Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAHABIR KISHORE & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT31/07/1989
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
OZA, G.L. (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 313 1989 SCR (3) 596
1989 SCC (4) 1 JT 1989 (3) 327
1989 SCALE (2)276
ACT:
Indian Contract Act--Section 72--Suit for refund of
money paid by mistake of law----Period of limitation-three
years.
Limitation Act 1968--Section 17(1) (c) and Schedule
Article 113 Suit for refund of money paid under mistake of
law--Period of limitation-Three years--Date of knowledge of
particular law being declared void--Date of judgment of the
competent court declaring that law void.
Words and phrases: ’Nul ne doit senrichir aux depens des
autres’ --’Indebitatus assumpsit’--’Aequum et bonum ’--Mean-
ing of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant firm was allotted contracts for manufac-
ture and sale of liquor for the year 1959 and for the subse-
quent periods from 1.1. 1960 to 31.3.1961 for Rs.2,56,200
and Rs.4,71,900 respectively by the M.P. Govt. who also
charged 7-1/2% over the auction money as mahua and fuel
cess. As writ petitions challenging the government’s right
to charge this 7-1/2% were pending in the M.P. High Court,
the Govt. announced that it would continue to charge it and
the question of stopping it was under consideration of Govt.
whose decision would be binding on the contractors. The
appellant firm paid for the above contracts a total extra
sum of Rs.54,606.00. On 24.4.1959 the M.P. High Court in
Surajdin v. State of M.P., [1960] MPLJ 39 declared the
collection of 7-1/2% as illegal. Even after this decision
the Govt. continue to charge 7-1/2% extra money. Again on
31.8.1961, the High Court of Madhya Pradesh in N.K. Doongaji
v. Collector, Surguja, [1962] MPLJ. 130 decided that charg-
ing of 7-1/2% by the Govt. above the auction money was
illegal. Appellants came to know of this decision only in or
about September, 1962.
On 17.10.1964 the appellants gave a notice under section
80 C.P.C. to the Govt. of Madhya Pradesh requesting for the
refund of Rs.54,606.00. failing which a suit for recovery
would be filed and later they instituted a civil suit in the
court of additional District Judge, Jabalpur on 24.12.1964.
The Govt. resisted the suit inter alia on the ground of
limitation. The Trial Court held that the suit was barred by
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597
limitation and dismissed it. The High Court also dismissed
the appeal. The appellants then came up in appeal by special
leave. While allowing the appeal and remanding the suit to
the Trial Court for decision on merits. This Court,
HELD: ’Nul ne doit senrichir aux depens des autres’ No
one ought to enrich himself at the expense of others. This
doctrine at one stage of English common Law was remedied by
’indebitatus assumpsit’ which action lay for money’ had and
received to the use of the plaintiff’. It lay to recover
money paid under a mistake or extorted from the plaintiff by
duress of his goods, or paid to the defendant on a consider-
ation which totally failed. On abolition of ’indebitatus
assumpsit’, courts used to imply a promise to pay which,
however, in course of time was held to be purely fictitious.
[601G-602A]
Courts is England have since been trying to formulate a
juridical basis of this obligation. Idealistic formulations
as ’aequum et bonum’ and ’natural justice’ were considered
to be inadequate and the more legalistic basis of unjust
enrichment is formulated. The doctrine of ’unjust enrich-
ment’ is that in certain situations it would be ’unjust’ to
allow the defendant to retain a benefit at the plaintiff’s
expense. The relatively modern principle of restitution is
of the nature of quasi contract. But the English law has not
yet recognised any generalised right to restriction in every
case of unjust enrichment. [602H-603B]
The principle of unjust enrichment requires; first, that
the defendant has been ’enriched’ by the receipt of a
"benefit"; secondly. that this enrichment is "at the expense
of the plaintiff" and thirdly, that the retention of the
enrichment be unjust. This justified restitution. Enrichment
may take the form of direct advantage to the recipient
wealth such as by the receipt of money or indirect one for
instance where inevitable expense has been saved. [603C-
603D]
There is no doubt that the suit in the instant case, is
for refund of money paid by mistake and refusal to refund
may result in unjust enrichment depending on the facts and
circumstances of the case. [604D]
Though there is no constitutionally provided period of
limitation for petitions under Article 226, the limitation
prescribed for such suits has been accepted as the guide-
line, though little more latitude is available in the for-
mer. [604F]
For filing a writ petition to recover the money paid under a
mis-
598
take of law the starting point of limitation is three years
is prescribed by Article 113 of the Schedule to the Indian
Limitation Act, 1963 and the provisions of S. 17(1)(c) of
the Act will be applicable so that the period will begin to
run from the date of knowledge of the particular law, where-
under the money was paid, being declared void and this could
be the date of the judgment of a competent court declaring
that law void. [609B]
Moses v. Macferlan, [1760] 2 Burr. 1005 at 1012; Sin-
clair v. Brougham, [1914] AC 398; Fibrosa Spolka v. Fair-
bairn Lawson, [1943] AC 32 = (1942) 2 All E.R. 122; Sales
Tax Officer v. Kanhaiya Lal, [1959] SCR 1350; M/s Budh
Prakash Jai Prakash v. Sales Tax Officer, Kanpur, [1952] ALJ
332; Kiriri Cotton Co. Ltd. v. Ranchhoddas Keshavji Dewani,
[1960] AC 192; D. Cawasji & Co. v. The State of Mysore &
Anr., [1975] 2 SCR 511; Madras Port 7rust v. Hymanshu Inter-
national, [1979] 4 SCC 176; Shri Vallabh Glass Works Lid. v.
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Union of India, [1984] 3 SCR 180; Commissioner of Sales Tax,
U.P.v. M/s. Auriaya Chamber of Commerce Allahabad, [1986] 3
SCC 50; Sales Tax Officer v. Budh Prakash Jai Prakash,
[1954] 5 STC 193; Salonah Tea Co. Ltd. & Ors. v. Superin-
tendent of Taxes, Nowgong & Ors., [1988] 1 SCC 401; Atiabari
Tea Co. Ltd. v. State of Assam, AIR 1961 SC 232; Khyerbari
Tea Co. Ltd. v. State of Assam, [1964] 5 SCR 975; Loong
Soong Tea Estate’s, case decided on July 10, 1973; Suganmal
v. State of M.P., AIR 1965 SC 1740; Tilokchand Motichand v.
H.B. Munshi, [1969] 2 SCR 824, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1826 (N)
of 1974.
From the Judgment and Order dated 6.4.1972 of the Madhya
Pradesh High Court in F.A. No. 23 of 1966.
M.V. Goswami for the Appellants.
U.A. Rana and S.K. Agnihotri for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SAIKIA, J. This plaintiffs’ appeal by special leave is
from the appellate Judgment of the Madhya Pradesh High Court
dismissing the appeal upholding the Judgment of the trial
court dismissing the plaintiffs’ suit on the ground of
limitation.
A registered firm Rai Saheb Nandkishore Rai Saheb Ju-
galki-
599
shore (Appellants) was allotted contracts for manufacture
and sale of liquor for the calendar year 1959 and for the
subsequent period from 1.1. 1960 to 31.3. 1961 for
Rs.2,56,200.00 and Rs.4,71,900.00, respectively, by the
Government of Madhya Pradesh who also charged 7-1/2 per cent
over the auction money as mahua and fuel cess. As writ
petitions challenging the Government’s right to charge this
7-1/2 per cent were pending in the Madhya Pradesh High
Court, the Government announced that it would continue to
charge it and the question of stopping it was under consid-
eration of the Government whose decision would be binding on
the contractors. The firm (appellants) thus paid for the
above contracts a total extra sum of Rs.54,606.00.
On 17.10.1961 the Under Secretary to Government, M.P.,
Forest Department, Bhopal wrote the following letter No. 10
130-X/61 (Exhibit D-23) to the Chief Conservator of Forests,
Madhya Pradesh, Rewa:
"Subject: Levy of cess on liquor contractors.
Under former M.P. Government (Forest Depart-
ment) memo No. 4595-CR-73-XI dated 25th July,
1953, a royalty at 7-1/2 per cent of the
license fee for liquor shops was imposed on
liquor contractors to cover the value of mahua
& fuel extracted from the reserved or protect-
ed forests by the contractors for their still.
2. The M.P. High Court has since
decided that the levy of the aforesaid cess is
illegal and the cess cannot be recovered from
the liquor contractors. In pursuance of this
decision, Government desires that all process-
es whenever issued or proceedings instituted
against liquor contractors for recovery of the
mahua or fuel cess should forthwith be with-
drawn and no revenue recovery certificates
should be issued in respect of this cess.
3. Simultaneously no free supply of
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mahua or fuel should be permitted by virtue of
the imposition mentioned above.
Immediate compliance is requested.
No ..... X/61 Dt. Bhopal
the ..... 661
Copy forwarded for immediate compliance to:
600
1. --Conservator of Forests, Bilaspur.
2. All Divisional Forest Officers, Bilaspur
Circle.
3. Copy to C.F. Raipur Circle for similar
auction in this cess levied in any division of
his Circle."
On 24.4.1959 the Madhya Pradesh High Court’s Judgment in
Surajdin v. State of M.P., declaring the collection of 7-1/2
per cent illegal was reported in 1960 MPLJ--39. Even after
this decision Government continued to charge 7-1/2 per cent
extra money. Again on 31.8. 1961 the High Court of Madhya
Pradesh in N.K. Doongaji v. Collector, Surguja, decided that
the charging of 7-1/2 per cent by the Government above the
auction money was illegal. This Judgment was reported in
1962 MPLI-- 130. It is the appellants’ case that they came
to know about this decision only in or about September 1962.
On 17.10. 1964 they served a notice on Government of Madhya
Pradesh under s. 80 of the Code of Civil Procedure request-
ing the refund of Rs.54,606.00, failing which, a suit for
recovery would be filed; and later they instituted Civil
Suit No. of 1964 in the court of Additional District Judge,
Jabalpur on 24.12.1964. The Government resisted the suit on,
inter alia, ground of limitation. The trial court taking the
view that Articles 62 and 96 of the First Schedule to the
Limitation Act, 1908 were applicable and the period of
limitation began to run from the dates the payments were
made to the Government, held the suit to be barred by limi-
tation and dismissed it. In appeal, the High Court took the
view that Article 113 read with s. 17, and not Article 24,
of the Schedule to the Limitation Act 1963, was applicable;
and held that the limitation began to run from 17.10. 1961
on which date the Government decided not to charge extra 7-
1/2 per cent on the auction money, and as such, the suit was
barred on 17.12. 1964 taking into consideration the period
of two months prescribed by s. 80 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. Consequently, the appeal was dismissed. The
appellants’ petition for leave to appeal to this Court was
also rejected observing, "it was unfortunate that the peti-
tioners filed their suit on 24.12. 1964 and as such the suit
was barred by time by seven days."
Mr. M.V. Goswami, learned counsel for the appellants,
submits, inter alia, that the High Court erred in holding
that the limitation started running from 17.16.1961 being
the date of the letter, Exhibit D-23, which was not communi-
cated to the appellants or any other contractor and there-
fore the appellants had no opportunity to know
601
about it on that very date with reasonable diligence under
s. 17 and the High Court ought to allow atleast a week for
knowledge of it by the appellants in which case the suit
would be within time. Counsel further submits that the High
Court while rightly discussing that s. 17 of the Limitation
Act, 1963 was applicable, erred in not applying that section
to the facts of the instant case, wherefore, the impugned
Judgment is liable to be set aside.
Mr. Ujjwal A. Rana, the learned counsel for the respond-
ent, submits, inter alia, that 17.10.2961 having been the
date on which the Government finally decided not to recover
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extra 7-1/2 per cent above the auction .money, the High
Court rightly held that the limitation started from that
date and the suit was clearly barred under Article 24 or 113
of the Schedule to the Limitation Act, 1963; and that though
the records did not show that the Government decision was
communicated to the appellants, there was no reason why
they, with reasonable diligence, could not have known about
it on the same date-
The only question to be decided, therefore, is whether
the decision of the High Court is correct. To decide that
question it was necessary to know what was the suit for.
There is no dispute that 7-1/2 per cent above the auction
money was charged by the Government of Madhya Pradesh as
mahua and fuel cess, and the High Court subsequently held
that it had no power to do so. In view of those writ peti-
tions challenging that power, Government asked the contrac-
tors to continue to pay the same pending Government’s deci-
sion on the question; and the appellants accordingly paid.
Ultimately on 17.10.1961 Government decided not to recover
the extra amount any more but did not yet decide the fate of
the amounts already realised. There is no denial that the
liquor contracts were performed by the appellants. There is
no escape from the conclusion that the extra 7-1/2 per cent
was charged by the Government believing that it had power,
but the High Court in two cases held that the power was not
there. The money realised was under a mistake and without
authority of law. The appellants also while paying suffered
from the same mistake. There is therefore no doubt that the
suit was for refund of money paid under mistake of law.
The question is what was the law applicable to the case.
’Nul ne doit senrichir aux depens des autres’--No one ought
to enrich himself at the expense of others. This doctrine at
one stage of English common law was remedied by ’indebitatus
assumpsit’ which action lay for money "had and received to
the use of the plaintiff". It lay to recover
602
money paid under a mistake, or extorted from the plaintiff
by duress of his goods, or paid to the defendant on a con-
sideration which totally tailed. On abolition of ’indebit-
atus assumpsit’, courts used to imply a promise to pay
which, however, in course of time was held to be purely
fictitious. Lord Manslied in Moses v. Macferlan, [1760] 2
Burr. 1005 at 10 12 explained the juridical basis of the
action for money "had and received" thus:
"This kind of equitable action, to recover
back money, which ought not in justice to be
kept, is very beneficial, and therefore much
encouraged. It lies only for money which, ’ex
aequo et bono’, the defendant ought to refund;
it does not lie for money paid by the plain-
tiff, which is claimed of him as payable in
point of honour and honesty, although it could
not have been recovered from him by any course
of law; as-in payment of a debt barred by the
Statute of Limitations, or contracted during
his infancy, or to the extent of principal and
legal interest upon a usurious contract, or,
for money fairly lost at play; because in all
these cases, the defendant may retain it with
a safe conscience, though by positive law he
was barred from recovering. But it lies for
money paid by mistake; or upon a consideration
which happens to fail; or for money got
through imposition, (express or implied); or
extortion; or oppression; or an undue advan-
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tage taken of the plaintiff’s situation,
contrary to laws made for the protection of
persons under those circumstances. In one
word, the gist of this kind of action is, that
the defendant, upon the circumstances of the
case, is obliged by the ties of natural jus-
tice and equity to refund the money."
In that case Moses received from Jacob four promissory
notes of cash each. He endorsed these to Macferlan who, by a
written agreement, contracted that he would not hold Moses
liable on the endorsement. Subsequently, however, Macferlan
sued Moses on the notes in a Court of Conscience. The Court
refused to recognise the agreement, and Moses was forced to
pay. Moses then brought an action against Macferlan in the
king’s Bench for money "had and received" to his use. Lord
Manslied allowed him to recover observing as above.
Courts in England have since been trying to formulate a
juridicial basis of this obligation. Idealistic formulations
as ’aequum et bonum’ and ’natural justice’ were considered
to be inadequate and the
603
more legalistic basis of unjust enrichment is formulated.
The doctrine of ’unjust enrichment’ is that in certain
situation it would be ’unjust’ to allow the defendant to
retain a benefit at the plaintiff’s expense. The relatively
modern principle of Restitution is of the nature of quasi
contract. But the English law has not yet recognised any
generalised right to restitution in every case of unjust
enrichment. As Lord Diplock has said, "there is no general
doctrine of "unjust enrichment" recognised in English law.
What it does is to provide specific remedies in particular
cases of what might be classed as unjust enrichment in a
legal system i.e. based upon the civil law." In Sinclair v.
Brougham, [1914] AC 398 Lord Haldane said that law could ’de
jure’ impute promises to repay whether for money "had and
received" otherwise, which may, if made defacto, it would
inexorably avoid.
The principle of unjust enrichment requires: first, that
the defendant has been ’enriched’ by the receipt of a
"benefit"; secondly, that this enrichment is "at the expense
of the plaintiff"; and thirdly, that the retention of the
enrichment be unjust. This justifies restitution. Enrichment
may take the form of direct advantage to the recipient
wealth such as by the receipt of money or indirect one for
instance where inevitable expense has been saved.
Another analysis of the obligation is of quasi contract.
It was said; "if the defendant be under an obligation from
the ties of natural justice, to refund; the law implies a
debt, and give this action rounded in the equity of the
plaintiff’s case, as it were, upon a contract (quasi ex
contracts) as the Roman law expresses it." As Lord Wright in
Fibrosa Spolka v. Fairbairn Lawson, [1943] AC 32--1942 2 All
E.R. 122 pointed out, "the obligation is as efficacious as
if it were upon a contract. Such remedies are quasi contract
or restitution and theory of unjust enrichment has not been
closed in English law."
Section 72 of the Indian Contract Act deals with liabil-
ity of person to whom money is paid or thing delivered, by
mistake or under coercion. It says:
"A person to whom money has been paid, or
anything delivered, by mistake or under coer-
cion, must repay or return it."
Illustration (b) to the section is:
"A Railway Company refuses to deliver up
certain goods to the consignee, except upon
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the payment of an illegal
604
charge for carriage. The consignee pays the
sum charged in order to obtain the goods. He
is entitled to recover so much of the charge
as was illegally excessive."
Our law having been codified, we have to apply the law.
It is true, as Pollock wrote in 1905 in the preface to the
first Edition of Pollock and Mulla’s Indian Contract and
Specific Relief Acts:
"The Indian Contract Act is in effect .......
a code of English law. Like all codes based on
an existing authoritative doctrine, it assumes
a certain knowledge of the principles and
habits of thought which are embodied in that
doctrine."
It is, therefore, helpful to know "those fundamental
notions in the common law which are concisely declared, with
or, without modification by the text."
There is no doubt that the instant suit is for refund of
money paid by mistake and refusal to refund may result in
unjust enrichment depending on the facts and circumstances
of the case. It may be said that this court has referred to
unjust enrichment in cases under s. 72 of the Contract Act.
See AIR 1980 SC 1037; AIR 1985 SC 883 and AIR 1985 SC 901.
The next question is whether, and if so, which provision
of the Limitation Act will apply to such a suit. On this
question we find two lines of decisions of this Court, one
in respect of civil sulks and the other in respect of peti-
tions under Article 226 of the Constitution of India. Though
there is no constitutionally provided period of limitation
for petitions under Article 226, the limitation prescribed
for such suits has been accepted as the guideline, though
little more latitude is available in the former.
A tax paid under mistake of law is refundable under s.
72 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872. In Sales Tax Officer v.
Kanhaiya Lal, [1959] SCR 1350 where the respondent, a regis-
tered firm, paid sales tax in respect of the forward trans-
actions in pursuance of the assessment orders passed by the
Sales Tax Officer for the year 1949-51; in 1952 the Allaha-
bad High Court held in M/s Budh Prakash Jai Prakash v. Sales
Tax Officer, Kanpur, [1952] ALJ 332 that the levy of sales
tax on forward transactions was ultra vires. The respondent
asked for a refund of the mounts paid, filing a writ peti-
tion under Article 226 of
605
the Constitution. It was contended for the Sales Tax Author-
ities that the respondent was not entitled to a refund
because (1) the amounts in dispute were paid by the respond-
ent under a mistake of law and were, therefore, irrecovera-
ble, (2) the payments were in discharge of the liability
under the Sales Tax Act and were voluntary payments without
protest, and (3) inasmuch as the monies which had been
received by the Government had not been retained but had
been spent away by it and the respondent was disentitled to
recover the said amounts. This Court held that the term
"mistake" in s. 72 of the Indian Contract Act comprised
within its scope a mistake of law as well as a mistake of
fact and that, under that section a party is entitled to
recover money paid by mistake or under coercion, and if it
is established that the payment, even though it be of a tax,
has been made by the party labouring under a mistake of law,
the party receiving the money is bound to repay or return it
though it might have been paid voluntarily, subject, howev-
er, to questions of estoppel, waiver, limitation or the
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like. On the question of limitation, it was held that s.
17(1)(c) of the Limitation Act, 1963 would be applicable and
that where a suit will be to recover "monies paid under a
mistake of law, a writ petition within the period of limita-
tion prescribed, i.e., within 3 years’ of the knowledge of
the mistake, would also lie." It was also accepted that the
period of limitation does not begin to run until the plain-
tiff has discovered the mistake or could, with reasonable
diligence, have discovered it.
The money may not be recoverable if in paying and re-
ceiving it the parties were in pan delicto. In Kiriri Cotton
Co. Ltd. v. Ranchhoddas Keshavji Dewani, [1960] AC 192,
where the appellant company, in consideration of granting to
the respondent a sub-lease asked for and received from him a
premium of Sh. 10,000 and the latter.claimed refund thereof,
the Privy Council held that the duty of observing the law
was firmly placed by the Ordinance on the shoulders of the
landlord for the protection of the tenant, and the appellant
company and the respondent were not therefore in pari delic-
to in receiving and paying respectively the illegal premium,
which, therefore, in accordance with established common law
principles, the respondent was entitled to recover from the
landlord and that the omission of a statutory remedy did not
in cases of this kind exclude the remedy by money had and
received. In the instant case also the parties could not be
said to be in pari delicto in paying and receiving the extra
7-1/2% per cent. Had the appellants not paid this amount,
they would not have been given the contracts.
In D. Cawasji &. Co. v. The State of Mysore & Anr.,
[1975] 2 SCR 511, the appellants paid certain amount to the
Government as
606
excise duty and education cess for the years 195 1-52 to
1965-66 in one case and from 1951-52 to 1961-62 in the
other. The High Court struck down the provisions of the
relevant Acts as unconstitutional. In Writ Petitions before
the High Court claiming refund, the appellants contended
that the payments in question were made by them under mis-
take of law; that the mistake was discovered when the High
Court struck down the provisions as unconstitutional and the
petitions were, therefore, in time but the High Court dis-
missed them on the ground of inordinate delay. Dismissing
the appeals, this Court held that where a suit would lie to
recover monies paid under a mistake of law, a writ petition
for refund of tax within the period of limitation would lie.
For filing a writ petition to recover the money paid under a
mistake of law the starting point of limitation is from the
date on which the judgment declaring as void the particular
law under which the tax was paid was rendered. It was held
in D. Cawasji (supra) that although s. 72 of the Contract
Act has been held to cover cases of payment of money under a
mistake of law, as the State stands in a peculiar position
in respect of taxes paid to it, there are perhaps practical
reasons for the law according different treatment both in
the matter of the heads under which they could be recovered
and the period of limitation for recovery. P.N. Bhagwati,
J., as he then was, in Madras Port Trust v. Hymanshu Inter-
national, [1979] 4 SCC 176, deprecated any resort to plea of
limitation by public authority to defeat just claim of
citizens observing that though permissible under law, such
technical plea should only be taken when claim is not well
founded.
Section 17(1)(c) of the Limitation Act, 1963, provides
that in the case of a suit for relief of the ground of
mistake, the period of limitation does not begin to run
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until the plaintiff had discovered the mistake or could with
reasonable diligence, have discovered it. In a case where
payment has been made under a mistake of law as contrasted
with a mistake of fact, generally the mistake become known
to the party only when a court makes a declaration as to the
invalidity of the law. Though a party could, with reasonable
diligence, discover a mistake of fact even before a court
makes a pronouncement, it is seldom that a person can, even
with reasonable diligence, discover a mistake of law before
a judgment adjudging the validity of the law.
E.S. Venkataramiah, J., as his Lordship then was, in
Shri Vallabh Glass Works Ltd. v. Union of India, [1984] 3
SCR 180, where the appellants claimed refund of excess duty
paid under Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944, laid down that
the excess amount paid by the appellants would have become
refundable by virtue of s. 72 of the
607
Indian Contract Act if the appellants had filed a suit
within the period of limitation; and that s. 17(1)(c) and
Article 113 of the Limitation Act, 1963 would be applicable.
In Commissioner of Sales Tax, U.P.v. M/s Auriaya Chamber
of Commerce Allahabad, [1986] 3 SCC 50, the Supreme Court in
its decision dated May 3, 1954 in Sales Tax Officer v. Budh
Prakash Jai Prakash, [1954] 5 STC 193 having held tax on
forward contracts to be illegal and ultra vires the U.P.
Sales Tax Act, and that the decision was applicable to the
assessee’s case, the assessee filed several revisions for
quashing the assessment order for the year 1949-50 and for
subsequent years which were all dismissed on ground of
limitation. In appeal to this Court Sabyasachi Mukharji, J.
while dismissing the appeal held that money paid under a
mistake of law comes within mistake in s. 72 of the Contract
Act; there is no question of any estoppel when the mistake
of law is common to both the assessee and taxing authority.
His Lordship observed that s. 5 of the Limitation Act, 1908
and Article 96 of its First Schedule which prescribed a
period of 3 years were applicable to suits for refund of
illegally collected tax.
In Salonah Tea Co. Ltd. & Ors. v. Superintendent of
Taxes, Nowgong and Ors., [1988] 1 SCC 401, the Assam Taxa-
tion (on Goods carried by Road or Inland Waterways) Act,
1954 was declared ultra vies the Constitution by the Supreme
Court in Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd. v. State of Assam, AIR 1961
SC 232. A subsequent Act was also declared ultra vires by
High Court on August 1, 1963 against which the State of
Assam and other respondents preferred appeals to Supreme
Court. Meanwhile the Supreme Court in a writ petition Khyer-
bari Tea Co. Ltd. v. State of Assam, [1964] 5 SCR 975,
declared on December 13, 1963 the Act to be intra vires.
Consequently the above appeals were allowed. Notices were,
therefore, issued requiring the appellant under s. 7(2) of
the Act to submit returns. Returns were duly filed and
assessment orders passed thereon. On July 10, 1973, the
Gauhati High Court in its Judgment in Loong Soong Tea Es-
tate’s case, Civil Rule No. 1005 of 1969, decided on July
10, 1973, declared the assessment to be without jurisdic-
tion. In November, 1973 the appellant filed writ petition in
the High Court contending that in view of the decision in
Loong Soong Tea Estate’s case he came to know about the
mistake in paying tax as per assessment order and also that
he became entitled to refund of the amount paid. The High
Court set aside the order and the notice of demand for tax
under the Act but declined to order refund of the taxes paid
by the appellant on the ground of delay and laches as in
view of the High Court it was possible for the appellant to
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know about
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the illegality of the tax sought to be imposed as early as
in 1963, when the Act in question was declared ultra vires.
Allowing the assessee’s appeal, Mukharji, J. speaking for
this Court held:
"In this case indisputably it appears that tax
was collected without the authority of law.
Indeed the appellant had to pay the tax in
view of the notices which were without juris-
diction. It appears that the assessment was
made under section 9(3) of the Act. Therefore,
it was without jurisdiction. In the premises
it is manifest that the respondents had no
authority to retain the money collected with-
out the authority of law and as such the money
was liable to refund."
The question there was whether in the application under
Art. 226 of the Constitution, the Court should have refused
refund on ground of laches and delay, the case of the appel-
lant having been that it was after the Judgment in the case
of Loong Soong tea Estate, the cause of action arose. That
judgment was passed in July, 1973. The High Court was,
therefore, held to have been in error in refusing to order
refund on the ground that it was possible for the appellant
to know about the legality of the tax sought to be imposed
as early as 1973 when the Act in question was declared ultra
vires. The Court observed:
"Normally speaking in a society governed by
rule of law taxes should be paid by citizens
as soon as they are due in accordance with
law. Equally, as a corollary of the said
statement of law it follows that taxes col-
lected without the authority of law as in this
case from a citizen should be refunded because
no State has the right to receive or to retain
taxes or monies realised from citizens without
the authority of law."
On the question of limitation referring to Suganmal v.
State of M.P., AIR 1965 SC 1740, and Tilokchand Motichand v.
H.B. Munshi, [1969] 2 SCR 824, his Lordship observed that
the period of limitation prescribed for recovery of money
paid by mistake started from the date when the mistake was
known. In that case knowledge was attributable from the date
of the Judgment in Loong Soong Tea Estate’s case on July 10,
1973. There had been statement that the appellant came to
know of that matter in October, 1973 and there was no denial
of the averment made. On that ground, the High Court was
held to be in
609
error. It was accordingly held that the writ petition filed
by the appellants were within the period of limitation
prescribed under Art. 113 of the Schedule read with s. 23 of
the Limitation Act, 1963.
It is thus a settled law that in suit for refund of
money paid by mistake of law, s. 72 of the Contract Act is
applicable and the period of limitation is three years as
prescribed by Article 113 of the Schedule to the Indian
Limitation Act, 1963 and the provisions of s. 17(1)(c) of
that Act will be applicable so that the period will begin to
run from the date of knowledge of the particular law, where-
under the money was paid, being declared void; and this
court be the date of judgment of a competent court declaring
that law void.
In the instant case, though the Madhya Pradesh High
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Court in Surajdin v. State of M.P., declared the collection
on 7-1/2% per cent illegal and that decision was reported in
1960 MPLJ 39, the Government was still charging it saying
that the matter was under consideration of the Government.
The final decision of the Government as stated in the letter
dated 17.10. 1961 was purely an internal communication of
the Government copy whereof was never communicated to the
appellants or other liquor contractors. There could, there-
fore, be no question of the limitation starting from that
date. Even with reasonable diligence, as envisaged in s.
17(1)(c) of the Limitation Act, the appellants would have
taken at least week to know about it. Mr. Rana has fairly
stated that there was nothing on record to show that the
appellants knew about this letter on 17.10. 1961 itself or
within a reasonable time thereafter. We are inclined to
allow at least a week to the appellants under the above
provision. Again Mr. Rana has not been in a position to show
that the statement of the appellants that they knew about
the mistake only after the judgment in Doongaji’s case
reported in 1962 MPLJ 130, in or about September, 1962,
whereafter they issued the notice under s. 80 C.P.C. was
untrue. This statement has not been shown to be false. In
either of the above cases, namely, of knowledge one week
after the letter dated 17.10. 1961 or in or about September,
1962, the suit would be within the period of limitation
under Article 113 of the Schedule to the Limitation Act,
1963.
In the result, we set aside the Judgment of the High
Court, allow the appeal and remand the suit. The records
will be sent down forthwith to the trial court to decide the
suit on merit in accordance with law, expeditiously. The
appellants shall be entitled to the costs of this appeal.
R.N .J. Appeal
allowed.
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