Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LT. COL. SAWAI BHAWANI SINGH ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF RAJASTHAN & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/02/1996
BENCH:
MADAN MOHAN PUNCHHI, K. RAMASWAMY,
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Punchhi, J.
When a legislative enactment is caused an amendment
beyond the competence of the legislature and the mistake is
corrected by another amendment to bring the enactment back
within its competence, can the entire legislation, original
as well as ambulatory be said to be "still-born" and thus
unenforceable, is the significant question which falls for
determination in this group of cases.
It will be necessary to refer to the legislative
history of the questioned provisions. In the year 1964, the
Rajasthan State legislature enacted a measure called the
Rajasthan Urban Lands Tax Act (Act No.18 of 1964)
[hereinafter referred to as the "Principal Act"], to provide
for levy of tax alone on "urban lands" in the State of
Rajasthan. The Act then did not levy tax on buildings though
within the competence of the legislature. The Principal Act
was not enforced till l973, when amendment was caused
thereto by the Amending Act No. 15 of 1973 bringing about
drastic changes in the Act, of far reaching consequences. By
virtue of this Amendment Act, tax was sought to be levied or
imposed upon both lands and buildings in the urban areas of
the State of Rajasthan. The Principal Act and the Amending
Act were made enforceable with effect from April 1 l973. A
private corporation challenged the constitutional validity
of the Act as amended, in the High Court of Rajasthan. The
State Government perhaps realizing the flaws in the Amending
Act No. 15 of 1973, had the Governor of the State issue on
June 23, 1973, an Ordinance No. 6 of 1973 bringing about
corrective changes in the provisions, (reference to which
will be made later) which Ordinance was replaced by the
Amending Act No. 18 of 1973, which came into force on
November 10, 1973 but effective from l-4-73. The rates of
tax as applicable with effect from April 1, 1973 were
changed subsequently by the Rajasthan Finance Act of 1977
(Act No.2 of 1977) causing necessary amendments in the
charging section of the Principal Act.
Section 3 of the Principal Act, as it was originally
enacted, reads as under:
"3. Levy of Urban land tax:(1) Subject
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to the other provisions contained in
this Act, there shall be levied and
collected for each year a tax on Urban
lands (hereinafter referred to as the
Urban Land tax) from every owner of
urban Land at such rate not exceeding 2%
of the market value of such urban land
as determined under Section 4, as the
State Government may by Notification in
the Official Gazette declare in this
respect.
Provided that the State Government may
fix graduated rates of tax on different
slabs of market value of urban lands.
Provided further that no tax shall be
levied on any urban land if the owner
thereof or his predecessor in interest
has acquired such land by transfer from
the Government or any local authority
within a period of two years immediately
preceding the year for which the tax is
levied.
(2) The tax shall be in addition to any
other tax for the time being payable in
respect of the urban land or portion
thereof under any other law for the time
being in force.
This Section 3 was subsequently substituted by the following
provision, by Section 4 of the Amending Act No.15 of 1973.
with effect from April 1, 1973.
"3. Levy of lands and buildings tax:(1)
There shall be levied and collected,
with effect on and from 1st April, 1973,
for each year a tax on lands and
buildings situate in an urban area,
(hereinafter referred to as the lands
and buildings tax) from the owner of
such lands and buildings at such rates
not exceeding 2% of the market value
thereof as the State Government may, by
notification in the official gazette
declare in this behalf.
Provided that the State Government may
fix graduated rates of tax on different
slabs of market values of urban lands
and buildings.
Provided further that until a
notification declaring rates of tax is
issued under this sub-section, the rates
of tax on lands and buildings shall be
as follows:
On First Rs.50,000/- of the market value
of the lands and buildings - NIL
On the balance of the market value of
the lands and buildings - 1/4%
Provided further that if any area is
declared a cantonments, or is
constituted a municipality, after the
commencement of Rajasthan Urban
Land Tax (Amendment) Act, 1973, the tax
on lands and buildings situate in such
area shall be levied and collected with
effect from the commencement of the year
following the year during which the area
is declared a cantonment or is
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constituted a municipality.
Provided also that where more than one
land or building in the same urban area
is owned by the same Person, the land
and building tax shall be assessed on
the market value of all such lands and
building taken together.
(2) The tax shall be in addition to any
other tax for the time being payable in
respect of the land and building or
portion thereof under any other law for
the time being in force."
By Amending Ordinance VI of 1973, which was later replaced
by Amending Act No.18 of 1973, the last proviso to sub-
section (1) of Section 3 was omitted and it was provided
that the same shall be deemed always to have been omitted
and the following sub-section (1)A was inserted
retrospectively after sub-section ((1) of Section 3.
"(1)A - For removal of doubt it is
declared that the tax shall be levied on
land or building or both separately as
units."
Section 4 of the Principal Act, as it was originally enacted
in the year 1964, was under:
"4. Determination of market value:
(1) The Assessing Authority shall
determine in the prescribed manner the
market value of the urban land liable to
be taxed under this Act.
(2) The Assessing Authority in
determining the market value shall have
regard to the following matters, namely:
(a) the locality in which urban land is
situated.
(b) the predominant use to which the
urban land is likely to be put, that is
to say, industrial commercial or
residential.
(c) accessability or proximity to market
dispensary, hospital, railway station,
educational institutions, or
Government offices.
(d) such other matter as may be
prescribed."
This Section was also substituted by the under mentioned
provision by Section 5 of the Amending Act No.15 of 1973:
"4. Determination of market value - For
purpose of this Act, the market value of
any land or building or both shall be
estimated to be the price which in the
opinion of the assessing authority such
land or buildings or both would have
reached, if sold in the open market on
the date of the commencement of the
Rajasthan Urban Land Tax (Amendment)Act,
1973."
The relevant portion of charging Section 3, as it
stands, after the amendments made therein by Act No.18 of
1973 and Act No.2 of 1977, runs as under:
"Provided further that until a
notification declaring rate of tax is
issued under this sub-section, the rate
of tax on lands and buildings shall be
as follows:
On the first Rs.50,000/- of the market
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value of the land and building - NIL
On the balance of the market value of
the land and buildings 1.4%
Provided further that if any area is
declared a cantonment, or is constituted
a municipality, after the commencement
of Rajasthan Urban Land Tax amendment)
Act, 1973, the tax on lands and
buildings situate in such area shall be
levied and collected with effect
from the commencement of the year
following the year during which the area
is declared a cantonment or is
constituted a municipality.
(1-A) For removal of doubt it is
declared that the tax shall be levied on
land or building or both separately as
units."
The challenge was batched up in 42 writ petitions,
which were decided by a common order by a learned Single
Judge of the High Court on May 11, 1979. The learned Single
Judge allowed all the writ petitions in part, leaving both
the writ petitioners as well as the state of Rajasthan
aggrieved. 59 special appeals were thus filed before a
Division Bench of the High Court which was disposed of by a
common order whereby the appeals of the State were allowed.
appeals of the writ petitioners were dismissed and as a
consequence the writ petitions were dismissed in their
entirety. Thus on granting leave in the present batch of
appeals before us, the only question raised by learned
counsel and regarding which written submissions have been
submitted to us is whether or not the Principal Act No.18 of
1964 was by itself invalid, more so after its amendment by
Amending Act No. 15 of 1973 rendering it further void
because it was beyond the legislative competence of the
State Legislature. The argument is that since levy of tax on
all lands and buildings of a person taken together under the
charging sections 3 and 4 in the enacted provisions were
outsides the legislative competence of the State
Legislature, the entire measure was a piece of "still-born"
legislation,
incapable, because inseperatability of being enlivened after
its amendment by the Amending Ordinance No. 6 of 1973 and
the subsequent Amending Act 13 of 1973. The view of the
learned Single Judge was that the Principal Act as enacted
in 1964 was a valid piece of legislation and was fully
covered by Entry 49, List II as it stood in the 7th Schedule
of the Constitution. The learned Single Judge was further of
the view that the Amending Act 15 of 1973 had brought in the
Principal Act the offensive material which was beyond the
legislative competence to the State Legislature, but since
that material was severable from the remaining provisions of
the charging Section 3, therefore the healthy portion of
Section 3 together with the other provisions of the Act was
valid, except the last proviso to Section 3(1), which was
subsequently deleted by Amending Act 18 of 1973. The Hon’ble
Judges of the Division Bench, improving the view of the
learned Single Judge, went on to say that the last proviso
to Sub-section (1) of Section 3 was also separable from the
rest of the provisions of the said Section and after
striking out the invalid portion, namely, the last proviso
to Sub- section (1) of Section 3, the remaining portion of
Section 3 contains a complete Code in itself and is workable
without reference to and notwithstanding that a portion
thereof is unenforceable. The Bench also took the view that
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for the purpose of separability, it was immaterial as to
whether the invalid and valid portions sere enacted in the
same Section or in different sections, because what is
important is the substance of the matter, the form being
immaterial. Noticeably Ordinance 6 of 1973/Act 18 of 1973
had omitted the last proviso to Sub-section (1) of Section 3
with retrospective effect, thus keeping the remaining
portion of Section 3 presenting a workable scheme without
affecting its validity. On the deletion of the last proviso
to Sub-section (l) of Section 3, the charging provision was
expressly clarified by adding a new Sub-section (1)A thereto
which declared that the tax shall be levied on lands and
buildings or on both separately as units.
It is now well settled that as per Entry 49 of List II,
the State Legislature is competent to impose tax either on
lands or on buildings or on both. A land or building or both
of a person may be subjected to direct tax by the State
legislature under Entry 49 of List II and may also be
subject matter of direct tax as a component of his total
assets, like Wealth-tax by the Union legislature as
mentioned in Entry 86 of List I. These two taxes are
separate and distinct in nature and it cannot be said that
there was any overlapping, or that the State Legislature was
not competent to levy such tax on lands and buildings merely
on the ground that they have been subjected to another tax
as a component of the total assets of the person concerned.
See in this connection, a seven member Bench decision of
this Court in Union of India vs. H.S. Dhillon [1972(2) SCR
33]. This Court clearly said that for a tax to be under
Entry 49 of List II, three conditions must be satisfied,
i.e. (i) it must be a tax on units i.e., land and buildings
separately as units; (ii) the tax cannot be a tax on
totality i.e., it is not a composite tax on the value of all
lands and buildings; and (iii) the tax is not concerned with
the division of interest in the building or land; in another
words, the tax was not concerned whether one person owned or
occupied the land or building or two or more persons occupy
or own it. In pith and substance, it was a tax on property
and not a personnel tax. Other cases of the same nature
being D.C. Gouse & Co. etc. vs. State of Kerala & Anr. etc.
[1980(1) SCR 268], which are of the same species, may be
turned to with advantage. B. Shama Rao vs. The Union
Territory of Pondicherry [1967(2) SCR 650], pressed into
service by learned counsel for the appellants, which was a
case under the Pondicherry General Sales Tax Act, enlightens
us that the core of the taxing statute is in the charging
Section of the provisions levying such tax and defining
persons who are liable to pay such tax. Understandably if
the core disappears, the remaining provisions have no
application. This is well understood.
The Principal Act, as it originally stood, provided for
levy of tax on lands only. It could then have no taint of
unconstitutionally and none could be pointed out to us. It
is the Amending Act No.15 of 1973 which brought about the
questioned changes in Section 3 and 4, which gave the spill
as if levy of tax was being made by the State legislature
under Entry 86 of List l on the premise that the tax was
being made leviable on a person taking into account his
total assets in lands and buildings, which taint, as
identified, was later withdrawn by Ordinance 6 of 1973/Act
18 of 1973 by causing certain deletions to keep the
remainder complete as a code. Thus it is evident that the
Principal Act could stand on its own and the amendment
caused to it by Amending Act No.l5 of 1973, by itself
brought a blot by way of substitution the offending portion
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of which was later sliced off as much. Nothing was so
inextricably mixed up so that the extricable parts were not
severable, or that any damage had been occasioned to the
left out healthy portion rendering it incomplete. This court
in M.P.V.Sundara Ramaiar and Co.vs. State of Andhra Pradesh
[l958 SCR 1442] and R.M.D. Chamarbaugwalla vs. Union of
India [1957 SCR 930 at page 950] has laid down the
principles that in determining whether the valid parts of
the statute are separable from its invalid parts, it is the
intention of the legislature that is the determining factor.
The test to be applied is whether the legislature would have
enacted the valid part if it had known that the rest of the
statute was invalid. If the valid and invalid provisions are
so inextricably mixed up that they cannot be separated from
one another, then the invalidity of a portion must result in
the invalidity of the Act in its entirety. This Court
further took the view that if on the other hand those valid
and invalid portions were so distinct and separate that
after striking out what is invalid, what is itself a
complete code, independent of the rest,then it will be the
subsisting object, notwithstanding that the rest has become
unenforceable. In the light of the aforesaid principles it
is clear that the charging section 3, which to begin with
was unquestionably valid, was replaced with the amendment
made by Amending Act 15 of 1973, making it in that state
unenforceable, but when the unhealthy part was removed by
Ordinance 6 of 1973. Amending Act 18 of 1973, Sections 3 and
4 got resuscitated, gaining radiatance, pristinely
legislative, its sparkle re-doubled by insertion of Sub-
section (1)A to Section 3, so as to remove doubts ever
existing regarding levy of tax on buildings and lands. Thus
it must be held that the charging Section 3 and the
supportive Section 4, as salvaged, are part of a scheme
which was within the legislative competence of the Rajasthan
State Legislature. The afore-analysis also demolishes the
"stillborn" theory because the Principal Act was by itself a
measure existing on the statute book which had life and
breath of its own, irrespective of the date of its
enforceability having been kept for a future date. It is the
Amending Act No.15 of l973 which got to choke its life but
before it could die or be declared dead by a court to
competent jurisdiction, life was breathed into it by the
Amending Ordinance 6 of 1973 and Amending Act 18 of 1973
with retrospective effect in the manner stated above. The
cases relied upon - M/s. West Ramnad Electric Distribution
Co. Ltd. vs. State of Madras [1963(2) SCR 747] and Mahendra
Lal Jaini vs. The State of Uttar Pradesh and others [1963
Supp.(1) SCR 912], would not serve the purpose for which
they have been pressed forward by learned counsel for the
appellants to incapacitate the State Legislature to correct
its own wrongs, well in time and before a judicial verdict.
On the basis of the aforesaid analysis and reasoning
the question posed at the outset and the three questions
summarized in the written submission, namely:
(i) whether the Amendment Act of 1973
(Rajasthan Act XV to 1973) in pith and
substance imposes a tax which is
relatable to Entry 86 of List I or Entry
49 of List II?;
(ii) If the Amendment Act of 1973 in
pith and substance imposes a tax under
Entry 86 of List I and not under Entry
49 of List II, whether the second
proviso to Section 3 is severable from
the rest of the Act?; and
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(iii) Whether the Ordinance VI of 1973
introducing Sub-Section 1(A) to Section
3 would have the effect of
retrospectively curing the defect of the
Amendment Act of 1973 and thus revives
it?,
would stand appropriately answered, without further
elaboration, in favour of the State of Rajasthan and
against the appellants.
No other question was raised besides those afore-
referred to.
As a result, these appeals fail and are hereby
dismissed with no order as to costs.