Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AMADALAVALASA COOPERATIVE AGRICULTURAL &INDUSTRIAL SOCIETY L
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
U.O.I.
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/11/1975
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
UNTWALIA, N.L.
CITATION:
1976 AIR 958 1976 SCR (2) 731
1976 SCC (2) 934
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1983 SC 751 (2)
F 1988 SC1020 (8)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Art 19(1)(f)(g) 31(1)-359-
Proclamation of Emergency-Whether Statutes made during
Emergency can be challenged under Article 19-Whether
liability created during emergency by statutes violating
Art. 19 can be enforced after the revocation of emergency-
General Clauses Act, ,. sec. 6 Emergency Risks (Goods)
Insurance Act, 1962-Emergency Risks ‘’ (Factories) Insurance
Act, 1962-Liability to pay deficit premium dependent on
quantification of evaded premium-Whether liability to pay
deficit premium conditioned by insurer’s ability to issue a
supplementary policy Distinction between a compulsory and
voluntary insurance.
HEADNOTE:
The President of India after the Chinese aggression in
1962, proclaimed emergency under Article 352 of the
Constitution. The Parliament passed the Emergency Risks
(Goods,) Insurance Act, 1962 and the Emergency Risks
(Factories) Insurance Act, 1962, which came into force from
1-1-1963. It was realised after the Chinese aggression that
it was necessary to make provision for reinstating the
factories damaged or ruined by enemy action and for
reimbursing the less or damage of goods and continue the
commercial and economic activity with a view to stabilize
the economy of the country. The Acts, therefore, provided
for compulsory insurance of factories and goods against loss
or damage sustained by enemy action. The Acts further
provided that if any person failed to insure the goods or
factories or insured for a lesser value than what was
required by the Acts and thereby evaded the payment by way
of permium such amounts would be payable by such person.
Proclamation of Emergency was revoked by the President on
10-9-1968. After the expiry of the acts, notices were issued
to the appellants stating that they evaded payment of
Emergency Risk Insurance Premia in respect of goods or
factories by undervaluing the goods or factories.
The appellant filed a writ petition, in the High Court
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challenging the said notices which were allowed by a learned
Single Judge on the ground that after P the expiry of the
Acts there could be no authorised officer to determine the
quantum, of the evaded premia on the basis, of the correct
value of the goods or factories. In an appeal the Division
Bench of the High Court held that the liability to pay the
evaded premia arose during the currency of the Acts and that
the extent of the liability could be ascertained by an
authorised officer even after the expiry of the Acts.
In the present appellant filed said judgment of the
Division Bench is challenged. G The appellants contended:
1. That the liability to pay the evaded premia was
dependent on the ascertainment by the authorised
officer of the insurable value of the factory or
goods and that until the extent of the liability
was so ascertained there can be no liability and,
therefore, section 6 of the General Clauses Act
was not attracted.
2. The provisions of the Acts contravened the
Articles 14, 19 and 31 of the Constitution.
732
^
HELD: (1) The duty to take out insurance policy for the
full insurable value of the factory or goods was mandatory
and that the failure to do so was an offence. To effectuate
this purpose the procedure for determination of the
insurable value of the factory or goods and of the premium
evaded was provided. The scheme of the insurance envisaged
by the Acts was different from a voluntary insurance. There
was no element of consensus on the fundamental terms of
insurance. The liability to take insurance policy for the
full insurable value of the factory or goods was compulsory.
Terms and conditions of the policy to be taken were governed
solely by the provisions of the Acts and the schemes. The
liability to pay premia in case of under-valuation was not
dependent on the subsequent determination of the full
insurable value of the factory or goods insured. The
decision in the case of Ekambarappa v. Excess Profits Tax
officer holding that the liability for excess profits tax
arose at the close of the accounting year and was not
dependent upon its ascertainment by order of assessment is
approved. [737 B, C, D, F,G]
(2) The argument that the liability to pay premia on
the basis of the full insurable value in case of under-
insurance was conditioned by the capacity on the part of the
insurer to issue a supplementary policy negatived. The
obligation to insure for full insurable value was obligation
which was not dependent upon corresponding liability of the
insurer to indemnity. [738 B-E]
(3) Since the liability to pay the premia on the full
insurable value was incurred before the expiry of the Act,
section 6 of the General Clauses Act would enable the
ascertainment of the extent of liability for evaded premia
by an officer who was authorised when the Act was in force
or by an officer authorised after the expiry of the Act. The
principle behind section 6 of the General Clauses Act is
that all the provisions, of the Acts would continue ill
force for purposes of enforcing the liability incurred when
the Acts were in force and any investigation, legal
proceeding, remedy, may be instituted, continued or enforced
as if the Acts had not expired. [738 G-H]
(4) Article 19 is not available to the petitioner as
these Acts were passed during the proclamation of Emergency
under Article 352. The liability incurred being acts or
omissions during the currency of the proclamation of
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emergency f cannot be nullified even if it be assumed that
provisions of the Acts were violative of Article 19. The
procedure for ascertaining correct insurable value of the
factory or goods is reasonable having regard to the
previsions of Third Schedule in that behalf and cannot,
therefore, violate Article 19(1)(f) or (g). [739 B, D-E]
(5) The petitioners were not deprived of any property
without the authority of law. There is, therefore. no
violation of Article 31(1). The‘provisions are not violative
of any provisions in Part III of the Constitution. [739 F)
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 461 of 1971.
Under article 32 of the Constitution of India
AND
Civil Appeals Nos. 506-510, 842-844, & 1710-1713 of
1971
From the Judgment and order dated the 12-3-1970 and 27-
4-1971 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in W.P. Nos. 360-364
of 1970, 4365-4366/69, 2704/71 and 295, 297-298, 301/70
respectively.
AND
Civil Appeals Nos. 2319 to 2354 of 1972
From the Judgment and order dated the 24-2-1971 of The
Madras High Court in Writ Petitions Nos. 1794, 2544, 2563,
2570.
733
2598, 2600, 2634, 2635, 2636, 2642, 2643, 2644, 2764, 2795,
2806. 2807, 3409, 3459, 3679, 3698 and 3699 of 1969, and
161, 162, 307, 308, 1071, 1512, 1514, 1779, 2279, 2282,
2283, 2285, 3164, 3534 and 3535 of 1970 respectively.
A. V. Koteswara Rao and K. Rajendra Chowdhary for the
Petitioners (In W.P. No. 461/71).
B. Sen, G. S. Rama Rao for the Appellants (in CAs. Nos.
506510 and 1710 to 1713/71).
Naunit Lal, K. Srinivasamurthy and Lalita Kohli for the
Appellants (In CAs. Nos. 2319-2354/72) and for Respondents
(In CAs: Nos. 506 to 510 and 842 to 844/71).
Gopalaratnam and A. T. M. Sampath for the Respondents
(In CAs. Nos. 2328, 2332, 2343 and 2337/72).
B. Sen S. Gopalakrishnan (Mrs.) for Respondents (In
CAs. Nos. 2323-2327, 2331, 2335-36, 2342 and 2344-47/72).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MATHEW, J.-We first take up for consideration Civil
Appeals Nos. 506-510 of 1971.
The appellants in these appeals filed writ petitions
before the Andhra Pradesh High Court questioning the
validity of notices issued by the 2nd respondent therein
under the Emergency Risks (Goods) insurance Act (Act 62 of
1962) and the Emergency Risks (Factories) Insurance Act (Act
63 of 1962) (hereinafter referred to as the Acts,
collectively and individually as ’the Goods Act’ and ’the
Factories Act’ respectively). The impugned notices stated
that the appellants had evaded payments of emergency risks
insurance premia in respect of goods or factories, is the
case may be, by undervaluing the goods or factories for the
purpose of insuring them under the Acts. A learned Single
Judge of the High Court allowed the writ petitions on the
ground that, after the expiry of the Acts, there could be no
authorized officer to determine the quantum of the evaded
premia on the basis of the correct value of the goods or
factories. Appeals were filed against the orders, and a
Division Bench of the Court, by a common judgment, held that
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the liability to pay the evaded premia arose during the
currency of the Acts and that the extent of the liability
could be ascertained by authorized officer even after the
expiry of the Acts and allowed the appeals. These appeals
are directed against the common judgment.
The President of India, after the Chinese aggression in
October, 1962, proclaimed an Emergency under Article 352 of
the Constitution on 26-10-1962. The proclamation was revoked
by the President on 10-1-1968. The Acts came into force with
effect from 1-1-1963.
The Acts were in substance similar to War Risks
Insurance Acts which were in force in the United Kingdom
during the Second World
734
War. It was realised after the Chinese aggression that it
was necessary to make provision, if possible on war footing,
for reinstating the factories damaged or ruined by enemy
action and for reimbursing the loss or damage of goods and
continue the commercial and economic activity with a view to
stabilize the economy of the country. In view of the
magnitude of the task, no private agency in the field of
insurance could have undertaken it. By the Acts, the Central
Government undertook the task of insuring factories and
goods against loss damage sustained by enemy action.
The Acts in substance provided for compulsory insurance
against emergency risks of every person carrying on business
as a seller or supplier of goods in respect of the insurable
goods, which were from time to time owned or deemed to have
been owned by him in the course of such business, if the
insurable value of such goods lying in one and the same city
or district exceeded Rs. 30,000/- and of all factories
falling within the purview of the Factories, 1948. The
schemes framed under the Acts provided for procedural
matters relating to the mode of valuation of the insurable
goods and assets, receipt of applications for the issue of
policies, payment of premium, the terms and conditions
attaching to such policies and settlement of claims and
other matters.
The provisions of the two Acts were more or less
similar. We would now refer to certain provisions of the
’Factories. Act’. Under s. 1(3) of that Act, it was provided
that the Act would remain in force during the period of
operation of the proclamation of emergency issued on 26-10-
1962 and for such further period as the Central Government
might declare to be the period of emergency for the purpose
of the Act. It was also provided in that section that the
expiry of the Act shall not affect anything done or omitted
to be done before such expiry and s. 6 of the General
Clauses Act, 1897, shall apply upon the expiry of the Act as
if it were repealed by a Central Act.
Section 2(f) of that Act defined ’insurable value’ of
property as the value of the property as ascertained for the
purpose of insurance under the Act. Section 2(j) defined
’quarter’ as meaning a period of three months commencing on
the first day of January, April, July or October and s. 2(i)
defined ’emergency risks’.
Section 3 of that Act empowered the Central Government
to put into operation a scheme called the "Emergency Risk
(Factories) Insurance Scheme", where by the Central
Government would undertake, in relation to factories, the
liability of insuring property against emergency risks.
Under s. 3(3) (a), the liability of the Central Government
as insurer did not extend to more than 80 per cent of the
insurable value of the property insurable. Under s. 3(3)
(c), the premium under a policy was payable at a rate not-
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exceeding 3 per cent per annum of the sum insured as may be
specified in the scheme. Section 3(7) enjoined that every
scheme shall be laid before each House of Parliament for a
total period of thirty days.
735
Section 5(1) said that while a scheme was in operation,
every owner of a factory shall take out a policy of
insurance against emergency risk, issued in accordance with
the scheme, for a sum not less than the insurable value of
the property, and, if any owner of factory failed to fulfil
the obligation under s. 5(1) and failed to pay the premium
on the policy which was subsequently due, he was liable to
be convicted of an offence under s. 5(4), punishable with
fine and, that would be without prejudice to any other
penalty or liability incurred in consequence of the failure.
Section 6 placed restrictions on carrying on certain
insurance business. By s. 7, the Central Government was
authorised to create an "Emergency Risks (Factories)
Insurance Fund". The Central Government was authorized,
under s. 8, to require the owner or occupier to furnish any
document or information to a person authorized by it.
Section 11 provided that where any person had failed to
insure as or to the full amount, required by the Act, and
had thereby evaded the payment by way of premium of any
money which would have had to pay but for such failure, an
officer authorized in that behalf by the Central Government
might determine the amount the payment of which had been so
evaded. The amount so determined shall be payable by such
person and shall be recoverable from him as provided in sub-
section (2) of s. 11. And sub-section (2) stated that any
installment of premium due on a policy of insurance issued
under the scheme and any amount determined as payable under
sub-section (1) shall be recoverable as an arrear of land
revenue and shall be a first charge on the property in
respect of which the default was made. Section 11(3) stated
that a person against whom a determination is made under
sub-section (1) could, within the period specified in the
scheme, appeal against such determination to the Central
Government, whose decision therein shall be final.
Now we will note a few relevant provisions of the
Emergency Risk (Factories) Insurance Scheme. The Scheme was
put into operation with effect from 1-1-1963. In clause 6 of
the Scheme it was provided that an application for insurance
should be made in the form set out in Part A or Part of the
First Schedule thereto according as the application was for
the original or supplementary policy, and that it should be
made to the government agent or such other officer of the
government agent as might be authorized by that agent in
this behalf and the application must be accompanied by a
treasury challan evidencing the payment of the requisite
premium into the Government treasury.
Clause 7 pertained to the method of valuation of
insurable property. It laid down that the insurable value of
the property shall be ascertained in accordance with the
principles mentioned therein. Clause 8 fixed the rate of
premium to be 25 paise for every 100 rupees or any part
thereof in respect of the quarter ending 31-3-1963. Clause 9
related to issue of policy and verification of previous
policies. Clause 12 mentioned the date from which the
policies would be effective.
736
Clause 13(1) provided that where any person had failed
to pay any premium due from him or to insure as, or to the
full amount, required by the Act and had thereby evaded the
payment by way of premium of any money which he would have
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had to pay but for such failure, the amount evaded shall be
determined in accordance with the Third Schedule; and sub-
clause (2) provided for appeal against the determination.
Sub-clause (3) of clause 13 stated that where the amount
determined under the provisions of sub-clause (1) or sub-
clause (2) was fully recovered, the government agent shall,
as soon as possible after such recovery, send the requisite
application forms to the defaulter for completion and
return, and a policy or supplementary policy in respect of
the property concerned according as the recovery was in
respect of non-insurance or under-insurance shall be issued
by the government agent on receipt of the application
correctly filled in, the said policy being made out so as to
take effect from the date the amount was fully recovered.
Clause 16 declared that the insured person shall bear
20 per cent of the loss or damage. It also declared that if
the total value of the property insured exceeded the sum
insured, the insured person shall be considered as his own
insurer for the excess as well as for 20 per cent of the sum
insured.
The First Schedule to the Scheme contained forms of
applications for a policy or supplementary policy and other
matters. The Second Schedule gave a model form of the policy
to be Issued.
According to the Third Schedule, the authorized
officer, when he k had reason to believe that the owner or
occupier of any property insurable under the Act had failed
to pay any premium and had thereby evaded the payment by way
of premium of any money which he would have had to pay but
for such failure, the officer may serve on such owner or
occupier a notice requiring him to show cause why he failed
to insure the property or to full amount as required by the
Act and further to produce before the officer on such date
any document or other evidence in support of his case. The
officer, after providing him an opportunity of being heard
shall assess the insurable value of the property and the
amount of premium, the payment of which had been evaded. The
Schedule made provisions for appeal to the Central
Government.
The provisions of the Scheme framed under the ’Goods
Act’ were practically the same.
The appellants challenged the finding of the High Court
that the liability to pay the evaded premia arose during the
currency of the Acts and contended that the liability itself
was dependent on the ascertainment by the authorized officer
of the insurable value of the factory or goods in accordance
with the Third Schedule and that until the extent of the
liability was so ascertained, there could be no liability
and so, s. of the General Clauses Act was not attracted.
In other words, the contention was that until the liability
of the insured was determined by the authorized officer by
ascertaining the correct
737
insurable value in accordance with the provisions of the
Third Schedule no liability to pay the evaded premia arose
and therefore, no liability was incurred before the expiry
of the Acts which could be enforced under the provisions of
s. 6 of the General Clauses Act after their expiry.
It is clear from the provisions of the Acts that the
duty to take out insurance policy for the full insurable
value of the factory of goods was mandatory and that the
failure to do so was an offence. Besides, in the case of
failure to insure for the full insurable value, provisions
were made for recovery of the relative premia. To effectuate
this purpose, the procedure for determination of the
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insurable value of the factory or goods and of the premia
evaded was also provided.
There is no compulsion in a voluntary insurance that
the cover should be made for the entire insurable value of
the property. The premium collected in a voluntary insurance
is related to the quantum of the risk undertaken in the
light of the insurable value suggested by the insured.
Generally, in a voluntary insurance, the premium is paid in
consideration of the cover provided. In other words, premium
is paid in order to enable the insurer to indemnify the
insured against loss or damage on account of the risk
specified. The scheme of insurance envisaged by the Acts was
different. There was no element of consensus on the
fundamental terms of insurance in the scheme. The liability
to take insurance policy for the full insurable value of the
factory or goods was compulsory. The terms and conditions of
the policy to be taken were governed solely by the
provisions of the Acts and the Schemes. It is a mistake to
assume that the rights and liabilities of the parties in
this statutory scheme were similar to those of a voluntary
contract of insurance. If the liability to take the
insurance policy for the full insurable value was absolute
and if the terms and conditions of insurance were settled by
the terms of the statutes and the Schemes read with the
Schedules, there is no merit in the contention of counsel
for the appellants that the obligation of the President as
insurer was same as that of an insurer in a contract of
voluntary insurance. The liability to pay premia ill case of
under-valuation was not dependent upon the subsequent
determination of the full insurable value of the factory or
goods insured. If the factory or goods was under-valued,
when the insurance policy was taken, the liability to pay
premia on the basis of the full insurable value arose at the
time when the policy was taken. That liability was not
dependent upon the ascertainment of the full insurable value
by the authorized officer in accordance with the Third
Schedule.
In Ekambarappa v. Excess Profits Tax officer(ll) this
Court held that the liability for excess profits tax arose
at the close of the accounting year and was not dependent
upon its ascertainment by an order of assessment. In the
same way, the liability to pay the premia on the basis of
the full insurable value of the factory or goods insured was
incurred Acts and the schemes were in operation. ’The
(1) [1967] 3 S.C.R. 864.
738
liability to pay premia on the basis of the full insurable
value of the factory or goods is one thing; the
quantification of the amount is another.
But it was argued that if a policy was taken not for
the full in surable value, the authorized officer should
have ascertained the cor rect insurable value within the
quarter and a supplementary policy should have been issued
on the basis of the full insurable value, also within the
quarter, so that the liability to pay premia on the basis of
the full insurable value might arise. In other words, the
argument was that the liability to pay premia on the basis
of the full insurable value in case of under insurance was
conditioned by the capacity on the part of the insurer to
issue a supplementary policy within the quarter undertaking
to indemnify the insured on the basis of the correct value
against emergency risks, and, as the insurer ceased to have
the capacity after the expiry of the quarter, and a fortiort
after the expiry of the Acts, to issue a supplementary
policy undertaking the liability to indemnify against loss
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arising out of emergency risk, on the basis of the full
insured value, the obligation to pay premia on the full
insurance value ceased, as, after the expiry of the Acts,
there could no longer be any emergency risk.
We do not think that the argument is correct. As we
said, the obligation to insure for full insurable value of
the factory or goods was an obligation which was not
dependent upon the corresponding liability of the insurer to
indemnify. If the owner of factory or goods failed to take
insurance policy at the time he ought to have taken it and
pay the premia, the liability of the insured to pay the
premia could be enforced under clause 13 or 14 respectively
of the Schemes under the ’Goods Act’ or the ’Factories Act’.
In such a case there would be no obligation on the part of
the President to indemnify the insured in case of loss or
damage on account of emergency risk the insured did not take
out the policy of insurance. The obligation to issue the
policy or supplementary policy, as the case may be, would
arise only after payment or recovery of the evaded premia,
and even then, the liability of the insurer under the
policy or supplementary policy would be from the date of
payment or recovery of the evaded premia. The fact,
therefore, that no supplementary policy was issued before
the expiry of the Acts is no answer for not fulfilling the
obligation of the insured to pay the premia in accordance
with the correct insurable value of the factory or goods as
determined under the Third Schedule to the Schemes.
Therefore, if under 6. S of the ’Factories Act’ or under s.
7 of the ’Goods Act’, the liability to pay the premia on the
full insurable value was incurred before ’he expiry of the
Act, s. 6 of the General Clauses Act would enable the
ascertainment of the extent of liability for the evaded
premia by an officer who was authorized when the Act was in
force or by an officer authorised after the expiry of the
Act. The principle behind s. 6 of the General Clauses Act is
that all the provisions of the Acts would continue in force
for purposes of enforcing the liability incurred when the
Acts were in force and any investigation, legal proceeding,
remedy, may be instituted, continued or enforced as if the
Acts had not expired.
739
The Third Schedule to the Schemes provides for the
method of ascertaining the liability in case of under-
insurance. The provisions of the Third Schedule show that
the officer has to give an opportunity to the insured to
show cause why he should not be made to pay the premia on
the basis of correct value of the factory or goods under
valued.
It was contended for the petitioner in Writ Petition
No. 461 of 971 that the provisions of the Acts contravened
Articles 14, 19 and
Article 19 is not available to the petitioner for
challenging the validity of the provisions of the Acts as
these Acts were passed during the currency of the
proclamation of emergency under Article 352. No doubt, when
the proclamation of emergency was revoked in 1968, the
provisions of the Acts became liable to be challenged on the
ground that they violated Article 19(1); but the liability
incured for acts or omissions during the currency of the
proclamation of emergency cannot be nullified even if it be
assumed that the provisions of the Acts were violative of
Article 19. In other words, liability crated by an act or
omission when the Acts were in operation during the currency
of the proclamation of emergency cannot be challenged even
after the revocation of the proclamation on the ground that
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the provisions of the Acts violated Article 19. This, we
think, is the principle laid down by this Court after
reading Article 358 of the constitution in Makhan Singh v.
State of Punjab(1).
We also think that the procedure for ascertaining the
correct in surable value of the factory or goods is
reasonable, having regard to the provisions of the Third
Schedule in that behalf and cannot, therefore, violate
Article 19(1)(f) or (g).
The writ petitioner has not shown how the provisions of
the Acts violated Article 14.
And, as regards the contention of the petitioner that
the provisions of the Acts violated Article 31(1), we do not
think that the petitioner was deprived of any property
without the authority of law. he petitioner has not
succeeded in showing law the law which deprived him of his
property could be challenged on the ground that it was
violative of any of the provisions in Part III of the
Constitution;
We dismiss Writ Petition No. 461 of 1971 and Civil
Appeals Nos. 506-510, 842-844 and 1710-1713 of 1971 and
allow Civil Appeals Nos. 2319-2364 of 1972 without any order
as to costs.
P.H.P Appeals partly allowed.
(1) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 797 at 812
740