Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MAHARAJA KRISHNAGARH MILLS LTD.(IN LIQUIDATION).
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18/01/1961
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
DAS, S.K.
SARKAR, A.K.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 683 1961 SCR (3) 524
CITATOR INFO :
R 1964 SC 207 (10)
ACT:
Cotton Excise Duty-Agreement between President and Raj
Pramukh of Part B State-Right of Union to collect arrears of
such duty Payable to the State-Constitution of India, Arts.
277, 278.
HEADNOTE:
The question for determination in the appeal was whether the
Union of India was entitled to levy and recover arrears of
excise duty on cotton cloth for the period April 1, 1949, to
March 31, 1950, payable by the respondent, a cloth mill in
the State of Rajasthan, under the Rajasthan Excise Duties
Ordinance, 1949. After the coming into force of the Indian
Constitution and the extension of the Central Excise and
Salt Act, 1944, and the rules framed thereunder to the State
of Rajasthan by s. II of the Finance Act of 1950, the duty
in respect of cloth manufactured on and from April 1, 1950,
became payable under that Act. The appellant Union,
however, claimed that as a result of the agreement entered
into on February 25, 1950, by the President of India with
the Rajpramukh of Rajasthan under Art. 278 and Art. 295 of
the Constitution, the Union of India became entitled as from
April 1, 1950, to claim and recover all arrears of excise
duties which the State of Rajasthan was entitled to recover
from the respondent before the Central Excise and Salt Act,
1944, was extended to Rajasthan. Notice having been
accordingly served on the respondent demanding payment of
the outstanding amount of Rs. 1,36,551-12 as payable by it,
it moved the High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution.
On a reference by the Division Bench which heard the matter
in the first instance, the Full Bench finding in favour of
the respondent held that Art. 277 was a complete refutation
of the said claim by the Union and Art. 278 and the said
agreement were overridden by it.
Held, that the provisions of Arts. 277 and 278 of the Con-
stitution, properly construed, leave no manner of doubt that
Art. 277 was in the nature of a saving provision, subject in
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terms to the provisions of Art. 278, permitting the States
to levy a tax or duty which, after the Constitution could be
levied only by the centre. But Art. 277 had to yield place
to any agreement in respect of such taxes and duties made
between the Union Government and the Government of a Part B
State under Art. 278.
Since there could not be the least doubt in the instant case
that the agreement between the President and the Rajpramukh
of Rajasthan conceded to the Union the right to levy and
collect the arrears of the cotton excise duty in Rajasthan,
the High Court was wrong in taking a contrary view of the
matter.
525
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 252 of 1956.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated September 29,
1953, of the Rajasthan High Court (Jaipur Bench) in Civil
Writ Application No. 28 of 1951.
Gopal Singh and T. M. Sen, for the appellants.
S. N. Andley, J. B. Dadachanji and P. L. Vohra,for the
respondent.
1961. January 19. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SINHA, C. J.-This appeal on a certificate granted by the
Jaipur Bench of the High Court of Judicature for Rajasthan
that " the case involves a substantial question of law as to
the interpretation of Arts. 277, 278, 294 and 295 of the
Constitution of India and the case is a fit one for appeal
to the Supreme Court under Art. 132(1) and also under Art.
133(1)(c) of the Constitution of India" is directed against
the judgment dated September 29, 1953, of the High Court of
Judicature for Rajasthan at Jaipur to the effect that the
appellant, the Union of India, was not entitled to levy and
recover arrears of excise duty on cotton cloth for the
period April 1, 1949, to March 31, 1950, from the
respondent, the Maharaja Krishnagarh Mills Ltd.
The facts of this case, which have not been in dispute at
any stage of the proceedings, may shortly be stated as
follows. The respondent is a cloth mill located in
Krishnagarh in District Jaipur in the State of Rajasthan.
It had a stock of manufactured cloth on April 1, 1949, and
also manufactured cloth during the period, April 1, 1949,
and March 31,1950. In respect of such cloth an excise duty
became payable under the Rajasthan Excise Duties Ordinance,
1949 (XXV of 1949), at rates set forth in the schedule to
the Ordinance. The sum of Rs. 1,56,291 odd became payable
on that account out of which only a sum of Rs. 19,739 odd
was paid to the Government of Rajasthan, thus leaving the
sum of Rs. 1,36,551 odd outstanding against the respondent.
After the Indian Constitution came into effect the Central
Excise and
526
Salt Act, 1944, and the rules framed thereunder were
extended to the State of Rajasthan by s. 11 of the Finance
Act of 1950. Hence, the duty became payable in respect of
the cloth manufactured on and from April 1, 1950, under the
provisions of that Act. The appellant claimed that as a
result of the agreement between the Government of India and
the State of Rajasthan, to be noticed hereinafter in detail,
and of the Constitution, the Union of India became entitled
to realise the arrears of the excise duty in respect of the
cloth manufactured by the respondent before April 1, 1950.
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In enforcement of that claim the Superintendent of Central
Excise, Jaipur, served a notice dated February 16, 1951, on
the respondent demanding payment of the outstanding amount
of Rs. 1,36,551 odd. The respondent thereupon filed a writ
petition in the High Court of Rajasthan, Jaipur, under Art.
226 of the Constitution against (1) the Union of India, (2)
the Central Board of Revenue, Delhi, (3) the Collector of
Central Excise for Rajasthan, Delhi, and (4) the
Superintendent of Central Excise, Jaipur, who are the
appellants before us, praying for a writ of prohibition
against them prohibiting them from imposing, levying or
collecting any tax or duty by way of excise as also for any
appropriate direction, order or writ. The writ petition was
founded on the contentions that the notice of demand served
upon the respondent as aforesaid was illegal and
unauthorised on the ground (1) that the Central Government
had no jurisdiction to levy any tax before January 26, 1950,
(2) that the Central Excise and ’Salt Act was not in force
in Rajasthan before April 1, 1950, and (3) that without the
application of the rules framed by the Central Government
under s. 37 of the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944, to
Rajasthan no duty could be imposed, levied or collected and
those rules were made applicable to Rajasthan only on
December 16, 1950.
On behalf of the appellants, who were the respondents in the
High Court, it was contended that it was got correct to say
that the rules framed under s, 37
527
of the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944, were made
applicable to the State of Rajasthan by virtue of the
notification dated December 16, 1950, and it was asserted
that those rules became applicable to the State of Rajasthan
with effect from April 1, 1950, as a result of s. 11 of the
Finance Act, 1950. It was also contended that by virtue of
s. 3 of Rajasthan Excise Duties Ordinance (XXV of 1949)
promulgated by His Highness the Rajpramukh of Rajasthan on
September 5, 1949, excise duty was levied on cloth and other
articles produced and manufactured in Rajasthan on and after
April 1, 1949, at the rates set forth in the first schedule
of the said Ordinance. It was also contended that in
pursuance of Arts. 278 and 295 of the Constitution the
President of India had entered into an agreement with the
Rajpramukh of Rajasthan on February 25, 1950, whereby the
parties agreed to accept the recommendations of the Indian
States Finance Enquiry Committee, 1948-49, contained in part
I of its report, read with chapters 1, 11 and III of part II
of its report, in so far as they applied to the State of
Rajasthan together with the recommendations contained in
Chapter VIII of part 11 of the said report. By virtue of
the said agreement the Union of India became entitled to
claim and recover all excise duties, whether assessed or un-
assessed, which the State of Rajasthan was entitled to
recover from the respondent as from April 1, 1949, before
the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944, was extended to the
State of Rajasthan, as aforesaid.
The matter was first heard by a Bench consisting of Ranawat
and Sharma, JJ., which, in view of the importance of the
points involved in the case, referred the following two
points for decision by a larger Bench by its judgment dated
November 5, 1951:
" 1. Whether by virtue of Articles 278, 279
and 295 of the Constitution of India and the
agreement entered into between the President
of India and the Rajpramukh of Rajasthan on
the 25th of February, 1950, the Union of India
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is entitled to levy and recover arrears of
excise duty on cloth held in stock or
manufactured before the 1st of April, 1950,
68
528
in case excise duty thereon was payable to the
State of Rajasthan under the provisions of the
Rajasthan Excise Duties Ordinance No. 25 of
1949 ?
2. Whether the publication of the
Government notification by which the Jaipur
Excise Rules were adopted under the provisions
of the Rajasthan Excise Ordinance was
sufficient publication within the meaning of
s. 28 of the Rajasthan Excise Duties Ordinance
No. 25 of 1949, and whether the publication of
the aforesaid notification should be deemed to
have been properly authenticated by
authentication of the publication of the
Ordinance. If not, whether want of
authentication would have the effect of
invalidating the said Excise Rules ? "
The case was then heard by a Full Bench consisting of
Wanchoo, C.J., Ranawat and Dave, JJ. The judgment of the
Court was delivered by the learned Chief Justice on November
24, 1952, in substance upholding the contentions raised on
behalf of the petitioner before the High Court, now
respondent. The High Court came to the conclusion that Art.
277 of the Constitution was a complete answer to the claim
of the Government of India to collect the dues in question
for any period anterior to April 1, 1950. This conclusion
was based on the reasoning that the agreement aforesaid
between the Government of India and the Government of
Rajasthan was in effect overridden by Art. 277 and that the
agreement contemplated by Art. 278 was in respect of a duty
which was leviable by the Government of India. By virtue of
Art. 277 of the Constitution cotton excise duty was actually
leviable by the State of Rajasthan up to March 31, 1950,
because Parliament made the contrary provision only from
April 1, 1950. Therefore, it was further observed by the
High Court that the effect of Art. 277 on Art 278 of the
Constitution was that cotton excise duty could not be said
to be leviable by the Government of India so far as the
State of Rajasthan was concerned up to March 31, 1950. In
view of that conclusion it was further held that the right
to collect the arrears of excise duty in question could not
be held to have been transferred to the Union of India
529
by virtue of the agreement aforesaid of February 25, 1950.
The first question referred to the Full Bench was thus
answered in favour of the petitioner in the High Court. The
second question relating to the publication and
authentication of the Excise Rules was also answered in
favour of the petitioner, now respondent. The High Court
held that the Hindi Gazette relied upon on behalf of the
Government did not contain any authentication of the Rules
and did not show by whose authority they had been published.
This conclusion was based on the ground that the contention
raised on behalf of the Government that the publication in
the Gazette and the authentication therein did not only
apply to the Ordinance but covered the Rules also, was not
correct. The answers given by the Full Bench to the
questions referred to it by the Division Bench were returned
to the Bench concerned and the Bench, in pursuance of the
opinion of the Full Bench, ordered by its judgment dated
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September 29, 1953, that "a direction be issued against the
opposite party not to recover from the petitioner the amount
of Rs. 1,36,551-12 as per their notice of demand of the 16th
of February, 1950. The petitioner shall get costs of this
petition from the respondents." The Union of India applied
for and obtained the necessary certificate, as quoted above,
from the High Court of Rajasthan. That is how the matter is
before this Court.
It is manifest that if the opinion of the Full Bench on the
second question referred to as to the publication and
authentication of the Rules is correct, then no other
question will arise for determination by this Court. It’
the Rules under the Rajasthan Excise Duties Ordinance, XXV
of 1949, had not been properly promulgated and
authenticated, then the Ordinance by itself could not be
sufficient for the levy and collection of the tax sought to
be imposed. It is, therefore, necessary for us first to
determine that controversy. At the outset, it may be
mentioned that the writ petition filed by the respondent in
the High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution did not
allege any facts bearing on this part of the controversy.
530
Thus, there was no foundation laid in the pleadings for a
contention that the Rules aforesaid had not been promulgated
on a proper authentication. As already indicated, the
petition was founded only on the lack of power in the Union
Government to levy and collect the excise duty with
reference to the provisions of the Central Excise and Salt
Act of 1944 and the Rules framed thereunder. There is no
reference to the provisions of Ordinance XXV of 1949
promulgated by the Rajasthan Government. It was only in the
reply to the writ petition made by the respondent in the
High Court that reliance was placed upon the said Ordinance
and the Rules framed thereunder. We do not find any
pleadings, or any petition by way of amendment of the
pleadings, in the record of this case raising the contention
that the Rules framed under the Ordinance aforesaid had not
been promulgated on a proper authentication. The High
Court, therefore, on the face of the pleadings, was not
justified in permitting the petitioner before it to raise
this contention, but our decision need not be rested on the
lack of pleadings only. We have examined the Rajasthan
Gazette, the Hindi version of which is entitled Rajasthan
Raj Patra published by authority of the Rajasthan Government
dated Margashirsa Krishna 7, Saturday, Samvat 2006,
containing the notification dated Jaipur, September 15,
1949, the preamble of which states that Shriman Rajpramukh
had made and promulgated the following Ordinance which was
being published for the information of the public and it
purports to have been authenticated by the Law Secretary,
Sanyukta Rajasthan Sarkar. Under that authentication
follows the Ordinance, XXV of 1949, dated September 5, 1949.
The Ordinance goes to the end of page 169 and from the next
page 170 ending with page 172 appear the Rules. They begin
with the declaration which may be translated as follows:
" In exercise of the powers conferred under
ss. 5 and 26 of the Rajasthan Excise Duties
Ordinance of 1949 the Rajasthan Government
orders that till new Rules are framed under
the said Ordinance, the Rules framed under the
Jaipur Excise Duties Act
531
of 1945 known as the Jaipur Excise Duty Rules
of 1945 will be in force throughout the whole
of Rajasthan with necessary modifications and
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for this purpose will be treated as made under
the Rajasthan Ordinance."
It would thus appear that the authentication by the Law
Secretary appearing on the first page of the Gazette as
aforesaid was intended to govern not only the Ordinance in
question but also the Rules which had been promulgated
thereunder. Apparently, s. 28 of the Ordinance which ran-
" All rules made and notifications issued
under this Ordinance shall be made and issued
by publication in the Rajasthan Gazette. All
such rules and notifications shall thereupon
have effect as if enacted in this Ordinance "-
was understood to authorise such a mode of promulgation and
authentication. The authority that promulgated the rule
having intended the signature of the Law Secretary appearing
at the beginning of the publication as an authentication of
the rules, we are of opinion that the formal requirements of
s. 8 (2) of the Ordinance V of 1949 were satisfied. Whether
the authentication appears in the beginning of the
notification or at the end of it is not material so long as
it is clear on a reference to the publication in the Gazette
that the matter is substantially covered by the
authentication, whether appearing at the beginning or the
end of the notification. The High Court, therefore, was in
error in coming to the conclusion that the authentication
covered the Ordinance proper without the Rules framed
thereunder. The correct conclusion from the record as it
stands is that the authentication covers the entire
notification including both the Ordinance proper and the
Rules framed thereunder which became parts of the Statute.
In view of this conclusion it becomes necessary now to
examine the ratio of the decision of the High Court on the
first question referred to it, namely, the authority of the
Union of India to realise the arrears of the duty in
question. It is clear in view of our conclusion
532
that the Ordinance and the Rules framed thereunder have been
properly promulgated in the Official Gazette, that the
Government of Rajasthan was entitled to levy and collect
the duty of excise in respect of. cotton cloth from the
respondent. As a matter of fact, the respondent appears to
have paid about Rs. 19,739 odd out of the duty payable by it
to that Government. The remaining amount for which the
notice of demand had been issued by the official of the
Government of India was certainly payable to the Government
of Rajasthan. We have, therefore, to consider whether the
Government of India by any process of law stepped into the
shoes of the Rajasthan Government in respect of the arrears
aforesaid. In this connection reliance was placed on the
agreement between the President of India and the Rajpramukh
of Rajasthan dated February 25, 1950. The relevant
provisions of the agreement are these:
" Whereas provision is made by Articles 278,
291, 295 and 306 of the Constitution of India
for certain matters to be governed by
agreements between the Government of India and
the Government of a State specified in Part B
of the First Schedule to the
Constitution............
Now, therefore, the President of India and the
Rajpramukh of Rajasthan have entered into the
following agreement, namely:-
The recommendations of the Indian States
Finance Enquiry Committee, 1948-49 (hereafter
referred to as the Committee) contained in
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Part I of its Report read with Chapters 1, 11
and III of Part 11 of its Report in so far as
they apply to the State of Rajasthan
(hereafter referred to as the State) together
with the recommendations contained in Chapter
VIII of Part 11 of the Report, are accepted by
the Parties hereto, subject to the following
modifications, namely............
The modifications are not material to this case. The
agreement thus incorporates as terms of the agreement the
report of the Committee, the relevant portion of which is in
these terms:-
533
" With effect from the prescribed date, the
Centre will take over all ’federal’ sources of
Revenue and all ’federal’ items of expenditure
in State together with the administration of
the Departments concerned. The Centre must
also take over all current out standings
(including pending assessments, refunds, and
arrears), liabilities, claims, etc., and all
productive and unproductive capital assets
connected with these Departments. "
It is common ground that "federal sources of revenue"
include the duty of excise in question. It is also clear
that all outstanding dues from assessees including pending
assessments and arrears have been by the terms of the
agreement made over to the Centre. This agreement, as the
preamble itself indicates, has been made in accordance with
the provisions of Arts. 278 and 295 of the Constitution.
The relevant portions of Art. 278 are as under:-
" 278. (1) Notwithstanding anything in this
Constitution, the Government of India may,
subject to the provisions of clause (2), enter
into an agreement with the Government of a
State specified in Part B of the First
Schedule with respect to-
(a) the levy and collection of any tax or
duty leviable by the Government of India in
such State and for the distribution of the
proceeds thereof otherwise than in accordance
with the provisions of this Chapter;......
and, when an agreement is so entered into, the
provisions of this Chapter shall in relation
to such State have effect subject to the terms
of such agreement."
It is noteworthy that the provisions of Art. 278 override
pro tanto other provisions of the Constitution including
Art. 277 and the terms of the agreement override the
provisions of the Chapter, namely, Chapter I of Part XII.
In this Chapter are contained Arts. 264 to 291. Thus, on a
construction of the pro. visions of Arts. 277 and 278, it is
clear that in the absence of any agreement between the
Government of India and the Government of a State specified
in Part B, duties of customs which immediately before
534
the commencement of the Constitution were being lawfully
levied by the Government of such a State continue to be
levied by that State until provision to the contrary is made
by Parliament by law, notwithstanding that such a duty is
mentioned in the Union List. Article 277, therefore, is in
the nature of a saving provision permitting the States to
levy a tax or a duty which, after the Constitution, could be
levied only by the Centre. But Art. 277 must yield to any
agreement made between the Government of India and the
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Government of a State in Part B in respect of such taxes or
duties, etc. The pro. vision to the contrary contemplated
by Art. 277 was made by the Finance Act, XXV of 1950, s. 11,
which extended the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944, along
with other Acts to the whole of India except the State of
Jammu and Kashmir. But that section has effect only from
April 1, 1950, and therefore does not apply to the arrears
of duty of excise now in controversy. The agreement
envisaged by Art. 278 was entered into as aforesaid on
February 25, 1950. That agreement conceded to the Centre
the right to levy and collect the arrears of the duty in
question. The reasons given by the High Court for the
conclusion that in spite of Art. 278 read with the agreement
aforesaid, the Union Government was not entitled to realise
the arrears are-(1) that the agreement does not contain any
specific provision about levy and collection of cotton
excise duty in Rajasthan, (2) that the mere approval in the
agreement of the principles set out in the report is not
enough in view of Art. 277 which made a distinctly different
provision from that contemplated in the report and (3) that
the agreement could be only with respect to a duty which was
leviable by the Government of India. In our opinion, none
of these reasons aforesaid can stand in the way of the Union
of India. Though the agreement does not in terms refer to
levy and collection of cotton excise duty in Rajasthan, it
is clear that the agreement has to be read with the relevant
portions of the report quoted above. So read, there cannot
be the least doubt that cotton excise duty in Rajasthan, as
a " federal
535
source of revenue," is also covered by the agreement. Nor
is it correct to say that the agreement read with the report
is not enough to override the provisions of Art. 277. The
agreement read with Art. 278, as already indicated, in
terms, overrides the provisions of Art. 277. The only other
reason which weighed with the High Court in getting over the
terms of Art. 278 cannot also hold good. That a duty of the
kind now in controversy on the date of the agreement after
coming into force of the Constitution is leviable only by
the Government of India even in respect of the State of
Rajasthan is clear beyond all doubt. The Union List only,
namely, entry 84 in the Seventh Schedule, authorises the
levy and collection of the duty in question. Neither the
State List, List II, nor the Concurrent List, List III,
contains any such authorisation. It is true that Art. 277
has saved, for the time being, until Parliament made a
provision to the contrary, the power of the State of
Rajasthan to levy such a duty, but that is only a saving
provision, in terms subject to the provisions of Art. 278.
Thus, the combined operation of Arts. 277 and 278 read with
the agreement vests the power of levy and collection of the
duty in the Union of India. It is only in the absence of an
agreement like the one we have in this case that the
Rajasthan Government could continue to levy and collect the
duty in question. The agreement between the two Governments
completely displaced the operation of Art. 277 in regard
inter alia to the levy of this duty so far as the State of
Rajasthan is concerned. It is clear, therefore, that the
High Court was in error in holding that Art,. 277 was any
answer to the claim of the Government of India and should
override the provisions of Art. 278 read with the agreement.
On a proper construction of these provisions, in our
opinion, the result is just to the contrary. In this view
of the matter, it is not necessary to consider the other
arguments advanced on behalf of the appellants, whether Art.
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295 should prevail over Art. 277.
For the reasons aforesaid, this appeal is allowed and the
decision of the High Court set aside. The result 69
536
is that the writ petition filed by the respondent in the
High Court stands dismissed with costs here and in
the High Court.
Appeal allowed.