they can be called - around themselves and/or insulate
themselves from the remaining territories of India by
erecting such ’tariff walls’. Part-XIII is premised upon the
assumption that so long as a State taxes its residents and
the residents of other States uniformly, there is no
infringement of the freedom guaranteed by Article 301; no
State would tax its people at a higher level merely with a
view to tax the people of other States at that level. And it
is this clause which has a crucial bearing on this case. Now
coming to clause (b), it empowers the legislature of the
State to make a law and "impose such reasonable restrictions
on the freedom of trade, commerce or intercourse with or
within that State as may be required in the public interest;
provided that no Dill 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".
(This proviso has, of course, to be read along with Article
255 which says that if the Act receives the assent of the
Presidents the non-compliance with the requirement of
obtaining the previous sanction to the introduction of the
Bill is cured.) Though in appearance this clause reads like
conferring on the State Legislatures a power akin to the
power conferred upon the Parliament by Article 302, there
are certain distinctions. Firstly, while Article 302, does
not use the expression "reasonable" before the word
"restrictions," this clause does. Secondly, this power can
be exercised by the State Legislature only with the
"previous sanction" of the President-which means the Union
Ministry, or with the assent of the President, as explained
above. It is probably our history which impelled the
founding fathers to lay store by the Central Government in
the matter of imposing restrictions, or reasonable
restrictions, as the case may be on the freedom guaranteed,
it is worthy of notice, is "throughout the territory of
India" and not merely between the States as such; the
emphasis is upon the oneness of the territory of India.
Part-XIII starts with this concept of oneness but then it
provides exceptions to that rule, as stated above, to meet
certain emerging situations. As a matter of fact, it can
well be said that clause (a) of Article 304 is not really an
exception to Article 301, notwithstanding the non-obstante
clause in Article 304 and that it is but a re-statement of a
facet of the very freedom guaranteed by Article 301, viz.,
power of taxation by the States. (We need not refer to the
other articles in Part-XIII for the purposes of this case).
Having noticed the scheme of Part-XIII, we may now turn
to decided cases to see how these articles have been
understood over the last fifty years.
The first decision to be noticed is, of course, in
Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd. v. State of Assam [1961 (10 S.C.R.
809]. The legislature of Assam enacted the Assam taxation
[on goods carried by Roads or Inland Waterways] Act, 1954
providing for levy of tax on certain goods carried by road
or inland waterways in the State of Assam. Its
constitutionality was questioned by a large number of tea
companies who sold most of their produce outside the State
of Assam after transporting it by road or waterways to West
Bengal and other States. The majority opinion
[Gajendragadkar, Wanchoo and Das Gupta, JJ.] stated their
conclusion in the following words:
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"Our conclusion, therefore, is that
when Art.301 provides that trade
shall be free throughout the
territory of India it means 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. It is
the free movement or the transport
of goods from one part of the
country to the other that is
intended to be saved, and if any
Act imposed any direct restrictions
on the very movement of such goods
it attracts the provisions of Art.
301, and its validity can be
sustained only if it satisfies the
requirements of Art.302 or Art.304
of Part XIII. At this stage we
think it is necessary to repeat
that when it is said that the
freedom of the movement of trade
cannot be subject to any
restrictions in the form of taxes
imposed on the carriage of goods or
their movement all that is meant is
that the said restrictions can be
imposed by the State Legislatures
only after satisfying the
requirements of Art.304(b). It is
not as if no restrictions at all
can be imposed on the free movement
of trade."
It was also held:
"Thus considered we think it would
be reasonable and proper to hold
that restrictions freedom from
which is guaranteed by Art. 301,
would be such restrictions as
directly and immediately restrict
or impede the free flow or movement
of trade. Taxes may and do amount
to restrictions; but it is only
such taxes as directly and
immediately restrict trade that
would fall within the purview of
Art.301....We are, therefore,
satisfied that in determining the
limits of the width and amplitude
of the freedom guaranteed by
Art.301 a rational and workable
test to apply would be: Does the
impugned restriction operate
directly or immediately on trade or
its movement?"
In Automobile Transport [Rajasthan] Ltd. v. State of
Rajasthan [1963 (1) S.C.R.491] validity of Section 4(1) of
the Rajasthan Motor Vehicles Taxation Act, 1951 was
challenged. The section levied a tax on all motor vehicles
used in any public place or kept for use at the rates
specified in the Schedules. Violation of the provision
invited penalties provided under Section 11. Certain
operators challenged the Act as violative of Articles 301
and 304(b). Since serious doubts were expressed with respect
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to the propositions enunciated by the majority and by Shah,
J. in Atiabari tea Co. Ltd., the matters were referred to a
larger Constitution Bench of seven Judges By a majority of
4:3, (S.K.Das, Kapur and Sarkaria,JJ joined by Subba
Rao,J.], this Court upheld the constitutionality of the Act
on the ground that the taxes levied by it are compensatory
in nature and, therefore, outside the purview of Article
301. Once outside the purview of Article 301, it was held,
Article 304 was also not attracted. The propositions
emerging from the opinion of Das,J. have been neatly
summarised in the head-note of the Supreme Court Reports in
the following words:
"(i) The concept of freedom of
trade, commerce and intercourse
postulated by Art.301 must be
understood in the context of an
ordinary society and as part of a
Constitution which envisaged a
distribution of powers between the
States and the Union, and if so
understood, the concept must
recognise the need and legitimacy
of some degree of regulatory
control, whether by the Union or
the States. Regulatory measures or
measures imposing compensatory
taxes for the use of trading
facilities did not hamper trade,
commerce and intercourse but rather
facilitated them and, therefore,
were not hit by the freedom
declared by Art.301; such measures
need not comply with the
requirements of the provisions of
Art.304(b) of the Constitution.
(2) In view of the provisions of
Art. 245, the restrictions in Part
XIII of the Constitution applied to
taxation laws; a and such laws were
not confined only to by legislation
with respect to entries relating to
trade and commerce in any of the
lists in the Seventh Schedule.
(3) On a proper construction of the
Act and the Schedules, the taxes
imposed were really taxes for the
use of the roads in Rajasthan. In
basing the taxes on passenger
capacity or loading capacity, the
legislature had merely evolved a
method and measure of compensation
demanded by the State, but the
takes were still compensation and
charge for regulation."
Subba Rao, concurred with the above propositions though
the learned Judge stated the propositions flowing from his
opinion at Pages 564-565 separately. The majority opined
that "the interpretation which has accepted by the majority
in the Atiabari Tea Co. case is corrects but subject to this
clarification. 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 proviso to Art. 304 (b) of
Constitution."[Emphasis supplied]
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Firm A.T.B. Mehtab Majid & Co. v. State of Madras [1963
Suppl. (2) S.C.R.435] arose under the Madras general Sales
Tax Act. The effect of Section 3 of the Act read with Rule
16 was that tanned hides and skins imported from outside the
State of Madras and sold within the State were subject to a
higher rate of tax than the tax imposed on hides or skins
tanned and sold within the State. Similarly, hides or skins
imported from outside the State after purchase in their raw
condition and then tanned inside the State were also subject
to higher rate of tax than hides or skins purchased in raw
condition in the State and tanned within the state. This
distinction was attacked as violative of Articles 301 and
304(a) of the Constitution. Following the law laid down in
Atiabari Tea Co.Ltd. and Rajasthan Automobiles, the
Constitution Bench held:
"It is therefore now well settled
that taxing laws can be
restrictions on trade, commerce and
intercourses if they hamper the
flow of trade and if they are not
what can be termed to be
compensatory taxes or regulatory
measures. Sales tax, of the kind
under consideration here cannot be
said to be a measure regulating any
trade or a compensatory tax levied
for the use of trading facilities.
Sales tax which has the effect of
discriminating between goods of one
State and goods of anothers may
affect the free flow of trade and
it will then offend against Art.301
and will be valid only if it comes
within the terms of Art.304(a).
Article 304(a) enables the
Legislature of a State to make laws
effecting trades commerce and
intercourse. It enables the
imposition of taxes on goods from
other States if similar goods in
the State are subjected to similar
taxes, so as not to discriminate
between the goods manufactured or
produced in that State and the
goods which are imported from other
States. This means that if the
effect of sales-tax on tanned hides
or skins imported from outside is
that the latter becomes subject to
a higher tax by the application of
the proviso to sub-rule of r.16 of
the Rules, then the tax is
discriminatory and unconstitutional
and must be struck down."
State of Madras v. N.K.Nataraja Mudaliar [1968 (3)
S.C.R.829] considered the validity of sub-sections (2),2(A)
and ( ) of Section 8 of the Central Sales Act. The
respondent‘s case was that they were violative of Articles
301, 302, 303 and 304. It was held by Shah,J. [speaking for
himself, Mitter and Vaidyalingam,JJ.] that while the Central
sales tax imposed under Section 3 violates Article 301 being
a tax on movement of goods, it was saved by Article 302. The
levy of different rates by sub-section (2A) was justified on
the ground that the Act was meant for imposing tax to be
collected and retained by the State and that in such a case
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the provision does not amount to a law contemplated by
clause (1) of Article 303. For the same reason, it was held,
leaving it to the States to levy tax at different rates also
does not amount to practising discrimination. Article
304(a), it is significant to note, was said to have no
application for the reason that it was not a case where tax
was imposed on imported goods at a different rate from the
rate leviable on goods manufactured locally. Certain
observations made by Shah,j. are relied upon by the learned
counsel for Jammu & Kashmir and must, therefore, be set out:
"The flow of trade does not
necessarily depend upon the rates
of sales tax: it depends upon a
variety of factors, such as the
source of supply, place of
consumption, existence of trade
channels, the rated of freight,
trading facilities, availability of
efficient transport and other
facilities for carrying on trade.
Instances can easily be imagined of
cases in which notwithstanding the
lower rate of tax in a particular
part of the counts goods may be
purchased from another part, where
a higher rate of tax prevails.
Supposing in a particular State in
respect of a particular commodity,
the rate of tax is 2% but if the
benefit of that low rate is offset
by the freight which a merchant in
another State may have pay for
carrying that commodity over a long
distance, the merchant would be
willing to purchase the goods from
a nearer State, even though the
rate of tax in that State may be
higher. Existence of long-standing
business relations, availability of
communications, credit facilities
and a host of other factors -
natural and business - enter into
the maintenance of trade relations
and the free flow of trade cannot
necessarily be deemed to have been
obstructed merely because in a
particular state the rate of tax on
sales is higher than the rates
prevailing in other States."
[ Emphasis added ]
It is significant to notice that these observations
were made in the context of the argument that different
rates of Central sales tax in different States on sale of
similar goods is discriminatory. It was not a case like the
present one where a State is levying a different/higher rate
of tax on goods imported from other States than the rate
applicable to sales of similiar goods manufactured within
that State. We are unable to see how these observations help
the State.
Hedge,J. concurred with Shah,J.
State of Tamil Nadu v. Sita Lakshmi Mills [1974 (3)
S.C.R.1] holds that Section 8(2) of the Central Sales Tax
Act is not violative of Articles 301, 302 and 303.
H.Anraj v. Government of Tamil Nadu [1985 Suppl.(3)
S.C.R.342] is a decision af a Bench of two learned Judges.
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The Government of Tamil Nadu exempted the lottery tickets
issued by it totally while levying tax on lottery tickets
issued by other governments and sold in Tamil Nadu. The
Court held that laws imposing taxes can amount to
restriction on trade, commerce and intercourse if they
hampered the free flow of trade unless they are compensatory
in nature and that the sales tax which had the effect of
discriminating between goods of one State and another may
affect free flow of trade and would be offensive to Article
301 unless saved by Article 304(a). It was held that the
direct and immediate result of the notification was to
impose an unfavourable and discriminatory tax.
India Cement & Ors. v. State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors.
[1986 (1) S.C.C.743] is also a decision of two learned
Judges. The Government of Andhra Pradesh had issued two
notifications, one under Section 9{1) of the State Sales Tax
Act and the other under Section 8(5) of the Central Sales
Tax Act. Under the first notification, sales tax on sale of
"cement manufactured by cement factories situated in the
State and sold to the manufacturing units situated within
the State for the purpose of........ " was reduced from
13.5% to 4% Under the second notifications the Central sales
tax was reduced to two percent. The Government of Karnataka
also issued a similar notification reducing in similiar
situations Central sales tax from 15% to 2%. These were
challenged as violative of Articles 301 and 304 and the
challenge was upheld, The first ground upheld was that the
"reasonable restrictions" contemplated by Article 304(b) can
be imposed by a law made by legislature of the State and not
by the orders of the Government, i.e., by executive action.*
The second ground given, by the Bench [Ranganath Misra and
M.M.Dutt,JJ.] is that "variation of the rate of inter-State
sales tax does affect free trade and commerce and creates a
local preference which is contrary to the scheme of Part
XIII of the Constitution" and hence bad. In the course of
discussion, the Bench observed:
"There can be no dispute that
taxation is a deterrent against
free flow. As a result of
favourable or unfavourable
treatment by way of taxation, the
course of flow of trade gets
regulated either adversely or
favourably. If the scheme which
Part XIII guarantees has to be
preserved in national interest, it
is necessary that the provisions in
the Article must be strictly
complied with. One had to recall
the farsighted
This ground appears to be of doubtful validity as
pointed out by a Three-Judge-Bench in Video Electronics v.
State of Punjab [1990 (3) S.C.C.87].
observations of Gajendragadkar,J.
in Atiabari Tea Co. case and the
observations then made obviously
apply to cases to the type which is
now before us."
The facts in Weston Electronics v. State of Gujarat
[1988 (2) S.C.C.568] are similar. Until 1981, the tax on
sale of electronic goods under the Gujarat Sales Tax Act was
fifteen percent whether the goods were manufactured within
the State of Gujarat and sold or imported from outside. In
1981 - and again in 1986 however, a distinction was made
between locally manufactured goods and those imported into
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the State. A lower rate was prescribed for the former. This
was held to be discriminatory and offensive to Articles 301
and 304.
In West Bengal Hosiery Association. v. State of Bihar
[1988 (4) S.C.C.134], the facts are practically similar to
those in Weston Electronics as also the conclusion.
Video Electronics (P) Ltd. v. State of Punjab (1990 (3)
S.C.C.87]: inasmuch as strong and almost exclusive reliance
is placed by the learned counsel for the State of Jammu &
Kashmir on this decision, it is necessary to examine the
facts of and the law laid down in this decision (rendered by
a Bench of three learned Judges) alittle more closely. In is
decision, notifications issued by two States, viz., Uttar
Pradesh and Punjab were considered. The notification issued
by the Government of Uttar Pradesh provided an exemption in
favour of new units established in specified areas and for
the prescribed period [three to seven years] specified
therein. It was further stipulated that the said benefit
shall be available only to those new units which have
commenced their production between the two dates specified
by the government. The Punjab notification provided that
"rate of the sales tax payable by an electronic
manufacturing unit existing in Punjab in cases of electronic
goods specified in Annexure-A was prescribed at one per cent
as against the normal 12 per cent". [This is how the purport
of the provision has been set out in the decision.] Both
notifications were impugned as violative of Articles 301 and
304. The Bench comprising Mukharji,CJ, Ranganathan and
Verma,JJ. upheld both the notifications. So far as the Uttar
Pradesh notification was concerned, it was held that
inasmuch as it was a case of grant of exemption "to a
special class for a limited period on specific conditions"
and was not extended to all the producers of those goods,
it does not offend the freedom guaranteed by Article 301.
Similarly, in the case of Punjab notification, it was held
that since the exemption is for certain specified goods and
also because "an overwhelmingly large number of local
manufacturers of similar goods are subject to sales tax", it
cannot be said that local manufacturers were favoured as
against the outside manufacturers. In the course of their
judgment, the Bench made certain observations which are
strongly relied upon by Shri M.L.Verma,J. The observations
are to the effect that while judging whether a particular
exemption granted by the State offends Articles 301 and 304,
it is necessary to take into account various factors. A
State which is technically and economically weak on account
of various factors should be allowed to develop economically
by granting concessions, exemptions and subsidies to new
industries. All parts of the country are not equally
developed, industrially and economically. The concept of
economic unity is an ever-changing one; it cannot be
imprisoned in a strait-jacket. India is not already an
economic unit. Economic unity is possible only when all the
units of the country develop equally. The power to grant
exemption is inherent in all taxing statutes end the
Government cannot be deprived of this power by invoking
Articles 301 and 304. The concept of economic barriers must
be understood in a dynamic sense. The concept of economic
unity or economic barriers must be read along with the power
of exemption inhering in the State Governments. Where every
State is exempting or reducing the rates of sales tax, there
can be no question of an economic war between them. "A
backward State or a disturbed State cannot with parity
engage in competition with advanced or developed States.
Even within a State there are often backward areas which can
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be developed only if some special incentives are granted. If
the incentives in the form of subsidies or grant are given
to any part of (sic or) units of a State so that it may come
out of its limping or infancy to compete as equals with
others, that in our opinion, does not and cannot contravene
the spirit and the letter of Part XIII of the Constitution.
However, this is permissible only if there is a valid
reason, that is to say, if there are justifiable and
rational reasons for differentiation. If there is none, it
will amount to hostile discrimination."
All the above observations were made to justify (1)
grant of incentives and subsidies and (2) exemption granted
to new industries, of a specified type [small scale
industries commencing production within the two specified
dates] and for a short period. They were not meant to nor
can they be read as justifying a blanket exemption to all
small scale industries in the State irrespective of their
date of establishment. The case before us clearly falls
within the ratio of the Constitution Bench decision
A.T.M.Mehtab Majid and the decisions in India Cement, West
Bengal Hosiery Association and Weston Electronics, The
limited exception and Weston Electronics. The limited
exception created in Video Electronics does not help the
State herein for the reason that exemption concerned herein
is neither confined to "new industries", nor is
circumscribed by other conditions of the nature stipulated
in the Uttar Pradesh notification. It is not possible to go
on extending the limited exception created in the said
judgment, by stages, which would have the effect of robbing
the salutory principle underlying Part-XIII of its
substance. Indeed, it has been the contention of Sri Salve
that, on principle, the exception carved out in Video
Electronics unsustainable. For the purpose of this case, it
is not necessary for us to say anything about the
correctness of Video Electronics. Suffice it to say that the
limited exception carved out therein cannot be widened or
expanded to cover cases of a different kind. It must be held
that the total exemption granted in favour of small scale
industries in Jammu & Kashmir producing edible oil [there
are no large scale industries in that State producing edible
oil] is not sustainable in law.
Sri Salve has brought to our notice a recent decision
of the Supreme Court of U.S.A. in West Lynn Creamery, Inc.,
Vs. Jonathan Healy, Commissioner of Massachusetts Department
of Food and Agriculture - judgment rendered on June 17, 1994
in Case No.93-141. The petitioner was a Milk dealer licenced
to do business in the State of Massachusetts. Most of the
milk consumed in that State was imported from other States.
In 1992, the Government declared a State of emergency in
view of declining trend in the price of raw milk. It found
at the cost of production of milk in Massachusetts is higher
than the cost of production, in other States and that to
preserve and protect the milk industry in Massachusetts, it
is necessary to take certain measures. Accordingly, an order
was issued soon after the declaration of emergency which
created the Massachusetts Dairy Equalization Fund. A levy
was imposed upon all the milk sold in the State. At the end
of each month, the proceeds of such levy were distributed
among the producers of milk in Massachusetts alone. This
order was attacked as violative of the Commerce Clause
contained in Article 1(8) of the United States Constitution,
which reads: "The Congress shall have power - to regulate
Commerce with Foreign nations and among the several States,
and with the Indian Tribes." The Court held [with one
learned Judge, Scalia,J., concurring with the conclusion but
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on a reasoning different from that of the majority] that the
order is bad. The majority observed that the "‘negative’
aspect of the Commerce Clause prohibits economic
protectionism-that is, regulatory measures designed to
benefit in-state economic interests by burdening out-of-
state competitors....Thus, state statutes that clearly
discriminate against interstate commerce are routinely
struck down....unless the discrimination is demonstrably
justified by a valid factor unrelated to economic
protectionism". The Court observed that the avowed purpose
and undisputed effect of the order is to enable her cost
Massachusetts Dairy Farmers to compete with lower cost dairy
farmers in other States and that the premium payments are
effectively a tax which makes milk produced out of state
more expensive. The Court further observed that a pure
subsidy funded out of general revenues ordinarily imposes no
burden on inter-State commerce and that it merely assists
local business. The impugned order, however, the Court
pointed out, was "funded principally from taxes on the sale
of milk produced in other States........". To the same
effect is the decision in Bacchus Imports Limited v. Dias
[(1984) - 460 U.S.263].
Now, what is the ratio of the decisions of this Court
so far as clause (a) of Article 304 is concerned? In our
opinion, it is this: the States are certainly free to
exercise the power to levy taxes on goods imported from
other States/Union territories but this freedom, or power
shall bot be so exercised as to bring about a discrimination
between the imported goods and the similar goods
manufactured or produced in that State. The clause deals
only with discrimination by means of taxation; it prohibits
it. The prohibition cannot be extended beyond the power of
taxation. It means in the immediate context that States are
free to encourage and promoted the establishment and growth
or industries within their States by all such means as they
think proper but they cannot, in that process, subject the
goods imported from other States to a discriminatory rate of
taxation, i.e., a higher rated to sales tax vis-a-vis
similar goods manufactured/produced within that State and
sold within that State. Prohibition is against
discriminatory taxation by the States. It matters not how
this discrimination is brought about. A limited exception
has no doubt been carved out in Video Electronics but, as
indicated hereinbefore, that exception cannot be enlarged
lest it eat up the main provision. So far as the present
case is concerned it does not fall within the limited
exception aforesaid; it falls within the ratio of
A.T.M.Mehtab Majid and the other cases following it. It must
be held that by exempting unconditionally the edible oil
produced within the State of Jammu & Kashmir altogether from
sales tax, even if it is for a period of ten years, while
subjecting the edible oil produced in other States to sales
tax at eight percents the State of Jammu s Kashmir has
brought about discrimination by taxation prohibited by
Article 304(a) of the Constitution.
We are unable to see any substance in the objection
raised by Sri Verma that not having attacked the exemption
notification when the rate of tax was four percents the
appellants should not be allowed to question the same when
the rate of tax has climbed to eight percent. There can be
no question of any acquiscence in matters affecting
constitutional rights or limitations. Similarly the argument
that the volume of trade of the appellants has not shown a
downward trend inspite of the said exemption is equally
immaterial apart from the fact that an explanation is
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offered therefor by Sri Salve. Yet another contention of Sri
Verma that the principle of classification applicable under
Article 14 is equally applicable under Articles 301 and
304(a) is of little help to the respondent-State. Article 14
speaks of equality; Article 301 speaks of freedom and
Article 304(a) speaks of uniform taxation of both the
imported goods and the locally produced goods by the States.
According to Sri Verma, edible oil produced and sold in the
State of Jammu & Kashmir and the edible oil, produced in
other States and sold in the State of Jammu & Kashmir fall
in two different classes and that the said classification is
designed to achieve the objective of industrialisation of
the State. We find it difficult to appreciate how can the
concept of classification be read into clause (a) of Article
304 to undo the precise object and purpose underlying the
clause. Sri Verma repeatedly stressed that the object
underlying the impugned measure is a laudable one and that
it seeks to serve and promote the interest of the State of
Jammu & Kashmir which is economically and industrially an
undeveloped State besides being a disturbed State. We may
agree on this score but then the measures necessary in that
behalf have to be taken by the appropriate authority and in
the appropriate manner. Part-XIII of the Constitution itself
contains adequate provisions to remedy such a situation and
there is no reason why the necessary measures cannot be
taken to protect the edible oil industry in the State in
accordance with the provisions of the said Part. Keeping the
said aspect in view, we invoke our power under Article 142
of the Constitution and mould the relief to suit the
exigencies of the situation.
We declare that the exemption granted by Notification
No.S.R.O.93 of 1991 to local manufacturers/producers of
edible oil is violative of the provisions contained in
Articles 301 and 304(a). At the same time, we direct that:
(a) the appellants shall not be entitled to claim any
amounts by way of refund or otherwise by virtue of or, as a
consequence of the declaration contained herein and (b) that
the declaration of invalidity of the impugned notification
shall take effect on and from April 1,1997. Till that date,
i.e., upto and inclusive of 31st March, 1997, the impugned
notification shall continue to be effective and operative.
Appeal allowed in the above terms.
There shall be no order as to costs.