Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF ORISSA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NARAIN PRASAD & ORS.,ETC.ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/09/1996
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
PARIPOORNAN, K.S.(J)
CITATION:
JT 1996 (8) 50
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
B.P.JEEVAN REDDY,J.
Leave granted.
Having voluntarily entered into contracts with the
Government of Orissa, undertaking to lift a particular
quantity of liquor every month and also to remit the monthly
excise duty in two equal installments on the fifth and
fifteenth of the month, the respondents- licencees committed
default on both counts and when the said undertaking in the
contract is not enforceable in law. They invoked the extra-
ordinary jurisdiction of the High Court under ARTICLE 226 of
the Constitution for the purpose. The High Court the upheld
their contention. Hence, these appeals by the State of
Orissa.
The grant of excise licences in the State of Orissa is
governed by the Bihar and Orissa Excise Act,1915 [the Act]
and the rules made thereunder. Section 22 provides for
grant of exclusive privilege of sale of country liquor,
whether wholesale or retail. Section 27 empowers the State
Government to impose excise duty or countervailing duty,as
it may direct on any of the activities specified therein.
It would be appropriate to set out sub-section [1] of
Section 27:
"27. Power to impose duty on
import, export, transport and
manufacture. [1] An excise duty or
countervailing duty, as the case
may be, at such rate or rates as
the State Government may direct,
may be imposed, either generally or
for any specified local area, on -
[a] any excisable article imported,
or
[b] any excisable article exported,
or
[c] any excisable article
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transported, or
[d] any excisable article [other
than tari] manufactured under any
Cl.[a] of S.13,or
[e] any hemp plant Cultivated, or
any portion of such plant
collected, under any licence
granted in respect of Cl. [b] or
Cl.of S. 13, Or
[f] any excisable article
manufactured in any distillery or
brewery licensed, established,
authorized or continued under this
Act.
Explanation: Duty may be imposed on
any article under this sub-section
at different rates according to the
places to which such article is be
removed for consumption, or
according to the article."
Section 28 empowers the levy of excise
duty/countervailing duty in any of the several ways provided
therein. Section 28, insofar as in relevant, reads:
"28. Ways of levying such duty. -
Subject to any rules made under
S.90, Cl. [12], any duty imposed
under S.27 may be levied in any of
the following ways:
[c] On an excisable article
transported, -
[i]...........................
[ii]by payment upon issue for sale
from a warehouse established,
authorized or continued under this
Act:
Section 29 is particularly relevant to the controversy
herein. It reads:
"29. payment for grant of exclusive
privilege. [1] Instead of or in
addition to, any duty leviable
under this Act, the State
Government may accept payment of a
sum in consideration of the grant
of any exclusive privilege under
S.22
[2] The sum payable under sub- [1]
shall be determined as follows:
[a] by auction or by calling
tenders or otherwise the State
Government may by general of
special order direct; and
[b] by such authority and
subject to such control as may
be specified in such order .
[3] The sum determined under sub-S.
[2] shall be final and shall be
final and shall be binding the
party making the offer by way of
tender, bid or other wise once such
offer is accepted by that sub-
section."
A reading of Section 29 shows that the State Government
may accept payment of a sum in consideration of the grant of
any exclusive privilege under Section 22. This may be
instead of or in addition to any duties leviable under the
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Act. Sub-section [2) clarifies that the sum payable under
sub-section 1) shall be determined by auction or by calling
for tenders or otherwise; sub-section [3] declares that the
sum determined under sub-sub-section [2] shall be final and
binding upon the party making the offer once the offer is
accepted by the appropriate authority.
Section 89 empowers the State Government to make rules
to carry out the objects of the Act. Sub-section [2]
specifies the several heads in respect of which rules can be
made. Clause [1] of sub-section [2] empowers the State
Government to make rules "for regulating the procedure to be
followed and prescribing the matters to be ascertained
before any licence for the wholesale or retail vend of any
intoxicant is granted for any locality."
In exercise of the power conferred by Section 89, the
Government of Orissa has made rules governing the grant of
licences, viz., The Orissa Excise Exclusive Privilege Rules,
1970’. Rule 6 of these Rules prescribes the manner in whish
the consideration determined for grant of exclusive
privilege shall be paid. Rule 6[A], as substituted by SRO
No. 215/89, provides for monthly minimum guaranteed quota,
the obligation of the licencee to lift it before the end of
the month and the further obligation to remit the monthly
excise duty in two equal instalments, i.e., on the 5th and
15th of every month. Clauses [1], [2], [3] and [4] of the
said Rules read thus:
"6 [A][1] Minimum guaranteed
quantity of Country spirit: Every
successful bidder of Country Spirit
shop shall, before obtaining
licence, guarantee the sale if the
minimum guaranteed quantity of
Country spirit as fixed by the
Collector. The bidder shall before
obtaining licences submit monthly
distribution of statement to the
concerned Collector. The licensee
before the 30th June, may revise
and resubmit the monthly
distribution statement for the
portion of the Excise Year from
August to March. The Collector,
shall be competent to revise and
approve such revised statement.
There shall be no further changes
in the distribution statement so
approved.
[2] The licensee shall lift the
monthly minimum guaranteed quantity
approved for that month before 5.00
P.m. on the last working day of
that month. The right to lift the
monthly minimum guaranteed quantity
approved for that month and left
unlifted if any by 5.00 p.m. on the
last working day of the month shall
be forefeited, unless specially
permitted to be lifted in the
subsequent month or months by the
Collector.
Provided that:-
[i] The Collector, may for any
special reasons permit the licensee
to lift the short drawn minimum
guaranteed quantity of the previous
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month in the succeeding month
except for the months of February
and March. The Collector shall
however, obtain the order of the
Commissioner of Excise in case of
default and for any special reasons
if the period exceeds Over one
month.
[ii] THE Commissioner , may,
wherever if he deems it necessary,
permit the licencee to lift the
short down minimum guaranteed
quantity of any month other than
that month of March in any
subsequent month or months.
[iii] No unlifted quantity of the
Country Spirit shall be permitted
to be lifted beyond the last day of
February.
[3] Subject to provisions of sub-
rule [1] no licensee shall lift
less than the specified minimum
guaranteed quantity of country
spirit in any month. The excise
duty of country spirit for the
month as approved in the
distribution statement under sub-
rule [1] shall be remitted in two
equal instalments by the licensee
into the Government treasury of
the District in which the shop is
situated. The first instalment
shall be remitted by fifth of the
second instalment by fifteenth of
that month. where due date or
subsequent day happens to be
holiday the instalment shall be
remitted on the nest working day.
If in any month, the first or
second instalment of the excise
duty of country spirit for that
month is not remitted as required
above, the excise duty to the
extent of deficit payment without
prejudice to any other mode of
recovery shall be deducted first
from the Bank Guarantee, if any,
and the balance from the advance
deposits furnished or paid under
rule 6 and the licensee shall be
called upon to indemnify the
amounts so adjusted in the case of
first instalment by fifteenth of
that month and in the case of
second instalment by twentyfifth of
that month in which deficit payment
of instalment of excise duty had
expired.
[4] Where a licensee fails to
indemnify the advance amount
adjusted under sub-rule [3] in the
case of first instalment of
fifteenth of that month and in the
case of second instalment by
twentyfifth of that month, the
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license is liable for cancellation
and the right acquired by the
defaulting licensee shall be liable
for redisposal subject to
provisions of sub-section [1] of
Section 22 of the Act."
A reading of Rule 6-A makes the following matters
clear: the licencee shall have to undertake to lift the
M.G.Q. of liquor every month. Clause (3) of the Rules, read
with clauses (1) and (2) means that the obligation to lift
the M.G.Q. of liquor and the obligation to remit the excise
duty payable for the month are two distinct obligations.
While the obligation to lift the M.G.Q. is to be discharged
before the end of the month, the obligation to remit the
excise duty for the month is to be discharged in two equal
instalments, viz., first instalment by the fifth and the
second instalment by the fifteenth of the month. The
consequences of not remitting the excise duty in the manner
specified are set out in clauses (3) and (4), which make the
said obligation mandatory and emphatic. The Rule also makes
it clear that if in a given month, the full M.G.Q. is not
lifted, the Collector can permit the deficit to be lifted in
the subsequent month but this has nothing to do with the
obligation to remit excise duty for the month on the dates
specified. It is relevant to point out that the several
consequences provided in clauses (3) and (4) follow the non-
deposit of excise duty on specified dates - and not the non-
lifting of M.G.Q. which is an independent obligation. It is
necessary to bear this aspect in mind.
Every person whose bid/tender has been accepted is
required to execute an agreement/contract in the prescribed
form. Under this agreement, the contractor/licencee agrees
to abide by the rules and conditions relating to retail vend
of country spirit (liquor) as stipulated in the licence as
also the general conditions of licence. The said conditions
shall be treated as part of the agreement. Clause (2)
obliges the contractor to draw a particular quantity of
liquor every month from the specified warehouse. Under
Clause (3) the contractor "undertakes to pay the duty at the
prescribed rate at the Warehouse prior to lifting the
stock". This condition provides that excise duty shall be
remitted prior to lifting ; it does not say it shall be
remitted at the time of lifting. Under Clause (7), the
contractor-licencee agrees to abide by all the provisions of
the Act and the Rules and instructions as may be issued from
time to time.
Conditions 1 and 2 of the licence, as amended in 1989,
repeat and reiterate the provisions contained in Rule 6-A
aforesaid in their entirety.
The respondents were the highest bidders in respect of
the various liquor shops in Orissa. Their bids were
accepted. They executed agreements in the prescribed form
and were issued licences. Each of them had undertaken the
agreement/contract to lift a particular specified quantity
of liquor every month during the relevant excise year (1990-
1991) as well as to remit the excise duty as specified in
the Rules. They did the business under the said licences for
the entire excise year. They failed to lift the agreed
M.G.Q. They also failed to remit the excise duty as provided
by Rule 6-A. And when notices were served calling upon them
to remit the appropriate amount, they rushed to the Orissa
High Court by way of writ petitions questioning the demand
notices.
The main contention of the respondents (writ
petitioners) was that the demand for payment of excise duty
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on unlifted quantity of arrack amounts to levy of duty and
that such levy is not warranted by the Act. They submitted
that Rule 6-A(3) is ultra vires the rule making power of the
Government and is outside the purview of the Act. They
submitted that if there is a sale of liquor, duty can be
collected on the liquor sold but that seeking to collect
duty even in the absence of sale amounts to levy of duty
contrary to the provisions of the Act. They placed reliance
upon the decisions of this Court in Bimal Chandra Banerjee
v. State of Mahdya Pradesh [ 1971 (1) S.C.R. 844 ] and the
subsequent decisions following it. According to them, their
case did not fall within the ratio of the decisions of this
Court in Panna Lal v. State of Rajasthan and Ors. [ 1976 (1)
S.C.R. 219 ] and State of Andhra Pradesh v. Y.Prabhakara Rao
[ 1987 (2) S.C.R. 513 ].
The State of Orissa disputed the several contentions of
the writ petitioners. In particular, they relied upon the
Agreement and the undertakings contained therein. Their case
is set out in the impugned judgement in the following words:
"It is further contended that the
fixation of M.G.Q. was made
considering the potentiality of
sale and by taking other relevant
factors into consideration, and the
petitioner and other contractors
were aware of the M.G.Q. at the
time when they participated in the
auction-cum-tender.....the
petitioner having accepted the
contract cannot now turn around and
challenge the fixation of M.G.Q.
for the year 1991-92...... the
demand was justified being the duty
towards shortfall of the M.G.Q.,the
challenge of the petitioner to
Annexure-3 if untenable. Sub-rule
(3) of Rule 6-A of the Orissa
Excise ( Exclusive Privilege)
Rules, 1970.....is valid and has
been framed in exercise of powers
under sub-section (1) of Section 89
of the Bihar & Orissa Excise Act,
1915 which empowers the State
Government to make rules to carry
out the objects of the Act, or any
other law for the time being in
force relating to the excise
revenue and also by Section 89(2)
of the Act which empowers the State
Government to make rules for
regulating the import,export or
transport of any
intoxicant....under Section 22(1)
of the Act, an exclusive privilege
can be granted to any person on
such terms and conditions and for
such period as the State Government
may think fit. The M.G.Q.. being
one of the conditions for grant of
a licence, the Government was fully
empowered in framing rules which
related to fixation of M.G.Q. and
also for providing the consequences
which would follow on reach of such
condition. This power..... flows
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from a combined reading of Sections
22,27,29 and 89 of the Act.....the
provision relating to the M.G.Q.
ought to be considered as a
condition subject to which the
licence was issued and accepted by
the petitioner, the petitioner
cannot, after operating the
licence, challenge the same. He is
bound by the conditions and is,
therefore, liable to pay the amount
demanded to compensate the State
for the loss sustained by it for
failure on the part of the
petitioners having entered into an
agreement for sale of country
liquor and having been granted an
exclusive privilege on certain
terms and conditions, cannot now,
after entering into a contract,
wriggle out of their contractual
obligation and contend that the
amount demanded for shortfall of
M.G.Q. is invalid......the sum
sought to be realized is damages
for breach of contract namely,
failure to lift M.G.Q...It is in
the granting of damages being the
duty on the shortfall, and as such,
is in the nature of a penalty and
can be realised on a breach being
committed. Strong reliance is
placed on Hari Shankar and others
etc. V. Deputy Excise & Taxation
Commissioner AIR 1975 SC 1121,
Panne Lal V. State of Rajasthan,
AIR 1975 SC 2008 and State of
Harvang V. Jage Ram & others, AIR
1980 SC 2018."
The High Court, however, accepted the contentions of
the respondents-writ petitioners and quashed the demand
notices impugned in the writ petitions.
It is evident from the contentions urged by both the
sides that while the respondents-licencees look at the
impugned demand as an instance of levy of excise duty, the
State looks at is as a case of enforcing the undertakings
contained in the agreement/contract executed by the
licencees According to the licencees. no excise duty can be
levied unless there is a sale. Demand for excise duty where
is no sale of liquor, according to them, is [4]
unsustainable in law. The State’s case, however, is that the
licence/privilege was granted to the respondents in
consideration of payment of several items of money, all of
money, all of which together constitute the consideration
for the grant of licence. The State says that it is merely
seeking to recover the amount due to it under the contract
and that such a course does not amount to levy of excise
duty. Both sides rely upon certain decisions of this Court
in support of their respective points of view. It would be
appropriate to notice them.
In Bimal Chandra Banerjee v. State of Madhya Pradesh
[1971(1) S.C.R. 844], one of the conditions of the licence
stipulated that:
"The minimum quantity for taking
issues from the Warehouse for sale
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is fixed at 3213 p. liters spiced
spirit and 25940 p. liters plain
spirit. You ( licencees ) shall be
liable to make good every month the
deficit of monthly average of the
total minimum duty on or before the
10th day of each month following
the month to which the deficit duty
relates."
Since the licencee failed to remit the duty as
stipulated, the State made a demand for the same. The
contention of the licencee was that the excise duty is a
tax, that it can be levied only on the basis of a valid law
and that no tax can be levied on the basis of a contract or
pursuant to executive orders, Tax, it was submitted, can be
levied only be the legislature. It was contended that the
aforesaid condition of licence is ultra vires the powers of
the Government. In other words, the contention was that
Government had no power to amend the Rules so as to include
the aforesaid clause in the conditions of licence. Section
25 of the Madhya Pradesh Act provided for the levy of duty
on any or the events specified therein, namely, import,
export transport, manufacture and cultivating while section
26 provided for levy of duty inter alia on liquor issued
from distillery or warehouse. No provision of the Act,
however, empowered levy of duty even where there was no
issue of liquor from distillery or warehouse, This Court
upheld the licencee’s contention on the following reasoning:
"Neither s.25 or s.26 or s.27 or
s.62(1) or cls. (8) and (h) of
s.62(2) empower the rule making
authority Viz., the State
Government to levy tax on excisable
articles which have not been either
imported, exported, transported.
manufactured, cultivated or
collected under any licence granted
under s.13 or manufactured in any
distillery established or any
distillery or brewery licensed
under the Act. The legislature has
levied excise duty only on those
articles which come within the
scope of s.25 The rule making
authority has not been conferred
with any power to levy duty on any
articles which do not fall within
the scope of s.25. Therefore it is
not necessary to be conferred on
that authority. Quite which the
contractors failed to lift. In so
doing it was attempting to exercise
a power which it did not possess.
No tax can be imposed by any bye-
law or rule or regulation unless
the statute under which the
subordinate legislation is made
specially authorises the imposition
even if it is assumed that the
power to tax can be delegated to
the executive. The basis of the
statutory power conferred by the
statute cannot be transgresses by
the rule making authority. A rule
making authority has no plenary
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power. It has to act within the
limits of the power granted to it.
We are of the opinion that the
impugned rule as well as the
demands are not authorised by law."
The ratio of the said decision is that inasmuch as the
Act does not empower levy of excise of excise duty on
unlifted liquor, on such levy can be created by a rule made
under the Act. It was also observed that in as much as the
Act does not empower the rule-making authority to impose tax
on unlifted liquor, the rule-making authority (the
Government of Madhya Pradesh) had no power to add the
aforesaid clause in the conditions of the licence. It is
significant to notice that this decision approached the
question from the point of view of levy of excise duty. No
argument appears to have been put forward-as was done in
later decisions-that the State is merely seeking to recover
the consideration for the grant of privilege/licence as per
the terms and conditions of, and as undertaken in, the
Agreement. The decision, therefore, does not advert to that
aspect at all-an aspect which came to highlighted in some of
the later decisions. This decision was followed in State of
Madhya Pradesh v. Firm Gappulal etc. [1976 (2) S.C.R. 1041]
and in Excise Commissioner, U.P., Allahabad v. Ram Kumar [
1976 Supp. S.C.R. 532]. Gappulal was again a case from
Madhya Pradesh. In this case, an attempt was no doubt made
by the State to bring its case within the ratio of Panna Lal
v. State of Rajasthan [ which was decided meanwhile], but it
was repelled by the Court holding that the facts of the case
before them placed the case within the ratio of Panna Lal.
In Ram Kumar, a case arising under the U.P. Excise Act, one
of the conditions of the licence provided that in case the
licencee failed to lift the minimum guaranteed quota, "he
shall be liable to pay to the Sate Government compensation
at the rate equal to the rate of stillhead duty per litre by
spiced spirit ..........". In this case too, the State tried
to bring its case within the ratio of Panna Lal but the
Court did not agree. It preferred to apply the ration of
Bimal Chandra Banerjee. It held that none of the provisions
of the U.P. Act authorised the levy of the duty even where
there was no sale. The Court held further that though
disguised as compensation, the demand is in reality a demand
for excise duty on the unlifted quantity of liquor, which is
not authorised by the provisions of the Act.
The licencees--respondents submit that the present
cases, having regard to the language of the enactment, Rules
and conditions of the licence fall within the ration of the
above decisions while the State of Orissa submits that these
cases properly fall within the ratio of the decisions in
Panna Lal and Prabhakara Reddy. before referring to these
decisions, it would be appropriate, in our opinion, to refer
to the decision of the Constitution Bench in Har Shankar V.
Deputy Excise and Taxation Commissioner [AIR 1975 SC 1211].
In Har Shankar, one of the objections raised by the State to
the maintainability of the writ petitions filed by the
licencees was that the writ petitioners were seeking to
enforce contractual rights thereby. This was denied by the
writ petitioners therein. This said, they were merely
seeking to vindicate their legal rights. The contention of
the writ petitioners was repelled by this Court in the
following words:
The short answer to this contention
is that the bids given by the
appellants constitute offers and
upon their acceptance by the
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Government a binding agreement came
into existence between the parties.
The conditions of auction become
the terms of the contract and it is
on those terms that licences are
granted to the successful bidders
in Form L. 14-A of the Rules."
The Court further observed:
"One of the reliefs Which the
appellants ask for is that Rules
27-A 30 and 31 be declared ultra
vires and unconstitutional and
consequently the respondents be
directed to refund the assessed
fees already recovered. By
attempting to exploit the licences
without the burden of assessed fees
originally attaching to them under
the rules framed by the financial
Commissioner, the appellants are
seeking to work the licences on
such terms as they find convenient.
The writ jurisdiction of High
Courts under Article 226 of the
Constitution is not intended to
facilitate avoidance of obligations
voluntarily incurred. That however
will not estop the appellants from
contending that the amended Rules
are not applicable as their
licences were renewed before the
amendments were made."
(emphasis added)
The approach adopted in this decision has to be borne
in mind in every such case. It is also to be kept mind that
while the decisions referred to hereinbefore are by smaller
Benches, this decision is by a Constitution Bench. A person
who enters into certain contractual obligations with his
eyes open and works the entire contract, cannot be allowed
to turn round, according to this decision, and question the
validity of those obligations of the Rules which constitute
the terms of the contract. The extra-ordinary jurisdiction
of the High Court under Article 226, which is of a
discretionary nature and is exercised only to advance the
interests of justice, cannot certainly be employed in aid of
such persons. Neither justice nor equity is in their favour.
Panna Lal arose under the Rajasthan Excise Act. The
licences were given to contractors under a guaranteed
system; there was a total guaranteed amount. When the
contractors failed to pay the guaranteed amount as per the
contract, demand notices were issued. The contention urged
by the licencees was that the demand for shortfall in truth
amounted to levy of excise duty on unlifted quantity
whereas the State’s case was that they were demanding the
amount guaranteed by the contractor and payable in
accordance with the agreement. Another argument of the
contractors was that the demand for issue price of unlifted
quantity was in effect a demand for excise duty inasmuch as
one of the components of issue price was excise duty. This
Court rejected the contention relying upon the decisions of
this Court rejected the contention relying upon the
decisions of this Court in Nashirwar V. State of Madhya
Pradesh [1975 (2) S.C.R. 861]and Har Shankar. It was held
that rental is the consideration for the privilege granted
by the Government for manufacturing or vending liquor, that
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rental is neither a tax nor excise duty and that it is the
consideration for grant of privilege by the Government. The
Court referred to the decision of the Federal Court in the
Central Provinces and Berar Sales of Motor Spirit and
Lubricants Taxation Act. 1938 [(1939) F.C.R. 18] and
observed:
"Many Acts Provide for lump sum
payments in certain cases by
manufacturers and retailers, which
may be described as payments either
for privilege or as consideration
for the temporary grant of a
monopoly, but these are clearly not
excise duties or anything like
them."
(See 1939 F.C.R. 18 at pp. 53 and
54).
After referring to certain other decisions of this
Court, it was held:
"The decisions of this Court
establish that the lump sum amount
Voluntarily agreed to by the
appellants to the State are not
levies of excise duty but are in
the nature of lease money or rental
or lump sum amount for the
exclusive privilege of retail sales
granted by the States to the
appellants.
There is no levy of excise duty in
enforcing the payment of the
guaranteed sum or the stipulated
lump sum mentioned in the licences.
for these reasons. First, the
licences were granted to the
appellants after offer and
acceptance or by accepting their
tenders or auction bid. The
appellants stipulated to pay lump
sum amounts as the price for the
exclusive privilege of vending
country liquor. The appellants
stipulated to pay lump sum amounts
as the price for the exclusive
privilege of vending country
liquor. The appellants agreed to
pay what they considered to be
equivalent to the value of the
right. Second, the stipulated
payment has no relation to the
production or manufacture of
country liquor except that it
enables the licensee to sell it The
country liquor is produced by the
distilleries. Under section 28 of
the Act and under the relevant duty
notifications the excise levy is on
the manufacture and not on the sale
or retail of liquor. Under the duty
notifications on excise duty is
levied or collected from the liquor
contractors who are liable only to
pay the price of liquor. The
taxable event is not the sale of
liquor to the contractors but the
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manufacture of liquor. What the
liquor contractors pay in
cosideration of the license is a
payment for the exclusive privilege
for selling country liquor. The
liability for excise is on the
distillery and the liquor
contractors are not concerned with
it."
Dealing with the argument that recovery of issue price
is in effect a recovery of excise duty for the reason that
excise duty forms a component of the issue price, this Court
observed:
"The lump sum amount payable for
the exclusive privilege is not to
be confused with the issue price.
In essence what is sought to be
recovered from the liquor
contractors is the shortfall
occasioned on account of failure on
the pant of liquor contractor to
fulfil the terms of license.
Having regard to the particular stipulations and
conditions of the contracts concerned therein, the Court
observed further:
"The agreements give the liquor
contractors an exclusive privilege
to sell country liquor in a
specified area for the period fixed
for a stipulated sum of money for
enjoying the privilege. If the
Contractors do not sell any liquor
they are Yet bound to pay the
stipulated sum. If they sell liquor
they are given the benefit of
remission in the price of the
exclusive privilege. The measure
for this remission is the excise
duty leviable to the extent that
the liquor contractors can
neutralise the entire amount of
exclusive privilege in the excise
duty payable by them. If the
contractors fail to lift adequate
quantity of liquor and thereby fail
in neutralising the entire price of
exclusive privilege the contractors
are not called upon to pay excise
duty.
The decision in Har Shankar was followed in State of
Harvana and others V. Jage Ram and others [A.I.R.1980 S.C.
2019]. This Court observed:
"In view of these decisions. the
preliminary objection raised by the
learned Solicitor General to the
maintainability of the writ
petitions filed by the respondents
has to be upheld. We hold
accordingly that High Court was in
error in entertaining the writ
petitions for the purpose of
examining whether the respondents
could avoid their contractual
liability by challenging the Rules
under which the bids offered by
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them were accepted to conduct their
business can work out the licence
if he finds it profitable to do so;
and he can challenge the conditions
under which he agreed to take the
licence, if he finds it
commercially inexpedient to conduct
his business."
Dealing with the nature of the amounts payable by the
licencee in respect of a liquor contract, the Court
observed:
"The respondents agreed to pay a
certain sum under the terms of the
auction and the Rules only
prescribe a convenient mode whereby
their liability was spread over the
entire year by splitting it up into
fortnightly instalments The Rules
might as well have provided for
payment of a lump sum and the very
issuance of the licence could have
been made to depend on the payment
of such sum. If it could not be
argued in that event that the lump
sum payment represented excise.
duty. it cannot be so argued in the
present event merely because the
quota for which the respondents
gave their bid is required to be
multiplied by a certain figure per
proof liter and further because the
respondents were given the facility
of paying the paying the amount by
instalments while lifting the quota
from time to time . What
respondents agreed to pay was the
price of a privilege which the
State parted with in their favour.
They cannot. therefore. avoid their
liability by contending that the
payment which they were called upon
to make is truly in the nature of
excise duty and that no such duty
can be imposed on liquor not lifted
or purchased by them...........
These decisions cannot help the
respondents because the true
position, as stated earlier, is
that the amount which the
respondents are called upon to pay
is not excise duty on undrawn
liquor but is the price of a
privilege for which they offered
their bid at the auction of the
vend which they wanted to
conduct."
Finally, we may refer to the decision in Y. Prabhakara
Reddy. Rule 15 of the Andhra Pradesh (Arrack, Retail Vend
Special Conditions of Licences ) Rules, 1969 read as
follows:
"15. Minimum guaranteed quantity of
arrack--
(1) No licensee shall purchase
arrack less than the specified
minimum guaranteed quantity in any
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month. If in any month, quantity
less than the minimum guaranteed
quantity in any month. If in any
month, quantity less than the
minimum guaranteed quantity fixed
for that month is drawn, at the end
of that month issue price to the
extent of deficit purchase shall be
deducted from the advance money
paid by the licensee under the
minimum quantity of arrack
guaranteed by him and the licensee
shall be called upon to indemnify
the amount so adjusted by the end
of the succeeding month in which
short drawn quantity had occurred.
Provided that the Excise
Superintendents may permit the
licensee to lift the short drawn
minimum guaranteed quantity of the
previous month in the succeeding
month for special reasons expert
for the month of September, unless
the licensee has committed default
in lifting the minimum guaranteed
quantity for two successive months;
Provided further that Where the
Commissioner deems it necessary to
permit a shop keeper to draw the
deficit quantity short drawn in any
month in the subsequent, he shall
obtain the prior approval of the
Government for granting such
permission.
(2) Where a licensee fails to lift
the arrack as permitted by the
Excise Superintendent or to
indemnify the advance amount so
adjusted by the end of the
succeeding month in which the short
drawn of quantity had occurred, the
right acquired by the defaulting
licensee shall be reauctioned
forthwith."
Rule 17 Provided that "every licensee shall be bound by
the provisions of Andhra Pradesh Excise Act, 1968, and the
rules and orders made thereunder from time to time."
Inasmush as the licencees failed to lift the minimum
guaranteed quota, the total issue price of the unlifted
quantity was sought to be recovered from him, which was
questioned by the licencee in a writ petition. The argument
of the licencee based upon Bimal Chandra Banerjee was that
the State is really levying excise duty in the name of issue
price and that it has no power to do so. Basing upon certain
observations in Panna Lal, it was contended by the licencee
that issue price can only relate to liquor drawn by the
contractor and that it cannot pertain to undrawn liquor.
This Court repelled the contention based upon observations
in Panna Lal in the following words:
"There can be on question that
issue price must generally relate
to liquor which is drawn by the
Contractors but it does not follow
therefrom that issue price cannot
be adopted by agreement between the
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parties as a measure of
compensation to be paid in the case
of undrawn liquor. In fact. It may
not be quiet correct even to view
it as compensation as we shall
presently see. It is no more and no
less than the price which the
contractor agrees to pay for the
grant of the privilege to sell
liquor drawn or undrawn."
The Court then referred to the provisions of the
A.P.Excise Act and the Rules made thereunder and observed
that according to these provisions "the Privilege of selling
liquor .....and the licence to sell liquor herein may be
granted by the State by public auction subject to: (1)
payment of rental being the highest bid at the auction
........ (ii)the requirement that the licensee shall
Purchase arrack at the issue price and (iii) the further
requirement that the licencee shall purchase a minimum
guaranteed quantity of arrack which he has to make good in
case of shortfall The consideration for the grant of
privilege to sell liquor is not merely the rental to be by
paid by the lessee but also the issue price of the arrack
supplied or treated as supplied in case of shortfall which
is also to be paid by the lessee-licencee. There is no
question of the licencee-lessee having to pay the excise
duty though it may be that the issue price is arrive at
after taking to account the excise duty payable."
The above statement of law was based upon & reading of
Sections 17 and 23 of the A.P. (Arrack Retail Vend Special
Condition Supply Service) Rules as also the definition of
‘rental’ in the A.P. (Lease of Right to Sell Liquor in
Retail) Rules, 1969. The provisions of the Orissa Act and
Rules are no different. section 22 of the Orissa Act
corresponds in material particulars to Section 17 of the
A.P. Act whereas Section 29 of the Orissa Act corresponds to
section 23 of the A.P. Act. Rule 6-A. of the Orissa Rules
corresponds to Rule 15 of the A.P. Rules while Rule 3 of
the Orissa Rules corresponds to Rule 3 of the A.P. Rules.
The only difference is that while Rule 15 of the A.P. Rules
provides for payment of issue price in case of the failure
of the licencee to lift the M.G.Q., the payment of excise
duty under the Orissa Rules is made in made an independent
obligation unrelated to lifting of M.G.Q. It is, in truth
and effect, the consideration for the grant of
privilege/licence alongwith the amounts specified in Rule 6.
In this sense, the Orissa Rules are clearer on the point
that rental and excise duty (Payable under Rules 6 and 6-A)
together constitute the consideration the grant of licence.
A review of the decided cases of this Court on the
subject indicates a clear shift in the way this matter has
been looked at.Initially, the matter was looked at from the
point of view of the levy of excise duty. On that basis, it
was held that unless there is a sale, on duty can be
collected (Bimal Chandra Banerjee. Gappu Lal and Ram Kumar).
But then a different view point emerged with the
Constitution Bench decision in Har Shankar which was carried
forward in Panna Lal. Jageram and Y.Prabhakara Reddy. These
decisions look at the matter from the point of view of the
several payments being, in truth and effect, consideration
for the grant of Privilege/licence. They point out that the
excise duty on manufacture of production and not on sale. It
was a case, they said, where the duty was being passed on to
the licencee who in turn passed it on to the consumer. What
add the licencee paid, they held, is nothing but
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consideration for the grant of licence and the mere fact
that the total consideration fixed comprises several
elements (including excise duty), it cannot be said that
excise duty is levied upon the licencee. In our opinion, the
Orissa matters fall under the ratio of Panne Lal and
Y.Prabhakara Reddyand not under the ratio of Bimal Chandra
Banerjee. Gappu Lal and Ram Kumar. The amounts mentioned in
Rules 6 and 6-A, as also the undertakings contained therein,
together constitute the consideration for grant of privilege
licence, determined by auction,as contemplated by Section 29
of the Act. As explained hereinbefore, the obligation to
remit the excise duty is independent of the sale/purchase of
liquor; it is payable on or before the specified dates every
month; it is an addition to the monthly instalment payable
under Rule 6; its remittance is not tied up to the purchase
of M.G.Q.extent that the licencee has to pay the prescribed
instalment of excise duty prior to the lifting of the
liquor. It, therefore, cannot be said that there is any levy
of excise duty upon the licencee. The concept here is
altogether different. It is a case where the consideration
payable by the licencee for grant of licence is made up of
monthly rental plus excise duty besides the obligation to
Purchase the M.G.Q. The licencee pays the rental and excise
duty as undertaken by him under the agreement/contract
executed by him and as required by conditions of the licence
under which he is doing business,1.e.,as and by way of
consideration. Indeed, the rules could have provided that
the entire amount provided under Rules 6 and 6-A should be
paid in advance before the issuance of licence in which
event it could not have been contended that it is not in
consideration of grant of licence. Merely because, the Rules
Provide a concession and provide for collection of the said
amounts in convenient instalments spread over the year, the
nature and character of the payments cannot change.
Mr. Sorabjee, learned counsel for the theory of
"Privilege" has been exploded in the decision of this Court
in Synthetrics and Chemicals Limited And Others V. State of
U.P. AndOthers [1990 (1) S.C.C.109] and can no longer be
invoked. In support of his submission, Mr. Sorabjee relied
upon certain observations in the concurring opinion of
G.L.Oza,J. at page 164 of the Report. The learned judge
referred to Article 47 of the Constitution and observed:
"This article appears in the
chapter of directive principles of
State Policy. Inclusion of this
article in this chapter clearly
goes to show that it is the duty of
the State to do what has been
enacted in Article 47 and in fact
this article starts with the phrase
"Duty of the State" and the duty is
toimprove public health and it is
further provided that this duty to
improve publec health will be
dicharged by the State by
endeavouring to bring about
prohibltion. It sounds
contradictory for a State which is
duty bound to protect human life,
which is duty bound to improve
bublic health and for that purpose
is expected to move towards
prohibition claims that it has the
privilege of manufacture and sale
of alcoholic beverages which are
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expected tobe dangerous to human
health, transferring this privilege
of Selling this privilege on
consideration to earn huge revenue
without thinking that this trade in
liquor ultimately results in
degradation of human life even
endangering human life and is
nothing but moving contrary to the
duty cast under Articles 21 and 47
and ideal of prohibition enshrined
in Article 47. In view of Articles
21 and 47 with all respect to the
learned Judges who so far accepted
the privilege doctrine it is not
possible to accept any privilege of
the State having the right to trede
in goods obnoxious and injurious to
health."
It is difficult to agree with Mr. Sorabjee. Firstly,
these observation are found in the opinion of Oza,J. alone.
The majority opinion does notexpress any opinion on this
aspect. Secondly, what does the expression "privilege" mean
in the context of intoxicating liquors. The expressionis
not defined in the Act. In the context of excise enactments,
the expression "Privilege" really means the licence or
permit granted by the State. We may explain: the State is
entitled to prohibit the trade in intoxicating liquors
altogether; it can impose a total ban; no citizen can
claimany fundamenta right to manufacture or to trade in
these liquors; it is, however, open to the State to lift
the ban partially and allow the trade in liquor to be
carried on in the manner prescribed; the State says that
that a citizen can trade in liquor only under a licence to
be granted by it for tahe consideration specified in that
behalf and that the trade therein can be carried on only in
accordance with the regulatory provisions prescribed by it
in that behalf.It is this grant of licence/permit, which is
called or is descried sometimes as grant of "privilege". We
do not think that the observations of Oza,J. relied upon by
Mr. Sorabjee can be understood as disabling the State from
granting licences and permits for trading in and/or
manufacture of intoxicating liquors for a consideration. Nor
can they be understood as precluding the State from carrying
on the trade or manufacture of said liquors by itself or its
agents. The learned Judge seems to have looked at the matter
from an idealistic and moralistic angle. The learned Judge
observed that in the light of Articles 47 and 21 "it is not
possible to accept any privilege of the State having the
right to trade in goods obnoxious and injurious health."
Lastly we may also invoke the holding in Har Shankar
and Jageram that the writ petitioners, having entered into
agreements voluntarily,containing the conditions aforesaid
and having done the business under the licences obtained by
them, cannot be allowed to either wriggle out of the
agreements nor can they be allowed to challenge the validity
of the Rules which constitute the terms of the contract. The
High Court should not have exercised its extra-ordinary
discretionary jurisdiction under Article 226 of the
Constitution in aid of such licencees.
For the above reasons, the appeals are allowed, the
judgments and orders of the High court under appeal are set
aside and the writ petitions filed by the respondents writ
petitioners are dismissed with costs. Advocate’s fee Rs..
5,000/-in each appeal.
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Before parting with these matters, we may refer to an
additional argument in Civil Appeal No.. 11518 of 1996
(arising out of S.L.P.(C) No. 1122 of 1996). It is submitted
that there was a default on the part of the Government in
supplying the liquor and that non-lifting of M.G.Q. was not
on account of any default on the part of the licencee.
Firstly, we have held hereinabove that obligation to remit
the excised duty is independent of the obligation to lift
the M.G.Q. every month and that the remitting of excise duty
is not dependent upon or co-related to lifting of M.G.Q.
Secondly, the judgment of the High Court does not refer to
this submission. In the circumstances, we decline to express
any opinion on the submission.