Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE AMALGAMATED COALFIELDS LTD. AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE JANAPADA SABHA, CHHINDWARA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/02/1961
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
DAS, S.K.
SARKAR, A.K.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1961 AIR 964 1962 SCR (1) 1
CITATOR INFO :
R 1964 SC 207 (14)
R 1964 SC1013 (3,6,8,13,18,24)
R 1965 SC1150 (9)
RF 1971 SC 57 (3)
RF 1977 SC1680 (7)
ACT:
Coal Tax-Legality of-Local Legislature authorising such levy
by local authority- Legislative competence-Central Provinces
Local Self-Government Act 1920 (C. P. 4 Of 1920), s. 51-
Government of India Act,1915 (5 & 6 Geo. 5, Ch. 61), ss.
80A(3), 81(1)(3), 84(2)- Government of India Act, 1935 (26
Geo. 5, Ch. 2), S. 143-Constitution of India Art 227.
HEADNOTE:
Section 51 of the Central Provinces Local Self-Government
Act, 1920 empowered a district council, subject to the
previous sanction of the local Government, to impose "any
tax, toll or rate, other than those specified in SS. 24,
48,49, and 50." On March 12, 1935, an Independent.Mining
Local Board functioning in the area in which the petitioners
were working certain mines situated therein, and having
vested in it all the powers of a district council, resolved
to impose a tax on coal, coal-dust and coke manufactured at
the mines or sold within the territorial jurisdiction of the
Board. The petitioners who were served with notices of
demand requiring them to pay certain sums of money as the
tax due by them for despatches of coal from their mines,
challenged the legality of the levy of the tax on the
grounds, inter alia (1) that the Act which by S. 51
authorised the imposition of the tax, had been passed by the
local legislature without the previous sanction of the
Governor-General, thereby contravening S. 80A(3) of the
Government of India Act, 1915, and that even if it was found
that the Act was validly passed before the coming into force
of the Government of India Act, 1919, which introduced S.
80A into the Act of r 1915, the power conferred by S. 51 to
levy tax was exercised only in 1935 and by that date S.80 A
had been introduced into the Government of India Act,1915,
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and that thereafter there could be no legal imposition of a
tax without the previous sanction of the Governor-General
being obtained, (2) that S. 51 Of the Central Provinces
Local Self Government Act, 1920, on its language and in the
context of other provisions referred to in that section, did
not authorise .the levy of a tax of the nature of the coal
tax, and (3) that, in any case, the tax ceased to be legally
leviable after the coming
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into force of the Government of India Act, 1935, and of the
Constitution of India, since a tax like that in question
could be in posed only by the Central Government.
Held: (1) that the Central Provinces Local Self-Government
Act, 1920, having received the assent of the Governor-
General, its validity cannot be challenged in view of the
saving clauses in the proviso to s. 80A(3) and s. 84(2) of
the Government of India Act, 1915.
(2) that the validity of Central Provinces Local Self
Government Act, 1920, when enacted, not being open to any
objection under the Government of India Act, 1915, any
subsequent amendments to the latter Act could not in any
manner affect its continued validity and operation.
(3) that on the proper construction Of s. 51 of the Act of
1920, the levy of a coal tax is not excluded from the
purview of the local authority.
(4) that the continued levy of the tax in question even
after the coming into force of the Government of India Act,
1935, and the Constitution of India, is valid in view of s.
143 Of the Act of 1935 and Art. 227 of the Constitution.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 31 of 1959.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India,
for enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General of India, S. N. Andley,
J. B. Dadachanji, Pameshwar Nath and P. L. Vohra, for the
petitioners.
B. Sen and I. N. Shroff, for the respondent.
1961. February 10. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
AYYANGAR, J.-This petition under Art. 32 has been filed
impugning the validity of two notices of demand served on
the petitioners requiring them to pay what has been
compendiously described as "coal tax" by the respondent,
which is a Local Board constituted under the Central
Provinces & Berar Local Government Act, 1948 (C. P. & Berar
Act XXXVIII of 1948). The ground of challenge is that there
was no legislative power for the levy of the tax and that
consequently the fundamental rights of the petitioners under
Art. 19(1)(f) and (g) are being violated.
It may be stated at the outset that the tax now impugned has
been imposed by the local authority,
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from March 12, 1935 and that the first occasion when its
validity was attacked was in only 1957, though if the
petitioners are right in their submissions their
acquiescence might not itself be a ground for denying them
relief Before however we set out the points urged by the
learned Attorney-General in support of the petition, it
would be convenient if we narrate briefly the history of the
levy of this tax.
Section 51 of the Central Provinces Local Self Government
Act, 1920 (C. P. Act IV of 1920), which will be referred to
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hereafter as the Act, ran:
"51(1). Subject to the provision of any law
or enactment for the time being in force, a
district council may, by a, resolution passed
by a majority of not less than two-thirds of
the members present at a special meeting
convened for the purpose, impose any tax, toll
or rate other than those specified in sections
24, 48, 49 and 50.
(2). The first imposition of any tax, toll or
rate under sub-section (1) shall be subject to
the previous sanction of the local
Government."
The petitioners are working certain mines situated in the
district of Chhindwara and for the area covered by the mines
an Independent Mining Local Board was constituted in or
about 1926 and such Boards are included in the definition of
a Local Board under the Act and they have vested in them all
the powers of a District Council. This Mining Board, after
obtaining the previous approval of the local Government,
passed on March 12, 1935, by the majority requisite under
E;. 51(1) of the Act a resolution to impose a tax on coal,
coal-dust and coke in the following terms:
"The tax shall be levied at the rate of three
pies per ton on coal, coal dust or coke,
manufactured at the mines, sold for export by
rail or sold otherwise than for export by rail
within the territorial jurisdiction of the
Independent Mining Local Board."
The tax has been levied and collected ever since.
The Local-Self Government Act of 1920 was repealed and re-
enacted by the Central Provinces & Berar Local Government
Act, 1948, but nothing turns on
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this, because the later enactment and certain amendments
made subsequently contain provisions for the continuance of
the Local Boards constituted under.. the repealed enactment
and for the continued exigibility of the taxes and ceases in
force at the date of the commencement of the Act of 1948.
The respondent was, as stated earlier, constituted under the
Act of 1948 and is admittedly the successor of the Inde-
pendent Mining Board which imposed the tax by its resolution
dated March 12, 1935, and is legally entitled to continue
the levy if the original imposition was valid. There is
only one other matter to be mentioned at this stage, viz.,
that the rate of duty which, as seen from the resolution
extracted earlier, was 3 pies per ton when imposed in 1935
was raised by the local body to 9 pies per ton in 1949, this
being the rate which now prevails. On August 23, 1958, the
Chief Executive Officer of the respondent-Sabha served two
notices of demand on the first and second petitioners
requiring them to pay sums of Rs. 21,898.64 and Rs. 11,838-
09 respectively as the tax due by each, for despatches of
coal from their respective mines for the period January 1,
1958, to June 30, 1958. It is the validity of these notices
that is impugned in this petition.
The submissions of the learned Attorney-General
were three:
(1) The levy of the tax by the Independent Mining Board was
invalid at the date of its original imposition in 1935, and
consequently the respondent-Sabha its successor-obtained no
authority to continue the same.
(2) Assuming the levy was valid when originally imposed, it
ceased to be legal after the coming into force, first of the
Government of India Act, 1935 and later of the Constitution
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of India in 1950 under which the tax in question or some
portions of it became exclusively leviable by the Central or
Union Government and would not be covered by the saving as
to previously existing taxes in s. 143 of the Government of
India Act, 1935, and subsequently of Art. 277 of the
Constitution.
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(3) Assuming further that the provision contained in s. 143
of the Government of India Act covered the tax, the
protection afforded by it or the continuance for which it
provided, is only for a tax at the rate of 3 pies per ton
prevailing before the commencement of the Government of
India Act (April 1, 1937), and the increase in the rate to 9
pies per ton in 1949 rendered the levy and the demand
illegal either in whole or at least in part.
We shall now proceed to deal with these points in that
order:
(1) That the imposition of the tax by the Independent
Mining Board by resolution dated March 12, 1935, was
invalid. This was sought to be rested on three distinct
grounds:
(a) that the levy of the tax was in contravention of s.
80A(3) of the Government of India Act, 1915. Section 80A(3)
enacted, to quote only the part material:
"The local legislature of any province may
not, without the previous sanction of the
Governor-General, make or take into
consideration any law(a) imposing or
authorising the imposition of any new tax
unless the tax is a tax scheduled as exempted
from this provision by rules made under this
Act; or "
The taxes now impugned are not within those enumerated in
the schedules to the Scheduled Taxes Rules and hence the
previous sanction of the Governor-General was required
before a bill authorising the levy of the tax could be taken
into consideration. And the Act which by a. 51 authorised
the imposition of the tax, had been passed by the local
legislature without the previous sanction of the Government
having been obtained.
The petition as filed setting out this contention proceeds
on the basis that the Act was passed after the Government of
India Act, 1919, by which s. 80A was introduced into the Act
of 1915 came into force. If ,that had been the correct
position, the proviso to ,S. 80A(3) reading:
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"Provided that an Act or a provision of an Act
made by a local legislature, and subsequently
assented to by the Governor-General in
pursuance of this Act, shall not be deemed
invalid by reason only of its requiring the
previous sanction of the Governor-General
under this Act."
would be a complete answer to the above objection, since
under the Government of India Act, 1915, before and after
its amendment in 1919, every bill passed by a local
legislative council had, after receiving the assent of the
Governor, to be transmitted to the Governor-General and
could become law only after the latter had signified his
assent (Vide s. 81(1) & (3) of the Act). That the Governor-
General had assented to the Act under this provision was
never in dispute. The saving contained in the proviso is,
it should be noticed, in addition to the general saving
contained s. 84(2) of the Government of India Act (to read
only the material words): "...the validity of any Act of..
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any local legislature shall not be open to question in any
legal proceedings on the ground that the Act affects ... a
central subject" which is of wider import and designed to
remove all questions of legislative competence of the type
now put forward from the
purview of Courts.
At the stage of the arguments, however, it was found. that
the Act had become law even prior to the coming into force
of the Government of India Act, 1919, with the result that
the contention raised in the petition based on s. 80A(3)
could not be urged. From the recitals at the beginning of
the Act it was found that the previous sanction of the
Governor-General had been obtained to the introduction of
the measure in the Local Legislature under s. 79(2) of the
Government of India Act, 1915-i.e., before s. 80A(3) intro-
duced into the Government of India Act, 1919, was brought
into force.
The learned Attorney-General, therefore, modified his
argument and presented it in this form: No doubt when s. 51
of the Act was enacted, it was within the competence of the
Local Legislature. But the power conferred by that section
to levy the tax was exercised
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only in 1935 and by that date s. 80A had been introduced
into the Government of India Act and thereafter there could
be no local imposition of a tax, not included in the
Scheduled Taxes Rules without the previous sanction of the
Governor-General being obtained. We consider this argument
wholly without force. The validity of s. 51 of the Act,
when enacted, not being open to any objection under the
Government of India Act, 1915, the amendments effected to
the Government of India Act, 1915, by the Act of 1919 did
not in any manner, or to any extent, expressly or even by
implication affect or trench upon the continued validity and
operation of that section. Obviously, s. 80A(3) was only
concerned to lay down the preliminaries for enacting a law
after that provision came into force and after a law has
once been enacted and is in operation, there is no question
of the procedure laid down for bills being attracted. This
apart, all controversy is set at rest and any argument of
the type now urged is precluded by r. 5 of the Scheduled
Taxes Rules which runs:
"Nothing in these rules shall affect the right
of a local authority to impose a tax without
previous sanction or with the previous
sanction of the local Government when such
right is conferred upon it by any law for the
time being in force."
The submission therefore that before the power conferred by
s. 51 of the Act, the previous sanction of the Governor-
General had to be obtained or that there must be fresh
legislation, must be rejected.
(b) The second matter urged under this head was based on
the meaning to be given to the opening words of s. 51 of the
Act: "Subject to the provision of any law or enactment for
the time being in force". it was suggested that the
provision contained in a. 80A(3) of the Government of India
Act read with the Scheduled Taxes Rules framed under that
section constituted "a law for the time being in force" to
,which the power to levy the tax was subject. In the first
place, it is clear that a law like that which is found in s.
80A(3) prescribing a procedure for enacting future Acts of
the Local Legislature could not be
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comprehended within those words. But even if it did, in the
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face of r. 5 of the Scheduled Taxes Rules, the construction
suggested could have no basis.
(c) The last reason assigned for disputing the validity of
the original imposition of the tax, was that s. 51 of the
Act on its language and in the context of the other
provisions referred to in that section, did not authorise
the levy of a tax or cess of the nature of the "coal tax".
We are wholly unable to accept this argument. The relevant
words of s. 51 are:
"impose any tax, toll or rate other than those
specified in sections 24, 48, 49 and 50".
It is not suggested that "the coal tax" is one specified in
any of the sections set out, and hence there was power to
levy any other tax including that which is now impugned.
The learned Attorney-General however suggested that the tax
authorised by s. 51 should still be somewhat like the taxes
referred to in the other sections, though not identical with
them. Obviously, in the face of the words "other than
those..." the rule Of ejusdem generis is contra-indicated
and if so on no rule of construction could "the coal tax" be
excluded from the purview of the local authority.
We, therefore, hold that the original imposition of the tax
in 1935 was valid.
(2) The next question is: has the tax ceased to be legally
leviable by reason of the coming into force of the
Government of India Act, 1935 and of the Constitution? Both
these constitutional enactments contain express provisions
whereby taxes, cesses, etc., which were previously lawfully
levied by local authorities for the purposes of their local
areas, might continue to be collected and applied for the
same purposes notwithstanding that those taxes could
thereafter be imposed only by the Central or the Union
Government, as the case may be (Vide s. 143 of the
Government of India Act, 1935, and Art. 277 of the
Constitution). The objection therefore that "coal tax" or
some of the components of it, could have been imposed only
by the Central Government or the Union Government is no
ground for impugning the continued validity and exigibility
of the tax. It is needless to add that if the
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tax fell within the Provincial or the State List, the levy
would be valid under s. 292 of the Government of India Act
and Art. 372 of the Constitution even without the aid of the
special provision in s. 143 or Art. 277. In view of those
considerations the learned Attorney-General did not address
us seriously on this point.
(3) The last point urged was as regards the validity of the
increase in the rate of tax to 9 pies per ton effected in
1949, i.e., after the commencement of Government of India
Act, 1935. This objection was not even hinted in the
petition now before us, and we did not consider it proper to
permit petitioners to raise the point.
The result is that the petition falls and is dismissed with
costs.
Petition dismissed.