Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
P.KANNADASAN ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU & ORS. ETC. ETC
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/07/1996
BENCH:
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, SUHAS C. SEN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 26TH DAY OF JULY, 1996
Presents:
Hon’ble Mr.Justice B.P. Jeevan Reddy
Hon’ble Mr.Justice Suhas C.Sen
M. Chandrasekharan, Additional Solicitor General A.K.
Ganguli, K.N. Shkula, T. Thiagarajan, K. Parasaran, V.A.
Bobde, Dr. A.M. Singhvi, P.S. Nair, B. Sen, Gulab Gupta,
G.L. Sanghi, R.N. Sachthey, Sr. Advs., V. Ramasubamaniam, V.
Krishnamurthy, (Manish Mishra,) Adv. for M/s. Fox Mandal &
Co., V.A. Subba Rao, A.D.N. Rao, Arvind Kumar Sharma, T.
Harish Kumar, Krishnamurthi Swami, K.K. Mani, Nikhil Nayyar,
T.V.S.N. Chari, B.B. Singh, Mahabir Singh, Praveen Kumar,
Suman J. Khaitan, Shahid Rizvi, T.G.N. Nair, satish K.
Agnihotri, Ashok Mathur, Anip Sachthey, C.D. Singh, M.
Munshi, B.B. Singh, Adhay Sapore, Vivek Gambir, Neeraj
Sharma, Ajit Kumar Sinha, P.R. Seetharaman. Advs. With them
for the appearing parties.
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO 9847 OF 1996
(Arising out of S.L.P. (C) No. 177812 of 1994)
WITH
C.A. NOS. ARISING OUT OF S.L.P NOS.
9849, 9780-81/96 11922-24/96
9905/96, 1761/96
9851/96 19147/94
9906,9907/96 25020,25076/95
9777/96 26137/95
W. P. (C) NOS.269/95, 270/94
9908, 9909/96 28062,28064/95
9850, 9778/96 3315/95,3351/96
9910/96 3513/96
W.P. (C) NO.408/96
9911-12/96 4198-99/96
9913/96 4885/95
W.P.(C) No. 518/95
9914/15/96 5339,5362/96
9848, 9774-76/96 8109,8814-16/95
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9916/96 9749/96
9917/96 15012/96 (D.No 11144/96)
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO. OF 1996
[ARISING OUT OF S.L.P.(C) NO.17721 OF 1994]
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NOS. OF 1996
[ARISING OUT OF S.L.P.(C) NOS.11922-24/96,1761/96, 19147/
94, 25020/95, 25076/95,26137/95,W.P.(C) NOS.269/95,270/94,
S.L.P.(C) NO.28062/95,28064/95, 3315/95,3351/96,3513/96,
W.P. (C) NO.408/96, S.L.P.(C) NOS.4198-99/96,4885/96,W.P.(C)
NO.518/95, S.L.P.(C) NOS.5339/96,5362/96,W.P.(C) NO. 688/92,
S.L.P.(C) NOS. 8109/95, 8814-16/95, 9749/96 AND S.L.P.(C)
NO._____________ /96 [D.NO.11144/96] WITH I.As.
J U D G M E N T
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, J.
Leave granted in the Special Leave petitions.
The appellants-writ petitioners are challenging the
validity of The Cess and Other Taxes on Minerals
(Validation) Act, 1992 [being Act 16 of 1992] enacted by
Parliament. The High Courts have repelled the attack.
It is renewed here.
FACTUAL CONSPECTUS:
Section 115 of the Tamil Nadu Panchayats Acts 1958
levied in every Panchayat Development lock a local cess @
0.45p on every rupee of land revenue payable to the
Government in respect of any land for every fasli. The
explanation to the section defined "land revenue" to include
inter alia royalty and lease amount payable in respect of
the land. The validity of the levy was challenged in the
Madras High Court. A learned Single Judge dismissed the writ
petition-holding that being a tax on land, it is within the
Legislative competence of the State Legislature. The learned
Judge followed the decision of this Court in H.R.S. Murthy
v. Collector Chittoor [1964 (6) S.C.R. 666]. A writ appeal
against the decision of the learned Single Judge was
dismissed, again following the decision in H.R.S. Murthy.
The matter was brought to this Court. It was heard
ultimately by a seven-Judge Bench [ India, Cement Limited v.
State of Tamil Nadu (1989 Suppl.(1) S.C.R. 692)] which held,
the said levy to be outside the legislative competence of
the Tamil Nadu Legislature. This Court held that (1) the
levy cannot be sustained under and with reference to Entry
49 of List-Il of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution of
India as a tax on land; (2) the levy is a levy on minerals
and is relatable to Entries 23 and 50 of List-II (3) that on
account of the declaration made by Parliament contained in
Section 2 of - the Mines and Minerals [Development and
Regulation] Act, 1957, [M.M.R.D. Act], the State
legislatures have been denuded of the power to levy tax on
minerals. Regulation of mines and mineral development takes
within its purview the levy of tax on minerals. Section 9 of
the M.M.R.D. Act, this Court held, provides for levy of
royalty/dead rent on minerals. The State legislatures
cannot, therefore, impose any tax on minerals. H.R.S. Murthy
was wrongly decided. Having so declared, this Court,
however, directed that the said decision shall only have
prospective effect. This was for the reason that the States
have been levying and collecting the said cess on the basis
of the decision of this Court in H.R.S. Murthy. The decision
in India Cement was rendered on 25th October, 1989.
Following the decision in India Cement, a three-Judge
Bench declared identical levies imposed by the States of
Orissa, Bihar and Madhya Pradesh as incompetent and void
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[Orissa Cement Limited v. State of Orissa (1991 (2) S.C.R.
105)]. Having regard to the fact that decisions of the High
Courts in Orissa, Bihar and Madhya Pradesh [which were the
subject-matter of appeals before this Court] were rendered
on different dates, the Bench directed that the said
decision shall be operative prospectively with effect from
the date of the said judgment, i.e., 4th April, 1991 in the
case of State of Bihar, with effect from December 22, 1989
in the case of Orissa and with effect from march 28, 1989 in
the case of Madhya Pradesh.
The aforesaid decisions of this Court had serious
impact on the revenues of several State Governments. Not
only were they barred from collecting the said cess, quite a
few of them were obliged to refund substantial amounts which
has already been collected. It is well known that the state
Governments in this country are perpetually strapped for
funds. the decisions made their situation more acute. The
Parliament then came to their rescue and promulgated The
Cess and other Taxes on Minerals (Validation) ordinance,
1992 on February 15, 1992. The Ordinance has been replaced
by Act 16 of 1992, published in the Gazette of India on 4th
April, 1992. the Act contains only three sections. Having
regard to the several submissions made with respect to its
validity, it is appropriate to read all the three sections
including the schedule appended thereto:
"An Act to validate the imposition
and collection of cesses and
certain other taxes on minerals
under certain State laws
Be it enacted by Parliament in the
Forty-third Year of the Republic of
India as follows:-
Prefatory Note Statement of
Objects and Reasons. --- Certain
State Acts imposing cesses or
other taxes on minerals had been
struck down by Courts including the
Supreme Court of India in different
cases. As result of judgments in
these cease, State Government
became liable to refund cesses and
other taxes collected by them.
Since refund was likely to have a
serious impact on State revenues of
the concerned State Governments
and having regard to the fact that
it is extremely difficult to ensure
that the levies collected are
refunded to the large number of end
users of minerals who have actually
borne the burden of such levies,
the Cess and Other Taxes on
Minerals (Validation) Ordinance,
1992, to validate collection of
such levies by State Governments up
to the 4th day of April, 1991.
2. The Bill seeks to replace the
aforesaid Ordinance.
1. Short title, extent and
commencement---(1) This Act May be
called the Cess and Other Taxes on
Minerals (Validation) Act, 1992.
(2) It extends to the whole of the
India.
(3) It shall be deemed to have
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come into force on the 15th day of
February, 1992.
2. Validation of certain State
laws and actions taken and things
done thereunder.- (1) The laws
specified in the Schedule to this
Act shall be, and shall be deemed
always to have been, as valid as if
the provisions contained therein
relating to cesses or other taxes
on Minerals had been enacted by
parliament and such provisions
shall be deemed to have remained in
force up to the 4th April, 1991.
(2) Notwithstanding any
judgment, decree order of nay
court, all actions taken, things
done, rules made, notifications
issued or purported to have been
taken, done made or issued and
cesses or other taxes on minerals
realised under any such laws shall
be deemed to have been validly
taken, done, made, issued or
realised, as the case may be, as if
this section had been in force at
all material times when such
actions were taken, Things were
done, rules were made,
notifications were issued. or
cesses or other taxes were issued,
and no suit or other proceeding
shall be maintained or continued in
any court for the refund of the
cesses or other taxes realised
under any such laws.
(3) For the removal of doubts,
it is hereby declared that nothing
in sub-section (2) shall be
construed as preventing any person
from claiming refund of any person
from claiming refund of any cess of
tax paid by him in excess of the
amount due from him under any such
laws.
3. Repeals and savings. -----(1)
The Cess and other Taxes on
Minerals (Validation) Ordinance,
1992 (Ord. 7 of 1992 ) is hereby
repealed.
(2) Notwithstanding such
repeal, anything done or any action
taken under the said Ordinance
shall be deemed to have been done
or taken under the corresponding
provisions of this Act.
THE SCHEDULE
(See Section 2 )
1. The Andhra Pradesh (mineral
Rights) Tax Act, 1975 (A.P. Act 14
of 1975).
2. The Andhra Pradesh (Andhra
Area) District Boards Act, 1920.
3. The Andhra Pradesh (Telengana
Area) District Boards Act, 1955.
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4. The Cess Act, 1880 (Bengal Act
9 of 1880) as applicable in the
State of Bihar.
5. Karnataka Zilla Parishads,
Taluk Panchayat Samitis, Mandal
Panchayat and Nyaya Panchayats Act,
1983 (Karnataka Act 20 of 1985).
6. The Karnataka (Mineral Rights)
Tax Act, 1984 (karnataka Act 32 of
1984).
7. The Madhya Pradesh karadhan
Adhiniyam, 1982 (M.P. Act 15 of
1982)
8. The Madhya Pradesh Upkar
Adhiniyam, 1982 (M.P. Act 1 of
1982).
9. The Maharashtra Zilla
Parishads and panchayat Samitis
(amendment and Validation ) Act,
1981 ( Maharashtra Act 46 of 1981).
10. The Orissa Cess Act, 1962
(Orissa Act II of 1962).
11. The Tamil Nadu Panchayat Act,
1958 (Tamil Nadu Act xxxv of
1958).
The Statement of Objects and Reasons appended to the
bill states that cesses and other taxes on minerals imposed
by certain State governments were struck down by this Courts
on account of which they have become liable to refund cesses
and other taxes collected by them. Since such refund is
likely to have serious impact- on the revenues of the
concerned State Governments and also because it is extremely
difficult to ensure that the levies collected are refunded
to the large number of end users of minerals who have
actually borne the burden of such levies, the said Act was
being made by Parliament. The Preamble to the Act states
that it was an Act "to validate the imposition and
collection of cesses and certain other taxes on minerals
under certain State laws". The Act is deemed to have come
into force on February 15, 1992, the date on which the
Ordinance of 1992 was promulgated by the President. Section
which contains three sub-sections the main provisions in the
Act. Sub-section (1) says that the provisions contained in
the laws specified in the Schedule to the Act relating to
cesses anc other taxes on minerals, shall be and shall be
deemed always to have been as valid as if the provisions
contained therein had been enacted by Parliament and that
such provisions shall be deemed to have remained in force
upto the 4th day of Aprils Sub-section (2) elaborates and
elucidates the content of sub-section ( Having regard to the
decisions of this Court and the High Courts on the question
of validity of cesses and taxes on minerals imposed by the
States, the sub-section opens with a non-obstante clause
"notwithstanding any judgments decree or order of any
court". The sub-section then provide three things. It
firstly says that "all actions taken, things done, rules
made, notifications issued or purported to have been taken,
done made or issued shall be deemed to have been validly
taken done, made or issued. as the case may be, as if this
section had been in force at all material times when such
actions were taken, things were done, rules were made and
notifications were issued". Secondly, it says that "cesses
and other taxes on minerals realised under any such laws
shall be deemed to have been validly..... realised....... as
if this section had been in force at all material times when
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such...... cesses or other taxes were realised". The third
thing provided by the sub-section is the declaration that
"no suit or other proceeding shall be maintained or
continued in any court for the refund of the cesses or other
taxes realised under any such laws". sub-section (3) is
clarificatory in nature. It starts with the words "for the
removal of doubts" and declares that nothing in, sub-section
(2) shall be construed as preventing any person from
claiming refund of any cess or tax paid by him in excess of
the amount due from him under any of the laws mentioned in
the Schedule. It is a case of stating the obvious by way of
abundant caution.
The object and purpose of the Validation Act is self-
evident. Since it was declared by this Court [ and other
High Courts] that the State legislatures were not competent
to levy cesses and taxes on minerals by virtue of the
declaration contained in Section 2 of the M.M.R.D. Act [made
in terms of Entry 54 in List-I of the Seventh Schedule to
the Constitution ] the Parliament stepped in and enacted the
relevant provisions of the State enactments [mentioned in
the Schedule ] with retrospective effect from the date of
the levy under each of the said enactments. The power of the
Parliament to levy such taxes cannot really be disputed. If
the States have no power to levy such cesses or taxes, it
follows that Parliament does have such power. By virtue of
the deeming clause contained in sub-section of Section 2,
the relevant provisions of the State enactments must be
deemed to have been enacted on the date they were enacted by
the respective State Legislatures and they must be deemed to
have remained in force upto the 4th day of April, 1991. The
device adopted by Parliament is a well-known one. It may be
called legislation by incorporation. The effect is as the
relevant provisions of ’Scheduled Acts are individually and
specifically enacted by Parliament; all those provisions
must be read into Section 2 (1). The necessary and logical
consequence flowing therefrom is the creation of levy of all
the cesses and taxes, levied by the respective State
enactments, by Parliament itself. The provisions so enacted
are, however, declared to be in force upto the 4th day of
April 1991.
CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES:
S/Sri K. Parasaran, G.L. Sanghi, A.K. Ganguli, B. Sen,
V.A. Bobde, Abhishek Singhvi, Rohinton F. Nariman and Ajit
Kumar Sinha urged the following contentions in support of
their attack upon the validity of the Act:
1. The impugned Act is a clear case of the Parliament
seeking to over turn the decisions rendered by this Court
and the High Courts in exercise of their constitutional
power and are, therefore, incompetent and ineffective.
2. The language in Section 2 does not achieve the purpose
set out in the Preamble. The Parliament must first make a
law creating the levy before it can create a fiction that
the law must be deemed to have been made do on anterior
date, i.e., before giving it retrospective effect. The
Parliament cannot relegate even the law making function to
the realm of fiction. In words, without making a laws the
Parliament cannot declare that the law shall be deemed to
have been made by it on an anterior date. Section 2 does
not bring into existence any levy/imposition. the language
employed in Section 2 is wholly inadequate for the purpose.
The section is mere exercise in futility.
3. Even if it is held by this Court for any reason that
Section 2 has indeed created the levy the creation of the
said levy is for the limited purpose of enabling the State
Governments to retain what they have already collected.
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Section 2 does not empower the Parliament or its agencies to
collect taxes which were not collected on or before the 4th
day of Aprils 1991. In other word, after 4th day of April,
1991, any tax or cess levied under the Act [ which means the
scheduled enactments] remaining uncollected/unrealised
cannot be collected or realised. The idea was to close the
chapter on 4th day of April, 1991: whatever is collected
shall not be refunded and whatever is not collected shall
not be collected thereafter.
4. The effect of Section 2 is that cesses and minerals are
levied in different States at different rates. This is
because the rate of tax/cess in each of the concerned States
was different. A Parliamentary enactment cannot levy the
same tax/cess at different rates in different States of the
country. It would be discriminatory and violative of Article
14 of the Constitutions No justification has been put
forward by the Union of India in support of such
discriminatory treatment. This discriminatory levy is
antithetical to the basic object underling M.M.R.D. Act,
viz., levy of uniform royalties-taxes. Indeed the Act does
not extend to the entire country but only to certain States
in the country.
5. The declaration made by Parliament in Section 2 of the
M.M.R.D. Act is not an absolute and unlimited one. The
denudation of the State legislatures is only to the extent
provided in the said Act. Section 9 is one of the provisions
of the M.M.R.D. Act defining the extent of denudation. The
impugned levy created by Section 2 f the impugned Act is in
addition to the levy under section 9. In other word, the
extent of denudation has been enhanced by the impugned levy.
It so, such levy/denudation could have been effected only by
making a fresh declaration in term of Entry 54 list-I of the
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. No such declaration
has been made by Parliament and. therefore, the levy is
incompetent and ineffective.
6. The levy in question can be related only to Entry 54 of
List-I. It cannot be related to Entry 97 of List-I If so,
the levy of cess/tax should be for the purposes of
regulating the mines or mineral development. Absolutely no
material is placed before the Court to show that the levy of
the impugned cess/tax is for the said purpose.
7. The impugned enactment is a temporary statute. Its
effect is only upto 4th day of April, 1991. On that date,
the purpose of the Act comes to an end. Thereafter, it is a
dead-letter. Since Section 6 of the General Clauses Act does
not apply in the case of a temporary statute, no action can
be taken and no recoveries can be made after 4th day of
April, 1991. Indeed, the relevant provision of the
enactments mentioned in the Schedule to the Act are enacted
and kept alive only upto 4th day of April, 1991 which means
that even the provisions relating to recovery also cease to
have any force after the said date. Since the recovers
machinery is not available and is not in existence after the
Said date, no recoveries can be made after the said date.
The sequence of events, the statement of objects and reasons
and the language in sub-section (2) all bear but the fact
that the Act was intended merely to save the collections
already made and not to enable the union of India or its
agencies to recover the taxes of cesses not realised or
recovered on or before 4th day of April, 1991. It is
significant to note that the impugned Act does not contain
any provision corresponding to any of the clause in Section
6 of the General Clauses Act.
Sri Chandrasekharan, learned additional Solicitor
General, Sri Gulab C. Gupta and Sri K.N. Shukla, appearing
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for the Governments of Tamil Nadu, Madhya Pradesh and the
Government of India respectively disputed the correctness of
the several contentions urged on behalf of appellants-
petitioners and submitted that section 2 of the impugned
enactment is perfectly adequate and effective to create the
levy [by Parliament] of cesses and taxes which were earlier
imposed by the State enactments but which enactments were
declared to be incompetent by this Court and the High
Courts. They submitted that parliament was competent to and
did create a new levy with retrospective effect but limited
its operation upto 4th day of April, 1991. The learned
counsel submitted that the impugned enactment is not and
cannot be described as a temporary statute. the impugned Act
has not expired. It is very much alive and continues to be
on the statute book. Merely because the levy created
thereunder is confined to a particular period, it does not
mean either that the Act has expired or that it is a
temporary statute. Learned counsel also submitted that the
different rates of levy created by Section 2 cannot be
described as discriminatory. Having regard to the context in
which the impugned Act came to be enacted historical factors
it could not have been otherwise. Levy of a tax at different
rates in different States of the country is not an unknown
feature. Such a practice already exists. The Parliament is
competent to enact a law applicable only to part of the
country. Classification on the grounds of geographical
division is a well-known and well-accepted one. It is also
not necessary, they submitted, that there should be a fresh
declaration in terms of Entry 54 of List-I whenever the rate
of tax or royalty is enhanced or any of the provisions of
the M.M.R.D. Act are amended. The impugned enactment is in
the nature of addition or a proviso to the M.M.R.D. Act. The
States have already been denuded of the power to levy any
tax or cess on minerals. There is no fresh denudation now.
The Parliament is only adding to the tax which it has
already imposed and that too for a limited period. Learned
counsel submitted that identical provisions have already
been upheld by this Court and that there is no reason to
take a different view.
THE RELEVANT PROVISIONS OF THE
CONSTITUTION AND THE M.M.R.D. ACT:
For a proper appreciation of the questions arising
herein, it is necessary to notice certain relevant
provisions of the Constitution and the M.M.R.D. Act.
Entries 23 and 50 of List-II of the Seventh Schedule to
the Constitution read thus:
"23. Regulation of Mines and
mineral development subject to the
provisions of List I with respect
to regulation and development under
the control of the Union.
50. Taxes on mineral rights
subject to any limitations imposed
by Parliament by law relating to
mineral development.
These entries which empower the States to make laws
with respect to regulation of mines and mineral development
and to levy taxes on mineral rights ares however, subject to
the provisions of List-I with respect to regulation and
development under the control of the Union. Entry 54 of
List-I empowers the Union to make laws regulating the mines
and mineral development to the extent such regulation and
development under the control of Union is declared by
Parliament by law to be expedient in the public interest.
Entry 54 of List-I reads:
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"54. Regulation of mines and
mineral development the extent to
which such regulation and
development under the control of
Union is declared by Parliament by
law to be expedient in the public
interest."
Entry 97 List-I may also be set
out:
97. Any other matter not
enumerated in List II or List-III
including any tax not mentioned in
either of those Lists"
The Parliament enacted the mines and minerals
[Regulation and development] Act, 1957, Section 2 whereof
contains the declaration in terms of Entry 54 of List-I. It
reads:
"2. Declaration as to expediency of
Union control:--- It is hereby
declared that it is expedient in
the public interest that the Union
should take under its control the
regulation of mines and the
development of minerals to the
extent hereinafter provided. "
The Act regulates the prospecting and mining
operations, prescribes the royalties payable in respect
of mining leases provides for development of minerals and
certain other miscellaneous and incidental provisions.
Section 9 read with second Schedule to the Act prescribed
the rates of royalty payable by the lessees in respect of
each mineral. Section 9-A provides for payment of dead-rent
which is in the nature of A minimum royalty. We need not
refer to the other provisions in the Act for the purposes of
this case.
P A R T = II
We may now proceed to deal with the contentions urged
by the learned counsel for appellants-petitioners, in the
order set out hereinabove.
The first submission of the learned counsel for
appellants-petitioners is that by enacting the impugned Act,
the Parliament has sought to annul and invalidate the
decisions of this Court in India Cement and Orissa cement
But which it is not competent to do. lt is submitted that
this Court had issued a mandamus directing certain State
Governments to refund the taxes and cesses collected by them
under the invalid laws, Some of the States had also given
undertakings to this Court to - refund the taxes/cesses
collected in the event of the success of appellants-
petitioners. The mandamus so issued cannot be invalidated by
making a law. The undertaking given by the State is binding
upon it. Strong reliance is placed upon the decisions of
this Court in Madan Mohan Pathak v. Union of India [1978
(3) S.C.R. 334 ] and A.V. Nachane v. Union of India [1582
(2) S.C.R. 246]. It is not possible to agree. It must be
remembered that our Constitution recognises and incorporates
the doctrine of separation of powers between the three
organs of the State viz., Legislatures Executive and the
Judiciary. Even though the Constitution has adopted the
parliamentary form of Government where dividing line between
the Legislature and the Executive becomes thins the theory
of separation of powers still valid. Ours is also a federal
form of government. The subjects in respect of Which the
Union and the States can make laws are separately set out in
List-I and List-II of the Seventh Schedule to the
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Constitution respectively [ List-III is, of courses a
concurrent list.] The Constitution has invested the Supreme
Court and High Courts with the power to invalidate laws made
by Parliament and the State legislatures transgressing the
constitutional limitations. Where an Act made by a State
legislature invalidated by the Courts on the ground that the
State legislature was not competent to enact it, the
judgment of the court shall not operate it cannot over-rule
or annul the decision of the court. But this does not mean
that the other legislature which is competent to enact that
law. It can. Similarly, it is open to legislature to alter
the basis of the judgment as pointed out by this Court in
Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills v. Broach Borough Municipality
[1970 (1) S.C.R. 388 ] - all the while adhering to the
constitutional limitations; in such case, the decision of
the court becomes ineffective in the sense that the basis
upon which it is rendered, is changed. The new low or the
amended low so made can be challenged on other grounds put
not on the ground that it seeks to ineffectuate or
circumvent the decision of the court. This what is meant by
"checks and balances" inherent in a system of government
incorporating the concept of separation of powers. This
aspect has been repeatedly emphasised by this Court in
numerous decisions commencing from Shri Prithvi Cotton
Mills. Under our constitution, neither wing is superior to
the other. Each wing derives its power its power and
jurisdiction from the Constitution. Each must operate with
the sphere allotted to it. Trying to make one wing superior
to other would be to introduce an imbalance in the system
and a negation of the basic concept of separation of powers
inherent in our system of government. Take this very case.
The state legislatures enacted provisions levying
cesses/taxes on minerals. They thought that they were
entitled to do so by virtue of Entry 50 of List-II of the
Seventh Schedule and that the enactment of the M.M.R.D. Act
by the parliament and the declaration contained in Section 2
thereof did not deprive them of the legislative power
conferred by the said entry. A Constitution Bench of this
Court in H.R.S. Murthy upheld their stand and affirmed their
belief. Several years later, a larger Bench of this Court
overruled H.R.S. Murthy in India Cement and ruled that by
virtue of the declaration contained in Section 2 of the
M.M.R.D. Act and the provisions of the said Act, the State
legislatures are denuded of their power to levy and tax on
minerals. Entry 50 in List-II became practically a dead
letter. Provisions in several State enactments levying
cess/tax on minerals were accordingly invalidated with
effect from different dates. The decisions of this Court
clearly meant that the power to levy cess/tax on minerals
vested exclusively with the parliament. Since this Court is
the final arbiter on the interpretation of the Constitution,
everybody was bound by the said declaration of law. In the
circumstances, the Parliament stepped in and enacted the
impugned law, avowedly to bail out States of the predicament
aforementioned; the impugned enactment makes this objective
clear beyond any doubt. At the same time, it should be noted
that Parliament does not purport to clothe the State
legislatures with the power which they do not possess. The
Parliament had already deprived the State legislatures of
the power to levy tax on minerals by making the declaration
contained in Section 2 of the M.M.R.D. Act as far back as
1957. The said declaration remains intact which means that
the States have no power to levy any tax or cess on minerals
so long as the said declaration remains in force. The
parliament, therefore, adopted the only legislative course
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open to it in the circumstances. It created those very
levies with retrospective effect by enacting the impugned
law. Section 2 (1) say that the relevant provisions of the
enactment mentioned in the schedule to the Act shall be
deemed to have been enacted by Parliament on the date they
were enacted by the respective legislatures and that such
provisions shall be deemed to have remained in force upto
4th day of April, 1991. It is not suggested that Parliament
is not competent o levy a tax or cess with retrospective
effect. It is, however, suggested that the tax so levied
must also be operative and effective on the date the
enactment is made. There cannot be levy which is wholly and
exclusively retrospective, it is argued, We see no warrant
for reading such restriction upon the power of the
Parliament. It the parliament is empowered to make is law
with retrospective effect, it is entitled to make the law
effective for such anterior period as it think appropriate.
It cannot be said that unless the levy created with
retrospective effect is also kept alive on the date the law
is enacted by Parliament, such a levy would be incompetent.
This would amount to evolving a principle unknown to law and
would also amount to creating a fetter on parliament for
which there is not basis in principle. We are also unable to
see any substance in the submission that by virtue of the
impugned enactment, the Parliament has tried to annual the
judgments of this Court. On the contrary, the parliament has
accepted the law declared by this Court and has accordingly
enacted the law itself, about whose legislative competence
there can be no serious question.
The decisions in Madan Mohan Pathak and Nachane, we
must say , have no bearing on this question. Even so, having
regard to the strong reliance placed thereon by Sri G.L.
Sanghi, it would be appropriate to deal with the facts and
principle of the said decisions, to illustrate how the said
decisions are wholly irrelevant to the questions concerned
therein, First, the decision in Madan Mohan Pathak.
In June 1974, a settlement was arrived at between the
life insurance Corporation and its employees relating to the
terms and conditions of service of Class III and Class IV
employees including the bonus payable to them. Clause 8(ii)
provided for payment of annual cash bonus, arrived at by
applying a particular formula. The settlement was valid for
a period of four years and was to continue until a new
settlement was arrived at. After the coming into force of
the payment of Bonus (Amendment) Act, 1976, the Central
Government decided that the employees of establishments not
covered by the payment of Bonus Act would not be eligible
for payment of bonus but an ex gratia payment in lieu of
bonus would be made to them. Life Insurance Corporation was
one of the establishments to whom the payment of Bonus Act
did not apply. Pursuant to the said decision, the Government
of India advised the Corporation to stop paying bonus in
accordance with clause 8(ii) of the aforesaid settlement.
The Corporation stopped the payment whereupon the employees
approached the High Court of Calcutta by way of a writ
petition, A learned Single Judge allowed the writ petition
and issued a mandamus directing the corporation to pay bonus
in accordance wit clause 8(ii) of the Settlement. The
Corporation preferred a Letters Patent Appeal against the
said decision. While the said appeal was pending, Parliament
enacted the Life Insurance Corporation (Modification of
Settlement) Act, 1976. When the Letters Patent Appeal was
taken up, the Corporation represented that in view of the
said act there was no necessity for proceeding with the
appeal. The Division Bench accordingly dismissed the Letters
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Patent Appeal with the result that the mandamus issued by
the learned Single Judge continued to be operative and
effective. The employees of the Corporation filed fresh writ
petitions in this Court challenging the constitutional
validity of the Life Insurance Corporation (Modification of
settlement ) Act, 1976 which were allowed. Three opinions
were rendered by the learned judges, Bhagwati, Krishna Iyer
and Desai, JJ. rendered one opinion, Chandrachud, Fazal Ali
and Singhal, JJ. A separate short opinion and Beg, C.J.
Another opinion. We may notice the ratio of each of these
three opinions. Bhagwati, J. held that the impugned Act did
not refer to and did not purport to supersede or nullify the
settlement between the Corporation and its employees. In the
words of Bhagwati, J., "unfortunately the judgment of the
Calcutta High Court remains almost unnoticed and the
impugned Act was passed in ignorance of that judgment.
Section 3 of the impugned Act provided that the provisions
of the settlement insofar as they relate to payment of
annual cash bonus to Class III and Class IV employees shall
not have any force or effect from Ist April, 1975..... This
right under the judgment was not sought to be taken away by
the impugned Act. The judgment continued to subsist and the
Life Insurance Corporation was bound to pay annual cash
bonus....". the learned Judge remarked that the Corporation
committed a grave error in withdrawing the Letters Patent
Appeal in view of the impugned enactment. Had they persisted
with the appeal and brought the aforesaid Act to the notice
of the Court, the Letters Patent Appeal would certainly have
been allowed. But as a result of the erroneous course
adopted by the Corporation. the learned Judge remarked, the
mandamus issued by the learned Single Judge remained
effective and became final. The learned Judge, it is
relevant to note, cited with approval the law laid down by
this Court in Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills but distinguished it
by pointing out that the 1976 Act concerned before them [in
Madan Mohan Pathak] purported to merely deny the benefit of
settlement to the employees which settlement was directed to
be implemented by means of a mandamus issued by the Calcutta
High Court and hence, the principle in Shri Prithvi Cotton
Mills did not help the Life Insurance Corporation. This is
what the learned Judge said:
"It is difficult to see how this
decision given in the context of a
validating statute can be of any
help to the Life Insurance
Corporation. Here, the judgment
given by the Calcutta High Court,
which is relied upon by the
petitioners, is not a mere
declaratory judgment holding an
impost or tax to be invalid, so
that a validation statute can
remove the defect pointed out by
the judgment amending the law with
retrospective effect and validate
such impost or tax."
The learned Judge then proceeded to examine the
validity of enactment on the footing that it did take away
the benefit of bonus vesting in the employees of the
Corporation by virtue of clause 8(ii) to the Settlement and
held it to be violative of Article 31 (2) of the
Constitution. He declared it void that ground. Chandrachud,
Fazal Ali and Singhal, JJ. delivered a two-line order
agreeing with the opinion of Bhagwati, J. that the impugned
enactment was violative of Article 31(2) and saying further
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that they do not think it necessary to express any opinion
on the effect of the judgment of the Calcutta High Court
aforementioned. Beg, C.J. observed, in the first instance,
that though Section 11(2) of the Life Insurance Corporation
Act empowered the Central Government to alter the conditions
of service of the employees, the Central Government. did
not choose to resort to that provision but instead
parliament chose to enact the Act impugned therein,
depriving the employees of their bonus. The impugned Act
took away the benefit conferred by the mandamus issued by
the Calcutta High Court upon the employees. This amounts to
exercise of judicial power by Parliament which has been held
to be bad in Indira Nehru Gandhi v. Raj Narain (1976 (2)
S.C.R.347). The learned Chief Justice then held the impugned
enactment to be violative of Article 19(1) (f) of the
Constitution and not saved by Article 19 (6).
While appreciating the ratio of the said opinions, it
is necessary to bear in mind that it was not a case where
the High Court either struck down a statutory provision was
it a case where a statutory provision was interpreted in a
particular manner or directed to be implemented. It was also
not a case where the statutory provision on which the
judgment was based, was amended or altered to remove/rectify
the defect.
Now of the seven learned Judges, only Beg, C.J. put as
forward as one of the grounds for allowing the writ petition
the theory that the mandamus issued by the learned Single
Judge of the Calcutta High Court having become final could
not be nullified by Parliament. No other learned Judge
adopted that reasoning. As pointed out hereinabove, three
learned Judges for whom Bhagwati, J. spoke, held that the
settlement remained untouched by the impugned Act and,
therefore settlement continued to be in forces and that if
the Act is taken as nullifying the settlement, the Act is
bad being violative of Article 31(2). Three other learned
Judges, Chandrachud, Fazal Ali and Singhal, JJ. agreed with
Bhagwati, J. only to the extent that the Act was violative
of article 31(2).
The observations of Bhagwati, J. extracted hereinabove
- upon which Sri Sanghi places strong reliance - indeed
emphasise the fact that the 1976 Act was passed in ignorance
of the mandamus issued by High Court and that the Act did
not touch the decision of the High Court in any manner.
These observations cannot be read to support the contention
that where a mandamus issued is premised on the footing that
State legislatives have no legislative power to impose the
disputed levy the Parliament [which is undoubtedly
competent to impose the said levies] cannot make a law
imposing the said levies. As pointed out earlier, the
majority Judgment of Bhagwati, J. did indeed affirm the
statement of law in Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills, which we may
quote here only with a view to emphasise the principle.
Hidayatullah, C.J., speaking for the Constitution Bench
held:
"When a legislature sets out to
validate a tax declared by a court
to be illegally collected under an
ineffective or invalid laws the
cause for ineffectiveness or
invalidity must be removed before
validation can be said to take
place effectively. The most
important condition is that the
legislature must possess the power
to impose the tax, for if it does
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not, the action must ever remain
ineffective and illegal. Granted
legislative competence it is not
sufficient to declare merely that
the decision of the court shall not
bind, for that is tantamount to
reversing the decision in exercise
of judicial power which the
legislature does not possess or
exercise, A Court’s decision must
always bind unless the conditions
on which it is based are so
fundamentally altered that the
decision could not have been given
in the altered circumstance."
The mandamus issued by this Court was against the
States and not against the Union or the Parliament. This
Court did not say that Parliament had no power to impose the
said levies. We are also of the opinion that the decision in
Madan Mohan Pathak must be read and understood in the
particular facts of that case and that it would not be
reasonable to read that decision as militating against, or
as over-turning the series of decisions of this court on
the subject including Rai Ramakrishna v. State of Bihar 1964
(1) S.C.R. 897), Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills and Joara Sugar
Mills, v. state of Madhya Pradesh (1966 (1) S.C.R.523).
Now, coming to the decision in Nachane, it is indeed a
sequel to the decisions in Madan Mohan Pathak and Life
Insurance Corporation v. D.J. Bahadur (1981 (1) S.C.C.315)
and its ratio has to be understood in the right of the
background facts set out in Paras 1 to 5 of the said
judgment. Having regard to the identity of the subject-
matter, it was held in Nachane that the decisions in Madan
Mohan Pathak and D.J. Bahadur being decisions between the
same parties their ratio is binding upon them. It cannot be
said that any new principle was enunciated.
We may mention that we have dealt with the decision in
Madan Mohan Pathak at some length because we find that it is
being frequently relied upon as laying down a principle at
variance with Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills and the host of
decisions affirming it. In our opinion the effort is a
futile one, as demonstrated hereinabove. Another decision
rendered by one of us, Suhas C. Sen, J. sitting with N.P.
Singh, J. has also understood the decision in Madan Mohan
Pathak in precisely the same manner. [See Comorin Match
Industries (P) Limited v. State of Tamil Nadu [J.T. 1996)
(5) S.C. 167]. We respectfully agree with all that has been
said in the said judgment with respect to the decisions in
Madan Mohan Pathak and Nachane. It is needless to re-
produce those observations over again here.
We must also say that the fact-situation and the ratio
of Madan Mohan Pathak and Nachane is totally at variance
with the fact-situation in the case before us. They are
worlds apart in every sense of the term. The first
contention of the appellants is accordingly rejected.
The second contention of the learned counsel for
appellants- petitioners is that Section 2 of the impugned
enactment does not achieve the purpose set out in the
Preamble and that the language employed in Section 2 is not
adequate to create any fresh levies. It is submitted that
the Parliament must first create the levy and then give it
retrospective effect. But it cannot relegate both the making
of law and giving it retrospective effect to the realm of
fiction, it is argued. The Parliament cannot say that it
must be deemed to have made a law without actually making
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it. It is submitted that in sub-section (1) of Section 2,
there are no words saying that the Parliament is levying the
various taxes/cesses mentioned in the said subsection read
with the Schedule. By way of contrast, our attention is
invited to the language of Section 3 of the Sugarcane Cess
(Validation) Act, 1961 which was enacted by Parliament in
view of the decision of this Court in Diamond Sugar Mills
Limited v. State of Uttar Pradesh [1961 (3) S.C.R.243] and
the decision of the Madhya Pradesh High Court following it
and declaring that the levy of cess on sugarcane under the
provisions of the Madhya Pradesh sugarcane (Regulation of
Supply and Purchase) Act, 1958 was beyond the legislative
competence of the Madhya Pradesh legislature. Several States
had levied similar cesses. To meet the situation To meet the
situation arising from the decisions aforesaid, the
parliament enacted the Sugarcane Cess (validation) Act,
Section 3 whereof reads:
"3. Validation of imposition and
collection of cesses under state
acts.
(1) Notwithstanding any judgments,
decree or order of any court, all
cesses imposed, assessed or
collected or purporting to have
been imposed, assessed or collected
under any State act before the
commencement of this Act shall be
deemed to have been validly
imposed, assessed or collected in a
accordance with law, as if the
provisions of the State Acts and of
all notifications, orders and rules
issued or made thereunder, in so
far as such provisions relate to
the imposition, assessment and
collection of such cess had been
included in and formed part of this
section and this section had been
in force at all material times when
such cess was imposed. assessed or
collected; and accordingly,--
(a) no suit or other
proceeding shall be maintained or
continued in any court for the
refund of any cess paid under any
State Act;
(b) no court shall enforce a
decree or order directing the
refund of any cess paid under any
State Act; and
(c) any cess imposed or
assessed under any State Act before
the commencement of this act but
not collected before such
commencement may be recovered
(after assessment of the cess,
where necessary) in the manner
provided under that Act.
(2) For the removal of doubts it
is hereby declared that nothing in
subsection (1) shall be construed
as preventing any person-
(a) from questioning in
accordance with the provisions of
any State Act and rules made
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thereunder the assessment of any
cess for any period; or
(b) from claiming refund of
any cess paid by him in excess of
the amount due from him under any
State Act and the rules made
thereunder.
(Emphasis added)
The validity of Sugarcane Cess (validation) Act was
questioned in this Court in Joara Sugar Mills Private
Limited but was upheld. The contention of the learned
counsel for appellants-petitioners is that if the parliament
wanted to impose the levies which levies were earlier
imposed by State enactments but declared incompetent, the
Parliament must impose the levy as has been done by it in
Section 3 of the Sugarcane Cess (Validation) Act, 1961.
Section 2(1). it is contended. does not impose the levies
and, therefore there is no levy and there is no imposition.
It is not possible to agree with this contention either. The
State enactments mentioned in the Schedule to the impugned
enactment did contain provisions creating the levy. It is
he very provisions which are enacted by Parliament now.
section 2(1) says that the said provisions must be deemed to
have been enacted and must be deemed always to have been
enacted by Parliament. In such a situation, it is idle to
contend that Section 2(1) does not create the levy or the
impost. It does. We are also unable to find any qualitative
difference between Section 3 of the Sugarcane Cess
(Validation) Act Section 2 of the impugned Act. The relevant
words are the same, viz., "shall be deemed to have been....
". With necessary adaptations, both the provisions are quite
alike. We need not, however, dilate upon this contention of
appellants-petitioners for the reason that an identical
provision enacted to meet an identical situation has already
been upheld by this Court in Krishnachandra Gangopadhyaya v.
Union of India [1975 Suppl. S.C.R. 151]. In Baijnath Kedia
v. State of Bihar [1970 (2) S.C.R. 100], this Court had
declared the second proviso to Section 10(2) of the Bihar
Land Reforms Act, 1950 unconstitutional on the ground that
Bihar legislature had no legislative competence to enact it
and that Parliament alone was competent to legislate in that
behalf. It was also held that Rule 20(2) framed by the
Bihar Government as delegate of the Parliament under Section
15 of the M.M.R.D. Act was unconstitutional since the rule-
making power conferred by Section 15 did not contemplate
alteration of terms of leases already in existence before
the Act was passed. In view of the judgment of this Court in
Baijnath Kedia, the Parliament enacted the Validation Act in
the year 1969. The Preamble to the said Act stated that it
was "an act to validate certain provisions contained in the
Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950, and the Bihar Minor Mineral
Concession Rules, 1964, and action taken and thing done
in connection therewith." Section 2 of the said Act read
thus:
"2. Validation of certain Bihar
State laws and action taken and
things done connected therein.
(1) The laws specified in the
Schedule shall be and shall be
deemed always to have been as valid
as if the provisions contained
therein had been enacted by
Parliament.
(2) Notwithstanding any judgment,
decree or order of any court, all
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actions taken things done, rules
made notifications issued or
purported to have been taken, done,
made or issued and rents or
royalties realised under any such
laws shall be deemed to have been
validly taken, done, made, issued
or realised, as the case may be, as
if this section had been in force
at all material times when such
action were taken, things were
done, rules were made, notification
were issued or royalties were
realised, and no suit or other
continued in any court for the
refund of rents or royalties
realised under any such laws.
(3) For the removal of doubts, it
is hereby declared that nothing in
subsection (2) shall be construed
as preventing any person from
claiming refund of any rents or
royalties paid by him in excess of
the amount due from him under any
such laws."
lt was contended before this Court that language of
Section 2 is not sufficient to bring about a levy. It was
contended that no liability to levy rent or royalty can be
created retroactively without two clear stages or steps:
firstly, a law must be enacted creating the liability;
next, such provision should be made retrospective. This two-
stage procedure is absent in the statute under attack and
therefore the purpose, whatever it be, has misfired". lt may
be noticed that this is precisely the contention urged
before us now. The said contention was, however, rejected by
this Court. It observed: "the Bihar Legislature is not is
not legislating into validity by a deeming provision, what
has been declared ultra vires by the Court. It is Parliament
whose competency to legislate on the topic in question is
beyond doubt, that is enacting the ’deeming’ provision". The
Court held further that the language of Section 2 is clear
and unmistakable and that by enacting the said provision
the "Parliament desired to validate retrospectively what the
Bihar legislation had ineffectually attempted. It has used
words plain enough to implement its object and therefore the
validating Act as well. as the consequential levy are good.
A perusal of Section 2 of the impugned enactment and Section
2 of the 1969 validation Act considered in Krishnachandra
Gangopadhyaya would show that Section 2 of the impugned
enactment is a faithful re-production and repetition of
Section 2 of the 1969 Validation Act, word to word. The only
additional words are in Section 2(l), viz.," and such
provisions shall be deemed to have remained in force upto
the 4th day of April, 1991."
Sri Parasaran contended that these additional words in
Section 2(i) do make a qualitative difference and
distinguish the present case from the one considered in
Krishanchandra Gangopadhyaya. We cannot agree. The said
words merely limit the levy upto 4th day of April, 1991 and
in no manner detract from the content and effect of the
preceding words employed in sub-section (1) of Section 2.
So far as reliance upon the language employed in
Section 3 of the Sugarcane Cess (Validation) Act is
concerned, all that we need say is, there is no set or
standard formula to which all Validation Acts should
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conform. The Parliament is not bound to adopt identical
language every time it enacts a Validation Act. It is open
to it to employ such 1 language as it chooses. All that the
court should see is whether the language employed achieves
the purpose which the Parliament set out to achieve. The
language employed in Section 2 of the impugned enactments,
we are satisfied, does achieve the purpose and we are fully
fortified, in our opinions, by the decision in
Krishnachandra Gangopadhyaya. The second contention too
accordingly fails.
The third contention which has been urged by every
counsel appearing for appellants-petitioners with great
vehemence is this: the impugned Act is designed to and
provides only for validating the taxes and cesses already
recovered under the relevant provisions of the enactment
mentioned in the Schedule. The impugned Act does not,
however, empower or authorise the Parliament or its agencies
to recover taxes and cesses which are payable under the said
provisions but have not been recovered on or before 4th day
Aprils, 1991. The Statement of Objects and Reasons and the
language in sub-section (2) of Section 2 are relied upon in
support of this contention. It is also pointed out that
Section 2 does not contain a clause or words corresponding
to clause (c) in sub-section (1) of Sections 3 of the
Sugarcane Cess (Validation) Act, 1961, referred to
hereinbefore. It is not possible to accede to this
contention, either. Section 2 enacts the relevant provisions
of the enactments mentioned in the Schedule with
retrospective effect. The provisions so enacted do create
the levy. Indeed, unless the levy is validated recoveries
already made cannot be validated. It is for this reason that
the Preamble to the Act says that it is an Act "to validate
the imposition and collection of cesses and certain other on
minerals under certain state laws". Once the provisions,
which create the Ievy, are deemed to have been enacted by
Parliament, the levy is very much there with retrospective
effect. Once there is a valid levy, not only the taxes
already collected need not be refunded but the taxes and
cesses which have not already been collected can also be
collected. It is impossible to see any distinction in
principle between both. Merely because sub-section (2)
inter alia state that "cesses or other taxes on minerals
realised under any such laws shall be deemed to have been
validly...realised....as if this section had been in force
at all material times when such....cesses or other taxes
were realised", it does not mean that the axes which were
levied but not collected cannot be collected. The said words
in sub-section (2) are not words of limitation; they are
words of validation and put in by way of abundant caution in
view of the Judgments and orders of the Courts. On the
language of Section 2 which enacts with retrospective
effect, the relevant provisions levying cesses and taxes on
minerals and also validates the rules and notifications
issued thereunder, we find it impossible to say that the
levy is validated only for the limited purpose of saving the
taxes already collected, i.e., to sty the refund of taxes
already collected. Indeed, if the section were so construed,
it would lead to discriminatory consequences. Take two
persons ’A’ and ’B’. Both are equal liable to pay the cess
on minerals levied by say the Madras legislature. One pays
the tax according to law and the other does not. If the
argument of appellants petitioners is to be accepted, the
man who paid will be worse off than the person who did not
pay because no tax can now be collected from the person who
did not pay. No such unreasonable intention can be
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attributed to Parliament. It would not be reasonable to
assume that the Parliament intended such discriminatory
treatment between two similarly placed persons and for no
reason. Some of the counsel for appellants-petitioners
sought to that the above situation cannot be described as
discriminatory. According to them, there is a reasonable
classification between the person who does not pay, comes to
the court and succeeds in his challenge and the person who
does not come to the court but quietly pays the tax and sits
at home. This illustration proceeds on the assumption that
only a person not paying the tax comes to the court. That
may not always be true. A person may pay the tax demanded
and then come to court challenging the demand and
collection. There may also be a situation, where tax is
collected from him even before he comes to court. It is
also possible that in a given case, stay is not granted by
the court and he is obliged to pay. There may also be a
situation where both ’A’ and ’B’ in the above illustration
may not come to court. We are, therefore, of the clear
opinion that once the levy is created or validated as the
case may be, distinction can be drawn between the person who
has paid and the person who has not paid. We are also unable
to find any words in Section 2 or anywhere else in the
impugned enactment limiting the levy only to the extent of
the taxes/cesses already collected on or before 4th day of
April, 1991. Nor are we satisfied that absence of a clause
or words corresponding to clause (c) in Section 3(1) of the
Sugarcane Cess (Validation) Act makes any difference. The
said clause merely sets out the consequence flowing from he
validation contained in the main limb of Section 3(1), by
way of abundant caution. It cannot be treated as a
substantive provision. Sri K. Parasaran then submitted that
the words "imposition and collection" in the Preamble do
evidence the intention to confine the imposition to amounts
already collected. It is not possible to agree. By reading
them conjunctively, their meaning cannot be cut down. On the
contrary, the said words indicate the intention to validate
the imposition as well as collection. "Collection" does not
mean what is a already collected alone. It means future
collection as well. Neither the Preamble nor Section 2 say
that what is already collected alone is validated. This
contention too accordingly fails.
The fourth contention of the learned counsel for
appellants petitioners is unsustainable in law and is
misconceived. The Parliament is competent to enact a law
applicable only to a part of the country or to some States
in the country, as the case may be. It is not necessary that
every law made by Parliament must necessarily apply to the
entire country as such. Not only this the Parliament is
equally entitled to prescribe different rates of tax in
different States if such different rates are called for in
the given circumstances. This is not unknown to law. Take,
for instance, sub-section (2A) of Section B of the Central
Sales Tax Act. Sub-sections (1) and (2) of the said Act levy
tax at uniform rates throughout the country. But sub-section
(2A) brings about a distinction between state and State. It
says that notwithstanding the provisions in Section 6 (A) or
Section 8(1) or Section 8(2)(b), so much turn-over of a
dealer as pertains to goods, the sale or purchase of which
is under the Sales tax law of the appropriate State, exempt
from tax generally or subject to tax generally at a rate
which is lower than four percent Central Sales tax shall
also be charged on such turn-over either at the nil rate or
at such lower rate, as the case may be. This provision
clearly recognizes and gives effect to different rates of
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tax in different States of the country on identical
transactions of sale. In State of Madras v. N.K. Nataraj
Mudaliar [1968 (3) S.C.R.829], this difference in rates of
tax between different States was challenged as
discriminatory and hence, violative of Articles 301, 302,
303 and 304 of the Constitution of India. The challenge was
repelled by a Constitution Bench of this. It was held that
the said provision does not bring about any discrimination
between one State and other within the meaning of Article
303. This Court quoted with approval the observations of the
Australian High Court in King v. Barger [1908 (6) C.L.R.41]
with respect to the meaning of the expression
"discrimination between States or part of States" used in
Section 51 of the Australian Constitution:
"......the pervading idea is the
preference of locality merely
because it is particular part of a
particular State. It does not
include a differentiation based on
other considerations, which are
dependent on natural or business
circumstances, and may operate with
more or less force in different
localities; and there is nothing in
my opinion, to prevent the
Australian Parliaments, charged
with the welfare of the people as a
whole, from doing what every State
in the Commonwealth has power to do
for its own citizens, that is to
say, from basing its taxation
measures on considerations of
fairness and justice, always
observing the constitution
injunction not to prefer States or
parts of States."
At the same time we must say that where Parliament
imposes different rates of tax in different States, lt is
under an obligation to justify the same. It must satisfy the
court that such a distinction does not amount to
discrimination and that it is reasonable in the
circumstances and has a purpose behind it. Now, let us see
us see whether there is any justification for imposing
different rates in different States in the present case. We
think there is. If one only remembers the background and the
context in which the impugned enactment was made by
Parliaments the reason behind such different rates would
immediately become clear. Each State had imposed its own
rate. The challenge in India Cement and Orissa cement was
not to different rates being levied by different State
legislatures but to the very legislative competence of the
State legislatures to impose the said levy. When the
parliament is re-enacting those very provisions it could not
but adopt those very rates. This is the historical
justifications if we can describe it that way. It is really
not a case where the Parliamentary enactment is creating the
distinction or different treatment. Distinction and
different treatment was already there over several decades;
each State was prescribing its own rate on the same mineral;
nobody ever questioned it as discriminatory; indeed it could
not be so questioned; the decisions of the courts had
declared the levy by the State legislatures as competent;
the Parliament has intervened and by enacting the impugned
law in exercise of its undoubted power, validated the levy
and all that flows from it. In such circumstances, there was
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no other way except to do what has actually been done. The
question is one of power and legality of the exercise and
not its desirability - apart from the fact that test of
desirability may vary form person to person. In our opinion,
the exercise cannot be faulted on the ground of violation of
Article 14 of the Constitution.
It is then argued that the very idea behind enacting
the M.M.R.D. Act was to bring about uniformity in taxes and
royalties through the country. True it is. But does that
mean that Parliament cannot create an exception to the rule
it itself has created. uniformity in the rates of tax is an
objective set out by Parliament in the M.M.R.D Act It is a
pre-condition to a law made by Parliament under Entry 54 in
List-I nor it a limitation upon Principle, it can also
create an exception thereto in appropriate circumstances or
to meet an exigency. This is precisely what has been done in
the instant case. The impugned enactment is both an addition
and an exception to Section 9 of the M.M.R.D Act.
The fifth contention of the learned counsel for
appellants-petitioners is equally misconceived. The
Parliament has already denuded the State legislatures of
their power to levy tax on minerals inhering in them by
making the declaration contained in Section 2 of the
M.M.R.D. Act. Sri Sanghi argued that the denudation is | not
absolute but only to the extent provided in the M.M.R.D.
Act. Section 9, learned counsel submitted, is one of the
facets of the extent of denudation. Section 9, it is
submitted, sets out the rates of royalty levied states that
such rates of royalty can be revised only once in three
years. If Section 9 is sought to be amended, whether
directly or indirectly, the learned counsel says, a fresh
declaration in terms of Entry 54 of List-I is called for.
This contention assumes that notwithstanding the
declaration. contained in Section 2 of the M.M.R.D. Act, the
States still retain the power to levy taxes upon minerals
over and above those prescribed by the M.M.R.D. Act and that
a fresh declaration is called for whenever such subsisting
power of the State is sought to be further encroached upon.
This suppositions however. flies in the face of the
decisions of this Court in India Cement and Orissa Cement.
The said decisions are premised upon the assumption that by
virtue of the said declaration, the States are totally
denuded of the power to levy any taxes on minerals. rt is
for this reason that the State enactments were declared
incompetent insofar as they purported to levy taxes/cesses
on minerals. The denudation of the States is not partial. It
is total. They cannot levy any tax or cess on minerals so
long ac the declaration in Section stands. Once the
denudation is totals there is no occasion or necessity for
any further declaration of denudation or, for that matters
for repeated declarations of denotations. Indeed if Sri
Sanghi’s arguments were to be accepted a fresh declaration
would be required every time the Parliament increases the
rate af royalties. No such requirement can be deduced from
the relevant constitutional provisions as interpreted by
this Court. This contention also accordingly fails.
The Sixth contention of the learned counsel for
appellants-petitioners is premised upon the supposition that
the Parliament is bound to utilise the taxes realised under
the impugned Act only for the purpose of regulation of mines
and mineral development. It is on this suppositions it is
argued that inasmuch as the Union. has not established that
the impugned levy is required for the purpose of the said
regulation and developments the imposition is incompetent.
In our opinion, the very supposition is misplaced. What is
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under the impugned enactment is a tax/cess and not a fee.
Even in the matter of fees, it is not necessary that element
of quid pro quo should be established in each and every
cases for it is well-settled that fees can be both
regulatory and compensatory and that in the case of
regulatory fees the element of quid pro quo is totally
irrelevant. [See Corporation of Calcutta v. Liberty Cinema
(A.I.R.1965 S.C.1107)]. Taxes are raised for augmenting the
general revenues of the State and not for any particular
purpose - much less for rendering a particular service.
We may now deal with the last contention urged by
appellants-petitioner, It has several facets. We may first
deal with the submission that the impugned act is a
temporary statute and that it has come to an end with the
4th day of April, 1991. Since Section 6 of the General
Clauses Act does not apply to a temporary statute and also
because the impugned act does not contain a saving clause in
terms of said Section 6 it is argued no proceedings for
recovery of unrecovered taxes/cesses can be taken after the
4th day of April, 1991 our opinion, the submission is
totally misconceived. temporary statute is one which expires
on the expiry of the specified period. The impugned act was
indeed enacted and published in April, 1992 and Section 1(30
says that the Act shall be deemed to have come into force on
February 15, 1992. It is, therefore, meaningless to say that
it has expired or it ceased to have any effect on the 4th
day of April, 1991. There are no words anywhere in the
impugned Act indicating that it expires on the expiry of a
particular period or on a particular date. Merely because
the cesses and taxes imposed by it are made effective upto a
particular date (4th April, 1991), it does not mean that the
statute itself expires on that date. We may in this
connection refer to the decision of this Court in Maganti
Subrahmanyam (dead) by L.Rs. v. The State of Andhra Pradesh
[ 1969 (2) S.C.C.96]. The Madras legislature had enacted the
Madras Estates Communal, Forest and Private Lands
(Prohibition of Alienation) Act, 1947 with a view to
prohibit the alienation of Communal, Forest and Private
Lands in the estates in the province of Madras. The Preamble
to the Act stated that it was enacted to prevent alienation
of the several lands in the estates in the Province of
Madras Pending enactment of legislation for acquiring the
interests of land holders in such estates and introducing
Ryotwari Settlement therein. In 1984, the Madras legislature
enacted the Madras Estates [Abolition and Conversion into
Ryotwari] Act providing for acquisition of the rights of
land holders in permanently settled estates. It was
contended before this Court that in view of the statement in
the Preamble to the 1947 Act, the said Act must be deemed to
have come to an and with the enactment of the 1948 Act. On
this basis, it was contended that the 1947 Act must be
deemed to be a temporary statute. The contention was roundly
rejected by this Court observing that since no fixed
duration of the Act was specified, it cannot be called a
temporary statute. Indeed, the decision of this Court in
Madurai Distt. Central Cooperative Bank Ltd. v. Third
Income-Tax Officer, Madurai [1976 (1) S.C.R.135] indicates
that even the Finance Acts which are passed every year, are
not transitional or temporary enactments.
It is also necessary to say that merely because the
levy created by an enactment is limited to a particular
period, the Act itself cannot be said to be a temporary
statute. The duration of the levy created by the Act and the
life of the Act are two different things; they are not
necessarily co-extensive. We, therefore, reject the argument
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that merely because the levies created by Section 2(1) of
the impugned Act are to remain in force only upto 4th April,
1991, the impugned Act very much continues in force even
today and will remain in force till the Parliament chooses
to repeal it. In the circumstances, the argument regarding
the inapplicability of Section 6 of General Clauses Act or
the alleged absence of a saving clause in terms of Section 6
are misplaced.
The next facet of this contention is that inasmuch as
the provisions validated under the impugned Act not only
pertain to levy but also to collection and recovery and
because all those provisions cease to have effect on and
with the 4th day of April, 1991, it must be held that there
is no machinery in existence after April 4, 1991, for
realising and collecting the uncollected\unrealised
taxes\cesses. There is no levy and there is no machinery to
realise the levy after April 4, 1991, it is contended. This
argument is urged in support of the contention that the Act
merely purports to validate the recoveries already made but
does not empower or authorise realisation\recovery of
taxes\cesses not already collected. This submission ignores
the crucial circumstance that the levy is created by the
impugned Act continues in force. Sub-section (3) of Section
2 is a firm indication that notwithstanding the cessation of
levy after the 4th day or April, 1991, the machinery created
to recover and refund the said cesses\taxes is kept alive.
Sub-Section (3) of Section 2 reads:
" (3) For the removal of doubts, it
is hereby declared that nothing in
sub-section (2) shall be construed
as preventing any person from
claiming refund of any cess or tax
paid by him in excess of the amount
due from him under any such laws.
Take a case where excessive collection is made sometime
before April 4, 1991. What is the remedy of the person
concerned. If the appellants argument were to be accepted,
the person would be helpless; there would be no machinery to
examine his claim. But then what does sub-section (3) mean
and signify? It must, therefore, be held that
notwithstanding the cessation of levy created by Section
2(1) with April 4, 1991, the machinery requisite for
realising and refunding the taxes\cesses yet to be collected
or wrongly collected, as the case may be, is kept alive. It
cannot also be suggested with any reasonableness that the
said machinery is kept alive only for the purposes of
refunding the excessively collected taxes but not for
collecting\recovering the uncollected\unrecovered taxes and
cesses. The last contention of the appellants-petitioners
also fails accordingly.
Sri G.L. Sanghi addressed a separate argument specific
to the petitioners from the State of Madhya Pradesh. It is
submitted that, in the first instance, cess on minerals was
levied by the Madhya Pradesh Karadhan Adhiniyam, 1982 [being
M.P. Act 15 of 1982]. The levy was declared incompetent and
void by the Courts, whereupon, it is stated, the Madhya
Pradesh Legislature amended in 1987, the Madhya Pradesh
Upkar Adhiniyam, 1981, levying the same cess. Even this levy
was invalidated by the Courts, it is submitted. Sri Sanghi’s
apprehension is that the impugned parliamentary enactment
validates the relevant provisions of both the 1982 Madhya
Pradesh Act as well as the 1981 Madhya Pradesh Act (as
amended in 1987), with the result that appellants-
petitioners may be called upon to pay the cess on minerals
twice over i.e., under both the 1982 Act as ell as under the
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1981 Act [as amended in 1987] simultaneously. We see no
basis for such an apprehension. Be that as it may, Sri Gulab
C. Gupta, learned counsel appearing for the State of Madhya
Pradesh, stated clearly that no such double levy will take
place and that there would be only one levy of cess on
minerals in any given year or any given quantity removed.
The said statement should allay any aprehensions on the part
of appellants-petitioners from Madhya Pradesh.
For the above reasons, the appeals and writ petitions
are dismissed with costs. Advocate’s fee quantitied at
Rs.2,500/- in each appeal and writ petition.
No orders are necessary in Interlocutory Applications.