Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6466-6476 of 1995
PETITIONER:
STATE OF HIMACHAL PRADESH AND ORS. ETC. ETC.
RESPONDENT:
NURPUR PRIVATE BUS OPERATORS UNION AND ORS. ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/10/1999
BENCH:
S.P. BHARUCHA & B.N. KIRPAL & V.N. KHARE & D.P. MOHAPATRA & N. SANTOSH
HEGDE
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMWNT
1999 (3 ) Suppl. SCR 430
WITH
Civil Appeal Nos. 6477 and 6480 of 1995.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHARUCHA, J. Civil Appeal Nos. 6466-6476 of 1995 :
Under challenge by the State of Himachal Pradesh is the judgment of a
Division Bench of the High Court of Himachal Pradesh delivered on writ
petitions filed under Article 226 of the Constitution to challenge
amendments to the Himachal Pradesh Passengers and Goods Taxation Act, 1955
and the Rules framed thereunder. The High Court allowed the writ petitions,
coming to the conclusion that confining the payment of tax under the said
Act to the mode of payment by lump sum made the provision invalid.
Section 3 of the said Act is the charging secion. It provides, in so far
as is relevant :
"3. Levy of Tax. - (1) There shall be levied, charged and paid to the State
Government a tax on all fares and freights in respect of all passengers
carried and goods transported by motor vehicles at such rates not
exceeding.......as the Government may, by notification, direct." (Emphasis
supplied.)
Section 4 lays down the method of collection of the tax and states that the
tax shall be collected by the owner of the motor vehicle and paid to the
State Government in the prescribed manner. The proviso thereto, which is
under challenge, reads :
"Provided further that in case of motor vehicles (including the stage or
contract carriages), other than those specified in the first proviso, in
which the passengers are carried, the State Government may assess the
tax....... at lump sum in the manner prescribed,taking into consideration
the registered capacity of the vehicle and the distance travelled or to be
travelled by such motor vehicles under a permil issued to such vehicles."
(Emphasis supplied.)
The Rule made to effectuate the said proviso, which was also the subject
matter of challenge, laid down the formula for such assessment of [ the
lump sum tax. The formula was this : "Number of seats x number of scheduled
kilometers x 3/5 x rate of passengers tax x rate per kilometer.
Explanation : In this formula, 3/5 represents average occupancy taken at
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sixty per cent of the number of seats." (Emphasis supplied)
It may be mentioned that, earlier, the relevant proviso had provided that
in case of contract carriage the State Government "may accept a lump sum in
lieu of the tax chargeable on fare in the manner prescribed". This proviso
was challenged. This Court, in M/s. Sainik Motors, Jodhpur and Ors. v. The
State of Rajasthan, [1962] 1 SCR 517, upheld the proviso for the reason
that "payment to lump sum is not obligatory, and a person can elect to pay
tax calculated on actual fares and freights....There is no compulsion for
any operator to elect to pay a lump sum if he does not choose to do so."
As far as the said Act, as it now stands, is concerned it is plain from
Section 3 thereof that the levy of the tax is on "all fares.......in
respect of all passengers carried.......". The proviso to Section 4 that is
under challenge takes into account for the purpose of assessment of the
lump sum tax only "the registered capacity of the vehicle and the distance
travelled or to be travelled........". It takes no account of "all
fares.....in respect of all pas-sengers carried.......", and it makes it
obligatory for the operator to pay such lump sum tax.
Learned counsel for the appellant-State submitted that the said Section 4
and Rule had been so amended having regard to surveys made and data
collected by the State Government and with a view to prevent tax evasion.
This may be so, but there can be no generalisation of tax that can be
levied under Section 3. It can only be levied with due regard to all fares
in respect of all passengers carried by the particular operator. No
hypothetical assumption can be made about how many passengers an operator
has carried. The amendment of the said Section 4, by the inclusion of the
proviso quoted above, is beyond the scope of the said Act. It is,
therefore, unnecessary to consider Rule 9, as amended, whose terms also, in
facts, leave the matter in no doubt.
The State may now make assessments of passenger tax on the basis that is
provided for in Section 3 of the Act.
The Civil appeals are dismissed with costs. Civil Appeals Nos. 6477/1995
and 6480/1995 :
The High Court, in the judgment afore-mentioned, held that the levy and
realisation of tax on the basis which had been held to be invalid by it
"for the period between 1st April, 1991 andf 30th Septemper, 1992 shall not
stand invalidated.........We propose to direct that the declaration made by
us today shall be applicable prospectively and with effect from October 1,
1992 alone." Some operators challenge the correctness of this. They are
right, for the doctrine of prospective over-ruling cannot be utilised by
the High Court. Once the High Court came to the conclusion, rightly, that
the concerned provisions were invalid, it was obliged to so declare and,
consequently, the collections made thereunder stood invalidated.
These civil appeals are, therefore, allowed and the direction of the High
Court insofar as it relates to prospective over-ruling is set aside. The
judgment and order of the High Court shall also operate for the period
between 1st April, 1991 and 30st September, 1992.
No order as to costs. S.V.K.
Appeals dismissed/allowed.