Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2549 of 2001
PETITIONER:
Union of India & Ors
RESPONDENT:
State of U.P. & Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/11/2007
BENCH:
A.K.MATHUR & MARKANDEY KATJU
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
A.K. MATHUR, J.
1. This appeal is directed against the judgment dated 12.12.2000
passed by the Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court whereby
the Division Bench has dismissed the writ petition filed by the
appellants and upheld the recovery proceedings initiated against the
appellants for the demand raised by the Jal Sansthan, Allahabad as
water and sewer charges.
2. The Union of India and two others filed a writ petition before
the High Court of Allahabad challenging the orders of recovery dated
1.7.1999 and 20.12.1999 issued by the Executive Engineer, Jal
Sansthan, Khusru Bagh, Allahabad on account of service charges on
Railway properties situated at Allahabad for the period from October,
1994 to March, 1999. The appellants also challenged the recovery
certificate issued by the Tahasildar, Sadar, Allahabad for recovery of
a sum of Rs.26,23,360/- from the appellant No.2 i.e. the Divisional
Railway Manager, Northern Railway, Allahabad. It was alleged by the
Jal Sansthan that the appellants were liable to pay the sewerage
charges for 3125 seats at the rates notified under Allahabad Jal
Sansthan Notification published in U.P. Gazette dated 19.11.1994. The
plea of the appellants was that they were holding the property of the
Central Government for which the service charges were not payable
under Article 285 of the Constitution of India as such charges were
in the nature of a tax. It was submitted that in view of the policy
taken by the Ministry of Railways, Government of India such charges
cannot be recovered as this was totally exempted but the respondent \026
Jal Sansthan did not heed to it and they moved the Tahasildar, Sadar,
Allahabad for effecting recovery. Therefore, the appellants were
constrained to file the present writ petition before the High Court of
Allahabad.
3. The writ petition was contested by the respondents and they
filed their reply and pointed out that in view of various circulars of
the Ministry of Railways, the appellants have been paying the service
charges to the Jal Sansthan and in that connection it was pointed out
that other Central Government Offices situated in Allahabad i.e.
Telephone Department; Post Offices; Accountant General Office;
Central Excise Department; Income Tax Offices were all making regular
payment of service charge and sewerage charge to the Jal Sansthan,
Allahabad. It was also pointed out that earlier the demand of service
charges was being paid by the Railway Administration to the Allahabad
Nagar Mahapalika but with the establishment of Allahabad Jal Sansthan
under the U.P. Water Supply and Sewerage Act, 1975 (herein after to be
referred to as\022 the Act\022) the aforesaid charges were being levied and
realized by the Allahabad Jal Sansthan.
4. On the basis of these pleadings the question that came up
before the Division Bench of the High Court was whether such demand
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raised by Allahabad Jal Sansthan for the services rendered by it to
the Railway colonies was sustainable or not. The short question was
whether Article 285 of the Constitution of India will exempt the
Railway Administration from paying the water and sewerage charges
under the Act of 1975. In this connection, reference was specially
made to two decisions of this Court i.e. Union of India v. Purna
Municipal Council & Ors. [(1992) 1 SCC 100] & Union of India & Anr.
V. Ranchi Municipal Corporation, Ranchi & Ors. [ (1996) 7 SCC 542].
There is no dispute that the bulk of water is supplied by the Jal
Sansthan for maintenance of the railway platforms as well as railway
colonies and the Jal Sansthan is catering to the need of maintaining
the sewerage system not only at the railway stations but in the
adjoining areas and also the residential quarters, offices, godowns,
shades are being maintained by the Union of India through the
Railways. The contention of the appellants in the writ petition was
that in view of the aforesaid two decisions of this Court the
question is no more res integra and the Jal Sansthan cannot charge for
the supply of water and maintenance of sewerage system. In this
connection, Section 184 of the Railways Act, 1989 was also referred to
which lays down that the railway administration shall not be liable to
pay any tax in aid of the funds of any authority unless the Central
Government by notification declares the railway administration to be
liable to pay the tax specified in such notification. In this
connection, Clause (I) of Article 289 of the Constitution was also
pressed into service. But the High Court did not dwell on this aspect
in absence of the material placed in support thereof and did not
permit to raise this plea.
5. As against this, it was contended on behalf of the
respondents that the writ petitioner- appellants herein were paying
its predecessors the amount for water and sewerage charges and there
was no reason why they should discontinue the payment for the same.
However, it was contended by the appellants that merely because they
were paying the charges that does not become law or a vested right
accrued in favour of the respondents to continue with the charges.
6. It was contended by the Jal Sansthan that the so called water
and sewer charges is not a tax and it is a fee for the services
rendered by the Jal Sansthan. Hence the exemption granted to the
property of the Union from the State taxation under Article 285 of the
Constitution has no relevance to the present case as the property of
the Union of India was not being subjected to any tax. It was only a
fee which has been charged for the services rendered and this has been
the practice which is prevalent since long as other departments of the
Central Government have been paying the same. In this background,
the Division Bench of the High Court after exhaustively dealing with
several cases on the subject came to the conclusion that in view of
the provisions of the Act of 1975 and with reference to Article 285
and Article 289 of the Constitution of India, consumption charges on
water or such services which are rendered under the statutory
obligation for which the Jal Sansthan is to maintain its own funds is
a fee and not tax. Hence, the writ petitioners were liable to pay
such charges and they must honour the bills which have been served
upon them. It was also observed that the appellants have been
uninterruptedly paying such bills as a contractual obligation. It
was also pointed out that the railway is not being charged with any
tax but what is being charged is a fee for the service rendered by the
Jal Sansthan. Aggrieved against this order passed by the Division
Bench of the High Court, the present appeal was filed by the
appellants.
7. We have heard learned counsel for the parties and perused the
record. One thing is very clear from the facts, namely, that the
Jal Sansthan which has been established under the Act of 1975, has
taken over certain duties of the Municipality i.e. supply of water and
maintenance of sewer. It is also not in dispute that prior to this,
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the railways were paying for the services like water and sewer to the
then Municipality and likewise other departments of the Central
Government are also paying the same charges. Therefore, the question
is whether the service charges like supply of water and sewerage can
be said to be a tax on the properties of the Railways.
8. Article 285 exempts the property of the Union from State
taxation. Article 285 of the Constitution reads as under :
\023 285. Exemption of property of the Union
from State taxation.- (1) The property of the Union
shall, save in so far as Parliament may by law
otherwise provide, be exempt from all taxes imposed
by a State or by any authority within a State.
(2) Nothing in clause (1) shall, until Parliament by
law otherwise provides, prevent any authority within
a State from levying any tax on any property of the
Union to which such property was immediately before
the commencement of this Constitution liable or
treated as liable, so long as that tax continues to
be levied in that State.\024
9. From a perusal of Article 285 it is clear that no property of
the Union of India shall be subject to tax imposed by the State, save
as Parliament may otherwise provide. The question is whether \021the
charges for\022 supply of water and maintenance of sewerage is in the
nature of a tax or a fee for the services rendered by the Jal
Sansthan. There is a distinction between a tax and a fee, and hence
one has to see the nature of the levy whether it is in the nature of
tax or whether it is in the nature of fee for the services rendered by
any instrumentality of the State like the Jal Sansthan. There is no
two opinion in the matter that so far as supply of water and
maintenance of sewerage is concerned, the Jal Sansthan is to
maintain it and it is they who bear all the expenses for the
maintenance of sewerage and supply of water. It has to create its own
funds and therefore, levy under the Act is a must. In order to supply
water and maintain sewerage system, the Jal Sansthan has to incur the
expenditure for the same. It is in fact a service which is being
rendered by the Jal Sansthan to the Railways, and the Railways cannot
take this service from the Jal Sansthan without paying the charges for
the same. Though the expression tax has been used in the Act of 1975
but in fact it is in the nature of a fee for the services rendered
by the Jal Sansthan. What is contemplated under Article 285 is
taxation on the property of the Union. In our opinion the Jal
Sansthan is not charging any tax on the property of the Union; what
is being charged is a fee for services rendered to the Union
through the Railways. Therefore, it is a plain and simple charge for
service rendered by the Jal Sansthan for which the Jal Sansthan has
to maintain staff for regular supply of water as well as for sewerage
system of the effluent discharge by the railway over their platform or
from their staff quarters. It is in the nature of a fee for service
rendered and not any tax on the property of the Railways.
10. The distinction has to be kept in mind between a tax and a
fee. Exemption under Article 285 is on the levy of any tax on the
property of the Union by the State, and exemption is not for charges
for the services rendered by the State or its instrumentality which in
reality amounts to a fee. In this connection, a reference was made to
the decision of this Court in re Sea Customs Act (1878), S.20(2) [ AIR
1963 SC 1760]. This was a case in which a reference was made by the
President of India with regard to levy of custom and excise duties on
the State under Article 289 of the Constitution of India wherein
Sinha, CJ, Gajendragadkar, Wanchoo and Shah,JJ answered the question
at paragraph 31 as follows :
\023 (31) For the reasons given above, it
must be held that the immunity granted to the States
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in respect of Union Taxation does not extend to
duties of customs including export duties or duties
of excise. The answer to the three questions
referred to us must, therefore, be in the negative.\024
11. But a contrary view was taken by S.K.Das, Sarkar and Das
Gupta,JJ. They concluded in paragraph 71 as follows:
\023 (71) For the reasons given above our
opinion is that the answers to the three questions
referred to this court must be in the affirmative
and against the stand taken by the Union. \024
12. Hidayatullah, J. answering the question in paragraph 121, held
as follows :
\023 (121) My answers to the questions are:
(1) The provisions of the Art. 289 of the
Constitution preclude the Union from imposing or
authorizing the imposition of, customs duties on
the import or export of the property of a State
used for purpose other than those specified in cl.
(2) of that Article, if the imposition is to raise
revenue but not to regulate external trade.
(2) The provisions of Art. 289 of the
Constitution of India preclude the Union from
imposing, or authorizing the imposition of excise
duties on the production or manufacture in India
of the property of a State used for purposes other
than those specified in cl.(2) of that Article.\024
13. Ayyangar,J. has also expressed a separate opinion concurring
with the Chief Justice. This decision on reference of the President of
India only dealt with the question of Article 289 of the Constitution
and we are not concerned in the present case with the effect of
Article 289 which is, so far as the present controversy is concerned,
of no useful assistance.
14. Learned counsel for the appellant has relied on the decision of
this Court in Union of India v Purna Municipal Council (supra). In
this case, the Railways challenged the notice of demand issued by
Purna Municipal Council claiming Rs.28,400/- by way of \021service
charges\022 due for the period from 1954 to 1960. The Union of India
made a reference to Article 285 of the Constitution of India read with
Section 135 of the Indian Railways Act, 1890. It is not clear from
this decision whether the service charge demanded by the Purna
Municipal Council was in reality a tax on the property of the Union or
a charge for some service rendered, rather the decision proceeded on
the assumption that it was a tax and not a fee. The Court disposed
of the matter holding as follows:
\023 The interplay of the constitutional and
legal provisions being well cut and well defined
requires no marked elaboration to stress the point.
Accordingly, we allow this appeal, set aside the
judgment and order of the High Court and issue the
writ and direction asked for in favour of the Union
of India restraining the respondent council from
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raising demands on the railway in regard to service
charges. We make it clear that the rights of the
local authority as flowing under Section 135 of the
Indian Railways Act, 1890 stand preserved in the
event of the Central Government moving into the
matter, if not already moved. In the circumstances
of the case, however, there will be no order as to
costs.\024
15. From this it is not clear whether the impugned demand was a
charge for some service rendered, such as that which is involved in
the present case with regard to water supply or with regard to
sewerage. As already pointed out, what is prohibited by Article 285 is
taxation on the property of the Railways and it does not prohibit
charge of a fee on account of some service rendered by the local
bodies or instrumentality of the State like supply of water or
maintenance of sewerage. Such a charge would be in the nature of a fee
and not a tax.
16. The other decision which has been heavily relied on by the
appellants in Ranchi Municipal Corporation, Ranchi & Ors. (supra). In
this case, their Lordships merely followed the decision in Purna
Municipal Council (supra) and disposed of the matter. Again the
question is what was the nature of the demand raised by the State
against the Railways. In this case, their Lordships after following
the judgment in Purna Municipal Council (supra) observed as follows :
\023 Therefore, it cannot be construed that there
is any contract between the Union of India and the
Municipality. In view of the fact that the
Municipality has no right to demand service charges
from the Union of India, the demand made by the
Municipality is clearly ultra vires its power. It
is true that earlier WP No.2844 of 1992 was filed
and was dismissed by the High Court and the special
leave was refused by this Court on the ground of
gross delay.\024
It was also observed at paragraph 5 as follows :
\023 It is now settled law that the summary
dismissal does not constitute res judicata for
deciding the controversy. Moreover, this being a
recurring liability which is ultra vires the power,
earlier summary dismissal of the case does not
operate as a res judicata. \024
17. Therefore, from the perusal of these two decisions what emerges
is that no property of the Union of India can be subjected to State
taxation, but these decisions do not deal with a charge for services
rendered by any State or an instrumentality of the State. In this
connection, our attention was invited to a decision of this Court in
New Delhi Municipal Council v. State of Punjab & Ors. [ (1997) 7 SCC
339]. This was also a case where Articles 289, 246(4), 245(1) and
1(2), 3(b) and 285 came up for consideration. As per the majority it
was held that levy of property tax on such lands / buildings which
are not used or occupied for the purpose of any trade or business
carried on by the State Government with profit motive was invalid and
incompetent by virtue of Article 289(1). But if the levy is on lands/
buildings used or occupied for any trade or business carried on by or
on behalf of the State Governments, then by virtue of Article 289(2),
the levy would be valid. It was also observed that it was for the
authorities under the enactments to determine with notice to the
affected State Governments, which land or building is used or occupied
for the purposes of any trade or business carried on by or on behalf
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of the State Government. As against this, the minority view was that
the States are entitled to exemption from levy of property tax on
their lands/ buildings situated within NCT including those occupied
for trade or business purposes. This case also does not throw any
light on the question whether the services which are being given by
the State Government or its instrumentality or the local bodies like
supply of water and maintenance of sewerage will have the exemption
under Article 285 of the Constitution ? This was also a case with
regard to levy on the property of the State. So far as we are
concerned in the present case, there is no levy on the property of the
Union of India. Therefore, this case also does not provide us any
useful assistance. As against this, our attention was invited to a
subsequent decision of this Court in Municipal Corporation, Amritsar
v. Senior Superintendent of Post Offices, Amritsar Division & Anr.
[(2004) 3 SCC 92]. In this case, their Lordships were directly dealing
with charges for the water supply, street light, drainage services
being rendered to P & T Department\022s buildings situated within the
Municipal limits. In that context, their Lordships held as follows :
\023 The demand so made was with regard to the
services rendered to the respondents\022 Department,
like water supply, street-lighting, drainage and
approach roads to the land and buildings. In the
counter, the respondents averred that they are
paying for the services rendered by the appellant
Corporation by way of water and sewerage charges and
power charges separately. It is also categorically
averred that no other specific services are being
provided to the respondents for which the tax in the
shape of service charges can be levied and realized
from the respondents. There is no provision in the
Municipal Corporation Act for levying service
charges. The only provision is by way of tax.
Undisputedly, the appellant Corporation is
collecting the tax from general public for water
supply, street-lighting and approach roads etc.
Thus, the \023tax\024 was sought to be imposed in the garb
of \023service charges\024. The interplay of the
constitutional and legal provisions being well cut
and well defined, it was clearly not within the
competence of the Corporation to impose tax on the
property of the Union of India, the same being
violative of Article 285(1) of the Constitution. \024
18. In this case, what is clear is that in fact the P & T Department
was paying for water supply and sewerage separately and it was over
and above that some service charges were levied under the garb of
service charges which was exempted by the Constitution. In the
present case, what is being charged is in fact water supply and
sewerage. Therefore, so far as this part is concerned, it is
affirmed by this Court in the aforesaid decision. But what is not
accepted was that over and above the charges for supply of water and
sewerage and power charges, the Municipal Corporation was levying
service charges which were not contemplated under the Municipal
Corporation Act for levying such service charges. Therefore,
indirectly so far as demand for water supply, sewerage was concerned,
it was accepted by the P & T Department and they were paying the
same to the Municipal Corporation.
19. Our attention was invited to another decision of this Court in
Sona Chandi Oal Committee & Ors. V. State of Maharashtra [ (2005) 2
SCC 345]. In this case, the question was whether levy of inspection
fee for renewal of moneylender\022s licence was valid or not. Their
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Lordships held that fee charged is regulatory in nature to further
the objects of the Act and it has nexus with services rendered to
moneylenders. However, it was observed that service to be rendered is
not a condition precedent and there should be reasonable relationship
between levy of fee and services rendered and in that context, their
Lordships affirmed the validity of levy of fee under the Bombay
Money-Lenders Act, 1946.
20. Our attention was also invited to a decision of this Court in
Vijayalashmi Rice Mill & Ors. V. Commercial Tax Officers, Palakol &
Ors. [ (2006) 6 SCC 763]. In this case, their Lordships considered the
distinction between fee, cesses and taxes. Their Lordships held that
ordinarily a tax generates general revenue not for any service
rendered. However, the nomenclature is not important. Sometimes a
\021tax\022 may be in reality a fee, depending upon its nature. It was
observed that the earlier concept of fee has undergone a sea change
and rendering of some specific service to a particular payer of fee is
no longer considered necessary to sustain the levy of fee provided
there is a broad and general correlationship between the totality of
the fee imposed and the totality of the expenses on the service
rendered. This discussion makes it clear that the distinction between
a tax and a fee remains, even though the concept of a fee has
undergone a sea change.
21. A reference was also made to another decision of this Court in
Karya Palak Engineer, CPWD, Bikaner v. Rajasthan Taxation Board, Ajmer
& Ors. [(2004) 7 SCC 195]. In this case, a three Judge Bench held that
Article 285 which contemplates exemption of Union property from State
tax, does not extent to exemption from levy of indirect tax. In this
case, the question was exemption of sales tax in a works contract for
erection of barbed wire. CPWD in terms of the contract supplied the
construction materials after purchasing the same on payment of
consideration and was adjusting the value of the materials in the
final bills of the contractor. The question was whether there was
immunity for the property of the Union from the State taxation under
Article 285. Their Lordships held that from the case law it is clear
that the Union is not exempted from the levy of indirect tax under
Article 285. Their Lordships after examining the decision in re Sea
Customs Act (1878) S.20(2) (supra) in reference by a nine Judge Bench
observed that Article 285 is a mandate and not indirect tax such as
sales tax. Their Lordships concluded with reference to sales tax
which reads as follows :
\023 We may in this connection contrast sales
tax which is also imposed with reference to goods
sold, where the taxable event is the act of sale.
Therefore, though both excise duty and sales tax are
levied with reference to goods, the two are very
different imposts; in one case the imposition is on
the act of manufacture or production while in the
other it is on the fact of sale. In neither case
therefore can it be said that the excise duty or
sales tax is a tax directly on the goods for in that
event they will really become the same tax.\024
22. The aforesaid decision came up consideration in New Delhi
Municipal Council (supra). Their Lordships concluded at paragraph 16
as follows :
\023 From the above judgment of this Court, it
is clear that the Union is not exempted from the
levy of indirect tax under Article 285 of the
Constitution. The above discussion also shows that
reliance placed on the judgment of this Court in the
case of New Delhi Municipal Council by one of the
learned counsel for the appellants is wholly
misconceived and is opposed to his contention with
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reference to Article 285 of the Constitution.\024
23. Though these observations were in reference to Sales Tax Act but
the reasoning equally applies in this case also. In this case what is
being charged is for service rendered by the Jal Sansthan i.e. an
instrumentality of the State under the Act of 1975. Section 52 of the
Act states that the Jal Sansthan can levy tax, fee and charge for
water supply and for sewerage services rendered by it as water tax
and sewerage tax at the rates mentioned therein. Though the charge
was loosely termed as \021tax\022 but as already mentioned before,
nomenclature is not important. In substance what is being charged is
fee for the supply of water as well as maintenance of the sewerage
system. Therefore, in our opinion, such service charges are a fee and
cannot be said to be hit by Article 285 of the Constitution. In this
context it is to be made clear that what is exempted by Article 285
is a tax on the property of the Union of India but not a charge for
services which are being rendered in the nature of water supply, for
maintenance of sewerage system. Therefore, in our opinion, the view
taken by the Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court is correct
that the charge is a fee, being service charges for supply of water
and maintenance of sewerage system, which cannot be said to be tax on
the property of the Union. Hence it is not violative of the provisions
of Article 285 of the Constitution.
24. As a result of our above discussion, we do not find any
merit in this appeal and the same is dismissed. There will be no order
as to costs.