Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHIV DUTT RAI FATEH CHAND ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ANR. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT06/05/1983
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1195 1983 SCR (3) 198
1983 SCC (3) 529 1983 SCALE (1)590
ACT:
Central Sales Tax Act 1956-Sub-section (2-A) of section
9 introdaced by Central Sales Tax (Amendment) Act 1976-
Applicability of provisions relating to penalties leviable
under general sales tax laws of the States to the
proceedings under the Act-And section 9 of the Central Sales
Tax (Amendment) Act 1976- Retrospective operation-Whether
sub-section (2-A) of section 9 of the Act suffers from vice
of excessive delegation-Whether sub-section (2-A) and
section 9 of the Amending Act violative of Article 19(1)(f)
and (g) and Article 20 (1) of the Constitution.
Haryana General Sales Tax Act 1973- Section 48- Whether
confers uncanalised unguided and arbitrary power-Validity
of.
Constitution of India-Article 20 gives constitutional
protection to persons charged with crime before criminal
court.
Wards and phrases-Penalty-Meaning of-A word of wide
significance- Used in Article 20 (1) of the Constitution in
a narrow sense.
HEADNOTE:
Section 9 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 as amended
retrospectively by the Central Sales Tax (Amendment) Act,
1969 provided for levy and collection of tax and penalties
on sale of goods effected by a dealer in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce. lt further provided that the
authorties for the time being empowered to assess, re-
assess, collect and enforce payment of any tax under the
general sales tax law of the appropriate State shall, on
behalf of Government of India, assess, re-assess, collect
and enforce payment of tax including any penalty, payable by
a dealer under this Act as if the tax or penalty payable by
such a dealer under this Act is a tax or penalty under the
general sales tax law of the State; and for this purpose
they may exercise all or any of the powers they have under
the general sales tax law of the State. Consequent upon the
decision of this Court in Khemka & Co. v. State of
Maharashtra [1975] 3 S.C.R. 753 holding by a majority that
it was not open to the authorities under the State law to
levy and recover penalty for delay or default in payment of
tax under the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, section 9 of the
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Act came to be amended by the Central sales Tax (Amendment)
Act, 1976 introducing sub-section (2-A) in it. Sub-section
(2-A) of section 9 provided that all the provisions relating
to offences and penalties (with certain exceptions) of the
general sales tax law of each State shall with necessary
modification, apply in relation to the assessment, re-
assessment, collection and the enforcement of payment of any
tax required to be collected under this Act in such State as
if the tax under this Act were a tax under such sales tax
law.
199
Section 9 of the Amending Act, 1976 declared that the
provisions; of section 9 of the 1956 Act would have effect
and should be deemed always to have had effect in relation
to the period commencing from January 5, 1957 (the date of
coming into force of 1956 Act) and ending with the date
immediately proceeding the date of commencement of the
Amending Act.
The petitioners in these two batches of petitions filed
under Article 32 of the Constitution are dealers under the
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 (herein-after referred to as
’the Act’) having their places of business at Maharashtra,
Haryana etc. They have questioned the constitutional
validity of sub-section (2-A) of section 9 of the Act as
introduced by the Central Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1976
(herein-after referred to as ’the Amending Act’ and section
9 of the Amending Act validating the levy of penalties under
the Act with retrospective effect on the following grounds:
(1) That the introduction of sub-section (2-A) in
section 9 of the Act by the Amending Act, 1976 does not have
the effect of making the provisions relating to penalties
leviable under the general sales tax laws of the States
applicable to the assessees under the Act 25 the word
’penalties’ is not Found along with the words ’assessment,
re-assessment, collection and the enforcement of payment of
any tax’ in sub-section (2-A); the lacuna in the Act, which
was pointed out by this Court in Kehmka’s case namely that
there is no specific provision levying penalties in the Act
remains unfilled up even now and hence no penalties can be
recovered by utilising the provisions of the general sales
tax laws of the respective States.
(2) Sub-section (2-A) of section 9 suffers from the
vice of excessive delegation of legislative power; the
Parliament by adopting the provisions relating to offences
and penalties referred to in the various general sales tax
laws of the States has abdicated its essential legislative
function.
(3) That sub section (2-A) of section 9 of the Act and
section 9 of the Amending Act are violative of Article 20(1)
of the Constitution; that any act or omission which is
considered to be a default under the Act for which penalty
is leviable is an offence, that such act or omission was not
an offence, and no penalty was payable under the law in
force at the time when it was committed and hence they
cannot be punished by the levy of penalty under a law which
is given retrospective effect.
(4) The levy and collection of penalties with
retrospective effect amounts to an imposition of an
unreasonable restriction on the fundamental right of the
petitioners to own property and to carry on business
guaranteed under Article 19 (1) (f) and (g) of the
Constitution.
(5) That in the case of assessees of the State of
Haryana, section 48 of the Haryana General Sales Tax Act,
1973 which authorises the levy of penalty of ’a sum of not
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less than twice and more than ten times the amount of tax’
on proof of the defaults mentioned therein is violative of
Article 14 of the
200
Constitution as there is no guidance given to the authority
levying the penalty about the quantum of penalty.
Dismissing the petitions,
^
HELD 1. Sub-section (2-A) of section 9 of the Act and
section 9 of the Amending Act are adequately enough to
assess and realise penalties w.e.f. January 5, 1957 as
contemplated therein. The principal object of the Act is not
the levying of the penalties. Its object is assessment, re-
assessment collection and the enforcement of payment of
central sales tax. The assessees incur the liability to pay
penalties on account of certain acts or omissions committed
by them at the various stages specified above, namely,
assessment, re-assessment, collection and the enforcement of
payment of tax. The inclusion of the word ’penalties’ along
with these four stages would have, therefore been redundant
apart from being inappropriate. Sub-section (2-A) of section
9 of the Act expressly makes all the provisions relating to
offences and penalties which are committed or incurred as
the case may be, under the general sales tax laws of the
respective States applicable to persons who commit
corresponding acts and omissions at the above mentioned
stages under the Act. There is no lacuna in the language of
sub-section (2-A) of section 9 of the Act which makes the
provisions relating to penalties under the general sales tax
laws of the respective States inapplicable even now to the
proceedings under the Act. While sub-section (2-A) of
section 9 of the Act makes the provisions relating to both
offences and penalties in the general Sales tax laws of the
States applicable to the proceedings under the Act
prospectively, section 9 of the Amending Act makes all the
provisions relating to penalties only in the general sales
tax laws of the States applicable to the proceeding under
the Act retrospectively by adopting the same language
appearing in sub-section (2-A) of section 9 of the Act. This
pattern of legislation had to be adopted perhaps because
Parliament wished rightly not to give retrospective effect
to the provisions relating to offences also which are
referred to in sub-section (2-A) of section 9. Having thus
given retrospective effect to section (2-A) of section 9 w.
e. f. January 5, 1957 in so far as penalties were concerned
by enacting sub-section (1) of section 9 of the Amending
Act, Parliament removed the deficiency pointed out in
Khemka’s case. [217 E-F, 216 E-G, 217 A-D]
Khemka & Co. v. State of Maharashtra [1975] 3 S.C.R.
1973, referred to.
2. The question whether there has been excessive
delegation or abdication of legislative power has to be
decided on the meaning of the words in the Statute and the
policy behind it, Legislation by incorporation of provisions
of another statute even though passed by a different
legislature is a well known method of legislation which does
not effect the validity of the legislation particularly when
the scheme of the other statute is similar and such
incorporation is relevant and necessary for the purpose of
advancing the objects and purposes of the legislation. [217
H, 218 A-B]
201
In the instant case sub-section (2-A) of section 9 of
the Act does not suffer from the vice of excessive
delegation merely because the provisions relating to penalty
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in the general sales tax laws of the States are adopted for
purposes of the Act. The assessees under the Act who are
spread over various States are accustomed to the general
pattern of sales tax law in their respective States and the
various duties and responsibilities of an assessee who is
liable to pay sales tax. The officers who assess and collect
the tax under the Act are the officers who discharge similar
functions under the State laws. In this situation if
Parliament has, with the knowledge of the various provisions
relating to offences and penalties in the general sales tax
laws of the various States adopted them for purposes of
assessment, re-assessment, collection and enforcement of the
provisions of the Act it cannot be said that it has
abdicated its legislative functions. [222 B-C, 218 C-E]
The circumstances leading to imposition of penalties
and the rates of penalties very from on State to the other
but the power to make a legislative provision on matters
relating to penalties is circumscribed by various economic
factors and it cannot be said that Parliament had virtually
surrendered its legislative judgment to the State
legislatures. There is a clear legislative policy adopted by
Parliament in the case of levy of penalties and that is that
the penalties payable under the Act should be the same as
the penalties payable under the general sales tax law of
each State if the rates of penalties exceed reasonable
limits the States which are beneficiaries of the tax
collected under the Act themselves suffer as such
unreasonable levy is bound to lead to the killing of the
goose which lays the golden egg. The trade would immediately
shift to areas outside the State which resorts to higher
taxes and penalties. The political and economic factors
which operate in this field are so powerful that the
provisions with regard to penalties to be made by the State
Legislature cannot but be reasonable as they would affect
the levy of tax under the State Act also. The penal nature
of the penalties itself is a sufficient guidance regarding
maximum limits upto which penalties can be levied. A penalty
cannot be wholly disproportionate to the extent of
infringement of law. Moreover Parliament always has the
power to amend its own law i. e the Act if it finds that the
provisions realting to penalties in any State law cross the
limits of public interest. [222 C-G]
State of Madras v. N.K. Nataraja Mudaliar, [1968] 3
S.C.R. 829; Gwalior Rayon Silk Mfg. (Wvg.) Co. Ltd. v. The
Asstt. Cvmmissioner of Sales Tax & Ors. [1974] 2. S.C,R.
879; M,K Papiah & Sons v. The Excise Commissioner & Anr
[1975] 3 S.C.R. 607, referred to.
3. The marginal note of our Article 20 is ’protection
in respect of conviction for offences . The presence of
words ’conviction’ and ’offences’, in the marginal note
’convicted of an offence’, ’the act charged as an offence’
and ’commission of an offence’, ’in clause (1) of Article
20, ’prosecuted and punished’ in clause (2) of Article 20
aud ’accused of an offence’ and ’compelled to be a witness
against himself’ in clause (3) of Article 20 clearly
suggests that Article 20 relates to the constitutional
protection given to persons who are charged with a crime
before a criminal Court. [226 A-B]
202
The word ’penalty’ is a word of a wide significance.
Sometimes it means recovery of an amount as a penal measure
even in a civil proceeding. An exaction which is not of a
compensatory character is also termed as a penalty even
though it is not being recovered pursuant to an order
finding the person concerned guilty of a crime. In Article
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20(1) the expression ’penalty’ is used in the narrow sense
as meaning a payment which has to be made or a deprivation
of liberty which has to be suffered as a consequence of a
finding that the person accused of a crime is guilty of the
charge. The word ’penalty’ unsed in Article 20 (1) cannot be
construed as including a ’penalty’ levied under the sales
tax laws by the departmental authorities for violation of
statutory provisions. A penalty imposed by sales tax
authorities is only a civil liability, though penal in
character. It may be relevant to notice that sub-section (2-
A) of section 9 of the Act specifically refers to certain
acts and omissions which are offences for which a criminal
prosecution would lie and the provisions relating to
offences have not been retrospective effect by section 9 of
the Amending Act.
[226 B-D, 230 C-D]
Constitutional Law of India by H.M. Seervai; 3rd Ed.
vol. 1. p. 759; Maqbool Hussain v. The state of Bombay,
[1953] S.C.R. 730; Jawala Ram v. State of Pepsu, [1962] 2
S.C.R. 503; State of West Bengal v. S.K Ghosh [1963] 2
S.C.R. 111; M/s. Hati Singh Mfg Co. Ltd. & Anr. v. Union of
India & Ors., [1960] 3 S.C.R. 528: Pai Bahadur Hurdut Roy
Mati Lal Jute Mills v The State of Bihar & Anr., [1956] 7
S.T.C. 609; The State of Bihar v. Rai Bahadur Hurdut Ray
Moti Lall Jute Mills & Anr., A.I.R. 1960 S.C. 378; Shew
Bhagwan Goenka v. Commercial Tax Officer & Ors. [1973] 32
S.T.C. 368; Commissioner of Wealth Tax, Amritsar v. Suersh
Seth, [1981] 3 S.C.R. 419; Raghunathan Prasad Mohan Lal v.
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, Delhi Bench & Ors., [1970] 75
I.T.R. 741; Central India Motors v. C.L. Sharma, Assistant
Commissioner of Sales Tax, Indore Region, Indore & Anr.,
[1980] 46 S.T.C. 379, referred to.
4. If in its essential features a taxing statute is
within the competence of the legislature, it would not cease
to be so if retrospective effect is given to it. The
provision for levying of interest and to levy penalties
retrospectively and to validate earlier proceedings under
laws which had been declared unconstitutional after removing
the element of unconstitutionality is included within the
scope of legislative power. [231 E]
Under the Constitution the grounds on which infraction
of the rights to property is to be tested have to be
considered on the precise criteria set out in Article 19
(5). Mere retrospectivity in the imposition of the tax
cannot per se render the law unconstitutional on the ground
of it infringing the rights to hold property under Article
19 (1) (f). The test of the length of time covered by the
retrospective operation cannot by itself be treated as a
decisive test.
[231 E, 233 D]
In the instant case, there is no dispute about the
validity of the tax payable under the Act during the period
between January 1, 1957 and the date of commencement of the
Amending Act. It has to be presumed that all the tax has
been collected by the dealers from their customers. There is
also no dispute that the law required the dealers to pay the
tax within the specified time. The
203
dealers had also the knowledge of the provisions relating to
penalties in the general sales tax laws of their respective
States. It was only owing to the deficiency in the Act
pointed out by this Court in Khemaka’s case the penalties
became not payable. In this situation where the dealers have
untilised the money which should have been paid to the
Government and have committed default in performing their
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duty, if Parliament calls upon them to pay penalties in
accordance with the law as amended with retrospective effect
it cannot be said that there has been any unreasonable
restriction imposed on the rights guaranteed under Article
19 (1) (f) and (g) of the Constitution, even though the
period of retrospectivity is nearly nineteen years. [233 H,
234 A-C]
Chhotabhai Jethabhai Patel & Co, v. The Union of India
JUDGMENT:
The State of Bihar, [1964] 1 S.C.R. 897, referred to.
5. Section 48 of the Haryana General Sales tax Act,
1973 provides both the minimum and the maximum amount of
penalties leviable and it is correlated to the amount of tax
which would have been avoided if the turnover returned by
such dealer had been accepted as correct. The degree of
remissness involved in the default is a factor to be taken
into account while levying penalty. The order levying
penalty is quasi judicial in character and involves exercise
of judicial discretion. An order levying penalty under
section 48 is also subject to the provision relating to
appeal. In the circumstances, it is not possible to hold
that section 48 confers an uncanalised, unguided and
arbitrary power on the authority levying penalty. [235 E-G]
Hindustan Steel Ltd. v. State of Orissa, [1970] 1
S.C.R. 753, referred to.
&
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petitions Nos. 9057 of
1982, 318-319 of 1980, 1406-07 of 1981, 782 of 1980, 1264 of
1979, 450, 5798, 5799 of 1980, 2254-60, 4715-17, 7636, 8190
of 1981, 2250, 3478, 5455, 3479, 5518, 7220 of 1982, 608,
609 of 1983, 55-57 of 1977, 362, 401, 670-71, 672-75, 1191-
96, 1534-36, 1539 of 1977, 3768-69, 4196 of 1978, 280, 789-
92, 1981-82, 1083-84 of 1979, 233-241, 2201 of 1981, 3300,
3316, 3317, 3318, 3325, 3326, 3327 of 1982, 4389-90 and
4562-72 of 1978.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India.
M.N. Phadke, U.R. Lalit, S.B. Bhasmi, Smt, Santosh
Gupta, H. G. Gupta, Snrwa Mitter, K.C. Dua, M.P. Jha, Dr.
N.M. Ghatate S Y. Deshpaade, S.B. Saharya, Vishnu B.
Saharya, G. S. Jetely and Ram Lal for the Petitioners.
L N, Sihna, Attorney General, P.P. Singh, Miss A.
Subhashini, R.N. Poddar, Gopal Subramanium, D.P. Mohanti,
S.A. Shroff, D.D. Sharma, V.B. Joshi and M.N. Shroff for the
Respondents.
204
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J. The petitioners in these two batches
of petitions filed under Article 32 of the Constitution have
questioned the Constitutional validity of sub-section (2-A)
of section 9 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 (Act No. 74
of 1956) (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’) as amended
by the Central Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1976 (Act No. 103
of 1976) hereinafter referred to as ’the Amending Act’) and
section 9 of the Amending Act Validating the levy of
penalties under the Act with retrospective effect.
The petitioners are dealers under the Act having their
places of business in the States of Maharashtra, Haryana,
etc.
For the purpose of understanding the points of dispute
raised in these cases, it is necessary to deal with the
history of the legislation relating to taxes on inter-State
Sales and purchases of goods during the post-Constitution
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period. Under Entry 54 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to
the Constitution, the power to levy tax on sale or purchase
of good other than newspapers was assigned to the State
Legislature. The power to levy taxes on the sale or purchase
of newspapers and on advertisements published therein was,
however, assigned to Parliament under Entry 92 of List I of
the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. Article 286 (as it
was originally enacted) of the Constitution which imposed
certain restrictions on a State in the matter of levy of tax
on the sale or purchase of goods read as follows:-
"286. (1) No law of a State shall impose, or
authorise the imposition of, a 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.
Explanation.- For the purposes of sub-clause
(a), a sale or purchase shall be deemed to have
taken place in the State in which the goods have
actually been delivered
205
as a direct result of such sale or purchase for
the purpose of consumption in that State,
notwithstanding the fact that under the general
law relating to sale of goods the property in the
goods has by reason of such sale or purchase
passed in another State.
(2) Except in so far as Parliament may by law
otherwise provide, no law of a State shall impose,
or authorise the imposition of, a tax on the sale
or purchase of any goods where such sale or
purchase takes place in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce:
Provided that the President may by order
direct that any tax on the sale or purchase of
goods which was being lawfully levied by the
Government of any State immediately before the
commencement of this Constitution shall,
notwithstanding that the imposition of such tax is
contrary to the provisions of this clause,
continue to be levied until the thirty first day
of March, 1951.
(3) No law made by the Legislature of a State
imposing, or authorising the imposition of, a tax
on the sale or purchase of any such goods as have
been declared by Parliament by law to be essential
for the life of the community shall have effect
unless it has been reserved for the consideration
of the President and has received his assent."
The true effect of the above Article on inter-State
sales and purchases of goods was considered by this Court in
the State of Bombay & Anr. v. The United Motors (India) Ltd.
& Ors(1). In that case this Court held that Article 286 (1)
(a) of the Constitution read with the Explanation thereto
and construed in the light of Article 301 and Article 304 of
the Constitution prohibited the taxation of sales or
purchases involving inter-State elements by all States
except the State in which the goods were delivered for the
purpose of consumption therein. In other words it was held
that in the case of inter-State sales, the importing State
alone was competent to levy tax on transactions of sale
under its sales tax law on persons who were,
206
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resident outside its territory provided the goods were
delivered in the importing State for the purpose of
consumption therein. The result of this decision was that a
dealer carrying on business in the exporting State became
amenable to the sales tax law of the importing State in
which the goods were consumed. This question was again
reconsidered in The Bengal Immunity Company Ltd. v. The
State of Bihar & Ors.(1) In that case, this Court held that
a reading of clause (1) (a) read with the Explanation,
clause.(1) (b), clause (2) and clause (3) of Article 286
showed that those clauses were intended to deal with
different topics and one could not be projected or read into
the other and, therefore, the Explanation to clause (!)
could not be legitimately extended to clause (2) either as
an exception or as proviso to it or read as curtailing or
limiting clause (2). Consequently it was held that the State
of Bihar could not levy sales tax under its law on goods
which were subject matt r of inter-State sales even though
they had been consumed in that State in the absence of a law
made by Parliament as provided in clause (2) of Article 286.
This judgment Was delivered on September 6, 1955 and the
view expressed in this case was further reiterated in M/s
Ram Narain Sons Ltd. v, Asst. Commissioner of Sales Tax &
Ors.(3) which was decided on September 20, 1955. The result
was that no State could levy sales tax on inter-State sales
as there was no central legislation authorising it This
judgment caused a serious financial disequilibrium on the
budgets of the several States which had collected sales tax
in accordance with the decision in the case of United Motors
(supra) as they had to refund all the taxes so collected
from the non-resident traders. This situation was met by the
President promulgating ordinance No. III of 1956 which was
later on replaced by the Sales Tax Laws Validation Act, 1956
(Act VII of 1956), whereby all collections of sales tax on
inter-State sales by the States upto September 6, 1955 were
validated and proceedings in respect of the levy on inter-
State sale. for assessment were also protected. Later on in
the light of the report of the Taxation Enquiry Commission,
the Constitution itself was amended by the Constitution
(Sixth Amendment) Act, 1956 by introducing Entry 92-A in the
Union List, substituting Entry 54 in the State List by a new
Entry and by amending Article 269 and Article 286. Entry 92-
A in the Union List reads:
207
"92-A. 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".
Entry 54 in the State List now reads:
"54. Taxes on the sale or purchase of goods
other than newspapers, subject to the provisions
of Entry 92-A of List I."
The taxes levied on the inter-State sales and purchases
by the Central Government under a law made pursuant to the
new Entry 92-A came to be assigned to the States in the
manner provided in clause (2) of Article 269 by the
inclusion of sub-clause (g) in clause (1) of Article 269 and
under the new clause i.e. clause (3) added to Article 269,
Parliament was empowered to formulate principles-for
determining when a sale or purchase of goods took place in
the course of inter-State trade or commerce. After amendment
the relevant part of Article 269 of the Constitution reads:
"269. (1) The following duties and taxes
shall be levied and collected by the Government of
India but shall be assigned to the States in the
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manner provided in clause (2), namely- 13
... ... .... ...
(g) 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.
... ... ... ...
(3) Parliament may by law formulate
principles for determining when a sale or purchase
of goods takes place in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce."
In Article 286 of the Constitution, the Explanation to
clause (1) was omitted and clauses (2) and (3) were
substituted by new clauses (2) and (3) Article 286 now reads
as follows:
"286. (1) No law of a State shall impose, or
authorise the imposition of, a tax on the sale or
purchase of goods where such sale or purchase
takes place-
208
(a) outside the State; or
(b) in the course of the import of the goods
into, or export of goods out of, the
territory of India.
(2) Parliament may by law formulate principles
for determining when a sale or purchase of
goods take place in any of the ways mentioned
in clause (1).
(3) Any law of a State shall, in so far as it
imposes, or authorises the imposition of, 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
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."
Accordingly the Act was passed in. 1956. It has been
amended a number of times since then. The Preamble to the
Act states that the object of the Act is to formulate
principles for deter mining when a sale or purchase of goods
takes place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce
or outside a State or in the course . Of import into or
export from India, to provide for the levy, collection and
distribution of taxes on sales of goods in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce and to declare certain goods
to be of special importance in inter-State trade or commerce
and specify the restrictions and conditions to which State
laws imposing taxes on the sales or purchase of such goods
of special importance shall be subject. The expression
’dealer’ is defined in section 2(b) of the Act and the
expression ’sale’ is defined in section 2(g) thereof.
Section 3 of the Act lays down the principles with reference
to which the question whether a sale or purchase of goods
has taken place in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce or not can be determined. Section 4 of the Act
provides for determining when a sale or purchase of goods is
deemed to take place outside a State and section 5 of the
Act lays down the principles governing the determination of
the question whether a sale or purchase has taken place in
the course of export or import. Section 6 of the Act is the
charging section. Sub-section (1) and (l-A) of section 6 of
the Act which are material for purposes of this case read as
follows:
"6. Liability to tax on inter-State sales.
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209
(1) Subject to the other provisions contained
in this Act every dealer shall, with effect from
such date as the A Central Government may, by
notification in the official Gazette, appoint, not
being earlier than thirty days from the date of
such notification, be liable to pay tax under this
Act on all sales of goods other than electrical
energy effected by him in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce during any year on and
from the date so notified.
Provided that a dealer shall not be liable to
pay tax under this Act on any sale of goods which
in accordance with the provisions of sub-section
(3) of section 5, is a sale in the course of
export of those goods out of the territory of
India.
(1-A) A dealer shall be liable to pay tax
under this Act on a sale of any goods effected by
him in the course of inter-State trade or commerce
notwithstanding that no tax would have been
leviable (whether on the seller or the purchaser)
under the sales tax law of the appropriate State
if that sale had taken place inside that State."
Sub-section (2) of section 6 of the Act deals with the
circumstances when certain inter-State sales or purchases
will be exempt from the liability imposed under sub-sections
(1) and (1-A) of section 6. Section 6-A of the Act deals
with the burden of proof in the proceedings under the Act.
Section 7 of the Act provides for registration of dealers,
section 8 specifies the rates of tax on sales in the course
of inter-State trade or commerce and section 8-A lays down
the rules relating to determination of turnover. Section 9
of the Act which has undergone a number of changes provides
for assessment, collection etc. Of the levy made under the
Act. By reason of the retrospective amendment made by the
Central Sales Tax Amendment Act 28 of 1969, section 9 (with
effect from the commencement of the Act) read as follows:
"9. Levy and collection of tax and penalties-
(1) The tax payable by any dealer under this
Act on sales of goods effected by him in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce, whether
such sales fall within clause (a) or clause (b) of
section 3, shall be levied by the
210
Government of India and the tax so levied shall be
collected by that Government in accordance with
the t provisions of sub-section (2), in the State
from which the movement of the goods commenced:
Provided that, in the case of a sale of goods
during their movement from one State to another,
being a sale subsequent to the first sale in
respect of the same goods, the tax shall, where
such sale does not fall within sub section (2) of
section 6, be levied and collected in the State
from which the registered dealer effecting the
subsequent sale obtained or, as the case may be,
could have obtained the form prescribed for the
purposes of clause (a) of sub-section (4) of
section 8 in connection with the purchase of such
goods.
(2) Subject to the other provisions of this
Act and the rules made thereunder, the authorities
for the time . being empowered to assess, re-
assess, collect and enforce payment of any tax
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under the general sales tax law of the appropriate
State shall, on behalf of Government of India,
assess, reassess, collect and enforce. payment of
tax, including any penalty, payable by a dealer
under this Act as if the tax or penalty payable by
such a dealer under this Act is a tax or penalty
payable under the general sales tax law of the
State; and for this purpose they may exercise all
or any of the powers they have under the general
sales tax law of the State; and the provisions of
such law, including provisions relating to
returns, pro visional assessment, advance payment
of tax, registration 1’ of the transferee of any
business, imposition of the tax liability of a
person carrying on business on the transferee of,
or successor to, such business, transfer of
liability of any firm or Hindu undivided family to
pay tax in the event of the dissolution of such
firm or partition of such family, recovery of tax
from third parties, appeals, reviews, revisions,
references, refunds, penalties, compounding of
offences and treatment of documents furnished by a
dealer as confidential, shall apply accordingly.
Provided that if in any State or part thereof
there is no general sales tax law in force, the
Central Govern-
211
ment may by rules made in this behalf make
necessary provision for all or any of the matters
specified in this sub-section.
(3) The proceeds in any financial year of any tax,
including any penalty, levied and collected under
this Act in any State (other than a union
territory) on behalf of the Government of India
shall be assigned to that State and shall be
retained by it and the proceeds attributable to
Union territories form part of the Consolidated
Fund of India."
(Underlining by us)
It is seen from sub-section (2) of section 9 quoted
above that the authorities empowered to assess, reassess,
collect and enforce payment of any tax under the general
sales tax law of the appropriate State are authorized to
assess,’ reassess and enforce payment of tax including any
penalty payable by a dealer under the Act. The authorities
under the General sales tax law of the State have thus been
made the agents of the Union Government in discharging the
duties of assessment etc. referred to in section 9(2) of the
Act, and empowered to exercise all Dr any of the powers they
have under the general sales tax law of the State for the
aforesaid purposes. Section 9(2) further provides that the
provisions of the general sales tax law of the State
concerned including provisions relating to returns,
provisional assessment, advance payment of tax, registration
of the transferee of any business, imposition of the tax
liability of a person carrying on business on the transferee
of, or successor to, such business, transfer of liability of
any firm or Hindu undivided family to pay tax in the event
of dissolution of any firm or partition of such family,
recovery of tax from third parties, appeals, reviews,
revisions, references, refunds, penalties, compounding of
offences and treatment of documents furnished by a dealer as
confidential shall apply accordingly to the proceedings
under the Act. The proviso to sub- section (2) of section 9
of the Act provides that if in any State or part thereof
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there is no general sales tax law in force, the Central
Government may by rules made in this behalf make necessary
provision for all or any of the matters specified in that
sub-section. Sub-section (3) of section 9 of the Act
virtually carries out the intention of Article 269 of the
Constitution by providing that the proceedings in any
financial year of any tax, including any penalty levied and
collected under the Act in any State (other than a Union
212
Territory) on behalf of the Government of India shall be
retained by it. It may be mentioned here that there was no
express provision in the Act itself authorizing the levy of
any penalty for delay or default in payment of the tax due
under the Act or for other breaches of the general sales tax
laws of the States in so far as they were adopted by section
9(2) of the Act as part of the machinery under the Act. But
it was understood by all the sales tax authorities in the
States who were authorized to exercise power under section
9(2) that penalty could also be collected by them in
accordance with the provisions of the general sales tax of
the appropriate State in order to enforce the provisions of
the Act including collection of tax thereunder. In Khemka &
Co. v. State of Maharashtra(1) which was a case heard by a
Bench of five learned Judges of this Court, an assessee
under the Act who was a resident of the State of Maharashtra
contended that the levy of penalty under section 16(4) of
the Bombay Sales Tax Act for delay or default in payment of
tax due under the Act was not warranted by the provisions of
section 9(2) of the Act. There were three opinions expressed
in that case. A. N. Ray, J. with whom Khanna, J. agreed held
that a penalty not being merely a sanction or an adjunct to
or consequential to an assessment and not being just a
machinery to enforce payment of a tax but in reality was a
statutory liability in the absence of any express provision
of levy of penalty for delay or default in payment of the
tax under the Act, it was not open to the authorities under
the State law to levy and recover penalty for delay or
default in payment of tax under the Act. Mathew, J. with
whom Chandrachud, J. (as he then was) agreed took a contrary
view holding that if for enforcing payment of tax due under
the general sales tax law of the appropriate State the
authorities thereunder had power to impose penalty, they had
the same power of imposing penalty for enforcing. payment of
tax payable under the Act in accordance with the general
sales tax law of the State. While the existence of specific
provision for levy of penalty under section 10 read with
section 10-A of the Act was relied on by A. N. Ray, C.J. in
support of his view, the said provisions were explained by
Mathew, J. by observing that the penalties provided for in
section 10 read with section 10-A of the Act were not for
the purpose of or in connection with assessment,
reassessment, collection and enforcement of payment of tax
payable by a dealer under the Act. Beg, J. (as he then was)
by his separate judgment concurred with the view of A. N
Ray, C.J.. The result was that
213
the penalty levied against the appellant was held to be
unsustainable in accordance with the opinion of the
majority. Consequently section 9 came to be amended by the
Amending Act which was published in the Gazette of India on
September 9, 1976 introducing sub-section (2-A) in it. We
are not concerned with the other amendments made by the
Amending Act in this case. Sub-section 2-A of section 9
which was introduced by the Amending Act reads:
"(2-A). All the provisions relating to
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offences and penalties (including provisions
relating to penalties in lieu of prosecution for
an offence or in addition to the penalties or
punishment for an offence but excluding the
provisions relating to matters provided for in
sections 10 and 10A) of the general sales tax law
of each State shall with necessary modifications,
apply in relation to the assessment, reassessment,
collection and the enforcement of payment of any
tax required to be collected under this Act in
such State or in relation to any process connected
with such assessment, reassess-ment, collection or
enforcement of payment as if the tax under this
Act were a tax under such sales tax law."
Sub-section (1) of section 9 of the Amending Act
contains a validating provision. Section 9 of the Amending
Act declared that the provisions of section 9 of the Act
would have effect and should be deemed always to have had
effect in relation to the period commencing from January S,
1957 and ending with the date immediately preceding the date
of commencement of the Amending Act as if section 9 of the
Act also provided-
(a) that all the provisions relating to penalties
(including provisions relating to penalties in lieu of
prosecution for an offence or in addition to the penalties
or punishment on conviction for an offence but excluding the
provisions relating to matters provided for in sections 10
and 10A of the principal Act and the provisions relating to
offences) of the general sales tax law of each State shall,
with necessary modifications, apply in relation to-
(i) the assessment, re-assessment, collection and
enforcement of payment of any tax required to
be collected under the principal Act in such
State; and
214
(ii) any process connected with such assessment,
reassessment, collection or enforcement of
payment; and
(b) that for the purposes of the application of the
prosisions of such law, the tax under the principal Act
shall be deemed to be tax under such law,
Sub-section (2) of section 9 of the Amending Act
validated all actions taken in connection with the levy of
penalties by declaring that notwithstanding anything
contained in any judgment, decree or order of any court or
tribunal or other authority, all penalties under the general
sales tax law of any State imposed or purporting to have
been imposed in pursuance of the provisions of section 9 of
the Act and all proceedings acts or things taken or done for
the purpose of, or in relation to the imposition or
collection of such penalties before the commencement of the
Amending Act should for all purposes be deemed to be and to
have always been imposed. taken or done as validly and
effectively as if the provisions of sub-section (1) had been
in force when such penalties were imposed or proceedings or
acts or things were taken or done and accordingly-
(a) no suit or other proceedings shall be maintained or
continued in or before any court or any tribunal or other
authority for the refund of any amount received or realised
by way of such penalty;
(b) no court, tribunal or other authority shall enforce
any decree or order directing the refund of any amount
received or realised by way of such penalty;
(c) where any amount which had been received or
realised by way of such penalty had been refunded before the
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commencement of this Act and such refund would not have been
allowed if the provisions of sub-section (1) had been in
force on the date on which the order for such refund was
passed, the amount so refunded may be recovered as an arrear
of tax under the Act;
(d) any proceeding, act or thing which could have been
validly taken, continued or done for the imposition of such
penalty at any time before the commencement of this Act if
the provisions of sub section (1) had then been in force but
which had not been taken,
215
continued or done, may after such commencement be taken,
continued or done.
Sub-section (3) of section 9 of the Amending Act
provided that nothing in section 9 (2) there of should be
construed as preventing any person from questioning the
imposition or collection of any penalty or any proceeding,
act or thing in connection therewith or from claiming any
refund in accordance with section 9 of the Act. The
Explanation to this sub-section provided for the exclusion
of the period between February 27, 1975 and the date of the
commencement of the Act in computing the period of
limitation for questioning the penalty.
Sub-section (4) of section 9 of the Amending Act
validated the levy of interest on arrears of sales tax also.
These petitions are filed after the Amending Act came
into force.
In support of these petitions the petitioners have
urged the following contentions:-
1. that the introduction of sub-section (2-A) in
section 9 of the Act does not have the effect
of making the provisions relating to penalt-
ies leviable under the general sales tax laws
of the States applicable to the proceedings
under the Act,
2. that the Parliament cannot adopt the provi-
sions relating to penalties in the general
sales tax laws, of the States for enforcing
the charge under the Act, as such a course
would amount to an abdication of its
essential legislative function by Parliament;
3 that the provision giving retrospective
effect to sub- section (2-A) of section 9 of
the Act and the provision validating all the
penalties levied prior to the coming into
force of the Amending Act are violative of
clause (1) of Article 20 of the Constitution;
4. The levy of penalties with retrospective
effect is also violative of Article 19 (1)
(f) and (g) of the Constitution; and
216
5. that in the case of assessees of the State of
Haryana it is urged that section 48 of the
Haryana General Sales Tax is void as it
confers arbitrary and unguided power on the
authorities to levy penalties.
We shall consider these contentions seriatim.
The first contention urged on behalf of the petitioners
is that the lacuna in the Act which was pointed out by this
Court in Khemaka’s case (supra) namely that there was no
specific provision levying penalties in the Act as it stood
before its amendment in 1976 remains unfilled up even now
and hence no penalties can be recovered by utilising the
provisions of the general sales tax laws of the respective
States. This argument is based upon the language of
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subsection (2.A) of section 9 of the Act which is extracted
above. lt is contended that the words "(A) 11 the provisions
relating to offences and penalties.. of the general sales
tax law of each State shall with necessary modifications
apply in relation to the assessment, re-assessment,
collection and the enforcement of payment of any tax
required to be collected under this Act . ..." are
insufficient to make the provisions relating to penalties in
the State laws applicable to the assessees under the Act as
the word ’penalties’ is not found alongwith the words
assessment, reassessment, collection and the enforcement of
payment of any tax’. The argument is misconceived. The
principal object of the Act is not the levying of penalties.
Its object is assessment, reassessment, collection and the
enforcement of payment of central sales tax. The assessment
incur the liability to pay penalties on account of certain
acts or omissions committed by them at the various stages
specified above, namely, assessment, reassessment,
collection and the enforcement of payment of tax. The
inclusion of the word ’penalties’ alongwith these four
stages would have, therefore, been redundant apart from
being inappropriate. Sub-section (2-A) of section 9 of the
Act expressly makes all the provisions relating to offences
and penalties which are committed or incurred, as the case
may be, under the general sales tax laws of the respective
States, applicable to persons who commit corresponding acts
and omissions at the above mentioned stages under the Act.
To illustrate, if a person is liable to pay any penalty for
not filing a return required to be filed by him under the
general sales tax law of a State, a person who is similarly
required to file a return under the Act incurs the penalty
for not filing a return and the measure of penalty is the
same as under the State law. If a person is liable to
217
pay penalty at a particular rate in addition to the tax for
not paying any part of the tax due under a State law within
the specified time, a person liable to pay tax under the Act
becomes liable to pay the penalty at the same rate if he
commits default in paying the tax due under the Act. We do
not, therefore, find any lacuna in the language of sub-
section (2-A) of section 9 of the Act which makes the
provisions relating to penalties under the general sales tax
laws of the respective States inapplicable even now to the
proceedings under the Act. While sub-section (2-A) of
section 9 of the Act makes the provisions relating to both
offences and penalties in the general sales tax laws of
States applicable to the proceedings under the Act
prospectively, section 9 of the Amending Act makes all the
provisions relating to penalties only in the general sales
tax laws of the States applicable to the proceeding under
the Act retrospectively by adopting the same language
appearing in subsection (2-A) of section 9 of the Act. This
pattern of legislation had to be adopted perhaps because
Parliament wished rightly not to give retrospective effect
to the provisions relating to offences also which are
referred to in sub-section (2-A) of section 9. Having thus
given retrospective effect to section 2-A of section 9 with
effect from January 5, 1957 in so far as penalties were
concerned by enacting sub-section (1) of section 9 of the
Amending Act, Parliament removed the deficiency pointed out
in Kheamaka’s case (supra) in the Act. In view of the
retrospective amendment, the basis of the judgment in
Kheamka’s case (supra) was also removed. Consequently the
judgment delivered in that case could not stand in the way
of realisation of penalties in accordance with the
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validating provisions of section 9 (2) of the Amending Act
We are of the view that sub-section (2-A) of section 9 of
the Act and section 9 of the Amending Act are adequate
enough to assess and realise penalties with effect from
January 5, 1957 as contemplated therein. We, therefore, hold
that there is no substance in this contention of the
petitioners.
The second point urged on behalf of the petitioners is
that sub-section (2-A) of section 9 of the Act suffers from
the vice of excessive delegation of legislative power. It is
argued that Parliament by adopting the provisions relating
to offences and penalties referred to in the various general
sales tax laws of the States has abdicated its essential
legislative function. The question whether there has been
excessive delegation or abdication of legislative power has
to be decided on the meaning of the words in the statute and
the policy behind it. In the instant case, Parliament has
not authorised the State Legislatures to make laws in
respect of
218
offences and penalties that may be leviable under the Act.
What is done by Parliament by enacting sub-section (2-A) of’
section 9 is that whatever provisions relating to offences
and penalties were there in the general sales tax laws of
the States would be applicable with appropriate modification
to assessment, reassessment, collection and enforcement or
the provisions of the Act. Legislation by incorporation of
provisions of another statute ever. though passed by a
different legislature is a well known method of legislation
which does not affect the validity of the legislation
particularly when the scheme of the other statute is similar
and such incorporation is relevant and necessary for the
purpose of advancing the objects and purposes of the
legislation. In the instant case we should bear in mind the
history of the central sales tax legislation and its object
and purpose. The central sales tax levied on inter-State
sales is assigned under Article 269 of the Constitution to
the States who are the true beneficiaries. The assessees
under the Act who are spread over various States are
accustomed to the general pattern of sale tax law in their
respective States and the various duties and
responsibilities of an assessee who is liable to pay sales
tax. The officers who assess and collect the tax under the
Act are the officers who discharge similar functions under
the State laws. In this situation if Parliament has, with
the knowledge of the various provisions relating to offences
and penalties in the general sales tax laws of the various
States, adopted them for purposes of assessment,
reassessment, collection and enforcement of the provisions
of the Act it cannot be said that it has abdicated its
legislative functions. In this connection it is necessary to
refer to the decision of this Court in State of Madras v. N.
K. Nataraja Mudaliar(1). In that case one of the contentions
raised by the assessee related to the validity of section 8
of the Act as amended by Central Act 31 of 1958. By sub-
section (1) of section 8 every dealer who in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce sold to the Government any
goods or to a registered dealer, other than the Government,
goods of the description referred to in sub-section (3) of
section 8 was liable to pay tax under the Act at the rate of
one per cent of his turnover. Under sub-section (2) of
section 8 the tax payable on the turnover relating to inter-
State sales not falling under sub-section (1) of section 8
was (a) in the case of declared goods, to be computed at the
rate applicable to the sale or purchase of such goods inside
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the appropriate State and (b) in the case of goods other
than declared goods at the rate of seven per cent or at the
rate
219
applicable to the sale or purchase of such goods inside the
appropriate State whichever was higher. Sub-section (2-A) Of
section 8 of the Act provided that notwithstanding anything
contained in subsection (1) or sub-section (2), if under the
sales tax law of the appropriate State the sale or purchase,
as the case may be, of any goods by a dealer was exempt from
tax generally or subject to tax generally at a rate which
was lower than one per cent (whether called a tax, a fee or
by any other name) the tax payable under the Act on his
turnover in so far as the turnover or any part thereof
related to the sale of such goods should be nil or as the
case might be, should be calculated at the lower rate. The
Explanation to sub-section 2-A of section 8 provided that
for the purpose of that sub-section, a sale or purchase of
goods should not be deemed to be exempt from tax generally
under the sales tax law of the appropriate State if under
that it was exempt only in specified circumstances or under
specified conditions or in relation to which the tax was
levied at specified stages or otherwise than with reference
to the turnover of goods. Justifying the varying rates of
tax under subsection (2) and (2-A) of section 8 depending
upon the rates of tax levied in different States, Shah, J.
Observed at pages 844-846 thus:
"The rates of tax in force at the date when
the Central Sales Tax Act was enacted have again
not become crystalised The rate which the State
Legislature determines, subject to the maximum
prescribed for goods referred to in s 8 (1) and
(2) are the operative rates for those
transactions: in respect of transactions falling
within s 8 (2) (b) the rate is determined by the
State rate except where the State rate is between
the range of two and seven per cent. The rate
which a State legislature imposes in respect of
inter-State transactions in a particular commodity
must depend upon a variety of factors. A State may
be led to impose a high rate of tax on a commodity
either when it is not consumed at all within the
State, or if it feels that the burden which is
falling on consumers within the State will be more
than offset by the gain in revenue ultimately
derived from outside consumers. The imposition of
rates of sales tax is normally influenced by
factors political and economic. If the rate is so
high as to drive away prospective traders from
purchasing a commodity and to resort to other
sources of supply, in its own interest the State
will adjust
210
the rate to attract purchasers ...Again, in a
democratic constitution political forces would
operate against the levy of an unduly high rate of
tax. The rate of tax on sales of a commodity may
not ordinarily be based on arbitrary
considerations but in the light of the facility of
trade in a particular commodity, the market
conditions internal and external-and the
likelihood of-consumers not being scared away by
the price which includes a high rate of tax.
Attention must also be directed to sub-s. (S) of
s. 8 which authorises the State Government,
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notwithstanding anything contained in s. 8 in the
public interest to waive tax or impose tax on
sales at a lower rate on inter-State trade or
commerce. It is clear that the legislature has
contemplated that elasticity of rates consistent
with economic forces may be maintained.
Prevalence of differential rates of tax on
sales of the same commodity cannot be regarded in
isolation as determinative of the object to
discriminate between one State and another. Under
the Constitution as originally framed, revenue
from sales tax was reserved to the States. But
since the power of taxation could be exercised in
a manner prejudicial to the larger public
interests by the States it was found necessary to
restrict the power of taxation in respect of
transactions which had an inter-State content.
Amendment of Art. 286 and the enactment of the
Sales Tax Validation Act 1956, and the Central
Sales Tax Act, 1956, were all intended to serve a
dual purpose: to maintain the source of revenue
from sales tax to the States and at the same time
to prevent the States from subjecting transactions
in the course of inter-State trade so as to
obstruct the free flow of trade by making
commodities unduly expensive. The effect of the
Constitutional provisions achieved in a somewhat
devious manner is still clear, viz. to reserve
sales tax as a source of revenue for the States.
The Central Sales Tax Act is enacted under the
authority of the Union Parliament, but the tax is
collected through the agency of the State and is
levied ultimately for the benefit of the States
and is statutorily assigned to the States. That ii
clear from the amendments made by the Constitution
(Sixth Amendment) Act, 1956, in Art. 269, and the
221
enactment of cls. (1) & (4) of s. 9 of the Central
Sales Tax Act. The Central sales-tax though levied
for and collected in the name of the Central
Government is a part of the sales-tax levy imposed
for the benefit of the States. By leaving it to
the States to levy sales-tax in respect of a
commodity on intra-State transactions no
discrimination is practised: and by authorising
the State from which the movement of goods
commences to levy on transactions of sale Central
sales-tax, at rates prevailing In the State,
subject to the limitation already set out, in our
judgment, no discrimination can be deemed to be
practised.
In Gwalior Rayon Silk Mfg. (Wvg.) Co. Ltd. v. The Asst.
Commissioner of Sales Tax & ors.(1) this Court had to
consider whether section 8 (2) (b) of the Act suffered from
the vice of excessive delegation. The material part of
section 8(2) (b), as it stood then, provided that the tax
payable by any dealer on his turnover in so far as it
related to the sale of goods in the course of inter State
trade or commerce not falling within sub-section (1) thereof
and In case of goods other than declared goods should be
calculated at the rate often per cent or at the rate
applicable to the sale or purchase of such goods inside the
appropriate State whichever was higher. The provision meant
that while the tax due on the sale of the goods in question
could not be less than ten per cent of the turnover, it
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could be any amount higher than that as might be determined
by a State Legislature in respect of the intra-State
transactions of sales or purchases of the said goods. In the
above case there were two judgments both upholding the
validity of the impugned provision.
The majority judgment delivered by Khanna, J. saw that
there was a legislative policy behind the provision, namely,
that the rate of sales tax on the goods in question should
be not less than ten per cent but in any event should be the
same as the local sales tax for the said goods. Khanna, J.,
however, held that it was not possible to accept that the
view that the legislature would not be abdicating its
essential legislative function merely because it could
always repeal the law delegating legislative power to
another authority. The minority view expressed by Mathew,
J., however, differed from
222
Khanna, J on the above point, but agreed with the conclusion
of the majority on the validity of the impugned provision. A
reading of the above decision shows that the question of
valid delegation of legislative power requires to be further
examined by this Court in view of a subsequent decision of
this Court in M. K. Papiah & Sons. v. The Excise
Commissioner & Anr.(1) in which we do not find any reference
at all to the case of Gwalior Rayon Silk Mfg. Wvg. Co. (supr
a). Even so, so far as the present case is concerned,
judging it in the light of either of the two views, it has
to be held that subsection (2-A) of section 9 of the Act
does not suffer from the vice of excessive delegation merely
because the provisions relating to penalties in the general
sales tax laws of the States are adopted for purposes of the
Act.
It may be true that the circumstances leading to
imposition of penalties and the rates of penalties vary from
one State to the other but the power to make a legislative
provision on matters relating to penalties is circumscribed
by various economic factors and it cannot be said that
Parliament has virtually surrendered its legislative
judgment to the State legislatures. There is clear
legislative policy adopted by Parliament in the case of levy
of penalties and that is that penalties payable under the
Act should be the same as the penalties payable under the
general sales tax law of each State. If the rates of
penalties exceed reasonable limits the States which are the
beneficiaries of the tax collected under the Act themselves
suffer as such unreasonable levy is bound to lead to the
killing of the goose which lays the golden egg. The trade
would immediately shift to areas outside the State which
resorts to higher taxes and penalties The political and
economic factors which operate in this field are so powerful
that the provisions with regard to penalties to be made by
the State Legislature cannot but be reasonable as they would
affect the levy of tax under the State Act also. The penal
nature of the penalties itself is a sufficient guidance
regarding maximum limits upto which penalties can be levied.
A penalty cannot be wholly disproportionate to the extent of
infringement of law. Moreover Parliament always has the
power to amend its own i. e. the Act if it finds that the
provisions relating to penalties in any State law cross the
limits of public interest. It is of interest to note here
that in the case of M.K. Papiah & sons (Supra) it was held
that the existence of the power to repeal or modify its own
law in order to bring a piece of
223
delegated legislation in accord with its own legislative
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will should be considered as an effective check on the
misuse of legislative power by the delegate. The power of
Parliament to remedy a situation created by the levy of
penalties by the general sales tax laws of States not in
consonance with its own pleasure is also an answer to the
criticism that Parliament has effaced itself in enacting
sub-section (2-A) of section 9 of the Act. As long as such
power is intact and can be exercised whenever Parliament
wishes to take the matter directly into its own hands, there
cannot be a total effacement of the legislative power of
Parliament. The above view receives support from the
following passage in "Australian constitutional Law" by
Fajgenbaum & Hanks (Second Edition) at page 202:
"3,009 ............................ Parliament can
delegate to the Crown, or to any servant of the
Crown, the power to demand the payment of taxes,
including the power to fix the rate of taxation. A
clear illustration is provided by the provisions
of the State Transport Facilities Act 1947 (Qld)
and the State Transport Act 1960 (Qld) which gave
to a commissioner for transport very broad powers
to license services for the carriage of passengers
and goods and to fix the amount of licence fee to
be paid by every licencee The validity of these
provisions was up held by the Privy Council in,
Cobb & Co. Ltd. v. Kropp (1967) 1 AC, 141,
rejecting an argument that Queensland Parliament
had no power to abrogate its taxing power in this
way:
In their Lordships’ view the Queensland
legislature were fully warranted in legislating in
the terms of the Transport Acts now being
considered. They preserved their own capacity
intact and they retained perfect control over the
commissioner for transport in as much as they
could at any time repeal the. legislation and
withdraw such authority and discretion as they had
vested in him. It cannot be asserted that there
was a levying of money by pretence of prerogative
without grant of Parliament or without
parliamentary warrant.
The legislature were entitled to use any
agent or any subordinate agency or any machinery
that they considered appropriate for carrying out
the objects and purposes that
224
they had in mind and which they designated. They
were entitled to use the commissioner for
transport as their instrument to fix and recover
the licence and permit fees (1967) 1 AC at 156,
157."
We feel that even applying the rule in the Gwalior
Rayon Silk Mfg. (Wvg.) Co.’s case (supra), it cannot be said
that sub-section (2-A) of section 9 suffers from the vice of
excessive delegation of legislative power having regard to
the nature of that provision.
We shall now proceed to consider the question whether
by reason of retrospective effect having been given to sub-
section (2-A) of section 9 of the Act in so far as penalties
are concerned by enacting section 9 of the Amending Act
Parliament has contravened Article 20 (1) of the
Constitution. In order to make good the deficiency in the
Act pointed out by the majority judgment in Khemka’s case
(supra) the validating provision contained in section 9 of
The Amending Act provided in substance that in so far as
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penalties were concerned sub-section (2-A) of section 9
should be deemed to have had effect in relation to the
period commencing on January 5, 1957 and ending with the
date immediately preceding the date of commencement of the
Amending Act. That is obvious from the similarity of the
language between sub-section (2-A) of section 9 of the Act
and section 9 (1) of the Amending Act. Section 9 (2) of the
Amending Act also contained the usual provision validating
the levy of penalties completed prior to the commencement of
the Amending Act and authorising the continuance of the.
proceedings for levy of penalties in respect of the period
commencing from January 5, 1957. In the instant case it may
be noted that in all the general sales tax laws of the
States, there were provisions requiring every dealer to
comply with statutory requirements such as the filing of
returns, the payment of the tax due within the specified
time etc. and they were applicable to the dealers under the
Act by reason of section 9 (2) of the Act. Notwithstanding
such statutory provisions many dealers failed to perform
their statutory duties. They would have been liable to
penalties mentioned in the relevant statutory provisions if
the defaults committed by them were those committed under
the said statutory provisions on the basis of the language
of sub-section 1.1 (2) of section 9 of the Act in many
States proceeding for levying penalties in accordance with
the provisions relating to penalties in their respective
general sales tax laws were commenced against such
defaulters under the Act and in some cases proceeding were
completed
225
and penalties were also recovered. Some High Courts also
took the view that such penalties were validly leviable. But
ultimately this Court by a majority of three to two held in
Khemka’s case (supra) that since there was no express
provision in the Act permitting the levy of such penalties,
the proceedings relating to the determination and recovery
of penalties were not valid. The Amending Act was,
therefore, passed expressly to make the levy of penalties as
per the general sales tax laws in force in the States
permissible with retrospective effect and also to validate
all such previous proceedings. Article 20 of the
Constitution reads thus:
"20. (1) No person shall be convicted of any
offence except for violation of a law in force at
the time of the commission of the act charged as
an offence, nor be subjected to a penalty greater
than that which might have been inflicted under
the law in force at the time of the commission of
the offence.
(2) No person shall be prosecuted and
punished for the same offence more than once.
(3) No person accused of any offence shall be
compelled to be a witness against himself."
The contention of the petitioners is that any act or
omission which is considered to be a default under the Act
for which penalty is leviable is an offence, that such act
or omission was not an offence and no penalty was payable
under the law in force at the time when it was committed and
hence they cannot be punished by the levy of penalty under a
law which is given retrospective effect. They principally
rely on Article 20 (1) in support of their case Art. 20 (1)
is modelled on the basis of section 9 (3) of Article 1 of
the Constitution of the United States of America which
reads: "No bill of attainder or ex post facto law shall be
passed". This clause has been understood in the United
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States of America as being applicable only to legislation
concerning crimes. (See Calder v. Bull 3 Dall 386 (1798)).
The expression ’offence’ is not defined in the Constitution.
Article 367 of the Constitution says that unless the context
otherwise provides for words which are not defined in the
Constitution, the meaning assigned in the General Clauses
Act, 1897 may be given. Section 3 (38) of the General
Clauses Act defines ’offence’ as any act or omission made
punishable by any law for the time being in force,
226
The marginal note of our Article 20 is ’protection in
respect of conviction for offences’. The presence of the
words ’convition’ and ’offences’, in the marginal note
’convicted of an offence’, ’the act charged as an offence’
and ’commission of offence’ in clause (1) of Article 20,
’prosecuted and punished’ in clause (2) of Article 20 and
’accused of an offence’ and ’compelled to be a witness
against himself’ in clause (3) of Article 20 clearly
suggests that Article 20 relates to the constitutional
protection given to persons who are charged with a crime
before a criminal court. (See H.M. Seervai: Constitutional
Law of India (3rd Edition) Vol. 1, page 759). The word
’penalty’ is a word of wide significance. Sometimes it means
recovery of an amount as a penal measure even in a civil
proceeding. An exaction which is not of compensatory
character is also termed as a penalty even though it is not
being recovered pursuant to an order finding the person
concerned guilty of a crime. In Article 20 (1) the
expression ’penalty’ is used in the narrow sense as meaning
a payment which has to be made or a deprivation of liberty
which has to be suffered as a consequence of a finding that
the person accused of a crime is guilty of the charge.
In Maqbool Hussain v. The State of Bombay.(1) the
question for consideration was whether when the customs
authorities confiscated Certain goods under the Sea Customs
Act there was a prosecution and the order of confiscation
constituted a punishment within the meaning of clause (2) of
Article 20. Negativing the said plea, the Court observed at
pages 738-739:
"The very wording of article 20 and the words
used therein:-" convicted "commission of the act
charged as an offence", "be subjected to a
penalty", "commission of the offence’, "prosecuted
and punished", "accused of any offence", would
indicate that the proceedings therein contemplated
are of the nature of criminal proceedings before a
court of law or a judicial tribunal and the pro-
secution in this context would mean an initiation
or starting of proceedings of a criminal nature
before a court of law or a judicial tribunal in
accordance with the procedure prescribed in the
statute which creates the offence and regulates
the procedure."
227
The levy of charges for ’unauthorised use’ of water
enforced with retrospective effect was held to be not
offending Article 20 (1) in Jawala Ram v. State of Pepsu.(1)
Similarly in State of West Bengal v. S.K Ghosh.(2) the
forfeiture provided under section 13 (3) of the Criminal Law
Amendment ordinance 1944 (38 of 1944) was held to be not a
penalty within the meaning of Article 20 (1) of the
Constitution and in that connection this Court observed at
pages 130-131 thus:
"Article 20 (1) deals with conviction of
persons for offences and for subjection of them to
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penalties. It provides firstly that "no person
shall be convicted of any offence except for
violation of a law in force at the time of the
commission of the act charged as an offence".
Secondly, it provides that no person shall be
"subjected to a penalty greater than that which
might have been inflicted under the law in force
at the time of the commission of the offence".
Clearly, therefore, Art.20 is dealing with punish-
ment for offences and provides two safeguards
namely. (1) that no one shall be punished for an
act which was not an offence under the law in
force when it was committed, and (ii) that no one
shall be subjected to a greater penalty for an
offence than what was provided under the law in
force when the offence was committed. The provi-
sion for forfeiture under s. 13(3) has nothing to
do with the infliction of any penalty on any
person for an offence. If the forfeiture provided
ins. 13(3) were really a penalty on a convicted
person for commission of all offence we should
have found it provided in the 1943 ordinance and
that penalty of forfeiture would have been
inflicted by the criminal court trying the
offender."
Again while upholding section 25 FFF(1) (which came
into force on June 6, 1957) of the Industrial Disputes Act,
1947 which directed compensation to workers who had been
retrenched earlier on and after November 28, 1956, this
Court observed in Hatisingh Mfg. Co. Ltd. & Anr. v. Union of
India & ors.(3) at pages 536 and 545 thus:
228
"A law which creates a civil liability in
respect of a transaction which has taken place
before the date on which the Act was enacted does
not per se impose an unreasonable restriction
(page 536)
If the statute fixes criminal liability for
contravention of the prohibition or the command
which is made applicable to transactions which
have taken place before the date of its enactment
the protection of Art. 20(1) may be attracted.. By
s. 33(c) liability to pay compensation may be
enforced by coercive process, but that again does
not amount to infringement of Art. 20(1) of the
Constitution. Undoubtedly for failure to discharge
liability to pay compensation, a person may be
imprisoned, under the statute providing for
recovery of the amount, e.g., the Bombay Land
Revenue Code, but failure to discharge a civil
liability is not unless the statute expressly so
provides, an offence. The protection of Art. 20(1)
avails only against punishment for an act which is
treated as an offence which when done was not an
offence."
(page 545)
The petitioners have relied upon certain decisions in
support of their contention. We shall deal with some of
them. It is true that in Rai Bahadur Hurdut Roy Moti Lall
Jute Mills v. The State of Bihar & Anr.(1) the High Court of
Patna held that the amendment of section 14A of the Bihar
Sales Tax Act, 1947 by Bihar Act IV of 1955 in so far as it
authorised the imposition of the penalty of forfeiture of
the amounts collected earlier by dealers in contravention of
the provisions of section 14A, without prejudice to any
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punishment for an offence under that Act, was violative of
Article 20(1) of the Constitution. We have gone through that
decision. We do not find any tenable reason given by the
High Court in support of its view. It may be added here that
in the appeal filed against that decision before this Court
in The State of Bihar v. Rai Bahadur Hurdut Roy Moti Lall
Jute Mills & Anr.(2) the judgment of the High Court was
confirmed on the ground that the penalty of forfeiture was
not
229
imposable on the facts of that case, but on the question of
the applicability of Article 20(1) to the case, this Court
declined to express any opinion on the ground that it was
purely an academic issue. In Shew Bhagwan Goenka v.
Commercial Tax officer & ors.(1) the Calcutta High Court
observed that the retrospective operation of an amendment to
the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941 which imposed an
unexpected liability in respect of certain transactions
which when they took place were not subject to any charge or
liability under that Act was opposed to Article 20(1) of the
Constitution. In that case the facts were that as a result
of the modification of the definition of the word ’business’
with retrospective effect, the assessee became liable to pay
tax on the turnover relating to sales of certain old and
discarded machineries and equipments. The assessee had not
been prosecuted for any offence or punished by any criminal
court as a consequence of such amendment. It was open to the
High Court to hold that if there was any such prosecution
for any offence it was violative of Article 20(1). But in so
far as realisation of tax was concerned Article 20(1) did
not in terms apply. Reference to Article 20(1) was,
therefore, unnecessary for deciding that case. The
observations made by this Court in Commissioner of Wealth
Tax, Amritsar v. Suresh Seth(2) at page 430 to the effect:
"In the case of acts amounting to crimes the
punishment to be imposed cannot be enhanced at all
under our Constitution by any subsequent
legislation by reason of Article 20(1) of the
Constitution which declares that no person shall
be subjected to a penalty greater than that which
might have been inflicted under the law in force
at the time of the commission of the offence. In
other cases, however, even though the liability
may be enhanced it can only be done by a subs-
equent law (of course subject to the Constitution)
which either by express words or by necessary
implication provides for such enhancement,"
are obviously of no assistance to the petitioners.
On the. Other hand, a Full Bench of the High Court of
Allahabad has held in Raghunandan Prasad Mohan Lal v.
Income-Tax
230
Appellate Tribunol, Delhi Bench & ors.(1) that Article 20 of
the Constitution contemplates proceedings in the nature of
criminal proceedings and it does not apply to penalty
proceedings under the Income-tax Act, 1961 which have a
civil sanction and are revenue in nature. The High Court of
Madhya Pradesh has held in Central India Motors v. C. L.
Sharma, Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax, Indore Region,
Indore Anr.(2) that Article 20(1) is not attracted to the
case of a levy of penalty made with retrospective effect
under the Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1958.
After giving an anxious consideration to the points
urged before us, we feel that the word ’penalty’ used in
Article 20(1) cannot be construed as including a ’penalty’
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levied under the sales tax laws by the departmental
authorities for violation of statutory provisions penalty
imposed by the sales tax authorities is only a civil
liability, though penal in character. It may be relevant to
notice that subsection (2-A) of section 9 of the Act
specifically refers to certain acts and omissions which are
offences for which a criminal prosecution would lie and the
provisions relating to offences have not been given
retrospective effect by section 9 of the Amending Act. The
argument based on Article 20(1) of the Constitution is,
therefore, rejected.
The next point to be considered is whether the
imposition and collection of penalty with retrospective
effect amounts to an imposition of an unreasonable
restriction on the fundamental right of the petitioners to
own property and to carry on business guaranteed under
Article 19(1) (f) and (g) of the Constitution. We have
already indicated above the circumstances under which it
becomes necessary to levy penalties with retrospective
effect and to validate all the proceedings relating to levy
of penalties and recovery thereof. The scope of the power of
a legislature to make a law validating the levy of a tax or
a duty retrospectively was considered by this Court in
Chhotabhai Jethabhai Patel & Co. v. The Union of India &
Anr.(3) The Court held that Parliament acting within its
legislative field had the power and could by law both
prospectively and retrospectively levy excise duty under the
Central Excises and Salt Act .1944 even where it was
established that by reason of the retrospective effect
231
being given to the law, the assessees were incapable of
passing on the excise duty to the buyers. After considering
certain American decisions, Ayyangar J. Observed at page 37
thus:
"It would thus be seen that even under the
constitution of the United States of America the
unconstitutionality of a retrospective tax is
rested on what has been termed "the vague contours
of the 5th Amendment. Whereas under the Indian
Constitution that grounds on which infraction of
the rights to property is to be tested not by the
flexible rule of "due process" but on the more
precise criteria set out in Art. 19(5). Mere
retrospectivity in the imposition of the tax
cannot per se render the Law unconstitutional on
the ground of its infringing the right to hold
property under Art. 19(1)(f ) or depriving the
person of property under Art. 31(1). If on the one
hand, the tax enactment in question were beyond
legislative competence of the Union or a State
necessarily different considerations arise. Such
unauthorised imposition would undoubtedly not be a
reasonable restriction on the right to hold
property besides being an unreasonable restraint
on the carrying on of business, if the tax in
question is one which is laid on a person in
respect of his business activity."
The Court was more emphatic in Rai Ramkrishan & ors. v.
The State of Bihar(3) about the power of the legislature in
India to enact retrospective taxation laws. It held that if
in its essential features a taxing statute is within the
competence of the legislature, it would not cease to be so
if retrospective effect is given to it. A power to make a
law, therefore, includes within its scope to make all
relevant provisions which are ancillary or incidental to it.
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The provision for levying of interest and to levy penalties
retrospectively and to validate earlier proceedings under
laws which have been declared unconstitutional after
removing the element of unconstitutionality is included
within the scope of legislative power. In the above
mentioned case of Rai Ramkrishna & ors. (supra), a Bihar Act
levying a tax on passengers and goods passed in 1950 was
declared to be unconstitutional by this Court in December,
1960. An Act validating the said levy after removing
constitutional deficiencies in it was passed with
232
the assent of the President in September 23, 1961 and that
Act was given retrospective effect from April 1, 1950 on
which date the earlier Act which had been declared as
unconstitutional had come into force. The limited challenge
mounted against the validating Act was that the provisions
contained in section 23(b) thereof which provided that any
proceeding commenced or purported to have been commenced for
the assessment, collection and recovery of any amount as tax
or penalty under the provisions of the earlier Act which had
been declared as unconstitutional or the rules made
thereunder during the period from April 1, 1950 to July 31,
1961 i.e. till the date on which an ordinance which was
replaced by the validating Act in question came into force,
should be deemed to have been commenced and conducted in
accordance with the provisions of the validating Act and if
not already completed should be continued and completed in
accordance with the validating Act was opposed to Article
304(b) and Article 19(1)(f ) and (g). It was urged in that
case on the basis of the observation made in Sutherland on
’Statutes and Statutory Constructions’ to the effect that:
"Tax statutes may be retrospective if the
legislature clearly so intends. If the
retrospective feature of a law is arbitrary and
burdensome the statute will not be sustained"
that the length of retrospectivity, that is, eleven years
was an unreasonable restriction on the rights guaranteed
under Article 19(1)(f ) (g). This contention was rejected by
this Court at pages 915 and 916 of the Report as follows:
’We do not think that such a mechanical test
can be applied in determining the validity of the
retrospective operation of the Act. It is
conceivable that cases may arise in which the
retrospective operation of a taxing or other
statute may introduce such an element of
unreasonableness that the restrictions imposed by
it may be open to serious challenge as
unconstitutional; but the test of the length of
time covered by the retrospective operation
cannot, by itself, necessarily be a decisive test.
We may have a statute whose retrospective
operation covers a comparatively short period and
yet it is possible that the nature of the
restriction imposed by it may be of such a
character as to introduce a serious infirmity in
the
233
retrospective operation. On the other hand, we may
get cases where the period covered by the
retrospective operation of the statute, though
long, will not introduce any such infirmity. Take
the case of a Validating Act. If a statute passed
by the legislature is challenged in proceedings
before a court, and the challenge is ultimately
sustained and the statute is struck down, it is
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not unlikely that the judicial proceedings may
occupy a fairly long period and the legislature
may well decide to await the final decision in the
said proceedings before it uses its legislative
power to cure the alleged infirmity in the earlier
Act. In such a case, if after the final judicial
verdict is pronounced in the matter the
legislature passes a validating Act, it may well
cover a long period taken by the judicial
proceedings in Court and yet it would be
inappropriate to hold that because the
retrospective operation covers a long period,
therefore, the restriction imposed by it is
unreasonable. That is why we think the test of the
length of time covered by the retrospective
operation cannot by itself be treated as a
decisive test.
Take the present case. The earlier Act was
passed in 1950 and came into force on April 1,
1950, and the tax imposed by it was being
collected until an order of injunction was passed
in the two suits to which we have already
referred. The said suits were dismissed on May 8,
1952, but the appeals preferred by the appellants
were pending in this Court until December 12,
1960. In other words, between 1950 and 1960
proceedings were pending in Court in which the
validity of the Act was being examined and if a
Validating Act had to be passed, the legislature
cannot be blamed. for having awaited the final
decision of this Court in the said proceedings.
Thus the period covered between the institution of
the said two suits and their final disposal by
this Court cannot be pressed into service for
challenging the reasonableness of the
retrospective operation of the Act."
In the instant case, the facts are one shade better.
There is no dispute in this case about the validity of the
tax payable under the Act during the period between January
1, 1957 and the date of commencement of the Amending Act. It
has to be presumed that
234
all the tax has been collected by the dealers from their
customers. There is also no dispute that the law required
the dealers to pay the tax within the specified time. The
dealers had also the knowledge of the provisions relating to
penalties in the general sales tax laws of their respective
States. It was only owing to the deficiency in the Act
pointed out by this Court in Khemka’s case (supra) the
penalties became not payable. In this situation, where the
dealers have utilised the money which should have been paid
to the Government and have committed default in performing
their duty, if Parliament calls upon them to pay penalties
in accordance with the law as amended with retrospective
effect it cannot be said that there has been any
unreasonable restriction imposed on the rights guaranteed
under Article 19(1) (f) and (g) of the Constitution, even
though the period of retrospectivity is nearly nineteen
years. It is also pertinent to refer here to subsection (3)
of section 9 of the Amending Act which provides that the
provisions contained in sub-section (2) thereof would not
prevent a person from questioning the imposition or
collection of any penalty or any proceeding, act or thing in
connection therewith or for claiming any refund in
accordance with the Act as amended by the Amending Act read
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with sub-section (l) of section 9 of the Amending Act.
Explanation to sub-section (3) to section 9 of the Amending
Act also provides for exclusion of the period between
February 27, 1975 i.e. the date on which the judgment in
Khemka’s case (supra) was delivered upto the date of the
commencement of the Amending Act in computing the period of
limitation for questioning ally order levying penalty. In
those proceedings the authorities concerned are sure to
consider all aspects of the case before passing orders
levying penalties. The contention that the impugned
provision is violative of Article 19(1)(f) and (g) of the
Constitution has, therefore, to be rejected.
The next contention relates to the validity of section
48 of the Haryana General Sales Tax Act, 1973 (Act No. 20 of
1973) It reads:
"48. Failure to maintain correct accounts.
and to furnish correct returns. If a dealer has
maintained false or incorrect accounts with a view
to suppressing his sales, purchases or stocks of
goods, or has concealed any particulars of his
sales, purchases or has furnished to, or produced
before any authority under this Act or the rules
made thereunder any account return or information
which is false or incorrect in any material
particular, the
235
Commissioner or any person appointed to assist him
under sub-section (I) of section 3 may after
affording such dealer a reasonable opportunity of
being heard direct him to pay, by way of penalty,
in addition to any tax payable by him, a sum not
less than twice and more than ten times the amount
of tax which would have been avoided if the
turnover returned by such dealer had been accepted
as correct and where no tax is payable a sum not
less than one hundred rupees but not exceeding one
thousand rupees."
The argument urged on behalf of the dealers in the
State of Haryana is that this section which authorises the
levy of penalty at ’a sum of not less than twice and more
than ten times the amount of tax’ on proof of the defaults
mentioned therein is violative of Article 14 as there is no
guidance given to the authority levying the penalty about
the quantum of penalty. There is no substance in this plea.
The provision in question itself suggests that the levy to
be made under it is in the nature of a penalty which
requires the authority concerned to apply his mind to all
relevant aspects of the default alleged to have been
committed by a dealer. First the default committed by the
dealer should be established at an enquiry after giving the
dealer concerned an opportunity of being heard. The degree
of remissness involved in the default is a relevant factor
to be taken into account while levying penalty. The section
provides both the minimum and the maximum amount of penalty
leviable and it is correlated to the amount of tax which
would have been avoided if the turnover returned by such
dealer had been accepted as correct. The order levying
penalty is quasi judicial in character and involves exercise
of judicial discretion. The considerations which should
weigh with the authorities while imposing penalty are well
known and have been settled by many decisions. Hindustan
Steel Ltd. v. State of Orissa(l) is one such decision. An
order levying penalty under section 48 of the Haryana
General Sales Tax Act is also subject to the provisions
relating to appeal, etc. set out in Chapter VII thereof. In
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the circumstances, it is not possible to hold that section
48 of the Haryana General Sales Tax Act, 1973 confers an
uncanalised, unguided and arbitrary power on the authority
levying penalty. This contention should, therefore, fail.
236
In Writ Petition No. 7220 of 1982 it was faintly
suggested that the order of penalty had been passed by an
authority not authorised by law. We find from the record
that the said order is passed by the Assessing Authority-
cum-Excise and Taxation officer, Hissar authorised by the
State Government apparently under section 2(a) read with
section 3 of the Haryana General Sales Tax Act, 1973 and
Rule 4(1) of the Haryana General Sales Tax Rules, 1975. We
do not find any substance in this contention too.
In the result these petitions fail and they are
dismissed. In the circumstances of these cases, there will
be no order as to costs.
H.S.K. Petitions dismissed
237