Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Writ Petition (civil) 567 of 1994
PETITIONER:
Godfrey Phillips(I)Ltd.& Anr.
RESPONDENT:
State of U.P.& Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/01/2005
BENCH:
R.C.LAHOTI CJI & RUMA PAL & ARUN KUMAR & G.P.MATHUR & C.K.THAKKER
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
With
W.P.(C) Nos. 568-569/94 and CA Nos. 123 -125/95
C. A. No. 6891/96, C.A. No. 7870/96,
C.A. Nos. 2123-2127/99, C.A. Nos. 2552-2553/99,
C.A. No. 6365/2000
DELIVERED BY:
RUMA PAL, J.
RUMA PAL, J.
The assessees/appellants are either manufacturers,
dealers or sellers of tobacco and tobacco products. They have
challenged the imposition and levy of a luxury tax on tobacco
and tobacco products by treating them as "luxuries" within the
meaning of the word in Entry 62 of List II.
Entry 62 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution relates to the exclusive power of State
Legislatures to make laws with respect to "Taxes on luxuries,
including taxes on entertainments, amusements, betting and
gambling". Several States have enacted legislation which
they claim are referable to the right to tax luxuries under this
Entry. We are concerned with the Uttar Pradesh Tax on
Luxuries Act, 1955, the Andhra Pradesh Tax on Luxuries Act,
1987 and the West Bengal Tax on Luxuries Act, 1994. The
legislative competence of these statutes was challenged by
the assessees before different fora - in some cases partially
successfully, in others not. To the extent the assessees were
unsuccessful, they have challenged the decisions before us.
In those cases in which the assessees were successful the
concerned State has filed the appeals.
The States have differed in their interpretation of the word
"luxuries" of Entry 62 List II since they have argued in the
context and from the point of view of the particular statute
sought to be defended as legislatively competent. Thus
although the principal question to be resolved would be the
ambit of Entry 62 of List-II, the arguments require a
determination of the nature of the tax sought to be levied by the
three statutes in dispute before us, before we resolve the
question.
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Uttar Pradesh Tax on Luxuries Act 1995
On 14th May, 1994 an Ordinance known as the Uttar
Pradesh Tax on Luxuries Act 1994 (being U.P. Ordinance
No.8/94) was promulgated. The object of the Ordinance as
stated in the preamble was to "provide for levy and collection of
tax on supply of tobacco and matters connected therewith or
incidental there to". It consisted of a few sections of which
relevant ones are quoted.
Section 3 of the Ordinance which provided for the levy of
luxury tax read as follows:-
"Levy of luxury tax.\027Every tobacconist shall
be liable to pay luxury tax on his turnover of
"receipts" at such rate, not exceeding twenty
five per cent, as the State Government may, by
notification, specify and different rates may be
specified for different classes of tobacco:
Provided that a "tobacconist" who does not
manufacture or receive tobacco from outside
the State shall be liable to pay tax on his
turnover of receipts from the date his turnover
of receipts exceeds two lakh rupees:
Provided further that in a chain of supply of
tobacco, the tax shall be realized from the
earliest of the "tobacconists" in the State and a
successive "tobacconist" shall be exempt from
payment of tax if he furnishes, in the manner
prescribed, proof of payment of tax on such
tobacco."
(Emphasis supplied)
The words "receipt" and "tobacconist" which have
been emphasized in the section by us had been respectively
defined in Section 2(e) and 2(h) as follows:-
2 (e) "receipt" means:-
(i) in respect of supply of tobacco by a
tobacconist made by way of sale, the
amount or valuable consideration
received or receivable by him for such
sale including any sum charged for
anything done by him in respect of the
tobacco so sold at the time of or before
the delivery thereof and the price if
charged separately, of any primary or
secondary packing, other than the cost of
freight or delivery or the amount realized
as luxury tax when such cost or amount is
separately charged; and
(ii) in respect of supply of tobacco by a
tobacconist made otherwise than by way
of sale, the normal price at which the
tobacco is sold, and the term "normal
price" shall have the same meaning as
assigned to it in Section 4 of the Central
Excise and Salt Act, 1944;
2 (h) "tobacconist" means:-
(i) a manufacturer whose turnover of
receipts in a year exceeds one lakh
rupees who supplies tobacco by way of
sale or otherwise and includes any
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person who for the purpose of business
gets the manufacturing done from any
other person, whether or not on job work
basis, but does not include any person
who manufactures tobacco only on job
work basis without obtaining any
proprietary right over it at any stage;
(ii) any person who for the purposes of
business brings or causes to be brought
tobacco in the State or to whom any
tobacco is dispatched from any place
outside the State and who supplies such
tobacco by way of sale or otherwise;
(iii) any person who supplies tobacco from a
place within the State to any place
outside the State by way of sale or
otherwise;
(iv) any person who does not buy or
otherwise obtain unmanufactured
tobacco under a brand name but
supplies by way of sale or otherwise
such unmanufactured tobacco in a
sealed container under a brand name;
Explanation:- For the removal of doubts, it is
clarified that a person:-
(1) who exclusively supplies unmanufactured
tobacco whether or not in a sealed container
but not under a brand name; or
(2) not being a person referred to in sub-clause (iii)
who exclusively obtains tobacco by way of
purchase or otherwise from a registered
tobacconist;
shall not be deemed to be a tobacconist for the
purposes or this clause;
Briefly therefore the UP Act provides for the levy of
luxury tax on the receipts from the supply of tobacco by a
tobacconist. It is the act of supply which is the taxable event.
Indeed the preamble of the UP Ordinance as it originally stood
said that the object was to provide for "levy and collection of tax
on the supply of tobacco". Here we may briefly indicate the
core of the controversy between the parties : If the act is in pith
and substance referable to Entry 54 of List II within the words
"taxes on the sale or purchase of goods" in that entry as the
assessees claim, then the tax would be subject to certain
constitutional curbs on the power of the State to levy sales tax
on tobacco. If on the other hand it is referable to Entry 62 of
List II as a "tax on luxury" there would be no such restriction.
Writ petitions had been filed by the assessees in the High
Court of Allahabad challenging U.P. Ordinance No.8/94 on the
ground that it was ultra vires Articles 14, 19, 245, 286, 301 and
304 of the Constitution. At the same time writ petitions under
Article 32 of the Constitution were filed in this Court for a
declaration that U.P. Ordinance 8 of 1994 was ultra vires the
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Constitution, basically on the ground that the levy was in
substance, a tax on sales.
During the pendency of the proceedings, U.P. Ordinance
No.8 of 1994 was amended by U.P. Ordinance No.22 of 1994
which was published in the Official Gazette on
28th September, 1994. The preamble and the definition of
’tobacconist’ were altered. As far as the preamble was
concerned, the phrase tax on supply of tobacco was changed
to read " luxury tax on tobacco". But despite the change in the
preamble there was no corresponding change in the taxable
event in the body of the statute which continued to remain a tax
on supply. The Explanation to the definition of tobacconist was
also substituted after deleting the earlier explanation. The
substitution is not material.
On 2nd November, 1994, the High Court allowed the writ
petitions impugning the levy of luxury tax. The High Court held
that the levy was intra vires the Constitution and was
legislatively competent. Following the decision of this
Court in A.B. Abdul Kadir and Ors. vs. State of Kerala (1976)
2 SCR 690 it was held that tobacco was an article of luxury
and a tax on tobacco would be a luxury tax within the meaning
of Entry 62 of List II. According to the High Court, tobacco
included all forms of tobacco as provided under the Ordinance
and could be taxed within the State whether it was sent from
outside the State or sent outside the State and every
person dealing in luxury goods such as tobacco would be liable
to luxury tax irrespective of where the tobacco may be
consumed. However, the High Court held that the imposition
of luxury tax impeded the freedom of trade and commerce and
intercourse and was violative of Article 301 of the Constitution
and since no prior assent of the President had been obtained
under Article 304(b), it was held that the State could not levy
the tax. The argument of the State that tobacco was
hazardous to health and, therefore, there was no fundamental
right to trade in it was negatived. It was held that tobacco could
not be put on par with liquor which had been held by this Court
to be "res extra commercium". It was also held that the
impugned levy was not in any way a regulatory measure. The
High Court also came to the conclusion that classification for
the purpose of levy of the tax in respect of products of tobacco
had been made on an arbitrary basis. The Writ petitions were
accordingly allowed and the levy of luxury tax was struck down
on the ground that it violated Articles 14 and 301 of the
Constitution. Special Leave Petitions have been filed from the
decision of the Allahabad High Court both by the writ petitioner
(to the extent that the High Court held that the levy was
legislatively competent) as well as the State of Uttar Pradesh
which assailed the ultimate conclusion of the High Court.
Leave was granted in the several special leave
petitions on 2nd January, 1995. The appeals were directed to
be tagged with the writ petitions under Art. 32. Interim relief
was granted to the effect that the dealers (tobacconists) would
file their returns with the competent authority in accordance
with the impugned Ordinance. No action on the returns so
filed would be taken by the authorities during the pendency of
the appeal. In the event the challenge of the dealers failed,
the dealers would be liable for payment of the amounts due in
accordance with the assessment made on the basis of the
returns so filed.
On 14th May, 1995, U.P. Ordinance No.22/94 was
repealed and replaced by the Uttar Pradesh Luxury Tax Act
1995 which came into force on the said date. The Act
reproduced Ordinance 22/94 without any material changes. The
pleadings before this Court were suitably amended.
On 17th September, 1995, the U.P. Tax on Luxuries Act
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1995 was repealed by U.P. Ordinance No.39 of 1995.
Therefore, there has been no luxury tax in the State of U.P.
since 1995 and as far as the State of U.P is concerned, the
issue is of relevance for the period 14th May, 1994 to 17th
September, 1995.
The Andhra Pradesh Tax on Luxuries Act, 1987
The Act is broadly similar to the UP Act both as to the
scope and operation with regard to the levy of luxury tax on
the sale and supply of commodities and in particular tobacco.
The Act initially provided for the levy of luxury tax on "luxuries
provided in a hotel and in a corporate hospital". In 1996 the
Act was amended by the AP Act No. 28 of 1996 by which
luxury tax was sought to be levied on specified commodities "
for enjoyment over and above the necessities of life" (S.2
(ggg)) The commodities specified are chewing tobacco in the
different forms and cigarettes. The tax is leviable at the first
point of supply of the tobacco in the State " by sale or
otherwise". Section 3-A which was introduced in 1996
provides for "Tax on tobacconist". It reads:
"3-A Tax on Tobacconist - (1) Subject to
the provisions of this Act, there shall be
levied and collected a tax, on the turnover
of receipts of a tobacconist relating to the
supply of luxuries, namely, tobacco
products, specified in the schedule by way
of sale or otherwise, at the rate of tax and
at the point of levy specified in the
schedule".
"Receipt" has been defined in Section 2(jj) as
"Receipt" in relation to a tobacconist means,-
(a) in respect of supply of the Luxuries, like
tobacco products made by him or by others
by way of sale, the amount of valuable
consideration received or receivable by him
for such sale including any sum charged for
anything done by him in respect of the
tobacco products so sold at the time of or
before the delivery thereof and the price, if
charged separately, of any primary or
secondary packing; and
(b) in respect of the supply of luxuries of
tobacco products made by him otherwise than
by way of sale, the normal price at which such
tobacco products are sold".
A tobacconist has been defined in S.2(kkk) as
"Tobacconist" means a person who
supplies whether by way of sale or
otherwise luxuries, like, tobacco products
manufactured by him or purchased from
other States or from other persons in this
State and includes any person who for the
purpose of Business gets the
manufacturing done from any person
whether or not on job work basis".
Several writ petitions were filed before the A.P. High
Court challenging the amendment to the Act claiming that the
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tax was a tax on the sale of goods and insofar as it violated the
constitutional discipline of Art. 286, 301, Art. 246 read with
Entry 52 List I and Art. 14, was ultra vires. These were
dismissed by a common judgment dated 12th November,
1998. The High Court upheld the validity of the AP Act and
held that the State was competent to enact the Act under Entry
62 of List II. The High Court held that the Act was a tax on the
supply of luxury goods namely; tobacco and tobacco products,
and it was not a tax on sale as had been contended by the writ
petitioners. It was held that the incidence of sale was adopted
as a measure for the purpose of assessment and did not alter
the essential character of the levy. It was held that the State
had not encroached upon the field occupied by Parliament
under Entry 52 of the List by the Tobacco Board Act, 1975 and
that there was no violation of Article 301 because under the Act
inter-state transactions were exempted from the levy of luxury
tax. The challenge to the tax on the ground of Article 14 was
also negatived.
Leave was granted in several special leave petitions
which were filed from the decision of the AP High Court on 1st
April, 1999 and an interim order was granted in the same
terms as had been granted in matters arising out of the
decision of the Allahabad High Court.
The West Bengal Luxury Tax Act, 1994
Section 2(C) of the Act, defines luxuries as meaning
"The commodities, as specified in the schedule, for enjoyment
over and above the necessaries of life". Initially, the scheduled
items related to tobacco and tobacco products as well as pan
masala. The schedule has been amended from time to time
and now contains 34 items, under the headings "luxuries". The
original items are covered by items 1 to 5 of the Schedule.
Items 6 and 8 to 21 deal with mill-made textile fabrics,
footwear, trousers and jeans, shirts and T-shirts, coat jackets,
blazer and suit, watches, bath-room fittings, electric switches,
sun-glasses, fountain pens and dot pens, home theatre
equipment, music system and Video camera. Each of these
items are classed as luxury if their values exceed particular
rates specified against each item. Items 22 to 34 relate to
items not manufactured or made in India. These items which
do not refer to any value are silk yarn, foreign liquor, toys,
electrical and electronic goods, cosmetics, umbrellas, tea,
glassware and crockery, soaps, chocolate and confectionery ,
readymade garments, motorcycles and motor vehicles.
Section 4 which is the charging Section provides:
"4. Incidence of luxury tax.-- Every stockist
shall be liable to pay a luxury tax on his
turnover of stock of luxuries at such rate, not
exceeding twenty per centum, as the State
Government may by notification fix in this
behalf, and different rates may be fixed for
different class or classes of luxuries.
"Stockist" has been defined in Section 2(i) as:-
" "stockist" means a person who has, in
customary course of business, in his
possession of, or control over, a stock of
luxuries whether manufactured, made or
processed by him in West Bengal, or brought
by him into West Bengal, either on his own
account or on account of others, from any
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place outside West Bengal, for stocking,
vending, supplying or distributing such
luxuries in West Bengal";
The other relevant definition is contained in Section 2(h)
which defines ’stock of luxuries’ as meaning:-
"the quantity of luxuries that a stockist
receives in, or procures for, his stock, or
records or accounts for in his books of
account, in West Bengal during any
prescribed period for stocking, vending,
supplying or distributing to a wholesaler,
dealer, retailer, distributor or any other
person, but shall not include any
quantity or such luxuries held by him in
stock on the first day of such prescribed
period;"
The luxury tax payable by a stockist under the Act is to be
levied under Section 5:
"Levy of luxury tax. - The luxury tax
payable by a stockist under this Act shall
be levied on that part of his turnover of
stock of luxuries during any prescribed
period which remains after deducting
therefrom his such turnover during that
period representing \026
(a) the value of such stock of
luxuries as shown to the
satisfaction of the prescribed
authority to have been
dispatched to places outside
West Bengal;
(b) the value of stock of luxuries of
such class or classes or
description as may be prescribed".
"Value of stock or luxuries" has been defined in
Section 2 (m) as follows:
""value of stock of luxuries" means.\027
(i) in respect of any stockist, being a
manufacturer of any of the
luxuries, the value of such luxuries
calculated at the ex-factory price
at the time of receipt or entry
thereof in his stock, and ;
(ii) in respect of any stockist, being an
importer of any of the luxuries, the
value of such luxuries calculated
at the price thereof as per
consignor’s bill, invoice or
consignment note or other
document of like nature.
And shall include\027
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(A) excise duty and central sales tax, if
any, paid or payable on such
luxuries by the manufacturer or
importer thereof , as the case may
be, and
(B) transport charges and insurance
charges, if any, for carrying such
luxuries to any premises, godown,
warehouse or any other place for
delivery to a wholesaler, dealer,
retailer, distributor or any other
person;
The remaining Sections are not material for the purposes
of our decision in these appeals.
The W.B. Act was challenged before the West Bengal
Taxation Tribunal inter alia on the grounds that it trespassed
into fields exclusively reserved for Parliament under Entries 83
and 84 of List I and was legislatively incompetent, that it
contravened Art. 301 of the Constitution and on other grounds
similar to those raised by the petitioners before the High Courts
of Allahabad and Andhra Pradesh. However, the applicants
conceded that in view of the decision of this Court in Abdul
Kadir (supra), cigarettes could be treated as "luxuries" under
Entry 62 of List II. The challenge of the applicants to the Act
was negatived by a majority of 2:1 on 20th December, 1995.
In two matters special leave petitions were filed from the
decision of the Tribunal. Leave was granted and the matters
tagged with pending Appeals and Writ Petitions arising out of
the decision of the Allahabad High Court. No stay was granted.
One applicant challenged the decision of the Tribunal before
the Calcutta High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution. The
High Court, by its judgment dated 29th September, 2000,
dismissed the writ petition and upheld the validity of the Act.
The decision of the High Court is also impugned before us and
is listed as Civil Appeal No. 6365 of 2000.
According to Mr. Harish Salve, appearing for some of
the assessees, the word "luxuries" could not be construed to
mean goods and the State’s power to legislate in respect of
luxuries under Entry 62 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to
the Constitution did not extend to tax the sale, manufacture, or
import of any goods. It is submitted that a tax on goods would
have to mean a tax on some facet of the goods commencing
with its manufacture and ending with its consumption.
Taxation on each and every facet of goods had been
specifically provided for in the legislative lists in the Seventh
Schedule. For example excise duty on the manufacture of
goods is covered under Entry 84 of List I, tax on the sale of
goods is covered by Entries 92-A and 92-B of List I and Entry
54 of List II and duties on import and export of goods were
referable to Entry 83 of List I. In each of these cases higher
rates of tax were charged or duty levied when the
commodities in question were of higher value. According to
Mr. Salve if the word ’luxuries’ in Entry 62 were construed to
include goods, then it would allow the State to legislate on all
these several facets merely by describing the goods as
luxuries. Similarly if the word ’luxuries’ was to be understood
as descriptive of goods it would mean that the entry would
give the State over-riding power to levy tax on all goods and
would disturb the scheme of distribution of power on taxation
and collection of revenue envisaged under the Constitution. It
is submitted that there is no over-lapping in fields of taxation.
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There may be an over-lapping on the subject matter of the
taxation but the taxable event must be different. It is
contended that a luxury tax on items of luxury would fail this
test unless the taxable event was the intangible act of
providing luxury. Therefore, Mr. Salve contends, the word
’luxuries’ as used in Entry 62 of List II has been used in the
sense of an activity or service namely, the providing of luxury
and what could be taxed by the State under that entry would
be such service but not the goods themselves. Both the U.P.
and A.P. Acts have been challenged on the ground that the
luxury tax imposed under the two Acts was in fact a tax on the
sale of tobacco which was beyond the legislative powers of
the States and was also violative of Articles 286 and 301 of
the Constitution. It is the further submission of Mr. Salve that
the U.P. and the A.P. Luxuries Tax Acts were a fraud on the
Constitution and a device to avoid operation of the Additional
Duties of Excise (Goods of Special Importance) Act, 1957
(referred hereafter as the ADE Act) under which a State
Government which levies sales or purchase tax on specified
goods including tobacco is to be denied its share in the
proceeds of additional excise duties levied under the ADE Act
of 1957. It is stated that both the States of U.P. and A.P.,
while taking full advantage of the enactment of the ADE Act
of 1957 and availing of the benefit thereunder had sought to
levy sales tax under the guise of luxury tax in order to
continue to reap such benefit.
Mr. K.K. Venugopal also appearing for the assessees
submitted that the language in Entry 62 List II read "taxes on
luxuries including entertainment etc." It is submitted that the
word "including" should, in the context, be interpreted as
illustrative. Therefore, on the principle of noscitur a sociis,
"luxury" would have to mean something in the nature of
entertainments, amusements, betting and gambling. The
argument is also that Entry 62 of List II uses two phrases,
namely, ’tax on luxury’ and ’tax on entertainment,
amusements, betting and gambling’. There are, therefore, two
kinds of taxes envisaged under the entry. The clubbing
together of these two kinds of taxes would indicate that this
was done because of a common element in the nature of the
taxes to be imposed, the link being that both referred to a kind
of activity. Mr. Venugopal also submitted that the tax sought
to be imposed under the West Bengal Luxury Tax Act was in
certain applications in fact a duty of excise insofar as it sought
to levy tax on goods manufactured in India, it was in fact a tax
on the import of goods insofar as it sought to levy a tax on
goods manufactured outside India and brought into the State
and it was a sales tax insofar as it sought to tax the dispatch
of goods. The mere fact that there is a provision for refund in
respect of interstate sales did not according to Mr. Venugopal,
change the character of the impost.
Mr. R. Nariman also representing the assesses,
submitted that the State Acts are violative of Art. 301 of the
Constitution. It is submitted by Mr. Nariman, that the only
exception to the right to free trade, commerce and intercourse
throughout the territory of India provided for under Article 301
related to articles which were res extra commercium. This
exception did not apply to tobacco. The decision in State of
Punjab Vs. M/s. Devans Modern Breweries 2003(10) Scale
202, which held that liquor was res extra commercium was
sought to be distinguished on the ground that tobacco, unlike
liquor, was not the subject matter of any privilege, but was the
subject matter of ordinary trade or commerce. It is submitted
that it was recognized by Parliament that the trade in tobacco
was of national importance, and had been declared to be of
national importance in interstate trade and commerce under
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Article 286 (3) read with Section 14 of the Central Sales Tax
Act 1956. Reliance was placed on the recent decision of this
Court in Godawat Pan Masala Products vs. Union of India
2004 (6) Scale Page 388, which has held that tobacco was
not res extra commercium. The further contention is that
Articles 301 and 286 form part of a common constitutional
scheme to preserve the economic unity of the country and that
although Article 286 was limited to sales but nevertheless
since there was a declaration under that Article in respect of
tobacco, it meant that imposition of any tax on the commodity
over and above the outer limit provided under Section 15 of
the Central Sales Tax Act would ipso facto amount to a
contravention of Article 301. Any tax which would result in a
declared commodity, such as tobacco, being subjected to
higher taxes in a particular State would, according to Mr.
Nariman, contravene Article 301 since it would lead to a
regional economic imbalance. The only way that such a State
law could be validated would be through Article 304 (b). It is
the accepted position that none of the State Acts have
received any Presidential assent under Article 304 of the
Constitution.
Mr. M. Parasaran, representing the Union of India,
supported the contentions of the assesses and has submitted
that the luxury tax in U.P., A.P. and W.B was in fact a tax on
the sale and purchase of tobacco and that the levy of the tax
was contrary to the scheme of collection and distribution of
taxes under which the Centre alone may levy taxes on goods
declared to be of special importance.
Mr. S. Gupta representing the State of Uttar Pradesh
has submitted that the word ’luxury’ has been defined
authoritatively in Abdul Kadir (supra) as, "something which
conduces enjoyment over and above the necessaries of life.
It denotes something which is superfluous and not
indispensable and to which we take with a view to enjoy,
amuse or entertain ourselves". It is submitted that this
definition should not be cast aside since it had held the field
for several decades. According to Mr. Gupta, the object of a
luxury tax is the occurrence or event of luxury which itself
means, "the happening of indulgence, extravagance,
pleasure, comfort, gratification of the senses etc.". It is
submitted that the word ’luxury’ was applicable both to
commodities and services and that this has been expressly
held in Express Hotels vs. State of Gujarat (1989) 3 SCC
677. It is said that luxury tax is an indirect tax and is
ultimately collected from and its burden directly or indirectly
falls on the consumers who enjoy the luxury. Responding to
the argument regarding the use of the word ’including’ in Entry
62 of List II, it is submitted that tax on luxury has been
recognized for a long time as a separate and distinct kind of
tax and the principle of noscitur a sociis would not apply. As
far as the U.P. Act is concerned, it is submitted that it was
limited to tobacco and other such products. It is said that
tobacco was inherently luxurious in the sense that it could not
be said to be necessary to a person’s health. On the other
hand, it was recognized as having a harmful effect on health.
It is said that it is not a tax on sale but on the article, tobacco,
and articles made out of tobacco both of which give rise to
luxuries in the sense that they are taken for pleasure and
enjoyment and are wholly unnecessary for human health and
sustenance. It is said that the luxury ’aspect’ or ’component’
which inheres in and arises on account of the article tobacco,
and the activity of supply of tobacco is by itself a ’matter’
under Article 246(3) which was distinct and independent of
other aspects of ’tobacco’ such as its manufacture, sale etc. It
is said that the U.P. Act targets at the entire chain of supply of
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tobacco and aims at making its presence felt at the point of
supply by the earliest tobacconist in the State. The mere fact
of the tobacconist \026 even the first tobacconist in the State \026
facilitating the act of consumption of tobacco by his act of
supply of tobacco, that is to say, by bringing about a state of
affairs which has the potential of the act and element of
luxury, namely, the act of consumption of tobacco is sufficient
to provide the requisite nexus between the levy and the
subject matter of the tax. Apart from this, it is said that the
tax was not a tax on sale. The reference to sale consideration
etc. in the Act was only for the purposes of fixing the value of
the element of luxury for the purposes of taxation. This was
also supported by the use of phrase "or otherwise" in the
charging section of the Act. It is submitted that it is not a tax
on the sale of goods within the meaning of Article 366 (29A)(f)
nor a tax on supply. It is drawn to our attention that the
amendment to Article 366 (29A) (f) extending the definition of
sale of goods occurred subsequent to the incorporation of
luxury tax as a specific field of legislation by the States.
Therefore, what was taxable as luxury by the States under
Entry 62 List II from before remained so taxable even after the
amendment to Article 366(29A). Thus the UP Act which was
framed within the legislative parameters of Entry 62 of List II
was not a tax on the aspect ’supply’. It would follow that if the
tax imposed by the State was not actual sale or deemed sale,
there was no question of the infringement of Article 286 nor
was there any question of the Act being a device to avoid the
consequence of the ADE Act.
The State of West Bengal was represented by Mr. R.
Dwivedi . He endorsed the stand of the U.P. Government on
the scope of Entry 62 of List II and has said that the word
’luxuries’ must be construed to include not only services but
also goods. According to Mr. Dwivedi, the legislative history of
the Entry starting with the Government of India Act, 1919
would show that betting, gambling, amusements and luxury
tax had been treated as distinct and separate items. We were
referred to Schedule I to the Tax Rules, 1920 and in particular
to Entry 6 which related to luxury tax and was the subject
matter of a report of the Tariff Commission of 1924-25. The
question of imposition of tax on tobacco had been considered
in connection with this Entry. All these Entries were clubbed
together under the Government of India Act, 1935 in Entry 52
of List II of that Act. It is said that this Court had repeatedly
construed the word "luxury". In 1959, the decision in
Western India Theatres vs. Cantonment Board AIR 1959
SC 582, 585 this Court had said that that the ordinary
meaning was to be given to the word "luxury". The decision in
Abdul Kadir in 1976 also proceeded on the basis that the
word ’luxury’ in Entry 62 List- II referred to goods. Finally, in
1989 Express Hotels had construed the Entry to hold that
the word ’luxuries’ covered goods both corporeal and
incorporeal and services. It is submitted that there was no
reason why this Court should deviate from a well established
series of precedents which had held the field for over five
decades. It is also submitted that the word ’including’ in the
Entry indicated an expansion and was not illustrative and
that neither the principle of noscitur a sociis nor abundante
cautela could be invoked in construing the objects of tax under
Entry 62. As far as tobacco is concerned, it is submitted that
there has never been a dispute that it constitutes an article of
luxury. It is further argued that reference to several entries in
List II which are subject to entries in either List I or List III, that
while certain aspects of a particular subject matter of taxation
may be taken out from List II nevertheless a taxing power in
respect of that subject remained with the State Governments
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under List II. Reference has been made to Entries, 26,27, 50,
53 and 60 of List II. According to Mr. Dwivedi, the
constitutional scheme showed that certain aspects in respect
of the same subject matter would fall in List II whereas other
aspects would fall in either List I or List III. The further
submission is that luxury tax is a tax directly on goods
whereas customs duty, excise duty and sales tax are in
respect of goods. Thus excise duty is a levy on the
manufacture or production of goods but was not a tax directly
on goods. It is argued that the fact that the tax was levied on
luxury goods with reference to the manufacture or sale of
goods would not mean that it was a tax on the manufacture or
sale of the goods. The manufacture or sale are only
measures of the luxury tax leviable. With particular reference
to the West Bengal Act, it was submitted that the tax was on
luxury goods or commodities although it was with reference to
the value of the commodities as stocked or as imported. The
tax is merely levied when the commodity is stocked. In
response to the assessees’ arguments that the excise duty,
sales tax, custom duty etc. all provide for higher rates in
respect of luxury goods is that the same did not detract from
the fact that those taxes remained taxes on activities in
respect of goods and were not taxes on the goods
themselves.
Mr. Gopal Subramanium appearing for the State of
Andhra Pradesh has submitted that Entry 62 of List II should be
construed bearing in mind that there were no restrictive words
in the entry itself nor was there any restrictive content in any
other entry which would modify or impact on Entry 62. It is
submitted that the word ’consumption’ used elsewhere in the
Constitution had not been used in the Entry. This indicated that
the Entry was not limited to the ’consumption’ aspect of
luxuries, entertainment etc. It is said that Entry 62 can be read
harmoniously with Entry 54 and Entry 54 is the aggregate Entry
and that Entry 62 relates to an element/component of such
aggregation. The substance of Entry 62, according to Mr.
Subramanium, is luxury, the form of the luxury either as goods
or services is immaterial. It is finally submitted that tobacco
squarely falls under Entry 62. It is further submitted that the
actual presence of a consumer is inessential to the concept of
luxury tax. It is also submitted that the Constitution provides for
legislation in respect of taxation of different taxable events in
respect of the same subject and for taxation in respect of
different aspects of the subject itself. It is said that unless the
aspect was common for two entries, there was no question of
harmonious construction nor of federal supremacy. The
expression, ’luxuries’ refers to goods and services which foster
’luxury’, a sense of abundance, enjoyment and gratification.
There are two aspects of luxury, the first being objects and
services which are intrinsically capable of fostering a sense of
luxury and second, the recipient of such articles or services
who consumes or experiences such gratification. The
argument is that the capacity to foster ’luxury’, which labels
goods as ’luxuries’ within Entry 62, is an aspect of the goods
entitling the objects to be taxed and that this is relatable to
Entry 62 which aspect is distinct from taxes on manufacture or
sale per se. Since ’luxuries’ can be both goods and services,
what is relevant is the common denominator of the luxury
element/potential of goods and services. According to
Mr. Subramanium since the tax under Entry 62 is on luxuries, it
can legitimately be levied even where there is no actual
consumption of the luxury. Coming to the Andhra Pradesh
Act, it is submitted that the primary purpose of the Act was to
levy tax on tobacco and not on the sale or manufacture of it.
On Article 301, it is submitted that the levy does not impact on
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the movement of tobacco or trade in tobacco as interstate
transactions were exempt.
In this background, the competing contentions as to the
meaning of the word "luxury" in Entry 62 of List II are
considered:
a) According to the learned counsel for the
assessees the word ’luxury’ is distinct from an
article of luxury and for the purpose of Entry 62
of List II means the activity of indulgence,
comfort, enjoyment.
b) The argument of learned counsel for the State of
U.P. and A.P. as to the meaning of ’Luxury’ is
somewhat ambivalent. On the one hand it was
contended that ’luxury’ is a component and
aspect of the goods and that Entry 62 relates to
the exclusive jurisdiction of the State to levy a
tax on such component or aspect of the goods.
On the other hand it was contended that luxury
may arise from the use or consumption of
certain kinds of goods or services or indulgence
in certain kind of activities which are luxurious in
nature.
c) According to counsel for the State of West
Bengal, ’luxuries’ comprehends both goods and
services which have an element of enjoyment,
extravagance and which are not necessaries.
Therefore, the State can tax goods which are
per se "luxury goods in the absolute sense like
tobacco, liquor, jewellery etc. or other goods by
imposing a sufficiently high price limit, the
sufficiency being determined according to
standards of the middle class".
The word luxury may possibly be susceptible of all three
meanings. According to the Oxford English Dictionary (2nd
Edn; Vol. IX) ’luxury’ could among other meanings be defined
as (1) abundance, sumptuous enjoyment (2) the habitual use
of, or indulgence in what is choice or costly (3) refined and
intense enjoyment; means of luxurious enjoyment; (4) in a
particularized sense: something which conduces to enjoyment
or comfort in addition to what are accounted the necessaries.
Hence, in recent use, something which is desirable but not
indispensable and (5) as an attribute as luxury coach, cruise
duty, edition, flat, liner, shop, tax, trade".
The High Courts and the West Bengal Taxation Tribunal
have accepted the fourth meaning that the tax is on luxury
goods or articles on the basis of the decision in Abdul Kadir
vs. State of Kerala (supra), in which this Court had upheld
the constitutional validity of the Kerala Luxury Tax on Tobacco
(Validation) Act, 1964. The Act had sought to validate the
collection of licence fees by the State under a statutory
provision which had been struck down as unconstitutional.
The invalidated Rules had required licences to be taken out
for storage and sale of tobacco and for payment of licence fee
in respect thereof. This Court had in A.B. Abdul Kadir vs.
Union of India (1962) 2 SCR 741 held the Rules were law
corresponding to the provisions of the Central Excise & Salt
Act, 1944 and were superseded by the Finance Act, 1950.
Consequent upon the invalidation of the Rules, applications
were filed by the erstwhile licensees for refund of the fees
collected. The Act was then passed by the States to validate
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the levy as luxury tax. The Act was challenged on the ground
that it was in fact a duty of excise referable to the exclusive
power of the Union under Entry 84 of List I. This was
negatived on the ground that there was no provision in the
impugned Act which was concerned with the production or
manufacture of tobacco. The next argument was that tobacco
was not an article of luxury. The argument was negatived. It
was in that context that this Court held that the Act was
referable to Entry 62 of List II and said:-
"According to that entry, the State
legislatures can make laws in respect of ’taxes
on luxuries, including taxes on entertainments,
amusements, betting and gambling".
Question therefore, arises as to whether
tobacco can be considered to be an article of
luxury. The word ’luxury’ in the above context
has not been used in the sense of something
pertaining to the exclusive preserve of the
rich. The fact that the use of an article is
popular among the poor sections of the
population would not detract from its
description or nature of being an article of
luxury. The connotation of the word ’luxury’ is
something which conduces enjoyment over
and above the necessaries of life. It denotes
something which is superfluous and not
indispensable and to which we take with a
view to enjoy, amuse or entertain
ourselves."(p. 227)
It appears to have been assumed that the phrase "tax on
luxuries" in Entry 62 of List II meant a tax on articles of luxury
and the only question was whether tobacco was such an article.
The assessees in the present case do not dispute that tobacco
is an article of luxury but contend that articles of luxury are not
covered by Entry 62. That was an argument neither raised nor
considered in Abdul Kadir.
The concept of "luxuries" in Entry 62 of List II was also
considered in the Federation of Hotel & Restaurant vs.
Union of India (1989) 3 SCC 634. In that case the hotel
industry challenged the constitutional validity of the Expenditure
Tax Act 1987 (Central Act 35 of 1987). The Union of India
sought to sustain the legislative competence to enact the
impugned law under Article 248 read with Entry 97 of List I of
the Seventh Schedule. The hoteliers urged that the legislation
was squarely within Entry 62 of List II since it imposed a tax on
’Luxuries". Counsel for the hoteliers argued on the basis that a
tax on luxuries was a tax on the price paid for the sale of goods
(vide para 29 of the report). This Court rejected the challenge
to the Act and upheld it saying that the subject matter of the
impugned Act was in pith and substance a tax on expenditure
and not on luxuries or sale of goods.
Another decision on the words ’tax on luxuries’ in Entry 62
is the case of Express Hotels vs. State of Gujarat: (1989) 3
SCC 677. In that case Legislations of different States, namely,
the States of Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and West Bengal
which imposed a tax on ’luxuries’ was challenged as being
constitutionally invalid. The Acts provided for levy of ’tax on
luxuries provided in Hotels’. The argument of the appellants in
that case was that the taxation entry in Entry 62 of List II
provided for taxes on "Luxuries" and took within its sweep, a tax
on goods and articles like jewellery perfumes, liquor, tobacco
etc. in their aspect and character as articles of luxuries and did
not include "services" or "activities". The argument was
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rejected and it was held that the levy was valid.
In this case also arguments proceeded on the basis that
Entry 62 of List II covered articles of luxury. In none of these
decisions therefore was this Court called upon to address the
question whether Entry 62 did not cover articles of luxury and
ought to be restricted to things incorporeal such as enjoyment
or indulgence in what is either choice or costly.
It appears that ’luxury’ has been defined by courts in the
United States of America as " An entirely relative term; a free
indulgence in costly food, dress, furniture or anything expensive
which gratifies the appetites or tastes; also a mode of life
characterized by material abundance and gratification of
expensive tastes’. (Corpus Juris Secundum Vol- IV p.887).
According to this definition, American Courts appear to have
opted for the definition of the word as submitted by the
assessees and have held that it is an activity. However we
have also been referred by counsel for the States to other
authoritative works such as Black’s Law Dictionary (6th Edition)
in which a ’luxury tax’ is said to be a generic term for excise
imposed on purchase of items which are not necessaries e.g.
tax on liquor or cigarettes. This definition is inconclusive as it
merely defines what may have in fact been the subject matter
of tax in a particular statute.
But theoretically ’luxuries’ is capable of covering each of
the several meanings ascribed to the word. The question is how
the word is to be construed in the Constitutional entry. Neither
the dictionary meaning nor the meaning ascribed to the word
judicially ( for the reasons stated ) resolve the ambiguity. The
solution must be found in the language of the Entry taking into
consideration the Constitutional scheme with regard to the
imposition of taxes and the collection of revenues.
Before we proceed further we would like to clear the
ground. Whatever be the similarities between the Constitutions
of other countries with similar federal structures as this Country
such as the United States, Canada or Australia, this Court has,
as a general rule held that the opinions expressed by the
Courts of those countries may not be helpful in construing the
allocation of legislative heads in our Constitution.
[See : Chhotabhai Hethabhai Patel vs. The Union of India
(1962) Supp. 2 SCR 1; Province of Madras vs. M/s. Boddu
Paidanna (supra); State of Bombay vs. Chamarbaugwala :
(1957) SCR 874; Atiabari Tea Co. vs. The State of Assam :
(1961) 1 SCR 809; The Automobile Transport (Rajasthan)
vs. The State of Rajasthan (1963) 1 SCR 491 ] although they
may be of some relevance in determining the true character
of particular legislation (Subrahmanyan Chettiar vs.
Muthuswami Gounder 1940 FCR 188; Union of India vs. H.
S. Dhillon (1971) 1 SCC 779, 801-803 ). Given the wealth of
authority on the question of interpretation of legislative heads in
this country, we deem it sufficient to restrict our opinion based
on the views expressed by this Court.
The Indian Constitution is unique in that it contains an
exhaustive enumeration and division of legislative powers of
taxation between the Centre and the States. This mutual
exclusivity is reflected in Article 246 (1) and has been noted in
H.M. Seervai’s Constitutional Law of India. Fourth Edition,
Volume 1 at page 166 in paragraph 1A 25 where, after
commenting on the problems created by the overlapping
powers of taxation provided for in other countries with federal
structures such as the United States, Canada and Australia, the
learned author opined :-
"The lists contained in the Schedule VII to the
G.I. Act, 35, provided for distinct and separate
fields of taxation and it is not without
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significance that the concurrent legislative list
contains no entry relating to taxation but
provides only for "fees" in respect of matters
contained in the list but not including fees
taken in any court. List I and List II of
Schedule 7 thus avoid overlapping powers of
taxation and proceed on the basis of
allocating adequate sources of taxation for the
federation and the provinces, with the result
that few problems of conflicting or competing
taxing powers have arisen under the G.I. Act,
35. This scheme of the legislative lists as
regards taxation has been taken over by the
Constitution of India with like beneficial
results".
This view has also been reiterated in Hoechst
Pharmaceuticals Ltd. and anr. vs. State of Bihar and Ors.
(1983) 3 SCR 130 :-
"A scrutiny of Lists I and II of the Seventh
Schedule would show that there is no
overlapping anywhere in the taxing power and
the Constitution gives independent sources of
taxation to the Union and the States.
Following the scheme of the Government of
India Act, 1935, the Constitution has made the
taxing power of the Union and of the States
mutually exclusive and thus avoided the
difficulties which have arisen in some other
Federal Constitutions from overlapping
powers of taxation \005\005\005\005\005. Thus, in our
Constitution, a conflict of the taxing power of
the Union and of the States cannot arise."
(See also The State of West Bengal vs. Kesoram
Industries Ltd., And Ors. JT 2004 (1) 375 ).
Therefore, taxing entries must be construed with clarity
and precision so as to maintain such exclusivity, and a
construction of a taxation entry which may lead to overlapping
must be eschewed. If the taxing power is within a particular
legislative field it would follow that other fields in the legislative
lists must be construed to exclude this field so that there is no
possibility of legislative trespass.
Classically, a tax is seen as composed of two elements:
the person, thing or activity on which the tax is imposed and the
incidence of tax. Thus every tax may be levied on an object or
an event of taxation. The distinction between the two may not,
ultimately, be material in the context of the Indian Constitution
as we will find later. But for the time being we may note that
both these elements are distinct from the incidence of taxation.
For example the tax may be imposed on goods on the event of
their manufacture, sales, import etc. The law imposing the tax
may also prescribe the incidence or the manner in which the
burden of the tax would fall on any person and would take
within itself the amount and measure of tax. The importance of
this distinction lies in the fact that in India, the first two have
been given a Constitutional status, whereas the incidence of tax
would be a matter of statutory detail. The incidence of tax would
be relevant in construing whether a tax is a direct or an indirect
one. But it would be irrelevant in determining the subject matter
of the tax. [ See: M/s. Chhotabhai Jethabhai Patel & Co. vs.
Union of India & Another : AIR 1962 SC 1006 ]
An illustration of this distinction is nicely brought out in
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State of Karnataka v. Drive-in-Enterprises [ ( 2001) 4 SCC
60 ] . Entertainment tax was levied by the Karnataka Cinemas
(Regulations) Act, 1964 and the Rules framed thereunder by
the State in respect of a film show. A higher rate of tax was
levied on persons who drove their cars in to view the film from
the comfort of their cars. The challenge to the Act was that
entertainment tax could be levied only on human beings and
not on any inanimate object, namely motor vehicles. The
challenge was negatived on the ground that the State was
competent to levy tax on entertainment under Entry 62 List II.
That was the subject matter of the tax. The incidence of the tax
was on the persons entertained. Clearly the manner in which
the burden would fall viz. on persons either with or without
motor vehicles would not affect either the object or the nature of
the tax. Motor vehicles were neither the object of taxation nor
the taxable event but were part of the incidence of the tax.
Under the three lists of the Seventh Schedule to the
Indian Constitution a taxation entry in a legislative list may be
with respect to an object or an event or may be with respect to
both. Article 246 makes it clear that the exclusive powers
conferred on the Parliament or the States to legislate on a
particular matter includes the power to legislate with respect to
that matter. Hence where the entry describes an object of tax,
all taxable events pertaining to the object are within that field of
legislation unless the event is specifically provided for
elsewhere under a different legislative head. Where there is the
possibility of legislative overlap, courts have resolved the issue
according to settled principles of construction of entries in the
legislative lists.
The first of such settled principles is that legislative
entries should be liberally interpreted, that none of the items in
the list is to be read in a narrow or restricted sense and that
each general word should be held to extend to ancillary or
subsidiary matters which can fairly and reasonably be said to
be comprehended in it (United Provinces vs. Mt. Atiqa
Begam : AIR 1941 FC 16, Western India Theatres ltd. vs.
The Cantonment Board Poona (1959) Suppl. (2) SCR 63, 69
and ELEL Hotels & Investments Ltd., & Ors. vs. Union of
India (1989) 3 SCC 698).
In Express Hotels vs. State of Gujarat (supra) it was
noted that the view of the Bombay High Court in State of
Bombay vs. RMD Chamarbaugwala AIR 1956 Bom. 1 that
what was contemplated in Entry 62 was "a tax on certain
articles or goods constituting luxuries and not legislation
controlling an activity which may not be a necessary activity",
was overruled by this Court in State of Bombay vs. RMD
Chamarbaugwala ((1957) SCR 874). The view of the Calcutta
High Court in Spences Hotel Private Ltd., vs. State of West
Bengal 1975 Tax LR 1890 (Cal) to the effect that A tax levied
under Entry 62 cannot be restricted to certain articles only but
may also be extended to things incorporeal" was affirmed, it
was said :-
"The concept of a tax on ’luxuries’ in Entry
62, List II cannot be limited merely to tax
things tangible and corporeal in their
aspect as ’luxuries’. It is true that while
frugal or simple food and medicine may be
classified as necessities; articles such as
jewellery, perfume, intoxicating liquor,
tobacco, etc., could be called articles of
luxury. But the legislative entry cannot be
exhausted by these cases, illustrative of
the concept. The entry encompasses all
the manifestations or emanations, the
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notion of ’luxuries’ can fairly and
reasonably (sic) can be said to
comprehend the element of extravagance
of indulgence that differentiates ’luxury’
from ’necessity’ cannot be confined to
goods and articles. There can be elements
of extravagance or indulgence in the
quality of services and activities." (p.690).
It was also held that :-
"The concept of ’luxuries’ in the legislative
entry takes within it everything that can
fairly and reasonably be said to be
comprehended in it\005\005\005\005\005 so long as
the legislation has reasonable nexus with
the concept of ’luxuries’ in the broad and
general sense in which the expressions in
legislative tests (sic lists) are
comprehended, the legislative competence
extends to all matters ’with respect to’ that
field or topic of legislation." (p-692).
But as we have already noted and as is abundantly clear
from the passages quoted, the decision was given on the
assumption that articles of luxury are covered by Entry 62 List II
and cannot be held to be an authority for the proposition that
articles or goods are, as a matter of construction, fairly and
reasonably includible in that entry.
The argument of Mr. Salve is in fact that the breadth of an
entry is curtailed by the second principle of construction. The
second principle is that competing entries must be read
harmoniously. The proper way to avoid a conflict would be to
read the entries together and to interpret the language of one
by that of the other (Governor General in Council vs.
Province of Madras (1945) FCR 179 at pg. 191-192 ); State
of Bombay vs. Narottamdas Jethabhai 1951 SCR 51; Bar
Council of U.P. vs. State of U.P. & Anr. (1973) 1 SCC 261;
D.G. Ghose & Co. (Agents) (P) Ltd. vs. State of Kerala &
Anr. (1980) 2 SCC 410; Federation of Hotel and Restaurant
vs. Union of India (1989) 3 SCC 634, 657, 667-668; State of
West Bengal vs. Kesoram Industries 2004 (1) SCALE 425,
462; in the matter of Central Provinces and Berar Sales of
Motor Spirit and Lubricants Taxation Act, 1938; AIR (1939)
FC 1,8,40 ).
The argument of the assessees is that the tax leviable
under Entry 62 List II cannot be a tax on goods as that would
not only allow the State to levy sales tax in contravention of Art.
286 but would permit trespass onto the Union’s Legislative
fields under Entries 83 and 84 of List I. Indeed the contention of
the assesses is that the States have by the impugned
legislations, done just that. Entry 83 demarcates the Union’s
power to legislate with respect to "Duties of customs including
export duties". Entry 84 speaks of "Duties of excise on tobacco
and other goods manufactured or produced in India except ( a )
alcoholic liquors for human consumption ( b) opium, Indian
hemp and other narcotic drugs and narcotics but including
medicinal and toilet preparations containing alcohol or any
substance included in sub-paragraph (b) of this entry".
The States have countered this by contending that Entry
62 List II envisaged a tax on luxury goods. Whereas duties of
Excise, Customs and Sales Tax are not directly on the goods
but with reference to goods and that the taxes are leviable on
the events of manufacture, import/export and sale. According to
the States this Court has held so while construing Article 289
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(1) in Re : The Bill to Amend Section 20 of the Sea
Customs Act, (1964) 3 SCR 787. In the language of the
Court:
"The taxable event in the case of duties of
excise is the manufacture of goods and the
duty is not directly on the goods but on the
manufacture thereof. We may in this
connection contrast sales tax which is also
imposed with reference to goods sold,
where the taxable event is the act of sale.
Therefore, though both excise duty and
sales tax are levied with reference to
goods, the two are very different imposts;
in one case the imposition is on the act of
manufacture or production while in the
other it is on the act of sale. In neither case
therefore can it be said that the excise duty
or sales tax is a tax directly on the goods
for in that event they will really become the
same tax. It would thus appear that duties
of excise partake of the nature of indirect
taxes as known to standard works on
economics and are to be distinguished
from direct taxes like taxes on property and
income.
Similarly in the case of duties of
customs including export duties though
they are levied with reference to goods, the
taxable event is either the import of goods
within the customs barriers or their export
outside the customs barriers. They are also
indirect taxes like excise and cannot in our
opinion be equated with direct taxes on
goods themselves"
Therefore according to the States, the argument of the
assessees that the existing entries on taxation indicated that
Entry 62 of List II could not cover goods was without substance.
The submission of the assessees proceeds on two
premises : the first that taxation of an object can only be with
reference to a taxable event and second \026 that all taxable
events have been covered by the legislative entries. As far as
the first premise is concerned, it may be that a tax on a thing or
goods can only be with reference to a taxable event, but there
is a distinction between such a tax and a tax on the taxable
event. In the first case the subject matter of tax is the goods
and the taxable event is within the incidence of the tax on the
goods. In the second the taxable event is the subject matter of
tax itself.
The first premise paraphrased is that even a tax on goods
is really a tax on a taxable event. The decision in the Sea
Customs Act case (supra) which was rendered by this Court in
its advisory capacity under Art. 143 was concerned with the
construction of Art. 289 of the Constitution. The nature and
incidence of the taxation entries in the legislative tests was
directly in issue and it was on the determination of this issue
that the power of the Union to levy tax on property of the States
under Art. 289 was considered (p. 822-823 of the report). A tax
on property was described as a direct tax and taxes on the
taxable events in respect of property as indirect taxes based on
the impact on the property. However even in respect of ’direct
taxes" ( in the sense used by the Court in that decision ) it was
held by Ayyangar, J. in his concurring opinion, that it was
ultimately a question of degree of impact. He said ( at pg. 917
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of the report ) "for in the ultimate analysis the distinction
between a direct and an indirect tax is a distinction based upon
the difference in impact which is also expressed as a distinction
based upon its being not on property but on a taxable event in
relation to property. If the taxable event is merely the
ownership of the property and on the beneficial interest
therein, it would be a direct tax, whereas if the connection
between the property and the tax payer is not merely
ownership but something else such as a transaction in relation
to it, then it would be an indirect tax." In other words it is the
taxable event of ownership which survives for taxation in all
entries levying tax on goods, articles or objects. It is true that
this Court in The Central Provinces and Berar Sales of
Motor Spirit and Lubricants Taxation Act, 1938; AIR 1939
FC 1 has held the excise duty is a tax on goods. This was
because ordinarily the power to impose a tax on goods would,
by virtue of Article 246 encompass the power to levy a tax in
respect of goods. Thus there appears to be no doubt that the
first premise contended for by Mr. Salve is correct.
The logical corollary of holding that taxes are imposed
only on taxable events is that even when an entry speaks of a
levy of a tax on goods it does not include the right to impose
taxes on taxable events which have been separately provided
for under other taxation entries. The tax in respect of goods has
sometimes been referred to as a tax on an aspect of the goods
and sometimes as the taxable event ( See : Federation of
Hotel & Restaurants vs. Union of India (1989) 3 SCC 634 ).
Whatever the terminology, because there can be no
overlapping in the field of taxation, such a tax if specifically
provided for under one legislative entry effectively narrows the
fields of taxation available under other related entries. It is also
natural ’when considering the ambit of an express power in
relation to an unspecified residuary power, to give a broad
interpretation of the former at the expense of the latter’.
(Madras Province vs. Boddu Paidanna AIR 1942 FC 33,37
per Gwyer C.J.). For example the State cannot under the garb
of luxury tax under Entry 62 List II impinge on the exclusive
power of the Union under Entries 83 and 84 of List I by merely
describing an article as a luxury. Ofcourse the States do have
the exclusive power under Entry 54 of List II to legislate with
respect to "Taxes on the sale and purchase of goods other than
newspapers", but that power has been explicitly made "subject
to the provisions of Entry 92A of List I".
Entry 92A of List I speaks of
"Taxes on the sale or purchase of goods
other than newspapers, where such sale
or purchase takes place in the course of
inter-state trade or commerce "
Apart from this limitation on the States’ jurisdiction to levy
sales tax, are the restrictions placed by Article 286. Article
286(1) prohibits the States from imposing or authorizing the
imposition of tax on the sale or purchase of goods where such
sale or purchase takes place (a) outside the State, or (b) in the
course of the import of the goods into, or export of the goods
out of, the territory of India. In addition Article 286 (3) provides
that :
"Any sale of a State shall, in so far as it imposes, or
authorizes the imposition of \026
(a) a tax on the sale or purchase of goods
declared by Parliament by law to be of special
importance in inter-State trade or commerce;
or
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(b) a tax on the sale or purchase of goods, being
a tax of the nature referred to in sub-clause
(b), sub-clause (c) or Sub-clause (d) of clause
(29A) of Article 366,
be subject to such restrictions and conditions in
regard to the system of levy, rates and other
incidents of the tax as Parliament may by law
specify".
Thus Parliament has been given the overriding power to
limit the rates of sales taxes which are otherwise within the
exclusive competence of the States in respect of certain items
of sale and purchase. The relevant clause for our purpose is
clause (a) of Art. 286(3) which allows Parliament to enact a law
declaring goods to be of special importance in inter-state trade
or commerce.
In exercise of this power, Section 14 of the Central Sales
Tax Act. 1956 has declared certain goods to be of special
importance in inter-state trade or commerce. This includes
tobacco both in un-manufactured and manufactured form. The
States have been restricted from imposing or authorizing the
imposition of tax on the sale or purchase of the declared goods
within the State upto a maximum limit of 4 per cent of the sale
or purchase price under Section 15 of the Central Sales Tax
Act, 1956.
In December, 1956, the National Development Council,
Planning Commission, Government of India, and the States
agreed that the sales tax in respect of inter alia tobacco should
be replaced by a surcharge on the Central Excise Duties, the
income derived there from being distributed amongst States on
the basis of consumption, subject to the income from the States
being assured. Pursuant to this and the recommendation of the
Finance Commission in its report dated 30th September, 1957,
the Additional Duties of Excise (Goods of Special Importance )
Act 1957 was passed by Parliament. The object of the Act was
to impose additional duties of excise in replacement of the
sales tax levied by the Union and the States on sugar, tobacco
and millmade textiles and to distribute the net proceeds of
these taxes, except the proceeds attributable to Union
territories, to the States. Provision was made that the State
which levy a tax on the sale or purchase of these commodities
after the 1st April, 1958 could not participate in the distribution of
the net proceeds of the additional levy under the ADE Act.
Provision was also being made in the Act for including specified
goods in the category of goods declared to be of special
importance in inter-State trade or commerce so that, following
the imposition of uniform duties of excise on them, the rates of
sales tax if levied by any State were subject from 1st April, 1958
to the restrictions in Section 15 of the Central Sales Tax Act,
1956.
Section 3 of the ADE Act is the charging section under
which additional excise duties are leviable on specified goods
manufactured or lying in stock. Sub-section (1) of Section 3
reads :-
"3. Levy and collection of additional duties
\026 (1) There shall be levied and collected
in respect of the following goods, namely,
sugar, tobacco, cotton fabrics, rayon or
artificial silk fabrics and woolen fabrics
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produced or manufactured in India and on
all such goods lying in stock within the
precincts of any factory, warehouse or
other premises where the said goods
were manufactured, stored or produced,
or in any premises appurtenant thereto,
duties of excise at the rate of rates
specified in the First Schedule to this Act."
(Emphasis added).
No State can levy luxury tax on items covered by Section
3 of the ADE Act in respect of goods for the same taxable event
i.e. goods stored on manufacture, just by describing the goods
as luxury goods. The overlapping of the powers exercised
under Entry 84 of List I and Entry 62 of List II would then be
evident. Similarly storage or stocking of imported goods is
covered by Entry 83 of List I and cannot be made the subject of
levy by the States.
By the Constitution (Forty-sixth Amendment ) Act, 1982
the phrase "tax on the sale or purchase of goods" was
extensively defined by the introduction of Clause 29A in Article
366. It reads :-
"(29A) ’tax on the sale or purchase of goods’
includes \026
(a) a tax on the transfer, otherwise than in
pursuance of a contract, of property in any
goods for cash deferred payment or other
valuable consideration;
(b) a tax on the transfer of property in goods
(whether as goods or in some other form)
involved in the execution of a works contract;
(c) a tax on the delivery of goods on hire
purchase or any system of payment by
instalments;
(d) a tax on the transfer of the right to use any
goods for any purpose (whether or not for a
specified period) for each, deferred payment
or other valuable consideration’;
(e) a tax on the supply of goods by any
unincorporated association or body of persons
to a member thereof for cash, deferred
payment or other valuable consideration;
(f) a tax on the supply by way of or as part of any
service or in any other manner whatsoever, of
goods, being food or any other article for
human consumption or any drink (whether or
not intoxicating), where such supply or
service, is for cash, deferred payment or other
valuable consideration,
and such transfer, delivery or supply of any goods
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shall be deemed to be a sale of those goods by the
person making the transfer, delivery or supply and a
purchase of those goods by the person to whom
such transfer delivery or supply is made";
However while widening the scope of Entry 54 of List II,
the powers of the State to levy such tax are subjected to a
corresponding restriction as a consequence of the constitutional
curbs imposed on sales tax under Article 286 read with
Sections 14 and 15 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 and the
ADE Act, 1957. "The tax leviable by virtue of sub-clause (b) of
clause (29-A) of Article 366 of the Constitution thus becomes
subject to the same discipline to which any levy under Entry 54
of the State List is made subject to under the Constitution. The
position is the same when we look at Article 286 of the
Constitution. If any declared goods which are referred to in
Section 14 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 are involved in
such transfer, supply or delivery, which is referred to in clause
(29-A) of Article 366, the sales tax law of a State which
provides for levy of sales tax thereon will have to comply with
the restrictions mentioned Section 15 of the Central Sales Tax
Act, 1956.
No State can therefore by describing an item as a luxury,
seek to levy tax on its supply. It cannot be disputed that as far
as UP and AP are concerned, were it not for their Interpretation
of Entry 62 of List II, the tax would be referable only to Entry 54
List II. If Entry 62 List II does not allow the taxation of goods,
the levy would not be constitutionally sustainable.
In our opinion to read Entry 62 List II as including articles
of luxury cannot allow all these constitutional restrictions to be
by-passed allowing States to levy tax on the supply of goods by
describing them as luxury goods. As has been rightly
contended by Mr. Parasaran appearing for the Union of India,
the supply of luxury is nothing but the supply of goods since the
goods themselves constitute the luxury.
So even if tobacco is an article of luxury, a tax on its
supply is within the exclusive competence of the State but
subject to the constitutional curbs prescribed under Article 286
read with Sections 14 and 15 of the Central Sales Tax Act,
1956 and most importantly the ADE Act of 1957 under which no
sales tax can be levied on tobacco at all if the State was to take
the benefits under that Act.
Despite the subtraction of the rights to levy excise or
customs duties and the restraint on the States to levy sales tax
in cases when the states can levy tax on goods we still have to
determine whether Entry 62 of List II covers taxes on goods at
all.
In view of the decision in the Sea Customs Act case, the
second premise propounded by Mr. Salve is unacceptable. As
we have seen, in that case this Court held that the taxable
event of ownership is implicit in the concept of taxes on goods.
That the entries on taxable events in the legislative lists are not
exhaustive is also recognised and provided for in Art. 248 (2)
which provides for the power of Parliament to make any law
imposing a tax not mentioned in either the Concurrent or State
lists. This residuary power is reflected in Entry 97 of List I.
Furthermore if an article or goods are taxable only with respect
to a taxable event, and if, as contended by Mr. Salve, all
taxable events have been provided for in the different legislative
heads, then by that token no object or goods could be taxable.
This would render the various entries in the State List including
entries 57 and 58 contentless. As we cannot accept that the
taxation entries exhaustively enumerate all taxable events, it
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does not follow that Entry 62 of List II does not cover goods. It
is not possible therefore to hold merely on such a construction
of the legislative lists and the taxation entries therein, that Entry
62 List II does not permit the States to levy tax on articles of
luxury.
Having rejected the second premise contended for by Mr.
Salve, the next question is whether the language of Entry 62
List II would resolve the issue. The juxtaposition of the different
taxes within Entry 62 itself is in our view of particular
significance. The entry speaks of "taxes on luxuries including
taxes on entertainments, amusements, betting and gambling".
The word "including" must be given some meaning. In ordinary
parlance it indicates that what follows the word "including"
comprises or is contained in or is a part of the whole of the
word preceding. The nature of the included items would not
only partake of the character of the whole, but may be
construed as clarificatory of the whole.
It has also been held that the word ’includes’ may in
certain contexts be a word of limitation ( South Gujarat
Roofing Tiles Manufacturers vs. State of Gujarat (1976) 4
SCC 601). In the context of Entry 62 of List II this would not
mean that the word ’luxuries’ would be restricted to
entertainments, amusements, betting and gambling but would
only emphasise the attribute which is common to the group. If
luxuries is understood as meaning something which is purely
for enjoyment and beyond the necessities of life, there can be
no doubt that entertainments, amusements, betting and
gambling would come within such understanding. Additionally,
entertainments, amusements, betting and gambling are all
activities. ’Luxuries’ is also capable of meaning an activity and
has primarily and traditionally been defined as such. It is only
derivatively and recently used to connote an article of luxury.
One can assume that the coupling of these taxes under one
entry was not fortuitous but because of these common
characteristics.
Where two or more words are susceptible of analogous
meaning are clubbed together, they are understood to be used
in their cognate sense. They take, as it were, their colour from
and are qualified by each other, the meaning of the general
word being restricted to a sense analogous to that of the less
general. As said in Maxwell on the Interpretation of Statues
12th Edn. P.289.
"Words, and particularly general words,
cannot be read in isolation; their colour
and their content are derived from their
context ."
Put in other words the included words may be clarificatory
or illustrative of the general word. Thus in U.P. State v. Raja
Anand; (1967) 1 SCR 362, while construing Art. 31A (2) as
enacted by the Constitution (Seventeenth Amendment ) Act,
1964 the relevant excerpt of which read as:-
"31A(2) In this article\027
(a) the expression ’estate’ shall in
relation to any local area, have the
same meaning as that expression
or its local equivalent has in the
existing law relating to land tenures
in force in that area and shall also
include\027
(i) xxx xxx xxx xxx xxx
(ii) xxx xxx xxx xxx xxx
iii) any land held or let for
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purposes of agriculture or for
purposes ancillary thereto,
including waste land, forest
land, land for pasture or sites of
buildings and other structures
occupied by cultivators of land,
agriculture labourers and village
artisans;
this Court said:-
"In our opinion the word "including"
is intended to clarify or explain the
concept of land held or let for purposes
ancillary to agriculture. The idea seems
to be to remove any doubts on the point
whether waste land or forest land could
be held to be capable of being held or
let for purposes ancillary to agriculture."
In the present context the general meaning of ’luxury’ has
been explained or clarified and must be understood in a sense
analogous to that of the less general words such as
entertainments, amusements, gambling and betting, which are
clubbed with it. This principle of interpretation known as
’noscitur a sociis’ has received approval in Rainbow Steels
Ltd. vs. C.S.T.: (1981) 2 SCC 141,145 although doubted in its
indiscriminate application in State of Bombay vs. Hospital
Mazdoor Sabha : AIR 1960 SC 610. In the latter case this
Court was required to construe Section 2(j) of the Industrial
Disputes Act which read:
"Section 2(j) provides that ’industry’
means any business, trade, undertaking,
manufacture or calling of employers and
includes any calling, service, employment,
handicraft or industrial occupation or
avocation of workmen".
It was found that the words in the definition were of very
wide and definite import. It was suggested that these words
should be read in a restricted sense having regard to the
included items on the principle of ’noscitur a sociis’. The
suggestion was rejected in the following language:
"It must be borne in mind that noscitur a
sociis is merely a rule of construction
and it cannot prevail in cases where it is
clear that the wider words have been
deliberately used in order to make the
scope of the defined word
correspondingly wider. It is only where
the intention of the Legislature in
associating wider words with words of
narrower significance is doubtful, or
otherwise not clear that the present rule
of construction can be usefully applied.
It can also be applied where the
meaning of the words of wider import is
doubtful; but, where the object of the
Legislature in using wider words is clear
and free of ambiguity, the rule of
construction in question cannot be
pressed into service". (p.614)
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We do not read this passage as excluding the application
of the principle of noscitur a sociis to the present case since it
has been amply demonstrated with reference to authority that
the meaning of the word "luxury" in Entry 62 is doubtful and has
been defined and construed in different senses.
In Black Diamond Beverages vs. Commercial Tax
Officer (1998) 1 SCC 458, the definition of ’sale price’ with
respect to notified commodities under Section 2(d) of the West
Bengal Sales Tax Act, 1954 was sought to be restricted with
reference to the specific inclusion of sums charged for
containers etc. The argument was that since freight charges
were not expressly included they must be taken to have been
excluded from the ’sale price’. In that context this Court said
that the inclusive part of the definition cannot prevent the main
provision from receiving its natural meaning and that according
to the natural meaning ’sale price’ included freight charges. It
was said that by the inclusion sale price was extended to mean
something which would not ordinarily come within its definition.
The decision is not of relevance as it is nobody’s contention
that luxuries in the sense of enjoyment would not naturally
cover entertainments, amusements, betting and gambling.
We are aware that the maxim of noscitur a sociis may be
a treacherous one unless the ’societas’ to which the ’socii’
belong, are known. The risk may be present when there is no
other factor except contiguity to suggest the ’societas’. But
where there is, as here, a term of wide denotation which is not
free from ambiguity, the addition of the words such as
’including’ is sufficiently indicative of the societas. As we have
said the word ’includes’ in the present context indicates a
commonality or shared features or attributes of the including
word with the included.
Furthermore where articles have been made the object of
taxation, either directly or indirectly, the entries in the
legislative lists have specifically said so or the impost is such
that the subject matter of tax follows by necessary implication.
In List II itself, the State legislature has been given the right to
levy taxes on the entry of goods under Entry 53, on ’carriage of
goods and passengers’ under Entry 56, on ’vehicles’ under
Entry 57 and on ’animals and boats under Entry 58. There is
no instance in any of the legislative lists of a tax being leviable
only with reference to an attribute. An attribute as an object of
taxation without reference to the object it qualifies would lead to
legislative mayhem, blur the careful demarcation between
taxation entries and upset the elaborate scheme embodied in
the Constitution for the collection and distribution of revenue
between the Union and the States. For example would a
luxury vehicle be subjected to tax under Entry 62 or Entry 57 of
List II? In the latter case, the levy would be subject to
provisions of Entry 35 of List III and hence capable of being
over-ridden by Parliament. If it is referable to Entry 62 there
would be no such concurrent power in Parliament.
Hence on an application of general principles of
interpretation, we would hold that the word ’luxuries’ in Entry 62
of List II means the activity of enjoyment of or indulgence in that
which is costly or which is generally recognized as being
beyond the necessary requirements of an average member of
society and not articles of luxury.
Lest we be accused of a blind adherence to a strictly
verbal interpretation we may note that the legislative history
behind Entry 62 of List-II does not militate against the
conclusion reached by us on a pure question of interpretation.
The Government of India Act, 1915 Act (as amended by the
Government of India Acts 1916 and 1919) provided for the
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division of the country into provinces including the two
Presidencies of Bengal and Madras (Section 46). The local
legislature of each province was empowered to make laws
under S. 80-A of the 1915-19 Act "for the peace and good
government" of that province. On 16th December, 1920 the
Scheduled Taxes Rules were made which permitted the
Legislative Council of a province for the purpose of the local
government to impose taxes listed in Schedule I to the Rules.
These included inter alia:
S.No.3 . A tax on any form of betting or gambling
permitted by law.
Sl.No.5 A tax on amusements
Sl.No.6. A tax on any specified luxury.
It was noted by the Indian Taxation Enquiry Committee in
its report in 1924-25 that tobacco was not subjected to tax. It
was recommended that a regular excise system should be put
in place on the manufacture of tobacco products or a levy of
sales tax or licensing fee on retail vendors of tobacco. It is of
significance that there was no suggestion of a levy being
imposed on tobacco under List I Sl.No.6.
Between the Government of India Act 1915-1919 and the
Government of India Act, 1935, these lists underwent a change.
Under the 1915-1919 Act there was indication only of the
provincial powers of legislation thereby leaving every other
subject within the legislative powers of the Centre. In 1921, the
Devolution Rules came into force. Schedule I to the Rules
contained two parts. Part I of Schedule I contained the subjects
which could be legislated or by the Indian Legislature.
Provincial subjects were classified under Part II. The sources
of provincial revenue included in the Schedules to the
Scheduled Taxes Rules were retained in Part II with the
provinces.
Schedule VII of the Government of India Act, 1935 which
repealed the 1915-1919 Act also classified the legislative
powers between the Federation and the Provinces. It
contained two exclusive lists and one concurrent list. List I of
the Schedule was the Federal Legislative List and comprised
matters exclusively assigned to the Federation. Entry 45 read
"Duties on excise on tobacco and other goods manufactured or
produced in India". List II which was the Provincial Legislative
List contained an Entry No. 48 "Taxes on the sale of goods"
and on advertisements. Entry 50 read: "Taxes on luxuries
including tax on entertainment, amusement, betting and
gambling". Here too there is no evidence of any tax being
imposed by the State under this entry on any goods. On the
other hand the imposition of tax on tobacco was brought under
Entry 45 of List I.
Entry 50 of the Provincial List (now Entry 62 of List II) was
resorted to impose entertainment tax on cinema houses under
the Cantonments Act, 1924 by the State of Bombay. The tax
was upheld on the ground that the entry contemplated a law
which imposed tax on the act of entertaining \026 Western India
Theatres Ltd. vs. The Cantonment Board, Poona (1959)
Supp. (2) SCR 63, 69.
Prior to the framing of the present Constitution the
debates in the Constituent Assembly show that the suggestion
that Entry 62 of List II should read as "taxes on entertainments,
amusements, betting and gambling, racing and other such
luxuries" was negatived on the ground that it would cut down
the scope of the entry. The example of a tax on servants which
"should probably be within the unamended entry" was cited as
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being possibly excluded by the amendment. In fact "a tax on
menials and domestic servants" was, under Schedule II of the
Taxes Rules framed under the 1915-1919 Act, within the
competence of the Provincial Legislative Council to impose, or
with the authority of the State Legislative Council within the
competence of any local authority. It was an entry distinct from
the authority conferred on the State Legislative Council to
impose a ’tax on any specified luxury’ under Schedule I of the
Taxation Rules. In any event ’servants and menials’ could
hardly be equated with "goods". It was probably their
employment which was considered as a possible luxury. It is
again to be emphasized that the rejection of the suggestion was
not because of the possible exclusion of luxury goods.
After the Constitution came into force, except for the
decision of this Court in A.B. Abdul Kadir vs. State of Kerala
(supra), in 1976, Entry 62 of List II was not invoked save for the
purpose of levying a tax on gambling and betting (State of
Bombay vs. R.M.D. Chamarbaugwala (1957) SCR 874) or for
levying tax on the provisions of enjoyment or indulgence of
facilities in hotels and restaurants (Express Hotels vs. State of
Gujarat (1989) 3 SCC 677; ELEL Hotels & Investments Ltd.
& Ors. vs. Union of India (1989) 3 SCC 698; East India
Hotels Ltd. vs. State of West Bengal (1990) Supp. SCC 755;
Spences Hotels Pvt. Ltd. and Anr. vs. State of West Bengal
and Ors.. (1991) 2 SCC 154 and East India Hotels Ltd,
Srinagar vs. State of J & K. and Anr. (1994) Supp. 2 SCC
580).
Thus the constitutional history of Entry 62 of List II would
show that despite the existence of an entry pertaining to ’luxury
tax’ in all the Constitutional Acts, from 1915 onwards, the tax
was never sought (save in the case of Abdul Kadir) to be
imposed on goods till 1993. The method of taxing luxury goods
invariably was by subjecting them to the extant fiscal regimes of
excise duties, sales tax, customs duties etc. at heavier rates.
No distinction is made in Article 366 (29A) or Article 286 or
Entries 83 and 84 of List I as to the nature of the goods which
may be the subject matter of sale excise or import be they
articles of necessity or articles of luxury. This is also the sense
in which States have all along understood the word as indicated
in their evidence given in response to the question posed by the
Taxation Enquiry Commission with reference to the levy of
sales tax in 1953-54 . The question was "should there be
special rates of levy, higher than the ordinary rate for certain
articles ? If so, for which types of articles?". The response to
this question by all the States was in the affirmative. It would
suffice for our purposes to note the response of the two States
whose statutes are impugned viz. AP and UP. Andhra Pradesh
said:
"In this State, special rates of tax at a
higher rate are levied on articles
mentioned in Section 3(2) of the Act,
which are luxury goods. It is proposed
to increase the number of articles in this
list by incorporating certain other items
brought to notice by the lists of the other
States."
Similarly Uttar Pradesh said:
"Special rates of levy, higher than the
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ordinary rates are justified in respect of
many luxury goods, needs on which
unduly high profits are being made by
the producers or dealers and goods of
which are consumption should be
discouraged."
Historically therefore the tax on luxury goods was seen as
a part of Entry 54 of List II or Entries 83 and 84 of List I but not
as a tax leviable under Entry 62 of List II. The only exception
was the Kerala Validating Statute which was the subject matter
of Abdul Kadir where the assessee did not question that Entry
62 related to goods and articles and the sole point of protest
was that tobacco was not an article of luxury. It was only in
1993 the State of Maharashtra enacted the Bombay Luxury Tax
Act, 1993 directly imposing luxury tax on goods. This was
withdrawn in 1994 but the other states soon followed suit
culminating in a rash of such legislation some of which are now
impugned before us where the question as to the leviability of
Luxury tax on goods is squarely raised.
Given the language of Entry 62 and the legislative history
we hold that Entry 62 of List II does not permit the levy of tax on
goods or articles. In our judgment, the word "luxuries" in the
Entry refers to activities of indulgence, enjoyment or pleasure.
In as much as none of the impugned statutes seek to tax any
activity and admittedly seek to tax goods described as luxury
goods, they must be and are declared to be legislatively
incompetent. However following the principles in Somaiya
Organics (India) Ltd. vs. State of U.P. (2001) 5 SCC 519
while striking down the impugned Acts we do not think it
appropriate to allow any refund of taxes already paid under the
impugned Acts. Bank guarantees if any furnished by the
assessees will stand discharged.
It was stated on behalf of the State Governments that
after obtaining interim orders from this Court against recovery
of luxury tax, the appellants continued to charge such tax from
consumers/customers. It is alleged that they did not pay such
tax to respective State Governments. It was, therefore,
submitted that if the appellants are allowed to retain the
amounts collected by them towards luxury tax from consumers,
it would amount to "unjust enrichment" by them.
In our opinion, the submission is well founded and
deserves to be upheld. If the appellants have collected any
amount towards luxury tax from consumers/customers after
obtaining interim orders from this Court, they will pay the said
amounts to the respective State Governments.
In view of our opinion on the scope of Entry 62 List II, we
do not think it necessary to answer the other issues raised in
these appeals which are left open.
Accordingly, W.P. No. 567 of 1994; W.P. Nos. 568-569 of
1994 are allowed. C.A Nos. 123-125 of 1995 are dismissed
albeit for different reasons. C.A. No. 2123 of 1999, C. A. Nos.
2124-25 of 1999, C.A. No. 2126 of 1999, C.A. No. 2127 of 1999
and C.A. Nos. 2552-2553 of 1999, C.A.No.7870 of 1996, C.A.
No. 6891 of 1996, and C.A. No. 6365 of 2000 are allowed.
There will be no order as to costs.