Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LORD KRISHNA SUGAR MILLS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MUNICIPAL COMMITTEE, SAHARANPUR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
08/12/1965
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
RAMASWAMI, V.
SATYANARAYANARAJU, P.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1519 1966 SCR (2) 959
ACT:
Saharanpur Municipality Rules for Tolls, 1949, r. 8(a)-
Lorries unloading goods in railway station within municipal
limits--Goods intended for export by rail-Applicability of
rule.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant-mills, was situate outside the municipal
limits of Saharampur and was exporting a large quality of
cloth to various places in India. Its lorries loaded with
bales first entered the municipal limits at some place near
the appellant’s premise; and then proceeded towards the
railway station where they were unloaded without any sorting
or change of bulk. Before reaching the station the lorries
had-to pass-out of the municipal barrier near the station,
which was meant to serve as an import barrier for goods
coming into the municipality from the railway
station and as an export barrier for goods going outside the
municipality. But the barrier was not placed exactly where
the municipal limits and it was some distance ins de the
municipal limits, which were beyond the railway station.
Therefore.. after the bales were unloaded at the railway
station, they remained within the municipal limits till they
were taken away by rail to destinations for which they were
booked.
Under r. 8(a) of the Rules for Tolls as In 1949, which were
applicable in the present case, if a person in charge of a
lorry laden with taxable goods entering the municipal
limits, declared that they were meant for immediate export
from the municipal limits without sorting or change of bulk,
he was entitled to a transit pass which had to be presented
within half an hour at the export barrier and no toll tax
would have to be paid. The appellant claimed that it was
entitled to get the transit pass under the rule, but the
respondent did not agree. The appellant, therefore, paid
the toll tax under protest and filed a writ petition in the
High Court, but it was dismissed.
In appeal to this Court, the appellant contended that all
that the rule required in order to entitle it to a transit
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pass and escape the toll tax, was, that is lorries should go
out of the export barrier even though the goods may still be
within municipal limits.
HELD (Per Chief Justice, Wanchoo., Ramaswami and
Satyanarayana Raju, JJ) : The intention of the rule was that
lorries, after entering the municipal limits, were to pass
out of the same with the leas, possible delay. Before a
person could claim the benefit of the rule, it was neces
sary to satisfy the condtion that the lorry reached the
export barrier within the time limited by the rule and with
the goods in the same condition in which they were when the
lorry entered the municipal area. The half an hour’s period
provided in the rule was for the purpose of checking at the
export barrier that the lorry passed out of the municipal
area as soon as possible. Therefore, where was not in
dispute that the goods did not go out of the municipal
limits even after passing the export barrier, and were
unloaded at the railway station which was
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within the municipal limits, they would not be entitled to a
transit pass. [964 E-F, H; 965 A-B]
The crucial words in the rule are "meant for immediate
export from such limits without sorting and change of bulk."
The rule contemplates that the goods must leave the
municipal limits as soon as possible without sorting or
change of bulk, that is, in the same vehicle and their
passing through the export barrier is taken to show that
they are going out of the municipal limits. However, as a
barrier is not necessarily at the end of the municipal
limits, for its placing depends upon convenience, the
reasonable interpretation of the rule is that where the
municipal limits extend for some distance beyond the export
barrier, the goods must go out of the municipal limits after
passing the export barrier. if they are to be entitled to a
transit pass. But it does not follow from the fact that the
goods have arrived at the export barrier within half an hour
from the time of the issue of a transit pass and have passed
the export barrier, that the goods are "meant for immediate
export from municipal limits" if the goods are not sent out
of the municipal limits after crossing the export barrier
and the unloaded within the municipal limits. [963 G-H; 964
A, B, D-E]
Per Hidayatullah, J. (dissenting) : There was a declaration
by the appellant that the goods imported into the municipal
limits were meant for immediate export from such limits
without sorting and change of bulk and the goods did pass
the export barrier without any sorting or change of bulk.
They were unloaded on the railway premises and the trucks
returned empty. The appellant had thus complied with all
the conditions of the rule. No doubt, some time has to pass
before the goods are booked and loaded on trains and during
that time the goods did lie within the municipal limits; but
as the goods have passed the export barrier and could not
re-enter without passing through it as an import barrier,
they should merit a release form tolls. [967 F-H]
The municipality imposes its taxes only when there is entry
into the town from the railway yard. The municipality by
its own arrangement, regards the station yard as being
outside its export barrier. If the same goods are brought
in again they will bear tax at the barrier as an import
barrier and no plea will be heard that the goods had paid
toll at the other end and that they were within the
municipal limits all the time. The intention of the rule is
to free from tolls goods in transit, on proof that they have
been exported from the municipal limits. The rule must be
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applied in a fair and equitable manner and one of the
cardinal principles of law is that the law does not expect,
nor does it compel, a man to do that which he cannot
possibly perform. The word "immediately" must be, in the
circumstances, understood as ’allowing a reasonable time for
export. [968 A-C; 969 A-B]
Central India Spinning and Weaving and Manufacturing Co.
Ltd., The Empress Mills, Nagpur v. The Municipal Committee,
Wardha, [1958] S.C.R. 1102, followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 753 of 1963.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated September 10, 1960
of the Allahabad High Court in Special Appeal No. 105 of
1957.
G. S. Pathak, B. Datta and Naunit Lal, for the appellant.
961
M. C. Setalvad, D. K. Agarwal, M. L. Gupta and R. Gana-
pathy lyer. for the respondent.
The Judgment of GAJENDRAGADKAR, C.J., WANCHOO, RAMASWAMI and
RAJU, JJ. was delivered by WANCHOO, J.,
HIDYATULLAH, J. delivered a dissenting Opinion.
Wanchoo, J. The only question raised in this appeal on a
certificate granted by the Allahabad High Court is the
interpretation of r. 8 (a) of the Rules in force from May 1,
1949, in the municipal area of Saharanpur with respect to
tolls payable on entry of goods within the limits of the
Saharanpur municipality. We may add that the rules in
question were changed from September 7, 1955; but we are not
concerned with those rules as the present dispute refers to
a period before September 7, 1955. The facts which are
relevant in this connection lie in a narrow compass. The
appellant, Lord Krishna Sugar Mills, carries on the business
of manufacturing sugar and cloth. It is situate outside the
limits of the Saharanpur municipality. A large quantity of
cloth is exported by the appellant to various places in
India. Motor lorries loaded with bales of packed cloth
leave the appellant’s premises and carry these bales to the
railway station where the bales are unloaded and booked by
rail to various destinations without any sorting or change
of bulk. The railway station of Saharanpur is situate
within the municipal limits and therefore the lorries have
to enter the municipal limits when they carry bales to the
railway station. Further after the bales are unloaded at
the railway station they remain within the municipal limits
till they are taken away by rail to destinations for which
they are booked.
Rule 2 of the Rules on Tolls as in 1949 with which we are
concerned provided that "no person shall enter the toll
limits of the Saharanpur Municipalities.... with any head-
load, bahangi load, laden vehicle or any laden pack animal,
on or in respect of which terminal toll is leviable, until
the toll due has been paid to such persons and at such
places as the Municipal Board may from time to time
appoint". Rule 3 provided that "when a laden man, laden
vehicle or laden pack animal subject to terminal toll
arrives at one of the barriers fixed by the Board, the
terminal toll due shall be paid at once by the person in-
charge of the head-load, bahangi load, laden vehicle or
laden pack animal to the moharrir stationed at the barrier".
Rule 8 (a) with which we are particularly concerned reads
thus’:
"If the person in-charge of any motor lorry
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laden with taxable goods declares in writing
to the moharrir
962
at the import barrier that the goods he is
importing into the limits of the Municipality
are meant for immediate export from such
limits without sorting and change of bulk, the
moharrir shall issue a transit pass in Form 61
of the M.A.C. to such person in-charge of the
motor lorry, who shall present the same
together with the motor lorry carrying the
goods covered thereby to the moharrir at the
barrier of export within half an hour from the
time of issue of the transit pass."
Dispute arose between the appellant and the municipality on
the question whether the appellant was entitled to the
benefit of r. 8 (a) which would exempt it from the payment
of toll tax when it sent its goods to the railway station at
Saharanpur for booking to various destinations by rail.
It appears that there is a municipal barrier near the
railway station and the appellant’s lorries carrying goods
first entered municipal limits at some place near the
appellant’s premises and then proceeded towards the railway
station. Before reaching the station, the lorries had to
pass out of the barrier near the station. This barrier
apparently was meant to serve two purposes. It was an
import barrier for goods coming into the municipality from
the railway station and from that side. It was also an
export barrier for goods going outside the municipality.
But the barrier was not placed exactly where the municipal
limits ended; it was at some distance inside the municipal
limits so that the lorries of the appellant going out of the
barrier and proceeding to the railway station were still
within the municipal limits and the goods when unloaded at
the railway station for booking were still within the
municipal limits. It is at some distance beyond the railway
station that the municipal limits come to an end. It was
not in dispute that the lorries of the appellant carrying
the goods to the railway station never went out of the
municipal limits and the goods were unloaded at the railway
station and remained within the municipal limits. The
municipality claims that it was entitled to charge the toll
tax as the goods never left the municipal limits and that r.
8 (a) only applied to those cases where the goods actually
left the municipal limits within half an hour of entry. The
appellant on the other hand contended on an interpretation
of r. 8 (a) that it was entitled to the transit pass as the
railway station was beyond the municipal barrier on that
side and the lorries passed that barrier and in the
circumstances if the lorries passed that barrier within half
an hour of their entry into the municipal limits, r. 8 (a)
was complied with and the appellant was entitled to a
transit pass which
963
would then exempt it from toll tax. The Municipal Board did
not accept this interpretation of r. 8 (a). The appellant
therefore had to. pay the toll tax and did so under protest.
It however filed a writ petition in the High Court inter
alia contending that its interpretation of r. 8 (a) was
correct and it was entitled to get transit passes for its
lorries. There were other grounds also on which r. 8 (a)
was assailed, but we are not concerned in the present appeal
with those grounds.
The learned Single Judge rejected all the contentions of the
appellant. He also rejected the interpretation placed on r.
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8 (a) on behalf of the appellant. He held that what r. 8
(a) contemplated was that the goods should leave the
municipality; as the appellant’s lorries did not leave the
municipal limits but were unloaded at the railway station
which was admittedly within the municipal Limits the
appellant was not entitled to transit passes for its
lorries.
The appellant then went in appeal to a Division Bench, and
the Division Bench upheld the interpretation put on r. 8 (a)
by the learned Single Judge. In consequence the appeal was
dismissed. Thereupon the appellant applied for a
certificate which was granted by the High Court; and that is
how the matter has come up before us.
The whole dispute in the present case has arisen on account
of the fact that the municipal barrier on the side of the
railway station is not near the municipal limits; it has
been placed at some distance within the municipal limits.
Beyond the barrier is the railway station which is within
municipal limits and beyond that also for some distance the
municipal limits continue. The appellant therefore contends
that all that r. 8 (a) requires is that after its lorries
had entered the municipal limits, they would be entitled to
transit passes if they go out of the municipal barrier at
the other end and even though thereafter they might still
remain within the municipal limits. In other words the
appellant’s contention is that all that r. 8 (a) requires in
order to entitle it to a transit pass and thus escape the
toll tax is that its lorries should go out of the municipal
barrier at the other end of the city even though they may
still be within municipal limits.
We are of opinion that this is neither the intention nor the
meaning of r. 8 (a). The crucial words in the rule are
"meant for immediate export from such limits without sorting
and change of bulk". A person would thus be entitled to a
transit pass under r. 8 (a) if the goods he is bringing
into the municipal limits are
964
meant for immediate export from the municipal limits without
sorting or change of bulk. The latter part of r. 8 (a) is
meant to lay down a procedure to check this. Reading the
two parts together, immediate export means that within half
an hour from the time of issue of transit pass the goods
must arrive at the barrier of export which may be on the
other side of the city and after checking by the moharrir at
the barrier pass out of the municipal limits which will take
a few minutes more. But it does not follow from the fact
that the goods have arrived it the barrier of export within
half an hour from the time of issue of transit pass and have
passed the export barrier that the goods are "meant for
immediate export from municipal limits" if the goods are not
sent out of the municipal limits after crossing the barrier
of export and are unloaded within municipal limits. The
transit pass is only to be granted if the goods are "meant
for immediate export from such limits". That means that the
goods must go out of municipal limits as soon as possible,
and half an hour’s period provided for their arrival at the
export barrier after the issue of transit passes is meant
merely to check this fact. The rule clearly contemplates
that the goods must leave the municipal limits as soon as
possible without sorting or change of bulk, i.e., in the
same vehicle and their passing through the export barrier is
taken to show that they are going out of the municipal
limits. However, as a barrier is not necessarily at the end
of the municipal limits for its placing depends upon
convenience, the reasonable interpretation of the rule is
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that where the municipal limits extend for some distance
beyond the export barrier the goods must go out of the
municipal limits after passing the export barrier if they
are to be entitled to transit pass. But where, as in the
present case, it is not in dispute that. the goods do not go
out of the municipal limits even after passing the export
barrier and are unloaded at the-railway station which is
within municipal limits they would not be entitled to a
transit pass. The drafting of r. 8 (a) is not very happy
and the difficulty has arisen because the export barrier in
the present case is well within municipal limits. But it
seems to us clear that what r. 8 (a) intends, when it says
that on a declaration that the goods are meant "for
immediate export from such limits without sorting and change
of bulk", a transit pass would be granted is that the goods
would be taken out of municipal limits as soon as possible
after entry. What the latter part provides is the method of
checking that the goods are taken out immediately from
municipal limits. When however the goods are not taken out
immediately from municipal limits and may lie at the railway
station which is within the muni-
965
cipal limits for a length of time, the benefit of transit
pass under r. 8 (a) cannot be allowed. We agree with the
High Court that the intention of the rule is that motor
lorries to which the rule applies after entering municipal
limits are to pass out of the same with the least possible
delay, and before a person can claim the benefit of the rule
it is necessary to satisfy the condition that the lorry
reached the export barrier within the time limited by the
rule. The intention of the rule obviously is that a lorry
which enters the municipal limit at one end and gets a
transit pass should go out of the municipal area as soon as
possible with the goods in the same condition in which they
were when the lorry entered the municipal area, and half an
hour’s period provided in the latter part of the rule is
merely for the purpose of checking at the export barrier
that this is actually done. Where, as in the present
case,,, lorries were never meant to proceed beyond the
railway station, and the railway station was within the
municipal area, there could be no question of grant of
transit passes to such lorries. As we have said already the
crucial words in r. 8 (a) are "for the immediate export from
such limits without sorting and change of bulk" and these
mean that the goods must go out of the municipal limits as
soon as possible on the lorry on which they have entered and
unless that is done the lorry would not be entitled to a
transit pass. The latter part of the rule is merely a
method for checking that this has happened.
The appeal therefore fails and is hereby dismissed with
costs.
Hidayatullah, J. The railway station at Saharanpur is
admittedly situated within the municipal limits. Anyone
going from the railway yard to the town must pass a
municipal gate which serves as the toll barrier for persons,
vehicles and goods entering the municipal area from the
station side. Anyone entering the railway yard must also
pass the same gate which serves as an export barrier and a
checking post for persons, vehicles and goods passing out of
the municipal area. This toll barrier is not placed at the
boundary of the Municipality but somewhat within it and it
separates the yard from the municipality proper. There is
no barrier beyond the railway territory.
The appellant, Lord Krishna Sugar Mills, manufactures sugar
and cloth. The mills are situated outside Saharanpur
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Municipality but their goods, which are carried in trucks,
have to pass the export barrier to enter the station yard
from where they are booked without any sorting or change of
bulk to destinations out-
966
side Saharanpur Municipality. It is not denied that if
these goods are brought back they must pass the barrier
again.
The Municipality levies tolls under its rules on goods
entering the Municipality and no person with a head-load,
bahangiload, laden vehicle or laden pack animal can enter
the municipal limit until toll is paid at one of the toll
barriers fixed by the Municipal Board. There is, however, a
concession in respect of goods carried on a motor lorry
which are in transit across the municipal territory. This
concession is given by rule 8 (a) and the concession is the
subject of the dispute between the Mills and the
Municipality in this appeal. Rule 8 reads
"8. (a) If the person incharge of any motor
lorry laden with taxable goods declares in
writing to the moharrir at the import barrier
that the goods he is importing into the limits
of the Municipality are meant for immediate
export from such limits without sorting and
change of bulk, the moharrir shall issue a
transit pass in Form 61 of the M.A.C. to such
person incharge of the motor lorry, who shall
present the same together with the motor lorry
carrying the goods covered thereby to the
moharrir at the barrier of export within half
an hour from the time of issue of the transit
pass.
(b) The moharrir shall retain the transit
pass and after he has verified the lorry and
the goods therein with the entries in the
transit pass allow such lorry with the goods
to pass out of the barrier and shall sign a
certificate to this effect on the transit
pass.
(c) In case of pass being presented after
the expiry of the time allowed for transit or
there being a discrepancy in the description
of the lorry presented or the goods carried
thereby, the moharrir shall make a note to
this effect on the transit pass and shall
submit the same to the Tax Inspector or
Superintendent. The fee for transit pass
shall be Rs. 2 per lorry."
The Municipal Committee insists on keeping the amount of
toll paid by the Mills and refuses the pass even though the
goods are carried to the railway yard and are taken out of
the export barrier at the railway station, on the ground
that the goods do not pass out of the municipal limits
immediately but remain within those limits even after
passing the export barrier. This is because the yard is
within the municipal limits and the goods have to be
967
booked and before booking lie in the yard for some time,
and, even after booking are not carried away immediately.
The Mills feeling aggrieved filed a petition under Art. 226
of the Constitution in the High Court of Allahabad for a
writ to restrain the Municipality from withholding the
refund. The petition was dismissed by Mr. Justice Mehrotra
on February 12, 1957 and a special appeal under the Letters
Patent was also dismissed by Mootham C.J. and A. P.
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Srivastava J. on September 10, 1960. This appeal is filed
by the Mills on a certificate granted by the High Court.
My learned brother Wanchoo has affirmed the decisions in the
High Court. In my opinion, and I say it respectfully, the
contention of the Mills is well-founded. The intention of
the rule undoubtedly is to free goods in transit from tolls
on proof that they have been exported from the municipal
limits as, required by rule 8(a). The question is: what
does rule 8(a) require a person to do and what can the Mills
do in the present circumstances ? Rule 8(a) analysed shows
that the person incharge of a truck laden with taxable goods
has to declare in writing to the moharrir at the import
barrier that the goods which are being imported are meant
for immediate export from such limits without sorting and
change, of bulk. This declaration is made by the persons
incharge of the trucks belonging to the Mills. The moharrir
to whom such declaration is made, then issues a transit pass
in Form 61 of the M.A.C. and the person to whom it is issued
has to present it together with the truck carrying the goods
covered by the transit pass to the moharrir at the barrier
of export within half an hour from the time of issue of the
transit pass. This is also complied with by the person
incharge of the trucks belonging to the Mills. The goods
then pass the export barrier and without sorting and change
of bulk. The goods are next unloaded on the railway
premises and the trucks return empty. No doubt some time
passes before the goods are booked and some more time passes
before they are loaded on trains and they do lie within the
municipal limits, but as the goods which have passed the
export barrier and which cannot enter the municipal limits
again without passing through an import barrier, they should
merit a release from tolls. This is the result of the fact
that the Municipality has established its barrier convenient
to itself so as to segregate the railway yard from the town
proper. It is to be remembered that persons coming to the
railway station and passing through without entering the
municipal barrier are not required to pay toll even though
they technically enter the
p. C.1./66-15
968
municipal limits. This is because the railway yard is not
considered as the area where the Municipality chooses to
impose its taxes. The Municipality imposes its taxes only
when there is entry into the town from the railway yard.
The same thing obtains when goods are exported through the
export barrier and enter the railway yard. In so far as the
Municipality is concerned it satisfies itself that the goods
have passed out of the municipal area and are not likely to
reenter without paying toll. The rule must be applied in a
fair and equitable manner and one of the cardinal principles
of law is that law does not expect, nor does it compel, a
man to do that which he cannot possibly perform. The goods
may not be for "immediate" export but they are meant for
export and are in fact exported. The word "immediately"
must be, in the circumstances, understood as allowing a
reasonable time for export. See Maxwell on the
Interpretation of Statutes (Eleventh Edition) p. 341, where
the following passage occurs
"When a statute requires that something shall
be done "forthwith", or "immediately" or even
"instantly," it would probably be understood
as allowing a reasonable time for doing
it..........
The Mills cannot take the goods out of the municipal area on
their own when they have passed through an export barrier
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into the railway yard. Having done everything that can
possibly be ,done the law does not compel them to do more.
I may mention here that in the Central India Spinning and
Weaving and Manufacturing Co. Ltd., The Empress Mills,
Nagpur v. The Municipal committee, Wardha(1), this Court
allowed refund in respect of goods entering a municipal
barrier but passing out of the municipal limits in the same
trucks, even though there was no prove,,ion for a
declaration or a transit pass or an export barrier. It was
pointed out what the words ’import’ and ’export’ meant in
such a context. The word ’import’, it was held, was not
merely bringing into but something more, i.e., incorporating
and mixing up of the goods imported with the mass of the
property and ‘expore, it was also held, had reference to
taking out of goods which had become part and parcel of the
mass of the property in the local area. Goods in transit
were, therefore, held to be neither imported nor exported.
It was on this ground that goods which are on trains in
municipal area were held neither to be imported nor
exported. The present case is even stronger.
[1958] S.C.R. 1102.
969
In my judgment, the Municipality by its own arrangement,
regards the station yard as being outside its export
barrier. If the same goods are brought in again the next
day or the day after, they will bear the tax at the import
barrier. No plea, I am sure, will be heard that these goods
had paid the toll at the other end of Saharanpur
Municipality and were within the municipal limits all the
time. The import barrier will be treated a toll barrier
even for these goods.
In this view of the matter I am of opinion that the appeal
must be allowed with costs and I would order accordingly.
ORDER
In accordance with the opinion of the majority the appeal is
dismissed with costs.
970