Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 12788 of 1996
PETITIONER:
KOLUTHARA EXPORTS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KERALA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/02/2002
BENCH:
CJI, Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri, U.C. Banerjee, S.N. Variava & Shivaraj V. Patil
JUDGMENT:
Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri, J.
This appeal arises from the judgment and order of a
Division Bench of the High Court of Kerala at Ernakulam
upholding the constitutional validity of Section 4(2) read with
Section 2(d) of the Kerala Fishermen’s Welfare Fund Act, 1985
(Act 30 of 1985) (as amended by Act 15 of 1987) (for short,
’the Act’) in O.P.No.19806 of 1995 and the batch by the
common judgment dated August 22/23, 1996.
On September 25, 1997 when this appeal came up for
hearing before a Bench of two learned Judges of this Court, it
was noticed that a Bench of three learned Judges of this Court
in Gasket Radiators Pvt. Ltd. vs. Employees’ State Insurance
Corporation & Anr. (1985 (2) SCC 68) had taken the view that
any contribution imposed by State Legislation under Entry 23
of the Concurrent List would not amount to either tax or fee,
which was relied upon by the respondent-State and that the
appellant placed reliance on decisions of the Constitution
Bench of this Court in The Corporation of Calcutta & Anr. vs.
Liberty Cinema (AIR 1965 SC 1107) and M/s.Hoechst
Pharmaceuticals Ltd. & Anr. vs. State of Bihar & Ors. (AIR
1983 SC 1019). It was submitted that compulsory impost could
be either by way of tax or fee and that the definition of
’taxation’ as found in Article 366 (28) of the Constitution of
India and the said cases were not considered in Gasket
Radiators (supra). The appeal was, therefore, referred to a
Bench of three learned Judges. The Bench of three learned
Judges opined that in Gasket Radiators (supra), a concept of
impost in the form of compulsory contribution had been given
birth to and whether such birth should further multiply was a
question touching the interpretation of the Constitution and
referred the appeal to a Constitution Bench of five Hon’ble
Judges. That is how this appeal has come up before us.
Mr.A.K.Jain, the learned counsel appearing for the
appellant, contended that the appellant was a purchaser and
exporter of fishes and there was no relationship of employer
and employee between the appellant and the fishermen as such
the Legislature cannot levy impost by way of contribution on it
under Section 4(2) of the Act and that the impugned provision
was bad for want of legislative competence.
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Mr.K.N.Bhat, the learned senior counsel appearing for
the State of Kerala (respondent Nos.1 and 2), has argued that
the Act and the scheme framed thereunder are welfare
legislation as postulated in Articles 39 and 41 of the
Constitution for the benefit of the fishermen who are members
of poor and downtrodden community. His further submission
was that a legislation under Entry 23 of List III of the Seventh
Schedule of the Constitution requiring one set of persons to pay
contributions for the benefit of another set of persons, is valid
and there need not be relationship of employer and employee
between them. To sustain the validity of Section 4(2) of the
Act he relied on the decisions of this Court in Mangalore
Ganesh Beedi Works etc. etc. vs. Union of India etc. (1974
(3) SCR 221) and Gasket Radiators (supra). He submitted that
this Court in Regional Executive, Kerala Fishermen’s Welfare
Fund Board vs. Fancy Food & Anr. (1995 (4) SCC 341) had
held that the appellant was a dealer and liable to pay
contributions under the Act.
Mr.V.R.Reddy, the learned senior counsel appearing for
the Welfare Fund Board (respondent No.3) while adopting the
argument of Mr. Bhat, sought to justify the impost as fee but
inasmuch as the learned Advocate-General of the State of
Kerala had taken a stand before the High Court that the impost
was neither tax nor fee we did not permit him to urge that
contention.
In view of the stand of the State that the impost under
Section 4(2) of the Act is neither tax nor fee, it would not be
necessary to consider the definition of ’taxation’ in Article
366(28) of the Constitution and the decisions of this Court in
Corporation of Calcutta and M/s.Hoechst Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
(supra).
The short but important question that arises is : whether
the impugned impost levied under Section 4(2) read with
Section 2(d) of the Act, is unconstitutional for want of
legislative competence of the State of Kerala.
To comprehend the nature and the extent of the impost, it
will be useful to refer to the relevant provisions of the Act.
Section 2 defines various terms employed in the Act.
Section 3 speaks of Fishermen’s Welfare Fund Scheme. Sub-
section (1) of Section 3 of the Act enables the Government to
frame a scheme to be called ’the Kerala Fishermen’s Welfare
Fund Scheme’ (for short, ’the scheme’) for the establishment of
a fund under the Act by name "the Kerala Fishermen’s welfare
Fund" (for short, ’the fund’) for the welfare of fishermen and
directs that soon after the framing of the scheme the fund shall
be established in accordance with the provisions of the Act and
the scheme. Various items of amounts which form constituents
of the fund and are required to be credited to the fund are
enumerated in sub-section (2). Clause (a) of sub-section (2)
refers to contributions required to be made under section 4 of
the Act. Sub-section (3) directs that the fund shall be vested in
and administered by the Board and sub-section (4) enumerates
the objects of the fund. They are as under :
"3. Fishermen’s Welfare Fund Scheme.-
(1) to (3) *
(4) The fund may be utilised for all or any of the
following purposes, namely :-
(a) to provide for distress relief to fishermen in
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times of natural calamities;
(b) for payment of financial assistance to
fishermen who suffer permanent or temporary
disablement;
(c) for payment of loans or grants to fishermen to
meet the expenses for the marriage of children,
or expenses in connection with disease or
death of dependants, or any unexpected
expenditure or the day to day expenditure
during loan months;
(d) to provide for the fishermen and the members
of their families,-
(i) education, vocational training and part-
time employment;
(ii) social education centres including
reading rooms and libraries;
(iii) sports, games and medical facilities;
(iv) nutritious food for children; and
(v) employment opportunities to the
handicapped;
(e) for payment of financial assistance to
fishermen who suffer loss of houses or fishing
implements or any other damage due to natural
calamities or other unexpected causes;
(f) to provide old age assistance to fishermen;
(g) for the implementation of any other purpose
specified in the scheme,"
Sub-section (5) says that every fisherman who is a
member of a Fishermen’s Welfare Society constituted under
Section 4 of the Kerala Fishermen Welfare Societies Act, 1980
(7 of 1981) shall be a member of the fund and sub-section (6)
says that the scheme framed under sub-section (1) may provide
for all or any of the matters specified in sub-section (4) and in
the Schedule.
Section 4 of the Act contains the list of contributors to
the fund. Sub-Section (2) of Section 4 which is impugned reads
as under :
"4. Contribution to the Fund -
(1) - (1A) *
(2) A dealer shall contribute to the Fund,
every year, one per cent of his sale proceeds
in the year."
Clause (d) of Section 2 defines the term ’dealer’ in the
following terms :
"2. Definitions :- In this Act, unless the
context otherwise requires, -
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(a) to (c) *
(d) "dealer" means any person who carries
on, within the State of Kerala, the business
of buying or selling or processing fish or
exporting fish (in raw or processed form) or
fish products and includes, - (i) a
commission agent, a broker or any other
mercantile agent, by whatever name called;
and (ii) a non-resident dealer or an agent of
a non-resident dealer or a local branch of a
firm or company or association situated
outside the State of Kerala."
Section 12 prescribes the mode for determination of
contribution and Section 13 deals with provisional assessment
and collection of advance contribution.
The appellant, a dealer under the Act, was served with a
notice by the Board under Section 4(2) of the Act for the period
1988-89 to 1994-95 calling upon it to show cause why
contribution under Section 4 (2) of the Act should not be
demanded from it. It is alleged that without considering the
objections, the order of assessment was passed against it on
November 30, 1995. This prompted the appellant to challenge
the validity of the assessment order and Section 4(2) of the Act,
in the aforementioned writ petition in the High Court of Kerala
at Ernakulam which was dismissed by the common judgment
on August 22/23, 1996. It is against that order that the
appellant is in appeal before this Court.
Having regard to the objects of the Act, the High Court
opined that the fishermen are the ultimate beneficiaries of this
benevolent legislation. They fight against the surging waves in
the sea for catches of the fishes which after changing hands,
reach the exporters for being exported to foreign countries. The
fishermen are the backbone of the industry and without them
the industry cannot exist and unless they are kept in good
humour, the industry cannot nourish or flourish. Therefore,
there is very intimate nexus between the fishermen and an
exporter of the marine products like the appellant. The learned
judges of the High Court also opined that the employee-
employer relationship was not wanting in the cases.
The Statement of Objects and Reasons of the impugned
Act shows that the fishermen belong to one of the weakest
sections of our society. The reasons for their poor socio-
economic condition are stated to be manifold. During off-
season and lean months as well as on special occasions like
marriage, death, religious and social functions etc., in the
families, the poor fishermen are forced to borrow heavily from
local money lenders or owners of craft at exorbitant rates of
interest. They often fail to clear off the accumulated debts with
the result, they are permanently indebted to the money lenders
and also forced to sell away the fruits of their hard labour at the
prices dictated by the money lenders. Due to the risky nature of
their occupation they are prone to accidents. They are
subjected to loss of houses and fishing implements due to
natural calamities. There is need for providing adequate
educational facilities and vocational training and for providing
old age assistance to them.
The Preamble to the Constitution records the resolve of
the people of India to secure to all its citizens Justice, inter alia,
social, economic and political. Part IV of the Constitution
embodies the Directive Principles of State Policy which, though
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not enforceable by any court, are fundamental in the
governance of the country. Article 39 enjoins that it shall be
the duty of the State to apply those principles in making laws.
Clauses (b), (c) and (e) respectively of Article 39 lay down that
the State shall, in particular, direct its policy towards securing
that the ownership and control of material resources of the
community are so distributed as best to subserve the common
good; that the operation of economic system does not result in
concentration of wealth and means of production to the
common detriment and that the health and strength of workers,
men and women, and the tender age of children are not abused
and that citizens are not forced by economic necessity to enter
avocations unsuited to their age or strength. Article 41 directs
that the State shall, within the limits of its economic capacity
and development (emphasis supplied), make effective provision
for securing the right to work, to education and to public
assistance in cases of unemployment, old age, sickness and
disablement, and in other cases of undeserved want.
Keeping these constitutional objectives and the Statement
of Objects and Reasons in mind it cannot but be said that the
Act and the establishment of welfare fund thereunder for
requirements of fishermen outlined in sub-section (4) of Section
3 of the Act is a commendable legislation. It will be apt to refer
to the observations of Alagiriswami, J. in his concurring
opinion in Mangalore Ganesh Beedi Works (supra) :
"Nobody can dispute the need for setting
right those evils. But good intentions should not
result in a legislation which would become
ineffective and lead to a lot of fruitless litigation
over the years."
Now adverting to the constitutional validity of the
impugned provisions, it must be remembered that Part IV of the
Constitution contains, as noticed above, fundamental principles
in governance of the country. They indicate and determine the
direction for the State but they are not legislative heads or the
fields of legislation like the Entries in the Lists I, II and III of
the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution. When any statute of
a State or any provision therein is questioned on the ground of
lack of legislative competence, the State cannot claim
legitimacy for enacting the impugned provisions with reference
to the provisions in Part IV of the Constitution; the legislative
competence must be demonstrated with reference to one or
more of the Entries in Lists II and III of the Seventh Schedule
of the Constitution. It is stated that the legislative competence
is referable to Entry 23 of the Concurrent List, which may be
extracted here :
"List III - Concurrent List -
23. Social security and social insurance;
employment and unemployment."
There can be no doubt that Entry 23 enables the State
Legislature to enact a law in respect of social security and
social insurance or dealing with employment and
unemployment. The provisions of sub-section (4) of Section 3
of the Act (quoted above) postulate social security and welfare
measures for the fishermen. The State can, therefore, justify its
competence under this Entry. But, in our view, the State
cannot, in an Act under Entry 23 of List III, place the burden of
an impost by way of contribution for giving effect to the Act
and the scheme made thereunder for the social security and
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social welfare of a section of society upon a person who is not a
member of such section of society nor an employer of a person
who is a member of such section of society. The burden of the
impost may be placed only when there exists the relationship of
employer and employee between the contributor and the
beneficiary of the provisions of the Act and the scheme made
thereunder.
The validity of Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948, in
regard to special contribution of the employer under Chapter V-
A of the said Act, was brought under challenge in appeal before
a three-judge Bench of this Court in Gasket Radiators (supra).
The Court held that the payment of contribution by an employer
towards the premium of an employee’s compulsory insurance
under the Employees’ State Insurance Act fell directly under
Entries 23 and 24 of List III. It was also held that the
contributions under the Act or contributions to provident fund
or payments of other benefits to workers are neither taxes nor
fees and that they fall within the ambit of Entries 23 and 24 of
List III. We are in agreement with the observations of
Chinnappa Reddy, J. who speaking for the Court observed :
"In our understanding, Entries 23 and 24 of
List III, of their own force, empower
Parliament or the Legislature of a State to
direct the payment by an employer of
contributions of the nature of those
contemplated by the Employees’ State
Insurance Act for the benefit of the
employees."
In Mangalore Ganesh Beedi Works (supra), the
constitutional validity of Sections 3, 4, 2(g), 2(g)(h), 2(m), 26,
27 and 31 of the Beedi and Cigar Workers (Condition of
Employment) Act, 1966 was assailed on the ground of lack of
legislative competence in the Parliament to enact such a law.
Having noticed the special feature of the industry of
manufacture of beedi through various categories of workers, the
said Act was passed by the Parliament to provide for the
welfare of workers in beedi and cigar establishments and to
regulate the conditions of their work and for matters connected
therewith. A Constitution Bench of this Court held that having
regard to the true nature and character of the legislation meant
for enforcing better conditions of labour amongst those who are
engaged in the manufacture of beedis and cigars, the said Act,
in pith and substance, was for welfare of the labour falling
within Entries 22, 23 and 24 of List III. It was pointed out that
the said Act had fastened liability on the person who himself
engaged labour or the person for whom or on whose behalf
labour was engaged or the person who had ultimate control
over the affairs of the establishment by reason of advancement
of money or of substantial interest in the control of the affairs
of the establishment. Thus, it is clear that in that case the
impugned legislation, while creating welfare scheme for beedi
workers, levied impost by way of contributions on the employer
or a person in the position of an employer.
In Regional Executive Kerala Fishermen’s Welfare Fund
Board (supra), the question before this Court was whether
exporters of fish meat, carrying on business of buying
processed fish and exporting the same, fell within the meaning
of ’dealer’ under Section 4(2) of the Act. The legislative
competence of the State Legislature and the constitutional
validity of Section 4(2) of the Act did not arise for the
consideration of the Court in that case. That case, therefore,
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does not advance the case of the respondents.
In the instant case, the only nexus between the categories
of persons covered by the sweep of sub-section (d) of Section 2
of the Act, including the appellant, who carry on the business of
buying or selling or processing fish or exporting fish (in raw or
processed form) or fish products, including - (i) a commission
agent, a broker or any other mercantile agent, by whatever
name called, and (ii) a non-resident dealer or an agent or a non-
resident dealer or a local branch of a firm or company or
association situated outside the State of Kerala and the
beneficiaries under the Act and the scheme - the fishermen - is
that the former are the purchasers and the latter are the catchers
and sellers of fish. Such a nexus, in our view, is not sufficient
to burden a purchaser/exporter with the impost or levy of the
contribution under Section 4(2) of the Act, which will clearly
be outside the ambit of Entry 23 of List III of the Constitution
and, therefore, lacking legislative competence.
For these reasons, Section 4(2) of the Act is declared to
be unconstitutional. Consequently, the order under challenge is
set aside. The writ petition shall stand allowed to that extent.
Mr.V.R.Reddy submitted that the amounts, credited to
the welfare fund by dealers under Section 4(2) of the Act, had
been expended by the Board for purposes of the Act and the
scheme so this Court might be pleased to relieve the Board of
the obligation to refund the amounts to the dealers-contributors.
On hearing Mr.Jain and on careful consideration of the
submission of Mr.Reddy, we direct that pursuant to the
declaration of invalidity of Section 4(2) of the Act, the amount
of contributions, already paid by persons falling under Section
4(2), will not be liable to be refunded to the dealers-contributors
by the Board.
The appeal is allowed accordingly. In the circumstances
of the case, we make no order as to costs.
............................................CJI.
................................................J.
[Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri]
................................................J.
[U.C.Banerjee]
................................................J.
[S.N.Variava]
................................................J.
[Shivaraj V. Patil]
February 1, 2002.