Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF CITY OF HUBLI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SUBHA RAO HANUMATHARAO PRAYAG & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/03/1976
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
GUPTA, A.C.
CITATION:
1976 AIR 1398 1976 SCR (3) 883
1976 SCC (4) 830
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1977 SC2138 (18,19)
ACT:
Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act, (Bom. 18 of 1925), Ss.
78 to 84-Whether assessment list should be authenticated
before the expiry of the official year.
Stare Decisis-Principle when State High Courts have
given a particular interpretation to State enactment.
Interpretation of statutes-Statute must be read as a
whole-Legislative interpretation as a guide.
HEADNOTE:
The scheme of Ss. 78 to 84 of the Bombay Municipal
Boroughs Act, 1925, shows that the official year is the unit
of time for the levy of rates on buildings and lands. Under
these provisions the provisional assessment list is prepared
for the official year, either before the commencement or in
the course of the official year, objections are invited, and
amendments consequential upon the decisions on the
objections are carried out in the list. The assessment list
is then authenticated. The process of assessment and levy of
tax which begins with the preparation of the provisional
assessment list is thus completed when the assessment list
is authenticated. The assessment list, when authenticated,
becomes effective from the first day of the official year
and gives rise to the liability or the rate-payers to pay
the tax levied. [889 C]
For the assessment year 1951-52, the appellant followed
the procedure but the authentication was on July 24, 1952,
after the expiry of the official year on March 31, 1952.
Since property tax in accordance with the revised rates was
sought to be levied, the respondents filed a suit for a
declaration that the appellant was not entitled to recover
any property tax at the revised rates.
The suit was decreed and the decree was affirmed by the
High Court.
In appeal to this Court, it was contended that, (1) the
authentication of the assessment list in order to be valid
and effective, need not be made before the expiry of the
official year to which the assessment list relates; and (2)
the suit was barred under s. 206A of the Act.
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Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD: (1) The assessment list in order to be effective
in levying the tax must be authenticated before the expiry
of the official year and if it is not, the assessment list
would be void and inoperative and would not give rise to any
liability in the rate-payers to pay tax. [891 H]
(a) Once the view is taken that the process of levying
the tax is complete only when the assessment list is
authenticated and it is only then that the tax is levied on
the rate-payers, it follows that the authentication must be
made within the official year. The tax being a tax for the
official year must obviously be levied during the official
year and since the levy of tax is complete only when the
assessment list is authenticated it must follow a fortiori
that the authentication must take place in the official
year. Otherwise, the tax for an official year would be
leviable at any time, without any time limit, even years
after the expiration of the official year, which could not
have been the intention of the legislature, since it is an
annual tax intended to be levied for each official year.
[889 D-F]
(b) Section 84 provides that it shall not be necessary
to prepare a new assessment list every year but subject to
the condition of revision once in every four years, the
Chief Officer may adopt the assessment list for any year,
with necessary alterations for the year immediately
following. The provision
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postulates that there would be an assessment list, that is,
the authenticated assessment list, for each official year
before the close of that official year so that it can be
adopted by the Chief Officer for the immediately following
year. Otherwise, he would have to prepare a new provisional
assessment list every time when the Assessment List for the
preceding year is not finalised and authenticated, and this
might lead to the starting result of there being more than
one provisional assessment list in the process of
finalisation at the same time. [889 G-890 C]
(c) In interpreting a provision of a statute the court
is entitled and indeed bound to consider any other parts of
the Act which throw light on the intention of the
legislature. The statute must, therefore, be read as a whole
and every provision in it must be construed with reference
to the context and other clauses so as, as far as possible,
to make a consistent enactment of the whole statute. Section
82(1) provides for making of an amendment in the assessment
list by insertion or alteration of an entry in certain
events, after hearing any objections to the amendment,
Section 82(3) makes the amendment effective from ’the
earliest day in the current official year in which the
circumstances justifying the entry or alteration existed.’
The expression clearly signifies the earliest day in the
official year which is current when the amendment in the
assessment list takes place, that is, the official year
which is running at the time when the amendment is made by
insertion or alteration of an entry. Therefore, a combined
reading of s. 82(1) and (3) shows that an amendment, in
order to be effective in levying tax for an official year,
must be made during the currency of the official year. The
scheme of ss. 78 to 81 is identical with s. 82 and in both
cases what is contemplated first is a proposal to which
objections are invited and after the objections are
investigated and disposed of, the assessment list in one
case, and the altered entry in the other, are authenticated,
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giving rise to liability in the rate-payer. It must follow a
fortiori that if an alteration in the assessment list in
order to fasten liability on the rate payer, is required to
be made during the currency of the official year equally,
the assessment list, in order to give rise to liability in
the rate payer, must also be authenticated before the expiry
of the official year. [890 C-891 B]
Sholapur Municipality v. Governor General, 49 Bom. L.R.
752 and Sholapur Municipal Corporation v. Ramchandra 74 Bom.
L.R. 489 referred to.
(d) Three High Courts having jurisdiction over the
territories in which the Act is in force have all taken this
view over a course of years and this Court will not be
justified in departing from it, merely on the ground that a
different view is possible. This Court is ordinarily loathe
to interfere with the interpretation of a State statute
which has prevailed in the State for a long number of years
and which the State Legislature has chosen not to disturb by
legislative amendment. [891 C-D]
(e) In the present case, the Bombay Legislature has
accepted the interpretation of ss. 78 to 81 by the three
High Courts and given legislative recognition to it by
introducing s. 84A by Bombay Act 53 of 1954. This provision
makes it clear that the legislature not only did not amend
the Act for the purpose of removing the time limit of the
official year as interpreted by the High Courts or enlarging
such time limit, but on the contrary, made the time limit
more stringent by providing that the authentication shall be
made by the Municipal Borough not late than July 31, of the
official year, and that if the authentication is not made
within that time, the State Government shall be entitled to
appoint a person for the purpose of authenticating the
assessment list and that the authentication by such person
shall not, in any event, be later than the last day of the
official year. [891 D-H]
(2) Section 206A provides, inter alia, that no suit
shall lie against a municipality in respect of any act done
in pursuance of execution or intended execution of the Act
unless it is commenced within 6 months next after the
accrual of the cause of action. It could not, however, be
contended that the cause of action for the suit in the
present case arose in favour of the respondents and other
rate payers on July 24, 1952, when the list was
authenticated and that the suit, not having been filed
within 6 months of that date, is barred. The assessment list
in the present case was authenticated after the expiry of
885
the official year and was void and inoperative and the
respondents and other rate-payers were entitled to ignore it
as a nullity. Their cause of action arose only when the
appellant sought to recover the amount of tax from them on
the strength of that assessment list. In the absence of
material to show when the notices demand requiring the
respondents and other rate-payers to pay the amount of tax
were issued, or which rate-payers paid and when it is not
possible to say whether the cause of action for filing the
suit arose to the respondents within six months before the
filing of the suit or earlier. [892 A-E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2406 of
1968.
From the Judgment and Order dated 13-2-1968 of the High
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Court of Mysore at Bangalore in R.S.A. No. 477 of 1962.
M. S. K. Sastri and M. S. Narasimhan for the Appellant.
B. D. Bal, R. B. Datar and Rajan Yashpal for the
respondents 1, 5, 6,10, 11, 17, 19, 23, 25, 26, 27, 35, 36
and 50.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J. This appeal by special leave raises two
questions relating to the interpretation of certain
provisions of the Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act, 1925. The
facts giving rise to the appeal are few and may be briefly
stated as follows:
The respondents are rate-payers liable to pay property
tax in respect of their lands and buildings situate within
the limits of the erstwhile Municipal Borough of Dharwar now
converted into the Hubli Dharwar Municipal Corporation. The
Municipal Borough of Dharwar (hereinafter referred to as the
Municipal Borough) was at the material time governed by the
provisions of the Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act, 1925
(hereinafter referred to as the Act). The Chief Officer of
the Municipal Borough prepared an assessment list for the
official year 1951-52 containing revised valuation and
assessment of the lands and buildings situated within the
limits of the Municipal Borough and published it on 1st May,
1951 in accordance with the provisions of the Act. The
respondents and several other rate-payers filed their
objections against the valuation and assessment in the
assessment list and consequent on the decisions on the
objections, modifications were made in the assessment list
and the assessment list so finalised was authenticated on
24th July, 1952. Since the authentication of the assessment
list was made after the expiry of the official year, the
respondents and other rate-payers took the view that the
assessment list was void and inoperative and the Municipal
Borough was not entitled to recover property tax at the
revised rates which were higher than the rates charged in
the previous official years. It seems, however, that from a
few persons, whose names do not appear in the record
property tax in accordance with the revised rates was
collected by the Municipal Borough. There was consequently
an agitation amongst the rate-payers and a body called the
Citizens Welfare Association championing the causes of the
rate-payers addressed a communication dated 30th November,
1952 to the Director of Local Authorities requesting him to
direct the Municipal Borough to refund the excess amount of
property tax collected from the rate-payers, because
according to them the levy and collection of property
886
tax at the revised rates was illegal in view of the fact
that the assessment list was authenticated only on 24th
July, 1952 beyond the expiration of the official year for
which the property tax was sought to be levied. The Director
of Local Authorities by his reply dated 16th December, 1952
informed the Citizens Welfare Association that the levy of
property tax under the authenticated assessment list was,
according to him, perfectly valid. The President of the
Municipal Borough thereafter issued a public notice dated
10th November, 1954 calling upon the rate-payers to "pay
immediately all the tax still due from them and extend their
full cooperation to the Municipal Borough". Since the
Municipal Borough was determined to recover the amount of
property tax from the rate-payers at the enhanced rates
appearing in the assessment list, the respondents, acting
for and on behalf of themselves and other rate-payers, filed
a suit against the Municipal Borough on 6th June, 1955.
after giving notice dated 1st April, 1955 on the hypothesis
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that such notice was required to be given under s 206A of
the Act. The main reliefs claimed in the suit were, firstly,
a declaration that the Municipal Borough was not entitled to
recover property tax from the rate-payers at the revised
rates since the assessment list was authenticated beyond the
expiration of the official year and secondly, an order
directing the Municipal Borough to refund the excess
property tax recovered by it from the rate-payers.
The Municipal Borough in its written statement raised a
preliminary objection that the suit was barred by limitation
since it was not filed within six months of the accrual of
the cause of action as required by s. 206A of the Act and it
also disputed the claim of the rate-payers on merits on the
ground that there was nothing in the Act which required that
the assessment list should be authenticated before the
expiration of the official year and that even if the
assessment list was authenticated beyond the expiration of
the official year, it did not have the effect of
invalidating the assessment list.
The Trial Court negatived the plea of limitation based
on s. 206A of the Act and so far as the merits were
concerned, held that since the authentication of the
assessment list was admittedly made beyond the expiry of the
official year, the assessment list was void and inoperative
and the Municipal Borough was not entitled to levy and
collect property tax at the revised rates on the strength of
such assessment list. The Municipal Borough, being aggrieved
by this decision, filed an appeal to the District Court, but
the appeal was unsuccessful and a second appeal to the High
Court also failed. Hence the present appeal by the Municipal
Borough with special leave obtained from this Court.
The principal contention that was urged before us on
behalf of the Municipal Borough was that on a true
construction of the relevant provisions of the Act, the
authentication of the assessment list, in client to impose
liability to tax for the official year even if it is made
the official year to which the assessment list relates and
it is sufficient to impose liability to tax for the official
year even if it is made at any time after the expiry of the
official year and, therefore, in the present case, though
the authentication of the assessment list for the official
year 1951-52 was made on 24th July, 1952 after the expiry of
887
the official year, it was valid and effective and operated
to create liability on the tax payers for payment of tax at
the revised rates. In order to appreciate this contention it
is necessary to examine briefly the scheme of the Act in
regard to assessment and levy of property tax. The
tascicunus or section from 78 to 89 deals with assessment of
and liability to rates of buildings and lands. These
sections set out the procedure which must be followed for
levy of rates on buildings and lands. Section 78, sub-s. (1)
requires the Chief Officer to cause an assessment list of
all lands and buildings in the Municipal Borough to be
prepared containing various particulars set out in the
section. When the preparation of the assessment list is
completed, the Chief Officer is required under s. 80 to give
public notice of the list and of the place where the list or
a copy thereof could be inspected. Simultaneously the Chief
Officer has also to give public notice under sub s. (1) of
s. 81 of a date not less than one month after such
publication before which objections to the valuation or
assessment in such list shall be made. Sub-s. (2) provides
for the mode in which the objections must be made and sub-s.
(3) provides for the hearing and disposal of the objections
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by the Standing Committee and the proviso to this sub-
section permits the powers and duties of the Standing
Committee to be transferred to another committee or to any
officer of the government. This sub-section provides that
before the objections are investigated and disposed of, the
objector shall be given an opportunity of being heard in
person or by an agent and it is only after the hearing the
objectors that the objections can be disposed of. When the
objections are thus considered and disposed of, the
assessment list with the modifications which may have been
made consequent upon the decisions on the objections has to
be authenticated in the manner set out in sub-s. (4). Sub-
section (5) provides that the list so authenticated shall be
deposited in the Municipal office and shall be open for
inspection during office hours to all rate payers. The
completion of this procedure leads to certain important
consequences and they are set out in sub-s. (6) which reads
as follows:
"(6) Subject to such alterations as may be made therein
under the provisions of section 82 and to the result of
any appeal or revision made under sec. 110, the entries
in the assessment-list so authenticated and deposited
and the entries, if any, inserted in the said list
under the provisions of sec. 82 shall be accepted as
conclusive evidence-
(1) . . . . .
(ii) for the purposes of the rate for which such
assessment-list has been prepared, of the amount of the
rate liable on such buildings or lands or both
buildings and land in any official year in which such
list is in force."
section 82 then provides for amendment of assessment list in
certain cases. This section is rather material and it may be
reproduced in full:
"82. (1) The standing committee may at any time alter
the assessment-list by inserting or altering an entry
in respect of any property, such entry having been
omitted from or
888
erroneously made in the assessment-list through fraud,
accident or mistake or in respect of any building
constructed altered, added to or reconstructed in whole
or in part, where such construction, alteration,
addition or reconstruction had been completed after the
preparation of the assessment-list, after giving notice
to any person interested in the alteration of the list
of a date, not less than one month from the date of
service of such notice, before which any objection to
the alteration should be made.
(2) An objection made by any person interested in any
such alteration, before the time fixed in such notice,
and in the manner provided by sub-section (2) of
section 81, shall be dealt with in all respects as if
it were an application under the said section.
(3) An entry or alteration made under this section
shall subject to the provisions of section 110, have
the same effect as if it had been made in the case of a
building constructed altered, added to or reconstructed
on the day on which such construction, alteration,
addition or reconstruction was completed or on the day
on which the new construction, alteration, addition or
reconstruction was first occupied, whichever first
occurs, or in other cases, on the earliest day in the
current official year on which the circumstances
justifying the entry or alteration existed; and the tax
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or the enhanced tax as the case may be shall be levied
in such year in the proportion which the remainder of
the year after such day bears to the whole year."
The next important section is s. 84 which provides for
the adoption of valuation and assessment contained in the
assessment list of any particular year for the year
immediately following. That section is in the following
terms:
"84. (1) It shall not be necessary to prepare a new
assessment list every year. Subject to the condition
that every part of the assessment list shall be
completely revised not less than once in every four
years, the Chief Officer may adopt the valuation and
assessment contained in the list for any year, with
such alterations as may be deemed necessary, for the
year immediately following.
(2) But the provisions of sections 80, 81 and 82 shall
be applicable every year as if a new assessment list
had been completed at the commencement of the official
year."
The other sections in this group are not material and it is
not necessary to refer to them.
It is clear from the scheme of these provisions that
the official year is the unit of time for the levy of the
tax. The provisional assessment list is prepared for the
official year. This may be done before the commencement of
the official year or even thereafter in the course of the
official year. Then objections are invited and when made,
they are disposed of and amendments consequential upon the
889
decisions on the objections are carried out in the
assessment list. The assessment list is then authenticated.
The process of assessment and levy of the tax which begins
with the preparation of the provisional assessment list is
thus completed when the assessment list is authenticated.
The assessment list, when authenticated, becomes effective
from the first day of the official year and gives rise to
the liability to pay tax. It is on the authentication of the
assessment list that the liability of the rate-payers to pay
tax arises and the tax is levied on the rate-payers. This
position would seem to be clear as a matter of plain
interpretation and in any event there is a long line of
decisions of the Bombay High Court commencing from Sholapur
Municipality v. Governor General(1) and ending has Sholapur
Municipal Corporation v. Ramchandra(2) which has
consistently accepted this position and the learned counsel
appearing on behalf of the Municipal Borough did not dispute
the correctness of these decisions. The only contention
raised by him was as to within what time the assessment list
must be authenticated, if it is to be a valid and effective
assessment list. It is to this contention that we must now
address ourselves.
Now, once we take the view that the process of levying
the tax is complete only when the assessment list is
authenticated and it is only then that the tax is levied on
the rate-payers, it is difficult to resist the conclusion
that the authentication must be made within the official
year. The tax, being a tax for the official year, must
obviously be levied during the official year and since the
levy of the tax is complete only when the assessment list is
authenticated, it must follow a fortiori that the
authentication on the making of which alone the levy of the
tax is effected, must take place in the official year. Any
other view would result in an anomalous and rather absurd
situation, namely, that the tax for an official year would
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be leviable at any time, even years after the expiration of
the official year. That could not possibly have been
intended by the legislature. That would indeed be a strange
consequence in case of a tax which is annual in its
structure and organisation and which is intended to be
levied for each official year.
But, apart from this consideration, there is inherent
evidence in the sections themselves which shows that the
authentication was intended by the legislature to be a step
which must be taken before the close of the official year.
Section 84 provides that it shall not be necessary to
prepare a new assessment list every year but, subject to the
conditions that every part of the assessment list shall be
completely revised not less than once in every four years,
the Chief Officer may adopt the valuation and assessment
contained in the list for any year, with such alterations as
may be deemed necessary, for the year immediately following.
This provision postulates that there would be an assessment
list for each official year at the close of that official
year, so that the valuation and assessment contained in it
can be adopted by the Chief Officer for the immediately
following year. Now clearly the assessment list which can be
adopted for the immediately following year
890
is the authenticated assessment list and it would,
therefore, seem that the legislative assumption underlying
this provision is that in respect or each official year,
there would be an authenticated assessment list before the
close of that official year, so that the valuation and
assessment contained in it can be adopted by the Chief
Officer for the immediately following year. Otherwise, it
would not be possible for the Chief Officer to adopt the
valuation and assessment of the preceding official year and
he would have to prepare a new provisional assessment list
every time when the assessment list for the preceding year
is not finalised and authenticated and this might lead to
the rather startling result of there being several
provisional assessment lists for different official years in
the process of finalisation at the same time. We should be
slow to accept an interpretation which might lead to such a
strange consequence.
Then again considerable light on this question is
thrown by the provision enacted in s. 82. It is a well
settled rule of interpretation that the Court is "entitled
and indeed bound, when construing the terms of any provision
found in a statute, to consider any other parts of the Act
which throw light on the intention of the legislature, and
which may serve to show that the particular provision ought
not to be construed as it would be alone and apart from the
rest of the Act." The statute must be read as a whole and
every provision in the statute must be construed with
reference to the context and other clauses in the statute so
as, as far as possible, to make a consistent enactment of
the whole statute. Obviously, therefore, section 78 to 81
must be so construed as to harmonise with s. 82. They must
be read together so as to form part of a connected whole.
Section 82, sub-s. (1) provides for making of an amendment
in the assessment list by insertion or alteration of an
entry in certain events after hearing objections which may
be made by any person interested in opposing the amendment.
Sub-section (3) of s. 82 makes the amendment effective from
"the earliest day in the current official year on which the
circumstances justifying the entry or alteration existed."
The expression ’current official year’ in the context in
which it occurs in s. 82, sub-s. (3) clearly signifies the
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earliest day in the official year which is current when the
amendment in the assessment list takes place and that
expression refers only to the official year which is running
at the time when the amendment is made by insertion or
alteration of an entry under sub-s. (1) of s. 82. It would,
therefore, seem clear, on a combined reading of sub-ss. (1)
and (3) of s. 82, that an amendment, in order to be
effective in levying tax for an official year, must be made
during the currency of the official year. That is now well
settled as a result of several decisions of the Bombay High
Court culminating in the Full Bench decision in Sholapur
Municipal Corporation v. Ramchandra (supra) and we do not
see any reason to take a different view. Now the scheme of
ss. 78 to 81 is identical with that of s. 82 and in both
cases what is contemplated first is a proposal to which
objections are invited and after the objections are
investigated and disposed of, the assessment list in the one
case and the altered entry in the other are authenticated
giving rise to liability in the rate-payer. It must follow a
fortiori that if an alteration in the assessment list, in
order
891
to fasten liability on the rate-payer, is required to be
made during the currency of the official year, equally, on a
parity of reasoning, the assessment list, in order to give
rise to liability in the rate-payer, must also be
authenticated before the expiry of the official year.
Moreover, it is difficult to behave that the legislature did
not intend that there should be any time limit in regard to
the levy of tax for an official year and that the tax should
be legally leviable at any time after the close of the
official year. There is, in our opinion, sufficient
indication in the various provisions of the Act to show that
the authentication of the assessment list, in order to be
valid and effective, must be made within the official year,
though the tax so levied may be collected and recovered even
after the expiry of the official year.
We may point out that the Karnataka High Court is not
alone in taking this view the present case. This view has
been consistently taken by the Bombay High Court in a series
of decisions over the years and it has also been followed by
the Gujarat High Court. When we find that three High Courts
having jurisdiction over the territories in which the Act is
in force have all taken this view over a course of years, we
do not think we would be justified in departing from it,
merely on the ground that a different view is possible. This
Court is ordinarily loathe to interfere with the
interpretation of a State statute which has prevailed in the
State for a long number of years and which the State
Legislature has chosen not to disturb by legislative
amendment. As a matter of fact, we find that, in the present
case, the Bombay Legislature accepted this interpretation of
ss. 78 to 81 and gave legislative recognition to it by
introducing s. 84A by Bombay Act 53 of 1954. That section
provides that where in any year a new assessment list is
prepared, or a list is revised, or the valuation and
assessment contained in the list for the year immediately
preceding is adopted with or without alteration, such new,
revised or adopted assessment list shall be authenticated in
the manner provided by section 81 at any time not later than
the thirty-first day of July of the official year to which
the list relates, and if it is not so authenticated, then
the State Government shall appoint such person or persons as
it thinks fit to prepare, revise or adopt and authenticate
the assessment list, and thereupon such person or persons
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shall duly authenticate such list at any time before the
last day of the official year to which such list relates,
and sections 78 to 81 or section 84 shall, as far as may be,
apply to the preparation, revision or adoption of the list,
as the case may be, by the person or persons appointed by
the State Government. It is clear from this provision that
the Legislature not only did not amend the Act for the
purpose of removing the time limit of the official year or
enlarging such time limit, but on the contrary, made the
time limit more stringent by providing that the
authentication shall be made by the Municipal Borough not
later than 31st July of the official year and if the
authentication is not made within that time, the State
Government shall be entitled to appoint a person for the
purpose of authenticating the assessment list and the
authentication by such person shall not. in any event, be
later than the last day of the official year. We are,
therefore, of the view that the assessment list, in order to
be effective in levying the tax, not be authenticated before
the expiry of the official year and if it is not, the
assessment list would be void and inoperative and not give
rise to liability in the rate-payers to pay tax.
892
That takes us to the second contention urged on behalf
of the Municipal Borough based on s. 206A. That section
provides inter alia that no suit shall lie against a
municipality or against any officer or servant of any
municipality in respect of any act done in pursuance or
execution or intended execution of the Act, or in respect of
any alleged neglect or default in the execution of the Act,
unless it is commenced within six months next after the
accrual of the cause of action. The argument of the
Municipal Borough was that the cause of action for the suit
arose in favour of the respondents and other rate-payers on
24th July, 1952 when the assessment list was authenticated
and since the suit was not filed within six months from that
date, it was barred by limitation under s.206A. This
argument is plainly unsustainable. The assessment list being
authenticated on 24th July, 1952, after the expiry of the
official year 1951-52, was void and inoperative and the
respondents and other rate-payers were entitled to ignore it
as a nullity. It is only when the Municipal Borough sought
to recover the amount of tax from them on the strength of
the assessment list, that it became necessary for them to
challenge the validity of the assessment list with a view to
resisting the demand of the Municipal Borough. Then and then
only could a cause of action be said to have accrued to them
which they were required to enforce within a period of six
months. Now, in the present case, there is no material to
show as to when notices of demand requiring the respondents
and other rate-payers to pay the amount of tax were issued
by the Municipal Borough or which rate-payers paid the
amount of tax and when. It is not possible to say, in the
absence of such material, as to when the cause of action for
filing the suit arose to the respondents and other rate-
payers and whether it arose within six months before the
filing of the suit or at a point of time earlier than that.
The Municipal Borough cannot, in the circumstances, be held
to have established that the suit was not commenced by the
respondents and other rate-payers within six months after
the accrual of the cause of action and the plea of
limitation based on s. 206A must fail.
We are, therefore, of the view that there is no
substance in the appeal and it must be dismissed, but in the
peculiar circumstances of the case, we make no order as to
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costs.
V.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
893