Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SPENCER & CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MYSORE & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/04/1971
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M. (CJ)
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M. (CJ)
MITTER, G.K.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
DUA, I.D.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 1321 1971 SCR 502
ACT:
City of Bangalore Municipal Corporation Act, 1949 as amended
by City of Bangalore Municipal Corporation Act, 1964, ss.
98, 99 and 100--Levy of property tax-Vacant land taxed at
uniform rate on market value of land--Provisions whether
discriminatory-Whether procedure in s. 98 relating to levy
of new tax ought to have been followed.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company owned a hotel at Bangalore. The
vacant land appurtenant to the building was used for the
beneficial enjoyment of the building as gardens and lawns.
Under s. 99(2) (b) of the City of Bangalore Municipal
Corporation Act, 1949 as amended in 1964 land appurtenant to
a building not exceeding thrice the area occupied by the
building was to be taxed as a part of the building, land in
excess of that limit was to be taxed at a uniform rate of
0.4 per cent of its market value. A notice was issued to
the appellant on March 20, 1966 demanding tax on the vacant
land in excess of thrice the area occupied by the hotel
building. The appellant challenged the levy in the High
Court but its petition under Art. 226 was dismissed. In
this Court the questions that fell for considerations were:
(i) whether for the reasons canvassed by the appellant the
tax was discriminatory; (ii) whether the levy was invalid on
the ground that the procedure in s. 98 for the levy of a new
tax had not been followed.
HELD: (i) The Act is not discriminatory. The scheme of
the Act is that the market value of the land is first
ascertained and then the tax at 0.4 per cent is levied.
Under sub-s. (3) of s. 99 the Commissioner has to determine
the market value of the land and sub-s. (3) of s. 100 gives
guidance as to how to determine the market value of the
land. The expressions ’estimated value’ and the word ’area’
in s. 100(3), are not vague. In the context of determining
the market value of the land, which has a well-known
connotation the Commissioner is directed to look at the
lands in the area of the land which is being assessed. In
the context be can only look at lands which are similarly
situate and are similar in nature to the lands being
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assessed, and the area must mean the locality in which the
land is situate and the extent of the locality would be
determined by the well-known characteristics such as
commercial area, residential area or factory area etc. In
other words the sub-section is drawing the attention of the
Commissioner to the well-known principle, which is followed
in assessing the market value, that lands similarly situate
and of similar potentiality should be taken as exemplars.
(ii) This Court has held that the State legislatures have
power to levy property tax by assessing the market value of
it and levying a percentage on it. If all lands are
assessed to the same rate of taxation it cannot be held that
there is per se any discrimination. Market value of land
always bears a definite relationship to the actual or
potential income being derived or derivable from the land
and there cannot be any objection to a levy at uniform rate
on market value. Moopil Nair’s case where no attention was
paid at all to income of the land was therefore distinguish-
able.
503
Kunnathat Thathunni Moopil Nair v. State of Kerala, [1961] 3
S.C.R. 77, 91 and State of Kerala v. Haji K. Kutty, [1969] 1
S.C.R.. 645, distinguished.
(iii) No discrimination can be said to result from the
fact that land appurtenant to a building not exceeding
thrice the area occupied by such building has been treated
as a part of the building and taxed as such whereas land in
excess of thrice the area of a building and other lands not
appurtenant to buildings have been classified separately.
In cities like Bangalore where land is scarce, excessive use
of land as gardens and grounds is not in the public interest
and the legislature can validly tax the excess land on a
different and higher basis. It may in a particular case
cause hardship but the legislature cannot be denied the
right to classify the lands in such a manner. Three times
the area occupied by a building is not a small area and it
cannot be held that this figure is not reasonable.
It was not necessary to specify as to which land would be
treated as surplus because the idea is to tax the excess
land being used for a particular building and such land
would be located in a block.
(iv) It was not necessary to have followed the procedure in
s. 98 of the Act to levy the impugned tax. The lands were
being assessed to property tax even before the 1964 Act
either separately or as part of the building. It could not
be said that the tax was being imposed for the first time
within the meaning of s. 98.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Civil Appeal No. 1852 of 1967.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
March 28, 1967 of the Mysore High Court in Writ Petition No.
704 of 1966.
R. B. Datar, for the appellant.
A. R. Somnath Iyer and S. P. Nayar, for respondent No. 1.
Rameshwar Nath, for respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sikri C. J This appeal by special leave is directed against
the judgment of the High Court of Mysore dismissing the
prayer for a declaration of the invalidity of s. 99(2)(b) of
the City of Bangalore Municipal Corporation Act, 1949-
hereinafter referred to as the Corporation Act-as amended by
the City of Bangalore Municipal Corporation (Amendment) Act,
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1964-hereinafter referred to as the 1964 Act.
By its judgment dated March 28, 1967 the High Court gave a
limited relief to the appellant in respect of the notice No.
4606 dated March. 31, 1966 issued by the Assistant Revenue
Officer, Corporation of Benglore, to the appellant and
quashed it to the extent it related to the period anterior
to, the date of notice.
504
The following points were urged before the High Court
"(1) The new provision, section 99(2)(b) of
the Corporation Act, introduced by the
amending Act is beyond the legislative
competence of the State Legislature.
(2) The said provision is violative of the
fundamental rights of the petitioners
guaranteed under Articles 14 and 19(1)(f) of
the Constitution.
(Note : The case of alleged violation of
Article 19 (1)(f), it is conceded, is not
available to the petitioner in writ
Petition 704 of 1966 which is an incorporated
Company.)
(3) The Corporation has omitted to observe
the procedure prescribed by section 98 of the
Corporation Act, and cannot therefore levy the
tax."
Two other points were raised with which we are
not concerned.
The learned counsel for the appellant, in view of our deci-
sion in Assistant Commissioner of Urban Land Tax v. The
Buckingham & Carnatic Co.,(1) has not pressed point No. 1
before us. In order to appreciate the other points it is
necessary to set out a few facts.
The appellant company are the proprietors of the West End
Hotel, Race Course Road, Bangalore. The premises of the
hotel comprises a total extent of 19.43 acres or 11,19,168
sq. ft. out of which the building area is 1,05,683 sq. ft.
The entire vacant land, excluding the built area and
appurtenant thereof is being made use of for the beneficial
enjoyment of the building in the area as garden and lawns.
Pursuant to the powers conferred upon the Municipal
Corporation of Bangalore under the Corporation Act, as
amended by the 1964 Act, to levy tax on the basis of
estimated market value of lands, a notice was issued to the
appellant on March 30, 1966 demanding a sum of Rs. 35,717.20
as tax on vacant land. It was stated in the notice that the
vacant land, over and above the limit, measuring 89,293 sq.
yds. is assessed at 0.4% of the market value, plus Education
Cess, plus Health Cess with effect from April 1, 1965.
Property tax was also demanded on the building of the hotel
but no question arises in this case as to its validity. The
High Court expressly stated that they were excluding from
consideration in this case all contentions of the appellant
relating to property tax on buildings. and the appellant was
(1) [1970] 1 S. C. R. 268.
505
left to pursue his normal remedies under the Corporation
Act regarding the property tax on buildings.
Objections were filed on behalf of the appellant before the
Commissioner. The appellant also filed a writ petition
under art. 226 of the Constitution challenging s. 99(2)(b)
of the Corporation Act, as amended by the 1964 Act, as
unconstitutional and void and prayed for other consequential
reliefs.
We may now set out the relevant provisions of the Corpora-
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tion Act, as amended by the 1964 Act. Part III Chapter V of
the Corporation Act deals with taxes. Section 97 enumerates
taxes and duties which the Corporation may levy and one of
the taxes enumerated therein is "a property tax". Section
98(1) requires that before the corporation passes any
resolution imposing a tax or duty for the first time it
shall direct the commissioner to publish a notice in the
Official Gazette and fix a reasonable period not being less
than one month from the date of publication for submission
of objections. The sub-section further provides that the
Corporation may after considering the objections, if any,
received within the period specified, determine by resolu-
tion to levy the tax or duty and such resolution shall
specify the rate at which, the date from which and the
period of levy, if any, for which such tax or duty shall be
levied. Sub-s. (2) of s. 98 provides that "when the
corporation shall have determined to levy any tax or duty
for the first time or at a new rate, the commissioner shall
forthwith publish a notice in the manner laid down in sub-
section (1) specifying the date from which, the rate at
which and the period of levy, if any, for which such tax or
duty shall be levied." Sub-sections (3) and (4) are not
relevant for our purpose.
Section 99(1) reads as under:
"If the corporation by a resolution determines
that a property tax shall be levied, such tax
shall be levied on all buildings and lands
within the city save those exempted by or
under this Act or any other law."
sub-section (2) of s. 99, provides
"(2) save as otherwise provided in this Act,
the property tax shall be levied,--
(a) in the case of buildings at such
percentages, not being less than ten per
cent and not more than twenty per cent of the
annual value of such buildings as may be fixed
by the Corporation:
Provided that the percentage to be fixed may
be different for different classes of
buildings.
506
(b) in the case of any land at 0.4 per cent
of the market value of the land:
Provided that the tax levied on any such land
shall not be less than rupees ten per annum.
Explanation.-For purposes of this section,
’building includes any land appurtenant to
such building used as garden and grounds for
the more beneficial enjoyment of such
building, not exceeding thrice the area
occupied by such building."
Sub-section (3) of s. 90 reads:
"(3) For the purposes of assessing the
property tax the annual value of any building
or the market value of the land shall be
determined by the Commissioner:
Provided that the annual value of any building
or the market value of the land the tax for
which is payable by the commissioner shall be
determined by the mayor."
Section 100(1) provides that every building
shall be assessed together with its site and
other adjacent premises occupied as
appurtenances thereto unless the owner of the
building is a, different person from the owner
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of such site or premises. Sub-section (2) of
s. 100 provides:
"The annual value of a building shall be
deemed to be the gross annual rent at which
such building may at the time of assessment
reasonably be expected to let from month to
month or from year to year, less a deduction
of 16 2/3 per cent of such annual rent and the
said deduction shall be in lieu of all
allowance for repairs or on any other account
whatever...... (proviso omitted)."
Sub-section (3) provides that "the market value of lands
shall be determined in accordance with the estimated value
at the time of assessment of such lands in the area in which
such lands are situate."
It is contended that the tax on vacant land is violative of
Art. 14 of the Constitution because (i) it is levied at an
average rate without any relation to the actual or potential
income of the land; (ii) the manner of determining the
market value was discriminatory, and (iii) the
classification of vacant land and land’ appurtenant to a
building is discriminatory. The learned councel relied on
the decision of this Court in Kunnathat Thathunni
507
Moopil Nair v. The state of Kerala(1). It will be
remembered that the charging section in that case was s. 4
of the Travancore-Cochin Land Tax Act, 1955, which read as
follows:
"4. Subject to the provisions of this Act,
there shall be charged and levied in respect
of all lands in the State, of whatever
description and held under whatever tenure, a
uniform rate of tax to be called the basic
tax."
Our attention was drawn to the following
passage in Chief Justice Sinha’s judgment:
"It is common ground that the tax, assuming
that the Act is really a taxing statute and
not a confiscatory measure, as contended on
behalf of the petitioners, has no reference to
income, either actual or potential, from the
property sought to be taxed.........
Ordinarily, a tax on land or land revenue is
assessed on the actual or the potential
productivity of the land sought to be taxed.
In other words, the tax has reference to the
income actually made, or which could have been
made, with due diligence, and, therefore, is
levied with due regard to the incidence of the
taxation. Under the Act in question we shall
take a hypothetical case of a number of
persons owning and possessing the same area of
land. One makes nothing out of the land,
because it is arid desert. The second one
does not make any income, but could raise some
crop after a disproportionately large invest-
ment of labour and capital. A third one, in
due course of husbandry, is making the land
yield just enough to pay for the incidental
expenses and labour charges besides land tax
or revenue. The fourth is making large
profits, because the land is very fertile and
capable of yielding good crops. Under, the
Act, it is manifest that the fourth category,
in our illustration, would easily be able to
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bear the burden of the tax. The third one may
be able to bear the tax. The first and the
second one will have to pay from their own
pockets, if they could afford the tax. If
they cannot afford the tax, the property is
liable to be sold, in due process of law, for
realisation of the public demand. It is
clear, therefore, that inequality is writ
large on the Act and is inherent in the very
provisions of the taxing section. It is also
clear that there is no attempt at
classification in the provisions of the Act.".
(1) [1961] 3 S. C. R. 779 91.
508
We are unable to hold that the impugned Act is discrimi-
natory. The scheme of the Act is that the market value of
the land is first ascertained and then tax at 0.4 per cent
is levied. Under sub-s. (3) of S. 99 the Commissioner has
to determine the urged by the learned counsel that the
expression "estimated as to how to determine the market
value of the land. It was urged by the learned counsel that
the expression "estimated value" and the word "area" are
very vague. We are unable to agree with him in this
respect. In the context of determining the market value of
the land, which has a well-known connotation, the
Commissioner is directed to look at the lands in the area of
the land which is being assessed. In the context he can
only look at the lands which are similarly situate, and are
similar in nature to the lands being assessed, and the area
must mean the locality in which the land being assessed is
situate and the extent of the locality would be determined
by the well-known characteristics such as commercial area,
residential area or factory area, etc. In other words the
sub-section is drawing the attention of the Commissioner to
the well-known principle, which is followed in assessing the
market value, that lands similarly situate and of similar
potentiality should be taken as exemplars.
The next question that arises is whether fixing property tax
at 0.4 per cent is itself discriminatory. We are unable
to see how this is discriminatory. This Court has held
that the State legislatures have power to levy property tax
by assessing the market value of it and levying a
percentage on it. If all lands are assessed to the same
rate of taxation we are unable to see how there is per se
any discrimination. The facts in Kunnathat Thathunni Moopil
Nair v. The State of Kerala(1) were quite different. There
no attention was paid at all to the income of. the land.
Here it is true that income of the land is not taken into
consideration and instead market value is the basis of taxa-
tion But market value of land always bears a definite
relationship to the actual or potential income being derived
or derivable from the land and there cannot be any objection
to a levy at uniform rate on the market value.
Reference was made to the decision of this Court in State of
Kerala v. Haji K. Kutty(2). There the facts were again
quite different. The legislature adopted the floor-area of
the building as the basis of tax irrespective of all other
consideration. The market value of the property stands on a
different footing because, like income, the market value of
property is one of the indices of the benefit which the
owner derives or can derive from It and the very concept of
market value takes, into account the present or the
potential income and other relevant considerations.
(1) [1961] 3 S. C. R. 77.
(2) (1969) 1 S. C. R. 645
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509
It was next contended that the classification of vacant land
is discriminatory. While land appurtenant to a building
used as garden and as grounds for the more beneficial
enjoyment of such building, not exceeding thrice the area
occupied by such building, has been treated as a part of the
building and taxed as such, land in excess of thrice the
area of a building and other lands not appurtenant to
buildings have been classified separately. The learned
counsel said that the distinction is artificial as the land
in excess of thrice the area of a building is also being
used for the same beneficial enjoyment of the building. It
seems to us that in cities like Bangalore, where land is
scarce, excessive use of land as gardens and grounds is not
in the public interest and the legislature can validly tax
the excess land on a different and higher basis. It may in
a particular case cause hardship but the legislature cannot
be denied the right to classify the lands in such a manner.
Three times the area occupied by a building is not a small
area and we are unable to hold that this figure is not
reasonable.
It was said that the Act did not give any indication as to
which land would be treated as surplus but in our view it is
nit necessary to specify the lands because the idea is to
tax the excess land being used for a particular building and
as this land would be located in a block it was not
necessary to specify the land.
The last point urged before us was that this was a new tax
and the procedure prescribed in s. 98 should have been
followed. We are unable to hold that it is a new tax. Tax
was being levied before the 1964 Act. The lands were being
assessed to property tax even before the 1964 Act, either
separately or as part of the building. We cannot say that
this tax is being imposed for the first time within the
meaning of s. 98.
In the result the appeal falls and is dismissed but in the
circumstances there will be no order as to costs.
G.C. Appeal dismissed.
510