Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
VALLABHDAS AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MUNICIPAL COMMITTEE, AKOLA.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/01/1961
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 133 1961 SCR (3) 618
ACT:
Octroi Tax--Legality of imposition--" System of Assessment
", meaniing of--C. P. & Berar Municipal Act, 1922 (C. P. &
Berar II of 1922), S. 67(2).
HEADNOTE:
The Municipal Committee, Akola, passed a resolution to
impose an octroi tax and forwarded it along with the draft
rules of assessment and collection to the State Government.
The State Government published a notification in the Gazette
which contained the articles to be taxed, the rate or rates
at which they were to be taxed and a brief statement of
objects and reasons for the imposition of the tax. This was
followed by draft rules as to how taxation was to be done.
Thereafter the Municipal Committee affixed on its notice
board and also published in the local newspapers the said
proposed rules but the draft rules in regard to the " system
of assessment " were not published along with other
particulars. It was alleged by the appellants that the
Municipality by not publishing the draft rules of the "
system of assessment ", failed to comply in full with the
mandatory requirements of s. 67(2) of the Act rendering the
imposition of tax illegal.
Held, that the words " system of assessment " did not neces-
sarily mean the whole procedure of taxation, i.e.
imposition, collection and procedure in regard to collection
and refund. The notice and not the draft rules relating to
assessment and collection were required under the Rules to
be affixed on the notice
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board of the Municipality and at other conspicuous places of
the town. In the instant case the publication of the Rules
relating to the rates at which the tax had been imposed was
sufficient compliance with the provisions of Section 67(2)
of the C. P. S
Berar Municipal Act, 1922, and the rules made thereunder.
Got,.
JUDGMENT:
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CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 234/60.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated November 18, 1958,
of the Bombay High Court at Nagpur in Special Civil
Application No. 201 of 1958.
N. C. Chatterjee, M. N. Phadke, S. A. Sonhi and Ganpat
Rai, for the appellants.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, B. R. Mandekar and A. G.
Ratnaparkhi, for respondent No. 1.
G. C. Mathur and R. H. Dhebar, for respondent No. 2.
1961. January 27. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
KAPUR., J.-This is an appeal against the jugdment and order
of the High Court of Judicature of Bombay at Nagpur
dismissing a petition under Arts. 226 & 227 of the
Constitution challenging the legality of the imposition of
the octroi tax under s. 66(1)(e) of the C. P. & Berar
Municipal Act (Act II of 1922) hereinafter termed the Act.
The appellants who were the petitioners in the High Court
are some of the rate-payers of the town of Akola in the
erstwhile State of Bombay and respondent No. 1 is the
Municipal Committee, Akola. On November 11, 1957,
respondent No. 1 passed a resolution to impose an octroi tax
on animals and goods brought within the limits of the Akola
Municipality. This resolution and the draft Rules of
Assessment and Collection were later on forwarded by the
Akola Municipality to the State Government for publication.
A notification dated January 3, 1958, was published in the
Bombay Government Gazette on January 16, 1958. This Gazette
Notification contained the draft rules, the schedule of
goods liable to octroi duty and the rates to be charged.
This was in accordance with the requirements of s. 67(2) of
the Act. Respondent
620
No. 1, the Municipal Committee, affixed on the Notice Board
of the Committee and published in the local newspapers the
proposed rules for the imposition of the tax, but the
objection of the appellants is that they did not publish
along with them the draft of the " System of Assessment ".
It is true that a pamphlet in Marathi language was
distributed in the town of Akola and the proposals were also
published in the local newspaper Jan-Sewak. Objections to
the proposals were filed by some of the rate-payers of the
town of Akola and all of them were considered and a
resolution was passed by the Municipal Committee on March 3,
1958, and that is the resolution which was challenged in the
petition filed in the High Court by a petition dated April
14, 1958, p raying for the quashing of the resolution and
for the issuing of a prohibitory order against the State
Government against sanctioning the proposal sent by the
Municipal Committee. On April 18, 1958, a rule was issued
by the High Court to the opposite parties calling upon them
to show cause why the, order as prayed should not be made.
This notice was served on the Special Government Pleader on
May 9, 1958, and the Special Government Pleader put in his
appearance on June 17, 1958. On June 23, 1958, an interim
injunction was issued, but previous to that on June 19,
1958, a final notification was issued by the Government
approving of the proposal to impose the octroi tax. As a
consequence of this the petition was allowed to be amended,
but ultimately the High Court dismissed the petition and
this appeal has been brought on a certificate of the High
Court.
The sole question which has been debated before us is the
legality of the imposition. The ground on which the
legality is challenged is that there was no full compliance
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with the mandatory requirements of s. 67(2) of the Act. It
is, therefore, necessary to deal with the relevant
provisions of the Act. Chapter IX of the Act deals with
Imposition, Assessment and Collection of taxes. Section 66
provides for the taxes which can be imposed and s. 67 deals
with the mode of the imposition of the tax. By s. 71, the
State
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Government is empowered to make rules regulating the
assessment of taxes and for preventing evasion of
assessment. Section 76 empowers the State Government to
make rules regulating the collection of taxes and preventing
evasion of payment. Section 85 em- Con powers the State
Government to make rules regulating the refund of taxes.
But it was argued on behalf of the appellants that as the
mandatory provisions of s. 67 as to publication of the "
System of Assessment " in accordance with the rules was not
complied with, the imposition of the tax was illegal.
Reliance was placed on certain judgments, but it is not
necessary to discuss those cases because in the
circumstances of this case they are of little assistance.
The respondents, on the other hand, submitted that what was
published was all that the section required and that the
word assessment there did not mean anything more.
As s. 67(2) has been mainly relied upon, it may be quoted.
It provides:-
" 67(2) When such a resolution has been
passed, the committee shall publish in
accordance with rules made under this Act, a
’notice defining the class of persons or
description of property proposed to be taxed,
the amount or rate of the tax to be imposed
and the system of assessment to be adopted."
The scheme of s. 67 appears to be this: that when a
Municipal Committee wishes to impose a tax it has to pass a
resolution at a special meeting and then it has to publish
its resolution for imposition of that tax so that the rate-
payers may be able to place their objections against the
imposition. This publication must appear in the Government
Gazette and also locally as required by the rules. The
Municipal Committee has then to consider the objections, if
any, of the rate-payers and if the Committee does not
consider it necessary to alter its original proposals, it
has to send its proposals with the objections received and
its decision thereon and any modifications of the original
proposals to the State Government which, after considering
the matter, may sanction them or refuse to sanction or
sanction them with modifications,
622
The real objection of the appellants was that the system of
assessment had not seen published as required. The Rule
relating to publication under s. 67 is as follows :-
" 1. A notice under section 67(2) of the
intention of the municipal committee to impose
a tax, or under section 68(3) of the proposal
of the committee to increase the amount of
rate of any tax, shall be forwarded to the
State Government through the Deputy
Commissioner for publication in the " Madhya
Pradesh Gazette. " The notice under section
67(2)shall be accompanied by draft rules for
the assessment and collection of the tax.
After its publication in the Gazette the,
notice shall be published by affixing copies
thereof to a notice board at the municipal
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office and at conspicuous places in the town,
and shall also be published in the local
papers, if any. As an alternative to its
publication in local papers, the committee may
circulate the notice in print in vernacular
within the municipal limits. Proclamation
shall also be made by beat of drum throughout
the municipality notifying the intention of
the committee and calling the attention of the
inhabitants to the notice in question and to
the term of thirty days laid down in the law
as that within which objections to the
proposed imposition or increase must be
submitted to the committee."
According to this rule the notice under s. 67(2) has to be
accompanied by draft rules for the assessment and collection
of the tax and after its publication in the Gazette the
notice has to be published by affixing copies thereof to a
notice board at the Municipal Office and at conspicuous
places in the town and has to be published in the local
papers, if any, or it may circulate the notice in print
within the municipal limits. It is admitted that in the
Gazette dated January 16, 1958, the draft rules were
published which contained the articles to be taxed, the rate
or rates at which they were to be taxed and what articles
were not to be taxed. It also contained a brief statement
of objects. and reasons for the imposition of the tax. This
was
623
followed by draft rules as to how taxation was to be done.
In short what was published in the Gazette was admitted to
conform to all the requirements of s. 67(2). But the
contention raised is that in the Jan-Sewak, a local Marathi
newspaper, the rules which were published contained the
articles to be taxed, the rate or rates at which they were
to be taxed, but the draft rules in regard to " System of
Assessment " were not published along with it.
The High Court has pointed out that what was done was a
sufficient compliance with the provisions of s. 67(2) and
that the words " System of Assessment " meant only the stage
of the imposition of the tax and not other stages as a
whole. Sections 71, 76 and 85, as has been said above, deal
with rules for assessment and for preventing evasion of
taxes, rules for collection of taxes and rules for refund
respectively. Read together these provisions of the Act
support the decision of the High Court that the words "
System of Assessment " do not necessarily mean the whole
procedure of taxation, i.e., imposition, collection and
procedure in regard to collection and refunds. The rule
also shows that what is to be affixed on the notice board
and at conspicuous places of the town is the notice and not
the draft rules relating to assessment and collection. In
our opinion there has been a compliance with the provision
of s. 67(2) and that the publication of the rules relating
to the rates at which the tax had been imposed was
sufficient to comply with the provisions of the Act and the
rules made thereunder. It is unnecessary to deal with the
efficacy of sub-ss. (7) and (8) of s. 67.
In our opinion the judgment of the High Court was right and
the appeal is therefore dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
624