Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE HINGIR-RAMPUR COAL CO., LTD. AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF ORISSA AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/11/1960
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
SUBBARAO, K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 459 1961 SCR (2) 537
CITATOR INFO :
R 1963 SC 703 (23)
F 1964 SC1284 (11,14)
D 1965 SC 177 (8)
R 1965 SC1107 (17,48,50)
APL 1970 SC1436 (14,15,16)
R 1971 SC1182 (7)
F 1975 SC 846 (14)
RF 1976 SC1654 (5,19,24,25)
AFR 1980 SC 1 (13)
R 1980 SC1008 (13,14)
RF 1980 SC1955 (41)
RF 1981 SC 711 (11)
RF 1981 SC 951 (11)
R 1983 SC 617 (6)
R 1983 SC 930 (7)
F 1983 SC1246 (30)
R 1984 SC 420 (15)
RF 1985 SC 218 (7,9)
D 1985 SC1211 (41)
RF 1986 SC 726 (11)
RF 1987 SC2034 (16)
RF 1989 SC 317 (34)
R 1989 SC2015 (10)
F 1990 SC 85 (26,30)
R 1990 SC1637 (47)
E 1991 SC1676 (5,6,9,13,15,18,27,42,48,50,52
RF 1992 SC1383 (14)
R 1992 SC2038 (3,7)
ACT:
Mining Areas, Development of--Enactment by State Legislature
authorising constitution of mining areas and development
fund-Imposition of cess-Constitutional validity-Competency
of State Legislature-Orissa Mining Areas Development Fund
Act, 1952 (Orissa XXVII of 1952), S. 4-Constitution of
India, Art. 372, Seventh Schedule, List II, Entry 23, 66,
List I, Entries 52, 54, 84--Adaptation of Laws Order, 1950,
cls. 16, 21.
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HEADNOTE:
The petitioners challenged the constitutional validity of
the Orissa Mining Areas Development Fund Act, 1952, which by
s. 3 empowered the State Government to constitute mining
areas for the purpose of providing them with certain
amenities after hearing objections from the lessees, by s. 4
to impose and collect a cess not exceeding 5% of the
valuation of the minerals at the pit’s mouth and by s. 5
created a fund to which the cess was to be credited. The
petitioners’ case, inter alia, was that the impugned Act and
the rules made thereunder were ultra vires the powers of the
State Legislature, the cess levied thereunder was not a fee
but a duty of excise on coal within Entry 84 of List I of
the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution and repugnant to
Coal Mines Labour Welfare Fund Act, 1947 (Act XXXII of
1947), and, alternatively, even supposing it was a fee
relatable to Entries 23 and 66 of List II, it was hit by
Entry 54 of List I read with the Mines and Minerals
(Regulation and Development) Act 1948 (Act LIII of 1948), or
by Entry 52 of List I read with the Industries (Development
and Regulation) Act, 1951 (Act LXV of 1951). It was urged
on behalf of the State, inter alia, that the cess was a fee
and not a duty of excise and the competence of the State
Legislature to levy it was not affected by the Central Acts.
Held (per Gajendragadkar, Sarkar, Subba Rao and Mudholkar,
JJ.), that the cess imposed by the Act was a fee relatable
to Entries 23 and 66 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to
the Constitution and the Constitutional validity of the
impugned Act was beyond question.
Although there can be no generic difference between a tax
and a fee since both are compulsory exactions of money by
public authorities, there is this distinction between them
that whereas a tax is imposed for public purposes and
requires no consideration to support it, a fee is levied
essentially for services rendered and there must be an
element of quid pro quo between the person
538
who pays it and the public authority that imposes it. While
a tax invariably goes into the consolidated fund, a fee is
earmarked for the specified services in a fund created for
the purpose. Whether a cess is one or the other would
naturally depend on the facts of each case. If in the guise
of a fee, the Legislature imposes a tax, it is for the Court
on a scrutiny of the scheme of the levy, to determine its
real character. The distinction is recognised by the
Constitution which while empowering the appropriate
Legislatures to levy taxes under the Entries in the three
lists refers to their power to levy fees in respect of any
such matters, except the fees taken in court, and tests have
been laid down by this Court for determining the character
of an impugned levy.
Matthews v. Chicory Marketing Board, 60 C.L.R. 263, The
Commissioner, Hindu Religious Endowments, Madras v. Sri
Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutt, [1954]
S.C.R. 1005, Mahant Sri Jagannath Ramanuj Das & Any. v. The
State of Orissa, [1954] S.C.R. 1046, and Ratilal Panachand
Gandhi v. The State of Bombay, [1954] S.C.R. 1055, referred
to.
P. P. Kutti Keva & Ors. v. The State of Madras, A.I.R.
1954 Mad. 621, Attorney-General for British Columbia v.
Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway Co., (1950) A.C. 87 and
Parton & Any. v. Mils Board (Victoria), (1949) 80 C.L.R.
229, considered and held inapplicable.
In determining whether a levy is a fee the true test must be
whether its primary and essential purpose is to render
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specific services to a specified area or class, it being of
no consequence that the State may ultimately and indirectly
be benefited by it.
So judged, the scheme of the impugned Act leaves no manner
of doubt that the levy authorised by it is a fee and not a
tax.
The amount of the levy must depend on the extent of the
services sought to be rendered and if they are
proportionate, it would be unreasonable to say that since
the impost is high it must be a duty of excise. The rate
specified by s. 4(2) of the Act, therefore, cannot by itself
alter the character of the levy and constitute a trespass by
the State Legislature on the legislative powers of the
Parliament under Entry 84 of the List I.
Nor can the method prescribed by the Legislature for re-
covering the levy by itself alter its character. The method
is a matter of convenience and, though relevant, has to be
tested in the light of other relevant circumstances. It is
not permissible to challenge the vires of a statute
relatable to an Entry in List II solely on the ground that
the method adopted for the recovery of the impost can and
generally is adopted in levying a duty of excise.
Ralla Ram v. The Province of East Punjab, [1948] F.C.R. 207,
Byramjee Jeejeebhoy v. The Province of Bombay & Anr. I.L.R.
539
1940 Bom. 58 and Governor-General in Council v. Province of
Madras, (1945)’L.R. 72 I.A. 91, considered.
The limitation imposed by the latter part of Entry 23 of
List II is a limitation on the legislative competence of the
State’ Legislature itself and the test whether a statute
passed by the State Legislature thereunder was ultra vires
would be whether the requisite declaration under Entry 54,
List I, has been made by Parliament by law covering the same
field or not; it is not necessary in order to make the
declaration effective that rules should also be made and
enforced.
Although by operation of Art. 372 of the Constitution Act
LIII of 1948 was an existing Act substantially covering the
same field as covered by the impugned Act, there was no
adaptation of S. 2 of that Act whereby a declaration implied
by it could be said to have been adapted to a declaration by
Parliament. Clause 16 of the Adaptation of Laws Order,
1950, properly construed, cannot be held to refer to the
Dominion Legislature and equate it with the Parliament. It
can be resorted to only where the existing law expressly
refers to some authority that can be equated with the
corresponding new authorities. Since the Dominion
Legislature was not so referred to, its competence under the
Constitution Act of 1935, repealed by the Constitution of
India, was clearly outside the clause. Nor can Cl. 21 of
the order be of any help to the petitioners.
Consequently, in the absence of the requisite Parliamentary
declaration, the competence of the Orissa State Legislature
under Entry 23 read with Entry 66 of the List II was not
impaired and the impugned Act must be deemed to have repeal-
ed the Central Act, so far as that State was concerned.
This case incidentally discloses that in regard to the
requisite Parliamentary declaration prescribed by Entry 54
in List I in its application to the pre-constitution Acts
under corresponding Entry 36 in List I of the Constitution
Act of 1935, there is a lacuna which has not been covered by
any clauses of the Adaptation of Laws Order, 1950.
Nor was the impugned Act ultra vires the State Legislature
by operation of Entry 52 of List I read with S. 2 of the
Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951 (LXV of
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1951). That Act, in pith and substance, deals more directly
with the control of certain specified industries including
the coal industry, while the impugned Act is concerned with
the development of the mining-areas notified under it. The
field covered by the two Acts was not, therefore, the same.
per Wanchoo, J.-In order to determine whether a levy is a
tax or a fee, what has to be considered is the pith and sub-
stance of the levy. Where the levy in pith and substance is
not essentially different from a tax, it cannot be converted
into a fee by crediting it to a special fund and attaching
certain services to it.
540
The Commissioner, Hindu Religious Endowments, Madras, v. Sri
Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutt, [1954]
S.C.R. 1005, Mahant Sri Jaannath Ramanuj Das v. The State of
Orissa, [1954] S.C.R. 1046 and Ratilal Panachand Gandhi v.
The State of Bombay, [1954] S.C.R. 1055, discussed.
A duty of excise in pith and substance is primarily a duty
levied on a manufacturer or producer in respect of the
commodity manufactured or produced. It is different and
distinct from a sales tax and in law they do not overlap.
Governor-General in Council v. Province of Madras, 72 I.A.
91, referred to.
What the impugned Act did was to provide for the levying of
the cess on the goods produced at a rate not exceeding five
per centum of the value at the pit’s mouth. The cess was,
therefore, in pith and substance a duty of excise falling
within Entry 84 of List I, which the State legislature could
not levy.
It was not correct to say that the method employed by the
impugned Act for realising the cess was a mere method of
quantification and did not affect its character which was
that of a fee. In the present case the very mode of the
levy of the cess is nothing other than the levy of a duty of
excise, and, therefore, the principle of quantification for
purposes of a fee could not be so extended as to convert
what was in pith and substance a tax into a fee.
Sri Byramjee Jeejeebhoy v. The Province of Bombay, I.L.R.
1940 Bom. 58, Municipal Corporation, Ahmedabad v. Patel Gor-
dhandas Hargovandas, I.L.R. 1054 Bom. 41 and Ralla Ram v.
The Province of East Punjab, [1948] F.C.R. 207, considered.
K. C. Gajapati Narayan Deo v. The State of Orissa, [1954]
S.C. R. 1, referred to.
The cess levied under s. 4 of the Act could not be justified
as a tax on mineral rights under Entry 50 of List II of the
Seventh Schedule and the impugned Act was in effect a
colourable piece of legislation.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 87 of 1959.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for
enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
M. P. Amin, Dara P. Mehta, P. M. Amin; S. N. Andley, J. B.
Dadachanji, Rameshwar Nath and P. L. Vohra for the
petitioners.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, R. Ganapathy Iyer, P. Kesava
Pillai and T. M. Sen, for the respondents.
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India, B.
Sen and R. H. Dhebar, for the Intervener.
541
1960. November, 21. The, Judgment of P. B. Gajendragadkar,
A. K. Sarkar, K. Subba Rao and J. R. Mudholkar, JJ., was
delivered by P. B. Gajendragadkar J., K. N. Wanchoo, J.,
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delivered a separate judgment.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-This is a petition filed under Art. 32 of
the Constitution in which the validity of the Orissa Mining
Areas Development Fund Act,(-, 1952 (XXVII of 1952), is
challenged. The first petitioner is a public limited
company which has its registered office at Bombay. A large
majority of its shareholders are citizens of India; some of
them are themselves companies incorporated under the Indian
Companies Act. Petitioners Nos. 2 to 7 are the Directors of
Petitioner No. 1, the second petitioner being the Chairman
of its Board of Directors. These petitioners are all
citizens of India. At all material times the first
petitioner carried on and still carries on the business of
producing and selling coal excavated from its collieries at
Rampur in the State ’of Orissa. Two leases have been
executed in its favour; the first was executed on October
17, 1941, by the Governor of Orissa whereby all that piece
or parcel of land in the registration district of Sambalpur
admeasuring about 3341.79 acres has been demised for a
period of 30 years commencing from September 1, 1939, in
consideration of the rent reserved thereby and subject to
the covenants and conditions prescribed thereunder; and the
second is a surface lease executed in its favour by Mr.
Mohan Brijraj Singh Dee on April 19, 1951, in relation to a
land admeasuring approximately 211.94 acres for a like
period of 30 years commencing from February 4, 1939, in
consideration of the rent and subject to the terms and
conditions prescribed by it.
Pursuant to s. 5 of the Orissa Estates Abolition Act, 1951,
all the right, title and interest of the Zamindar of Rampur
in the lands demised to the first petitioner under the
second lease vested in respondents, the State of Orissa.
Since then the first petitioner has duly paid the rent
reserved by the said lease to the appropriate authorities
appointed by respondent 1,
69
542
and has observed and performed all the conditions and
covenants of the said lease. In exercise of its rights
under the said two leases the first petitioner entered upon
the lands demised and has been carrying on the business of
excavating and producing coal at its collieries at Rampur.
In December, 1952, the Legislature of the State of Orissa
passed the impugned Act; and it received the assent of the
Governor of Orissa on December 10, 1952. It was, however,
not reserved for the consideration of the President of India
nor has it received his assent. In pursuance of the rule-
making power conferred on it by the impugned Act respondent
1 has purported to make rules called the Orissa Mining Areas
Development Act Rules, 1955; these rules have been duly
notified in the State Gazette on January 25, 1955.
Subsequently, the Administrator, respondent 2, appointed
under the impugned Act issued a notification on June 24,
1958, whereby the first petitioner’s Rampur colliery has
been notified for the purpose of liability for the payment
of cess under the impugned Act. The area of this colliery
has been determined at 3341.79 acres. In its appeal filed
under rule 3 before the Director of Mines the first
petitioner objected to the issue of the said notification,
inter alia, on the ground that the impugned Act and the
rules framed under it were ultra vires and invalid; no
action has, however, been taken on the said appeal
presumably because the authority concerned could not enter-
tain or deal with the objections about the vires of the Act
and the rules.
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Thereafter on March 26, 1959, the Assistant Administrative
Officer, respondent 3, called upon the first petitioner to
submit monthly returns for the assessment of the cess. The
first petitioner then represented that it had filed an
appeal setting forth its objections against the
notification, and added that until the said appeal was
disposed of no returns would be filed by it. In spite of
this representation respondent 3, by his letter of May 6,
1959, called upon the
543
first petitioner to submit monthly returns in the prescribed
form and issued the warning that failing compliance the
first petitioner would be prosecuted under s. 9 of the
impugned Act. A similiar demand was made and a similar
warning issued by respondent 3 by his letter dated June 6,
1959. It is under these circumstances that the present
petition has been filed.
The petitioners contend that the impugned Act and’ the rules
made thereunder are ultra vires the powers of the
Legislature of the State of Orissa, or in any event they are
repugnant to the provisions of an existing law. According
to the petition the cess levied under the impugned Act is
not a fee but is in reality and in substance a levy in the
nature of a duty of excise on the coal produced at the first
petitioner’s Rampur colliery, and as such is beyond the
legislative competence of the Orissa Legislature.
Alternatively it is urged that even if the levy imposed by
the impugned Act is a fee relatable to Entries 23 and 66 in
List II of the Seventh Schedule, it would nevertheless be
ultra vires having regard to the provisions of Entry 54 in
List I read with Central Act LIII of 1948. The petitioners
further allege that even if the said levy is held to be a
fee it would be similarly ultra vires having regard to Entry
52 in List I read with Central Act LXV of 1951. According
to the petitioners the impugned Act is really relatable to
Entry 24 in List III, and since it is repugnant with Central
Act XXXII of 1947 relatable to the same Entry and covering
the same field the impugned Act is invalid to the extent of
the said repugnancy under Art. 254. On these allegations
the petitioners have applied for a writ of mandamus or a
writ in the nature of the said writ or any other writ, order
or direction prohibiting the respondents from enforcing any
of the provisions of the impugned Act against the first
petitioner; a similar writ or order is claimed against
respondent 3 in respect of the letters addressed by him to
the 1st petitioner on March 3, 1959 and June 6, 1959.
This petition is resisted by respondent 1 on several
grounds. It is urged on its behalf that the levy
544
imposed by the impugned Act is a fee relatable to Entries 23
and 66 in List II and its validity is not affected either by
Entry 54 read with Act LIII of 1948 or by ’Entry 52 read
with Act LXV of 1951. In the alternative it is contended
that if the said levy is held to be a tax and not a fee, it
would be a tax relatable to Entry 50 in List II, and as such
the legislative competence of the State Legislature to
impose the same cannot be successfully challenged.
Respondent 1 disputes the petitioner’s contention that the
impugned Act is relatable to Entry 24 in List III; and so,
according to it, no question of repugnancy with the Central
Act XXXII of 1947 arises.
After this appeal was fully argued before us Mr. Amin
suggested-and Mr. Sastri did not object-that we should hear
the learned Attorney-General on the question as to whether
even if the levy imposed by the impugned Act is a fee
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relatable to Entries 23 and 66 in List II of the Seventh
Schedule, it would nevertheless be ultra vires having regard
to the provisions of Entry 54 in List I read with Central
Act LIII of 1948. Accordingly we directed that a notice on
this point should be served on the learned Attorney-General
and the case should be set down for hearing on that point
again. For the learned Attorney-General the learned
Additional Solicitor-General appeared before us in response
to this notice and we have had the benefit of hearing his
arguments on the point in question.
The first question which falls for consideration is whether
the levy imposed by the impugned Act amounts to a fee
relatable to Entry 23 read with Entry 66 in List II. Before
we deal with this question it is necessary to consider the
difference between the concept of tax and that of a fee.
The neat and terse definition of tax which has been given by
Latham, C. J., in Matthews v. Chicory Marketing Board (1) is
often cited as a classic on this subject. "A tax", said
Latham, C. J., "is a compulsory exaction of money by public
authority for public purposes enforceable by law, and is not
payment for services rendered". In bringing out the
essential features of a tax this defini-
(1) (1938) 60 C.L.R. 263, 276.
545
tion also assists in distinguishing a tax from a fee. It is
true that between a tax and a fee there is no generic
difference. Both are compulsory exactions of money. by
public authorities; but whereas a tax is imposed for public
purposes and is not, and need not, be supported by any
consideration of service rendered in return, a fee is levied
essentially for services rendered and as such there is an
element of quid pro quo between the person who pays the fee
and the public authority which imposes it. If specific
services are rendered to a specific area or to a specific
class of persons or trade or business in any local area, and
as a condition precedent for the said services or in return
for them cess is levied against the said area or the said
class of persons or trade or business the cess is
distinguishable from a tax and is described as a fee. Tax
recovered by public authority invariably goes into the
consolidated fund which ultimately is utilised for all
public purposes, whereas a cess levied by way of fee is not
intended to be, and does not become, a part of the
consolidated fund. It is earmarked and set apart for the
purpose of services for which it is levied. There is,
however, an element of compulsion in the imposition of both
tax and fee. When the Legislature decides to render a
specific service to any area or to any class of persons, it
is not open to the said area or to the said class of persons
to plead that they do not want the service and therefore
they should be exempted from the payment of the cess.
Though there is an element of quid pro quo between the tax-
payer and the public authority there is no option to the
tax-payer in the matter of receiving the service determined
by public authority. In regard to fees there is, and must
always be, co-relation between the fee collected and the
service intended to be rendered. Cases may arise where
under the guise of levying a fee Legislature may attempt to
impose a tax; and in the case of such a colourable exercise
of legislative power courts would have to scrutinise the
scheme of the levy very carefully and determine whether in
fact there is a co-relation between the service and the
levy, or whether the levy is either not co-related with
service or is levied to such an
546
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excessive extent as to be a presence of a fee and not a fee
in reality. In other words, whether or not a particular
cess levied by a statute amounts to a fee or tax would
always be a question of fact to be determined in the
circumstances of each case. The distinction between a tax
and a fee is, however, important, and it is recognised by
the Constitution. Several Entries in the Three Lists
empower the appropriate Legislatures to levy taxes; but
apart from the power to levy taxes thus conferred each List
specifically refers to the power to levy fees in respect of
any of the matters covered in the said List excluding of
course the fees taken in any Court.
The question about the distinction between a tax and a fee
has been considered by this Court in three decisions in
1954. In The Commissioner, Hindu Religious Endowments,
Madras v. Sri Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutt
(1) the vires of the Madras Hindu Religious and Charitable
Endowments Act, 1951 (Madras Act XIX of 195 1), came to be
examined. Amongst the sections challenged was s. 76(1).
Under this section every religious institution had to pay to
the Government annual contribution not exceeding 5% of its
income for the services rendered to it by the said
Government; and the argument was that the contribution thus
exacted was not a fee but a tax and as such outside the
competence of the State Legislature. In dealing with this
argument Mukherjee, J., as he then was, cited the definition
of tax given by Latham, C.J., in the case of Matthews (2),
and has elaborately considered the distinction between a tax
and a fee. The learned judge examined the scheme of the Act
and observed that "the material fact which negatives the
theory of fees in the present case is that the money raised
by the levy of the contribution is not earmarked or
specified for defraying the expense that the Government has
to incur in performing the services. All the collections go
to the consolidated fund of the State and all the expenses
have to be met not out of those collections but out of the
general revenues by a proper method of appropriation as is
done in the
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 1005.
(2) (1938) 60 C.L.R. 263.
547
case of other Government expenses". The learned judge no
doubt added that the said circumstance was not conclusive
and pointed out that in fact there was a total absence of
any co-relation between the expenses incurred by the
Government and the amount raised by contribution. That is
why s. 76(1) was struck down as ultra vires.
The same point arose before this Court in respect of the
Orissa Hindu Religious Endowments Act, 1939, as amended by
amending Act 11 of 1952 in Mahant Sri Jagannath Ramanuj Das
v. The, State of Orissa (1). Mukherjea, J., who again spoke
for the Court, upheld the validity of s. 49 which imposed
the liability to pay the specified contribution on every
Mutt or temple having an annual income exceeding Rs. 250 for
services rendered by the State Government. The scheme of
the impugned Act was examined and it was noticed that the
collections made under it are not merged in the general
public revenue and are not appropriated in the manner laid
down for appropriation of expenses for other public
purposes. They go to constitute a fund which is
contemplated by s. 50 of the Act, and this fund to which the
Provincial Government contributes both by way of loan and
grant is specifically set apart for the rendering of
services involved in carrying out the provisions of the Act.
The same view was taken by this Court in regard to s. 58 of
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the Bombay Public Trust Act, 1950 (Act XXIX of 1950) which
imposed a similar contribution for a similar purpose in
Ratilal Panachand Gandhi v. The State of Bombay (2). It
would thus be seen that the tests which have to be applied
in determining the character of any impugned levy have been
laid down by this Court in these three decisions; and it is
in the light of these tests that we have to consider the
merits of the rival contentions raised before us in the
present petition.
On behalf of the petitioners Mr. Amin has relied on three
other decisions which may be briefly considered. In P. P.
Kutti Keya v. The State of Madras (3), the Madras High Court
was called upon to consider, inter
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 1046. (2) [1954] S.C.R. 1055.
(3) A.I.R. 1954 Mad. 621.
548
alia, the validity of s. 11 of the Madras Commercial Crops
Markets Act 20 of 1933 and Rules 28(1) and 28(3) framed
thereunder. Section 11(1) levied a fee on the sales of
commercial crops within the notified area and s. 12 provided
that the amounts collected by the Market Committee shall be
constituted into a Market Fund which would be utilised for
acquiring a site for the market, constructing a building,
maintaining the market and meeting the expenses of the
Market Committee. The argument that these provisions
amounted to services rendered to the notified area and thus
made the levy a fee and not a tax was not accepted by the
Court. Venkatarama Aiyar, J., took the view that the funds
raised from the merchants for a construction of a market in
substance amounted to an exaction of a tax. Whether or not
the construction of a market amounted to a service to the
notified area it is unnecessary for us to consider.
Besides, as we have already pointed out we have now three
decisions of this Court which have authoritatively dealt
with this matter, and it is in the light of the said
decisions that the present question has to be considered.
In Attorney-General for British Columbia v. Esquimalt and
Nanaimo Railway Co. (1), the Privy Council had to deal with
the validity of forest protection impost levied by the
relevant section of the Forest Act R. S. B. C. 1936. The
lands in question were statutorily exempted from taxation,
and it was urged against the validity of the impost that the
levy of the said impost was not a service charge but a tax;
and since it contravened the exemption from taxation granted
to the land it was invalid. This plea was upheld by the
Privy Council. The Privy Council did consider two
circumstances which were relevant; the first that the levy
was on a defined class of interested individuals, and the
second that the fund raised did not fall into the general
mass of the proceeds of taxation but was applicable for a
special and limited purpose. It was conceded that these
considerations were relevant but the Privy Council thought
that the weight to be attached to them should not be exagge-
(1) (1950) A.C. 87.
540
rated. In appreciating the weight of the said relevant
circumstances the Privy Council was impressed by the fact
that the lands in question formed an important part of the
national wealth of the Province and their proper
administration, including in particular protection against
fire, is a matter of high public concern’ as well as one of
particular interest to individuals. In other words, the
effect of the impugned provision was, that the expenses of
what was the public service of the greatest importance for
the Province as a whole had been divided between the general
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body of tax. payers and those individuals who had a special
interest in having their property protected. It would thus
appear that this decision proceeded on the basis that what
was claimed to be a special service to the lands in question
was in reality an item in public service itself, and so the
element of quid pro quo was absent. It is true that when
the Legislature levies a fee for rendering specific services
to a specified area or to a specified class of persons or
trade or business, in the last analysis such services may
indirectly form part of services to the public in general.
If the special service rendered is distinctly and primarily
meant for the benefit of a specified class or area the fact
that in benefiting the specified class or area the State as
a whole may ultimately and indirectly be benefited would not
detract from the character of the levy as a fee. Where,
however, the specific service is indistinguishable from pub-
lic service, and in essence is directly a part of it, diffe-
rent considerations may arise. In such a case it is
necessary to enquire what is the primary object of the levy
and the essential purpose which it is intended to achieve.
Its primary object and the essential purpose must be
distinguished from its ultimate or incidental results or
consequences. That is the true test in determining the
character of the levy.
In Parton. v. Milk Board (Victoria)(1), the validity of the
levy imposed on dairymen and owners of milk depots by s. 30
of the Milk Board Act of 1933 as amended by subsequent Acts
of 1936-1939 was
(1) (1949) 80 C.L.R. 229.
70
550
challenged, and it was held by Dixon, J., that the levy of
the said contribution amounted to the imposition of a duty
of excise. This decision was substantially based on the
ground that the statutory board "performs no particular
service for the dairyman or the owner of a milk depot for
which his contribution may be considered as a fee or
recompense" that is to say the element of quid pro quo was
absent qua the persons on whom the levy had been imposed.
Therefore none of the decisions on which Mr. Amin has relied
can assist his case.
Let us now examine the scheme of the impugned Act. As the
preamble shows it has been passed because it was thought
expedient to constitute mining areas and a Mining Areas
Development Fund in the State of Orissa. It consists of 11
sections. Section 3 of the Act provides for the
constitution of a mining area whenever it appears to the
State Government that it is necessary and expedient to
provide amenities like communications, water-supply and
electricity for the better development of any area in the
State of Orissa wherein any mine is situated, or to provide
for the welfare of the residents or to workers in any such
areas within which persons employed in a mine or a group of
mines reside or work. Under this section the State
Government has to define the limits of the area. and is
given the power to include within such area any local area
contiguous to the same or to exclude from such area any
local area comprised therein; that is the effect of s. 3(1).
Section 3(2) empowers the owner or a lessee of a mine or his
duly constituted representative in the said area to file
objections in respect of any notification issued under s.
3(1) within the period specified, and the State Government
is required to take the said objection into consideration.
After considering objections received the State Government
is authorised to issue a notification constituting a mining
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area under s. 3(3). Section 4 deals with the imposition and
collection of cess. The rate of the levy authorised shall
not exceed 5 per centum of the valuation of the minerals at
the pit’s mouth. Section 5 provides for the constitution of
the Orissa Mining Areas Development
551
Fund. This fund vests in the State Government and has to be
administered by such officer or officers as may be appointed
by the State Government in that, behalf Section 5(2)
requires that there shall be paid to the credit of the said
fund the proceeds of the cess recovered under s. 4 for each
mining area during the quarter after deducting expenses, if
any, for collection and recovery. Section 5(3) contemplates
that to the credit of the said fund shall be placed all
collections of cess under s. 5(2) as well as amounts from
State Government and the local authorities and public
subscriptions specifically given for any of the purposes of
the fund. Section 5(4) deals with the topic of the appli-
cation of the said fund. The fund has to be utilised to
meet expenditure incurred in connection with such measures
which in the opinion of the State Government are necessary
or expedient for providing amenities like communications,
water supply and electricity, for the better development of
the mining areas, and to meet the welfare of the labour and
other persons residing or working in the mining areas.
Section 5(5) lays down that without prejudice to the
generality of the foregoing provisions the fund may be
utilised to defray any of the purposes specified in cls. (a)
to (e). Under s. 5(6) the State Government is given the
power to decide whether any particular expenditure is or is
not debitable to the fund and their decision is made final;
and s. 5(7) imposes on the State Government an obligation to
publish annually in the gazette a report of the activities
financed from the fund together with an estimate of receipts
and expenditure of the fund and a statement of account.
Section 6 prescribes the mode of constituting an advisory
committee. It has to consist of such number of members and
chosen in such manner as may be prescribed, provided however
that each committee shall include representatives of mine-
owners and workmen employed in mining industry. The names
of the members of the committee are required to be published
in the gazette. Section 7 deals with the appointment and
functions of the statutory authorities to carry out the
purpose of the Act, while s. 8 confers on the State
Government power to
552
make rules. Section 9 prescribes penalties and provides for
prosecutions; and s. 10 gives protection to the specified
authorities or officers in respect of anything done or
intended to be done by them in good faith in pursuance of
the Act or any rules or order made thereunder. Section 11,
which is the last section confers on the State Government
the power to do anything which may appear to them to be
necessary for ’the purpose of removing difficulties in
giving effect to the provisions of the Act.
The scheme of the Act thus clearly shows that it has been
passed for the purpose of the development of mining areas in
the State. The basis for the operation of the Act is the
constitution of a mining area, and it is in regard to mining
areas thus constituted that the provisions of the Act come
into play. It is not difficult to appreciate the intention
of the State Legislature evidenced by this Act. Orissa is
an underdeveloped State in the Union of India though it has
a lot of mineral wealth of great potential value. Un-
fortunately its mineral wealth is located generally in areas
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sparsely populated with bad communications. Inevitably the
exploitation of the minerals is handicapped by lack of
communications, and the difficulty experienced in keeping
the labour force sufficiently healthy and in congenial
surroundings. The mineral development of the State,
therefore, requires that provision should be made for
improving the communications by constructing good roads and
by providing means of transport such as tramways; supply of
water and electricity would also help. It would also be
necessary to provide for amenities of sanitation and
education to the labour force in order to attract workmen to
the area. Before the Act was passed it appears that the
mine-owners tried to put up small-length roads and tramways
for their own individual purpose, but that obviously could
not be as effective as roads constructed by the State and
tramway service provided by it. It- is on a consideration
of these factors that the State Legislature decided to take
an active part in unsystematic development of its mineral
areas which would help the mine-owners in moving their
553
minerals quickly through the shortest route and would
attract labour to assist the excavation of the minerals.
Thus there can be no doubt that the primary and the
principal object of the Act is to develop’ the mineral areas
in the State and to assist more efficient and extended
exploitation of its mineral wealth.
The constitution of the advisory committee as prescribed by
s. 4 emphasises the fact that the policy of the Act would be
to carry out with the assistance of the mine-owners and
their workmen. Thus after a mining area is notified an
advisory committee is constituted in respect of it, and the
task of carrying out the objects of the Act is left to the
care of the said advisory committee subject to the
provisions of the Act. Even before an area is notified the
mine-owners are allowed an opportunity to put forward their
objections. These features of the Act are also relevant in
determining the question as to whether the Act is intended
to render service to the specified area and to the class of
persons who are subjected to the levy of the cess.
Section 5 shows that the cess levied does not become a part
of the consolidated fund and is not subject to an
appropriation in that behalf; it goes into the special fund
earmarked for carrying out the purpose of the Act, and thus
its existence establishes a correlation between the cess and
the purpose for which it is levied. It was probably felt
that some additions should be made to the special fund, and
so s. 5(3) contemplates that grants from the State
Government and local authorities and public subscriptions
may be collected for enriching the said fund. Every year a
report of the activities financed by the fund has to be
published together with an estimate of receipt and
expenditure and a statement of accounts. It would thus be
clear that the administration of the fund would be subject
to public scrutiny and persons who are called upon to pay
the levy would have an opportunity to see whether the cess
collected from them has been properly utilised for the
purposes for which it is intended to be used. It is not
alleged by the petitioners
554
that the levy imposed is unduly or unreasonably excessive so
as to make the imposition a colourable exercise of
legislative power. Indeed the fact that the accounts have
to be published from year to year affords an indication to
the contrary. Thus the scheme of the Act shows that the
cess is levied against the class of persons owning mines in
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the notified area and it is levied to enable the State
Government to render specific services to the said class by
developing the notified mineral area. There is an element
of quid pro quo in the scheme, the cess collected is
constituted into a specific fund and it has not become a
part of the consolidated fund, its application is regulated
by a statute and is confined to its purposes, and there is a
definite co-relation between the impost and the purpose of
the Act which is to render service to the notified area.
These features of the Act impress upon the levy the
character of a fee as distinct from a tax.
It is, however, urged that the cess levied by s. 4(2) is in
substance and reality a duty of excise. As we have already
noticed s. 4(2) provides that the rate of such levy shall
not exceed 5 per centum of the valuation of the minerals at
the pit’s mouth; in other words it is the value of the
minerals produced which is the basis for calculating the
cess payable by mine-owners, and that precisely is the
nature in which duty of excise is levied under Entry 84 in
List I. The said Entry empowers Parliament to impose duties
of excise, inter alia, on goods manufactured or produced in
India. When minerals are produced from mines and a duty of
excise is intended to be imposed on them it would be
normally imposed at the pit’s mouth, and that is precisely
what the impugned Act purports to do. It is also contended
that the rate prescribed by s. 4(2) indicates that it
operates not as a mere fee but as a duty of excise. This
argument must be carefully examined before the character of
the cess is finally determined. It is not disputed that
under Entry 23 in List II read with Entry 66 in the said
List the State Legislature can levy a fee in respect of
mines and mineral development. Entry 23 reads thus: "Regu-
lation of Mines and mineral development subject to
555
the provisions of List I with respect to regulation and
development under the control of the Union". We will deal
with the condition imposed by the latter part of this Entry
later. For the present it is enough to state that
regulation of mines and mineral development is within the
competence of the State Legislature. Entry 66 provides that
fees in respect of any of the matters in the said List can
be imposed by the State Legislature subject of course to the
exception of fees taken in any Court. The argument is that
though the State Legislature is competent to levy a fee in
respect of mines and mineral development, if the statute
passed by a State Legislature in substance and in effect
imposes a duty of excise it is travelling outside its
jurisdiction and is trespassing on the legislative powers of
Parliament.
This argument is based on two considerations. The first
relates to the form in which the levy is imposed, and the
second relates to the extent of the levy authorised. The
extent of the levy authorised would always depend upon the
nature of the services intended to be rendered and the
financial obligations incurred thereby. If the services
intended to be rendered to the notified mineral areas
require that a fairly large cess should be collected and co-
relation can be definitely established between the proposed
services and the impost levied, then it would be
unreasonable to suggest that because the rate of the levy is
high it is not a fee but a duty of excise. In the present
case, if the development of the mining areas involves con-
siderable expenditure which necessitates the levy of the
prescribed rate it only means that the services being
rendered to the mining areas are very valuable and the rate-
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payer in substance is compensating the State for the
services rendered by it to him. It is significant that the
petitioners do not seriously suggest that the services
intended to be rendered are a cloak and not genuine, or that
the taxes levied have no relation to the said services, or
that they are unreasonable and excessive. Therefore, in our
opinion, the extent of the rate allowed to be imposed by s.
4(2) cannot by itself alter the character of the levy from a
556
fee into that of a duty of excise. If the co-relation
between the levy and the services was not genuine or real,
or if the levy was disproportionately higher than the
requirements of the services intended to be rendered it
would have been another matter.
Then as to the form in which the impost is levied, it is
difficult to appreciate how the method adopted by the
Legislature in recovering the impost can alter its
character. The character of the levy must be determined in
the light of the tests to which we have already referred.
The method in which the fee is recovered is a matter of
convenience, and by itself it cannot fix upon the levy the
character of the duty of excise. This question has often
been considered in the past, and it has always been held
that though the method in which an impost is levied may be
relevant in determining its character its significance and
effect cannot be exaggerated. In Balla Ram v. The Province
of East Punjab (1) the Federal Court had to consider the
character of the tax levied by s. 3 of the Punjab Urban
Immoveable Property ’tax Act XVII of 1940. Section 3
provided as follows: "There shall be charged, levied and
paid an annual to tax on buildings and lands situated in the
rating areas shown in the schedule to this Act at such rate
not exceeding twenty per centum of the annual value of such
buildings and lands as the Provincial Government may by
notification in official gazette direct in respect of each
such rating area". The argument urged before the Federal
Court was that the tax imposed by the said section was in
reality a tax on income within the meaning of Item 54 in
List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution Act of
1935, and as such it was not covered by Item 42 in List II
of the said Schedule. This argument was rejected on the
ground that the tax levied by the Act was in pith and
substance a tax on lands and buildings covered by Item 42.
It would be noticed that the basis of the tax was the annual
value of the building which is the basis used in the Indian
Income-tax Act for determining income from property; and so,
the attack against the section was based on
(1) (1948) F.C.R. 207.
557
the ground that it had adopted the same basis for leaving
the impost as the Income-tax Act and the said basis
determined its character whatever may be the appearance in
which the impost was purported to be levied. In repelling
this argument Fazl Ali, J. observed that the crucial
question to be answered was whether merely because the
Income-tax Act has adopted the annual value as the standard
for determining the income it must necessarily follow that
if the same standard is employed as a measure for any other
tax that tax becomes a tax on income. The learned judge
then proceeded to add that if the answer to this question is
to be given in the affirmative then certain taxes which
cannot possibly be described as income-tax must be held to
be so. In other words, the effect of this decision is that
the adoption of the standard used in Income-tax Act for
getting at the income by any other act for levying the tax
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authorised by it would not be enough to convert the said.
tax into an income-tax. During the course of this judgment
Fazl Ali, J. also noticed with approval a similar view taken
by the Bombay High Court in Sir Byramjee Jeejeebhoy v. The
Province of Bombay (1).
This decision has been expressly approved by the Privy
Council in Governor-General in Council v. Province of Madras
(2). Consistently with the decision of the Federal Court
their Lordships expressed the opinion that "a duty of excise
is primarily a duty levied on a manufacturer or producer in
respect of the commodity manufactured or produced. It is a
tax on goods and not on sales or the proceeds of the sale of
goods. The two taxes, the one levied on the manufacturer in
respect of his goods and the other on the vendor in respect
of his sales may in one sense overlap, but in law there is
no overlapping; the taxes are separate and distinct imposts.
If in, fact they overlap that may be because the taxing
authority imposing a duty of excise finds it convenient to
impose that duty at the moment when the excisable article
(1) I.L.R. 1940 Bom. 58.
(2) (1945) L.R. 72 I.A. 91.
71
558
leaves the factory or workshop for the first time on the
occasion of its sale". In that case the question was
whether the tax authorised by the Madras General Sales Tax
Act, 1939, was a tax on the sale of goods or was a duty of
excise, and the Privy Council held it was the former and not
the latter. Therefore, in our opinion, the mere fact that
the levy imposed by the impugned Act has adopted the method
of determining the rate of the levy by reference to the
minerals produced by the mines would not by itself make the
levy a duty of excise. The method thus adopted may be
relevant in considering the character of the impost but its
effect must be weighed along with and in the light of the
other relevant circumstances. In this connection it is
always necessary to bear in mind that where an impugned
statute passed by a State Legislature is relatable to an
Entry in List II it is not permissible to challenge its
vires only on the ground that the method adopted by it for
the recovery of the impost can be and is generally adopted
in levying a duty of excise. Thus considered the conclusion
is inevitable that the cess levied by the impugned Act is
neither a tax nor a duty of excise but is a fee.
The next question which arises is, even if the cess is a fee
and as such may be relatable to Entries 23 and 66 in List II
its validity is still open to challenge because the
legislative competence of the State Legislature under Entry
23 is subject to the provisions of List I with respect to
regulation and development under the control of the Union;
and that takes us to Entry 54 in List I. This Entry reads
thus: "Regulation of mines and mineral development to the
extent to which such regulation and development under the
control of the Union is declared by Parliament by law to be
expedient-in the public interest". The effect of reading
the two Entries together is clear. The jurisdiction of the
State Legislature under Entry 23 is subject to the
limitation imposed by the latter part of the said Entry. If
Parliament by its law has declared that regulation and
development of mines should in public interest be under the
control of the Union, to
559
the extent of such declaration the jurisdiction of the State
Legislature is excluded. In other words, if a Central Act
has been passed which contains a declaration by Parliament
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as required by Entry 54, and if the said declaration covers
the field occupied by the impugned Act the impugned Act
would be ultra vires, not because of any repugnance between
the two statutes but because the State Legislature had no
jurisdiction to pass the law. The limitation imposed by the
latter part of Entry 23 is a limitation on the legislative
competence of (,he State Legislature itself. This position
is not in dispute.
It is urged by Mr. Amin that the field covered by the
impugned Act has already been covered by the Mines and
Minerals (Regulation and Development) Act, 1948, (LIII of
1948) and he contends that in view of the declaration made
by s. 2 of this Act the impugned Act is ultra vires. This
Central Act was passed to provide for the regulation of
mines and oil fields and for the development of minerals.
It may be stated at this stage that by Act LXVII of 1957
which has been subsequently passed by Parliament, Act LIII
of 1948 has now been limited only to oil fields. We are,
however, concerned with the operation of the said Act in
1952, and at that time it applied to mines as well as oil
fields. Section 2 of the Act contains a declaration as to
the expediency and control by the Central Government. It
reads thus: "It is hereby declared that it is expedient in
the public interest that the Central Government should take
under its control the regulation of mines and oil fields and
the development of minerals to the extent hereinafter
provided". It is common ground that at the relevant time
this Act applied to coal mines. Section 4 of the Act
provides that no mining lease shall be granted after the
commencement of this Act otherwise than in accordance with
the rules made under this Act. Section 5 empowers the
Central Government to make rules by notification for
regulating the grant of mining leases or for prohibiting the
grant of such leases in respect of any mineral or in any
area. Sections 4 and 5 thus
560
purport to prescribe necessary conditions in accordance with
which mining leases have to be executed. This part of the
Act has no relevance to our present purpose. Section 6 of
the Act, however, empowers the Central Government to make
rules by notification in the official gazette for the
conservation and development of minerals. Section 6(2) lays
down several matters in respect of which rules can be framed
by the Central Government. This power is, however, without
prejudice to the generality of powers conferred on the
Central Government by s. 6(1). Amongst the matters covered
by s. 6(2) is the levy and collection of royalties, fees or
taxes in respect of minerals mined, quarried, excavated or
collected. It is true that no rules have in fact been
framed by the Central Government in regard to the levy and
collection of any fees; but, in our opinion, that would not
make any difference. If it is held that this Act contains
the declaration referred to in Entry 23 there would be no
difficulty in holding that the declaration covers the field
of conservation and development of minerals, and the said
field is indistinguishable from the field covered by the
impugned Act. What Entry 23 provides is that the
legislative competence of the State Legislature is subject
to the provisions of List I with respect to regulation and
development under the control of the Union, and Entry 54 in
List I requires a declaration by Parliament by law that
regulation and development of mines should be under the
control of the Union in public interest. Therefore, if a
Central Act has been passed for the purpose of providing for
the conservation and development of minerals, and if it
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contains the requisite declaration, then it would not be
competent to the State Legislature to pass an Act in respect
of the subject-matter covered by the said declaration. In
order that the declaration should be effective it is not
necessary that rules should be made or enforced; all that
this required is a declaration by Parliament that it is
expedient in the public interest to take the regulation and
development of mines under the control of the Union. In
such a case the test must be whether the legislative
declaration covers the field
561
or not. Judged by this test there can be no doubt that the
field covered by the impugned Act is covered by the Central
Act LIII of 1948.
It still remains to consider whether s. 2 of the said Act
amounts in law to a declaration by Parliament as required by
Art. 54. When the said Act was passed in 1948 the
legislative powers of the Central and the Provincial
Legislatures were governed by the relevant Entries in the
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution Act of 1935. Entry 36
in List I corresponds to the present Entry 54 in List I. It
reads thus: "Regulation of Mines and Oil Fields and mineral
development to the extent to which such regulation and
development under Dominion control is declared by Dominion
law to be expedient in public interest". It would be notic-
ed that the declaration required by Entry 36 is a
declaration by Dominion law. Reverting then to s. 2 of the
said Act it is clear that the declaration contained in the
said section is put in the passive voice; but in the context
there would be no difficulty in holding that the said
declaration by necessary implication has been made by
Dominion law. It is a declaration contained in a section
passed by the Dominion Legislature’ and so it is obvious
that it is a declaration by a Dominion law; but the question
is: Can this declaration by a Dominion law be regarded
constitutionally as declaration by Parliament which is
required by Entry 54 in List I.
It has been urged before us by the learned Additional
Solicitor-General and Mr. Amin that in dealing with this
question we should bear in mind two general considerations.
The Central Act has been continued under Art. 372(1) of the
Constitution as an existing law, and the effect of the said
constitutional provision must be that the continuance of the
existing law would be as effective and to the same extent
after the Constitution came into force as before. It is
urged that after the said Act was passed and before the Con-
stitution came into force no Provincial Legislature could
have validly made a law in respect of the field covered by
the said Act, and it would be commonsense to assume that the
effect of the continuance of the
562
said law under Art. 372(1) cannot be any different. In
other words, if no Provincial Legislature could have
trespassed on the field covered by the said Act before the
Constitution, the position would and must be the same even
after the Constitution came into force.
It is also contended that for the purpose of bringing the
provision of existing laws into accord with the provisions
of the Constitution the President was given power to make by
order appropriate adaptations and modifications of such
laws, and the object of making such adaptations obviously
was to make the continuance of the existing laws fully
effective. It is in the light of these two general
considerations, so the. argument runs, must the point in
question be considered. The relevant clause in the
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Adaptation of Laws Order, 1950, on which reliance has been
placed in support of this argument is el. 16 in the
Supplementary Part of the said Order. This clause provides
that subject to the provisions of this Order any reference
by whatever form of words in any existing law to any
authority competent at the date of the passing of that law
to exercise any powers or authorities, or to discharge any
functions, in any part of India shall, where a corresponding
new authority has been constituted by or under the
Constitution, have effect until duly repealed or amended as
if it were a reference to that new authority. The
petitioners contend that as a result of this clause the
declaration made by the Dominion Legislature in s. 2 of the
Central Act must now be held to be the declaration made by
Parliament. Is this contention justified on a fair and
reasonable construction of the clause? That is the crux of
the problem.
In considering this question it would be relevant to recall
the scheme of the Adaptation of Laws Order, 1950. It
consists of Three Parts. Part 1 deals with the adaptation
of Central Laws and indicates the adaptation made therein;
Part 11 deals with the adaptation of Provincial Laws and
follows the same pattern; and Part III is a Supplementary
Part which contains provisions in the nature of
supplementary provisions. A perusal of the clauses
contained in Part
563
I would show that though some adaptation was made in Act
LIII of 1948 it was not thought necessary to make an
adaptation in s. 2 of the said Act whereby the declaration
implied in the said section has been expressly adapted into
a declaration by Parliament.
Now, the effect of el. 16 in substance is to equate an
authority competent at the date of the passing of the
existing law to exercise any powers or authorities, or to
discharge any functions with a corresponding new authority
which has been constituted by or under the Constitution.
Reference to the authority in the con. text would suggest
cases like reference to the Governor-General eo nomine, or
Central Government which respectively would be equated with
the President or the Union Government. Prima facie the
reference to authority would not include reference to a
Legislature; in this connection it may be relevant to point
out that Art. 372(1) refers to a competent Legislature as
distinguished from other competent authorities. That is the
first difficulty in holding that el. 16 refers to the
Dominion Legislature and purports to equate it with the
Parliament.
It is clear that for the application of this clause it is
necessary that a reference should have been made to the
authority by some words whatever may be their form. In
other words it is only where the existing law refers
expressly to some authority that this clause can be invoked.
It is difficult to construe the first part of this clause to
include authorities to which no reference is made by any
words in terms, but to which such reference may be implied;
and quite clearly the Dominion Legislature is not expressly
referred to in s. 2. In construing the present clause we
think it would be straining the language of the clause to
hold that an authority to which no reference is made by
words in any part of the existing law could claim the
benefit of this clause.
Besides, there is no doubt that when the clause refers to
any authority competent to exercise any powers or
authorities, or to discharge any functions, it refers to the
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powers, authorities or functions attributable to the
existing law itself; that is to say, authorities
564
which are competent to exercise powers or to discharge
functions under the existing laws are intended to be equated
with corresponding new authorities. It is impossible to
hold that the Dominion Legislature is an authority which was
competent to exercise any power or to discharge any function
under the existing law. Competence to exercise power to
discharge functions to which the clause refers must
inevitably be related to the existing law and not to the
Constitution Act of 1935 which would be necessary if
Dominion Legislature was to be included as an authority
under this clause. The Constitution Act of 1935 had been
repealed by the Constitution and it was not, and could not
obviously be, the object of the Adaptation of Laws Order to
make any adaptation in regard to the said Act. Therefore,
the competence of the Dominion Legislature which flowed from
the relevant provisions of the Constitution Act of 1935 is
wholly outside this clause. We have carefully considered
the arguments urged before us by the learned Additional
Solicitor-General and Mr. Amin but we are unable to hold
that cl. 16 can be pressed into service for the purpose of
supporting the conclusion that the declaration by the
Dominion Legislature implied in s. 2 of Act LIII of 1948
can, by virtue of cl. 16, be held to be a declaration by
Parliament within the meaning of the relevant Entries in the
Constitution. If that be the true position then the
alternative challenge to the vires of the Act based on el.
16 of the Adaptation of Laws Order must fail.
There is another possible argument which may prima facie
lead to the same conclusion. Let us assume that the result
of reading Art. 372 and cl. 16 of the Adaptation of Laws
Order is that under s. 2 of Act LIII of 1948 there is a
declaration by Parliament as suggested by the petitioners
and the learned Additional Solicitor-General. Would that
meet the requirements of Entry 54 in List I of the Seventh
Schedule? It is difficult to answer this question in the
affirmative because the relevant provisions of the
Constitution are prospective and the declaration by
Parliament specified by Entry 54 must be declaration made by
565
Parliament subsequent to the date when the Constitution came
into force. Unless a declaration is made by Parliament
after the Constitution came into force it will not satisfy
the requirements of Entry 54, and that inevitably would mean
that the impugned Act is validly enacted under Entry 23 in
List II of the Seventh Schedule. If that be the true
position then it would follow that even on the assumption
that el. 16 of the Adaptation of Laws Order and Art. 372 can
be construed as suggested by the petitioners the impugned
Act would be valid.
Faced with this difficulty, both the learned Additional
Solicitor-General and Mr. Amin argued that cl. 21 of the
said Order may be of some assistance. Clause 21 reads thus:
"Any Court, Tribunal, or authority required or empowered to
enforce any law in force in the territory of India
immediately before the appointed day shall, notwithstanding
that this Order makes no provision or insufficient provision
for the adaptation of the law for the purpose of bringing it
into accord with the provisions of the Constitution,
construe the law with all such adaptations as are necessary
for the said purpose". Assuming that this clause is valid
we do not see how it is relevant in the present case. All
that this clause purports to do is to empower the Court to
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construe the law with such adaptations as may be necessary
for the purpose of bringing it in accord with the provisions
of the Constitution. There is no occasion to make any
adaptation in construing Act LIII of 1948 for bringing it
into accord with the provisions of the Constitution at all.
The said Act has been continued under Art. 372(1) and there
is no constitutional defect in the said Act for the
avoidance of which any adaptation is necessary. In fact
what the petitioners seek to do is to read in s. 2 of the
said Act the declaration by Parliament required by Entry 54
so as to make the impugned Act ultra vires. Quite clearly
cl. 21 cannot be pressed into service for such a purpose.
Therefore, we reach this position that the field covered by
Act LIII of 1948 is substantially the same as the field
covered by the
72
566
impugned Act but the declaration made by s. 2 of the said
Act does not constitutionally amount to the requisite
declaration by Parliament, and so the limitation imposed by
Entry 54 does not come into operation in the present case.
Act LIII of 1948 continues in operation under Art. 372; with
this modification that so far as the State of Orissa is
concerned it is the impugned Act that governs and not the
Central Act. Article 372(1) in fact provides for the
continuance of the existing law until it is altered,
repealed or amended by a competent Legislature or other
competent authority. In the absence of the requisite
parliamentary declaration the legislative competence of the
Orissa Legislature under Entry 23 read with Entry 66 is not
impaired, and so the said Legislature is competent either to
repeal, alter or amend the existing law which is the Central
Act LIII of 1948; in effect, after the impugned Act was
passed, so far as Orissa is concerned the Central Act must
be deemed to be repealed. This position is fully consistent
with the provisions of Art. 372. The result is that the
material words used in cls. 16 and 21 being unambiguous and
explicit, it is difficult to give effect to the two general
considerations on which reliance has been placed by the
petitioners. Incidentally the present case discloses that
in regard to the requisite parliamentary declaration
prescribed by Entry 54 in List I in its application to the
pre-Constitution Acts under corresponding Entry 36 in List I
of the Constitution Act of 1935, there is a lacuna which has
not been covered by any clauses of the Adaptation of Laws
Order; that, however, is a matter for Parliament to
consider.
There is one more point which is yet to be considered. Mr.
Amin contends that Entry 23 in List II is subject to the
provisions in List I with respect to regulation and
development under the control of the Union, and according to
him Entry 52 in List I is one of such provisions. In this
connection he relies on the said Entry which deals with
industries the control of which by the Union is declared by
Parliament by law to be expedient in the public interest,
and Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951 (LXV
567
of 1951). This Act has been passed to provide for the
development and regulation of certain industries one of
which undoubtedly is coal mining industry. Section 2 of
this Act declares that it is expedient in the public
interest that the Union should take under its control the
industries specified in the First Schedule. This
declaration is a declaration made by Parliament, and if the
provisions of the Act read with the said declaration covered
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the same field as is covered by the impugned Act, it would
undoubtedly affect the vires of the impugned Act; but in
dealing with this question it is important to bear in mind
the doctrine of pith and substance. We have already noticed
that in pith and substance the impugned Act is concerned
with the development of the mining areas notified under it.
The Central Act, on the other hand, deals more directly with
the control of all industries including of course the
industry of coal. Chapter II of this Act provides for the
constitution of the Central Advisory Council and Development
Councils, chapter III deals with the regulation of scheduled
industries, chapter IIIA provides for the direct management
or control of industrial undertakings by Central Government
in certain cases, and chapter IIIB is concerned with the
topic of control of supply, distribution, price, etc, of
certain articles. The last chapter deals with miscellaneous
incidental matters. The functions of the Development
Councils constituted under this Act prescribed by s. 6(4)
bring out the real purpose and object of the Act. It is to
increase the efficiency or productivity in the scheduled
industry or group of scheduled industries, to improve or
develop the service that such industry or group of
industries renders or could render to the community, or to
enable such industry or group of industries to render such
service more economically. Section 9 authorises the
imposition of cess on scheduled industries in certain cases.
Section 9(4) provides that the Central Government may hand
over the proceeds of the cess to the Development Council
there specified and that the Development Council shall
utilise the said proceeds to achieve the objects mentioned
in cls. (a) to (d). These
568
objects include the promotion of scientific and industrial
research, of improvements in design and quality, and the
provision for the training of technicians and labour in such
industry or group of industries. It would thus be seen that
the object of the Act is to regulate the scheduled
industries with a view to improvement and development of the
service that they may render to the society, and thus assist
the solution of the larger problem of national economy. It
is difficult to hold that the field covered by the
declaration made by s. 2 of this Act, considered in the
light of its several provisions, is the same as the field
covered by the impugned Act. That being so, it cannot be
said that as a result of Entry 52 read with Act LXV of 1951
the vires of the impugned Act can be successfully
challenged.
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the impugned Act is
relatable to Entries 23 and 66 in List II of the Seventh
Schedule, and its validity is not impaired or affected by
Entries 52 and 54 in List I read with Act LXV of 1951 and
Act LIII of 1948 respectively. In view of this conclusion
it is unnecessary to consider whether the impugned Act can
be justified under Entry 50 in List II, or whether it is
relatable to Entry 24 in List III and as such suffexs from
the vice of repugnancy with the Central Act XXXII of 1947.
The result is the petition fails and is dismissed with
costs.
WANCHOO, J.-I have read the judgment just delivered by my
learned brother Gajendragadkar J. and regret that I have not
been able to persuade myself that the cess levied in this
case on all extracted minerals from any mine in any mining
area at a rate not exceeding five per centum of the value of
the minerals at the pit’s mouth by the Orissa State
Legislature under s. 4 of the Orissa Mining Areas
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Development Fund Act, No. XXVII of 1952, (hereinafter called
the Act) is a fee properly so called and not a duty of ex-
cise. The facts are all set out in the judgment just
delivered and I need not repeat them.
The scheme of the Act, as appears from s. 3 thereof is to
give power to the State Government, whenever it
569
thinks it necessary and expedient to provide amenities, like
communications, water-supply and electricity for the better
development of any area in the State where-, in any mine is
situated or to provide for the welfare of residents or
workers in any such area within. which persons employed in a
mine or a group of mines reside or work, to constitute such
an area to be a mining area for the purposes of the Act, to
define the limits of the area, to include within such area
any local area contiguous to the same and defined in the
notification and to exclude from such area any local area
comprised therein and defined in the notification. A
notification under s. 3 is made, after hearing objections
from owners or lessees of mines. After such an area is con-
stituted under s. 3, a cess is imposed under s. 4 on all
extracted minerals from any mine in any such area at the
rate not exceeding five per centum of the value of the
minerals at the pit’s mouth. The cess so collected is
credited to a fund called the Orissa Mining Area Development
Fund created under s. 5 of the Act, besides other amounts
with which we are not concerned in this case. The Fund is
to be applied to meet expenditure incurred in connection
with such measures, which in the opinion of the State
Government, are necessary or expedient for providing
amenities like communications, water-supply and electricity,
for the better development of mining areas and to meet the
welfare of labour and other persons residing or working in
the mining areas. Then come other provisions for working
out the above provisions including s. 8, which gives power
to the State Government to frame rules to carry. into effect
the purposes of the Act. The Rules were framed under the
Act in January, 1955.
The constitutional competence of the Orissa State
Legislature to levy the cess under the Act is attacked on
two main grounds. In the first place, it is urged that the
cess is in pith and substance a duty of excise under item 84
of List I of the Seventh Schedule and therefore the levy of
such a cess is beyond the competence of the Orissa State
Legislature. In the second place, it is urged that even if
the cess is a fee, in view
570
of the two Acts of the Central Legislature and Parliament,
namely, The Mines and Minerals (Regulation and Development)
Act, No. LIII of 1948 and The Industries (Development and
Regulation) Act, No. LXV of 1951, the Orissa Legislature was
not competent to pass the Act.
The petition has been opposed on behalf of the State of
Orissa and the main contentions urged on its behalf are that
the cess is a fee properly so called and not a duty of
excise and therefore the Orissa State Legislature was
competent to levy it and the two Central Acts do not affect
that competence. In the alternative it has been urged that
even if the cess is a tax the State Legislature was
competent to levy it under item 50 of List If of the Seventh
Schedule.
The first question therefore that falls for consideration is
whether the cess in this’ ease is a tax or a fee.
Difference between a tax properly so called and a fee
properly so called came up for consideration before this
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Court in three cases in 1954 and was considered at length.
In the first of them, namely, The Commissioner, Hindu
Religious Endowments, Madras v. Sri Lakshmindra Thirtha
Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutt it was pointed out that-
"though levying of fees is only a particular form of the
exercise of the taxing power of the State, our Constitution
has placed fees under a separate category for purposes of
legislation and at the end of each one of the three
legislative lists, it has given a power to the particular
legislature to legislate on the imposition of fees in
respect to every one of the items dealt with in the list
itself".
It was also pointed that-
"the essence of a tax is compulsion, that is to say, it is
imposed under statutory power without the taxpayer’s consent
and the payment is enforced by law. The second
characteristic of a tax is that it is an imposition made for
public purpose without reference to any special benefit to
be conferred on the payer of the tax. This is expressed by
saying that the levy of tax is for the purposes of general
revenue, which when
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 1005.
571
collected forms part of the public revenues of the State.
As the object of a tax is not to confer any special benefit
upon any particular individual, there is, as it is said, no
element of quid pro quo between the tax-payer and the public
authority. Another feature of taxation is that as it is a
part of the common burden, quantum of imposition upon the
tax-payer depends generally upon his capacity to pay."
As to fees, it was pointed out that-
"a ’fee’ is generally defined to be a charge for a special
service rendered to individuals by some governmental agency.
The amount of fee levied is supposed to be based on the
expenses incurred by the Government in rendering the
service, though in many cases the costs are arbitrarily
assessed. Ordinarily, the fees are uniform and no account
is taken of the varying abilities of different recipients to
pay."
Finally, it was pointed out that-
"the distinction between a tax and a fee lies primarily in
the fact that a tax is levied as a part of a common burden,
while a fee is a payment for a special benefit or
privilege............... Public interest seems to be at the
basis of all impositions, but in a fee it is some special
benefit which the individual receives."
The consequence of these principles was that-
"if, as we hold, a fee is regarded as a sort of return or
consideration for services rendered, it is absolutely
necessary that the levy of fees should, on the face of the
legislative provision be co-related to the expenses incurred
by Government in rendering the services............... If
the money thus paid is set apart and appropriated
specifically for the performance of such work and is not
merged in the public revenues for the benefit of the general
public, it could be counted as fees and not a tax."
Having laid down these principles, that case then considered
the vires of s. 76 of the Madras Hindu Religious and
Charitable Endowments Act, No. XIX of 1951, and it was
pointed out that the material fact which negatived the
theory of fees in that case was that the money raised by
levy of the contribution was not ear-marked or specified for
defraying the expenses
572
that the Government had to incur in performing the services.
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All the collections went to the consolidated fund of the
State and all the expenses had to be met not out of those
collections but out of the general revenues by a proper
method of appropriation as was done in the case of other
government expenses. That in itself might not be
conclusive, but in, that case there was total absence of any
co-relation between the expenses incurred by the Government
and the amount raised by contribution under the provision of
s. 76 and in those circumstances the theory of return or
counter-payment or quid pro quo could not have any possible
application to that case. Consequently, the contribution
levied under s. 76 was held to be a tax and not a fee.
In the second case of Mahant Sri Jagannath Ramanuj Das v.
The State of Orissa (1), a similar imposition by the Orissa
Legislature came up for consideration. After referring to
the earlier case, it was pointed out that-
"two elements are thus. essential in order that a payment
may be regarded as a fee. In the first place, it must be
levied in consideration of certain services which the
individuals accepted either willingly or unwillingly. But
this by itself is not enough to make the imposition a fee,
if the payments demanded for rendering of such services are
not set apart or specifically appropriated for that purpose
but are merged in the general revenue of the State to be
spent for general public purposes."
The Orissa imposition was held to be a fee because the
collections made were not merged in the general public
revenue and were meant for the purpose of meeting the
expenses of the Commissioner and his office which was the
machinery set up for due administration of the affairs of
the religious institution. They went to constitute a fund
which was contemplated by s. 50 of the Orissa Act and this
fund was specifically set apart for rendering services
involved in carrying out the provisions of the Act.
The third case, namely, Ratilal Panachand Gandhi
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 1046.
573
v. The State of Bombay (1) came from Bombay. Sec. 58 of
the Bombay Act, No. XXIX of 1950, provided for an imposition
in proportion to the gross annual income of the trust. This
imposition was levied for the purpose of due administration
of the trust property and for defraying the expenses
incurred in connection with the same. After referring to
the two earlier cases, the Court went on to say that-
"taxis a common burden and the only return which the
taxpayer gets is participation in the common benefits of the
State. Fees, on the other hand, are payments primarily in
the public interest, but for some special service rendered
or some special work done for the benefit of those from whom
the payments are demanded. Thus in fees there is always an
element of quid pro quo which is absent in a tax.........
But in order that the collections made by the Government can
rank as fees, there must be co-relation between the levy
imposed and the expenses incurred by the State for the
purpose of rendering such services." It was then pointed out
that the contributions, which were collected under s. 58,
were to be credited in the Public Trusts Administration Fund
as constituted under s. 57. This fund was to be applied
exclusively for the payment of charges for expenses
incidental to the regulation of public trusts and for
carrying into effect the provisions of the Act. The
imposition therefore was in that case held to be a fee.
These decisions clearly bring out the difference between a
tax and a fee and generally speaking there is always an
element of quid pro quo in a fee and the amount raised
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through a fee is co-related to the expenses necessary for
rendering the services which are the basis of quid pro quo.
Further, the amount collected as a fee does not go to
augment the general revenues of the State and many a time a
special fund is created in which fees are credited-though
this is not absolutely necessary. But as I read these deci-
sions, they cannot be held to lay down that ’What is in pith
and substance a tax can become a fee merely
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 1055.
574
because a fund is created in which collections are credited
and some services may be rendered to the persons from whom
collections are made. If that were so, it will be possible
to convert many taxes not otherwise leviable into fees by
the device of creating a special fund and attaching some
service to be rendered through that fund to the persons from
whom collections are made. I am therefore of opinion that
one must first look at the pith and substance of the levy,
and if in its pith and substance it is not essentially
different from a tax it cannot be converted into a fee by
creating a special fund in which the collections are
credited and attaching some services to be rendered through
that fund.
Let me then look at the pith and substance of the cess,
which has been imposed in this case. The cess consists of a
levy not exceeding five per centum of the value of the
minerals at the pit’s mouth on all extracted minerals.
Prima facie such a levy is nothing more nor less than a duty
of excise. Item 84 of List I gives power to levy duties of
excise exclusively to the Union and is in these terms :-
"Duties of excise on tobacco and other goods manufactured or
produced in India except-
(a) alcoholic liquors for human consumption;
(b) opium, Indian hemp and other narcotic drugs and
narcotics, but including medicinal and toilet preparations
containing alcohol or any substance included in sub-
paragraph (b) of this entry."
This item gives power to Parliament to impose duties of
excise on all goods manufactured. or produced in India with
certain exceptions mentioned therein. Taking this
particular case, coal is produced from the mine and would
clearly be covered by the words " other goods produced in
India" and a duty of excise can be levied on it. What then
exactly is meant by a duty of excise? Reference in this
connection may be made to Governor-General in Council v.
Province of Madras (1). In that case the point arose
whether the sales-tax imposed by the Madras Legislature was
a duty of excise. The Privy Council pointed out that--
(1) (1945) L.R. 72 I.A. 91.
575
"in a Federal constitution in which there is a division of
legislative powers between Central and Provincial
legislatures, it appears to be inevitable that controversy
should arise whether one or other legislature is not
exceeding its own, and encroaching on the other’s,
constitutional legislative power, and in such a controversy
it is a principle, which their Lordships do not hesitate to
apply in the present case, that it is not the name of the
tax but its real nature, its ’pith and substance’ as it has
sometimes been said which must determine into what category
it falls."
The Privy Council went on to consider what a duty of excise
was and said that-
"it is primarily a duty levied on a manufacturer or producer
in respect of the commodity manufactured or produced. It is
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a tax on goods not on sales or the proceeds of sale of
goods. Though sometimes a duty of excise may be imposed on
first sales, a duty of excise and a tax on the sale of goods
were separate and distinct imposts and in law do not
overlap."
The Privy Council approved of the decisions of the Federal
Court in re The Central Provinces and Berar Sales of Motor
Spirit and Lubricants Taxation Act, 1938 (1) and The
Province of Madras v. Messrs. Boddu Paidanna and Sons (2).
It seems to have been urged that because in some cases a
duty of excise may be levied on the occasion of the first
sale and a sales tax may also be levied on the same
occasion, there is really no difference between the two. It
is however clear that a duty of excise is primarily a tax on
goods manufactured or produced; it is not a tax on the sale
of goods, though the taxing authority may as a matter of
concession to the producer not charge the tax immediately
the goods are produced and may postpone it, to make it easy
for the producer to pay the tax, till the first sale is made
by him; nevertheless the charge is still on the goods and is
therefore a duty of excise. On the other hand, a sales tax
can only be levied when a sale is made and there is nothing
to prevent its levy on the first sale. The two concepts
(1) (1939) F.C.R. 18. (2) (1948) F.C.R. go.
576
are however different and, as the Privy Council pointed out,
a sales tax and a duty of excise are separate and distinct
imposts and in law do not overlap. The pith and substance
of a duty of excise is that it is primarily a duty levied on
a manufacturer or producer in respect of the commodity
manufactured or produced.
Let me therefore see what the Orissa Legislature has done in
the present case. It has levied a cess at a rate not
exceeding five per centum on the value of minerals at the
pit’s mouth on all extracted minerals. All the extracted
minerals are nothing other than goods produced and the cess
is levied on the goods produced at a rate not exceeding five
per centum of the value at the pit’s mouth. The cess
therefore in the present case cannot be anything other than
a duty of excise. The pith and substance of the cess in
this case falls fairly and squarely within entry 84 of List
I and is therefore a duty of excise, which cannot be levied
by the Orissa State Legislature. I may in this connection
refer to the cesses levied by the Central Legislature and
Parliament by Act XXXII of 1947 and by the Act No. LXV of
1951. Sec. 3 of Act XXXII of 1947 lays down that there
shall be levied and collected as a cess for the purposes of
that Act a duty of excise on all coal and coke dispatched
from collieries at such rate not less than four annas and
not more than eight annas per ton as may from time to time
be fixed by the Central Government by notification in the
Official Gazette. This is obviously a tax on the goods
produced, the basis of the tax being so much per ton. Again
sec. 9 of Act LXV of 1951 lays down that there may be levied
and collected as a cess for the purposes of that Act on all
goods manufactured or produced in any such scheduled
industry as may be specified in this behalf by the Central
Government by notified order a duty of excise at a rate not
exceeding two annas per centum of the value of the goods.
This again is clearly a tax on goods produced or
manufactured and is in the nature of a duty of excise, the
basis of the tax being so much of the value of the goods.
If these two taxes are duties of excise,
577
I fail to see any difference in pith and substance between
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these two taxes and the cess levied under the Act.
It is however urged that the method employed in the Act for
realising the cess is only a method of quantification of the
fee and merely because of this quantification, the pith and
substance of the impost does not change from a fee to a duty
of excise. Reference in this connection was made to three
cases of quantification. In Sir Byramjee Jeejeebhoy v. The
Province of Bombay (1), a question arose with respect to a
tax imposed on urban immovable property, whether it was a
tax on lands and buildings. The challenge to the tax was on
the ground that it was tax on income or capital value within
items 54 and 55 of List I of the Seventh Schedule of the
Government of India Act and could not therefore be imposed
by the Bombay Legislature. It was held that the tax was a
tax on lands and buildings within the meaning of item 42 of
List II of the same Schedule and that the basis of the tax,
which was the annual value, would not convert it into a tax
on income or capital value. The High Court considered the
pith and substance of the said Act and came to the
conclusion that every tax on annual value was not
necessarily a tax on income and it was held that the mode of
assessment of a tax did not determine its character and one
has to look to the essential character of the tax to decide
whether it was a tax on income or on lands and buildings.
Looking to the pith and substance of the tax it was held in
that case that it was a tax on lands and buildings. That
decision was in the circumstances of that case right because
the intention of the legislature was not to tax the income
of any one; the essential character of the tax in that case
was to tax the lands and buildings and the annual value of
the lands and buildings was only taken as a mode of levying
the tax. In the present case, however, the very mode of the
levy of the cess is nothing other than the levy of a duty of
excise and therefore the principle of quantification for
purposes of a fee cannot be extended to
(1) I.L.R. 1940 Bom. 58.
578
such an extent as to convert what is in pith and substance a
tax into a fee on that basis.
The next case to which reference was made is Municipal
Corporation, Ahmedabad v. Patel Gordhandas Hargovandas (1).
In that case the Ahmedabad Bo. rough Municipality had levied
a rate on open lands and the basis of the levy was one per
centum of the capital value of the land. It was urged that
this amounted to a capital levy within entry 54 of List I;
but the court repelled that contention and held that the
levy was in pith and substance a tax on lands, which came
within entry 42 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to the
Government of India Act. A distinction was made between a
tax on land which is levied on the basis of its capital
value and a tax which is on capital treating it as an asset
itself. This decision also, if I may say so with respect,
is correct, for the basic idea was to tax lands and some
method had to be found for doing so and the method evolved,
though it might look like a capital levy, was in pith and
substance not so. But the theory of quantification which is
the basis of these two cases cannot be stretched so far as
to turn levies which are in pith and substance taxes into
fees, by the process of attaching certain services and
creating a fund.
The third case is Ralla Ram v. The Province of East Punjab
(2). That was a case of a tax on lands and buildings and
annual value was the basis on which the tax was levied. The
Federal Court rightly pointed out that the pith and
substance of the levy had to be seen and on that view it was
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not income-tax but a tax on lands and buildings and the
method adopted was merely a method of quantification. The
Federal Court also pointed out that "where there is an
apparent conflict between an Act of the Federal Legislature
and an Act of the Provincial Legislature, we must try to
ascertain the pith and substance or the true nature and
character of the conflicting provisions and that before an
Act is declared ultra vires, there should be an attempt to
reconcile the two conflicting jurisdictions, and, only if
such a reconciliation should prove
(1) I.L.R. 1954 Bom. 41.
(2) (1948) F.C.R. 207.
579
impossible, the impugned Act should be declared invalid." It
may also be pointed out that in all these three cases, one
source of income of an individual or one item out of the
total capital of an individual was the basis of calculation
while income-tax or capital levy is generally on the total
income or the total capital of a person. That aspect must
have gone into the decision that the method employed was
merely a mode for imposing a tax on lands and buildings. In
the present case, however, I see no difference between the
method of imposing a duty of excise and the method employed
in the Act for imposing a cess-a matter which will be clear
from the cesses imposed under the two Central Acts already
referred to (No. XXXII of 1947 and No. LXV of 1951). It is
not as if there could be no method of imposing a fee
properly so called in this case except the one employed.
Two methods readily suggest themselves. A lump sum annual
fee could be levied on each mine even on a graded scale
depending on the size of the mine as evidenced by its share
capital. Or a similar graded fee could be levied on each
mine depending on its size determined by the number of men
employed therein. Where therefore the result of
quantification is to bring a particular impost entirely
within the ambit of a tax it would not be right to say that
such an impost is still a fee, because certain services have
to be rendered and a fund has been created in which
collections of the impost are credited. If this were
permissible many taxes not otherwise leviable would be
converted into fees by the simple device of creating a
special fund and attaching certain services to be rendered
from the amount in that fund. That would in my opinion be a
colourable exercise of the power of legislation, as
explained in K. C. Gajapati Narayan Deo v. The State of
Orissa (1). Let me illustrate how taxes can be turned into
fees on the so-called basis of quantification with the help
of the device of creating a fund and attaching certain
services to be rendered out of monies in the fund. Take the
case of income-tax under item 82 of List I of the Seventh
Schedule, which is exclusively reserved
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 1.
580
for the Union. Suppose that some State Legislature wants to
impose a tax on income other than agricultural income in the
garb of fees. All that it has to do is then to create a
special fund out of the amounts collected and to attach
rendering of certain services to the fund. All that would
be necessary would be to define the services to be rendered
so widely that the amount required for the purpose would be
practically limitless. In that case there would be no
difficulty in levying any amount of tax on income, for the
amount collected would always be insufficient for the large
number of services to be rendered. What has to be done is
to find out a number of items in Lists II and III of the
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Seventh Schedule in respect of which fees can be levied by
the State Legislature. These fees can be levied on a total
basis for a large number of services under various entries
of Lists II and III. A fund can be created, say, for
rendering services of various kinds to residents of one
district. In order to meet the expenses of tendering such
services, suppose, the legislature imposes a tax on every
one in the district at 10 per centum of the net total income
(other than agricultural income); the amount so collected is
put in a separate fund and ear-marked for such special
services to be rendered to the residents of that district.
Can it be said that such a levy is a fee justified under
various entries of Lists II and III, and not a tax on
income, on the ground that this is merely a mode of
quantification? As an instance, take, item 6 of List II,
"Public health and sanitation, hospitals and dispensaries";
item 9, "Relief of the disabled and unemployable"; item II,
Education; item 12, Libraries, museums and similar
institutions"; item 13, communications, that is to say,
roads, bridges and other means of communications; item 17,
"Water, that is to say, water supplies, irrigation and
canals, drainage and embankments, water storage and water
power"; and item’, 25, "Gas and gas-works"; item 23 of List
III, "Social security and social insurance, employment and
unemployment"; item 24, "Welfare of labour including
conditions of work, provident funds, employers’ liability
workmen’s compensation, invalidity and old age
581
pensions and maternity benefits"; item 25, "Vocational and
technical training of labour"; and item 38, "Electricity".
Assume that a fund is created for rendering, these services
to the residents of a district. The State Legislature is
entitled to impose fees for rendering these services to the
residents of the district; the costs of these services would
obviously be limitless and in order to meet these costs, the
State legislature levies a consolidated fee for all these
purposes at 10 per centum of the total net income on the
residents of the district (excluding his agricultural
income) as a measure of quantification of the fee. Can it
be said in the circumstances that such a levy would not be
Income-tax, simply because a fund is created to be used in
the district where collections are made and these services
have to be rendered out of the fund so created to the
residents of that district and to no others? The answer can
only be one, viz., that the nature of the impost is to be
seen in its pith and substance; and if in pith and substance
it is income-tax within item 82 of List I of the Seventh
Schedule it will still remain income-tax in spite of the
creation of a fund and the attaching of certain services to
the monies in that fund to be rendered in a particular area.
Such an impost can never be justified as a consolidated fee
on the ground that it is merely a method of quantification.
Compare what has been done in this case. Sec. 3 of the Act
which refers to the services to be rendered mentions
communications, that is,, roads, bridges and other means of
communication (barring those given in List I), water-supply
and electricity, for the better development of the area.
These three items themselves would mean expenditure of such
large amounts that anything could be charged as a fee to
meet the costs, particularly in an undeveloped State like
Orissa. Further, the section goes on to mention provision
for the welfare of residents or workers in any such area,
which would include such things as social security and
social insurance, provident-funds, employer’s liability,
workmen’s compensation, invalidity and old age pensions and
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maternity benefits and may be even employment and
unemployment. Again large funds would
74
582
be required for these purposes. Therefore, the services
enumerated in s. 3 being so large and requiring such large
sums, any amount can be levied as a fee and in the name of
quantification any tax, even though it may be in List I, can
be imposed; and that is exactly what has been done, namely,
what is really a duty of excise has been imposed as a fee
for these purposes which fall under items 13 and 17 of List
II and 23, 24 and 38 of List III. There can be no doubt in
the circumstances that the levy of a cess as a fee in this
case is a colourable piece of legislation. I do not say
that the Orissa State Legislature did this deliberately.
The motive of the legislature in such cases is irrelevant
and it is the effect of the legislation that has to be seen.
Looking at that, the cess in this case is in pith and
substance nothing other than a duty of excise under item 84
of List I and therefore the State legislature was
incompetent to levy it as a fee.
The next contention on behalf of the State of Orissa is that
if the cess is not justified as a fee, it is a tax under
item 50 of List II of the Seventh Schedule. Item 50
provides for taxes on mineral rights subject to any
limitations imposed by Parliament by law relating to mineral
development. This raises a question as to what are taxes on
mineral rights. Obviously, taxes on mineral rights must be
different from taxes on goods produced in the nature of
duties of excise. If taxes on mineral rights also include
taxes on minerals produced, there would be no difference
between taxes on mineral rights and duties of excise under
item 84 of List I. A comparison of Lists I and II of the
Seventh Schedule shows that the same tax is not put in both
the Lists. Therefore, taxes on mineral rights must be
different from duties of excise which are taxes on minerals
produced. The difference can be understood if one sees that
before minerals are extracted and become liable to duties of
excise somebody has got to work the mines. The usual method
of working them is for the owner of the mine to grant mining
leases to those who have got the capital to work the mines.
There should
583
therefore be no difficulty in holding that taxes on mineral
rights are taxes on the right to extract minerals and not
taxes on the minerals actually extracted. Thus tax on
mineral rights would be confined, for example, to taxes on
leases of mineral rights and on premium or royalty for that.
Taxes on such premium and royalty would be taxes on mineral
rights while taxes on the minerals actually extracted would
be duties of excise. It is said that, there may be cases
where the owner himself extracts minerals and does not give
any right of extraction to somebody else and that in such
cases in the absence of mining leases or sub-leases there
would be no way of levying tax on mineral right,-,. It is
enough to say that these cases also, rare though they are,
present no difficulty. Take the case of taxes on annual
value of buildings. Where there is a lease of the building,
the annual value is determined by the lease-money; but there
are many cases where owners themselves live in buildings.
In such cases also taxes on buildings are levied on the
annual value worked out according to certain rules. There
would be no difficulty where an owner himself works the mine
to value the mineral rights on the same principles on which
leases of mineral rights are made and then to tax the
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royalty which, for example, the owner might have got if
instead of working the mine himself he had leased it out to
somebody else. There can be no doubt therefore that taxes
on mineral rights are taxes of this nature and not taxes on
minerals actually produced. Therefore the present case is
not a tax on mineral rights; it is a tax on the minerals
actually produced and can be no different in pith and
substance from a tax on goods produced which comes under
Item 84 of List I, as duty of excise. The present levy
therefore under s. 4 of the Act cannot be justified as a tax
on mineral rights.
In the view I have taken, it is not necessary to consider
the other point, raised on behalf of the petitioners,
namely, that even if it is a fee, in view of the two Central
Acts (mentioned earlier) the, Orissa Legislature was not
competent to pass the Act. I would
584
therefore allow the petition, and declare that the Orissa
Mining Areas Development Fund Act, 1952, is beyond the
constitutional competence of the Orissa Legislature to pass
it. The whole Act must be struck down because there will be
very little left in the Act if s. 4 falls as it must. The
legislature would never have passed the Act without s. 4.
By COURT. In accordance with the majority Judgment of the
Court, the Writ Petition is dismissed with costs.