Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
IN RE. THE BILL TO AMEND S. 20 OF THE SEA CUSTOMS ACT,
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/05/1963
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
DAS, S.K.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1760 1964 SCR (3) 787
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1964 SC1486 (13)
R 1965 SC 745 (1)
R 1967 SC1512 (20,48,64)
R 1977 SC1459 (7)
RF 1979 SC 478 (8,22)
RF 1984 SC 420 (13)
RF 1986 SC 515 (92)
RF 1986 SC 649 (26)
R 1986 SC 662 (53)
F 1989 SC1153 (8)
C 1990 SC 781 (64)
ACT:
President’s Reference-Customs duties and duties of excise-
Parliament’s power to levy such duties on the property of
States-Direct and indirect taxes-Distinction, if valid under
Constitution--Customs duties and duties of excise, if taxes
on property-"Taxation", Definition-Sea Customs Act, 1878 (8
of 1878), s. 20-Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (1 of
1944). s. 3 (1)- Government of India Act, 1935 (25 & 26 Geo
5, ch. 42), 88. 154, 155-Constitution of India, Arts. 245,
246, 285, 289, 366 28).
HEADNOTE:
As a result of a proposal to introduce in Parliament a Bill
to amend s. 20 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878, and s. 3 of the
Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944, with a view to applying
the provisions of the said two Acts to goods belonging to
the State Governments, in regard to which certain doubts
arose as to whether the provisions of the Bill were
inconsistent with Art. 289 of the Constitution of India, the
President of India referred under Art. 143 of the
Constitution certain questions for the opinion of the
Supreme Court to ascertain if the proposed amendments would
be constitutional. The question was whether the provisions
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of Art. 289 of the Constitution precluded the Union from
imposing, or authorising the imposition of (a) Customs
duties on the import or export or (b) excise duties on the
production or manufacture in India: of the
788
property of a State used for purposes other than those
specified in cl. (2). of that Article.
Held (S. K. Das, A. K. Sarkar, Hidayatullah and K. C. Das
Gupta, JJ dissenting), that the provisions of Art. 289.(1)
of the Constitution of India were in the nature of an
exception to the exclusive field of legislation reserved to
Parliament and were limited to taxes on property and on
income of a state; that the immunity granted in favour of
States had to be restricted to taxes levied directly on
property and income ; and, that even though import and
export duty or duties of excise had reference to goods and
commodities, they were not taxes on property directly and
were not within the exemption in Art. 289 (1).
Per Sinha C. J., Gajendragadkar, Wanchoo, Shah and
Rajagopala Ayyangar JJ.-(1) Though the expression
"taxation", as defined in Art. 366 (28), "includes the
imposition of any tax or impost, whether general or local or
special", the amplitude of that definition has to be cut
down if the context otherwise so requires.
(2) Whereas the Union Parliament has been vested with the
exclusive power to regulate trade and commerce and with the
sole responsibility of imposing export and import duties and
duties of excise, with a view to regulating trade and
commerce and raising revenue, an exception has been
engrafted in Art. 289 (1) in favour of States granting them
immunity from certain kinds of Union taxation and it is
necessary that the general Words of the exemption in that
Article should be limited in their scope so as not to come
in conflict with the power of the Union to regulate trade
and commerce.
(3) Though the Constitution of India does not make a clear
distinction between direct and indirect taxes, the exemption
provided in Art., 289 (1) from Union taxation to property
must refer to what are known to economists as direct taxes
on property and not to indirect taxes like duties of customs
and excise which are in their essence trading taxes and not
tax on property.
Per Das, Sarkar and Das Gupta JJ.-(1) The exemption clause
under Art. 289 (1) ha,; to be interpreted with the key
furnished by Art. 366 (28) Under the Constitution the word
"taxation" has been defined by the Constitution itself, and
the Court is not free to give a different meaning to the
word so as to make a distinction between direct and indirect
789
taxation, nor is the Court free to make a distinction
between a tax on property and a tax in respect of it.
(2) The problem is not the nature of the impost, but rather
the extent of the immunity granted by Art. 289 and the
extent of the immunity really depends on the true scope and
effect of Arts. 245, 285, 289, and 366 (28).
(3) The Union’s power to legislate to regulate foreign
trade contained in the legislative list is subject to the
provisions of the Constitution, and the Union cannot, in
view of Art. 289 (1), impose a customs duty on things
imported by the State and seek to justify it as an exercise
of its power to regulate foreign trade.
(4) The exemption given to State property from Union
taxation by Art. 289 does not conflict in any way with the
power of control which the Union has over foreign trade or
inter-State trade.
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(5) In the Constitution of India the "taxing powers is
treated as different from the "regulatory power" and the
classification between "direct" and "indirect" taxes hasot
been adopted in the Constitution.
Per Hidayatullah J.-(1) The fact that the word "taxation" is
used in one place only in the Constitution saves us from the
task of examining the context, because the definition would
become a dead letter if it were not used in Art. 289 in the
sense defined.
(2) Taking the language of Art. 289 (1) by itself or even
as modified by that of cls. (2) and (3) the conclusion is
inescapable that properties of all kinds belonging to the
States save those used or occupied fur trade or business,
were meant to be exempted from taxation. The scheme of Art.
289 does not admit that the word "property" should be read
in any specialized sense and goods imported and goods
manufactured or produced by the States air, included in the
word "property."
(3) The provisions of Art, 289 preclude the Union from
imposing, or authorising the imposition, of customs duties
on the import or export of the property of a State used for
purposes other than those, specified in cl. (2) of that
Article, if the imposition is to raise revenue but not to
regulate external trade.
(4) The intention being to raise revenue the amendment if
made would be hit by Art. 289.
790
Per Rajagopala Ayyangar J. -Though no express distinction
has been made in the Constitution between direct and
indirect taxes, taxes in the shape of duties of customs
including export duties, and excise, particularly when
imposed with a view to regulating trade and commence in so
far as such matters are within the competence of Parliament
being covered by various entries in List I, cannot be called
taxes on property ; for they are imposts with reference to
the movement of property by way of import or export or with
reference to the production or manufacture of goods.
American, Australian and Candian cases reviewed.
JUDGMENT:
ADVISORY JURISDICTION : Special Reference No. 1 of 1962.
Reference by the President of India under Art. 143 (1) of
the Constitution regarding the proposed amendments to sub-
section (2) of Section 20 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878 (Act
8 of 1878) and subsection 1 (a) of Section 3 of the Central
Excise and Salt Act, 1944 (Act 1 of 1944).
C. E. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India,H. N. Sanyal,
Additional Solicitor General of India, G.N. Joshi and R.H.
Dhebar, for the Union Of India.
D. Narsa Rajuu, Advocate-General for the State of Andhra
Pradesh and T. V. R. Tatachari, for the State of Andhra
pradesh.
B. C. Barua, Advocate-General for the State of Assam and
Naunit Lal, for the State of Assam.
Mahabir Prasad, Advocate-General for the State of Bihar and
S. P. Varma, for the State of Bihar.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, J. B. Dadachanji,O. C. Mathur
and Ravinder Narain, for the State of Maharashtra.
J. M. Thakore, Advocate-General the State of Gujaratand
H.L.Hathi,for the State for Gujarat.
791
D. Sahu, Advocate-General for the State of Orissa and K.
L. Hathi, for the State of Orissa.
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V. P. Gopalan Nambyar, Advocate-General for the State of
Kerala and Sardar Bahadur, for the State of Kerala.
A. Ranganadham Chetty and A. V. Rangam, for the State of
Madras.
G. R. Ethirajulu Naidu, Advocate-General for the State of
Mysore and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the State of Mysore.
S. M. Sikri, Advocate-General for the State of Punjab, S.
K. Kapur and Gopal Singh, for the State of Punjab.
G. C. Kasliwal, Advocate-General for the State Of Rajasthan,
S. K. Kapur, V. N. Sethi and K. K. Jain, for the State of
Rajasthan.
B. Sen, M. K. Banerjee and P. K. Bose, for the State of West
Bengal.
M. Adhikari, Advocate-General for the State of Madhya
Pradesh and I. N. Shroff, for the State of Madhya Pradesh.K. S.
Hajela and C. P. Lal, for the State of Uttar Pradesh.
1963. May 10. The opinion of B. P. Sinha, C.J., P. B.
Gajendragadkar, K. N. Wanchoo and J. C. Shah JJ. was
delivered by Sinha, C. J. The opinion of S. K. Das, A. K.
Sarkar and K. C. Das Gupta JJ., was delivered by Das, J. M.
Hidayatullah, J., and N. Rajagopala Ayyangar, J., delivered
separate opinions.
SINHA C. T.-The main question, on this reference by the
President of India under Art. 143 (1) of
792
the Constitution, depends upon the true scope and
interpretation of Art. 289 of the Constitution relating to
the immunity of States from Union taxation. On receipt of
the reference notices were issued to the Attorney General
’of India and to the Advocates General of the States. In
pursuance of that the case of the Union Government has been
placed before us by the learned Solicitor-General and that
of the States of Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Gujarat,
Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Madras, Maharashtra, Mysore, Orissa,
Punjab and West Bengal was presented to us by their
respective counsel. On the date the hearing of this case
started, an application was made on behalf of the State of
Uttar Pradesh also to be heard, but no statement of case had
been put in on behalf of that State, and as no grounds were
made out for condoning the delay, we refused the
application.
The reference is in these terms
"Whereas sub-section (1) of section 20 of the Sea Customs
Act, 1878 (Act 8 of 1878), provides for the levy of customs
duties on goods imported or exported by sea to the extent
and in the manner specified in the said sub-section ;
And whereas sub-section (2) of section 20 of the said Act
applies the provisions of sub-section (1) of that section in
respect of all goods belonging to the Government of a State
and used for the purposes of a trade or business of any kind
carried on by, or on behalf of, that Government, or of any
operations connected with such trade or business as they
apply in respect of goods not belonging to any Government;
And whereas it is proposed to amend sub-section (2) of
section 20 of the said Act so as to apply the provisions of
sub-section (1) of that section in respect of all goods
belonging to the Government of a State;
793
irrespective of whether such goods are used or not for the
purposes set out in the said subsection (2) as at present in
force;
And whereas sub-section (1) of section 3 of the Central
Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (Act 1 of 1944), provides for the
levy of duties of excise on all excisable goods other than
salt which are produced or manufactured in India and a duty
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on salt manufactured in, or imported by land into any part
of India in the manner specified in the said sub-section;
And whereas sub-section (IA)of section 3 of the said Act
applies the provisions of sub-section (1) of that section in
respect of all excisable goods other than salt which are
produced or manufactured in India by, or on behalf of, the
Government of a State and used for the purposes of a trade
or business of any kind carried on by, or on behalf of, that
Government, or of any operations connected with such trade
or business as they apply in respect of goods which are not
produced or manufactured by any Government;
And whereas it is proposed to amend sub-section (IA) of
section 3 of the said Act so as to apply the provisions of
sub section (1) of that section in respect of all excisable
goods other than salt which are produced or manufactured in
India by, or on behalf of the Government of a State,
irrespective of whether such goods are used or not for the
purposes set out in the said sub-section (IA) as at present
in force;
And whereas it is proposed to introduce in Parliament a
Bill, the draft of ’which is annexed here to and marked
"Annexure’, to amend for the purpose aforesaid sub-section
(2) of section 20 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878 (Act 8 of
1878) and sub-section -(IA) of section 3 of the Central
Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (Act 1 of 1944);
794
And whereas Governments of certain States have expressed,the
view that the amendments as proposed in the said draft of
the Bill may not be constitutionally valid as the provisions
of article 289 read with the definitions of ’taxation’ and
-tax’ in clause (28) of article 366 of the Constitution of
India preclude the Union from imposing or authorising the
imposition of any tax, including customs duties and excise
duties; or in relation to any property of a State except to
the extent permitted by clause (2) read with clause (3) of
the said article 289;
And whereas the Government of India is on the other hand
inclined to the view-
(i) that the exemption from Union taxation
granted by clause (1) of article 289 is res-
tricted to Union taxes on the property of a
State and does not extend to Union taxes in
relation to the property of a State and that
clauses (2) and (3) of that article have also
to be construed accordingly;
(ii) that customs duties are taxes on the
import or export of property and not taxes on
property as such and further that excise
duties are taxes on the production or
manufacture of property and not taxes on
property as such; and
(iii) that the union is not precluded by the
pro. visions of article 289 of the
Constitution of India from imposing or
authorising the imposition of customs duties
on the import or export of the property of a
State and other Union taxes on the property of
a State which are not taxes on property as
such;
And whereas doubts have arisen as to the true interpretation
and scope of article 289 of the Constitution of India and,
in particular, as to the constitutional validity of the
amendments to the Sea Customs
795
Act. 1878 (Act 8 of 1878) and the Central Excises and Salt
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Act, 1944 (Act 1 of 1944) as proposed in the aforesaid draft
Bill;
And whereas in view of what has been hereinbefore stated, it
appears to me that the questions of law hereinafter set out
have arisen and are of such a nature and are of such public
importance that it is expedient to obtain the opinion of the
Supreme Court of India thereon;
Now, therefore, in exercise of the powers conferred upon me
by clause (1) of article 143 of the Constitution of India,
1, Rajendra Prasad, President of India, hereby refer the
following question to the Supreme Court of India for
consideration and report of its opinion thereon;
"(1) Do the provisions of article 289 of the
Constitution preclude the Union from imposing,
or authorising the imposition of, customs
duties on the import or export of the property
of a State used for purposes other than those
specified in clause (2) of that article ?
(2) Do the provisions of article 289 of the
Constitution of India preclude the Union from
imposing, or authorising the imposition of,
excise duties on the production or manufacture
in India of the property of a State used for
purposes other than those specified in clause
(2) of that article ?
(3) Will sub section (2) of section 20 of
the Sea Customs Act, 1878 (Act 8 of 1878) and
subsection (IA) of section 3 of the Central
Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (Act 1 of 1944) as
amended by the Bill set out in the Annexure be
inconsistent with the provisions of article
289 of the Constitution of India
New Delhi Sd/-Rajendra Prasad,
Dated the 19-4-1962.
President of India.
796
Anne
xure
DRAFT BILL
A
BILL
Further to amend the Sea Customs Act, 1878,
and the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944.
Be it enacted by Parliament in the year of the
Republic of India as follows
1. Short title-This Act may be called the
Sea Customs and Central Excises (Amendment)
Act, 19.
2. Amendment of section 20, Act 8 of 1878,
In section 20 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878 for
sub-section (2) the following sub-section
shall be substituted, namely :-
"(2) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall
apply in respect of all goods belonging to the
Government as they apply in respect of goods
not belonging to the Government."
3. Amendment of section 3, Act 1 of 1944.In
section 3 of the Central Excises and Salt Act,
1944, for sub-section (IA) the follow
ing sub-
section shall be substituted, namely :-
"(1A) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall
apply in respect of all excisable goods other
than salt which are produced or manufactured
in India by, or on behalf of, the Government
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as they apply in respect of goods which are
not produced or manufactured by the Govern.
797
It has been argued on behalf of the Union of India that cl.
(1) of Art. 289 properly interpreted would mean that the
immunity from taxation granted by the Constitution to the
States is only in respect of tax on property and on income,
and that the immunity does not extend to all taxes; the
clause should not be interpreted so as to include taxation
in relation to property; a tax by way of import or export
duty is not a tax on property but is on the fact of
importing or exporting goods into or out of the country;
similarly, an excise duty is not a tax on property but is a
tax on production or manufacture of goods; though the
measure of the tax may have reference to the value, weight
or quantity of the goods, according to the relevant
provisions of the statute imposing excise duty, in essence
and truly speaking import or export duties or excise duty
are not taxes on property, including goods, as such, but on
the happening of a certain event in relation to goods,
namely, import or export of goods or production or
manufacture of goods; the true meaning of Art. 289 is to be
derived not only from its language but also from the scheme
of the Indian Constitution distributing powers of taxation
between the Union and the States in and the context of those
provisions; Arts. 285 and 289 of the Constitution are
complementary and the true construction of the one has a
direct bearing on that of the other; those articles have to
be construed in the background of the corresponding
provisions of the Government of India Act 1935, ss. 154 and
155; cl. (2) of Art. 289 is only explanatory and not an
exception to cl. (1) in the sense that the entire field of
taxation covered by cl. (1) is also covered by the terms of
cl. (2); as Parliament has exclusive power to make laws with
respect to trade and commerce with foreign countries and
with respect to duties of customs, including export duties
and duties of excise on certain goods manufactured or
produced in India, the Union is competent to impose or to
authorise the, imposition of custom duties on
798
the import or export of goods by a State which may be its
property or excise duty. on the production or manufacture of
goods by a State; if cl. (1) of Art. 289 were to be
interpreted as including the exemption of a State in respect
of customs duties or excise duty, it will amount to a
restriction on the exclusive: competence of Parliament to
make laws with respect to trade and commercial restriction
which is not warranted in view of the scheme of the
Constitution; that the term "taxation" has been used in a
very wide sense, as per Art. 366 (28); the wide sweep of
that expression has to be limited with respect to the words
"Property" or "income"; the juxtaposition of the words
"’property" and "income" in cl. (1) of Art. 289 would show
that the exemption of the States from Union taxation wag
only in respect of tax on property and tax on income; in
other words, the exemption granted by Art. ?89 (1) is in
respect of property taxes properly so called in the sense of
taxes directly on property; a tax on property means a tax in
respect of ownership, possession or enjoyment of property,
in contradistinction to customs duties and duties of excise,
which in their true meaning are not taxes on property but
only in relation to property, on a particular occasion Cl..
(2) of Art. 289 of the Constantine shows clearly that trade
or business carried on by States will be liable to taxation;
by cl. (3) of Art. 289 Parliament has been authorised to
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legislate as to what trade or business would be incidental
to the ordinary functions of government and which, therefore
would not be subject to taxation by the Union; any trade or
busines not so declared by parliament will be within the
operation of cl. (-), i.e liable to Union taxation.
On the other hand. it is argued on behalf of the States that
in interpreting Art. 289 of the Constitution, on which the
answer to the question referred by the President depends, it
has to be borne in mind that our Constitution does not make
a distinction
799
between direct and indirect taxation; that trade and
commerce and industry have been distributed between the
Union and the States; that the power of taxation is
different from the power to regulate trade and commerce;
that the narrower construction of the Article, contended for
and on behalf of the Union, will seriously and adversely
affect the activities of the States and their powers under
the Constitution; that a comparison and contrast between the
terms of s. 155 of the Government of India Act and those of
Art. 289 of the Constitution would clearly emphasize that
the wider meaning contended for on behalf of the States
should be preferred; that the legislative practice in
respect of excise and customs duties is a permissible guide
to the interpretation of the Article in question and would
support the wider construction, an that even on a narrower
construction, insisted upon by the Union, customs duties and
duties of excise affect property and are, therefore, within
the immunity granted by Art. 289 (1); properly construed
Art. 289 (1) grants complete immunity from all taxation on
any kind of property; and any kind of tax on property or in
relation to property is within the immunity; therefore, the
distinction sought to be made on behalf of the Union between
tax on property and tax in relation to property is wholly
irrelevant; cl. (2) of Art. 289 is not explanatory, as
contended on behalf of the Union, but is an exception or in
the nature of a proviso to cl. (1) of the Article; cl. (2)
really carves out something which is included in cl. (1) and
similarly cl. (3) is an exception to cl. (2) and carves out
something which is included in cl. (2).
It should be noted that all the States which were
represented before us were agreed in their contention, as
set out above, except the State of Maharashtra. The learned
Counsel for the State of Maharashtra agreed with the
contention on behalf of the Union that there was a clear
distinction between
800
tax on property and excise duties. In other words, excise
duty is not within the immunity granted by cl. (1) of Art.
289, which is in the nature of an exception to the general
power of a State to regulate trade and commerce and its
right to tax, and as such it should be very strictly
construed. But he supported the other States in so far as
they contended that duties of import and export were within
the exemption granted by cl. (1) of Art. 289.
It will thus be seen that whereas the Union is for
interpreting cl. (1) of Art. 289 in the restricted sense of
the immunity being limited to a direct tax on property and
on the income of a State, the States contend for an all-
embracing exemption from Union taxes which have any relation
to or impact on State property and income. In spite of this
wide gulf between the two view points, both are agreed that
the terms "property", "income’ and "tax" have been used in
their widest sense. ’They are also agreed that the immunity
granted to the Union in respect of its property by Art. 285
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corresponds to the immunity granted to the States by Art.
289, and that, therefore, the term "property" "taxation" and
"tax" have to be interpreted in the same comprehensive sense
in both the Articles. It will be noticed that whereas not
only the term ("property" but also "income" occurs in Art.
289, in Art. 285 the term "income’ is not used apparently
because the Constitution makers were aware of the legal
position that tax on "income" (as distinct from agricultural
income) is exclusively in the Union List and was so even
before the advent of the Constitution. It was agreed, and
it is manifest that the terms of Art. 285 and 289 are very
closely parallel to those of ss. 154 and 155, respectively,
of the Government of India Act, 1935 (25 & 26 Geo. VC. 42),
except for the differences in expression occasioned by the
change in the constitutional position and the integration
of the Indian States after-
801
1947. The language of the two parellel provisions may be
set out below in order to bring out the points of
similarity and contrast.
Government of India Act.
S. 154 : Property vested in His Majesty for purposes of
the Government of the Federation shall, save in so far as
any Federal law may otherwise provide, be exempt from all
taxes imposed by, or by any authority within, a Province or
Federated State;
Provided that, until any Federal law otherwise provides, any
property so vested which was immediately before the
commencement of Part III of this Act liable, or treated as
liable., to any such tax, shall, so long as that tax
continues, continue to be liable, or to be treated as
liable.. thereto.
S. 155 (1) Subject as hereinafter provided.. the
Government of a Province and the
Constitution of India.
Art. 285. (1) The property of the Union shall, save in so
far as Parliament may by law otherwise provide, be exempt
from all taxes imposed by a State or by any Authority within
a State.
(2) Nothing in clause
(1) shall, until Parliament by law otherwise provides.,
prevent I any authority within a State from levying any ’tax
on any property of the Union to which such property was
immediately before’ the commencement of this Constitution
liable or treated as liable, so long as that tax continues
to be levied in that State.
Art. 289. (1) The property and income of a State shall be
exempt from Union
802
Government of India Act.
Ruler of a Federated State &hall not be liable to Federal
taxation in respect of land & or buildings situate in
British India, or income accruing, arising or received in
British India :
Provided that-
(a) where a trade or business of any kind is carried on by
or on behalf of the Government of a Province in any part of
British India outside that Province or by a Ruler in any
part of British India, nothing in this sub-section shall
exempt that Government or Ruler from any Federal taxation in
respect of that trade or business, or any operations con-
nected therewith, or any income arising in connection
therewith, or any property occupied for the purposes
thereof,
(b) nothing in this sub-section shall exempt
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Constitution of India.
taxation.
(2) Nothing in clause (1) shall prevent.the
Union from imposing, or authorising the imposition of any
tax to such extent, if any as Parliament may by law provide
in respect of a trade or business of any kind carried on by,
or on behalf of the Government of a State, or any operations
connected therewith, or any property used or occupied for
the purposes of such trade or ’business, or any income
accuring or arising in connection therewith.
(3) Nothing in clause
(2) shall apply to any trade or business, or to any class
of trade or business which Parliament may by law
declare to be incidental to the ordinary functions of
government.
803
Government of India Act.
a Ruler from any Federal taxation in respect of any lands,
buildings or income being his personal property or personal
income.
(2) Nothing in this Act affects any exemption from taxation
enjoyed as of right at the passing of this Act by the Ruler
of an Indian State in respect of any Indian Government
securities issued before that date.
Constitution of India.
It will thus appear that both s. 154 and Art. 285 set out
above speak only of "property" and lay down that property
vested in the Union shall be exempt from all taxes imposed
by a State or by any authority within a State, subject to
one exception of saving the pre-existing taxes on such
property until Parliament may by law otherwise provide.
Similarly, whereas s. 155 of the Government of India Act
exempts from federal taxes the Government of a Province in
respect of lands or buildings situate in British India or
income accruing, arising or received in British India, Art.
289(1) says "the property and income of a State shall be
exempt from Union taxation". Section 156 aforesaid has two
provisos (a) & (b); (a) relating to trade or business of any
kind carried on by or on behalf of the Government of a
Province, and (b) which is not relevant, relating to a
Ruler. It will be seen that "’income" is repeated in both
the provisions, but what was "’lands" or "’buildings" has
become simply "property" in Art. 289(1).
804
The question naturally arises why "income" was at all
mentioned when it is common ground that "income" would be
included in the generic term " property". It was suggested
on behalf of the Union that the a position of the terms
"property" and "income"of a State which have been declared
to be exempt from Union taxation would indicate that the tax
from which they were to be immune was tax on ,(property" and
on "Income", i.e., in both cases a direct tax, and not an
indirect tax, which may be levied in relation to the
property of a State, namely, excise duty, which is a tax on
the manufacture or production of goods and customs duty
which is a tax on the event of importation or exportation of
goods.
Before dealing with the argument on either side, whether the
restricted meaning attributed to the words of Art. 289(1) on
behalf of the Union, or the wider significance claimed for
these words on behalf of the States, was intended by the
Constitution makers, it is necessary to bear in mind certain
general considerations and the scheme of the constitutional
provisions bearing on the power of the Union to impose the
taxes contemplated by the proposed legislation. Neither the
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Union nor the States can claim unlimited right as regards
the are area of taxation. The right has been hedged in by
considerations of respective powers and responsibilities of
the Union in relation to the States, and those of the States
in relation to citizens or inter se or in relation to the
Union. Part XII of the Constitution relates to "Finances
etc." At the they outset Art. 265 lays down that no tax
shall be levied or collected except by authority of law.
That authority has to be found in the three lists in the
Seventh Schedule, subject to the provisions of Part Xi which
deals with the relations between that Union and the States,
particularly Chapter 1 relating to legislative relations and
distribution of legislative powers, with special reference,
to Art.’ 246. Under that Article the legislature of a State
has exclusive powers to make laws with respect
805
to the matters enumerated in List 11 and Parliament and the
Legislature of a State have powers to make laws with respect
to’ the matters enumerated in List III (the Concurrent
List), and notwithstanding those two lists, Parliament has
the exclusive power to make Laws with respect to any of the
matters enumerated in List I (the Union List). Parliament
also has power to make laws with respect to any of the
matters enumerated in the State List with respect to any
part of the territory of India which is not included in a
State. By Art. 248 Parliament has been vested with
exclusive power to make laws with respect to any matters not
enumerated in the State list or the Concurrent list,
including the power of making a law imposing ?. tax ’nut
mentioned in either of those lists. It is not necessary to
refer to the extended power of legislation vested in
Parliament in abnormal circumstances, as contemplated by
Arts. 249 250 and 252. In short, though the State have been
vested with exclusive powers of Legislation with respect to
the matters enemurated in List II, the authority of
Parliament to legislate in respect of taxation in List I is
equally exclusive. The scheme of distribution of powers of
legislation, with particular reference to taxation, is that
Parliament has the exclusive power to legislate imposing
taxes on income other than agricultural income (Entry 82):
duties of customs including export duties (Entry 83); duties
of excise an tobacco an other goods, manufactured or produc-
ed in India, except alcoholic liquors for human consumption
and opium, Indian hemp and other narcotic drugs and
narcotics, which by entry 51 of List II is vested in the
State legislature (Entry 84). It is not necessary to refer
to the other taxes which Parliament may impose because they
have no direct bearing on the questions, in controversy in
this case. Similarly, the State legislatures have the power
to impose taxes on agricultural income (Entry 46), taxer,on
lands and buildings (Entry 49) and duties of excise on
alcoholic liquors and opium etc., manufactured or
806
produced in the State and countervailing duties at the same
or lower rates on similar goods manufactured or produced
elsewhere in India (Entry 51). It is also not necessary to
refer to other heads of taxes which arc contained in the
State List. It would, thus appear that whereas all taxes on
income other than agricultural income are within the
exclusive power of the Union, taxes on agricultural income
only are reserved for the States. All customs duties,
including export duties, relating as they do to transactions
of import into or export out of the country are within the
powers of Parliament. The States are not concerned with
those. They are only concerned with taxes on the entry of
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goods in local areas for consumption, use or sale therein,
covered by entry 52 in the State List. Except for duties of
excise on alcoholic liquors and opium and other narcotic
drugs, all duties of excise are leviable by Parliament.
Hence, it can be said that by and large, taxes on income,
duties of customs and duties of excise are within the
exclusive power of legislation by Parliament.
Those exclusive powers of taxation, as aforesaid vested in
Parliament, have to be correlated with the exclusive power
of Parliament to legislate with respect to trade and
commerce with foreign countries; import and export duties
across customs frontiers; definition of customs frontiers
(Entry 41); inter-State trade and commerce (Entry 42). As
the regulation of trade and commerce with foreign countries,
as also inter-State, is the exclusive responsibility of the
Union, Parliament has the power to legislate with respect to
those matters, alongwith the power to legislate by way of
imposition of duties of customs in respect of import and
export of goods as also to impose duties of excise on the
manufacture or production in any part of India in respect of
goods other than alcoholic liquors and opium, etc , referred
to above. Further, the imposition of customs duties
807
or excite duties may be either (1) with a view to raise
revenue or (2) to regulate trade and commerce, both in land
and foreign, or (3) both to regulate trade and commerce and
to raise revenue. If therefore Art. 289 (1) completely
exempts all property of the States from all taxes the power
of Parliament to regulate foreign trade by the use of its
power of taxation would be seriously impaired and this con-
sideration will have to be kept in mind when interpreting
Art. 289(1).
There is another general consideration which has also to be
borne in mind in view of the provisions contained in Part
XII of the Constitution. Though various taxes have been
separately included in List I or List II and there is no
overlaping in the matter of taxation between the two lists
and there is no tax provided in the Concurrent List except
stamp duties (Item 44), the constitution embodies an
elaborate scheme for the distribution of revenue between the
Union and the States in Part XII, with respect to taxes
imposed in List 1. The scheme of the Constitution with
respect to financial relations between the Union and the
States. devised by the Constitution makers, is such as to
ensure an equitable distribution of the revenue between the
Centre and the States. All revenues received by the
Government of India normally form part of the Consolidated
Fund of India, and all revenues received by the Government
of a State shall form part of the Consolidated Fund of the
State. This general rule is subject to the provision of the
Chapter I of Part XII in which occur Arts. 266 to 277.
Though stamp duties and duties of excise on medicinal and
toilet preparations which are’ covered by the Union List are
to be levied by the Government of India, they have to be
collected by the States within which such duties are
leviable and are not to form part of the Consolidated Fund
of India, but stands assigned to the State which has.
collected them (Art. 268). Similarly, duties and taxes
808
levied and collected by the Union in respect of Succession
Duty, Estate Duty, Terminal Taxes on goods and passengers
carried by Railway, sea or air, taxes on rail fares and
freights, etc. as detailed in Art. 269 shall be assigned to
the States and distributed amongst them in accordance with
the principles of distribution as may be formulated by
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Parliamentary legislation, as laid down in cl. (2) of Art.
269. Art. 270 provides that taxes on income, other than
agricultural income shall be levied and collected by the
Government of India and distributed between the Union and
the States. The taxes and duties levied by the Union and
collected by the Union or by the States as contemplated by
Arts. 268, 269 and 270 and distributed amongst the States
shall not form part of the Consolidated Fund of India.
Further Excise duties which are levied and collected by the
Government of India and which form part of the Consolidated
Fund of India may also be distributed amongst the States, in
accordance with the principles laid down by Parliament in
accordance with the provisions of Art. 272. Express
provision has been made by Article 273 in respect of grants-
in-aid of the revenue of the States of Assam, Bihar, Orissa
and West Bengal in lieu of assignment of any share of the
net proceeds of export duty on jute and jute products.
Further a safeguard has been laid down in Art. 274 that no
bill or amendment which imposes or varies any tax or duty in
which States are interested or which affects the principles
of distribution of duties or taxes amongst the States as
laid down in Arts. 268-273 shall be introduced or moved in
either House of Parliament except on the recommendation of
the President. Parliament has also been authorised to lay
down that certain sums may be charged on the Consolidated
Fund of India in each year by way of grants-in-aid of the
revenues of such States as it may determine to be in need of
assistance. This aid may’ be different for different
States, according to their needs, with particular reference
to schemes of
800
development for the purposes indicated in Art. 275 (1).
Provision has also been made by Art. 280 for the
appointment by the President of a Finance Commission to
make, recommendations to the President as to the
distribution amongst the Union and the States of the net
proceeds of taxes and duties as aforesaid, and as to the
principles which should govern the grants-in-aid of the
revenue of the States out of the Consolidated Fund of India.
It will thus appear that Part XII of the Constitution has
made elaborate provisions as to the revenues of the Union
and of the States, and as to how the Union will share the
proceeds of duties and taxes imposed by it and collected
either by the Union or by the States. Sources of revenue
which have been allocated to the Union are not meant
entirely for the purposes of the Union but have to be
distributed according to the principles laid down by
Parliamentary legislation as contemplated by the Articles
aforesaid. Thus all the taxes and duties levied by the Union
and collected either by the Union or by the States do not
form part of the Consolidated Found of India but many of
those taxes and duties are distributed amongst the States
and form part of the Consolidated Fund of the States. Even
those taxes and duties which constitute the Consolidated
Fund of India may be used for the purposes of supplementing
the revenues of the States in accordance with their needs.
The question of the distribution of the aforesaid taxes and
duties amongst the States and the principles governing them,
as also the principles governing grants-in-aid of revenues
of the States out of the Consolidated Fund of India, are
matters which have to be decided by a high-powered Finance
Commission, which is a responsible body designated to
determine those matters in an objective way. It cannot,
therefore, be justly
810
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contended that the construction of Art. 289 suggested on
behalf of the Union will have the effect of seriously and
adversely affecting the revenues of the States. The
financial arrangement and adjustment suggested in Part XII
of the Constitution has been designed by the
Constitution makers in such a way as to ensure an equitable
distribution of the revenues between the Union and the
States, even though those revenues may be derived from taxes
and duties imposed by the Union and collected by it or
through the agency of the States. On the other hand, there
may be more serious difficulties in the way of the Union if
we were to adopt the very wide interpretation suggested on
behalf of the States. It will thus be seen that the powers
of taxation assigned to the Union are based mostly on
considerations of convenience of imposition and collection
and not with a view to allocate them solely to the Union ;
that is to say, it was not intended that all taxes and
duties imposed by the Union Parliament should be expended on
the activities of the Centre and not on the activities of
the States. Sources of revenue allocated to the States,
like taxes on land and other kinds of immovable property,
have been allocated to the States alone. The Constitution
makers realised the fact that those sources of revenue allo-
cated to the States may not be sufficient for their purposes
and that the Government of India would have to subsidise
their welfare activities out of the revenues levied and
collected by the Union Government. Realising the
limitations on the financial resources of the States and the
growing needs of the community in a welfare State, the
Constitution has made, as already indicated, specific
provisions empowering Parliament to set aside a portion of
its revenues, whether forming part of the Consolidated Fund
of India or not, for the benefit of the States, not in
stated proportions but according to their needs. It is
clear, therefore, that considerations which may apply to
those Constitutions which recognise
811
water-tight compartments between the revenues of the
federating States and those of the federation do not apply
to our Constitution which does not postulate any ’conflict
of interest between the Union on the one hand and the States
on the other. The resources of the Union Government are not
meant exclusively for the benefit of the Union activities ;
they are also meant for subsidising the activities of the
States in accordance with their respective needs,
irrespective of the amounts collected by or through them.
In other words, the Union and the States together form one
organic whole for the purposes of utilisation of the
resources of the territories of India as a whole.
Bearing the scheme of our Constitution in mind let us now
turn to the words of Art. 289 and also its complementary
article, namely, Art. 285. The contention on behalf of the
Union is that when Art. 289 provides for exemption of the
property and income of a State from Union taxation, it only
provides for exemption from such tax as may be levied
directly on property and income and not from all Union
taxes, which may have some relation to the property or
income of a State. On the other hand, the contention on
behalf of the States is that when Art. 289 (1) provides for
exemption of the property and income of a State from Union
taxation, it completely exempts the property and income of a
State from all Union taxation of whatsoever nature it may
be. So far as exemption of income is concerned, there is no
serious dispute that the exemption there is with respect to
taxes on income other than agricultural income (item 82,
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List I), for the simple reason that the only tax provided in
List I with respect to income is in item 82 of List I. The
dispute is mainly with respect to taxes on "property". Now
this fact in our opinion has an important bearing on the
nature of taxation of "’property" which is exempt under Art.
289 (1). If the income
812
of a State is exempt only from taxes on income, the
juxtaposition of the words "property and income" in Art.
289(1)must lead to the inference that property is also
exempt only from direct taxes on property. But it is said
that there is no specific tax on property in List I and it
is therefore contended on behalf of the States that when
property of a State was exempted from Union taxation, the
intention of the Constitution makers must have been to
exempt it from all such taxes which are in any way related
to property. Therefore, it is urged that the exemption is
not merely from taxes directly on property as such but from
all tax which impinge on property of a State even
indirectly, like customs duties, or export duties or excise
duties. It is true that List I contains no tax directly on
property like List II, but it does not follow from that the
Union has no power to impose a tax directly on property
under any circumstances. Article 246 (4) gives power to
Parliament to make laws with respect to any matter for any
part of the territory of India not included in a State
notwithstanding that such matter is a matter enumerated in
the State List. This means that so far as Union territories
are concerned Parliament has power to legislate not only
with respect to items in List I but also with respect to
items in List II. Therefore, so far as Union territories
are concerned, Parliament has power to impose a tax directly
on property as such. It cannot therefore be said that the
exemption of States’ property from Union taxation directly
on property under Art. 289 (1) would be meaningless as
Parliament has no power to impose any tax directly on
property. If a State has any property in any Union
territory that property would be exempt from Union taxation
on property under Art. 289 (1). The argument therefore that
Art. 289 (1) cannot be confined to tax directly on property
because there is no such tax provided in List I cannot be
accepted,
813
Now the words in Art. 289, confining ourselves to
"property", are that "the property of a State shall be
exempt from Union taxation". It is remarkable that the word
"all" does not govern the woods "Union taxation" in
Art.289(1). It does not provide that the property of a State
shall be exempt from all Union taxation. The question
therefore is whether when Art. 289 provides for the
exemption of State property from Union taxation, it only
provides for exemption from that kind of Union taxation
which is a tax directly on property. It is true that Art.
299(1) does not specifically say that the property of a
State shall be exempt from Union taxation on property. It
may however be properly inferred that was the intention if
one looks to the language of Art. 289 (2). That clause
mainly deals with income accruing or arising to a State from
trade or business carried on by it. At the same time it
provides that where the State is carrying on a trade or
business nothing in cl. (1) shall prevent the Union from
imposing any tax to such extent as Parliament may by law
provide in respect of any property used or occupied for the
purposes of such trade or business, and the authority thus
given to Parliament to tax property used or occupied in
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connection with trade or business can only refer to a tax
directly on property as such, which is used or occupied for
business, the tax being related to the use or occupation of
the property. The meaning will be clearer if we look to
Art.285. Clause (1) of that Article provides that the
property ’of the Union shall be exempt from all taxes
imposed by a State or by any authority within a State.
Prima facie the use of the words "all taxes" in cl. (1)
would suggest that the property of the Union would be exempt
from all taxes of whatsoever nature, which a State can
impose. But if one looks to cl. (2) of Art. 285 the ’nature
of taxes from which the property of the Union’ would be
exempt is clearly indicated as a tax on property. Clause
(2) provides that "nothing in clause (1) shall,until
814
Parliament by law otherwise provides, prevent any authority
within a State from levying any tax on any property of the
Union to which such property was immediately before the
commencement of this Constitution liable or treated as
liable, so long as that tax continues to be levied in that
State". It will in our opinion be permissible in view of
cl. (2) to read cl. (1) of Art. 285 when it speaks of all
taxes as relating to taxes of the nature of taxes directly
on property. We have already pointed out, when dealing with
the general considerations which should govern the
interpretation of Art. 289 (1) that the power of the Union
would be crippled if Art. 289 is interpreted as exempting
the property of a State from all Union taxes. We have also
pointed out that even though the taxes may be collected and
levied by the Union, there arc provisions in Part XII for
the assignment or distribution of many Union taxes to the
States. I here are also provisions for grants maid by the
Union from the Consolidated Fund of India to a State. In
these circumstance’s it would in our opinion be in
consonance with the scheme of the Constitution relating to
taxation to read Art. 289 (1) as laying down that the
property and income of a State shall be exempt from Union
taxation on property and income. There is in our opinion
better warrant for reading these words "’on property and
income" after the words "’Union taxation" in Art. 289(1) in
view of the scheme of our Constitution relating to taxation
and also the provisions of Part XII thereof than to read the
word "all" before the words "Union taxation" in that clause.
The effect of reading the word "all" before the words
"’Union taxation" would in our opinion be so serious, and so
crippling to the resources, which the Constitution intended
the Union to have, as to make it impossible to give that
intention to the words of cl. (1) of Article 289. On the
other hand, the States would not be so seriously affected if
we read the words "’on property and income" after the words
815
"Union taxation" in Art. 289 (1), for unlike other
Constitutions there is provision in Part XII of our
Constitution for assignment or distribution of taxes levied
and collected by the Union to the States and also for
grants-in-aid from the Union to the States, so that the
burden which may fall on the States by giving a restrictive
meaning to the words used in cl. (1) of Art, 289 would be
alleviated to a large extent in view of the provisions in
Part XII of the Constitution for assignment and distribution
of taxes levied by the Union to the States and also for
grants-in-aid from the Union to the States.
Further it must not be forgotten that Arts. 285 and 289
are successors of ss. 154 and 155 of the Government of India
Act, though there are differences in detail between them, in
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particular cl. (2) of Art. 289, which corresponds to the
proviso to s. 154 seems in our opinion to make it clear by
the change in the language, that cl. (1) of Art. 285 when it
speaks of all taxes is referring to taxes on property of
which cl. (2) definitely permits continuance provided such
property of the Union immediately before the commencement of
the Constitution was liable or was treated as liable to such
tax. As to Art. 289 (1), a change has been made in the
words, for s. 155(1), which corresponded thereto, provided
that the Government of a Province shall not be liable to
Federal taxation in respect of lands or buildings. Art. 289
on the other hand refers not only to lands and buildings but
to all property of a State, whether movable or immovable and
exempts it from Union taxation. Even so, we find no warrant
for interpreting cl. (1) of Art. 289 as if it exempts all
property of a State from all Union taxation. We are there-
fore of opinion reading Art. 289 and its complementary Art.
285 together that the intention of the Constitution makers
was that Art. 285 would exempt all property of the Union
from all taxes on property levied by a State or by any
authority within the
816
State while Art. 289 Contemplates that all property of the
States would be exempt from all taxes on property which may
be leviathan by the Union. both the Articles in our opinion
are concerned with taxes directly either on income or on
property and not with taxes which may indirectly affect
income or property. The contention therefore on behalf of
the Union that these two’ Articles should be read in the
restricted sense of exempting the property or income of a
State in one case and the property of the Union in the other
from taxes directly either on property or on income as the
case may be, is correct.
In this connection, it is pertinent to refer to certain
decision of the High Court of Australia, the Supreme Court
of Canada, and the Privy Council bearing on the construction
of similar, though not identical, provisions in the
Constitutions of Australia and Canada.
The corresponding provisions of the Canadian Constitution
are contained in ss. 91, 92 and 125 of the British North
America Act, 1867 (30-31 Vict. Ch. 3). The relevant
portion of s. 91 is as follows :-
"It shall be lawful for the Queen...... to
make laws for the peace, order and good
Government of Canada, in relation to all
matters not coming within the classes of
Subjects by this Act assigned exclusively to
the Legislatures of the Provinces; and the
greater certainty, but not so as to restrict
the generality of the fore going terms of this
Section, it is hereby declared that
(notwithstanding anything in this Act) the
exclusive legislative authority of the
Parliament of Canada extends to all matters
coming within the classes of subjects next
hereinafter enumerated; that is to say:
... .... .....
817
(2) The regulation of Trade and Commerce;
(3) The raising of money by any mode or
system of taxation."
S. 92 provides for exclusive powers of the province
including direct taxation within the Province in order to
the raising of revenue for Provincial purposes.
Section 125 is in these terms
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",No lands or property belonging to Canada or
any Province shall be liable to taxation."
It will thus be seen that the above quoted section runs very
parallel to the provisions of Art. 289 (1) of our
Constitution. These provisions of the Canadian constitution
have come up for consideration before the Supreme Court of
Canada, as also before the judicial Committee of the Privy
Council on a number of occasions. In the case of the
Attorney-General of The Province of British Columbia v. The
Attorney-General of the Dominion of Canada (64 Can. S.C.R.
377) the question arose whether the Province of British
Columbia could import liquors into Canada for the purposes
of sale, pursuant to the provisions of the Government Liquor
Act (11 Geo. V, c. 30) without payment of customs duties
imposed by the Dominion of Canada. It was argued, as has
been argued before us, that the word "tax" was wide enough
to include the imposition of customs duties, and that the
word "’property" in s. 125 included property of all kinds.
The answer given by the Dominion was that customs duties did
not constitute taxes within the meaning of the expression
used in s, 125 but were merely in the nature of regulation
of trade and commerce, and secondly, assuming that customs
duties were included in the expression "taxation", they did
not constitute taxation
818
on property. It was also contended on behalf of the
Dominion that the word "taxation" in s. 125 was not intended
to comprehend customs duties inasmuch as the prohibition
indicated by the section was intended to be reciprocal
prohibition and did not extend as regards the Dominion to
indirect taxation. The Supreme Court of Canada, by majority
judgment, upheld the decision of the Exchequer Court of
Canada which had held that the import by the Province was
liable to pay import duty to the Dominion. Thus the
contention raised on behalf of the Dominion was accepted
that customs duties were not taxes imposed on property as
such but were levied on the importation of certain goods
into Canada as a condition of their importation.
This decision of the Supreme Court was challenged before
the Privy Council, by special leave. The judgment of the
Privy Council is reported in Attroney-General of British
Columbia v. Attorney-General of Canada (1924 ’A. C. 222).
The Privy Council upheld the decision appealed from and held
that import duties imposed by the Dominion upon alcoholic
liquors imported into Canada by the Government of British
Columbia for the purposes of trade was valid. The Privy
Council based its decision on a consideration of the whole
scheme of the Canadian Constitution under which the Dominion
had the power to regulate trade and commerce throughout the
Dominion, and held that ’Is. 125 must therefore be so
considered as to prevent the paramount purpose thus declared
being defeated". The Privy Council further observed that
"the true solution is to be found in the adaptation of s.
125 to the whole scheme of Government which the statute
defines". The ratio decidendi in the case just mentioned
fully supports the contention raised on behalf of the Union
in the present case and the interpretation of Art 289 (1)
must also be adapted to the whole scheme of the
Constitution.
819
Turning now to the Constitution of Australia and the
relevant cases decided by the High Court ,of Australia, it
is necessary to set out the relevant part of s. 51 of the
Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act, 1900 (63 and 64
Vict. c. 12) :-
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"The Parliament shall, subject to this Consti-
tution, have power to make laws for the peace,
order and good Government of Commonwealth with
respect to-
(i) Trade and Commerce with other countries,
and among the States;
(ii) Taxation; but so as not to discriminate
between the States or parts of States."
This closely follows that part of s. 91 of the British
North America Act, which has vested the Federal Parliament
with the"exclusive power to legislate in respect of such
trade and commerce and taxation in respect thereof. Section
114 of the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution grants
immunity from taxation in the following terms :-
"A State shall not, without the consent of the
Parliament of the Commonwealth, raise or
maintain any naval or military force, or im-
pose any tax on property of any kind belonging
to the Commonwealth nor shall the Commonwealth
impose any tax on property of any kind
belonging to a State."
This corresponds to the provision of s. 125 of the
Canadian Constitution and Arts. 285 and 289 of our
Constitution, which have laid down the provisions as to
exemption from taxation. The question of the interpretation
of those provisions of the Australian Constitution came
before the High Court of Australia in the case of the
Attorney-General of New South
820
Wales v. The Collector of Customs for New South Wales (1907-
8) 5 C.L.R. 818. In this case an action was brought by the
State of New South Wales to recover the amount of customs
duties realised by the Collector of Customs in respect of
certain steel rails imported by the plaintiff from England
for use in the construction of the railways of the State.
The State claimed that those rails were not liable to
customs duties on the ground that they were the property of
the Government and as such exempt from customs duties by
virtue of s. 114 of the Constitution. The majority of the
Court decided that the imposition of customs duties being a
mode of regulating trade and commerce with other countries
as well as of exercising the taxing power, the goods
imported by a State Government were subject to the customs
laws of the Commonwealth. They also laid it down that the
levying of the duties of customs is not an imposition of a
tax on property within the meaning of s. 114 aforesaid. The
Court added that even if the words of the section were
capable of bearing that comprehensive meaning, that was not
the only or necessary meaning and should be rejected as
inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution con-
ferring upon the Commonwealth exclusive power to impose
duties of customs and to regulate trade and commerce.
Isaacs I came to the same conclusion though on somewhat
different grounds. In the result, the Court unanimously
held, though not for the same reasons, that the goods
imported by the State were liable to import duty. The High
Court held that the words "impose any tax" might be capable
of application to duties of customs. But it pointed out
that the levying of customs duties was not within the
comprehension of the expression "imposition of a tax on
property." It also pointed out that customs duties were
imposed in respect of goods and in a sense "’upon 19
goods,even as the expression Stamp duties, Succession Duties
and other forms of indirect taxes are said to be taxes on
deeds and other real or personal property. The
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821
Court recognised the legal position that customs duties are
not really taxation upon property but upon operations or
movements of property.
These authorities based on the interpretation of
analogous provisions in the Canadian and Australian
Constitutions fully support the contention raised on behalf
of the Union that customs duties are not taxes on property
but are imposts by way of conditions or restrictions on the
import and export of goods, in exercise of the Union’s
exclusive power of regulation of trade and commerce read
along with the power of taxation and that the general words
of the exemption have to be limited in their scope so as not
to come into conflict with the power of the Union to
regulate trade and commerce and to impose duties of customs.
It is next urged on behalf of the States that even if Art.
289 (1) only exempts the property of the States from tax
directly on property, the levy of excise on goods under item
84 of List I is a tax on property and therefore no excise
can be levied on goods belonging to States and manufactured
by them. It is further urged that duties of customs
including export duties under item 83 of List I are equally
duties on the goods imported or exported and therefore the
property of the State must be exempt under Art. 289 (1),
both from excise duties and from duties of customs including
export duties. This raises the question of the nature of
duties of excise and customs. This question with respect to
excise duties was considered by this Court in the case of A
malgamated Coalfields Ltd. v. Union of India (A.I.R. 1962
S.C: 1281). After considering the previous decisions of the
Federal Court In re. The Central Provinces and Berar Saks
of Motor and Lubricant Taxation Act (1939 F.C.R. 18) ; The
Province of Madras v. M/s. Budhu Paidanna (1942 F. C. R.
90) and of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in
Governor General in Council v. Province of Madras (1945
822
F.C.R. 179), this Court observed as follows at p. 1287:-
"With great respect, we accept the principles
laid down by the said three decisions in the
matter of levy of an excise duty and the mach-
inery for collection thereof. Excise duty is
primarily a duty on the production or man-
ufacture of goods produced or manufactured
within the country. It is an indirect duty
which the manufacturer or producer passes on
to the ultimate consumer, that is, ultimate
incidence will always be on the consumer.
Therefore, subject always to the legislative
competence of the taxing authority, the said
tax can be levied at a convenient stage so
long as the character of the impost, that is,
it is a duty on the manufacture or production,
is not lost. The method of collection does
not affect the essence of the duty, but only
relates to the machinery of collection for
administrative convenience."
This will show that the taxable event in the case of
duties of excise is the manufacture of goods and the duty is
not directly on the goods but on the manufacture thereof.
We may in this connection contrast sales tax which is also
imposed with reference to goods sold, where the taxable
event is the act of sale. Therefore, though both excise
duty and sales-tax are levied with reference to goods the
two are very different imposts ; in one case the imposition
is on the act of manufacture or production while in the
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other it is on the act of sale. In neither case therefore
can it be said that the excise duty or sales tax is a tax
directly on the goods for in that event they will really
become the same tax. It’ would thus appear that duties of
excise, partake of the nature of indirect taxes as known to
standard works on economics and are to be distinguished from
direct taxes like taxes on property and income.
823
Similarly in the case of duties of customs including export
duties though they are levied with reference to goods, the
taxable event is either the import of goods within the
customs barriers or their export outside the customs
barriers. They are also indirect taxes like excise and
cannot in our opinion be equated with direct taxes on goods
themselves. Now, what is the true nature of an import or
export duty ? Truly speaking, the imposition of an import
duty, by and large, results in a condition which must be
fulfilled before the goods can be brought inside the customs
barriers, i.e., before they form part of the mass of goods
within the country. Such a condition is imposed by way of
the exercise of the power of the Union to regulate the
manner and terms on which goods may be brought into the
country from a foreign land. Similarly an export duty is a
condition precedent to sending goods out of the country to
other lands. It is not a duty on property in the sense of
Art. 289 (1). Though the expression "taxation", as defined
in Art. 366 (28), "includes the Imposition of any tax or
impost, whether general or local or special", the amplitude
of that definition has to be cut down if the context
otherwise so requires. The position is that whereas the
Union Parliament has been vested with exclusive power to
regulate trade and commerce, both foreign and interState
(Entries 41 and 42) and with the sole responsibility of
imposing export and import duties and duties of excise, with
a view to regulating trade and commerce and raising revenue,
an exception has been engrafted in Art. 289 (1) in favour of
the States, granting them immunity from certain kinds of
Union taxation. It,therefore,becomes necessary so to
construe the provisions of the Constitution as to give full
effect to both as far as may be. If it is held that the
States are exempt from all taxation in respect of their
export or imports, it is not difficult to imagine a
situation where a State might import or export all varieties
of things and thus nullify to
824
a large extent the exclusive power of Parliament to
legislate in respect of those matters. The provisions of
Art. 289 (1) being in the nature of an exception to the
exclusive field of legislation reserved to Parliament, the
exception has to be strictly construed, and therefore,
limited to taxes on property and on income of a State. In
other words, the immunity granted in favour of States has to
be restricted to taxes levied directly on property and
income. Therefore, even though import and export duty or
duties of excise have reference to goods and commodities,
they are not taxes on property directly and are not within
the exemption in Art. 289 (1).
We may in this connection refer to the Attorney-General
for British Columbia v. Kingcome Navigation Co. Ltd. (1934
A. C. 45), to bring out the essence of duties of customs and
excise which were held by the Privy Council to be in their
essence trading taxes as distinguished from direct taxes.
But it is contended on behalf of the States that in the
scheme of our constitution no distinction has been made
between direct and indirect tax and therefore this
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distinction is not relevant to the present controversy. It
is true that no such express distinction has been made under
our Constitution; even so taxes in the shape of duties of
customs (including export duties) and excise, particularly
with a view to regulating trade and commerce in so far as
such matters are within the competence of Parliament and are
covered by various entries in List I to which reference has
already been made, cannot be called taxes on property; they
are imposts with reference to the movement of property by
way or import or export or with reference to production or
manufacture of goods. Therefore even though our Con-
stitution does not make a clear distinction between direct
and indirect taxes, there is no doubt that the exemption
provided in Art. 289 (1) from Union
825
taxation to property must refer to what are known to
economists as direct taxes on property and not to indirect
taxes like duties of customs and excise which are in their
essence trading taxes and not taxes on property.
It is also contended on behalf of the States that the
narrower construction suggested on behalf of the Union would
very seriously and adversely affect activities of the
States. This argument does not take into account the more
serious consequences that would follow if the wider
interpretation suggested on behalf of the States were to be
adopted. For example, a State may decide to embark upon
trade and commerce with foreign countries on a large scale
in respect of different commodities. On the interpretation
put forward by the States, the Union Parliament would be
powerless to regulate such trade and commerce by the use of
the power of taxation conferred on it by I entry 83 of List
I, thus largely nullifying the exclusive power of Parliament
to legislate in respect of international trade and commerce,
including the power to tax such trade. Trade and commerce
with foreign countries, export and import across the customs
frontriers and inter-State trade and commerce are all within
the exclusive jurisdiction of the Union Parliament. This
Court naturally will not adopt a construction, of Art.
289(1) which will lead to such a startling result as to
nullify the exclusive power of Parliament in these matters.
Lastly, it is urged on behalf of the States that s. 20 of
the Sea Custom Act was recast and amended ’by Act. XLV of
1951 and that sub-s. (2) thereof has borrowed most of its
words from the provisions of cl. (2) of Art. 289, and
therefore, Parliament itself had understood cl. (2) of Art.
289 in the sense in which the States are contending that it
should be interpreted. But that in our opinion does not
826
conclude the matter, for we have to construe the provisions
of the Constitution in their proper setting and we are
entitled to come to the conclusion that Parliament may not
have been correct in so interpreting the words of cl. (2) of
Art. 289.
For the reasons given above, it must be held that the
immunity granted to the States in respect of Union taxation
does not extend to duties of customs including export duties
or duties of excise. The answer to the three questions
referred to us must, therefore, be in the negative. Let the
opinion of this Court be reported to the President
accordingly.
S.K. DAS J. In exercise of the powers conferred upon him
by cl. (1) of Art. 143 of the Constitution, the President of
India has referred three questions of law to this court for
consideration and a report of its opinion thereon. These
questions are
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(1) Do the provisions of article 289 of the
Constitution preclude the Union from imposing,
or authorising the imposition of, customs
duties on the import or export of the property
of a State used for purposes other than those
specified in clause (2) of that article ?
(2) Do the provisions of article 289 of the
Constitution of India preclude the Union from
imposing, or authorising the imposition of,
excise duties on the production or manufacture
in India of the property of a State used for
purposes other than those specified in clause
(2) of that article ?
(3) Will sub-section (2) of section 20 of
the Sea Customs Act, 1878 (Act 8 of 1878), and
sub-section (1A) of section 3 of the Central
Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (Act 1
827
of 1944) as amended by the Bill set out in the
annexure be inconsistent with the provisions
of article 289 of the Constitution of India ?
We have had the advantage of very full arguments on these
questions. The learned Solicitor-General of India has put
forward the point of view on behalf of the Union of India.
Several States were represented before us by their
Advocates-General or other counsel. Except for the State of
Maharashtra which has taken a stand somewhat akin to that of
the Union of India, there is a sharp conflict between the
States and the Union as to the answers to be given to the
three questions. We shall presently refer in greater detail
to the points of conflict but it may be generally stated
that except for the State of Maharashtra, the States have
taken the stand that under Art. 289 of the Constitution the
property of a State is exempt from the imposition of customs
duties and excise duties except to the extent permitted
under clause (2) of the said article. The Union of India
has taken the stand that the amplitude of power given to the
Union Legislature to impose duties of customs (entry 83 of
List I of the Seventh Schedule) and duties of excise (entry
84 of List I of the Seventh Schedule) can be cut down only
by a. very strict interpretation of article 289 and that
strict interpretation is that cl. (1) of Art. 289 is
confined to a property tax only, namely, a tax on the goods
as such and not on their importation or exportation or on
their production and manufacture, and looked at from that
point of view Art. 289 of the Constitution does not give any
protection to a State in the matter of customs duties and
excise duties.
It is necessary perhaps to say something at this stage
about the constitutional background against which the
questions fall for consideration. The Sea
828
Customs Act, 1878 (8 of 1878) was enacted in March 1878 in
order to consolidate and amend the law relating to the levy
of sea customs duties. The Central Excises and Salt Act,
1944 (1 of 1944) was enacted in February 1944 to consolidate
and amend the law relating to central duties of excise and
to salt. The Government of India Act, 1915 (5 and 6 Geo. 5,
c. 61) was a consolidating measure repealing and reenacting
the numerous Parliamentary Statutes relating to the
administration of British India which had been passed
between the years 1770 and 1912. This Act was amended in
certain minor respects by the Government of India Amendment
Act, 1916 (6 and 7 Geo. 5, c. 37) which also contained
certain substantive provisions not incorporated in the
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principal Act. In 1919 the Act again underwent amendment by
the passing of the Government of India Act, 1919 (9 and 10
Geo. 5, c. 101) which was enacted for the purpose of
bringing into effect the Indian constitutional reforms based
on what is commonly known as the Montagu-Chelmsford Report.
Section 45 of the Act of 1919 provided that the amendments
made by that Act and the Act of 1916 be incorporated in the
text of the Government of India Act, 1915, and that Act as
so amended be known as the Government of India Act. This
Government of India Act constituted an Indian Legislature
consisting of two Chambers, namely, the Council of States
and the Legislative Assembly. This Legislature bad the
power to make laws for all persons, for all courts and for
all places and things within British India and had also the
power to repeal or alter any laws which were in force in any
part of British India. Prior to the Government of India
Act, 1935 (26 Geo. V, c. 2) the dominion and authority of
the Crown, which extended over the whole of British India,
was derived from many sources, in part statutory and in part
prerogative, the former having their origin in Acts of the
British Parliament and the latter in rights based upon
conquest, cession or usage
829
some of which were directly acquired while others were
enjoyed by the Crown as successor to the rights of the East
India Company. The Secretary of State for India was the
Crown’s responsible agent for the exercise of all authority
vested in the Crown in relation to the affairs of India.
But the superintendence, direction and control of the civil
and military government of India was declared by the
Government of India Act to be vested in the
Governor-General-in-Council; while the government or
administration of the Governers’ and Chief Commissioners’
Provinces vested respectively in the local governments.
The Government of India Act, 1935 introduced a dual system
of government in the shape of autonomous Provinces and a
Federation; two sets of Legislatures were set up, one
Federal Legislature and the other Provincial Legislature.
In the Seventh Schedule were given three Lists, Federal
Legislative List called List 1 Provincial Legislative List
called List 11 and the Concurrent legislative list called
List III. Legislative power was distributed amongst the
legislatures in accordance with those lists. Duties of
custom, including export duties came within item 44 of List
I and duties of excise on tobacco and other goods
manufactured or produced in India except alcoholic liquors,
opium etc., came within item 45. The In Indian Legislature
amended the Sea Customs Act.. 1878 as also the Central
Excises and Salt Act, 1944 from time to time in exercise of
the powers which it had either under the Government of India
Act., or the Government of India Act, 1935. The Indian
Independence Act, 1947 created the Dominion of India as from
August 15, 1947 and the Secretary of State for India as the
Crown’s responsible agent for Indian affairs disappeared
from the Indian constitutional scene. The Constitution of
India came into force on January 26, 1950. This
Constitution envisaged India as a Sovereign
830
Democratic Republic, viz., a Union of States but the scheme
of the Government of India Act, 1935 with regard to
distribution of legislative powers between Parliament, which
is the Union Legislature, and the State Legislatures was
continued. The Seventh Schedule of the Constitution contains
three lists, Union List called List 1, State List called
List 11, and Concurrent List called List III. Entry 83 of
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List I relates to duties of customs including export duties
and entry 84 relates to duties of excise on tobacco and
other goods manufactured or produced in India except
alcoholic liquors, opium etc. The distribution of
legislative powers and the legislative relations between the
Union and the States are controlled by various articles,
namely, Arts. 245 to 258, in Chapter 1 of Part XI of the
Constitution. We may indicate here briefly the
constitutional position that in normal circumstances
Parliament has exclusive power to make laws with respect to
any of the matters enumerated in List 1, and the Legislature
of any State has exclusive power to make laws for any such
State with respect to any of the matters enumerated in List
11; both Parliament and the Legislature of a State have
power to make laws with respect to any of the matters
enumerated in List III.
Under Art. 245 of the Constitution, the power of
Parliament as also of the Legislature of a State to make
laws is subject to the provisions of the Constitution. Some
of these provisions are contained in Art. 285 and Art. 289
which occur in Chapter 1 of Part XII of the Constitution.
This Part deals with several subjects, such as Finance
(Chapter 1), Borrowing (Chapter 11) and Property, Contracts
etc. (Chapter 111). We may now read Art. 289 :
"289 (1) The property and income of a State
shall be exempt from Union taxation.
831
(2) Nothing in clause (i) shall prevent the
Union from imposing, or authorising the
imposition of, any tax to such extent, if any,
as Parliament may by of law provide in respect
of a trade or business of any kind carried on
by, or on behalf of, the Government of a
State, or any operations connected therewith,
or any property used or occupied for the
purposes of such trade or business, or any
income accruing or arising in connection
therewith.
(3) Nothing in clause (2) shall apply to any
trade or business, or to any class of trade or
business, which Parliament may by law declare
to be incidental to the ordinary functions of
government."
The interpretation of this article is the main subject for
consideration in this reference.
Soon after the coming into force of the Constitution, s.
20 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878 which stated what goods
would be dutiable under the Act, was, amended by the Union
Legislature by Act XLV of 1951. The amendment took the
shape of inserting a subsection in s. 20, sub-s. (2), which
said that the provisions of sub-s. (1) shall apply in
respect of goods belonging to the Government of a State and
used for the purpose of a trade or business of any kind
carried on by, or on behalf of, that Government or of any
operations connected with such trade or business as they
apply in respect of goods not belonging to any Government.
A similar amendment was made in s. 3 of the Central Excises
and Salt Act, 1944 by inserting sub-s. (1A) in that section.
That sub-section said that the provisions of sub-s. (1)
shall apply to all excisable goods other than salt which are
produced or manufactured in India by, or on behalf of a
Government of a State (other than a Union territory) and
used for the purposes
832
of a trade or business of any kind carried on by or on
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behalf of that Government, or of any operations connected
with such trade or business as they apply ;in respect of
goods which are not produced or manufactured by any
Government. It is obvious that these two amendments were
intented to bring the Sea Customs Act, 1878 and the Central
Excises and Salt Act, 1944 into harmony with Art. 289 of the
Constitution. In 1962 the Union Government introduced a
draft Bill in Parliament further to amend the Sea Customs
Act, 1878 and the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944. We
may quote two clauses, of this draft Bill in order to
appreciate how this reference has come to be made to this
court. These two clauses are clauses 2 and 3 of the draft
Bill which run :
2. Amendment of section 20, Act 8 of 1878,-
In section 20 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878,
for sub-section (2) the following sub-section
shall be substituted, namely
"(2) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall
apply in respect of all goods belonging to the
Government as they apply in respect of goods
not belonging to the Government."
3. Amendment of section 3, Act 1 of 1944,- In
section 3 of the Central Excises and Salt Act,
1944, for sub-section (1A) the following sub-
section shall be substituted, namely :-
"(1A) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall
apply in respect of all excisable good other
than salt which are produced or manufactured
in India by, or on behalf of, the Government
as they apply in respect of goods which are
not produced or manufactured by the
Government."
833
This draft Bill gave rise to a controversy and the
Governments of certain States expressed the view that the
amendments proposed in the draft Bill would not be
constitutionally valid as the provisions of Art. 289 read
with the definitions of ’taxation’ and ’tax’ in cl. (28) of
Art. 366 of the Constitution preclude the Union from
imposing or authorising the imposition of any tax, including
customs duties and excise duties, on or in relation to any
property of a State, except to the extent permitted by cl.
(2) read with cl. (3) of the said Art. 289. The Union
Government was, however, of the view that the exemption from
Union taxation granted by cl. (1) of Art. 289 was restricted
to Union taxes on the property of a State and did not extend
to Union taxes in relation to the property of a State;
therefore, customs duties being taxes on the import or
export of goods and not on goods as such and excise duties
being taxes on the production or manufacture of goods and
not on goods as such did not come within the protection of
cl. (1) of Art. 289. This conflict of views gave rise to
doubts as to the true interpretation and scope of Art. 289
of the Constitution and in particular, as to the
constitutional validity of the amendments proposed in the
draft Bill. This led the President to refer the three
questions stated above to this court for consideration and a
report of its opinion thereon.
In one of the very earliest references made to the Federal
Court (In are The Central Provinces and Bert Sales of Motor
Spirit and Lubricants Taxation Act, 1938 (Central Provinces
and Bert Act. No. XIV of 1938) (1), under s. 213 of the
Government of India Act, 1935 (which corresponded to Art.
143 of the Constitution), Gwyer C. J. observed that the
rules which would apply to the interpretation of other
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statutes would apply equally to the interpretation of a
constitutional enactment, but their application must be
conditioned of necessity by the
(1) [1939] F.C.R. 18.
834
subject matter of the enactment itself, namely, the nature
and scope of the Act itself which is a Constitution, "’a
mechanism under which laws are to be made and not a mere Act
which declares what the law ought to be". He said that this
was especially true of a Federal Constitution, with its nice
balance of jurisdictions. We recognise that a broad and
liberal spirit must inspire those whose duty it is to
interpret an organic instrument which sets up a
constitutional machinery, a machinery meant to control the
life of a nation, to embody its ideals, and facilitate the
realisation of such ideals for the present and the future;
this does not however imply that those whose duty it is to
interpret the Constitution are free to stretch or pervert
the language of the enactment in the interests of any legal
or constitutional theory or even for the purpose Of
supplying omissions or of correcting supposed errors.
Keeping these principles in mind let us consider the
problem before us by an examination of the relevant articles
of the Constitution bearing on that problem. The crux of
the problem is the true scope and effect of Art. 289 of the
Constitution which we have quoted earlier. Cl. (1) of Art.
289 states that the property and income of a State shall be
exempt from Union taxation. Now, Art. 366 (28) says in
clear terms that, unless the context otherwise requires, the
expression "taxation" includes the imposition of any tax or
impost whether general or local or special and the word
"tax" shall be construed accordingly. We shall presently
consider the question whether the context of Art. 289
requires a different meaning to be given to the word
"taxation". But let us first see what happens if we read
Art. 289 (1) by substituting for the expression "taxation"
the words which Art. 366 (28) says the expression "taxation"
includes. GI. (1) of Art. 289 will then read as follows :
"The property and income of a State shall be
exempt from the imposition of any tax or
835
impost, whether general or local or special,
by the Union."
There can be no manner of doubt that customs duty or excise
duty is an impost within the meaning of Art. 366 (28), and
this the learned Solicitor-General has not contested. If
therefore Art. 289 (1) is interpreted with the key furnished
by Art. 366 (28), then it seems to us that however broad and
liberal a spirit may inspire those whose duty it is to
interpret the article, it would be impossible to stretch or
pervert the language (of the article which in the clearest
of terms says that the property and income of a State shall
be exempt from any impost, whether general or local or
special, by the Union.
So far as the property of the Union is concerned the
counter part of Art. 289 is Art. 285 which reads :
"(1) The property of the Union shall, save in
so far as Parliament may by law otherwise
provide be exempt from all taxes imposed by a
State or by any authority within a State.
(2) Nothing in clause (1) shall, until
Parliament by law otherwise provides, prevent
any authority within a State from levying any
tax on any property of the Union to which such
property was immediately before the com-
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mencement of this Constitution liable or
treated as liable, so long as that tax
continues to be levied in that State."
Now’ the words of Art. 285 (1) are still more clear and
emphatic. It says that the property of the Union shall,
save in so far as Parliament may by law otherwise provide be
exempt from all taxes imposed by a State or by any authority
within a State. The expression "all taxes" must mean all
taxes whether they be on property or in relation to
property.
836
Neither in Art. 289 (1) nor in Art. 285 (1) do we see any
restricting words which would cut down the full meaning of
the expression "taxation" in Art. 289 or "all taxes" in Art.
285. The distribution of legislative powers under Art. 245
is in express terms subject to the provisions of the
Constitution. The result therefore is that Parliament
cannot legislate to take away the exemption given by Art.
289 (1), nor can a State Legislature Legislate to take away
the exemption given by Art. 285 (1). If one follows the
principles of interpretation to which we have earlier
referred the plain effect of Arts. 245, 285 (1), 289 (1) and
366 (28) appears to be this : under Art. 285 (1) the
property of the Union shall be exempt from all taxes imposed
by the State or by any authority within a State, save in so
far as Parliament may by law otherwise provide ; the
property and income of a State shall be exempt from Union
taxation save in so far as cl. (2) Of Art. 289 allows or
authorises the imposition of any tax. on the property of a
State.
Let us now consider whether’ the context of Art. 289 or
any of the other articles in the Constitution requires that
a different meaning should be given to the expression
"taxation" or "’taxes" in Art. 289 (1) or Art. 285 (1).
The learned Solicitor-General has emphasised the use of
the words ’property’ and ’income’ in Art. 289 and has
further submitted that the word ’income’ was not necessary
in Art. 285 (1) and has not been mentioned there, because
"taxes on income other than agricultural income" is an item
in List I of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution and a
State, or an authority within a State, has no legislative
competence to impose a tax on income. From the use of the
two words property’ and ,income’ in cl. (1) of Art. 289, the
learned Solicitor. General has argued that the intention of
the makers
837
of the Constitution must have been to restrict cl. (1) to a
direct tax on property or income, that is, a tax on property
as such or a tax on income as such, He has elaborated this
argument in this way: as ’income shall be exempt from tax’
means that income shall be exempt from income-tax, in the
same way the expression ’property shall be exempt from tax’
means that property shall be exempt from property tax In
other words, he contends, that the word ’property must
control the word ’taxation’ and must be interpreted as
modifying the comprehensive connotation of the word
"taxation’.
We are wholly unable to accept this line of argument as
correct. The learned Solicitor-General has indeed conceded
that the word "property’ in cl. (1) of Art. 289 has a
comprehensive connotation and refers to all property and
assets of a State. Article 294 which occurs in the same
Part of the Constitution states that as from the
commencement of the Constitution all property and assets
which immediately before such commencement were vested in
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His Majesty for the purposes of the Government of the
Dominion of India and all property and assets which
immediately before such commencement were vested in His
Majesty for the purposes of the Government of each
Governor’s Province shall vest respectively in the Union and
the corresponding State. It is clear therefore that in the
Constitution the word ’property’ is used in a comprehensive
sense to include all assets, movable or immovable. Apart
from those assets which vested in the Union or a State at
the commencement of the Constitution, the Union or a State
may acquire new assets. This is also provided for in Arts.
296 to 298 of the constitution. Therefore, in both Arts.
285 and 289 the word ’property’ means all property and
assets which vested in the Union or a State at the
commencement of the Constitution and all property and assets
which may thereafter be acquired by the Union or a State.
838
In cl. (1) of Art. 289, the subject of the sentence is ’
property and income’ and the predicate is ’shall be exempt
from Union taxation’. Grammatically, the clause can only
mean this: all property and income of a State shall be
exempt from all taxation by the Union, giving the word
’taxation’ its comprehensive meaning, as required by Art.
366 (28). It is necessary to emphasis here that the word
’property’ used in the sentence is not used as a word
qualifying the word ’taxation’; rather it is used as a
subject which gets the benefit of exemption from Union
taxation. One can understand that when one says that State
income shall be free from Union tax he means that such
income shall be free from Union income-tax, particularly
when there is only one legislative item with regard to a tax
on income (.other than agricultural income) which is entry
82 in List I. But we fail to appreciate how the word ’
property’ can be used as qualifying the word ’taxation’ and
thereby restricting the ambit of its comprehensive
connotation. The Union power of taxation on or in relation
to property of various kinds ranges over a wide field; see
entries 82 to 92A of the Constitution. Why then should the
use of the word ’property’ in Arts. 285 and 289 refer only
to those items which enable the imposition of a direct tax
on property and not to other,,,? We find no legitimate
ground for such a restriction in the context of Art. 289.
Such a restriction would, in our opinion, be clearly against
the plain language of the article.
The learned Solicitor-General has conceded that Art. 285
(1) and 289 (1) are analogous and complementary articles and
bear the same meaning. In Art. 285 (1) the word ’income’
does not occur, but the word ’property’ occurs. It states
that the property of the Union shall be exempt from all
taxes imposed by a State etc. We fail to see how in Art.
285 (1) the word ’property’ can be taken to qualify and cut
down the expression "all taxes"
839
occurring therein. It should be obvious that the expression
’all taxes’ means all taxes, and the clear intention as
expressed in Art. 285 (1) is that the property of the Union
shall be exempt from all taxes imposed by a State or by any
authority within a State, including even a tax on
agricultural income derived from Union property. It is
worthy of note here that the items in List II which deal
with taxes or duties which can be imposed by a State Legis-
lature are those contained in items 46 to 62 thereof Some of
these items are indeed taxes on property as such, e. g.,
item 49, "taxes on lands and buildings"; item 56, "taxes on
goods and passengers carried by road or on inland
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waterways"; item 57, "taxes on vehicles, whether
mechanically propelled or not, suitable for use on roads
etc"; and item 58, "taxes on animals and boats". Some other
items are in relation to property, but are not on property
as such; e.g., item 51, "duties of excise on the manufacture
or production of alcoholic liquors for human consumption
manufactured in the State and countervailing duties at the
same or lower rates on similar goods manufactured or
produced elsewhere in India"; item 52, "taxes on the entry
of goods into a local area for consumption. use or sale
therein"; item 54, "taxes on the sale or purchase of goods
other than newspapers"; and item 55, "taxes on
advertisements other than advertisements published in the
newspapers". If the argument of the learned Solicitor-
General is correct, then the property of the Union will be
exempt from such taxes imposed by a State, or by an
authority within a State, as are property taxes, that is,
taxes on property as such, but not exempt from taxes which
are on the manufacture or production of goods, entry of
goods, sale or purchase of goods etc. This would mean that
the expression ’all taxes’ occurring in Art. 285(1) would
lose its meaning, and we must read the article as though
when the Constitution makers used the expression ’all
taxes’. they meant some taxes only and not all taxes. It is
to be
840
noticed that under Art. 366(28) the word ’tax’ has also to
be construed in the same comprehensive way as the word
’taxation’. It is necessary to state here that fortunately
for us, neither under the Government of India Act, 1935 nor
under our present Constitution, it is necessary to examine
the niceties of distinction between direct and indirect
taxation, as no such division exists in the Government of
India Act, 1935 or in the Constitution. There are several
taxes like taxes on luxuries or trade which can be indirect;
and some taxes like succession duties (and even excise) have
in part been assigned to both.
In M. P. V. Sundararamier & Co. v. The State of Andhra
Pradesh (1), this court observed that our Constitution was
not written on a tabula rasa; and that a Federal
Constitution had been established under the Government of
India Act, 1935, and though that has undergone considerable
change by way of repeal, modification and addition, it still
remains the frame work on which the present Constitution is
built. On an analysis of the subjects in List I and List II
of the Seventh :Schedule of the Constitution, this court
observed :
"The above analysis and it is not exhaustive
of the Entries in the Lists leads to the
inference that taxation is not intended to be
comprised in the main subject in which it
might on an extended construction be regarded
as included, but is treated as a distinct
matter for purposes of legislative competence.
And this distinction is also manifest in the
language of Art. 248, Cls. (1) and (2), and of
Entry 97 in List I of the Constitution."
The distinction is between the main subject of legislation
and a tax in relation thereto; the main subject of
legislation figures in one group and a tax in relation
thereto is separately mentioned in a
(1) [1956] S. C4 R. 1422,
941
second group, but no distinction is drawn between direct and
indirect taxation. There are several taxing items in List I
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and List II which will take in both direct and indirect
taxation. In re The Central Provinces and Berar Sales of
Motor spirit and Lubricant,s Taxation Act, 1938 (Central
Provinces and Berar Act No. XIV of 1938 (1)), Sulaiman J.,
after referring to the Canadian Constitution as embodied in
the British North America Act, 1867, and the Australian
Constitution as embodied in the Commonwealth of Australia
Constitution Act, 1900, observed that unlike those
Constitutions the Government of India Act, 1935, did not
make any distinction between direct and indirect taxation
and in the matter of legislative competence the ultimate
incidence of the tax was not necessarily a crucial test and
there was no justification for adopting any such principle
as that certain classes of duties which were to be regarded
as direct had been assigned to the Provinces, and other
classes regarded as indirect had been reserved for the
Federation (see the observations at page 73). As in the
Government of India Act, 1935, so also in our Constitution
the distinction for purposes of legislative competence is
between the main subject of legislation and a tax in
relation thereto.
If this be the correct position, then it is impossible to
accept the argument advanced on behalf of the Union that the
word ’property’ in cl. (1) of Art. 289 or cl. (1) of Art.
285 makes a distinction between direct and indirect
taxation, namely, a tax on property as such and a tax in
relation to property.
If we examine cls. (2) and (3) of Art. 289 and cl. (2) of
Art. 285, the position becomes still more clear. It seems
clear to us that cl. (2) of Art. 289 carves out an exception
to cl. (1) in the sense that it states that nothing in cl.
(1) shall prevent the
(1) [1939] F.C.R. 18,
842
Union from imposing or authorising the imposition of any tax
to such extent, if any, as Parliament may by law provide in
respect of a trade or business of any kind carried on, by or
on behalf of; a Government of a State, or any operations
connected therewith, or any property used or occupied for
the purposes of such trade or business, or any income
accruing or arising in connection therewith. Cl. (3) says
that, nothing in cl. 2 shall apply to any trade or business
or to any class of trade or business which Parliament may by
law declare to be incidental to the ordinary functions of
Government. Cf. (2) creates an exception to cl. (1) and cl.
(3) creates an exception upon an exception. The broad
distinction drawn in these two clauses is between trading or
business activities of the Government of a State and its
governmental functions. In respect to its trading or
business activities a tax may be imposed and if any property
is used or occupied for the purpose of trade or business, it
is liable to tax. If however the trade or business is
declared by Parliament to be incidental to the ordinary
functions of a Government, the exemption given by cl. (1)
will operate and cl. (2) will not defeat that operation.
The combined effect of cls. (1), (2) and (3) appears to be
this: under cl. (1) the property and income of a State is
exempt from Union taxation; cl. (2) however says that the
income of a State derived from commercial activities or the
property of a State in respect of a trade or business of any
kind carried on by or on behalf of a Government of a State
or any operations connected therewith or any property. used
or occupied for the purpose of such trade or business shall
not be immune from Union taxation; under cl. (3) however
Parliament may by law declare any trade or business or any
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class of trade or business of a State to be incidental to
the ordinary functions of Government and if Parliament so
declares, cl. (2) will not apply and the operation of cl.
(1) will not be arrested. What
843
is a governmental function or what is a trading or business
function is not always easy ’to determine? Thus, in
Australia, activities of the Government have been held to be
’industrial’ even though nothing is charged for the
services,, e. g. municipal road construction, harbour
dredging. piloting and ferries. Our Constitution, avoids
this difficulty by empowering Parliament to declare by law
that any trade or business carried on by a State shall not
come within the scope of cl. (2) of the article but shall be
deemed to be ’incidental to the ordinary functions of
government’. Upon such declaration no taxation by the Union
of such trade or business or property or income connected
therewith will be possible. This seems to us to be the true
effect of the three clauses of Art. 289.
If cl. (1) of Art. 289 has a restricted meaning as is
contended for by the learned Solicitor-General on behalf of
the Union, then the distinction drawn between trading or
business activities on one hand and governmental functions
on the other in cl. (2) and cl. (3) of Art. 289 loses its
full significance; for cls. (1) and (2) distinguish between
trading and other functions and cls. (2) and (3) distinguish
between ordinary trading and trading which is really govern-
mental function. If all that the Union is prevented from
doing is to put a tax on property as such, what was the
purpose of drawing a distinction between the trading or
business activities of Government And its governmental
functions ? If the tax is to be levied on property as such,
then obviously there cannot be any impost on a trading or
business activity, as for example, on the production or
manufacture of goods etc. Why was it necessary then to make
a reference to trading or business activities or operations
in cls. (2) and (3) of Art. 289 ? It would have been enough
merely to say that property used or occupied in connection
with a trade or business will be liable to a tax, but not
other property. But
844
the ambit of cl. (2) is much wider than the mere use or
occupation of property in connection with trade or business.
It has reference to trading or business activities, such as,
the production and manufacture of goods., transportation of
goods etc. Why was it necessary for the Constitution-makers
to refer to such trading or business activities in cl. (2)
if all that they had in mind in cl. (1) was a direct tax on
property ? In our opinion, the learned Solicitor-General has
given no satisfactory explanation with regard to this aspect
of the case. He suggested at first that cl. (2) was not an
exception, but merely explanatory of cl. (1). It is
difficult to understand why there should be a reference to
business or trading activities in cl. (2) if the entire
intendment was to confine the exemption to a direct tax on
property. The learned Solicitor-General then said that even
if cl. (2) was an exception, it was an exception only in the
matter of property tax. That would mean that only the last
portion of cl. (2) which refers to property used or occupied
for the purpose of trading or business activities of a State
Government has any significance and not the other parts
which relate to trading or business activities, such as,
production or manufacture of goods etc.
We have noticed earlier that the amendments which
Parliament itself made in 1951 in s. 20 of Sea Customs Act,
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1878 and s. 3 of the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944 by
inserting two subsections thereto showed that Parliament
understood cl. (2) of Art. 289 as creating an exception to
cl. (1). Those two amendments, sub-s. (3) of s. 20 of the
Sea Customs Act, 1878 and sub-s. (1A) of s. 3 of the Central
Excises and Salt Act, 1944, draw a distinction between the
trading activities of the Government of a State and its
governmental functions; no exemption is given in respect of
goods belonging to a State Government and used for the
purpose of a trade or business of any kind carried on
845
by or on behalf of that Government or of any operations
connected with such trade or business, but exemption is
granted in respect of other goods belonging to Government.
If, therefore, we look to the context of Art. 289,
particularly cls. (2) and (3) thereof, it becomes manifest
that there is nothing in Art. 289 which restricts the
comprehensive meaning to be given to the word ’taxation’ in
Art. 289. Similar is the position with regard to cl. (2) of
Art. 285. That again creates an exception to cl. (1) of
Art. 285 and saves any tax on any property of the Union to
which such property was immediately before the commencement
of the Constitution liable or treated as liable to tax, so
long as that tax continues to be levied in that State.
One very serious objection to the contention of the
learned Solicitor-General, an objection which appears to us
to be almost fatal, is that in the taxing entries in List I
(from entry 82 to entry 92A) there is no entry which would
enable the Union to impose a tax on property as such, that
is, a direct tax on property as property in the sense
suggested by the learned Solicitor-General for his
interpretation of Art. 289 (1). There are however, entries
in List II to some of which we have referred carrier, which
would enable the State Legislature to impose a direct tax on
property, such as, ’lands and buildings’ and animals and
boats’ etc. If the learned Solicitor-General is right in
his contention, then the only tax from which the property of
a State can claim exemption under cl. (1) of Art. 289 is
’Property tax’ to be imposed by the Union, and yet under the
legislative entries in List I the Union cannot impose a
’property tax" on State property at all. To this aspect of
the case the reply of the learned Solicitor-General has been
two fold ; he has first referred us to entry 89 (terminal
taxes on goods and passengers carried by
846
railway, sea or air), entry 86 (taxes on the capital value
of the assets, exclusive of agricultural land, of
individuals and companies) and entry 97, the residuary
entry; secondly, he has referred us to Art. 246 (4) under
which Parliament has power to make laws with respect to any
matter for any part of the territory of India not included
in a State notwithstanding that such matter is a matter
enumerated in the State List. His argument is that the
Union can impose a property tax under any of the aforesaid
three entries; secondly, under Art. 246 (4) the Union can
impose a property tax on State property if that property is
situate in a territory riot included in a State. It appears
to us that the argument does not really meet the objection
raised on behalf of the States. Entry 86 relates to capital
value of the assets of individuals and companies and has
nothing to do with State property, for the State is neither
an individual nor a company. Entry 89 relates to a terminal
tax which is essentially different from a property tax in
the sense contended for by the learned Solicitor-General.
We find it difficult to believe that the exemption given by
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cl. (1) of Art. 289 was meant as a safeguard against the
exercise of power under the residuary entry. Apart from
that, we have considerable doubt if the residuary entry will
take in a " property tax’ when there are entries relating to
such tax in List If. It would be a case of much ado about
nothing if the Constitution solemnly provided for an
exemption against ’property tax’ on Stea property only for
such rare cases as are contemplated in Art. 246 (4), the
situation of State property in territory not included in a
State. Such situation would be very rare, and could have
hardly necessitated a solemn safeguard at the inception of
the Constitution when the States were classed under Part A
or Part B of the First Schedule. If the widsr
interpretation of cl. (1) of Art. 289 is accepted, sue
property would also be exempt from Union taxatioch except in
cases covered by cl. (2) of the article. We
847
find it difficult to accept the contention that cl. (1) of
Art. 289 was meant only for cases covered by Art. 246 (4);
for that would be the result of the interpretation canvassed
for on behalf of the Union.
We proceed now to consider the problem from three other
aspects : (1) against the background of similar provisions
in the Government of India Act, 1935; (2) in the light of
the scheme under the Constitution of the financial relations
between the States and the Union; and (3) the distribution
of taxing powers between the States and the Union.
As to the Goverenment of India Act, 1935 the relevant
provisions are contained in ss. 154 and 155. They read as
follows (so far as relevant for oar purpose) :
"S. 154. Property vested in His Majesty for
purposes of the government of the Federation
shall, save in so far as any Federal law may
otherwise provide, be exempt from all taxes
imposed by, or by any authority within, a
Province or Federated State :
Provided that, until any Federal law
otherwise provides, any property so vested
which was immediately before the commencement
of Part III of this Act liable, or treated as
liable, to any such tax, shall, so long as
that tax continues, continue to be liable, or
to be treated as liable, thereto.
S. 155. (1) Subject as hereinafter provi-
ded, the Government of a Province and the
Ruler of a Federated State shall not be liable
to Federal taxation in respect of lands or
buildings situate in British India or income
848
accruing, arising or received in British India
Provided that-
(a) where a trade or business of any kind is
carried on by or on behalf of the Government
of a Province in any part of British India,
outside that Province or by a Ruler in any
part of British India, nothing in this sub-
section shall exempt that Government or Ruler
from any Federal taxation in respect of that
trade or business, or any operations.
connected therewith, or any income arising in
connection therewith. or any property occupied
for the purposes thereof;
(b) x x x
(2) x x X"
Before the Government of India Act, 1935 the scheme of
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government was essentially unitary though there were local
legislatures with limited powers. For the purpose of
distinguishing the functions of the local governments and
local legislatures of Governor’s Provinces from the
functions of the Governor-General in Council and the Indian
Legislature, subjects were classified in relation to the
functions of Government as Central and Provincial subjects
in accordance with the Lists set on in Schedule 1 of the
Devolution Rules made under ss. 45-A and 129-A of the
Government of India Act, 1919. All Government property then
vested in His Majesty for the purpose of the Government of
India and there was no necessity for any special provision
granting immunity to that property from taxation. The
Government of India Act, 1935 introduced a dual system of
Government. Part III of the Government of India Act, 1935
came into force on April 1, 1937. Properties belonging to
the Crown and in existence prior to that date were
849
governed by the general law enunciated by the courts,
judicial opinion was however not uniform. In some cases it
was held that statutes imposing duties of taxes bind
Government unless the very nature of the duty or tax is such
as to be inapplicable to Government. On the other hand, in
some cases it was held that the law was the same in India as
in England, where the principle of immunity of Crown
property from taxation followed from the prerogative that
the Crown was not bound by any statutes unless expressly
named. When the dual system of Government was first
introduced by the Government of India Act, 1935 the question
of immunity of taxation of property of one Government by the
other arose.
The doctrine of Immunity of Instrumentalities was
propounded by the Supreme Court of the United States in the
case of McCulloch v. Maryland (s), to mean that when two
separate Governments are established as in a Federal
Constitution, each with a limited jurisdiction, the power of
each Government shall be construed as being under an implied
limitation that it shall be so exercised as not to impair
the functions allotted to the other Government. Hence, any
incidental or indirect interference with the functions of
the Federal Government would make a State legislation bad
even though the legislation might relate to a subject
allotted to the State Legislature and conversely. It was
held that a State could not tax the agencies or
instrumentalities of the Federal Government and a similar
limitation would apply as regards the Federal Legislature.
This doctrine has had many vicissitudes of fortune in the
decisions of the courts in America. We do not think that it
is necessary to deal with the history of those vicissitudes.
The Government of India Act, 1935 as also the
Constitution of’ 1950 contained provisions which accepted
the principle with a limited application as regards the
exemption from mutual taxation,, in
(1) [1819] 4 Wh. 316.
850
ss. 154 and 155 of the Act of 1935 and Arts. 285 and 289 of
the Constitution. In the words of the Judicial Committee in
Webb v. Outrim (1), it may be stated that the very inclusion
of the aforesaid provisions shows that the question of
interference on the part of the Federal and State powers as
a against each other was not left to an ’implied prohibition
or limitation’ but the provisions themselves define the
extent of the immunity. Outside those provisions the State
and Union Legislatures have the full power to legislate on
the matters included within their respective Lists, subject
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always to the other provisions of the Constitution.
Like Arts. 085 and 289 of the Constitution, the aforesaid
ss. 154 and 155 are complementary to each other and provide
for the mutual exemption of the property of the Federation
and the Provinces from taxation imposed by the other: this
is consistent with the general practice of federal
constitutions to exempt the governments of the units from
Federal taxation, that being part of a reciprocal
arrangement under which the Federal Government also is
exempt from taxation by the several units (see Parliamentary
Debates, Vol. 302, Cols. 523 and 524). One noticeable
feature of the two sections is that whereas s. 154 speaks of
the ""property vested in His Majesty for the purpose of the
Federation" so as to include movable property also (see Bell
v. Municipal Commissioner of Madras (2), s. 155 which
confers exemption on the property of the "units" is confined
to lands and buildings. The result would be that movable
property belonging to the Federation would be exempt from
duties like octroi which might be levied under the
Provincial law, while, goods of the Provincial Governments
and "units" would be subject to the customs and excise
duties levied by the Federal Government. Income from
commercial undertakings and operations in the nature of
trade carried on by the units, so long as they are confined
(1) [1907] A.C. 81.
(2) 25 Madras 457.
851
within the territory of that unit is not liable to Federal
income-tax. This, in short, was the scheme of ss. 154 and
155 of the Government of India Act, 1935. Now, if ss. 154
and 155 of the Government of India Act, 1935 are contrasted
with Arts. 285 and 289 of the Constitution, one noticeable
difference strikes one at once. The expression lands and
buildings’ in s. 155 is changed to "property’ in Art. 289;
in other words, the Union and the States are practically put
on the same footing so far as exemption from taxation of one
by the other is concerned. Both Arts. 285 and 289 mention
’property’ in a comprehensive sense, and the distinction
between movable property and immovable property drawn in ss.
154 and 155 is done away with. The inevitable conclusion is
that the Constitution makers consciously made the departure.
They must have been aware of the distinction made in ss. 154
and 155 and also of +,he interpretation of courts that
’property$ in s. 154 was used in a comprehensive sense so as
to get exemption for the property of the Federation from all
Provincial taxation. With that knowledge they used the word
’property’ in Art. 289 and put State ’property’ on a par
with Union ’property’. It is impossible to accept in these
circumstances the contention that the word ’property’ or the
juxtaposition of the words ’property and income’ in Art. 289
was intended to qualify the word Taxation and thereby the
plain meaning of the language used.
Now, as to the financial relations between the Union and
the States. Chapter 1 of Part XII contains provisions which
control and govern these relations. Put briefly the scheme
is that there is a distribution of revenues between the
Union and the States, even though the collection may be made
in some cases by the State and in other cases by the Union ;
some taxes collected by the Union are assigned to the States
(Art. 269); some taxes levied and collected by the Union are
distributed between the
852
Union and the States (Arts. 270 and 272), there are
provisions for grants in aid of the revenues of some States,
in which jute is extensively grown, in lieu of assignment of
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any share of the net proceeds in each year of export duty on
jute and jute products (Art. 273); there are also provisions
for grants in aid of the revenues of such States as
Parliament may determine to be in need of assistance (Art.
275), etc. These provisions indicate clearly that there is
an attempt at adjustment on a financial integration so that
neither the Union nor the States may be starved for want of
financial resources to carry on the essential and expanding
activities of a welfare State. We do not see in these
provisions. any determining consideration which would bear
upon the exemption granted to Union property by Art. 285 and
that granted to State property by Art. 289. We fail to see
how a restricted meaning given to the aforesaid two articles
will facilitate the financial adjustment referred to in the
earlier articles in the same chapter or how it will retard
the said adjustment if a wider meaning is given to them. We
repeat that Arts. 285 and 289 must be construed on their own
terms, and it is not open to us to pervert or change the
language used therein unless there are compelling reasons to
be gathered from other relevant articles of the Constitu-
tion. We find no such compelling reasons in the other
article of Part XII which deal with the financial relations
between the States and the Union.
We have earlier referred briefly to the distribution of
legislative power between the States and the Union. We have
also pointed out that so far as the taxing powers are
concerned, the legislative entries in the Seventh Schedule
make a distinction, for purposes of legislative competence,
between the main subject of legislation and a tax in rela-
tion thereto. Taxes on income other than agricultural
income (entry 82), duties of customs including export duties
(entry 83), and duties of excise on
853
tobacco and other goods manufactured or produced in India
except alcoholic liquors for human consumption, opium, hemp
and other narcotic drugs (entry 84) are in List 1.
Therefore, under Art. 246 Parliament alone has power to make
laws imposing the aforesaid taxes. This power, it has been
argued on behalf of the Union, will be seriously curtailed
if a wider meaning is given to Art. 289. We do not think
that this argument is any answer to the problem posed before
us. The power to make laws given to Parliament is subject
to the provisions of the Constitution. Art. 289 is one of
such provisions. Therefore, it is no answer to the problem
to say that if a wider meaning is given to Art. 289, it will
curtail the powers of Parliament. If Art. 289 in its true
scope and effect is capable of bearing only the wider
meaning, then it must control the power of Parliament. Art.
245 says so in express terms.
Another argument on this aspect of the case is that the
Union has exclusive power to regulate trade and commerce
with foreign countries, import and export across customs
frontiers, and definition of customs frontiers (entry 41 of
List I) and inter-State trade and commerce (entry 42 of the
same List), and the power to regulate trade and commerce
with foreign countries or inter State trade includes the
power to regulate by imposing customs duties or duties of
excise. This power, it is contended, will be very seriously
affected if the exemption from taxation given by Art. 289 is
held to extend to customs duties and excise duties in
respect of goods imported or exported by a State or goods
produced or manufactured by a State. We are not impressed
by the argument. The power to control trade and commerce
with foreign countries and inter-State trade is with the
Union, and in exercise of that power the Union can impose
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regulatory measures on the activities of a State. We are
familiar now with control measures like the Import Control
Order,
854
Essential Supplies Act, etc. Through these regulatory
measures the Union can carry into effect its power of
control, and under Art. 302 Parliament may by law impose
such restrictions on the freedom of trade, commerce or
intercourse between one State and another or within any part
of the territory of India as may be required in the public
interest. Under Art. 256 the executive power of every State
shall be so exercised as to ensure compliance with the laws
made by Parliament, and the executive power of the Union
shall extend to the giving of such directions to a State as
may appear to the Union Government to be necessary for that
purposes, Under Art. 257 the executive power of every State
shall be so exercised as not to impede or projudice the
exercise of the executive power of the Union, and the Union
Government can give necessary directions in the matter to
the State Government. So far as trade and commerce within
the State is concerned, the State has power to make laws
(entry 26 of List 11). We think, therefore, that nothing
serious is likely to happen, either with regard to foreign
trade or inter State trade, if we hold on the terms of Art.
289 that State property is exempt from Union taxation
including customs duties or excise duties. Such an
interpretation is not likely to result in any interference
with the power of control which the Union undoubtedly has
over foreign trade or inter-State trade.
The contention that the Union has the power to regulate
trade by imposition of customs duties and that power would
be’ annulled if the State has immunity from them in respect
of things imported or exported by it seems to us to be
fallacious. The Union’s power to legislate to regulate
foreign trade contained in the legislative list is subject
to the provisions of the Constitution one of which is con-
tained in Art. 289(1). Therefore in the case of a conflict
between Art. 289(1) and the legislative
855
power to regulate foreign trader the former must prevail.
The Union, therefore, cannot in view of Art. 289(1) impose a
customs duty on things imported by the State and seek to
justify it as an exercise of its power to regulate foreign
trade. Then, again,it seems to us that as stated in M.P.V.
Sundararamier & Co’s case(1) an item in the legislative list
not giving expressly the power of taxation does not confer
such a power. It would follow that the power in List I to
regulate foreign trade cannot be exercised by imposition of
a tax. That has to be done otherwise and without the
imposition of a tax.
It is to be remembered that a striking feature of our
Constitution, which perhaps distinguishes it from some other
Constitutions, is its attempt to harmonise the interests of
the individual with those of the community and the interests
of a State with those of the Union. Our Constitution does
not set up the States as rivals to one another or to the
Union. Each is intended to work harmoniously in its own
sphere without impediment by the other, with an over-riding
power to the Union where it is necessary in the public
interest. It is a nice balance of jurisdictions which
has worked satisfactorily so far and, it is to be hoped will
continue to so work in times to come with good sense
prevailing on all sides. We are not prepared to say that
the exemption given to State property from Union taxation by
Art. 289 conflicts in any way with the power of control
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which the Union has over foreign trade or inter-State trade
or disturbs the balance of jurisdictions referred to above.
It is to be remembered in this context that under cl. (2) of
Art. 289 the trading activities of a State and property used
for such trading activities cannot claim any exemption from
Union taxation, unless Parliament declares by law that the
trading activities are incidental to the ordinary functions
of government.
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1422,
856
We have so far dealt with the problem on the relevant
articles of our Constitution. It may be helpful now to
consider how a similar problem under other Federal
Constitutions has been dealt with by the courts.
It is necessary here to strike a note of warning. Each
Constitution must be interpreted on its own terms and in its
own setting of history, geography and social conditions of
the country and nation for which the Constitution is made; a
decision on a constitutional problem having an apparent
similarity with a problem arising under a different
Constitution may not be sure guide as a solution of the
problem. Basically, the problem must be solved on the terms
of the Constitution under which it arises. Remembering this
warning, we turn first to certain Canadian decisions on
which the learned Solicitor-General has relied. The vital
core of a federal constitution, it is said, is the division
of legislative powers between the central authority and the
component states or provinces. In Sections 91 to 95 of the
British North America Act, 1867 the main lines of this
division in Canada were set forth. In section 92 certain
classes of subjects were enumerated and the provinces were
given exclusive power to make laws in relation to matters
coming within these classes of subjects. The opening
paragraph of s. 91 gave the Dominion power "’to make laws
for the peace, order and good government of Canada in
relation to all matters not coming within the classes of
subjects by this Act assigned exclusively to the
Legislatures of the Provinces. " That is to say, the
residue of powers not expressly given to the Provinces was
reserved to the Dominion The section then proceeded with a
specific enumeration of twenty nine classes of subjects,
illustrating but not restricting the scope of the general
words used earlier in the section. Section 125 said, "No
lands or property belonging to Canada or any province
857
shall be liable to taxation." In The Attorney-General of
British Columbia v. The Attorney-General for Canada(1), the
facts were these. The Government of the province of British
Columbia in the exercise of its powers of control and sale
of alcoholic liquors embarked on the business of dealing in
alcoholic liquors and found itself under the necesssity of
importing ’Johnnie Walker Black Label" whiskey; it claimed
it was exempt from payment of the usual customs duties
imposed by the Dominion Parliament and rested its claim on
s. 12.5. The Supreme Court of Canada held by a majority
decision that the levying of customs duties on the goods in
question was not "taxation" on "property" belonging to a
province within the purview of s. 125. The ratio of the
decision, as expressed by Duff, J., was that customs duties
as an instrument for regulation of external trade came
within the second enumerated head under s. 91; and customs
duties when levied for the purpose of raising a revenue
were, speaking broadly add in the general view of them,
taxes on consumable commodities, taxes on consumption; while
the taxation of capital, of assets, of property was a very
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different matter. Duff, J. then said :
"Our first duty in construing the section is,
of course. to ascertain the ordinary and
grammatical meaning of the words but it is
with the ordinary and grammatical meaning of
the words in the setting in which they are
found and as applied to the subject matter
that we are concerned. What the section is
dealing with is not taxation in general but
the liability of "property" to "taxation" and
the word "taxation" when used in this
association has, I think prima facie a much
less comprehensive import than that which
would be ascribed to it standing by itself or
in some other connections."
(1) 64 Canada Supreme Court Reports 377,
858
It is pertinent to note here that the Canadian Constitution
did not contain a key to the word ’taxation’ as is contained
in Art. 366 (28) of our Constitution. It was permissible,
therefore, in the setting of the Canadian Constitution to
draw a distinction between "taxation of property" and the
"levying of customs duties" for purposes of raising,
revenue, Our Constitution says in express terms that
’taxation’ includes the imposition of any tax or impost,
whether general, local or special. It is reasonable to
think that the makers of our Constitution were aware of the
distinction between the more comprehensive and less
comprehensive meaning that can be attached to the word
’taxation’, and deliberately chose to mention expressly the
more comprehensive meaning in the interpretation article,
instead of leaving it to judicial determination. One may
well speculate if the decision in Canada would have been the
same if there were such a provision in the Canadian
Constitution and if, as Duff, ,J. said, our first duty in
construing a provision is to ascertain the ordinary and
grammatical meaning of the words used. The aforesaid
decision of the Supreme Court was approved by the Privy
Council in Attorney-General of Britsh Columnbia v.
Attorney-General of Canada (1). Referring to s.125 of the
British North America Act, Lord Buckmaster said :
"Taken alone and read without consideration of
the scheme of the statute, this section
undoubtedly creates a formidable argument in
support of the appellant’s case. It is plain
however, that the section cannot be regarded
in this isolated and disjunctive way. It is
only a part of the general scheme established
by the statute with its different allocations
of powers and authorities to the Provincial
and Dominion Governments. Sect. 91, which
assigns powers to the Dominion, provides,
among other things, that it shall enjoy
exclusive legislative
(1) [1924] A.C. 222.
859
authority over all matters enumerated in the
Schedule, included among which are the re-
gulation of trade and commerce and raising of
money by any mode or system of taxation. The
imposition, of customs duties upon goods
imported into any country may have many
objects; it may be designed to raise revenue
or to regulate trade and commerce by
protecting native industries, or it may have
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the two fold purpose of attempting to secure
both ends; in either case it is a power
reserved to the Dominion. It has not indeed
been denied that such a general power does
exist, but it is said that a breach is created
in the tariff wall, which the Dominion has the
power to erect, by s. 125, which enables goods
of the Province or the Dominion to pass
through, unaffected by the duties. But s. 125
cannot, in their Lordships’ opinion, be so
regarded. It is to be found in a series of
sections which, beginning with s. 102,
distribute as between the Dominion and the
Province certain distinct classes of property,
and confer control upon the Province with
regard to the part allocated to them. But
this does not exclude the operation of
dominion laws made in exercise of the
authority conferred by s. 91. The Dominion
have the power to regulate trade and commerce
throughout the Dominion, and, to the extent to
which this power applies, there is no
partiality in its operation. Sect. 125 must,
therefore, be so considered as to prevent the
paramount purpose this declared from being
defeated."
It is obvious that the observations made by Lord Buckmaster
have reference to the special characteristics of the
Canadian Constitution, particularly the paramountcy of
Dominion Power to regulate trade and commerce throughout the
Dominion to which
860
s. 125 was’ made to yield. The scheme of our Constitution
is different : (1) the legislative power of Parliament is
expressly subject to other provisions of the Constitution
(2) the power to regulate trade and commerce is assigned
both to the Union and the States; and (3) there is a
distinction between the main subject of legislation and a
tax in relation thereto. We are not emphasising the fact
that in s. 91 of the British North America Act, 1867 occurs
the expression "notwithstanding anything in this Act",
because that expression may be said to relate to the
enumeration of subjects rather than to s. 125. In our view
the decision turned upon the peculiar characteristics of the
Constitution under which the problem arose and is no safe
guide for the interpretation of our Constitution. It may
perhaps be added that if the Canadian case fell to be
decided under our Constitution, cl. (2) of Art. 289 would
have been given an adequate answer to the problem, for a
State can claim no exemption in respect of its business
activities and when British Columbia imported whiskey to
embark on a business of alcoholic liquors, it could not
claim any exemption under cl. (1) of Art. 289.
We now turn to certain Australian decisions. Speaking
generally, the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act,
1900 creates a federation which resembles the United States
in a manner in which powers are assigned to the Federal
Government with a residue in the States or the people.’ It
resembles the Canadian Constitution in the attempt to adapt
the machinery of responsible government to a federal system,
but differs from the Canadian and our Constitution in the
division of powers. As regards the Commonwealth, s. 51
contains a list of thirty nine enumerated powers with which
it is vested. It says inter alia that, subject to the
Constitution, the Parliament shall have power to make laws
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for the peace
861
order and good government of the Commonwealth with respect
to
(i) Trade and commerce with other countries,
and among the States; and
(ii) Taxation, but so as not to discriminate
between the States or parts of States.
Section 52 defines the cases in which the power of the
Commonwealth is to be exclusive. As regards the State, the
broad principle of the division is found in s. 107 which in
effect says that the powers of the States are left
unaffected by the Constitution except in so far as the
contrary is expressly provided; subject to that each State
remains sovereign within its own sphere. Now, s. 114 of the
Commonwealth of Australia Act, 1900 says :
"A State shall not, without the consent of the
Parliament of the Commonwealth, raise or
maintain any naval or military force, or
impose any tax on property of any kind
belonging to the Commonwealth, nor shall the
Commonwealth impose any tax on property of any
kind belonging to a State."
The decision on which the learned Solicitor-General has
placed the greatest reliance is Attorney-General of New
South Wales v. Collector of Customs for N.S.W. (1). That
was a case in which an action was brought by the
Attorney-General of New South Wales to recover from the
Collector of Customs for New South Wales a particular sum
being the amount of duties of customs demanded by the
defendant upon the importation into the Commonwealth of
certain steel rails, and paid under protest by the
Government of the State of New South Wales The rails in
question were purchased in England by the State or use in
the construction of the railways of
(1) 5C.L.R.818.
862
the State. On their arrival at the port of Sydney the
defendant claimed that they were liable to Customs duties.
The State disputed its liability to pay duty and deposited
the amount claimed under protest. A case was stated for the
opinion of the High Court of Australia on two main questions
: (1) whether the provisions of the Customs 1901 and the
Customs Tariff 1922, affected the Crown as representing the
community of New South Wales; and (2) whether the steel
rails were exempt from duty by virtue of s. 114 of the
Constitution. So far as the first question was concerned
Griffith C. J. said that it was concluded by the decision in
The King v. Sutton (1). So far as the second question was
concerned, the majority of judges held that customs duties
whether capable or not of being included in the word "tax",
are not a tax upon property in the sense in which that
expression is used in s. 114. Isaacs J. held that duties of
customs, as ordinarily understood and as enacted in the
Customs Act, were imposed on the goods themselves, and,
therefore, "on property" within the meaning of s. 114, but
they did not come within the meaning of the word "tax" as
used in that section and the Constitution generally.
Griffith C. J. not only drew a distinction between direct
and indirect taxation but also held that s. 1 14 applied
only to property within the limits of the Commonwealth and
did not apply to goods in process of coming within those
limits. He further held that the power to impose taxation
conferred by s. 51 (ii) as well as the power to regulate
importation conferred by s. 51 (1) were paramount and
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unlimited and a construction which would make the words of
s. 114 consistent with giving full effect to the plain
intention of s. 51 should be preferred. He proceeded on the
footing that the words of s. 114 were capable of two
constructions. Then he observed :
"There is no doubt that in some contexts the
words "impose any tax" might be capable of
(1) SC.L.R. -89.
863
application to duties of Customs. Nor is
there any doubt that the word "taxation" in
sec. 51 (ii) includes the levying of duties;
of Customs. But these duties arc nowhere in
the Constitution described as a "tax", unless
the use of the word "taxation" in sec. 51 (ii)
is such a description of them; nor is the
levying of them ever spoken of as the
imposition of a tax on property. Sec. 86
speaks of "’the collection and control of
duties of Customs and of Excise". Ss. 88, 89,
90, 92, 93, 94, 95, all speak of the
"imposition" of duties of Customs. Such
duties are imposed in respect of "$goods" and
in one sense, no doubt, "upon" goods,, which
is only another way of saying that the word
"upon" is sometimes used as synonymous with
"in respect of." In the same way the word
"’upon" or "’on" is used colloquially in
speaking of stamp duties, succession duties,
and other forms of indirect taxation, as taxes
on deeds, etc., or on real and personal
property. Yet it is recognised that these
forms of taxation are not really taxation upon
property but upon operations or movements of
property."
Higgins J. based his decision on a somewhat different
ground. He said that he could not confidently take the
ground that a customs duty could not be a tax within the
meaning of the word "tax" in s. 114. He said that s. 114
did not use the expression "tax of any kind", but spoke of
"any tax on property of any kind belonging to a State". He
derived the idea of ownership as the crucial test by reason
of the use of the expression "property of any kind belonging
etc." The learned judge observed :
"The prohibition as to State taxation was, no
doubt, suggested by the British North America
Act, sec. 125. But by substituting the word
"property" for "lands or property", the
864
intention-if it was the intention to confine
the prohibition to what are known as
’,’property taxes" has been somewhat obscured.
Property is, by the Constitution, subject to
be taxed at the instance of the State as well
as of the Commonwealth; Customs taxation is
solely a matter for the Commonwealth (sec.
90). Taxes of retaliation, as between the
States and the Commonwealth, are possible as
to property taxes; but are impossible as to
Customs taxes. But whatever may have been the
motive which led to this express prohibition,
in addition to the prohibition which this
Court has held to be implied from the nature
of the Constitution as to the taxation of
State or Commonwealth agents, the phraseology
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is such as to point to taxation of property as
property as being the subject of this express
prohibition. "A State shall not, without the
consent of the Parliament or the
Commonwealth,... ... impose any tax on
property of any kind belonging to the
Commonwealth, nor shall the Commonwealth
impose any tax on property of any kind
belonging to a State"."
We are of the view that the considerations which led the
learned judges to the conclusion at which they arrived are
not considerations which are available to us under our
Constitution. We are dealing with an exemption clause under
Art. 289 (1); that exemption clause has to be interpreted
with the key furnished by Art. 366 (2s) Under our
Constitution the word ’taxation’ has been defined by the
Constitution itself and we are not free to give a different
meaning to the word so as to make a distinction between
direct and indirect taxation, or between taxation on
property within the limits of the Commonwealth and property
in the process of coming within those limits; nor are we
free to make a distinction between a tax
865
on property and a tax in respect of property. It is further
significant that s. 1 If of the Commonwealth of Australia
Act, 1900 uses the expression "tax on property". Our
exemption clause in Art. 289 uses a different phraseology, a
phraseology which does not qualify the word "tax’ in any
way, but says that the property and income of a State shall
be exempt from any tax or impost whether general, local or
special, to be imposed by the Union. Even in the matter of
s. 11 4 of the Commonwealth of Australia Act, 1900 there was
a difficulty in drawing the distinction between property,
and the imporation of property, because of the use of the
expression "of any kind" in s. 114. This difficulty is
pointed out by Nicholas in The Australian Costitution
(second edition, page 1433). He says :
"The solution was found in distinguishing
between property and the importation of pro-
perty, and between duties and taxation as
those terms are used in the Constitution.
Both distinctions involved some difficulties,
for s. 114 uses the words "of any kind" and
the only express authority to impose duties is
to be found in s. 51 (ii). The policy thus
sanctioned has not been approved in all States
alike. States have been compelled to pay
duties on imported materials, including
locomotives of a type not made in Australia,
so that the proceeds of their loans have been
reduced for the benefit of the Commonwealth
revenue and the power of exemption has not
been used where it might have been (Report of
the Royal Commission, p. 361)."
Apropos of the Australian case it may perhaps be pointed out
that under our Constitution the ’taxing power’ is treated as
different from the ’regulatory power’. Again, as we have
stated earlier, the classification between ’direct’ and
"indirect’ taxes has
866
not been adopted by our Constitution. Moreover the problem
which falls for our consideration under Art. 289 is not one
which has to be examined from the point of view of
legislative power. The problem before us is really the
extent of the immunity or exemption granted by Art. 289. In
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Attorney-General for Saskatchewan v. Canadian Pacific
Railway Company (1), the question arose of construing an
exemption granted to the Canadian Pacific Railway Company by
clause 16 of a contract between the Canadian Government and
the said company. The exemption clause provided inter alia
that "the Canadian Pacific Railway, and all stations and
station grounds, workshops, buildings, yards and other
property etc., shall be forever free from taxation by the
Dominion, or by any province hereafter to be established, or
by any municipal corporation therein." The Province of
Saskatchewan was constituted in 1905 and in purported
compliance with its obligations under the aforesaid
exemption clause, the Dominion Parliament provided in
section 24 of the Saskatchewan Act of 1905 that ,the powers
hereby granted to the said Province shall be exercised
subject to the provisions of clause 16 of the contract".
The Canadian Pacific Railway Company raised the question
that it was free from business tax imposed by the City Act,
1947, of Saskatchewan by reason of the exemption clause.
Before the judicial Committee of the Privy Council it was
argued on behalf of the Province of Saskatchewan that the
exemption was limited to taxes imposed upon the owner in
respect of the ownership of the property liable to taxation,
but the exemption did not extend to taxes levied upon the
company in respect of its business of operating it. Dealing
with this argument the Judicial Committee said :
"While the language of clause 16 is that the
property shall be ’forever free from taxation’
by any Province thereafter to be established,
(1) [1953] A.C. 594.
867
it is said that to tax the company in respect
to the use of the property (itself a term of
the exemption), is not to tax the property and
that alone is prohibited."
Their Lordships construed the exemption on its own terms
and held that a tax upon the owner in respect of the use of
the property was as much within the exemption as a tax on
the property itself. In our View the exemption clause in
Art. 289 must similarly be construed on its own terms. We
further consider that no question of paramountcy of
legislative power arises in that connection.
On behalf of the States, except the State of Maharashtra
which has supported the stand of the Union in the matter of
excise duties only, it has been very strongly contended
before us that for the purpose of the exemption clause in
Art. 289 nothing turns upon the distinction between a tax on
property as such and a tax in relation to property. Both
affect property and if property is to be free from Union
taxation, it makes no difference whether the tax is on the
ownership or possession of property or is on its production
or manufacture or its importation or exportation. A large
number of decisions were cited before us as to the true
nature of customs duties and excise duties. There are a
number of decisions of this court where it has been held
that a duty of excise is a tax on goods produced or
manufactured in the taxing country; similarly customs or
export duty is a duty imposed on goods which are the subject
of importation or exportation. This is also clear from the
provisions relating to "draw back" in the matter of customs
duties and refund rules in the matter of excise duty. We
consider it unnecessary to examine these decisions in detail
for the purpose of the problem before us. It is enough to
point out that in order to determine whether an impost, be
it a tax, duty or fee, falls under one item or the other
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868
of the Legislative Lists in the Seventh Schedule, it may be
necessary to examine the nature of the tax, duty or fee. As
the judicial Committee pointed out in Governor-General in
Council v. Province of Madras (1), a duty of excise is
primarily a duty levied on a manufacturer or producer in
respect of the commodity manufactured or produced; it is
however a tax on goods, to be distinguished from tax on
sales or the proceeds of sales of goods; the two taxes, the
one levied on the manufacturer in respect of his goods, the
other on a vendor in respect of his sales may in one sense
overlap. But in law there is no overlapping, the taxes
being separate and distinct imposts But as we have said
earlier, the problem before us is not the nature of the
impost but rather the extent of the immunity granted by Art.
289 of the Constitution. The extent of that immunity, as we
have indicated earlier, really depends on the true scope and
effect of Arts. 245, 285, 289 and 366(28) of the
Constitution. In the matter of the extent of the immunity
the distinction between a tax on property as such or in
relation to property is really of no materiality. A tax on
property as such and a tax in relation to property both
affect property and if the true scope and effect of the
articles which we have mentioned is that state property must
be exempt from imposition of any tax or impost, whether
general or local or special, by the Union, then the
distinction drawn between a tax on property as such and a
tax in relation to property loses its significance.
For the reasons given above our opinion is that the
answers to the three questions referred to this court must
be in the affirmative and against the stand taken by the
Union.
HIDAYATULLAH J.-- As a result of a proposal to introduce
in Parliament a Bill to amend s. 20 of the Sea Customs Act,
1878 (Act 8 of 1878) and s. 3 of the Central Excises and
Salt Act, 1944 (Act 1 of
(1) 72 I.A. 91, 103.
869
1944) with a view to applying the provisions of these two
Acts to goods belonging to the State Governments, the
President of India has been pleased to refer under Art. 143
of the Constitution, three questions for the opinion of this
Court to ascertain if the proposed amendments would be
constitutional. These questions are :
"(1) Do the provisions of article 289 of the
Constitution preclude the Union from imposing,
or authorising the imposition of, customs
duties on the import or export of the property
of a State used for purposes other than those
specified in clause (2) of that article ?
(2) Do the provisions of article 289 of the
Constitution of India preclude the Union from
imposing, or authorising the imposition of,
excise duties on the production or manufacture
in India of the property of a State used for
purposes other than those specified in clause of
that article ?
(3) Will sub-section of section 20 of the
Sea Customs Act, 1878 (Act 8 of 1878) and
sub-section (1A) of section 3 of the Central
Excises and Salt Act, 1944 (Act 1 of 1944) as
amended by the Bill set out in the Annexure be
inconsistent with the provisions of article
289 of the Constitution of India ?"
The sections of the two Acts as they stand today provide for
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the levy of customs duties and duties of excise on all goods
belonging to a State but only if used for purposes of trade
or business of any kind carried on by or on behalf of that
Government, or of any operations connected with such trade
or business as they apply in respect of goods not belonging
870
to any Government. These two sections as at present read :
"20. (1) Except as hereinafter provided,
customs duties shall be levied at such rates
as may be prescribed by or under any law for
the time being in force, on
(a) goods imported or exported by sea into
or from any customs-port from or to any
foreign port;
(b) opium, salt or salted fish imported by
sea from any customs-port into any other
customs-port;
(c) goods brought from any foreign port to
any customs-port, and, without payment of
duty, there transhipped for, or thence carried
to, and imported at, any other customs-port;
and
(d) goods brought in bond from one customs-
port to another.
(2) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall
apply in respect of all goods belonging to the
Government of a State and used for the
purposes of a trade or business of any kind
carried on by, or on behalf of, that Govern-
ment, or of any operations connected with such
trade or business as they apply in respect of
goods not belonging to any Government.
Explanation....In this sub-section ’State’
does not include a Union territory".
"3 (1) There shall be levied and collected in
such manner as may be prescribed duties
871
of excise on all excisable goods other than
salt which are produced or manufactured in
India and a duty on salt manufactured in, or
imported by land into, any part of India as,
and at the rates, set forth in the First
Schedule.
(1A) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall
apply in respect of all excisable goods other
than salt which are produced or manufactured
in India by, or on behalf of, the Government
of a State other than a Union terri
tory and
used for the purposes of a trade or business
of any kind carried on by, or on behalf of,
that Government, or of any operations
connected with such trade or business as they
apply in respect of goods which are not
produced or manufactured by any Government".
x x x x
The proposal is to amend the two sections as follows :
"AMENDMENT OF SECTION 20, ACT 8 OF 1878.-In
section 20 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878, for
sub-section (2) the following sub-sections
shall be substituted, namely :-
’(2) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall
apply in respect ’of all goods belonging to
the Government as they apply in respect of
goods not belonging to the Government.’
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AMENDMENT OF SECTION 3, Act 1 OF 1944.-In
section 3 of the Central Excises and Salt Act,
1944, for sub-section (1A) the following sub-
section shall be substituted, namely :-
’(1A) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall
apply in respect of all excisable’ goods
872
other than salt which are produced or
manufactured in India by, or on behalf of, the
Government as they apply in respect of goods
which are not produced or manufactured by the
Government’."
The question is one of great importance not only to the
States but also to the Union. What the Union wishes to do
is to put the State Governments on its tax-payers’ list, not
only in respect of their trading activities but also in
respect of their governmental functions. If the
Constitution does not prohibit it their can be no doubt
about the power. The sole question thus is whether the
Constitution has not prohibited this by Art. 289 to which
reference will be made presently.
Our Republic is composed of States with their own
Governments. These Governments possess and exercise their
own powers like any other Government. Then there is the
Union Government which within its own sphere is supreme but
its supremacy is not a general or undefined supremacy. It
is in certain respects curtailed to give supremacy to the
State Governments. One such curtailment is to be found in
Art. 289(1) and the only question that can really arise is
to what extent does that restriction go ?
We are concerned here with the taxing power of Parliament
which admittedly extends to the levying of duties of customs
including export duties (entry 83, List I, 7th Schedule) and
duties of excise on tobacco and other goods manufactured in
India except those expressly mentioned in the entry (entry
84, ibid). In addition to the powers of taxation,
Parliament has exclusive regulatory power over "trade and
commerce with foreign countries; import and export across
customs frontiers" (entry 41, ibid) and also over "inter-
State trade and commerce" (entry 42, ibid). The power
derive from these
873
entries is plenary and can only be the subject of restraint
if the Constitution so provides. Under Art. 245, this power
is expressly stated to be subject to the provisions of the
Constitution. By Art. 246, which divides the subject matter
of laws to be made by Parliament and by the Legislatures of
the States, exclusive power is given to Parliament in
respect of matters enumerated in the Union list. Similarly,
exclusive power is conferred on State Legislatures in
respect of matters enumerated in the State List. There is a
third list called the "Concurrent list" and it contains
matters over which Parliament and the Legislature of the
States have power to make laws. Inconsistency between the
laws is avoided by Art. 254 which makes the law made by
Parliament, whether before or after the law made by the
State Legislature, to prevail over the latter. In addition
to these provisions, Parliament has power to make laws for
the territory of India not included in a State even on
matters enumerated in the State List and also exclusive
power to make any law with respect to any matter not
enumerated in the concurrent or the State Lists. This, in
brief, is the scheme of legislative relations and the
distribution of legislative power under our Constitution.
The three Lists contain entries which enable the raising of
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money by way of taxes, duties and fees. The taxation
entries are to be found in the Union and State Lists only.
There are only two entries in the Concurrent List which deal
with (a) stamp duties other than duties or fees collected by
means of judicial stamps, but not including rates of stamp
duties (entry 44, Concurrent List,) and (b) fees in respect
of any of the matters in that List but not including fees
taken in any court (entry 47, ibid). The other two lists
contain entries which enable the Union and the States to
impose taxes, duties and fees to raise revenue for their
respective purposes. These entries, as far as human
ingenuity could achieve, attempt to make a clear cut and
fair
874
division. There is an elaborate procedure for distribution
of the proceeds of some of the taxes raised by the Union
among the States to finance their activities but we are not
presently concerned with it.
The powers of taxation being plenary except in so far as
the exercise of the power could be said to trench upon the
exclusive domain outlined and demarcated in a rival list,
there was a danger in the dual form of government, which has
been adopted in our Republics of one Government taxing
another whether to start with or as a retaliatory measure.
Such a possibility had earlier been envisaged by other
Federal Constitutions either expressly or as an implication
of the dual form and immunity of some kind had been
conferred in respect of property, etc., between the
respective Governments. Our Constitution has also made
provision in that behalf. Those provisions are to be found
in Parts XII and XIII. The latter part has been the subject
of much anxious thought recently in this Court, and it pro-
vides for freedom of trade, commerce and intercourse within
the territory of India. Articles 285-289 of Part XII
provide for immunity from tax in certain other
circumstances. Of these, Art. 286, which involves
restrictions on the imposition of tax on the gale and
purchase of goods, has been before this Court on many
occasions and need not be considered. Article 285 provides
for exemption of the property of the Union from State taxes,
and Article 289, for exemption of property and income of a
State from Union taxation. We are primarily concerned with
Art. 289 in this Reference. Articles 287 and 288 provide
for special exemption from taxes on electricity in certain
cases and are not relevant to the present purpose.
Putting aside Articles 286, 287 and 288, 1 set out below
Articles 285 and 289 :
"285. (1) The property of the Union shall,
875
save in so far as Parliament may by law
otherwise provide, be exempt from all taxes
imposed by a State or by any authority within
a State.
(2) Nothing in clause (1) shall, until
Parliament by law otherwise provides, prevent
any authority within a State from levying any
tax on any property of the Union to which such
property was immediately before the
commencement of this Constitution liable or
treated as liable, so long as that tax
continues to be levied in that State."
"289. (1) The property and income of a State
shall be exempt from Union taxation.
(2) Nothing in clause (1) shall prevent the
Union from imposing, or authorising the
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imposition of, any tax to such extent, if any,
as Parliament may by law provide in respect of
a trade or business of any kind carried on by,
or on behalf of, the Government of a State, or
any operations connected therewith, or any
property used or occupied for the purposes of
such trade or business, or any income accuring
or arising in connection therewith.
(3) Nothing in clause (2) shall apply to any
trade or business, or to any class of trade or
business, which Parliament may by law declare
to be incidental to the ordinary functions of
government."
These are the provisions of the Constitution which the
President of India has in mind in making this reference to
determine whether the proposed extension
876
of customs and excise duties to all goods belonging to the
State Governments, imported or exported in the one case and
manufactured or produced in the other, would not offend Art.
289.
It may be mentioned at this stage that under the Government
of India Act, 1935, sections 154 and 155 also provided for
similar immunity, but these sections were slightly
differently worded. I quote these sections for future
comparison :
"154. Exemption of certain public property
from taxation. Property vested in His Majesty
for purposes of the Government of the
Federation shall, save in so far as any
Federal law may otherwise provide, be exempt
from all taxes imposed by, or by any authority
within, a Province or Federated State :
Provided that, until any Federal law other.
wise provides, any property so vested which
was immediately before the commencement of
Part III of this Act liable, or treated as
liable, to any such tax, shall, so long as
that tax continues, continue to be liable, or
to be treated as liable, thereto."
"155. Exemption of Provincial Governments and
Rulers of Federated States in respect of
Federal taxation. (1) Subject as hereinafter
provided, the Government of a Province and the
Ruler of a Federated State shall not be liable
to Federal taxation in respect of lands or
buildings situate in British India or income
accruing, arising or received in British India
Provided that-
(a) Where a trade or business of any kind is
carried on by or on behalf of the Government
of a Province in any
877
part of British India outside that province or
by a Ruler in any part of British India,
nothing in this sub-section shall exempt that
Government or Ruler from any Federal taxation
in respect of that trade or business, or any
operations connected therewith, or any income
arising in connection therewith, or any
property occupied for the purposes thereof
(b) nothing in this sub-section shall exempt
a Ruler from any Federal taxation in respect
of any lands, buildings or income being his
personal property or personal income.
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(2) Nothing in this Act affects any
exemption from taxation enjoyed as of right at
the passing of this Act by the Ruler of an
Indian State in respect of any Indian
Government securities issued before that
date."
As I have said already, dual government in a Federation
requires the protection of one government from taxation by
the other. In the United States of America, there is no
specific provision but such an immunity is held to be
implied in the nature of dual government. In Canada, s. 125
of the British North America Act, 1867, provides : ,
"No lands or property belonging to Canada or
any province shall be liable to taxation."
In the Australian Constitution, which, one of its framers
(Mr.Justice Higgins) described as a "pedantic imitation" of
the American Constitution, s. 114 provides :
"A State shall not without the consent of the
Parliament of the Commonwealth raise or
878
maintain any naval or military Force, or
impose any tax on property of any kind
belonging to the commonwealth, nor shall the
commonwealth impose any tax on property of any
kind belonging to a State."
Even in Constitutions which are comparatively recent, like
those of Argentina and Brazil we find similar provisions.
Article 32 of the Constitution of Brazil provides:
"The Union, the States and the Municipalities
are forbidden-
(c) to tax goods, income or services of each
other."
In the arguments before us at which the Solicitor-
General of India for the Union and Advocates-General of some
of the States and other learned counsel assisted, two
distinct lines of thought were discernible. One line was to
rely upon certain American, Canadian and Australian
decisions where restrictions under the respective
Constitutions were either upheld or negatived, and then to
reason from anology. The other line was to take the words
of the Constitution and to see what the Constitution has
meant to say. These two lines represent the classic
approach to the interpretation and construction of a written
Constitution. Cooley explained the difference between them
(’Constitutional Limitations, p. 97) by saying that
interpretation "is the art of finding out the true sense of
any form of words; that is, the sense which their author
intended to convey", while construction is "the drawing of
conclusions, respecting subjects that lie beyond the direct
expression of the text, from elements known from and given
in the text;Conclusions which are in the spirit, though not
879
within the letter of the text". With a written Cons-
titution, such as we have, the task in most cases must be
one of interpretation, but where the language’ Of the
Constitution suggests that what was previously passed upon
by the Superior Courts of other countries in parallel
matters has obviously been taken as a guide, one may have to
go a little further than the text to find out what was being
sought to be achieved and what was being avoided. I am
aware that in Webb v. Outtrim (1), Lord Halsbury observed
that it was impossible to say of the framers of the
Australian Constitution what their supposed preferences
were. I am also conscious of the fact that the Indian
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Constitution is a document framed by the Indian people for
the Indian people. In interpreting the Constitution, one
must not completely cast off the moorings to the text of the
Constitution and drift into alien seas. I may say, however,
that there are indications in the Constitution itself of
compelling force which show that the framers were desiring
to avoid some of the implications of these rulings of the
Superior Courts of the United States, Canada and Australia..
The observations of these learned Courts have been pressed
into service by counsel before us, as they form the
historical background of the provisions of our Constitution.
I also find it convenient to deal with them first as they
prepare us to understand our own Constitution. Perhaps by
seeing the problem in other settings and environments, one
is able to see it better in one’s own.
I shall begin with the United States of America, because
the doctrine had its first beginnings there. In the United
States, the immunity of one Government from taxation by the
other arose as an indispensible implication of the dual
system. It had its roots in what Mr. justice Frankfurter
described as a ’seductive cliche" of Chief justice Marshall
in McCulloch v. Maryland (2), that the power to tax involves
the power to destroy by the tax. But the
(1) [1907] A. C. 81.
(2) 4 Wheaton 316,
880
doctrine was more that) a mere cliche; it was stated by
Chief.’ justice Marshall to be fundamental to dual
government. Let me recall his words :
"If we measure the power of taxation residing
in a State, by the extent of sovereignty which
the people of a single State possess, and can
confer on its government, we have an
intelligible standard, applicable to every
case to which the power may be applied. We
have a principle which leaves the power of
taxing the people and property of a State
unimpaired, which leaves to a State the
command of all its resources, and which places
beyond its reach, all those which are
conferred by the people of the United States
on the Government of the Union, and all those
means which are given for the purpose of
carrying those powers into execution. We have
a principle which is safe for the States, and
safe for tile Union. We are relieved, as we
ought to be, from clashing sovereignty; from
interfering powers; from a repugnancy between
a right in one Government to pull down what
there is an acknowledged right in another to
build up; from the incompatibility of a right
in one government to destroy what there is a
right in another to preserve. We are not
driven to the perplexing inquiry, so unfit for
the judicial department, what degree of
taxation is the legitimate use and what degree
may amount to the abuse of the power".
The. Chief justice, therefore, concluded in
these famous words :
"The Court has bestowed on this subject its
most deliberate consideration. The result is
a conviction that, the States have no power,
by taxation or otherwise, to retard, impede,
burden or in any manner control, the
operations
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881
of the Constitution laws enacted by Congress
to carry into execution the powers vested in
the general government. This is we think, the
unavoidable consequence of that supremacy
which the Constitution has declared".
This doctrine had early dissenters and chief among them was
Mr. justice Bradley who described it as founded on a fallacy
which would lead to mischievous consequences. Collector v.
Day (1). McCulloch’s case involved a State tax which was re-
ally discriminatory against the operations of a national
bank and could have been decided without laying down any
such proposition. But the doctrine was accepted and it grew
and grew. It took in not only the property and activities
of a Government within its protection but also all means,
agencies and instrumentalities by which Government acts. It
was only after, many years that the reach of the doctrine
began to be curtailed. In the Panhandle Oil Co. v. Missippi
(2), Mr. justice Holmes did away with the cliche by the
trenchant observation ",the power to tax is not the power to
destroy while this Court sits". But it was only the
increasing dissents which led to the overthrow of a good
dozen cases in Gravess v. New York
I need not enter into the history of the process by
which the doctrine was curtailed. I shall refer to that
part only which has withstood the attrition to which the
doctrine was subjected. In the State of South Carolina v.
U. S. (4), (a case relied upon by the States to explain Art.
289), the State had taken over the business of selling
intoxicating liquors in the exercise of its sovereign
powers. The dispensing and selling agents of the State were
charged, under a Federal Revenue Statute, an excise licence
tax which was imposed on all sellers of intoxicating
liquors. It was held that the agents were not
(1) 11 Wall. 113 : 20 L. Ed. 122.
(2) 277 U.S 218, 223:72 L. Ed 857, 859.
(3) 306 U.S, 466. 83 L.Bd. 927.
(4) 199 U.S. 437 .50 L. Ed. 261,
882
protected by the doctrine because they were doing business
and not carrying on functions of Government. Mr. Justice
Brewer gave the reason in these words :
"Mingling the thought of profit with the
necessity of regulation may induce the State
to take possession, in like manner, of
tobacco, oleomargarine and all other objects
of internal revenue tax. If one State finds
it thus profitable other States may follow,
and the whole body of internal revenue tax be
thus stricken down".
Mr. justice Brewer pointed out that in this way control of
all public utilities, of gas. of water and of the rail-road
systems would pass to the States and the States would become
owner of all property and business and then what would the
States contribute to the revenues of the nation ? He held
that the tax was not imposed on any property belonging to
the State, but was a charge on a business before any profits
were realized therefrom, or in other words, upon the means
by which that property was acquired but before it was
acquired. In that case, the distinction between State as a
trader and State as Government was made. This distinction
was emphasized later in Ohio Helvering(1), where it was
observed :
"When a State enters the market place seeking
customers it divests itself of its quasi
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sovereignty pro tanto and takes on the
character of a trader, so far at least, as the
taxing power of the federal government is
concerned".
In subsequent cases this distinction between governmental
functions and functions as a trader was preserved. The term
’governmental functions’ was
(1) 292 U.S.360.78L.Ed.1307.
883
further qualified by the words ’strictly’. ’essential’ or
,usual’. It was even said that these functions must be
those in which State Governments must be ’traditionally
engaged’, otherwise they would not be able to withdraw from
the taxing power of the general government. A certain
amount of strictness in the application of the doctrine was
noticeable in the University of Illinois v. U.S.A. (1). In
that case, the University imported scientific apparatus for
use in one of its departments. Customs duties were exacted
which were paid under protest, the University claiming to be
an instrumentality of the State of Illinois, discharging a
governmental function. The Tariff Act of 1922, under which
the impost was made. was an Act to provide revenue, to
regulate commerce with foreign countries, and to encourage
the industries of the U.S.A. Relying on Gibbons v. Ogden
(1), it was pointed out in the case that the power to
regulate was plenary and exclusive and its exercise could
not be limited, qualified or impeded to any extent by State
action and that there was a denial to the States to lay
imposts or duties on imports and exports without the concent
of the Congress (Articles 1, 10, 2). It was, therefore,
laid down that the principle of duality did not touch
regulation of commerce with foreign countries. It was
argued that the Tariff Act laid a tax and the tax fell upon
an instrumentality. It was conceded that it nigh be so, but
it was pointed out that the imposition of customs duties
could be for purposes of regulation and that the provisions
took into account foreign trade and regulated it and revenue
was incidental and the protection did not go beyond
governmental functions. Chief justice Hughes then observed:
" The fact that the. State in the performance
of State functions may use imported articles
does not mean that the imporation is a
function
(1) 289 U.S. 48: 77 L. Ed. 1025.
(2) 9 Wheaton 1.
884
of the State Government independent of federal
power."
"To permit the States or their
instrumentalities to import commodities for
their own use, regardless of the requirements
imposed by the Congress, would undermine, if
not destroy, the single control which it was
one of the dominant purposes of the
Constitution to create. It is for the
Congress to decide to what extent if at all,
the States and their instrumentalities shall
be relieved of the payment of duties on im-
ported articles."
The regulatory aspect of taxes on commerce was again
recently the subject of discussion in the United States
Supreme Court in what is popularly called the ’Soft drink
case’. Natural mineral waters in the State were bottled and
sold and it was held by majority that a non-discriminatory
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tax on all persons was payable by the Government of the
State because in selling mineral waters, even though a part
of the natural resources of the State, it was not carrying
on a governmental function and the tax did not affect its
sovereignty. Mr. justice Frankfurter said
"Surely the power of Congress to lay taxes
has impliedly no less a reach than the power
of the Congress to regulate commerce. There
are of course State activities and State owned
property that partake of uniqueness from the
point of view of inter-governmental relations.
These inherently constitute a class by
themselves. Only a State can own a State
house; only a State can get income by taxing.
These could not be included for purposes of
federal taxation in any abstract category of
tax payers without taxing the State as a
State, But so long as Congress
885
generally taps a source of revenue by whomso-
ever earned and not uniquely capable of being
earned only by a State, the Constitution of
the United States does not forbid it merely
because its incidence falls also on a State.
If Congress desires, it may of course leave
untaxed enterprises pursued by States for the
public good while it taxes such enterprises
organised for private ends".
Mr. justice Frankfurter rejected as untenable such
criteria as "proprietary’ against ’governmental’ activities
of the State or historically sanctioned activities of
Government ’ or ’ activities conducted mostly for profit’
and found no restriction upon Congress to include the States
in levying a tax exacted casually from private persons upon
the same subject-matter". Mr. justice Rutledge did not
agree with the last extention but chose not to differ.
Chief justice Stone, with whom justices Read, Murphy and
Burton agreed, pointed out that in the United States the
cases were divisible into two parts those in which there was
taxing of property, income or activities of the State, and
those in which the tax was laid on agents and
instrumentalities of the State, which tax was said to impede
or cripple indirectly the State. They held that the
distinction between governmental and proprietary interests
was untenable, and agreed that a non-discriminatory tax
could sometimes be laid on the State, provided it did not
affect its sovereignty, but the essence of the matter was
not that the tax was non-discriminatory but because it
unduly interfered with the performance of the State’s
functions of Government. Holding, therefore, that the tax
in question there did not curtail the State Government in
its functions, it was point out that the Constitution could
not be read to give "immunity to the State’s mineral water
business from federal taxation" or to deny to the federal
government power to levy the tax. Mr. justice Jackson took
no
886
part but justices Douglas and Black entered a powerful
dissent. The opinion was based on the theory that the
taxing power of either Government if exercised against the
other was likely to affect the cost of its operation and "if
the federal Government can place the local Governments on
its tax collectors’ list, then, capacity to serve the needs
of their citizens is at once hampered or curtailed."
From the above analysis of the American cases (and all
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of them were within the ken of our Constituent Assembly), we
gather that the immunity now does not extend to agents,
means or instrumentalities as it did previously, and that it
does not extend to any trading or business activity of the
State even though the trading involves natural resources
(though it is conceded that the Congress may excuse trading
in a suitable case). It extends to the property of the
State owned as State but not in the course of trading. The
marginal cases are those where the tax which is laid,
interferes unduly with the State as a State, and it is held
by narrow majority that except for such marginal cases, the
States are not immune. The contention on behalf of some of
the States is that the distinction made by Brewer, J., in
the South Carolina case (1) has’ been preserved in the
scheme of Art. 289, and if’ import and export are in the
discharge of essential governmental functions, there must be
exemption from customs duty but not if there is trading.
Similarly, it is contended that there is exemption from
excise duty based on the same or similar considerations. In
other words, the claim is that Our Constitution reproduces
in its broad features the doctrine ,is understood in the
United States till the time of’ the framing of our
Constitution.
There can be no doubt that the broad features of Art.
289 correspond to the American doctrine as understood before
our own Constitution was framed. Article 289 grants an
exemption from taxation to
(1) 199 U.S. 437: 50 L.Ed. 261.
887
the property and income of the States. What that
comprehends I am leaving over for discussion till after I
have touched upon the Canadian and Australian Constitutions
and referred to cases decided in connection therewith.
Article 289, however, quite clearly limits the exemption
against taxation in such a way as to make the trading
activities of the States and the property used or occupied
for the purposes of such trade or business liable to
taxation. This follows indubitably from cl. (2). Without
attempting to expound exegetically the words of that clause
and its relation to clauses (1) and (3) I find it sufficient
to say that cl. (2) put outside the exemption granted by cl.
(1) all trading activities of the State and property used in
that connection. The force of the opening words "Nothing in
clause (1)" does not make cl. (2) an exception to cl. (1).
Those words emphasize that the existence of the power
declared by cl. (2) is really unaffected by cl. (1). This
is the trend of opinion in the U.J.S.A., as I have pointed
out. The same opening words are repeated in cl. (3) and the
final words "incidental to the ordinary functions of
government" show that even trading can be regarded, if
Parliament so declares by law, as "incidental to the
ordinary functions of Government." This is again recognized
in the U.S.A., where statutes sometimes include special
exemptions in favour of the trading activities of the
States.
It follows, therefore, that the general outline of Art.
289 is based upon the American pattern that the property and
income of the States are not to be taxed, that trading is
not an ordinary function of Government though Parliament may
by law declare that any trade or business or any class of
trade or business is incidental to functions of Government.
So far I have dealt with the general pattern only and
traced its similarity to the American
888
doctrine. It may be pointed out even at this stage that
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there is no immunity in respect of the agents or
instrumentalities of Government in our Constitution. The
exemption is in respect of the "property and income of a
State". The force of these words appears from other cases
under the Canadian and Australian Constitutions. I shall
deal with Australia first, because the leading case under
that Constitution was decided before the leading case under
the Canadian Constitution.
I have already quoted s. 114 of the Commonwealth of
Australia Constitution Act. The material portion of it may
be reproduced here.:
"A State shall not..................... impose
any tax on property of any kind belonging to
the Commonwealth, nor shall the Commonwealth
impose any tax on property of any kind belong-
ing to the State".
The doctrine of immunity of instrumentalities as an
implied prohibition in the Constitution was held in-
applicable to Australian Constitution by the Supreme Court
of Victoria before the High Court was constituted but the
High Court in the first case applied the doctrine. See
D’Emden v. Pedder (1). It is hardly necessary to trace the
history of the doctrine as it was rejected in what is called
the Engineers’ case (2). It was, However, held in D’Emden
v. Pedder(1), that s. 1 14 only referred to "tax on
property" as such and was a prohibition different from that
contained in the American Doctrine. The matter came to a
head in two cases in 1908. In King v. Sutton(3), a quantity
of wire netting purchased in England and imported into the
Commonwealth by the Government of New South Wales was landed
at the port of Sydney. Without any entry having been made
or passed and without the permission of the customs
officers, it was removed under the executive
(1) (1904) I C.L.R. 91.
(2) (1920) 28 C.L.R. 129.
(3) (1908) 5 C.L.R. 786.
889
authority of the State. The customs authorities proceeded
against the defendant under ss. 36 and 236 of the Customs
Act of 1901. It was held that the Customs Act, 1901, was a
valid exercise of the exclusive power of the Commonwealth
conferred by ss. 52(ii), 86 and 90 of the Constitution Act,
to impose, collect and control duties of customs and excise,
and the Act applied to goods imported by the Government of a
State just as it applied to private persons and the goods
which were subject to the control of the Customs authorities
under s. 30 could not be removed contrary to the provisions
of the Act. On the following day, the High Court delivered
judgment in the Attorney-General of New South Wales v. The
Collector of Customs (1), in which s. 114 was considered.
That was an action brought to recover from the defendant the
amount of customs duties demanded and paid under protest in
respect of the importation into the Commonwealth of certain
steel rails by the Government of the State of New South
Wales. The rails were purchased in England and were shipped
to the Secretary for Public Works of the State. At that
time the current of authority in Australia was in favour of
applying the American doctrine of immunity of
instrumentalities as laid down by the High Court in D’Emden
v. Pedder ( 2), though in that case, it was already held
that s. 114 dealt with "tax on property", and it was a very
different matter. The State sought the protection of s.
114. It was held that the doctrine had no application to
powers expressly granted to the Commonwealth which by their
very nature involved control of some operations of the State
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Government and one such grant was the power to make laws
with respect to external trade. It was further held that
the imposition of customs duties being a mode of regulating
trade and commerce with other countries as well as an
exercise of the taxing power, the right of the States to
import goods must be subject to the
(1) (1908) 5 C. L. P. 818.
(2) (1904) 1 C.t.R. 91.
890
Commonwealth power. The Commonwealth power was said to flow
from s. 51 [(i) and (ii)] which read :
"51. The Parliament shall, subject to the
Constitution, have power to make laws for the
peace, order and good government of the
Commonwealth with respect to
(i) Trade and commerce with other countries,
and among the States,
(ii) Taxation; but so as not to discriminate
between States or parts of States".
In this connection, one other section may be
quoted
"55. Tax Bill.--Laws imposing taxation shall
deal only with the imposition of taxation, and
any provision therein dealing with any other
matter shall be of no effect.
Laws imposing taxation, except laws imposing
duties of customs or of excise, shall deal
with one subject of taxation only; but laws
imposing duties of customs shall deal with
duties of customs only, and laws imposing
duties of excise shall deal with ditties of
excise only".
In deciding that the State Government was required to pay
customs duties on import by it, the provisions of s. 114
notwithstanding, the learned judges gave widely different
reasons. Those reasons were pressed into service in the
arguments before us, and I shall briefly notice them. Chief
justice Griffith found entinomy in the power of taxation and
regulation conferred by s. 51 on the one hand and the
exemption granted by s. 114 on the other, and held that if a
construction was possible which would harmonise the two, it
was to be preferred. The
891
learned Chief justice, therefore, examined the scheme of the
Constitution Act and found that though the word ’taxation’
in s. 51 (ii) included customs duties, the latter were not
described as ’tax’ in the Constitution or as ’tax on
property He held that customs duties were a tax on the
movement of goods and the word ’tax’ ins. 114 could riot be
held to include customs duties because the section mentioned
a tax con property’ ’belonging to a State’. He was of
opinion that such property must be within the geographical
boundaries of the State and customs duties being collected
at the confines of the State were collected before the goods
became the property of the State. He concluded, therefore,
that the levying of duties of customs on importation was not
an imposition of the tax upon property within the literal
meaning of s. 114, and even if it was, the section must be
differently construed in the light of the general provisions
of the Constitution Act. Barton and O’Connor, JJ., in
separate judgments followed the same line of thought.
Higgins, J. , pointed out that before the prohibition
applied, taxation of property must be ’as property’. His
conclusion ,nay be stated in his own words :
"I prefer to base my judgment on the ground
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which I have stated. I cannot confidently,
take the ground that customs duty cannot be a
tax within the meaning of the word tax’ in
section 114. It is true that ’duties of
customs’ and ’duties of excise’ are the usual
expressions; but phraseology, such as is used
in s. 55, shows that the Constitution treats
the imposing of such duties as being the
imposing of taxes. ’Laws imposing taxation,
except laws imposing duties of customs or
excise, shall deal with one subject of
taxation only’. However the fact that section
114 uses the mere word "tax’not ’tax of any
kind’ although it speaks of (property of any
kind strengthens the view
892
that the framers of the section could not have
had customs duties in their minds at the time.
They lay the emphasis on the thought on
ownership "property of any kind belonging’
etc." (p. 855).
Isaacs,J., on the other hand, held that duties of
customs as ordinarily understood or in the Customs Act, were
imposed on the goods themselves and were therefore, ’on
property’ within the meaning of s. 114, but did not come
within the meaning of ’tax’ as used in that section and the
Constitution generally. He cited certain authorities to
show that though the word ’taxation’, when used to confer on
Government a power, might carry the amplest meaning.. being
a generic word, the word tax might or might not be as wide
in meaning when used in, one other context. The learned
judge found that the word ’tax’ was used only in s. 114 and
did not carry the wide meaning, and coupled with the word
’property’ could not be read to include customs duties.
This decision of the Australian High Court was strongly
relied upon by the learned Solicitor-General. It will,
however, be seen that the construction of the words used
ins. 114 is so intimately connected with the scheme and
language of the other parts of the Constitution Act as to be
of little assistance to us. The words ’tax’ and ’taxation’
were not defined in the Australian Constitution, whereas
they are, in our own. Further, the distinction between
’tax’ and ’taxation’ with all due respects is somewhat
difficult to apprehand. I can only say in the words of
Cassels, J., in a Canadian case to which I shall refer
presently that :
"I agree with the Attorney-General for British
Columbia in his Statement before me as to the
difference between taxation and a tax. As the
Attorney.General states ’I am not relying very
893
strongly upon that phase of the argument’. He
thinks the distinction is rather subtle and
thin, so do I."
We shall soon that the Privy Council (lid not rely upon this
distinction when this case was cited before
it.
The decision in the Australian case laws down certain
general propositions which may be stated. It recognizes
that customs duties have the dual aspect of raising revenue
and of regulating external trade. This proposition, of
course, is valid. It was also accepted in the American
cases to which I have already referred and also in the Privy
Council case from Canada to which I shall make reference.
It also decided that the word ’taxation’ is sufficiently
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wide to take in customs duties. This was laid down by
Isaacs, J., and cannot be said to be dissented from by the
other learned judges. This proposition is hardly necessary
as an aid to construction of our Constitution which uses the
word ’taxation’, as I pointed out during the course of
arguments only, in Art. 289, and defines the term :
"Art. 366 (28). ’Taxation’ includes the
imposition of any tax or impost, whether
general or local or special, and tax’ shall be
construed accordingly".
This gets over the difficulty felt in Australian case
generally and particularly by Higgins J., in the extract I
have made from his judgment. The fact that the word
taxation is used in one place only in our Constitution saves
us from the task of examining the context, because the
definition would become a dead letter if it were riot used
in, that place in the sense defined. As regards the scheme
of the Australian Constitution, there is some similarity in
that the powers of taxation conferred by s. 51 of the
Australian
894
Constitution Act on Parliament are subject to the provisions
of that Constitution just as they are in our Constitution
but unlike those conferred by the Constitution of Canada. I
shall refer to these points which were used in arguments
when I deal with our Constitution. I shall now refer to the
Canadian case relied upon by the learned Solicitor-General.
Before dealing with the Canadian precedent or the decision
on appeal by the judicial Committee, I find it necessary to
refer to a few cases in which the Privy Council explained
the general scheme of the British North America Act and the
principles on which that Act is to be construed,
particularly ss. 91 --95 of the Act, which deal with the
powers of legislation in the Dominion and their distribution
between the Dominion Parliament and the Legislatures of the
Provinces. Without leaving those principles before one,
there is a danger of misapprehending the implications of the
cases relied upon by the learned Solicitor-General. It is
not necessary to reproduce sections 91 and 92 in their
entirety beyond the opening words which have a direct
bearing upon the problem decided in the Privy Council case.
Section 91, in so far as material to our purpose, reads
Section 91 -
"It shall be lawful for the Queen, by and with
the advice and consent of the Senate and House
of Commons, to make laws for the peace, order,
and good government of Canada, in relation to
all matters not coming within the classes of
subjects by this Act assigned exclusively to
the legislatures of the provinces; and for
greater certainty but not so as to restrict
the terms of this section, it is hereby
declared that (notwithstanding anything in
this Act) the exclusive legislative authority
of the Parliament of Canada extends to all
matters
895
coming within the classes of subjects next
hereinafter enumerated, that is to say,-"
"Then follows an enumeration of twenty nine
classes of subjects".
"And any matter coming within any of the
classes of subjects enumerated in this section
shall not be deemed to come within the class
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of matters of a local or private nature
comprised in the enumeration of the classes of
subjects by this Act assigned exclusively to
the legislatures of the provinces."
Section 92 is as follows
"In each province the legislature may
exclusively make laws in relation to matters
coming within the classes of subjects next
hereinafter enumerated, that is to say,-"
"Then follows an enumeration of sixteen
classes of subjects."
In dealing with the general scheme of the Act, the Board
in The Citizens Insurance Company of Canada v. William
Parsons and The Queen Insurance Company v. Williams Parsons
(1), pointed out that the scheme was to give primacy to the
Dominion Parliament in cases of conflict of power
notwithstanding anything in the Act and explained how the
exclusiveness of the spheres of the two legislatures was
intended to work. The position was again summed up the next
year in Russel v. Queen, the report of which is to be found
in the same volume at p. 829. Again, in Tennant v Union
Bank of Canada (2), it was held that s. 91 (No. 15) of the
British North America Act gave the Dominion
(1) (1881-82) 7 App. Cas. 96.
(2) (1894) A.C. 31 at 41.
896
Parliament power to legislate over every transaction within
the legitimate business of a banker, notwithstanding that
the exercise of such power interfered with property and
civil rights in the province (ss. 92, 20, 13) and conferred
upon the bank privileges as a lender which the provincial
law did not recognise. The decision was rested once again
on the doctrine of paramountcy of Dominion Parliament
notwithstanding anything in the Act so long as it did not
fall within the exclusive power of the Provincial Legis-
lature under section 91. Lord Watson observed :
".......... But sect. 91 expressly declares
that, notwithstanding anything in this Act,’
the exclusive legislative authority of the
Parliament of Canada shall extend to all
matters coming, within the enumerated classes;
which plainly indicates that the legislation
of that Parliament, so long as it strictly
relates to these matters, is to be of
paramount authority. To refuse effect to the
declaration would render nugatory some of the
legislative powers specially assigned to the
Canadian Parliament."
This primacy of Dominion Parliament wag in all matters
legislative, subject, of course, to what was assigned
exclusively to the Provincial Legislatures. But the primacy
of Parliament of Canada was untrammelled by anything
elsewhere to be found in the same Act.
From the above citations, it is obvious that the general
scheme of the British North America Act assigns certain
subjects to the exclusive and plenary power of the Dominion
Parliament, and certain other subjects exclusively to the
Provincial Legislatures. By s. 91, the Imperial Parliament
has unequivocally placed everything not assigned to the
local legislatures within the jurisdiction of the Dominion
Parliament notwithstanding anything in the
897
Act. The British North America Act thus has to be construed
as a whole and with reference first to the exclusive domain
of the Provincial Legislatures, next, with reference to the
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Paramountcy of the Dominion Parliament and the general
scheme of the Act. Unless a matter falls within s. 92 and
does not fall within s. 91, the action of the Dominion
Parliament is subject to no restraint by anything elsewhere
to be found in the Act.
We are now in a position to consider the case so
strongly relied upon by the learned Solicitor-General. To
Understand that case, the facts must be seen first. It was
a test case by way of an action by the Crown in the right of
the Province to have it declared that it could import liquor
into Canada for purposes of sale without paying customs
duties imposed by the Crown in the right of the Dominion of
Canada by virtue of the Customs Act of Canada. The action
of the Province of British Columbia was based on the
provisions of Government Liquor Act which was declared intra
vires by the Privy Council in Canadian Pacific Wine Company
Limited v. Tuley (1). Before the Exchequer Court, the
following admission of facts was filed by the Attorney-
General of Columbia:-
"It is hereby admitted, for all purposes of
this action, that the case of ’Johnnie Walker’
’Black label’ whiskey, which was purchased and
consigned to H.M. King George V in the right
of the province of British Columbia care of
Liquor Control Board, Victoria B. C. as alleg-
ed in para 1 of the Statement of the claim
filed herein, was so purchased and consigned
to meet the requirements of the Government
Liquor Stores’ established in British Columbia
under the Government Liquor Act Ch. 30 of the
States of British Columbia, 1921 and for the
purpose of sale at the said Government
(1) [1921] 2 A.C. 417.
898
Liquor Stores pursuant to the provisions of
the said Act".
The contention on the side of the Province was that s. 125
of the British North America Act which provides "No lands or
property belonging to Canada or any Province shall be liable
to taxation", gave protection against the customs duty. The
contention on the side of the Dominion was that the whiskey
was not imported for purposes of Government but for trade.
It was pointed out that under s. 118, large sums were
payable by the Dominion to the Provinces and reference was
also made to ss. 122, 123 and 124, under which customs and
excise laws as also certain other dues were to continue
until altered by the Parliament of Canada. British Columbia
was not a part of the Dominion to start with. It was
admitted ’into the Dominion under s. 146 of the British
North America Act on May 16, 1871, by an order of Her
Majesty in Council. Section 7 of the Order provided that
the existing customs tariff and excise duties would continue
in force in British Columbia for sometime. The Dominion Act
under which the customs duty was sought to be levied
provided as follows :-
"The rates and duties of customs imposed by
this Act, or the customs tariff or any other
law relating to the customs, as well as the
rates and duties of customs heretofore imposed
by any Customs Act or Customs Tariff or any
law relating to the Customs enacted and in
force at any time since the first day of July
1867, shall be binding, and are declared and
shall be deemed to have been always binding
upon and payable by his Majesty, in respect of
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any goods, which may be hereafter or have been
heretofore imported by or for His Majesty
whether in the right of His Majesty’s Govern-
ment of Canada or His Majesty’s Government
899
of any Province of Canada, and whether or not
the goods so imported belonged at the time of
importation to His Majesty; and any and all
such Acts as aforesaid shall be construed and
interpreted as if the rates and duties of
customs aforesaid were and are by express
words charged upon and made payable by His
Majesty.
Provided, however, that nothing herein
contained is intended to impose or to declare
the imposition of any tax upon, or to make or
to declare liable to taxation, any property
belonging to His Majesty either in the right
of Canada or of a Province".
In the Exchequer Court, Cassells, J., based his decision on
the fact that the whiskey was imported not for any
governmental purpose but for trade. He, therefore, rejected
the claim of the Province following Mr. justice Brewer’s
dictum in the South Carolina Case, and referred to two cases
of the Privy Council, Farnell v. Bowman (1) and Attorney-
General of the Strait Settlement v. Wemyss (1), in which it
was stated that "if a State chooses to embark upon private
business in competition with other trades, they should be
liable just as other persons engaging in trade". The
Australian case of Attorney General of New South Wales v.
Collector of Customs (3), was referred to but was not
followed.
An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court of Canada. The
report of the decision is found in The Attorney-General of
the Province of British Columbia v. The Attorney-General of
the Dominion of Canada (4). It was argued on behalf of
British Columbia that in s. 125, British North America Act,
the word ’taxation’ included the imposition of customs
duties and the word ’property’ included movable property of
all kinds and not merely
(1) (1887) 12 App C.s. 613.
(2) (1188) 13 App. Cas 192.
(3) (1908) 5 C.L.R. 818.
(4) 64 Canda S.C.R. 377.
900
property as may be incidental to the administration of the
provincial government. On behalf of the Dominion, it was
contended that customs duties did not come within taxation’
but were merely in the nature of regulations of trade and
commerce, and further this was not taxation on property’,
and Attorney-General of New South Wales V. Collector of
Customs (1), was relied upon.
The Court consisted of five learned judges and they
delivered separate judgments. Iddington J., declined to go
into the question whether the word ’taxation’ would or would
not include customs duties. He held that s. 125 was in a
chapter which dealt with lands and property and thus was
confined to property as was mentioned there or in the 3rd
and 4th Schedules, and concluded that in view of this
context and the nature of the powers given by Nos. 2 and 3
of s. 91, the power to demand customs duties must be upheld.
Ainglin J., held on the authority of Attorney-General of New
South Wales v. Collector of Customs (1), that s. 125
could not have been intended to give exemptions of this
kind, and that customs duties were not only taxes but were
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also regulatory and were imposed rather on movement across
the border than on the goods themselves and were thus not a
tax ’on property in Canada. Mignault J., followed
a similar line. Duff J., entered into a more detailed
discussion of the scheme of the British North America Act.
He observed that it was a fundamental part of the scheme of
Confederation to give amplest authority in relation to
external trade exclusively to the Dominion, and customs
duties were an instrument of regulation. He, therefore,
held that the theory of Dominion primacy must on such a
construction of s. 125 postulate a power of disallowance of
anything which would weaken that control and primacy. He
also held that "taxation’ in relation to property was less
comprehensive in significance than ’taxation’
(1) (1908) 5 C.L.R. 818.
simpliciter, and though customs duties were taxes on
commodities in one sense, they were not ’taxes on property’
as used in s. 125 where the word ’property’ was used in the
sense of distribution of ’lands’ and "property’ between the
Dominion and the Provinces. Brodeur J., held that customs
duties in Canada both regulated and raised revenue and the
Act under which they were levied laid them ’on or upon
goods’ and this attracted s. 125.
All these reasons were of course pressed into service in the
arguments before us. I shall now address myself to the
Privy Council judgment on appeal from the Supreme Court.
The Privy Council did not express any opinion on these
reasons.
Lord Buckmaster referred to the width of s. 125 but
pointed out that it could not be read in an isolated and
disjunctive way. It was to be read as a part of the general
scheme of the Constitution Act by which the Dominion was to
enjoy exclusive legislative authority over matters
enumerated in s. 91 which included regulation of trade and
commerce all raising of money by any mode or system of
taxation. He pointed out that customs duties had these dual
functions and whether it was the one function or the other
or both, the Dominion alone had the power. The claim of the
Provinces that though the Dominion had the power to erect a
tariff wall, the provinces could make a breach in it by
virtue of s. 125 through which the goods could pass un-
affected by the Customs duties, was not accepted, because s.
125 was a part of a group of sections which distributed
property between the Dominion and the Provinces and gave
control to the Provinces over properties allocated to them.
This did not affect authority conferred by s. 91, which
power extended to regulation of trade and commerce
throughout the Dominion and irrespective of the area of its
operation. Lord Buckmaster, therefore,
902
held that this purpose was paramount and s. 125 must not be
read to defeat it. In other words, the primacy of Dominion
Parliament in the matter of regulation of external trade and
commerce and taxation of this type was held to be unaffected
by s. 125. Lord Buckmaster referred to Attorney-General of
New South Wales v. Collector of Customs (1), but did not
apply it and observed that "the true solution is to be found
in the adaptation of s. 125 to the whole scheme of
Government" which the British North America Act defined.
The Canadian decisions are based upon the scheme of the
British North America Act which gives paramountcy to the
Dominion Parliament which was unaffected by s. 125 which
found place in a group of sections dealing with the
distribution of property between the Dominion and the
Provinces.
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Now, the arguments in the present case follow the lines
taken in the cases I have reviewed. It is contended for the
Union that the exclusive power to levy duties of customs and
regulation of external trade belongs to Parliament, that
customs duties both raise revenue and regulate, that they
are not ’taxes’ much less ’taxes on property’, and Art. 289
must be interpreted to preserve the exclusive and plenary
power of Parliament. On the other side, it is contended
that clauses (2) and (3) indicate that the right of
Parliament is to tax the trading activities of State
Governments but to leave free the ordinary functions as the
Governments of the States, and the prohibition in cl. (1) of
Art. 289 is absolute subject only to what is expressly
excluded by cl. (2). To understand the arguments and to see
how the precedents of other countries serve us to understand
our Constitution, I shall first analyse the scheme of
taxation under our Constitution.
To begin with, it is a matter for reflection whether the
word ’property’ in Art. 289 excludes
(1) (1908) 5 C.L.R. 818.
903
property imported from foreign countries which has to bear a
tax before it can enter the territory of India. The Article
bans taxation of property belonging to the Government of the
by property is meant only that prod the geographical limits
of outside those limits and set across customs frontiers may
duty. Similarly, if customs duties in the word ’taxation’,
the Article is to save the property of the State
Governments. Union claims that customs duty is neither nor
a ’tax on property’. It is a tax on the movement of goods
across the customs frontier and the protection given by
Article 289(1) does not apply. The scheme of the
Constitution clearly shows that neither claim of the Union
can be upheld.
The Union List does not include any tax which in the
technical or popular sense can be said to be ’property tax’
or a tax laid on property as property. These tax entries
begin at No. 82 which is "taxes on income other than
agricultural income". Then follow Nos. 83 and 844 which
deal with duties of customs and duties of excise. It is
these entries which are the subject of controversy. If
these are not to be regarded as taxes on ’property’, then,
no other tax can be remotely connected with the property of
"he State in the sense suggested by the learned Solicitor-
General, Nos. 85 and 86 deal with companies, and Nos. 87 and
88, with death duties. In extremely rare cases, a State
might be the legatee as in U. S. v. Perkins (1) and Snyder
v. Bettman (1), but it is difficult to imagine that such a
case was in contemplation. Terminal taxes and taxes on
railway fares and freights of No. 89 may fall upon the
States, but under Art. 269, the proceeds have to be assigned
to the States. No. 90 deals with taxes other than stamp
duties oil transactions in stock exchanges and future
markets. They are seldom, if at all, likely to
(1) 163 U.S. 62541 L.Ed. 287.
(2) 190 U. R. 24947 L.Ed. 103 5.
904
fall on the States and the proceeds are also assignable to
the States. No. 91 is Rates of stamp duties, and No. 92,
taxes in the sale or purchase of newspaper,
assements published therein, and he sale and purchase of
goods where such sale or purchase jurse of inter-State trade
or not taxes such as may be con property’. The net
proceeds of gain to be given to the States. When ..J" was
put to the learned Solicitor-General as to which tax on
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property was in contemplation, he could only point to the
residuary power of Parliament. This shows that unless Art.
289(1) took in entries relating to customs duties and excise
duties, the protection granted by the clause would be large-
ly superflaous or nugatory.
The Government of India Act, 1935, granted exemption in
respect of lands and buildings only, The present Article
changed the words to "property and income’. The pharse is
exhaustive of all the assets and income of the States.
Clause (2) of the Article indicates that the exemption is
not to apply to the trade or business carried on by the
State and any tax can be imposed in respect of such trade or
business of any kind or any operations connected therewith
and any property used or occupied for the purpose of such
trade or business and any income accuring or arising in
connection therewith. The repeated use of the word ’any’
shows that the distinction sought to be made in Australia
from the use of the word in one place and its omission in
another is not admissible. The words "used or occupied’
show that movable and immovable properties are included.
Clause (3) shows that power is reserved to Parliament to
declare by law which trade or business or class of trade or
business is incidental to the ordinary functions of
Government, thus, taking the matter out of the
905
jurisdiction of courts. Till Parliament so declares, all
trade and business of any kind must remain subject to
taxation.
From the above, it follows that the three clauses of
Art. 289 must be read together and harmoniously together
their correct import. It is not possible to read cl. (1)
with the assistance of rulings of other Courts. The problem
to be faced is : What is included in the expression
’property of a State’ ? It must obviously include all
property to which the State can lay claim. The word
"property’ is wide enough to include immovable as well as
movable varieties. Art. 289 departed from the language of
the Government of India Act, 1935 by discarding ’lands or
buildings’ and using the more comprehensive expression "pro-
perty’, and in cl. (2) qualified that word by ’any’ and by
’used or occupied’. The collocation of these expressions
clearly indicates that the property of the State in whatever
circumstances situated, was meant and was exempt from
taxation and the only property which was made subject to
taxation was any property used or occupied for business.
Property, which is brought into ownership and possession
abroad, or property, which is produced or manufactured by
the State, is property of the State. If not, the question
may be asked, "Whose property is it then ?", and no answer
to such a question can be given. I am, therefore, of the
opinion that taking the language of Art. 289 (1) by itself
or even as modified by that of clauses (2) and (3), the
conclusion is inescapable that properties of all kinds
belonging to the States save those used or occupied for
trade or business, were meant to be exempted from
’taxation’. Such property may be immovable or movable and
need not be within the geographical limits. This Article is
in the part dealing with "Finance" and is included in a sub-
chapter entitled "Miscellaneous Financial Provisions". Its
significance is thus not made less
906
by any special considerations as was the case with s. 125
of the British North America Act. The powers of
legislation, which Parliament enjoys by virtue of the
taxation entries in List 1, are expressly subject to the
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provisions of the Constitution, and Art. 289 must,
therefore, override unless it be inapplicable. The Scheme
of Art. 289 does not admit that the word ’property’ should
be read in any specialized sense. I am, therefore, of
opinion that goods imported and goods manufactured or
produced by the States are included in the word ’property’.
It is next contended that neither customs duties nor
excise duties can be said to be "taxation’ and even if they
can be described as "’taxation" or "’tax", they are not tax
on property. They are said to be taxes on movement of goods
in the one case, and taxes on production or manufacture, in
the other. Many rulings were cited to show that this is the
way in which judges have described these levies. I shall
deal with customs duties first, because, in my opinion,
excise duties are simpler to deal with. Some judges have
described excise duties as "on goods produced", and some, as
"on production and manufacture", and it is easy to cite an
equal number of cases on either side.
The definition of the word ’taxation’ in our Constitution
is the most significant fact. It serves to distinguish the
Australian cases and it tells us what kind of levy would be
hit by Art. 289 (1). This is what it states :
"Taxation’ includes the imposition of any tax
or impost, whether general or local or
special, and ’tax’ shall be construed accord-
ingly".
Though it is not an exhaustive definition and only shows
what is included in the word, one is struck
907
immediately by its width of language. Though it speaks of
any tax or impost, it goes a step further and adds "whether
general, or local or special" indicating thereby that no
special or local considerations are relevant and even a
general non-discriminatory levy must be regarded as
taxation. I have already stated that the word "taxation" is
used only in Art. 289 (1) and it must be read with all its
wealth of meaning into the first clause of the Article. Not
to do so would be to make the definition entirely redundant.
When the clause is expanded in the light of the definition,
it reads :
"The property and income of a State shall be
exempt from any Union tax or impost, whether
general or local or special".
The underlined portion represents the definition.
The question thus arises why use the word and define it
in this comprehensive way if there was no tax in the
legislative entries in List I which could be said to fall on
the property of the States unless one thought in terms of
customs duties and excises ? According to Wells (1).
"Scientifically considered taxation is the
taking or appropriating such portions of the
product or property of a country or community
as is necessary for the support of its
Government by methods that are not in the
nature of extortions, punishments or
confiscations".
Viewed in this broad way and having in mind that the term
’taxation’ as used in the Article was specially defined with
great width, the answer to the question posed by me is
obvious. But that is not all. The definition speaks of
"impost". The word "impost" in its general sense means a
tax or tribute or duty and may be on persons or on goods.
In a
(1) Theory and Practice of Taxation,p.204.
908
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special sense it means a duty on imported goods and on
merchandise. See Pacific Ins. Co. v. Sonle(1). In Ward v.
Maryland (2), it is stated .
"An impost, or a duty on imports, is a custom
or tax levied on articles brought into a
country".
The Oxford Dictionary does say that this special meaning is
after Cowell and that there is no evidence of the origin.
But every dictionary of legal terms will bear out the
special meaning. Indeed, the American Constitution
classifies "impost" with "duties" and "excises" as indirect
taxes in contradistinction to taxes on property or
capitation. The word "duties" is sometimes used as
synonymous with tax, but in a special sense, it means an
indirect tax imposed on the importation or consumption of
goods. See Pollock v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust co (3).
In Art. 289(1), property of the States is exempted from
Union taxation. One cannot go by the word "Property" alone
but must take into consideration the ambit of the word
"taxation" also. I have read the definition into the first
clause of Art. 289. Reading further into the definition the
meaning of the word "impost" not as a "tax" (which is
unnecessary as the word "tax" has already been used and
there is a presumption against tautology) but as a "duty on
importation or consumption", one gets this result :
"The property and income of a State shall be
exempt from any Union tax or duty on
imported
goods or merchandise of all kinds".
In other words, property of the States shall be free from
direct taxes and indirect taxes.
It will thus be seen that both from the angle of the word
"property" as also from the angle of the
(1) 7 Wall. (U.S.) 433 :19 L.Ed. 95.
(2) 12 Wall. (U.S.) 418 :20 L.Ed. 449.
(3) 158 U.S. 601, 622: 39 L. Ed. 1108
909
word "taxation" we reach the two kinds of taxes which are
the subject matter of controversy here. On the other hand,
all this width of language is lost completely if these taxes
are left out and one goes in search of other possible taxes.
The definition may conceivably cover some of them in very
special circumstances but the proceeds of those taxes are
assignable to the States, and it seems pointless to include
them for taxation and then to hand over the proceeds to the
States. The distinction between the trading activity of the
State Governments and their ordinary functions of
government, which is worked out with such elaborate care on
the American pattern, also loses its point. Clause (2)
would scarcely be necessary and cl. (3), even less.
The next question is whether customs duties and excises
are in their true nature taxes on the occasion of
importation in the one case and production in the other, and
cannot be described as "taxes on property". To begin with,
the expression "taxes on property" is not used; nor is the
expression "taxes in respect of property", with which the
former expression was compared. The former expression was
used in the Australian Constitution Act and the distinction
was made by the High Court of that country. We are only
concerned to see whether the imports of the States would be
free from Union taxation. If by the nature of customs
duties as a tax on movement of goods, it cannot be said that
the exemption has been earned, there should be an answer in
favour of the validity of the amendment. If customs duties
can be said to be "tax on property", the answer must be the
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other way.
In this connection, there is the High authority of Chief
justice Marshall in Brown v. Maryland where he observed :
" An impost, or duty on imports, is a custom
or a tax levied on articles brought into a
(1) 12 Wheaton 419, 437 : 6 L.Ed. 678, 685.
910
country, and is most usually secured before
the importer is allowed to exercise his rights
of ownership over them, because evasio
ns of the
law can be prevented more certainly by execu-
ting it while the articles are in its custody.
It would not, however, be less an impost or
duty on the articles, if it were to be levied
on them after they were landed. The policy
and consequent practice of levying or securing
the duty before or on entering the port, does
not limit the power to that state of things,
nor, consequently, the prohibition, unless the
true meaning of the clause so confines it.
What, then, are ’imports’ ? The lexicons
inform us, they are "things imported’. If we
appeal to usage for the meaning of the word,
we shall receive the same answer. They are
the articles themselves which are brought into
the country. "A duty on imports’, then, is
not merely a duty on the act of importation,
but is a duty on the thing imported."
In Marriot v. Brune (1), later approved in Lawder v. Stone
(2), it was laid down that customs are duties charged upon
commodities on their being imported into or exported from a
country. It follows, therefore, that it is not right to say
that customs duties are on movement of goods and not upon
the goods themselves. A glance at the Sea Customs Act,
1878, which is sought to be amended, shows that the legis-
lative practice in our country has been to describe customs
duties as laid on the goods or commodities. Section 20
itself, which is sought to be amended, says :
"............... customs duties shall be
levied......on
(a) goods imported or exported, etc.
(b) opium, salt or salted fish imported,
etc.
(1) 9 Haward (U.c.) 619 at 632 : 13 L, Ed,
282.
(2) 187 (U.S.) 281: 47 L.Ed. 178
911
(c) goods brought from any foreign port
to............ etc.
(d) goods brought in bond from one customs
port to another".
Similarly, ss. 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 29A, 31, 32 and several
others mentioned goods as being the subject of the tax.
Section 43, which deals with drawbacks, may be seen in this
connection :
"43. When any goods, having been charged with
import duty at one customs-port and thence
exported to another, are re-exported by Sea as
aforesaid, drawback sha11 be allowed on such
goods as if they had been so re-exported from
the former port."
*
The duty is laid on goods and it is the goods which earn
the drawback. It would be not wrong to say that the whole
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of the Sea Customs Act speaks of goods all the time.
If then the goods be the property of the States and
those goods have to bear the tax before rights of ownership
can be exercised in respect of them, is it an error to say
that the exemption of Art. 289 (1) will be available to
them, regard being had to the language of the clause read
with the definition of "taxation"-
"The property...... of a State shall be exempt
from any Union tax or impost, whether general
or local or special"?
Indeed, Parliament in 1951, soon after the Constituent
Assembly had adopted the Constitution, amended s. 20 of the
Sea Customs Act, 1878, by inserting sub-s. (2) which read:
912
"The provisions of sub-section (1) shall apply
in respect of all goods belonging to the
Government of a State and used for the purpose
of a trade or business of any kind carried on
by, or on behalf of, that Government, or of
any operation; connected with such trade or
business as they apply in respect of goods not
belonging to any Government."
This sub-section reproduces cl. (2) of Art. 289. It views
the goods imported as property, customs duties as
"taxation", and declares that such goods though belonging to
a State Government would bear the tax under the
circumstances mentioned in the said clause. If there ever
was a perfect instance of contemporanea expositio, this must
be it. It is not a case of a modern statute being
interpreted with reference to an old one. Nor is their any
judicial interpretation involved. This is a case of the
same body of men enacting a provision in an Act to carry out
the intent and meaning of a provision of the Constitution
adopted earlier by them. In their understanding of the
Constitution, customs duties as levied under the Sea Customs
Act, 1878, were affected by the change from "lands and
buildings" of s. 154 of the Government of India Act, 1935,
to "property" and the grant of exemption to such property
from Union taxation. If I had any doubts about the
construction of Art. 289, this would have served me to show
the way. 1, however, think that the matter hardly admits of
any doubt.
The learned Solicitor-General again and again referred
to the dual purpose achieved by the imposition of customs
duties, namely, the raising of revenue and the regulation of
foreign trade. He associated excise duties with customs in
the same breath and cited the Privy Council case from Canada
to argue that if the proposed amendment is declared in
either case to be unconstitutional, then, the regulatory
part
913
of the same law would fail without being in any way
imperilled by Art. 289 or anything elsewhere to be found in
the Constitution. This argument needs serious
consideration.
There can be no doubt that the power of Parliament to
regulate foreign trade is plenary and is untrammelled by
anything contained in Art. 289. A similar assumption may
also be made in favour of duties of excise, though the
element of regulation may be somewhat weaker there than in
the duties of customs. The question, however, is what
purpose is the proposed amendment intended to serve ? It is
a little difficult to dissociate the regulatory aspect from
taxation. Even in Australia, where tax laws must deal only
with taxation and no other subject, the regulatory aspect of
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customs duties was adverted to. In the United States of
America also, this regulatory aspect of customs duties did
play a prominent part. Can we, therefore, say that the
combined effect of entries 83 and 41 of List 1 would sustain
the proposed amendment ? If it were a question of regulation
being inextricably woven into the tax, I would have paused
to consider the matter. I am not expounding a law already
made but am giving an opinion on certain questions. These
questions definitely refer to the revenue aspect of customs
duties. If the law were framed to regulate and even to
prohibit the importation, by the State Government in common
with others, of certain goods or classes of goods, I would
have no hesitation in saying that such a law would not
offend the exemption in Art. 289. Even if the law was
intended to achieve ’both ends’ there would be an argument
in favour of the Union. But if the advice is sought on the
plain question whether the goods of the States can be taxed
to raise revenue, the answer is equally plain that it is not
permissible except in the circumstances already mentioned
respectively in the two sub-sections which are sought to be
amended.
914
Section 20 of the Sea Customs Act, and s. 3 of the Central
Excises & Salt Act, do not pretend to regulate external
trade in the one case and production and manufacture, in the
other. They are provisions for raising revenue in much the
traditional English way. Whatever little pretence there
might be is shed completely by the proposed amendment which,
to borrow once again from Mr. justice Douglas, is a "measure
designed to put the States on the tax collectors’ list". In
these circumstances, I answer the question in respect of
customs duties without adverting to entry 41 of the Union
list. It is argued that the States would import goods not
only free but also freely and, thus, lose valuable exchange.
But the question can only be answered as posed and not on
the basis of horrible imaginings. It can be argued with
equal force that the State Governments may be expected to
evince a sane attitude towards our finances.
In so far as excise duties are concerned, no’ question of
regulation of trade or of production or of manufacture can
really arise except in certain rare circumstances. Much of
this power of regulation of production and manufacture
(except in respect of certain essential commodities
mentioned in No. 33 of List III and those specially
mentioned in List I) belongs to the States. In entry No.
84, we are concerned with tobacco and other goods except
alcoholic liquors for human consumption, opium, Indian hemp
and other narcotic drugs and narcotics. If regulation can
serve the purpose, power will have first to be found either
in List I or List III. But if it were a case of pure
taxation, then, the excise duty is laid on goods in much the
same way as customs. We cannot treat the observations of
judges, where they speak of excises as "on production and
manufacture", to be as binding as statutes. Other judges
have used other language, like "on goods produced or
manufactured". The Central Excise & Salt Act
915
uses the latter, and so do the lists in the Constitution.
There is, therefore, no difference in this respect between
excises and customs. The case of excises is simpler and a
fortiori, because the goods produced in the States by the
States for their ordinary functions of Government and not
for trade or business, are property of the States and
directly within their ownership. If such property is taxed,
it is directly hit by Art. 289 (1), and the arguments on the
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analogy of customs have little place. It follows,
therefore, that neither customs duties nor excise duties can
be levied on goods properly belonging to a State if the
goods are imported or produced not for the purpose of trade
or business but for purposes incidental to the ordinary
functions of Government. It also follows that the sections
of the two Acts as they stand today reflect the true
position under the Constitution, I may add that if the Union
Government desires to put a curb on the excessive impor-
tation of goods by the States, the power to regulate
external trade is available and it is unaffected by Art.
289. A measure designed to achieve regulation by a system
of controls, licensing and all such-devices, would not be
affected by the exemption contained in the Article, but a
pure taxing measure, which seeks to tax property used for
State or governmental purposes, is within the exemption.
My answers to the questions are:
(1) The provisions of Art. 289 of the
Constitution preclude the Union from imposing,
or authorizing the imposition of, customs
duties on the import or export of the property
of a State used for purposes other than those
specified in cl. (2) of that Article if the
imposition is to raise revenue but not to
regulate external trade.
916
(2) The provisions of Art. 289 of the
Constitution of India preclude the Union from
imposing, or authorizing the imposition of,
excise duties on the production or ma
nufacture
in India of the property of a State used for
purposes other than those specified in cl. (2)
of that Article.
(3) The answer is in the affirmative.
RAJAGOPALA AYYANGAR J.-I entirely agree with the
opinion expressed by my Lord the Chief justice both as
regards the answers to the questions referred to this Court
as well as the reasoning on which the same is based. My
only justification for venturing to add a few words of my
own, is because of my feeling that certain matters on which
great stress was laid by learned Counsel appearing for the
States, might be dealt with a little more fully.
When the learned Solicitor-General submitted that on a
proper construction of Art. 289 (1), the immunity from Union
taxation in its relation to property was confined to a
direct tax on property and did not extend to indirect
taxes which were not on property but on an incident
or an event in relation to property, it was urged by learned
Counsel for the States that this was introducing a
distinction between direct and indirect taxes which formed
no part of our constitutional structure. It is true that no
such express distinction has been made by our Constitution,
even so, taxes in the shape of duties of customs (including
export duties) and excise, particularly when imposed with a
view to regulating trade and commerce in so far as such
matters are within the competence of Parliament being
covered by various entries in List I, these cannot be called
taxes on property; for they are
917
imposts with reference to the movement of property by way of
import or export or with reference to the production or
manufacture of goods. Therefore, even though our
Constitution does not confer or distribute legislative power
to tax based on any distinction between direct and indirect
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taxes, it is wrong to suggest that for construing the
exemption in Art. 289 (1), the distinction would necessarily
be irrelevant. Learned Counsel for the States are perfectly
correct in their submission that the Constitution does not
distribute legislative power in regard to taxation between
the Union and the States or any distinction between direct
and indirect taxes as in Canada. In passing I might
observe that even in Australia, there is no distribution of
taxing power on such a basis, for while the Commonwealth
Parliament has an exclusive power to levy duties of customs
and excise (subject to the same having to be uniform) it has
power, generally speaking, to impose direct taxes also,
provided they do not discriminate, and the States have also
a similar power to levy such direct taxes. This however
does not by itself eliminate the relevance of the
distinction for any particular purpose. That there is a
distinction between direct and indirect taxes cannot be
disputed and I heard no submission to the contrary. The
question is whether that distinction has any materiality for
interpreting the meaning of the words ’the property of a
State not being subject to Union taxation’. The question at
once arises whether when reference is made to "property" and
"’its taxation" what is meant is merely a tax on property as
such, i. e. on the beneficial ownership by the State of the
property or whether it is intended to include a tax which
bears merely some relationship to or has some impact on such
property. For in ultimate analysis the distinction between
a direct and an indirect tax is a distinction based upon the
difference in impact which is also expressed as a
distinction based upon its being one not on property
918
but on a taxable event in relation to property. If the
taxable event is merely the ownership of the property and on
the beneficial interest therein, it would be a direct tax,
whereas if the connection between the property and the tax-
payer is not merely ownership but something else such as a
transaction in relation to it, then it would be an indirect
tax. The argument therefore that under the Constitution
legislative power in relation to taxation is not distributed
between the Union and the States on any distinction between
direct and indirect taxes as in Canada is not very material
and of course not decisive on the question under
consideration by us.
It was strenuously urged on behalf of the States that
if Art. 289 (1) were construed in the manner suggested by
the Union, i. e., confining the immunity to direct taxes on
property as distinct from taxes on property which merely
impinged on or had an impact on property, the States could
derive no benefit at all from the provision, because the
Union Parliament had no legislative competence under the
entries in the Union list to impose any direct taxes on
property and that if some meaning and content has to be
given to the exemption it would only be if its scope were
to be held to extend to indirect taxes on property such as
excise duty and duties of customs. The learned Solicitor-
General submitted that even on the construction which he
desired us to adopt there would be scope for the operation
of the immunity because the exemption might very well have
been framed in view of the possible direct taxation on
certain forms of property under entry 97 of the Union List,
read with Art. 248, though such taxes had not yet been
imposed. His further argument was that the exemption might
be capable of being invoked in cases where any State owned
property in the Union territories, for in such a situation
the Union Government would have under
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919
Art. 246 (4) power to legislate on the items enumerated in
the State List and thus levy direct taxes on property. On
the other side, it was urged that it would not be reasonable
to construe the words as having some meaning by reference to
such unlikely eventualities, but that it would be proper to
attribute to the Constitution makers an intention to make
provision for the usual and the normal.
I must say that the submissions of the learned
Solicitor-General are not without force. That apart, I
consider that the history of this clause should be
sufficient to preclude an argument of the type urged for the
States having any great or decisive validity. It is common
ground that Art. 289 (1) was taken over from s. 155 (1) of
the Government of India Act, 1935, with however a variation
to which I shall advert. In that earlier statute, that
section ran :
"Subject as hereinafter provided, the Govern-
ment of a Province shall not be liable to
Federal taxation in respect of lands or build-
ings situate in British India or income
accuring or arising or received in British
India."
The only change which is material which this section has
undergone is the substitution of the word ’property’ for the
words "lands and buildings", thus extending the immunity not
only to immovable property of the type specified but to
other forms of property, including movable property as well.
The distribution of legislative power in regard to taxation
under the Government of India Act in the field relevant to
the present context was identical with that which is found
in the Constitution. Then as now, there was no power in the
Central Legislature to levy any direct taxes on lands and
buildings, besides there being no entry like 97 in the Union
list, the residuary power remaining after the distribution
in the three lists being vested in the Governor
920
General for allocation under s. 104. It would have been
impossible to find any scope for the operation of this
exemption under the scheme of distribution of taxing power
under the Government of India Act except possibly on some
such line as suggested by the learned Solicitor-General.
The fact therefore that if one had regard merely to the
distribution of taxing power between the Centre and the
Provinces there was no scope for imparting a wider meaning
to the expression "taxes on lands and buildings" appears to
me to support the view that the circumstance that direct
taxes on property arc not within Union Legislative power is
not by itself a ground for reading the exemption from
taxation as necessarily having any particular or a wider
connotation.
The next question is whether the inclusion of property
other than "lands and buildings" in the Article by itself
brings within the immunity taxation not merely of the
property itself but on some incident or event in relation to
property such as production or manufacture, import or export
(to refer to the incidents which are relevant to the
context) or does the Article contemplate the same type of
taxes in relation to movable property as were within the
exemption under the Government of India Act in regard to
"’lands and buildings"? In other words, just in the case of
"’lands and buildings" under the Government of India Act,
1935, is the type of taxation of other species of property
now brought in one which is direct and which arises from the
mere ownership of such property or does it include a tax
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livied not on the property itself but on an incident or
event in relation to it ? The analogy of the immunity from
direct taxes on "lands and buildings" which formed the
feature of the exemption in regard to "property" under the
Government of India Act, 1935, would appear. to favour the
view that it is also a direct taxation in relation to the
other forms
921
of property that was intended to be brought within Art. 289
(1). Of course, this view could be overborne by sufficient
reason pointing the other way.
It was in this context that a reference was made to the use
of the expression "taxation" in Art. 289, a term which has
been defined in Art. 366 (28) thus :-
"366. In this Constitution, unless the
context otherwise requires, the following
expressions have the meanings hereby
respectively assigned to them, that is to say-
(28) "Taxation" includes the imposition of
any tax or impost, whether general or local or
special, and "tax" shall be construed accord-
ingly."
There is no doubt that if this definition were applied and
every "tax, duty or impost" were within the scope of the
exemption, the submissions made on behalf of the States
would be formidable. A subsidiary and related point was
also made that the expression "taxation" occurs only in Art.
289 and that if the width of the definition in Art. 366(28)
is not held to be applicable to understand the content of
that word in Art. 289, the definition itself would be
rendered wholly unmeaning. Before considering these
arguments it is necessary to advert to some matters. It is
true that the expression "taxation" occurs only in Art.
289(1) but it is also to be noted that the definition of the
term "’taxation" in Art. 366 has been bodily taken from s.
311(2) of the Government of India Act, 1935. just as under
the Constitution the word "’taxation" also occurs only once
in the Government of India Act, 1935, viz., in s. 155(1)
corresponding to Art. 289(1). The definition, it would be
seen, applies to define not merely the word ""taxation" but
also to the grammatical
922
variations of that expression for instance "taxes". In the
circumstances the only question is whether in the context in
which the word occurs having regard to the antecedent
history and the form of the provision and to the other
provisions of the Constitution there is justification for
the word being understood as meaning something less than the
full width of which it is capable under the definition.
In this connection it would be pertinent to refer to the
terms of Article 285 in which the corresponding immunity of
the Union from State taxation is provided. That Article
runs :-
"285. (1) The property of the Union shall,
save in so far as Parliament may by, law
otherwise provide, be exempt from all taxes
imposed by a State or by any authority
within a
State.
(2) Nothing in clause (1) shall, until
Parliament by law otherwise provides, prevent
any authority within a State from levying any
tax on any property of the Union to which such
property was immediately before the
commencement of this Constitution liable or
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treated as liable, so long as that tax
continues to be levied in that State."
In regard to this provision there are two matters to which
attention might be directed. The first of them is the use
of the expression "all" in clause (1)(taken from the
corresponding s. 154 (1) of the Government of India Act
1935) which is absent from Art. 289 (1). It is manifest
that some significance has to be attached to this variation.
If the definition of the word "taxes" in Art. 366 (28) were
applied to that word in Art. 285 (1), it would be apparent
that the word "all" would be wholly superfluous and otiose,
as the definition itself and that
923
is the contention urged before us on behalf of the
States-embraces all and every tax. This would suggest that
it would not be wrong to take the view that the Constitution
makers felt that notwithstanding the definition of "taxes"
in Art. 366 (28), it might not always have that width of
connotation, so that it was necessary to affirm and if need
be supplement its width by the addition of the word "all".
The other matter is this. If the definition of "taxes" were
read into Art. 285 and the Article read literally, it would
be seen that property of which the Union was the owner would
be entitled to the exemption, whether or not the beneficial
occupation and use of the property was in the Union. In
other words, the literal reading of the Article would bring
within the exemption a tax on a private occupier of Union
land even when imposed on the beneficial interest of such
occupier. S. 125 of the British North America Act 1867 ran
:
"No lands or property belonging to Canada...
shall be liable to taxation (Provincial)".
A lessee of Dominion Crown lands taken on lease for grazing
purposes was assessed to lard tax under an enactment of
Saskatchewan in respect of the lessee’s interest in the
lands. The dominion challenged the validity of the
imposition on the ground of the land itself being within the
immunity conferred by s. 125. Rejecting this contention
Viscount Haldane speaking for the judicial
Committee said :
"........... although the appellant is sought
to be taxed in respect of his occupation of
land, the fee of which is in the Crown, the
operation of the Statute imposing the tax is
limited to the appellants’ own interest." (1).
My object in referring to these observations is that
provisions of this sortxcannot always be read literally
(1) Smith v. Vermillion Hills. [1916] 2 A.C 569, 574.
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and that the object of the framers as disclosed by the
general scheme of distribution of powers has to be borne in
mind to arrive at their proper construction. It is in this
context that the intimate correlation between the exclusive
legislative power of the Union in regard to "trade and
commerce with foreign countries", and related to it, "import
and export across customs frontiers" and the duties with
which we are now concerned and particularly import and
export duties movements across the customs frontier assume
crucial importance; and pose the question whether this power
confided to the Union was intended to be broken into by
every component State imparting its requirements free of
duty.
There was one other further submission made to us by
learned Counsel for the States which requires some detailed
examination and this was based upon the impact of cl. (2) of
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Art. 289 on the import of cl. (1). The argument was this :
The non-obstante clause with which cl. (2) opens should be
taken to indicate that but for that clause, the exemption
would be operative so as to deprive the Union of the power
to levy tax in the converse circumstance, in other words
that but for clause (2) even where the State was engaged in
a trading activity it would be entitled to claim exemption
from Union taxes. It was therefore submitted that light
could be gathered from the content of cl. (2) on the types
of taxation from which exemption was granted under cl. (1)
or in other words for determining the ambit of the immunity
covered by cl. (1). The argument proceeded. Cl. (2)
permits the Union to impose the followingtaxes
notwithstanding the blanket exemption granted by cl. (1).
These taxes are : (1) A tax in respect of a trade or
business of any kind carried on by or on behalf of the
State, The taxes leviable in respect of a trade or business
would be, having regard to the entries in the Union
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List-(a) income tax (item 82), (b) Possibly corporation tax
(item 85) where the State carries on business through a
State owned or State controlled corporation, (c) taxes on
the capital value of assests of companies (item 86) in cases
where the State carries on business through a State owned
corporation; (2) Taxes in respect of operations connected
with a trade or business. These might include a tax on
freights, sales tax, and it was added duties of customs and
duties of excise; (3) Taxes in respect of property used or
occupied in connection with such a trade or business or any
income accuring or arising in connection therewith. It was
strongly pressed upon us that not merely direct taxes on
property and direct taxes on income, but other types of
taxes which were incidental to the "operations connected"
with a trade or business (and it was suggested that customs
and excise duties were such) could be imposed by the Union
upon the States in cases where the latter was carrying on a
trade or business. It necessarily followed, it was urged,
that if these were not used for a trade or business, the
taxes would fall within the scope of the exemption under
Art. 289 (1). In other words, the argument was that as
there was a limited power in Parliament to impose taxation
on States or on those acting on behalf of the States it
necessarily connoted that in cases not covered by cl. (2),
that is in cases where it was not connected with a trade or
business the exemption under cl. (1) would operate.
The precise relationship between clauses (2) and (1) and
the question whether the former was a proviso properly so
called which had been carved out of the main provision of
cl. (1) and which but for such carving out would be within
cl. (1) was the subject of considerable debate before us but
I consider that it is not necessary to deal with this rather
technical point for in my view the history of cl. (2) throws
926
considerable light on its significance and place in the
scheme of tax exemption. At the lmperial Economic
Conference of 1923 a resolution was adopted to the effect
that the Parliaments of Great Britain, the Dominions and
India should be invited to enact a declaration that the
general and particular provisions of their respective Acts
imposing taxation might be made to apply to any commercial
or industrial enterprises carried on by any other such
Government in all respects as if it were carried on by or on
behalf of a subject of the British Crown.
This resolution drew a distinction between the trading
and business activities of the several constituent units
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owing allegiance to the Crown of England and their
governmental activities. In pursuance of this resolution
the Imperial Parliament enacted s. 25 in the Finance Act of
1925 (15 and 16 George V, Ch. 36) which read to quote the
material words :
"25. (1) Where a trade or business of any kind
is carried on by or on behalf of the
Government of any part of His Majesty’s
Dominions which is outside Great Britain and
Northern Ireland, that Government shall, in
respect of the trade or business and of’ all
operations in connection therewith, all
property occupied in Great Britain or Northern
Ireland and all goods owned in Great Britain
or Northern Ireland for the purposes thereof,
and all income arising in connection
therewith, be liable, in the same manner as in
the like case any other person would be, to
all taxation for the time being in force in
Great Britain or Northern Ireland.
(2) ... .... ... ...
(3) Nothing in this section shall-
(a) affect the immunity of any such
Government as aforesaid from
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taxation in respect of any income or property
to which sub-section (1) of this section does
not apply ; or
(b)... ... ..."
A similar provision was enacted in India in the Government
Trading Taxation Act, 1926 (Act 3 of 1926). Its preamble
recited :
"WHEREAS it is expedient to determine the
liability to taxation for the time being in
force in British India of the Government of
any part of His Majesty’s Dominions, exclusive
of British India, in respect of any trade or
business carried on by or on behalf of such
Government. It is hereby enacted as follows
:-"
The operative provision was s. 2 and it ran :-
"2. (1) Where a trade or business of any kind
is carried on by or on behalf of the
Government of any part of his Majesty’s
Dominions, exclusive of British India, that
Government shall, in respect of the trade or
business and of all operations connected
therewith, all property occupied in British
India and all goods owned in British India for
the purposes thereof, and all income arising
in connection therewith, be liable
(a) to taxation under the Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922, in the same manner and to the same
extent as in the like case a company would be
liable;
928
(b) to all other taxation for the time being
in force in British India in the same manner
as in the like case any other person would be
liable.
(2) For the purposes of the levy and
collection of income-tax under the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922, in accordance with the
provisions of sub-section (1) any Government
to which that sub-section applies shall be
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deemed to be a company within the meaning of
that Act, and the provisions of that Act shall
apply accordingly.
(3) In this section the expression "His
Majesty’s Dominions" includes any territory
which is under His Majesty’s protection or in
respect of which a mandate is being exercised
by the Government of any part of His Majesty’s
Dominions."
This, it would be seen, applied to a foreign Government
carrying on a trade or business or owning property or using
property within British India. The Act has been adapted
subsequently to bring it into line with the constitutional
changes that have taken place since 1926, but it is
unnecessary to refer to them. Proviso (a) to sub-s. (1) of
s. 155 enacted the exemption in the same terms as in the Act
of 1926 in favour of the Provinces under the Government of
India Act, 1935. This bodily incorporation was done without
any reference to the distribution of legislative powers
effected by Sch. 7 of the Government of India Act.
This being the historical origin of this provision, it is
not easy to relate it to the exemption in Art. 289. (1) or
to construe the exemption with its aid. Bearing in mind
this antecedent history it
929
appears to me that it would not be proper to read the scope
of the saving in favour of the Union in cl. (2) as
reflecting on the scope of Art. 289 (1).
There is also another angle from which the relevance of
clause (2) to the Construction of clause (1) of Art. 289
might be tested. One of the more serious arguments put
forward on behalf of the States to which I have adverted was
that if the expression ’taxes’ in relation to the exemption
of property from tax were confined to direct taxes on
property the exemption would be unmeaning, as such taxes
could not be imposed by the Union. Now, let me take the
taxes specified in Art. 289 (2). They include, for
instance, taxes on "property used or occupied for the
purpose of such trade or business". A tax on the use of
property or on the property itself which is occupied for the
purpose of trade would obviously be a direct tax on property
which ex-concessis the Central legislature under the
Government of India Act and Parliament under the
Constitution are incompetent to impose. It is not the
contention of the States that the Centre has such a power to
levy a tax on occupation or use of property where it is in
connection with a trade or business. This would at least
show that it is not justifiable to imply from clause (2)
that but for that provision Parliament would be entitled to
impose such a tax. The other points urged have been dealt
with in the opinion of my Lord the Chief justice and I do
not propose to cover the same ground. I concur in the view
that the questions referred to this Court for its opinion
should be answered as they have been by the Chief justice.
By Court: In view of the opinion of the majority the
answer to the three questions referred to is in the
negative.
Questions answered accordingly.
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