Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE GUJARAT AGRO INDUSTRIES CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF CITY OF AHMEDABAD & ORS. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/04/1999
BENCH:
D.P.Wadhwa, N.Santosh Hegde
JUDGMENT:
D.P. Wadhwa, J.
This batch of appeals arises out of judgment dated
October 9, 1980 passed by the Division Bench of the Gujarat
High Court holding that Section 406(2)(e) of the Bombay
Provincial Municipal Corporations Act, 1949 in its
application to Ahmedabad in the State of Gujarat was a valid
piece of legislation. Section 406 of the Act we may set out
here and now :
406.(1) Subject to the provisions hereinafter
contained, appeals against any rateable value or tax fixed
or charged under this Act shall be heard and determined by
the Judge.
(2) No such appeal shall be entertained unless
(a) it is brought within fifteen days after the
accrual of the cause of complaint;
(b) in the case of an appeal against a rateable value
a complaint has previously been made to the Commissioner as
provided under this Act and such complaint has been disposed
of ;
(c) in the case of an appeal against any tax in
respect of which provision exists under this Act for a
complaint to be made to the Commissioner against the demand,
such complaint has previously been made and disposed of;
(d) in the case of an appeal against any amendment
made in the assessment book for property taxes during the
official year, a complaint has been made by the person
aggrieved within fifteen days after he first received notice
of such amendment and his complaint has been disposed of;
(e) in the case of an appeal against a tax, or in the
case of an appeal made against a rateable value, the amount
of the disputed tax claimed from the appellant, or the
amount of the tax chargeable on the basis of the disputed
rateable value, up to the date of filing the appeal, has
been deposited by the appellant with the Commissioner :
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Provided that where in any particular case the judge
is of the opinion that the deposit of the amount by the
appellant will cause undue hardship to him, the judge may in
his discretion, either unconditionally or subject to such
conditions as he may think fit to impose, dispense with a
part of the amount deposited so however that the part of the
amount so dispensed with shall not exceed twenty five per
cent of the amount deposited or required to be deposited.
Judge is defined in Section 2(29) of the Act to mean
in the City of Ahmedabad the Chief Judge of the Court of
Small Causes or such other Judge of the Court as the Chief
Judge may appoint in his behalf and in any other City the
Civil Judge (Senior Division) having jurisdiction in the
City. Section 406 suffered some amendments. In sub-section
(2) for the words shall be heard were substituted by
shall be entertained. Proviso to clause (e) of
sub-section (2) was first added by Gujarat amendment 5 of
1970. This proviso (as it now exists) was then substituted
by Gujarat Amendment 1 of 1979.
Appellants in all these appeals own properties in the
City of Ahmedabad. They are liable to pay property tax
which is a tax on buildings and lands in the City. Property
tax is revisable every four years. When last revision took
place, appellants challenged those assessments in appeals
which they filed before the Judge under Section 406(1) of
the Act after bills were presented by the Municipal
Corporation to them. During the pendency of appeals before
the Judge, appellants prayed for stay of recovery of the
property tax. In view of proviso to clause (e) of Section
406(2) of the Act, the Judge could not give effective
interim relief to the appellants as exemption from payment
of property tax could not be more than 25% of the amount of
the property tax demanded from the appellants. The
appellants therefor challenged the constitutional validity
of clause (e) of sub- section (2) of Section 406 contending
that it was violative of Article 14 of the Constitution.
The Division Bench who heard the writ petitions
considered the earlier history of amendments to clause (e)
of Section 406(2) of the Act. Clause (e), as it originally
stood at the time when the Act was made applicable to the
City of Ahmeadbad, read as under :
No such appeal shall be heard unless- ... ... ...
in the case of an appeal against a tax or in the case of an
appeal made against a rateable value after a bill for any
property tax assessed upon such value has been presented to
the appellant, the claimed from the appellant has been
deposited by him with the Commissioner.
A Division bench of the Gujarat High Court in SCA
No.662 of 1968 decided on October 27, 1969 held that clause
(e) violated Article 14 of the Constitution. It is not
necessary for us to go into the reasons which weighed with
the Court in reaching such a conclusion. By Gujarat Act 5
of 1970 following proviso was added to clause (e) :
Provided that where in any particular case the Judge
is of opinion that the deposit of the amount by the
appellant will cause undue hardship to him, the Judge may in
his discretion dispense with such deposit or part thereof
either unconditionally or subject to such conditions as he
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may deed fit.
This proviso also came to be challenged before the
Gujarat High Court on the same very plea that it violated
the provisions of Article 14 of the Constitution. This time
also a Division Bench of the High Court held that clause (e)
violated Article 14 of the Constitution. This decision of
the High Court was challenged in this Court in The Anant
Mills Co. Ltd. vs. State of Gujarat and Others [(1975) 2
SCC 175]. This Court reversed the decision of the High
Court and held that clause (e) with the added proviso did
not violate article 14 of the Constitution.
Now it is this amended clause (e) and the proviso
which were subject matter of the constitutional challenge in
the High Court and by the impugned judgment, High Court held
the same to be constitutionally valid and dismissed all the
petitions filed before it.
We may refer to the reasons which led this Court to
uphold the constitutional validity of clause (e) read with
proviso which was added by Gujarat Act 5 of 1970. This
Court said :
After hearing the learned Counsel for the parties, we
are unable to subscribe to the view taken by the High Court.
Section 406(2)(e) as amended states that no appeal against a
rateable value or tax fixed or charged under the Act shall
be entertained by the Judge in the case of an appeal against
a tax or in the case of an appeal made against a rateable
value after a bill for any property tax assessed upon such
value has been presented to the appellant, unless the amount
claimed from the appellant has been deposited by him with
the Commissioner. According to the proviso to the above
clause, where in any particular case the Judge is of opinion
that the deposit of the amount by the appellant will cause
undue hardship to him, the Judge may in his discretion
dispense with such deposit or part thereof, either
unconditionally or subject to such conditions as he may deem
fit. The object of the above provision apparently is to
ensure the deposit of the amount claimed from an appellant
in case he seeks to file an appeal against a tax or against
a rateable value after a bill for any property tax assessed
upon such value has been presented to him. Power at the
same time is given to the appellate Judge to relieve the
appellant from the rigour of the above provision in case the
Judge is of the opinion that it would cause undue hardship
to the appellant. The requirement about the deposit of the
amount claimed as a condition precedent to the entertainment
of an appeal which seeks to challenge the imposition or the
quantum of that tax, in our opinion, has not the effect of
nullifying the right of appeal, especially when we keep in
view the fact that discretion is vested in the appellate
Judge to dispense with the compliance of the above
requirement. All that the statutory provision seeks to do
is to regulate the exercise of the right of appeal. The
object of the above provision is to keep in balance the
right of appeal, which is conferred upon a person who is
aggrieved with the demand of tax made from him, and the
right of the Corporation to speedy recovery of the tax. The
impugned provision accordingly confers a right of appeal and
at the same time prevents the delay in the payment of the
tax. We find ourselves unable to accede to the argument
that the impugned provision has the effect of creating a
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discrimination as is offensive to the principle of equality
enshrined in Article 14 of the Constitution. It is
significant that the right of appeal is conferred upon all
persons who are aggrieved against the determination of tax
or rateable value. The bar created by Section 406(2)(e) to
the entertainment of the appeal by a person who has not
deposited the amount of tax due from him and who is not able
to show to the appellate Judge that the deposit of the
amount would cause him undue hardship arises out of his own
omission and default. The above provision, in our opinion,
has not the effect of making invidious distinction or
creating two classes with the object of meting out
differential treatment to them; it only spells out the
consequences flowing from the omission and default of a
person who despite the fact that the deposit of the amount
found due from him would cause him no hardship, declines of
his own volition to deposit that amount. The right of
appeal is the creature of a statute. Without a statutory
provision creating such a right the person aggrieved is not
entitled to file an appeal. We fail to understand as to why
the Legislature while granting the right of appeal cannot
impose conditions for the exercise of such right. In the
absence of any special reasons there appears to be no legal
or constitutional impediment to the imposition of such
conditions. It is permissible, for example, to prescribe a
condition in criminal cases that unless a convicted person
is released on bail, he must surrender to custody before his
appeal against the sentence of imprisonment would be
entertained. Likewise, it is permissible to enact a law
that no appeal shall lie against an order relating to an
assessment of tax unless the tax had been paid. Such a
provision was on the statute book in Section 30 of the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. The proviso to that section
provided that . . . no appeal shall lie against an order
under sub-section (1) of Section 46 unless the tax has been
paid. Such conditions merely regulate the exercise of the
right of appeal so that the same is not abused by a
recalcitrant party and there is no difficulty in the
enforcement of the order appealed against in case the appeal
is ultimately dismissed. It is open to the Legislature to
impose an accompanying liability upon a party upon whom
legal right is conferred or to prescribe conditions for the
exercise of the right. Any requirement for the discharge of
that liability or the fulfillment of that condition in case
the party concerned seeks to avail of the said right is a
valid piece of legislation, and we can discern no
contravention of Article 14 in it. A disability or
disadvantage arising out of a partys own default or
omission cannot be taken to be tantamount to the creation of
two classes offensive to Article 14 of the Constitution,
especially when that disability or disadvantage operates
upon all persons who make the default or omission.
By the Amending Act 1 of 1979 discretion of the Court
in granting interim relief has now been limited to the
extent of 25% of the tax required to be deposited. It is,
therefore, contended that earlier decision of this Court in
Anant Mills case may not have full application. We,
however, do not think that such a contention can be raised
in view of the law laid by this Court in Anant Mills case.
This Court said that right of appeal is the creature of a
statute and it is for the legislature to decide whether the
right of appeal should be unconditionally given to an
aggrieved party or it should be conditionally given. Right
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of appeal which is statutory right can be conditional or
qualified. It cannot be said that such a law would be
violative of Article 14 of the Constitution. If the statute
does not create any right of appeal, no appeal can be filed.
There is a clear distinction between a suit and an appeal.
While every person has an inherent right to bring a suit of
a civil nature unless the suit is barred by statute.
However, in regard to an appeal, position is quite opposite.
The right to appeal inheres in no one and, therefore, for
maintainability of an appeal there must be authority of law.
When such a law authorises filing of appeal, it can impose
conditions as well {see Smt. Ganga Bai vs. Vijay Kumar &
Ors. [(1974) 2 SCC 393]}.
In M/s. Elora Construction Company vs. Municipal
Corporation of Greater Bombay & Ors. [AIR 1980 Bom.162],
the question before the Bombay High Court was as to the
validity of Section 217 of the Bombay Municipal Corporations
Act. This Section provided for filing of appeal against any
rateable value or tax fixed or charged under that Act but no
such appeal could be entertained unless :
(d) in the case of an appeal against a tax, or in the
case of an appeal made against a ratable value the amount of
the disputed tax claimed from the appellant, or the amount
of the tax chargeable on the basis of the disputed ratable
value, up to the date of filing of the appeal, has been
deposited by the appellant with the Commissioner.
It will be seen that clause (d) aforesaid was in
similar terms as clause (e) of Section 406(2) as it
originally existed. Bombay High Court upheld the
constitutional validity of Section 217 of the Bombay
Municipal Corporation Act. Calcutta High Court in Chhatter
Singh Baid & Ors. vs. Corporation of Calcutta & Ors. [AIR
1984 Cal. 283] also took the same view. There it was
sub-section (3A) of Section 183 of the Calcutta Municipal
Act, 1951 which provided
No appeal under this section shall be entertained
unless the consolidated rate payable up to the date of
presentation of the appeal on the valuation determined
(a) by an order under Section 182, in the case of an
appeal to the Court of Small Causes,
(b) by the decision of the Court of Small Causes, in
the case of an appeal to the High Court,
has been deposited in the municipal office and such
consolidated rate is continued to be deposited until the
appeal is finally decided.
Similar provisions existed in the Delhi Municipal
Corporation Act, 1957. There it is Section 170 which is as
under :
170. Conditions of right to appeal.No appeal shall
be heard or determined under Section 169 unless
(a) the appeal is, in the case of a property tax,
brought within thirty days next after the date of
authentication of the assessment list under Section 124
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(exclusive of the time requisite for obtaining a copy of the
relevant entries therein) or, as the case may be, within
thirty days of the date on which an amendment is finally
made under Section 126, and, in the case of any other tax,
within thirty days next after the date of the receipt of the
notice of assessment or of alteration of assessment or, if
no notice has been given, within thirty days after the date
of the presentation of the first bill or, as the case may
be, the first notice of demand in respect thereof :
Provided that an appeal may be admitted after the
expiration of the period prescribed therefor by this section
if the appellant satisfies the court that he had sufficient
cause for not preferring the appeal within that period;
(b) the amount, if any, in dispute in the appeal has
been deposited by the appellant in the office of the
Corporation.
A Full Bench of the Delhi High Court, by majority,
upheld the constitutional validity of the aforesaid
provision though there was also challenge to the same based
on Article 14 of the Constitution. Appeal against the
judgment of the Delhi High Court was taken to this Court
which upheld the view of the Delhi High Court. The decision
of this Court is reported as Shyam Kishore and Ors. vs.
Municipal Corporation of Delhi & Anr. [(1993) 1 SCC 22].
This Court relied on its earlier decisions in Ganga Bai case
and Anant Mills case. Reference was also made to another
decision of this Court in Vijay Prakash D. Mehta/Shri
Jawahar D. Mehta vs. Collector of Customs (Preventive),
Bombay [(1988) 4 SCC 402] where Justice Sabyasachi Mukharji,
J., speaking for the Court, said :
Right to appeal is neither an absolute right nor an
ingredient of natural justice the principles of which must
be followed in all judicial and quasi-judicial
adjudications. The right to appeal is a statutory right and
it can be circumscribed by the conditions in the grant.
It is not necessary for us to refer to other decisions
asserting the same principle time and again. When the
statement of law is so clear, we find no difficulty in
upholding the vires of clause (e) of sub-section (2) of
Section 406 read with proviso thereto. Any challenge to its
constitutional validity on the ground that onerous
conditions have been imposed and right to appeal has become
illusory must be negatived.
We also note that under clause (c) of sub-section (2)
of Section 406, a complaint lies to the Municipal
Commissioner against imposition of any property tax and only
after that when the complaint is disposed of that appeal can
be filed. Appeal to the Court as provided in clause (e) may
appear to be rather a second appeal. Then under Section 408
of the Act provisions exist for referring the matter to
arbitration. Under sub-section (1) of Section 408 where any
person aggrieved by any order fixing or charging any
rateable value or tax under the Act desires that any matter
in difference between him and the other parties interested
in such order should be referred to arbitration, then, if
all such parties agree to do so, they may apply to the Court
for an order of reference on such matter and when such an
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order is made provisions relating to arbitration in suits
shall apply. That apart, if a person cannot avail of the
right of appeal under Section 406 of the Act, other remedies
are available to him under the law. In that case, it may
not be possible for the Municipal Corporation to contend
that an alternative remedy of appeal exist under Section 406
of the Act.
When leave was granted in these appeals by order dated
December 12, 1980 this Court granted stay on the condition
that seventy-five per cent of the tax is deposited with the
Municipal Commissioner within two months from that date and
on such deposit being made, the appeals be heard and
disposed of (by the Judge) and we believe by this time the
appeals filed before the Judge under Section 406 must have
been disposed of.
When the arguments started in these matters, on the
statement of learned counsel for the appellant two appeals
bearing Nos.3018-19/80 were dismissed as withdrawn.
We do not find any merit in these appeals. These are
accordingly dismissed with costs.