Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. NORTHERN INDIA IRON & STEEL CO ETC. A
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF HARYANA & ANR
DATE OF JUDGMENT10/11/1975
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
CITATION:
1976 AIR 1100 1976 SCR (3) 677
1976 SCC (2) 877
CITATOR INFO :
R 1989 SC1030 (5,7)
ACT:
Electricity (Supply) Act, 1948-"Demand Charge" and
"Energy Charge"-How calculated in terms of power cut.
HEADNOTE:
The State Electricity Board had framed, in exercise of
its power under s. 49 of the Electricity (Supply) Act, 1948,
certain terms and conditions and, the procedure in regard to
supply of electricity to its. consumers. For big consumers
the system of tariff is the two-part tariff system
comprising of (1) Demand charge and (ii) Energy charge. A
"Demand charge" means the amount chargeable per month in
respect of the Electricity Board’s readiness to serve the
consumer irrespective of whether he consumes any energy or
not and is based upon certain factors. "Energy charge" means
the charge for energy actually taken by the consumer and is
applicable to the units consumed by him in any Month. This
was in addition to any demand charge, if applicable.
A schedule of tariff of energy was framed by the Board.
Cl. 4(b) mentions how the monthly demand charge shall be
calculated and sub-clause (f) of this clause states that in
the event of lock-out, fire or any other circumstances
considered by the supper to be beyond the control of the
consumer, the consumer shall be entitled to a proportionate
reduction of demand charges/minimum charges.
As a result of shortage of electricity the State
Electricity Board considerably restricted the supply to
large industrial concerns. Because of this the Board allowed
some reduction in the demand charges. The appellant, who was
a bulk consumer of electricity, could not get the full
quantity as per the contract between the parties. The
appellant, therefore, filed a writ petition that there
should be either no demand charge at all. when the Board was
not in a position to supply electric energy, or there should
be a proportionate reduction of the demand charge. The High
Count noted the reduction made by the Board and held that
the Board was entitled to the demand charge. It did Dot,
however decide as to what should be the basis for and in
what proportion the demand char o should be reduced. The
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appellant also contended that no duty was lovable on the
demand charge, under the Punjab Electricity (Duty) Act, 1958
but only on the energy charge, for the actual amount of
energy supplied but the High Court rejected this contention.
Allowing the appeal in part on the first contention,
^
HELD: (1) The circumstance of power cut which disabled
the Board to give the full supply to the appellant would be
a circumstance which disabled the consumer from consuming
electricity as per the contract and this was a circumstance
which was beyond it control and could not be considered
otherwise by the Board. It entitled the consumer to a
proportionate reduction of the demand charge. In a
circumstance like this the obligation of the consumer o
serve at least 3 days’ notice on the supplier as per the
later part of sub clause (f) was not attracted as the
requirement of the notice was only in the case of shut down
of not less than 15 days’ duration [682 A, B, C]
Therefore, the inability of the Board to supply
electric energy due to power cut as per the demand of the
consumer according to the contract will be reflected in and
considered as n circumstance beyond the control of the
consumer which prevented him from consuming electricity as
per the contract to the extent it wanted to consume. [682,
D]
2-L159SCT/76
678
(2) A reading of the clauses of the Schedule of tariff
as a whole makes it clear that the duty under the Punjab Act
is chargeable on the price of energy supplied in a month.
Therefore, the duty is chargeable not only on the energy
charge but also on the demand charge. It is, however,
chargeable on the actual amount of demand charge realizable
from the consumer.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 1306,
1310, 1370-1380 and 1422 to 1424 of 1975.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and orders
dated the 9th July 1975 of the Punjab & Haryana High Court
at Chandigarh in Civil Writ Petitions Nos. 733, 595, 725,
681, 720, 723, 726, 728, 777, 780, 781, 833, 892, 884, 885
and 887 of 1975 respectively.
M. C. Bhandare, (In 1306) and Mrs. S. Bhandare for the
appellants in C.As. 1306, 1370-1980 and 1422-1424 of 1975.
F. S. Nariman, A. K. Srivastava and B. P. Singh for the
appellants in C.A. 1310.
A. K. Sen, (In CA 1306), Dr. L. M. Singhvi, (In 1310),
K. K. Jain, Bishamber Lal, S. K. Gupta and P. Dayal for the
Respondent No. 2 in all the appeals.
L. N. Sinha, Sol. General (In CAs. 1306 and 1310) and
R. N. Sachthey for Respondent No. 1 in all the appeals.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
UNTWALLA, J-In these appeals by special leave the
common question for determination is whether the Haryana
State Electricity Board (brieny, the Board), respondent no.
2, is entitled to claim any demand charge from the
appellants in respect of the supply of electric energy to
them and whether the State of Haryana, respondent no. 1 is
entitled to charge any duty under the Punjab Electricity
(Duty) Act, 1958 on the demand charge. Several connected
Writ Petitions were disposed of by the High Court of Punjab
& Haryarna by a common Judgment and this judgment will
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govern all the cases which had been heard together by us.
Civil Appeal No. 1306/1975 is by M/s Northern India
Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. and arises out of Writ Petition No.
733/1975. We may state a few necessary facts of this case;
those of the other cases being more or less similar. The
appellant owns a factory and manufactures alloy steel and
steel castings. It is a large consumer of electricity
supplied by the Board. As per the contract between the
appellant and the board be total connected load of the
installation in question is 8687, 649 Kilowatts and its
contract demand is the same. At the ratio of one K.V. to
0.85 KW, the corresponding K.V. Of the contract demand works
to 10,221 K.V. The appellant was allotted 1,06,590 units on
daily basis as its power quota by the Board. There was
shortage of electric energy in the State of Haryana. The
State Government, there are, issued orders and directions
for maintaining the supply and securing the equitable
distribution of the energy. Orders were issued by the State
Government under section
679
228 of the Indian Electricity Act, 1910-hereinafter called
the 1910 A Act, restricting considerably the supply of
electric energy by the Board lo the large industrial
consumers as a result of which power cut was introduced. It
is not necessary to give the facts and figures of the amount
of power cut, suffice it to say that at the relevant time
there were substantial power cuts and the appellant was not
able to get supply of energy according to demand as per the
quantity mentioned in the contract. In these circumstances a
dispute arose between the parties as to whether the Board
was entitled to get any demand charge, if so to what extent,
and whether the State could demand any duty on such charge.
Under Section 49 of the Electricity (Supply) Act, 1948
hereinafter called the 1948 Act, the Board may supply
electricity to any person not being a licensee upon such
terms and conditions as the Board thinks fit and may for the
purposes of such supply frame uniform tariffs of course, the
power of the Board is subject to the other provisions of the
Act and regulations, if any made in this behalf
There are two well-known systems of tariffs-one is the
flat rate system and the other is known as the two-part
tariff system. Under the former a flat rate is charged on
unit of energy consumed. The letter system is meant for big
consumers of electricity and it comprised of (1) demand
charges to cover investment, installation and the standing
charges to some extent and (2) energy charges for the actual
amount of energy consumed. The Board has framed in exercise
of its power under section 49 of the 1948 Act certain terms
and conditions and procedure in regard to supply of
electricity to its consumers. They are applicable in the
cases of the appellants also. Demand Charge has been defined
in clause 1(h) thus:
"Demand charge" shall mean the amount chargeable
per month in respect of Board’s readiness to serve the
con summer irrespective of whether he consumes any
energy or not, and is based upon the connected load,
the maximum demand or the contract demand, as the case
may be and as prescribed in the relevant schedule of
tariff.
And in sub-clause (1) "Energy Charge" has been defined thus:
"Energy charge" shall mean the charge for energy
actually taken by the consumer and is applicable to the
units consumed by him in any month. This is in addition
to any demand charge, if applicable.
A schedule of tariff for supply of energy which is amended
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from time to time has been framed by the Board. Such
schedule of tariff for steel furnace power supply mentions
in item 2 the character of service. Clause 3 provides for
tariff and clause 4 deals with the demand assessment. The
two part tariff mentioned in clause 3 in case of the
appellant was "Demand Charges Rs. 12/- per KVA per month
PLUS Energy charges Rs. 7.00 passe per Kwh". There was some
surcharge on the above rates. The relevant Sub-clauses of
clause 4 i.e., Demand Assessment may now be quoted here:
680
"(a) The demand for any month shall be defined as
the highest average load measured in Kilovolt
amperes during any consecutive minutes period
of the month.
(b) The monthly demand charges shall be based on
(1) the actual maximum demand during the
month or (ii) 65%% of the contract demand or
(iii) 75% of the highest maximum demand
during the preceding eleven months or (iv)
100 KVA whichever is the highest. For the
first 11 months from the commencement of
Supply alternative (iii) shall not be
applicable.
(c) The contract demand means the maximum K.W.
KVA for the supply of which the Board
undertakes to provide facilities from time to
time.
NOTE-In case the consumer exceeds his contract
demand in any month by more than 71/2% a surcharge of
25 % will be levied on the SOP/Monthly minimum charges
(industrial, Factory lighting and colony supply).
(d) If in any case the maximum demand is being
measured in KW the same shall be converted
into KVA by the use of actual power factor
and KVA tariff applied for working out the
demand charges.
(e) In case the supply has been given on
restricted hours basis then a reduction of
30% in demand charges will be given if supply
is for 12 hours or less, occasional break
downs or shut downs if any, on the part of
the supplier, shall, however, not entitle a
consumer to any reductions.
(f) Force Majeure: In the event of lock out, fire
or and other circumstances considered by the
supplier to be beyond the control of the
consumer the consumer shall be entitled to a
proportionate reduction of demand
charges/minimum charges provided he serves at
least 3 days notice on the supplier for shut
down of not less than 15 days duration.
It appears from the judgment of the High Court that
some reduction (perhaps upto 60%) was given by the Board in
the demand charges because of the inability of the Board to
supply energy as per the requirement of the appellant
consumers due to power cuts imposed by the Government. But
the appellant seems to have taken the stand that either
there should be no demand charge at all when the Board was
not in a position to supply electric energy as per is
requirement or there should be a proportionate reduction of
the demand charge. Hence it filed a Writ petition. The High
Court has noted the reduction made by the Board and has held
that the Board is entitled to the demand charge. It has,
however, not been
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decided as to what should be the basis for and in what
proportion the demand charges be reduced.
The stand of the appellant as respects the charge of
duty by the State Government under the Punjab Electricity
(Duty) Act, 1958-hereinafter called the Duty Act, was that
no duty could be levied on the demand charge. The High Court
has repelled this contention.
The two questions which fall our determination in these
appeals are:
(1) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the cases the Board is entitled to claim
any demand charge; if so, to what extent?
(2) Whether any duty is leviable on the demand
charge; if so, to what extent ?
An argument was advanced before us in the first
instance by counsel for the appellants with reference to the
definition of the demand change in clause 1(h) of the terms
and conditions of supply framed by the Board that since the
Board was not ready to serve the consumer and the consumer
was ready to consume maximum electric energy the former was
not entitled to ask for any demand charge. This argument, in
the beginning was combated with equal force, if not more, on
behalf of the Board and it was asserted that the Board was
entitled to assess and claim the full demand charge as per
clause 4 of the tariff irrespective of the fact whether it
was in a position to supply the energy according to the
demand of the consumer or not. Such an extreme stand on
either side appeared to us a bit puzzling and leading to
inequitable results. The difficulty was not easy to solve.
If we were to hold that for the Board’s inability to supply
a fraction of the consumer’s demand as per the contract it
could claim only the energy charge and not the demand
charge, it would have been very hard and injurious to the
Board and the consumer would have unjustifiably got the
supply at a very cheap rate If on the other hand, we were to
say that the consumer was liable to pay the entire demand
charge as per the method of assessment provided in clause 4
of the tariff even when for no fault of it, it could get
only a fraction of its demand fulfilled, resulting in its
not being able to run the industry to its full capacity, it
would be liable to pay a huge amount per month, and this
will not only be uneconomical but would seriously affect its
economic structure. But we were happy to find that a just,
equitable and legal solution of the difficulty was provided
during the course of the argument on either side and that is
with reference to sub-clause (f) of clause 4 of the tariff.
It is, therefore, not necessary to resolve the extreme stand
taken on either side.
Under clause 4(f) the consumer is entitled to a
proportionate reduction of demand charges in the event of
lock-out, fire or any other circumstances considered by the
supplier beyond the control of the
682
consumer; that is to say, if the consumer is not able to
consume any part of the electric energy due to any
circumstance beyond its control and which is considered by
the Board to be so, then it shall get a proportionate
reduction in the demand charge. The circumstance of power
cut which disabled the Board to give the full supply to the
appellant because of the Government order under section 228
of the 1910 Act, undoubtedly would be a circumstance which
disabled the consumer from consuming electricity as per the
contract. And this was circumstance which was beyond its
control and could not be considered otherwise by the Board.
It entitled the consumer to a proportionate reduction of the
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demand charges. This interpretation of subclause (f) of
clause 4 of the tariff was accepted to be the correct, legal
and equitable interpretation on all hands. In our opinion it
is so. In a circumstance like this, it is plain, the
obligation of the consumer to serve at least 3 days notice
on the supplier as per the latter part of sub-clause (f) was
not attracted, as the requirement of notice was only in the
case of shut down of not less than 15 days duration.
We are, therefore, of the view that the inability of
the Board to supply electric energy due to power cut or any
other circumstance beyond its control as per the demand of
the consumer according to the contract will be reflected in
and considered as a circumstance beyond the control of the
consumer which prevented it from consuming electricity as
per the contract and to the extent it wanted to consume. The
monthly demand charge for a particular month will have to be
assessed in accordance with sub-clause (b) of clause 4 of
the tariff and therefore from a proportionate reduction will
have to be made as per sub-clause (f). We hope, in the light
of the judgment, there will be no difficulty in working out
the figures of the proportionate reduction in any of the
cases and for any period. In case of any difference or
dispute as to the quantum of the demand charge or the
proportionate reduction, parties will be at liberty to
pursue their remedy as may be available to them in
accordance with law.
Coming to the question of duty, we have no hesitation
in an out right rejection of the extreme contention put
forward on behalf of the appellants that no duty is leviable
at all on the demand charge. But it is clear, and this was
fairly conceded to by the Solicitor General appearing for
the State of Haryana, that the amount of duty payable will
be on the actual amount of demand charge realisable from the
consumer after the proportionate reduction under clause 4(f)
of the tariff.
Section 3 of the Duty Act says that there shall be
levied and paid to the State Government on the energy
supplied by the Board to a consumer a duty to be called the
"electricity duty", computed at the rates indicated in the
various clauses of sub-section (1) of section 3. The
expression used in the various clauses is "where the energy
is supplied" to a particular type of consumer, then the rate
of duty will be as specified therein. On the basis of the
said expression the argument put forward on behalf of the
appellant was that the duty could be levied only on the
energy charges for the actual amount of energy
683
supplied. Such an argument is too obviously wrong to be
accepted. Reading the clauses as a whole it would be seen
that the duty is chargeable on the price of energy supplied
in a month. The price of energy in a two-part tariff system
would mean and include the energy charge as also the demand
charge. This is made further, clear by the manner of
calculation provided in Rule 3 of the Punjab Electricity
(Duty) Rules, 1958. Sub-rule (1) says:
"The duty under clause (iii) and (iv) of sub-
section (1) of section 3 of the Act shall be calculated
on the price of the energy recoverable at the net rate
of the Board which will include the demand charge when
the Supply is governed by a two-part tariff."
It is therefore, manifest that the duty under the Duty
Act is chargeable not only on the energy charge but also on
the demand charge when the supply is governed by two-part
tariff and it is chargeable on the actual amount of demand
charge realisable from the consumer
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For the reasons stated above, we allow these appeals in
part to the extent indicated above. In the circumstances we
shall make no order as to costs in any of the appeals.
P.B.R. Appeals partly allowed.
684