Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BHOPAL SUGAR INDUSTRIES LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/02/1964
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 1179 1964 SCR (6) 846
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1971 SC2377 (20)
RF 1974 SC 1 (27)
F 1980 SC 1 (23,28,36,44,47)
R 1984 SC 121 (17,23)
ACT:
Equal Protection of Laws-Geographical classification due to
historical reasons whether valid-If upheld-Time-limit for
adjustments, if possible--Differential treatment-Mere plea
not sufficiet-Constitution of India, Art. 14-Bhopal State
Agricultural Income-tax Act, 1953 (Bhopal Act 11 of 1953).
HEADNOTE:
The respondent, a company incorporated in the former State
of Bhopal, presented a petition in August 1960 under Art.
226 of the Constitution in the High Court of Madhya Pradesh
for a writ restraining the State of Madhya Pradesh from
enforcing the Bhopal State Agricultural Income-tax Act,
1953, claiming that the Act contravened the respondent’s
right under Art. 14 of the Constitution. By the States
Reorganisation Act, 1956 the territory of the State of
Bhopal was
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incorporated from November 1, 1956 into the newly formed
State of Madhya Pradesh. The States Reorganisation Act by
s. 119 continued the operation of the laws in force in the
territories in which they were previously in force until the
competent legislature or authority amended, altered or
modified these laws. Shortly after the reorganisation. the
Madhya Pradesh Adaptation of Laws Order, 1956 was issued so
as to make certain laws applicable uniformly to the entire
State and later the Legislature by the Madhya Pradesh
Extension of Laws Act, 1958 made other alterations in the
laws applicable to the State. But Bhopal Act 11 of 1953
remained unamended or unaltered: nor was its operation
extended to the other areas or regions in the State with the
result that Agricultural Income-tax was levied within the
territory of the former State of Bhopal and not in the rest
of the territory of the State of Madhya Pradesh. The High
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Court held that the provisions of Bhopal Act 11 of 1953
contravened Art. 14 of the Constitution and observed that
though the State had removed diversity in some of the laws
of the component regions, no attempt was made to remove
discrimination between the territory of the former Bhopal
State and the rest of the territories of the State of Madhya
Pradesh with respect to this law.
Held: (i) Where application of unequal laws is
reasonably justified for historical reasons, a geographical
classification founded on those historical reasons would be
upheld. The legislature has always the power to make
special laws to attain particular objects and for that
purpose has authority to select or classify persons, objects
or transactions upon which the law is intended to operate.
Differential treatment becomes unlawful only when it is
arbitrary or not supported by a rational relation with the
object of the statute.
Bhaiyalal Shukla v. State of Madhya Pradesh, [1962] Supp. 2
S.C.R. 257, The State of Madhya Pradesh v. The Gwalior Sugar
Co., [1962] 2 S.C.R. 619, Maharaj Kumar Prithivi Rai v.
State of Rajasthan, C.A. Nos. 327-328, dated 2-11-1960 and
Anand Prasad Lakshminivas Ganeriwal v. State of Andhra
Pradesh, A.I.R. 1953 S.C. 853. relied on.
State of Rajasthan v. Rao Manohar Singhji, [1954] S.C.R.
996, explained.
(ii) It would be impossible to lay down any definite time-
limit within which the State had to make necessary
adjustments so as to effectuate the equality clause of the
Constitution. It cannot be said that because a certain
number of years have elapsed or that the State has made
other laws uniform, the State has acted improperly in con-
tinuing an impost which operates upon a class of citizens
more harshly than upon others.
(iii) To make out a case of denial of the equal
protection of laws under Art. 14, a plea of differential
treatment is by itself not sufficient. An applicant
pleading such denial must make out that not only he
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had been treated differently from others but he has been so
treated from persons similarly circumstanced without any
reasonable basis, and such differential treatment is
Unjustifiably made.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 491 of 1963.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated January 17, 1961 of
the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc. Petition No. 226 of
1960.
B. Sen and I. N. Shroff, for the appellant.
S. T. Desai, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder
4Narain, for the respondent.
February 19, 1964. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SHAH, J.-Bhopal Sugar Industries Ltd. hereinafter called
’the Company’-was incorporated under the Companies Act of
the former Indian State of Bhopal. In 1953 the State of
Bhopal which was then a Part ’C’ State under the
Constitution of India enacted "The Bhopal State Agricultural
Income-tax Act, IX of 1953" providing for imposition and
levy of tax on agricultural income. The Act was applied to
the territory of the entire State of Bhopal and was brought
into force on July 15, 1953.
By the States Reorganisation Act, 1956 (No. 67 of 1956),
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territory of the Part ’C’ State of Bhopal was incorporated
with effect from November 1, 1956, into the newly formed
State of Madhya Pradesh. Section 119 of the States
Reorganisation Act, 1956, enacted that by the constitution
of the reorganized State, no change in the laws in force
which immediately before November 1, 1956, extended or
applied to any constituent regions, was effected, and
territorial references in the laws to an existing State
shall, until otherwise provided by a competent Legislature
or other competent authority be construed as meaning, the
territories within that State immediately before November 1,
1956. By the Madhya Pradesh Adaptation of Laws (State and
Concurrent Subjects) Order, 1956, promulgated by the
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Government of the State, all laws in force in the regions
which were newly incorporated into the reorganised State
St,, of Madhya Pradesh were, with certain adaptations and
modifications specified in the Order, to remain in force in
those areas until altered, repealed or amended, and by that
Order the Bhopal Act IX of 1953 continued to remain
applicable in the territory of the former Bhopal State, in
the new State of Madhya Pradesh. Later the Legislature of
the Madhya Pradesh State enacted the Madhya Pradesh
Extension of Laws Act, 1958, extending several Acts Central
as well as State-to the entire territory of the State, but
no alteration was made in the territorial operation of
Bhopal Act IX of 1953. It is common ground that in the
remaining territory of the State of Madhya Pradesh there was
no law providing for levy of tax on agricultural income.
The Company paid and continued to pay tax assessed under the
Bhopal State Agricultural Income-tax Act, 1953, till some
time in 1960. On August 4,1960, the Company presented a
petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution in the High
Court of Madhya Pradesh at Jabalpur for a writ declaring
that Bhopal Act IX of 1953 was unconstitutional and void as
being discriminatory and for appropriate directions, writs
or orders restraining the State of Madhya Pradesh from
giving effect to the Act. It was claimed by the Company
that Bhopal Act IX of 1953 deprived the residents of the
territory to which it applied, of the protection of Art. 14
of the Constitution. The High Court upheld the plea of the
Company and issued a writ restraining the State of Madhya
Pradesh from enforcing the provisions of Bhopal Act IX of
1953, observing that the Act was "in clear contravention of
the petitioner’s right under Art. 14 of the Constitution and
must be declared void".
Authority of the Part C State of Bhopal to enact the Act, as
it originally stood, is not in dispute, nor are the
provisions of s. 119 of the States Reorganisation Act and
the Madhya Pradesh Adaptation of Laws (State and Concurrent
Subjects) Order, 1956, challenged as incompetent. The plea
that there is infringement of Art. 14 of the Constitution is
advanced on the sole ground that in the reorganized State of
Madhya Pradesh formed under the
134-159 S.C.-54
850
States Reorganisation Act, 1956, agricultural income-tax is
,,levied within the territory of the former State of Bhopal
and not in the rest of the territories of Madhya Pradesh.
Prima facie, a differential treatment is accorded by the
State of Madhya Pradesh to persons carrying on agricultural
operations in the Bhopal region, because the State subjects
them to pay tax on agricultural income, which is not imposed
upon agricultural income earned in the rest of the State.
But that by itself cannot be a ground for declaring the Act
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ultra vires. The State is undoubtedly enjoined by Art. 14
of the Constitution not to deny to any person equal
protection of the laws within the territory, but a proper
classification bearing a reasonable and just relation to the
object sought to be achieved by the statute does not on that
account become impermissible. All persons who are similarly
circumstanced as regards a subject matter are entitled to
equal protection of the laws, but it is not predicated
thereby that every law must have universal application
irrespective of dissimilarity of objects or transactions to
which it applies, or of the nature or attainments of the
persons to whom it relates. The Legislature has always the
power to make special laws to attain particular objects and
for that purpose has authority to select or classify
persons, objects or transactions upon which the law is
intended to operate. Differential treatment becomes
unlawful only when it is arbitrary or not supported by a
rational relation with the object of the statute. This
Court has held in several cases, that where application of
unequal laws is reasonably justified for historical reasons,
a geographical classification founded on those historical
reasons would be upheld: Bhaiyalal Shukla v. State of Madhya
Pradesh(1): The State of Madhya Pradesh v. The Gwalior Sugar
Co. Ltd. and others(2): Maharaj Kumar Prithvi Rai and
another v. The State of Rajasthan and others ( 3 ) and Anand
Prasad Lakshminiwas Ganeriwal v. State of Andhra Pradesh(4).
The decision of this Court in The State of Rajasthan v. Rao
Manohar Singhji(5) does not lay down
(1) [1962] Suppl. 2 S. C. R. 257.
(2) [1962] 2 S. C. R. 619.
(3) C.A. Nos. 327-328 of 1956 decided on Nov. 2, 1960.
(4) AIR 1963 S. C. 853.
(5) [1954] S. C. R. 996.
851
any contrary principle. In that case the Court accepted
that historical reasons may justify differential treatment
of separate geographical regions provided it bears a
reasonable and just relation to the matter in respect of
which it is proposed, but the differentiation in that case
was regarded as infringing the equal protection of the laws
because members of the same class were treated in a manner
ex facie discriminatory, and no attempt was made by the
State to justify the treatment as founded upon a rational
basis having a just relation to the impugned statute.
It is necessary to bear in mind that the various adminis-
trative units which existed in British India were the result
of acquisition of territory by the East India Company from
time to time. The merger of Indian States since 1947
brought into the Dominion of India numerous Unions or
States, based upon arrangements ad hoc, and the constitu-
tional set up in 1950 did not attempt, on account of diverse
reasons mainly political, to make any rational rearrangement
of administrative units. Under the Constitution as
originally promulgated there existed three categories of
States, beside the centrally administered units of the
Andaman and Nicobar islands. Part ’A’ States were the
former Governors’ Provinces, with which were merged certain
territories of the former Indian States to make
geographically homogeneous units : Part ’B’ States repre-
sented groups formed out of 275 bigger Indian States by
mutual arrangement into Unions : Part ’C’ States were the
former Chief Commissioners’ Provinces. These units were
continued under the Constitution merely because they
formerly existed. Later an attempt was made under the
States Reorganisation Act to rationalize the pattern of
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administration by reducing the four classes of units into
two-States, and Union territories-and by making a majority
of the States homogeneous linguistic units. But in the
States so reorganized were incorporated regions governed by
distinct laws, and by the mere process of bringing into
existence reorganized administrative units, uniformity of
laws could not immediately be secured. Administrative
reorganization evidently could not await adaptation of laws,
so as to make them uniform, and
852
immediate abolition of laws which gave distinctive character
to the regions brought into the new units was politically
inexpedient even if theoretically possible. An attempt to
secure uniformity of laws before reorganisation of the units
would also have considerably retarded the process of
reorganisation. With the object of effectuating a swift
transition, the States Reorganisation Act made a blanket
provision in s. 119 continuing the operation of the laws in
force in the territories in which they were previously in
force notwithstanding the territorial reorganisation into
different administrative units until the competent
Legislature or authority amended, altered or modified those
laws.
The reorganized State of Madhya Pradesh was formed by
combining territories of four different regions. Shortly
after reorganisation, the Governor of the State issued the
Madhya Pradesh Adaptation of Laws (State and Concurrent
Subjects) Order, 1956, so as to make certain laws applicable
uniformly to the entire State and later the Legislature by
the Madhya Pradesh Extension of Laws Act, 1958, made other
alterations in the laws applicable to the State. But Bhopal
Act IX of 1953 remained unamended and unaltered : nor was
its operation extended to other areas or regions in the
State. Continuance of the laws of the old region after the
reorganisation by s. 119 of the States Reorganisation Act
was by itself not discriminatory even though it resulted in
differential treatment of persons, objects and transactions
in the new State, because it was intended to serve a dual
purpose-facilitating the early formation of homogeneous
units in the larger interest of the Union, and maintaining
even while merging its political identity in the new unit,
the distinctive character of each region, till uniformity of
laws was secured in those branches in which it was expedient
after full enquiry to do so. The laws of the regions merged
in the new units had therefore to be continued on grounds of
necessity and expediency. Section 119 of the States
Reorganisation Act was intended to serve this temporary
purpose, viz., to enable the new units to consider the
special circumstances of the diverse units, before launching
upon a process of adaptation of laws so as to make them
reasonably uniform, keeping in view the special needs
853
of the component regions and administrative efficiency.
Differential treatment arising out of the application of the
laws so continued in different regions of the same reorga-
nised State, did not therefore immediately attract the
clause of the Constitution prohibiting discrimination. But
by the passage of time, considerations of necessity and
expediency would be obliterated, and the grounds which
justified classification of geographical regions for
historical reasons may cease to be valid. A purely
temporary provision which because of compelling forces
justified differential treatment when the Reorganisation Act
was enacted cannot obviously be permitted to assume
permanency, so as to perpetuate that treatment without a
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rational basis to support it after the initial expediency
and necessity have disappeared.
The High Court observed that even though the State had
enacted the Madhya Pradesh Extension of Laws Act, 1958, and
had removed diversity in some of the laws of the component
regions, no attempt was made to remove discrimination
between the territory of the former Bhopal State and the
rest of the territories of the State of Madhya Pradesh in
the matter of levy of agricultural income-tax. This in the
view of the High Court was unlawful because the State had
since the enactment of the States Reorganisation Act
sufficient time and opportunity to decide whether the
continuance of the Bhopal State Agricultural Incometax Act
in the Bhopal region would be consistent with Art. 14 of the
Constitution. We are unable to agree with the view of the
High Court so expressed. It would be impossible to lay down
any definite time-limit within which the State had to make
necessary adjustments so as to effectuate the equality
clause of the Constitution. That initially there was a’
valid geographical classification of regions in the same
State justifying unequal laws when the State was formed must
be accepted. But whether the continuance of unequal laws by
itself sustained the plea of unlawful discrimination in view
of changed circumstances could only be ascertained after a
full and thorough enquiry into the continuance of the
grounds on which the inequality could rationally be founded,
and the change of circumstances, if any. which obliterated
the compulsion of expediency
854
and necessity existing at the time when the. Reorganisation
Act was enacted.
Unfortunately there was no clear perception by the parties
of what has to be pleaded and proved to establish a plea of
denial of equal protection of the laws. The Company merely
assumed that the existence of a law relating to taxation
which imposed agricultural income-tax in the Bhopal region,
there being no similar levy in the rest of the State, was in
law discriminatory. That is clear from the petition of the
Company which merely asserted that the Act discriminated
between the Company and other owners of sugarcane farms in
the State of Madhya Pradesh, because it singled out the
Company and other agriculturists in the Bhopal region from
other agriculturists and sugarcane farm owners in the State
of Madhya Pradesh and subjected them to liability without
any reasonable basis for classification. The Company
therefore baldly submitted that after the incorporation of
the Bhopal region in the reorganised State, the State of
Madhya Pradesh ought to have suitably modified the Act so as
to make it applicable to all residents alike and by allowing
the Act to operate without any modification, the State had
violated the fundamental right of the Company under Art. 14
of the Constitution. The State of Madhya Pradesh did not
file any affidavit in reply before the High Court, and chose
to defend the petition as if its decision depended on a pure
question of law, that if for historical reasons the Act in
operation in a -region incorporated in the new State was not
discriminatory at the date when the reorganisation took
place, it can never become discriminatory thereafter. The
assumptions made by both the parties appear to be erroneous.
The High Court was of the view that after expiry of a
reasonable period during which the State has the opportunity
of making necessary adaptations ,so as to make the Act
applicable to the entirety of the new State, if the State
fails to adapt the law, historical considerations which
initially justified the classification must be deemed to
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have disappeared. That assumption without further enquiry
may not be accepted as correct. It was necessary for
the High Court to investigate whether at the date when the
petition was filed, special treatment of the
855
Bhopal region in the matter of levy of agricultural income-
tax had a rational basis. That necessitated an enquiry into
the structure of tax burden imposed directly or indirectly
on or in respect of agricultural land or income from it in
the different regions constituting the State. If for
instance, on account of disparity in the impost of land
revenue and related taxes on land and income from land in
other regions, the ultimate burden on persons in the Bhopal
region who were subjected to agricultural income-tax and
agricultural land owners in the rest of the State did not
disclose a pattern of wide variations, the mere existence of
agricultural income impost in one region, and absence of
such impost in another region may not necessarily justify an
inference of unlawful discrimination. It was therefore
necessary to ascertain the difference in the overall tax
liability between persons similarly situated in the State of
Madhya Pradesh in the matter of levy of agricultural tax.
For that purpose an investigation was necessary whether the
incidence of total burden on agriculturists was so desparate
that an inference of unlawful discrimination may reasonably
be made. The High Court had to ascertain the impact of
diverse land taxes imposed on agricultural land in the four
regions of the State, and whether the burden between persons
similarly circumstanced was substantially dissimilar. and
whether continuance of dissimilar levies was justified. If
upon a thorough examination of the pattern of land taxes in
different regions of the State, it appeared to the Court
that an unreasonably larger burden was sought to be
continued upon this region, without any apparently
justifiable ground, an inference of discrimination may
arise.
In adjudging reasonableness of classification for the
purpose of taxation, the Courts recognise greater freedom in
the Legislature and if the statute discloses a permissible
policy of taxation, the Courts will uphold it. The Courts
undoubtedly lean more readily in favour of the presumption
of constitutionality of a taxing statute, but that is not to
say that they will not strike down a statute unless it
appears that the tax was imposed deliberately with the
object of differentiating between persons similarly
circumstanced. We may state that the observations to the
contrary that it
856
matters of taxation a statute may not be struck down "unless
the Court finds that" the tax "has been imposed with a
deliberate intention of differentiating between individual
and individual" in The State of Madhya Pradesh v. The
Gwalior Sugar Co. Ltd. and another(1) was not strictly
necessary for deciding that case, and was not intended to
lay down any special test applicable to taxing statutes in
their relation to Art. 14 of the Constitution.
To arrive at a conclusion adverse to the State it was
therefore necessary to decide whether the differentiation
arising from the continuation of the levy of the
agricultural income-tax was unfair and not supported by a
reasonable standard, and the State having the requisite
information and opportunity to make the imposts reasonably
uniform, had failed or neglected to do so. No set formula
can be devised for solving a problem of this character. It
cannot be said that because a certain number of years have
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elapsed or that the State has made other laws uniform, the
State has acted improperly in continuing an impost which
operates upon a class of citizens more harshly than upon
others.
The petition filed by the Company was singularly deficient
in furnishing particulars which would justify the plea of
infringement of Art. 14 of the Constitution. It cannot be
too strongly emphasized that to make out a case of denial of
the equal protection of the laws under Art. 14 of the
Constitution, a plea of differential treatment is by itself
not sufficient. An applicant pleading that equal protection
of the laws has been denied to him must make out that not
only he had been treated differently from others but he has
been so treated from persons similarly circumstanced without
any reasonable basis, and such differential treatment is
unjustifiably made. A mere plea that the Company and other
agriculturists within the region of the former Bhopal State
had to pay the agricultural income-tax, whereas the
agriculturists elsewhere had not to pay such tax, is not
sufficient to make out a case of infringement of the funda-
mental right under Art. 14 of the Constitution.
The State also did not place evidence before the High Court,
which would in the very nature of things be in its
(1) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 619.
857
possession, showing a rational relation between the differ-
ential treatment and the classification and has also not
placed any material before the Court throwing light on the
question whether the continuance of the tax was justified :
it merely chose to plead its case as on a demurrer. Both
the State and the Company have by inadequate appreciation of
the true position in law contributed to the manner in which
the trial of the petition has proceeded. We would in the
circumstances not be justified in dismissing the petition on
a technical view of the burden of proof. We think that this
is a case in which the parties should be given an
opportunity to plead their respective cases adequately and
to go to trial after the requisite evidence which has a
bearing is brought before the Court.
We accordingly allow the appeal, set aside the order and
remand the case for retrial to the High Court. The High
Court, will, if the Company so desires, give opportunity to
the Company to amend its petition so as to adequately plead
its case of infringement of the fundamental right to equal
protection of the laws supported by necessary particulars.
The High Court will also give opportunity to the State to
file its affidavit in reply and to place all such materials
as it may rely upon the plea set up by the Company. After
the pleadings are completed and the evidence is brought on
the record, the High Court will proceed to decide the case
according to law. Costs in this Court will be the costs in
the petition before the High Court.
Appeal allowed.