Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 690-92 1991
PETITIONER:
STATE OF ASSAM & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHRI NARESH CHANDRA GHOSE (D) BY LRS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/12/2000
BENCH:
V.N.Khare, S.N.Hegde
JUDGMENT:
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J U D G M E N T
SANTOSH HEGDE, J.
The medicinal preparation Mritasanjibani
manufactured by the respondent was assessed to sales-tax
under the Assam Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1956 (hereinafter
referred to as the Act) under Item 67 of the Schedule to
the Act by the assessing authorities. The challenge to the
said assessment order being dismissed by the appellate
authority, the respondents filed 3 writ petitions before a
Division Bench of the Gauhati High Court which, while
allowing the said writ petitions, declared the said Item 67
of the Schedule to the Act as violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution. The State of Assam is in appeal before us,
challenging the said judgment of the Division Bench of the
High Court made in Civil Rule Nos.368, 369 of 1978 and 310
of 1982 dated 11.4.1990. The High Court while entertaining
the abovesaid writ petitions, considered the following 3
arguments of the respondents and held the same against them
:
1. That no spirit being used in the preparation of
Mritasanjibani, it cannot be termed as spirituous medicinal
preparation; 2. That there being no Ayurvedic
Pharmacopoeia in existence, in the absence of any machinery
to determine the alcoholic contents of a medicinal
preparation, Item 67 cannot be given effect to; 3. That
there is no finding in the instant case that Mritasanjibani
contains more than 12% alcohol.
However, it proceeded to consider the constitutional
validity of Item 67 of the Schedule to the Act, as stated
above, and following the judgment of this Court in Ayurveda
Pharmacy & Anr. v. State of Tamil Nadu (1989 2 SCC 285),
it declared Item 67 of the Schedule to the Act as being
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violative of Article 14 of the Constitution of India and
directed the assessing authorities to re-assess the turnover
of the respondent by treating Mritasanjibani as all other
Ayurvedic medicines which are exempt from sales-tax under
the Act. The State in these appeals has contended that the
finding of the High Court that the said Item of the Schedule
is violative of Article 14 is erroneous. It was also
contended that the judgment of this Court in Ayurveda
Pharmacy (supra) does not apply to the facts of the case in
hand, hence the High Court has erred in placing reliance on
the said judgment. Per contra, on behalf of the
respondents, it is contended that the judgment of this Court
in Ayurveda Pharmacy (supra) applies on all fours to the
facts of this case. There is no dispute that the
Legislature has a wide discretion in selecting the persons
or objects it wants to tax and that a Statute cannot be
challenged on the ground it levies tax on one class of
articles and not on others. Bearing this well- settled
principle in mind, we will now examine the provisions of the
Assam Act as also the applicability of the judgment of this
Court in Ayurveda Pharmacy (supra). For the said purpose,
it is necessary for us to notice the two relevant Items in
the Schedule to the Act. Item 28 which deals with the
medicines and drugs for the purpose of levy of sales-tax
under the Act reads thus :- No. Name of taxable goods Rate
of tax
28. Medicines and drugs other than the following :-
(a) x x x (b) x x x (c) x x x (d) Ayurvedic,
Homeopathic and 7 paise in the rupee. Unani Medicines
except those covered by Item No.67 of this schedule.
As per this Item, the various drugs enumerated in sub-
clauses (a) to (c) are exempted from the levy of tax,
subject to the exceptions found therein. Under sub-clause
(d) above, it is seen that all Ayurvedic, Homeopathic and
Unani medicines are generally exempt from the levy of tax
with an exception in regard to those medicinal preparations;
be it Ayurvedic, Homeopathic or Unani, if it comes within
the realm of Item 67 of the same Schedule. Therefore, it is
to be noted here that the exemption granted is not an
absolute exemption. It is subject to the Entry in Item 67
which Entry reads thus :-
No. Name of taxable goods Rate of tax
67. Spirituous medical prepara- 20 paise in the
rupee. tion under any pharmacopoeia containing more than 12@@
JJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJ
percent by volume of alcohol (but other than those which are
declared by the State Government by notification in the
official Gazette to be not capable of causing intoxication.
As could be seen, this Item carves out an exception
from Item 28 in regard to those medicinal preparations@@
JJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJ
prepared under any pharmacopaeia; be it Allopathic,@@
JJJJJJJJ
Ayurvedic, Homeopathic or Unani medicines if it contains
more than 12% by volume, of alcohol. An analysis of these
two Items of the Schedule to the Act clearly shows that
generally all Ayurvedic, Homeopathic and Unani medicines are
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exempt from the levy of tax. However, this exemption is not
available to a specific class of medicinal preparation
including Allopathic, Ayurvedic, Homeopathic and Unani
medicines if it contains 12% by volume of alcohol. This
class of spirituous medicinal preparation is to be taxed @
20 paise in a rupee. The question, therefore, for our
consideration is whether this type of classification which
differentiates medicinal preparations based on the content
of alcohol in such preparations is a valid classification or
not. If the accepted principle in law that the Legislature
has a wide discretion in selecting the persons or objects it
wants to tax is correct then in our opinion such a
classification cannot be construed as an arbitrary
classification. Definitely, a medicinal preparation
containing over 12% of alcohol stands as a separate class of
medicinal preparation as compared to other medicinal
preparations which either do not contain any alcoholic or
contains less than 12%. It is to be noted that this
classification based on the alcohol contents of the
medicinal preparation is not confined to Ayurvedic,
Homeopathic or Unani medicines alone but it encompasses all
spirituous medicinal preparations which are prepared under
any Pharmacopoeia and containing more than 12% by volume of
alcohol. Therefore, the Legislature or its delegates have
not made any arbitrary classification for the purpose of
levy impugned. The said classification being based on
intelligible differentia is, therefore, in our opinion, a
valid classification. It is true that in the case of
Ayurveda Pharmacy (supra), this Court declared that the two
Ayurvedic preparations termed as Arishtams and Asavas are
medicinal preparations, and even though they contain a high
alcohol content, so long as they continue to be identified
as medicinal preparations (emphasis supplied) they must be
treated, for the purposes of the sales tax law, in like
manner as medicinal preparations generally, including those
containing a lower percentage of alcohol. In that case, it
is to be noted that while all other patent or proprietory
medicinal preparations belonging to different systems of
medicines were taxed @ 7% only without any classification,
Arishtams and Asavas prepared under the Ayurvedic system
alone were made subject to 30% levy. The Court also noticed
the fact that there were at relevant point of time over 130
Allopathic medicines containing alcohol which were potable
as against only 3 Ayurvedic medicines out of which Arishtams
and Asavas were alone subject to 30% tax. While other
medicinal preparations which also contained alcohol were
subjected to a tax @ 7% alone. Therefore, this Court came
to the conclusion that while Arishtams and Asavas continued
to be identified as medicinal preparations, they must be
treated alike for the purpose of sales-tax. The law in this
case is different from the law that was considered by this
Court in Ayurveda Pharmacys case (supra). It is already
noticed that for the purpose of Item 28, Ayurvedic,
Homeopathic and Unani medicines either not containing
alcohol or containing less than 12% alcohol have been
exempted from the levy of sales-tax but the Legislature
thought that in regard to the medicinal preparations
irrespective of the fact whether they are Allopathic,
Ayurvedic, Homeopathic or Unani have to be separately
classified as spirituous medicinal preparations if it
contained more than 12% by volume of alcohol (See Item 67).
Therefore, so far as the Assam Act is concerned, unlike the
Tamil Nadu General Sales Tax Act, 1959, it identified the
medicinal preparations containing more than 12% alcohol as a
separate class vis-Ã -vis such preparations either not
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containing alcohol or containing less than 12% alcohol.
This difference distinguishes the basis of the judgment of
this Court in Ayurveda Pharmacys case (supra) inasmuch as
the Assam Act does not identify the medicinal preparations
containing more than 12% alcohol as being the same as other
medicinal preparations not containing alcohol. On the
contrary, as could be seen these types of spirituous
medicinal preparations which contained 12% alcohol have been
separately classified for the levy of tax under Item 67 of
the Schedule to the Act. We are of the considered view that
the classification founded in the impugned Act in regard to
the medicinal preparations based on the strength of alcohol
contents in the same, cannot be said to be arbitrary and
violative of Article 14 as held by the High Court in its
impugned judgment. For the reasons stated above, these
appeals succeed, the impugned judgments of the High Court
are set aside and the writ petitions filed by the
respondents before the High Court stand dismissed.