Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
C. RAJAGOPALACHARI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CORPORATION OF MADRAS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/03/1964
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 1172 1964 SCR (6) 962
ACT:
City Municipality Act 1919 (Act No. 4 of 1919), s. 111(b),
Government of India Act, 1935, ss. 142A(1), 143(2), 292,
Constitution of India, Art. 277-Drawing pension-If amounts
to employment or profession within the meaning of Act-
Whether taxable.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant held office as the last Governor-General of
India. He has been drawing Rs. 15,000/- per annum as
pension while residing in the city of Madras. The
Corporation of Madras demanded profession tax from him under
section 111(i)(b) of the City Municipal Act, 1919 for the
year 1958-59 on the ground of his residence being within
Madras city and his drawing the pension to which he was
entitled. The appellant addressed a communication to the
Corporation asserting that this demand was illegal as the
Corporation was empowered by the relevant constitutional
provisions merely to levy a tax "on a profession, trade
calling or employment" and that as he as a pensioner did not
fall under any of these classes, the said demand was
illegal. The Corporation did not accept the contention of
the appellant and therefore, the appellant filed a writ
petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution before the High
Court. The High Court dismissed the writ petition of the
appellant. The High Court granted a certificate under Art.133(1)(c
)
of the Constitution to the appellant to file on appeal to
the
Supreme Court. Hence the appeal.
The question before the Supreme Court was whetherthe
Corporation was entitled to levy a tax on pensioners in
respect of thepensions received by them in Madras City.
Held:(1) that the power of the Corporation to levy the tax
is dependent on the subject of the tax being within the
State Legislative power under the Constitution. The present
levy comes within the purview of item 60 in the State list
in Schedule VIII of the Constitution, which reads as
follows:-
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"Taxes on profession, trades, callings and employments."
Being a "pensioner" cannot be a "profession, trade, business
or calling", nor could a tax on a person because he is in
receipt of a pension be said to be a tax on ’employments".
The tax, therefore, under the last portion of sec. 111(1)(b)
reading-profession tax on persons "in receipt of any pension
or income from investments"-is nothing but a tax on income
falling within Entry 82 of the Union List.
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The taxes specified in item 60 are taxes on the carrying on
of a profession, trade etc., and would, therefore, apply
only to a case of present C.’ employment. The mere fact
that a person has previously been in a profession or carried
on trade etc. cannot justify a tax under this entry. The
tax on the receipt of pension or on the income from
investments which is referred to in the last part of sec.
111(1) is in truth and substance a taxon income. At the
time the tax is levied the appellant-pen-sioner is inno
employment but is only in receipt of income.
(ii) The present levy of tax cannot be saved by Art. 277 of
the Constitution because the tax was a new levy and not a
continuance of a tax which had been levied just prior to
April 1, 1937. On the facts of this case it was held that
if the statutory charge to profession tax imposed on
pensioners by the Act of 1919, was lifted by the Act of
1936, and the tax again came into operation only on April 1,
1937, it would follow that there was no "levy of the tax’
immediately before the commencement of Part III of the
Government of India Act. 1935. so as to bring it within the
saving in s. 143(2) of that Act. Besides, the two
circumstances, viz., that residence within the city for a
specified period was made a condition of the liability to
the tax, as well as the increase in the rates would both
serve to emphasise that the levy was a new one, with a
different texture and not a continuation of the tax which
was leved just prior to April 1, 1937.
(iii)The mere fact that prior to 1st April, 1937 the
Corporation had under Act of 1936 the power to bring the tax
into force by a resolution does not on a proper construction
of s. 143(2) bring it within the range of those taxes or
duties which "were being lawfully levied" prior to the
commencement of Part III of the Government of India Act
1935, which alone are permitted to be continued to be levied
notwithstanding that these duties were in the Federal
Legislative List. The mere existence of a power to bring a
tax into operation, cannot be equated with "a tax which was
being lawfully levied" before Part III of the Government of
India Act, 1935.
The High Court erred in holding that s. 292 of the
Government of India Act applies to this case.
The Town Municipal Committee, Amravati v. Ramchandra Vasudeo
Chimote, [1964] 6 S.C.R. 947, South India Corporation (P)
Ltd. V. The Secretary, Board of Revenue, Trivandrum, A.I.R.
1964 S.C. 207, relied on.
(iv)Under s. 111(1) as amended, the tax could be levied
only in accordance with the rules in Schedule IV and as
those rules did not make a provision for the levy of a tax
on pensioners, it would follow that the tax "was not being
lawfully levied" on them. The High Court erred in holding
that such defect would be removed by s. 18 of the Madras
General Clauses Act.
(v)S. 142-A(1) of the Government of India Act, 1935 would
assist the respondent’s case only if tax imposed were on a
profession, trade, calling or employment. In the present
case, the tax is being imposed
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on an income of a pensioner and so this provision has no
application. It is not the intention of Parliament that
State might levy a tax on income and call it "profession"
tax.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 580 of 1962.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated May 1, 1961, of
the Madras High Court in Writ Petition No. 975 of 1959.
R.M. Seshadri. and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the appellant.
R. Ganapathy lyer, for respondent No. 1.
A. Ranganadham Chetty and A. V. Rangam, for respondent No.
2.
March 3, 1964. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
AYYANGAR, J.-This appeal comes before us by virtue of a
certificate of fitness granted by the High Court of Madras
under Art. 133(1)(c) of the Constitution against its
judgment dismissing a petition filed by the appellant under
Art. 226 of the Constitution seeking a writ of prohibition
against the Corporation of Madras challenging the
constitutional validity. of a notice requiring the appellant
to pay profession tax.
The appellant held office as the last Governor-General of
India. Under s. 3 of Central Act XXX of 1951 the appellant
is entitled to a pension of Rs. 15,000/- per annum and has
been drawing this sum residing in the city of Madras. The
Corporation of Madras-the first respondent before us
demanded profession tax from the appellant under s.
111(1)(b) of the City Municipal Act, 1919 hereinafter called
the Act for the year 1958-1959 on the ground of the
appellant’s residence within the city for the period therein
specified and his drawing the pension to which he was
entitled. The appellant addressed a communication to the
Corporation asserting that this demand was illegal as the
Corporation was empowered by the relevant constitutional
provisions merely to levy a tax "on a profession,
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trade, calling or employment" and that as he as a pensioner
did not fall under any of these classes, the said demand was
illegal. The authorities of the Corporation, however,
insisted on compliance with the demand on the ground that
under the express terms of the Act persons in receipt of
pensions were also liable to the tax. The appellant
thereupon filed a writ petition for the relief already set
out, and as the validity of the State Act was impugned
impleaded the State of Madras also as a respondent.
It would be seen from the foregoing that -the question for
consideration is whether the 1st respondent Corporation is
entitled to levy a tax on pensioners in respect of the
pensions received by them. In order to appreciate the
submissions made to us by learned Counsel for the appellant
it would be necessary to set out the history of the
legislation in relation to profession tax and the impugned
tax on persons in receipt of pensions applicable to the City
of Madras because it is on a construction of these
provisions that the learned Judges of the High Court have
upheld the validity of the levy and dismissed the
appellant’s writ petition. For this purpose it is not
necessary to travel to any period anterior to the enactment
of the Madras City Municipal Act (Madras Act IV of 1919)
which with certain amendments to be referred to presently is
still in force. The Act received the assent of the Governor
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on March 26, 1919, of the Governor-General in June, 1919 and
came into force-on publication in the Gazette which was in
the same month. Having been enacted while the powers of the
Local Legislatures were governed by the Government of India
Act, 1915, the constitutional validity of the legislation is
not open to any challenge. Section 111(1 of this enactment
ran
"Every person not liable for the companies’
tax. who, within the city and for the period
prescribed in Sec. 113, exercises a
profession, art, trade or calling or holds an
appointment, public or private, bringing him
within one or more of the classes of persons
specified in the taxation rules in Schedule
IV- shall pay by way of licence fee and in
addition to any other licence fee
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that may be leviable under this Act a tax as
determined under the said rules but in no case
exceeding rupees five hundred in the half year
and such tax may be described as the
profession tax."
The Section had two explanations of which the
second is material and this reads:
Explanation 2
"A person in receipt of a pension paid from
any source shall be deemed to be a person
holding an appointment within the meaning of
this section.’
The next change in the relevant provision was effected by
Madras City Municipal Amendment Act, 193,6 (Madras Act X of
1936) which came into force on 14th April 1936. By this
amendment a new section-s. III was substituted ,for the old
one just set out, and under this Explanation (2) was deleted
and the substituted provision ran :
"III(1). If the Council by a resolution
determines that a profession tax shall be
levied, every person not liable to the tax,
on companies, who after the date specified
in the notice published under sub-sec. (2)
of Sec. 98-A in any half year-
(a) exercises a profession , art or calling
or transacts business or holds any
appointment, public or private-
(i) within the city for not less than sixty
days in the aggregate, or
(ii) outside the city but who resides in the
city for not less than sixty days in the
aggregate; or
(b) resides in the city for not less than
sixty days in the aggregate and is in receipt
of any pension or income from investments,
shall pay in addition to any licence fee that
may
967
be leviable under this Act, a half yearly tax
assessed in accordance with the rules in
Schedule IV in no case exceeding rupees five,
hundred."
Along with this was added a new section-s. 98-
A which ran :
Sec. 98-A(1):
"Before the council passes any resolution
imposing a tax or duty for the first time it
shall direct the Commissioner to publish a
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notice in the Fort St. George Gazette and in
the local papers of its intention and fix a
reasonable period not being less than one
month from the date of publication of such
notice in the Fort St. George Gazette for
submission of objections. The Council may,
after considering the objections, if any,
received within the period specified,
determine by resolution to levy the tax or
duty. Such resolution shall specify the rate
at which, the date from which and the period
of levy, if any, for which such tax or duty
shall be levied.
When the Council shall have determined to levy
any tax or duty for the first time or at a new
rate the Commissioner shall forthwith publish
a notice in the manner laid down in sub-
section (1) specifying the date from which the
rate at which and the period of levy, if any,
for which such tax or duty shall be levied."
At this stage it is necessary to refer to Schedule IV in
accordance with which the tax has to be assessed under the
terms of s. 111(1). In the Act as enacted in 1919 the
relevant rule in Schedule IV divided persons assessed to
profession tax etc. into 8 classes, based upon the amount of
,monthly salary received in the case of those holding
appointments, and income derived in the case of those in
trade, -art - calling etc. Each of these classes was again
sub-divided ,into two-the first sub-class comprising
"Persons holding appointments upon a monthly salary" and the
other of
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"persons exercising any profession, trade, art, calling or
transacting business". It would be seen that having regard
to Explanation 2 to s. 111, as it stood in 1919, before its
amendment by Act X of 1936 by reason of the provision which
enacted that "persons in receipt of pension" were deemed to
be "persons holding appointments" when the rule in Schedule
IV referred to "persons holding appointments" it included by
the statutory fiction-pensioners who on the basis of the
amount of pension which they derived were classified as
"persons holding appointments" under the various classes.
But when this Explanation to s. Ill was deleted by the
Amending Act X of 1936 and when the new s. 111,(1)(b)
referred to the "half-yearly tax assessed in accordance with
rules in Schedule IV, it was urged that there could not have
been an assessment of persons in receipt of pension unless
they could be comprehended as within the category of persons
holding appointments, or of persons exercising -any
profession, trade, or art or calling",as these were the only
classes-relevant to the present purpose who were within the
scope of the rules under Schedule IV.
We shall refer to the submission based on this feature as
regards the terminology employed in Schedule IV in its
proper place. The Corporation of Madras availed itself of
the provisions of s. 98-A and after the issue of the notices
prescribed by it passed a resolution at a meeting held on
March 31, 1937 to levy inter alia "profession tax" for the
year 1937-38 at -the rates which were specified in the
resolution. As regards "profession tax", the resolution
read :
"Resolved that the profession tax in respect
of clauses 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 be fixed at the
maximum rate and 25 per cent over and above
the minimum rates prescribed in Schedule IV of
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the Act in respect of clauses 7, 8 and 9."
This resolution further specified that the tax at the rates
therein set out which were higher ’than what prevailed
before, were to have effect from April 1, 1937. Notwith-
standing the apparent inapplicability of the rules in
Schedule IV to the levy of profession tax on pensioners, the
Corporation continued to assess pensioners to the said tax
and
969
collected the same. The lacuna in the enactment was
Apparently noticed in 1942 when by a notification in the
Official gazette the Schedule was amended in exercise of the
powers conferred on Government by s. 347(3) of the Act.
Under the amendment instead of the words "Persons holding
any appointment or persons exercising profession, trade or
calling etc. "the classes ’Were divided, on the basis of
"the half yearly income received by the individual specified
in s. 111(1)". This amendment to the Schedule was
directed to come into force from April 1, 1942. The
relevant terms of Schedule IV have continued up to date in
the same from as amended in 1942-only the rate of tax has
been progressively increased; first in 1950, then in 1958
and again in 1961, but in the view we take of the principal
contention raised by the appellant it is not necessary to
set out or deal with these increases.
Pausing here the ground upon which the demand for
"profession tax" made by the Corporation was impugned may be
briefly stated. The power of the Corporation to levy the
tax is dependent on the subject of the tax being within
State legislative power under the Constitution. The
relevant ’entry in the Legislative Lists conferring taxing
power on the State under which alone, if possible, the
present levy could be supported was item 60 in the State
List in Schedule VII of the Constitution reading:
"Taxes on profession, trades, callings and’ employments."
Being a "pensioner" cannot be a "profession, trade, business
or calling", nor could a tax on a person because he is in
receipt of a pension be said to be a tax on "employments".
The tax therefore under the last portion of s. 111(1)(b)
reading-Profession tax on persons "in receipt of any pension
or income from investments"- is nothing but a tax on income
falling within Entry 82 of the Union list. If, therefore,
the Corporation could not justify the tax as being within
the State legislative power the only manner in which it
could be done would be by reference to Art. 277 of the
Constitution by which "taxes, duties, etc."’ which "were
being lawfully levied" prior to the commencement of the
970
Constitution were permitted to be levied "notwithstanding
that the tax was in the Union List" and "to be applied to
the same purposes" as before. Unless therefore the
Corporation could make out that the tax now impugned was
being lawfully levied from before the Constitution the levy
would be illegal and besides there was the complication
introduced by the enhancement of the rates of tax which, as
stated earlier, were effected in April, 1950, April 1958 and
in 1961. Leaving aside for the moment the question of the
effect of the enhancement of the rate, we have to see
whether it has been established that the duty was lawfully
levied by the Corporation prior to the Constitution.
The answer to the question whether it was "lawfully levied"
prior to 26th January, 1950 when the Constitution came into
force would depend upon the effect of certain provisions of
the Government of India Act, 1935. Under that enactment, as
under the Constitution, the State legislative power as
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regards taxes of the nature now in controversy was couched
in terms identical with that employed in entry 60 of the
State List in the Constitution. Entry 46 in the Provincial
Legislative List under the Government of India Act, 1935
ran:
"Taxes on profession, trades, callings and
employments" :
and "taxes on income" fell within the exclusive Federal
’Legislative power under Entry 54 of List I. By the Indo-
Burma Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1940 the Parliament of
the U.K. enacted s. 142-A to whose terms we shall advert
later and by the same enactment entry 46 was amended and the
words :
"Subject, however, to the provisions of s. 142-A" were added
at the end of entry 46. Here, again, it would be seen that
if the right of the Corporation to levy profession tax on
the pension received by a pensioner had to rest on the
legislative entries it would fail because it was ,outside
the legislative power of the Province under the Lists read
with s. 100 of that Act corresponding, to Art. 246 of the
Constitution. The validity of the levy during the period
when the Government of India Act was in force i.e. between
1st April, 1937 and 25th January, 1950 was dependent on
971
its falling within the saving contained in s. 143 (2) of the
Government of India Act which ran :
"Any taxes, duties, cesses or fees which,
immediately before the commencement of Part
III of this Act, were being lawfully levied by
any Provincial Government, municipality or
other local authority or body for the purposes
of the Province, municipality, district or
other local area under a law in force on the
first day of January, nineteen hundred and
thirty-five, may, notwithstanding that those
taxes, duties, cesses or fees are mentioned in
the Federal Legislative List, continue to be
levied and to be applied to the same purposes
until provision to the contrary is made by the
Federal Legislature."
No doubt the Amending Act was not in force on 1st January,
1935 having been passed in April 1936, but this would not
take it out of s. 143 (2) because para.3 of the Indo-Burma
(Transitory Provisions) Order, 1937, being an Order in
Council by His Majesty in Council authorised by s. 310 of
the Government of India Act, provided :
"Para 3(1): For a period of two years from the
commencement of Part III of the Indian Act,
the provisions of subsection (2) of section
one hundred and forty-three of that Act (which
authorises the continuance until provision to
the contrary is made by the Federal
Legislature, of certain provincial taxes
falling within the Federal List) shall have
effect as if the reference to the first of
January nineteen hundred and thirty-five were
a reference to the commencement of the said
Part Ill."
It would follow, therefore, that for the present demand to
be sustained as valid it would be sufficient if it was shown
that the tax was lawfully levied immediately prior to the
commencement of Part III of the Government of India Act,
1935, i.e., on 31st March, 1937. The learned Judges of the
High Court held that this condition was satisfied and on
this basis they have dismissed the appellant’s petition.
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972
Learned Counsel for the appellant submitted four points in
support of the appeal : (1) That the amending Act X of 1936
Was not validly passed by reason of its contravening the
Devolution Rules framed under s. 45-A of the Government of
India Act, 1919 by which Local Governments were given
legislative power inter alia to levy taxes on professions,
trades, etc. but that the present tax which is really a "tax
on income" was a Central subject outside the competence of
the Local Legislature, (2) Even assuming that Act X of 1936
was valid, the tax which was permitted to be levied under it
was, having regard to the terms of s. 111 ( 1 ) a new tax
which was levied for the first time by the resolution of the
Corporation only on and from April 1, 1937 and, therefore,
the present tax was not in operation prior to the
commencement of Part III of the Government of India Act,
1935 and not therefore saved by s. 143(2) of that Act, (3)
Besides, between 1st April, 1937 to 1st April, 1942 it was
not lawfully levied by reason of the lacuna created by the
words of the rules in Schedule IV being inapplicable to the
levy of a tax on pensioners, (4) The increase. in the rates
from 1937 onwards could not be justified even under s. 143
(2) or Art. 277 and by reason of these changes in rates the
tax became virtually a new tax and could not continue to be
lawfully levied to any extent after the increases.
The first point need not detain us long. Prima facie it
would seem that there being no rigid distribution of legis-
lative power between the Central and Local Governments under
the Government of India Act, 1919 any infraction of the
rules made under the Devolution Rules framed under s. 45-A
would be validated by s. 80-A(3) and s. 84(2) of the
Government of India Act, 1919. The learned Judges of the
High Court before whom this contention was urged rejected
it, and the learned counsel submitted that the decision on
this point was not correct. But in the view that we took of
the other submissions made to us, we did not hear learned
counsel fully on this point and therefore do not propose to
express any final opinion on the tenability of the argument
on this head.
973
As preliminary to the consideration of the second point it
would be necessary to advert to one feature of the change
effected by the Amending Act of 1936 to the tax levy. Under
s. 111, as it originally stood, the liability to pay the
tax, i.e., the charge for the tax, was imposed by virtue of
the statute itself, on persons who for the period prescribed
"exercised a profession or trade or calling or held an
appointment", persons in receipt of pensions being deemed to
be persons holding appointments. This structure as regards
the imposition of liability was altered by the Amending Act.
Under the provision, as recast, before a liability to pay
the tax could arise the Council had to determine by a
resolution that profession tax shall be levied and it was
only that resolution which brought the charge into
operation. Thus, the resolution of the Council was substi-
tuted for the statute itself as the mode by which the charge
was to be imposed. There was also a second change that was
introduced by rendering residence for six months within the
city, besides the receipt of pension in the city, a
necessary ingredient of the chargeability of the "profession
tax" on pensioners. The effect of these two changes now
calls for consideration. On the amendment of s. Ill by the
Act of 1935 coming into force in April 1936, the statutory
imposition of the charge to tax laid on persons in receipt
of pensions within the city of Madras ceased, and the
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liability to tax as regards the period after that date was
dependent on the passing of a resolution by the Council in
terms of the amended s. III( 1 ) of the Act. In this con-
nection it has to be pointed out that though recourse to the
procedure as respects previous publication etc. prescribed
by s. 98-A was necessary only in the case of taxes newly
levied, and might have been adopted in the present case
because of the enhancement of the rates, still, a resolution
,of the Council was necessary to impose the tax as without
it, no liability to profession tax would arise. The charge
to tax was imposed, as stated earlier by the resolution of
the Council which was to have effect from April 1, 1937. In
other words by reason of the repeal of the original section
III, the statutory charge to tax on pensions ceased in April
1936. A charge was imposed again under the resolution -of
the Council effective from 1st April, 1937, so that
974
between April 1936 to 31st March, 1937, no charge was
imposed by virtue of any "law". Learned Counsel for the
Appellant submits that this is in effect a new levy-a levy
of a tax which was not legally in existence on 31st March,
1937, and if this levy could not be supported as being
sanctioned by s. 143(2) of the Government of India Act,
1935, it is common ground that the lawfulness of the levy
cannot be sustained. We consider this submission well
founded. If the statutory charge to profession tax imposed
on pensioners by the Act of 1919, was lifted by the Act of
1936, and the tax again came into operation only on 1st
April, 1937, it would follow that there was no "levy of the
tax" "immediately before" the commencement of Part III of
the Government of India Act, 1935, so as to bring it within
the saving in s. 143(2) of that Act. Besides, the two
circumstances. viz. : that residence within the city for a
specified period was made a condition of the liability to
the tax, as well as the increase in the rates would both
serve to emphasise that the levy was a new one, with a
different texture and not a continuance of the tax which was
levied just prior to the 1st April, 1937.
Learned Counsel for the respondents the Corporation of
Madras and the State have urged that it was in substance the
old levy. We are unable to agree. The mere fact that prior
to 1st April, 1937 the Corporation had under Act X of 1936
the power to bring the tax into force by a resolution does
not on a proper construction of s. 143(2) bring it within
the range of those taxes or duties which "were being
lawfully levied" prior to the commencement of Part III of
the Government of India Act which alone are permitted to be
continued to be levied notwithstanding that these duties
were in the Federal Legislative List. This question has
been considered by us in great detail in The Town Municipal
Committee, Amravati v. Ram Chandra Vasudeo Chimote and
Another, etc.(1) in which judgment has been pronounced today
and it is unnecessary to re-examine the same. The mere
existence of a power to bring a tax into operation, cannot,
as pointed out, be equated with "a tax
(1) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 947.
975
which was being lawfully levied" before Part III of the
Government of India Act, 1935.
The 3rd submission of learned Counsel for the appellant is
also well-founded. The conclusion we have reached as to the
effect of the amendment to s. 111 by Act X of 1936, and of
the tax being imposed by resolution of the Council from 1st
April, 1937 not being a tax which was being lawfully levied
immediately prior to 1st April, 1942, is reinforced by
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reference to the rules in Schedule IV which; remained
unamended till 1942. Under s. 111(1) as amended, the tax
could be levied only in accordance with the rules in
Schedule IV and as those rules did not make a provision for
the levy of a tax on pensioners, it would follow that the
tax "was not being lawfully levied" on them. As already
pointed out, the relevant rules in that Schedule were framed
at a time when Explanation 2 formed part of s. III and
"pensioners" were deemed to "hold appointments". With the
deletion of the Explanation, the fiction created by the
original Madras Act IV of 1919 ceased and thereafter if the
rules in Schedule IV had to be applied to them these had to
be suitably modified. This, as we have pointed out earlier,
was done only from April 1, 1942, so that in reality taxes
on pensioners were "lawfully" levied upto 1936 and then
after a break from April 1, 1942, we use the word "lawfully"
on the assumption that this could’ have been legally done
under the Government of India Act, 1935, a point already
discussed. The learned Judges of the High Court have
rejected the argument addressed to them under this head by
reference to s. 18 of the Madras General Clause Act
corresponding to s. 24 of the General Clauses Act (Central
Act X of 1897). With great respect to the learned Judges we
do not see how this provision affords any assistance in the
matter. The Schedule and the rules continued without repeal
or amendment when the new s. III (1) was substituted in
1936, and when this section made a reference to the rules in
Schedule IV it could only be a reference to the rules in the
Schedule IV which stood’ unaltered. If the phraseology
employed in the Schedule was inappropriate to a class which
fell within s. 111(1), the, only effect would be that the
tax could not be levied, because
976
of the defect in the law imposing the tax, but such a
situation is not remedied by reference to the provision
in the General Clauses Act on which the learned Judges have
relied.
If, therefore, the, tax was one not lawfully levied just
prior to April 1, 1937 and was one brought in after the
Government of India Act, 1935 came into force, and really
only from April 1, 1942 assuming this to be lawful-it is
obvious that the validity of this tax could not be sustained
as a continuation of a lawful pre-existing levy under s. 143
(2).
In this view it is not necessary to consider the last of the
points urged by learned Counsel and examine whether in case
of an increase of rate, the entire tax would become a new
tax and so unconstitutional or whether it is only the
increase in the rate that would become unenforceable.
Learned Counsel for the respondent-Corporation submitted
that the tax could not be deemed to be a tax on income, as
was suggested by the appellant, but was really a tax on
employment because it was in consideration of past services
during employment that pension was payable. This argument
was admittedly not urged before the learned Judges of the
High Court and is obviously untenable. The taxes specified
in item 60 are taxes on the carrying on of a profession,
trade, etc. and would, therefore, apply only to a case of
present employment. The mere fact that a person has
previously been in a profession or carried on a trade, etc.
cannot justify a tax under this Entry. The tax on the
receipt of pension or on the income from investments which
is referred to in the last part of s. 1 1 1 ( 1 ) is in
truth and substance a tax on income and in fact the argument
before the High Court proceeded on this basis, so have the
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learned Judges. At the time the tax is levied the pensioner
is in no employment but is only in receipt of income though
it might be for past services, in an employment.
He next submitted that Act X of 1936 which had been enacted
prior to the Government of India Act, 1935 was continued as
an existing law by s. 292 of the Government of India Act and
as there was nothing in the Government of India Act against
its continuance it would have effect
977
even if the terms of s. 143 (2) were not satisfied by the
present levy. The learned Judges of the High Court accepted
this submission. In our opinion, they were in order. The
question of the correlation between Art. 372 corresponding
to s. 292 of the Government of India Act and Art. 277
corresponding to s. 143(2) of the Government of India Act
was considered by this Court in South India Corporation (P)
Ltd. v. The Secretary, Board of Revenue, Trivandrum(1) and
this Court said:
"It is settled law that a special provision
should be given effect to the extent of its
scope, leaving the general provision to
control cases where the special provision does
not apply. The earlier discussion makes it
abundantly clear that the Constitution gives a
separate treatment to the subject of finances,
and Art. 277 saves the existing taxes etc.
levied by States, if the conditions mentioned
therein are complied with. While Art. 372
saves all pre-Constitution valid laws, Art.
277 is confined only to taxes, duties, cesses
or fees lawfully levied immediately before the
Constitution. Therefore, Art. 372 cannot be
construed in such a way as to enlarge the
scope of the saving of taxes, duties, cesses
or fees. To state it differently, Art. 372
must be read subject to Art. 277."
Learned Counsel next drew our attention to s. 142-A(1) of
the Government of India Act, 1935 and faintly suggested that
it might afford him some assistance. This provision, again,
was not adverted to before the learned Judges of the High
Court and for a proper reason. S. 142-A(1) which
corresponds to Art. 276(1) of the Constitution enacted :
"Notwithstanding anything in section one
hundred of this Act, no Provincial law
relating to taxes for the benefit of a
Province or of a municipality, district board,
local board or other local authority therein
in respect of professions,
(1) A.I.R. 1964 S.C. 207.
134-159 S.C.-62
978
trades, callings or employments shall be
invalid on the ground that it relates to a tax
on income."
This section would assist the respondent only if tax imposed
were one on a profession, trade, calling, or employment and
in that event the section provides that such a tax shall not
be deemed to be a tax on income, but where the tax imposed
is one not on a profession, etc. at all, it does not mean
that the State might levy a tax on income and call it
"profession tax". This is sufficient to dispose of a
similar argument as regards the scope of the amended Entry
46 in the Provincial Legislature List (List II) to which we
have adverted earlier.
The appeal accordingly succeeds and the appellant is held
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entitled to the relief prayed by him in the, filed in the
High Court, viz., a writ of Prohibition against the
respondent-Corporation from enforcing the demand. The
appellant will be entitled to his costs from the respond-
ents here and in the High Court.
Appeal allowed.