Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KRISHNA KUMAR NARULA ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF JAMMU AND KASHMIR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/03/1967
BENCH:
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ)
BENCH:
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ)
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
RAMASWAMI, V.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1368 1967 SCR (3) 50
CITATOR INFO :
R 1972 SC1816 (16)
RF 1972 SC1863 (13)
E 1975 SC 360 (12,17,19,21,22)
R 1975 SC1121 (51,52,53,54,67)
R 1977 SC 722 (9,17,29)
RF 1978 SC1457 (42)
R 1985 SC1676 (2)
RF 1990 SC1927 (75)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 19(1)(g)-Right to carry on
business in liquor-If fundamental right.
The jammu and Kashmir Excise Act, 1958, s. 20-Licence for
carrying an business in liquor-Objections by inhabitants of
location of bar--Applicant asked to shift premises as
condition for issue of licence-Validity of order under Art.
19(6) of the Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, who was carrying on business in liquor in his
hotel under an annual licence issued by the Excise and
Taxation Commissioner under s. 20 of the Jammu and Kashmir
Excise Act, 1958, had applied for a fresh licence for
another year. Meanwhile, the Excise Department received
complaints from the inhabitants of the locality objecting to
the location of the bar in that locality. The complaints
were inquired into and the appellant was informed by the
Commissioner that the licence would not be issued unless he
shifted the premises of his hotel to some other approved
locality. A writ petition filed by the appellant for quash-
ing the order was dismissed by the High Court.
In appeal to this Court.,
HELD : (i) Dealing in liquor is business, and a citizen has
a fundamental right to do that business under Art. 19(1)(g)
of the Constitution. But the State can make a law imposing
reasonable restrictions on the right, in public interests,
under Art. 19(6). (57 D-E]
Dealing in noxious and dangerous goods does not cease to be
business, though the nature of the goods may be a ground for
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imposing a restriction on the activity. [53 F; 54 C]
T. B. Ibrahim v. Regional Transport Authority, Tanjore,
[1953] S.C.R. 290, Cooverjee B. Bharucha v. The Excise
Commissioner and the Chief Commissioner, Ajmer, [1954]
S.C.R. 873, State of Assam v. A. N. Kidwai, Commissioner of
Hills- Division and Appeals, Shillong, [1957] S.C.R. 295,
Nagendra Nath v. Commissioner of Hills Division and Appeals,
Assam, [1958] S.C.R. 1240, explained.
Narain Swadesh Weaving Mills v. The Commissioner of Excess
Profits ’Fax, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 952, State of Bombay v. R. M.
D. Chamarbaugwala, [1957] S.C.R. 874 and Ranchhorlalji v.
Revenue Divisional Commissioner, Northern Division,
Sambalpur, A.I.R. 1960 Orissa 88, referred to.
Since the instant case was one of issuing a licence, s. 20
of the Excise Act applies. As the Excise and Taxation
Commissioner had made a bona fide enquiry and came to the
conclusion that the locality was not suitable far carrying
on business in liquor, for relevant reasons, it could not
he said that his order was arbitrary or unreasonable. [58 B]
(ii) Section 22 of the Act deals with cancellation of a
licence and does not control s. 20. [58 C]
K.K.NARULA V. J. & K. STATE (Subba Rao, C.J.)
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 65 and 66
of 1967.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated September 16, 1966
of the Jammu and Kashmir High Court in Writ Petitions Nos. 2
and 4 of 1966.
S. T. Desai, S. K. Dholakia, Vineet Kumar and Inder Das
Grover, for the appellants (in both the appeals).
Raja Jaswant Singh, Advocate-General, Jammu and Kashmir, R.
N. Sachthev for S. P. Nayyar, for the respondents (in both
the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao, C.J. These two appeals arise out of a common
judgment of a Division Bench of the High Court of Jammu &
Kashmir dismissing the two petitions filed by the appellants
for the issuance of a writ quashing the order passed by the
Taxing and Excise Officer, Jammu, refusing to renew their
licences for the year 1966-67 in respect of their liquor
shops.
The facts giving rise to these two appeals may be briefly
and separately stated.
Civil Appeal No. 65 of 1967 relates to Glory Restaurant
situated in Moti Bazaar, Jammu. The appellant in the said
appeal, who is the proprietor of the said restaurant, after
taking the requisite licence from the Government, had been
carrying on for the last 7 years the business of retail sale
of country and foreign liquor in the said restaurant. The
licence was an annual licence and it was being renewed from
year to year. On December 11, 1965, the Deputy Excise and
Taxation Commissioner, Jammu, issued a notice to the
appellant ordering the shifting of the premises of the said
restaurant to some other locality on the ground that the
inhabitants of the locality had complained against the
location of the appellant’s bar and restaurant there. As
the licence for 1965-66 would expire on March 31, 1966, the
appellant applied for a fresh licence for 1966-67 and
deposited the prescribed licence fee in the Government
treasury.
The appellant in Civil Appeal No. 66 of 1967 was carrying on
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business in liquor in his hotel, named Bliss Hotel and Bar,
situated in Parade Ground, Jammu, under a licence issued by
the Government of the said State. He obtained a licence for
the first time in 1964. After obtaining the licence, it is
alleged, he had spent about Rs. 70,000/- in furnishing the
Hotel and Bar, but for unavoidable reasons he could not do
business during the financial year 1964-65. For the year
1965-66 he made an application for the renewal of the
licence and on December 11, 1965, he received a letter from
the Deputy Excise and Taxation Commissioner, Jammu, desiring
the appellant to shift the premises of his
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Hotel and Bar to some other suitable place after getting it
approved by the Department on the ground that he had
received complaints from the inhabitants of the locality
against the location of the bar there. At the instance of
the 2nd respondent, the Excise and Taxation Commissioner,
Jammu, his licence, along with those of other licensees, was
collected by the 3rd respondent. As he was not given a
licence to do business in liquor in the same locality, this
appellant also filed a writ petition in the High Court for a
relief similar to that claimed by the appellant in Civil
Appeal No. 65 of 1967.
To both the petitions, the State of Jammu and Kashmir,
through its Chief Secretary, the Excise and Taxation
Commissioner. Jammu & Kashmir, and the Deputy Excise and
Taxation Commissioner, Jammu, were made respondents 1, 2 and
3 respectively.
The respondents opposed the petitions and pleaded, inter
alia, that the localities wherein the petitioners were
carrying on the business were the most congested and
frequented parts of the city and that, as complaints were
made against their carrying on the business in the said
localities, the respondents refused to renew their licences
to carry on the said business in the said localities. They
also pleaded that under The Excise Act, 1958, hereinafter
called the Act, the issuing of licence was at the discretion
of the Excise Commissioner and he had, having regard to the
complaints received, bona fide, in exercise of his
discretion, refused to give licence to the appellants to
carry on business in the said localities.
In the High Court the Writ petitions, along with others,
were decided by a Division Bench consisting of Chief Justice
and Justice Syed Murtaza Fazl Ali. They gave concurrent but
separate judgments. Both the Judges agreed on merits in
dismissing the petitions, but expressed different views on
the question whether the petitioners had fundamental right
to do business in liquor. Hence the appeals.
Mr. Desai, learned counsel for the appellants, contended as
follows :-(1) If s. 20 of the Act was construed as
conferring an absolute discretion on the Commissioner of
Excise and Taxation to issue or not to issue a licence to do
business in liquor, it would be void on the ground that it
infringed Art. 19 of the Constitution. (2) The licence being
renewable as a matter of course, the Commissioner of Excise
and Taxation could not refuse to renew the same on a ground
other than those similar to the grounds contained in s. 22,
cls. (a), (b), (c) and (d) of the Act. (3) In any case, as
the licences were renewable as a matter of course, the
appellants were entitled to notice and an opportunity to
explain why the licence should be renewed. (4) The ground
relating to objections as to locality was not in substance
accepted by the High Court.
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The first point, namely, the constitutional validity of S.
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20 of the Act was not raised in the High Court. We cannot
permit the appellant to raise that question for the first
time before us. But we should not be understood to have
expressed our view one way or other on the said question.
As we have pointed out earlier, the learned Chief Justice
and Ali, J., expressed different views on the question
whether the appellants had a fundamental right to do
business in liquor. To avoid further confusion in the
matter it is necessary to make the position clear. Article
19 of the Constitution qua the right to do business reads
thus :
(i) All citizens shall have the right-
(g) to practice any profession, or to carry
on any occupation, trade or business.
(6) Nothing in sub-clause (g) of the said
clause shall affect the operation of any
existing law in so far as it imposes, or
prevent the State from making any law
imposing, in the interests of the general
public, reasonable restrictions on the
exercise of the right conferred by the said
sub-clause.........
A combined reading of cls. (1) and (6) of Art. 19 makes it
clear that a citizen has a fundamental right to carry on any
trade or business, and the State can make a law imposing
reasonable restrictions on the said right in the interests
of the general public. It is therefore, obvious that unless
dealing in liquor is not trade or business, a citizen has a
fundamental right to deal in that commodity. The learned
Advocate General contended that dealing in liquor was not
business or trade, as the dealing in noxious and dangerous
goods like liquor was dangerous to the community and
subversive of its morals. The acceptance of this broad
argument involves the position that the meaning of the ex-
particular point of time in our country. Such an approach
leads general acceptance of the standards of morality
obtaining at a particular point of time in our country.
Such an approach leads to incoherence in thought and
expression. Standards of morality can afford a guidance to
impose restrictions, but cannot limit the scope of the
right. So too, a Legislature can impose restrictions on, or
even prohibit the carrying on of a particular trade or busi-
ness and the Court, having regard to the circumstances
obtaining at a particular time or place may hold the
restrictions or prohibition reasonable. The question,
therefore, is, what is trade or business ? Though the word
"business" is ordinarily more coin-
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prehensive than the word "trade", one is used as synonymous
with the other.It is not necessary to bring out the finer
points of distinction between the said two concepts in
this case. In the words of S.R. Das, J., as he then was, in
Narain Swadeshi Weaving Mills v. The Commissioner of Excess
Profits Tax(1), the word "business" connotes some real,
substantial and systematic or organised course of activity
or conduct with a set purpose. Even accepting this test, if
the activity of a dealer, say, in ghee is business, then how
does it cease to be business if it is in liquor ? Liquor
can be manufactured, brought or sold like any other corn-
modity. It is consumed throughout the world, though some
countries restrict or prohibit the same on economic or moral
,,rounds. The morality or otherwise of a deal does not
affect the quality of the activity though it may be a ground
for imposing a restriction on the said activity. The
illegality of an activity does not affect the character of
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the activity but operates as a restriction on it. If a law
prohibits dealing in liquor, the dealing does not cease to
be business, but the said law imposes a restriction on the
said dealing. But it is said that the decisions of this
Court have held that dealing in liquor is not a business or
trade within the meaning of Art. 19 of the Constitution. In
T. B. Ibrahim v. Regional Transport Authority, Tanjore (2)
it was held that restriction placed upon the use of the bus-
stand for the purpose of picking up or setting down
passengers to or from outward journeys could not be
considered to be an unreasonable restriction on the right to
carry on. any profession, trade or business of the appellant
and, therefore, Art. 268 was not in any way repugnant to
Art. 19 (1) (g) of the Constitution. In that context,
Chulam Hasan, J., speaking for the Court, observed:
"There is no fundamental right in a citizen to
carry on business wherever he chooses and his
right must be subject to any reasonable
restriction imposed by the executive authority
in the interest of public convenience."
This Court did not say that there was no fundamental right
to do business but only held that a citizen could not claim
that his fundamental right could not be restricted in public
interests. Nor did the decision in Cooverjee B. Bharucha v.
The Excise Commissioner and the Chief Commissioner.
Ajmer(3) lay down any such proposition. There the question
was whether the Excise Regulation 1 of 1915 imposed a
reasonable restriction within the meaning of Art. 19(6) of
the Constitution on the right given under Art. 1 9 (1 ) (g)
thereof to carry on the business in intoxicating liquors.
This Court. held that the said Regulation was a reasonable
restriction within the meaning of Art. 19(6) of the
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R.952,961. (2) [1953] S.C.R. 290, 299.
(3) [1954] S.C.R. 873,880.
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Constitution. But in the course of tile judgment Mahajan.
C. J., who spoke for the Court, gave an extract from the
judgment of Field, J., in Crowley v. Christensen(1). In
that extract the following passage is found :-
"The police power of the State is fully
competent to regulate the business to mitigate
its evils or to suppress it entirely. There
is no inherent right in a citizen to thus sell
intoxicating liquors by retail; it is not a
privilege of a citizen of the State
or of a
citizen of the United States. As it is a
business attended with danger to the commu-
nity, it may, as already said, be entirely
prohibited, or be permitted under such
conditions as will limit to the utmost its
evil."
After citing the entire passage, this Court
concluded thus
"These observations have our entire
concurrence and they completely negative the
contention raised on behalf of the petitioner.
The provisions- of the regulation purport to
regulate trade in liquor in all its different
spheres and are valid."
It will be seen that the said passage from the judgment of
Field. J., has nothing to do with the construction of Art.
19 (1) (g) of the Constitution of India. The learned Judge
was considering the scope of the "police power" and in that
context the said observations were made. This Court applied
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those observations in considering the reasonableness of the
restrictions imposed on the fundamental rights. Indeed, a
perusal of the entire judgment shows that the Court conceded
the fundamental right but held that the said regulation
operated as a reasonable restriction on the said right. The
decision of this Court in The State of Assam v. A. N.
Kidwai, Commissioner of Hills Division and Appeals,
Shillong(2) has no relevance to the present enquiry. The
following- passage from the said judgment is relied upon
"A perusal of the Act and rules will make it
clear that no person has any absolute right to
sell liquor and that the purpose of the Act
and the rules is to control and restrict the
consumption of intoxicating liquors, such
control and restriction being obviously
necessary for the preservation of public
health and morals, and to raise revenue."
This Court only said that on the provisions of the Act no
absolute right to sell liquor was given to any person and
that the said right was controlled by the provisions of the
said Act. These observations have nothing to do with the
question whether a person has a fundamental right to do
business in liquor. Nor can the
(2) [1957] S.C.R. 295, 301.
(1) 34 L.E.D. 620, 623.
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respondents draw any support from the decision of this Court
in Nagendra Nath v. Commissioner of Hills Division and
Appeals, Assam(1). There, the question was in regard to the
scope of Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution vis-a-vis the
orders passed by the appropriate authorities under the East
Bengal and Assam Excise Act, 1910. There incidentally two
decisions of this Court, namely, Cooveriee B. Bharucha v.
The Excise Commissioner and the Chief Commissioner, Ajmer(2)
and The State of Assam v. A. N. Kidwai, Commissioner of
Hills Division and Appeals,Shillong (3) were noticed and it
was observed that there was no inherent right to the
settlement of liquor shops. No question of fundamental
right under Art. 19(1) arose in that case. This Court in
The State of Bombay v. R. M. D. Chamarbaugwala(4) upheld the
validity of the Bombay Lotteries and Prize Competition
Control and Tax Act, 1948 (Bom. LIV of 1948), as amended by
the Bombay Lotteries and Prize Competition Control and Tax
(Amendment) Act (Bombay Act XXX of 1952). One of the
questions raised was whether gambling was business or trade
or commerce within the meaning of Art. 19 (1) (g) of the
Constitution or Art. 301 thereof. Das, C. J., after
considering the various decisions, observed thus :
"We find it difficult to accept the contention
that those activities which encourage a spirit
of reckless propensity for making easy gain by
lot or chance, which lead to the loss of the
hard earned money of the undiscerning and
improvident common man and thereby lower his
standard of living and drive him into a
chronic state of indebtedness and eventually
disrupt the peace and happiness of his humble
home could possibly have been intended by our
Constitution makers to be raised to the status
of trade, commerce or intercourse and to be
made the subject-matter of a fundamental right
guaranteed by Art. 19(1) (g)."
This decision only lays down that gambling is not business
or trade. We are not concerned in this case with gambling.
A division Bench of the Orissa High Court in Ranchhorlalji
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v. Revenue Divisional Commissioner, Northern Division,
Sambalpur(5) maintained the validity of the provisions of
the Orissa Cinema (Regulation) Act, 1954, on the ground that
it did not infringe the fundamental right guaranteed under
Art. 19 (1) (g), read with Art. 19(6) of the Constitution.
The learned Judges observed :
"It is only when no policy or principle has
been laid down either in the Preamble or in
the other provi-
(1) [1958] S.C.R.1240. (2) [1954] S.C.R. 873,
(3) [1957] S.C.R. 295. (5) A.I.R. 1960 Orisa 88, 92.
(4) [1957] S.C. R. 874, 925.
57
sions of the statute or statutory rules, and
the impugned provision confers arbitrary or
excessive powers on the authority, that it is
liable to be struck down. The nature of the
restrictions imposed will necessarily vary
with the nature of the business. Restrictions
on the carrying on of business in respect of
’normally available’ commodities should not be
as drastic as those in respect of a business
or occupation which is likely to cause
nuisance or danger to the public."
This decision also does not say that there is no fundamental
right to do business which is likely to cause nuisance or
danger to the public, but stated that the nature of the
restrictions would depend upon the nature of the trade.
A scrutiny of these decisions does not support the
contention that the courts held that dealing in liquor was
not business or trade. They were only considering the
provisions of the various Acts which conferred a restricted
right to do business. None of them held that a right to do
business in liquor was not a fundamental right.
We, therefore, hold that dealing in liquor is business and a
citizen has a right to do business in that commodity; but
the State can make a law imposing reasonable restrictions on
the said right, in public interests.
The next question is whether s. 20 of the Act infringes the
fundamental right under Art. 19 of the Constitution. This
question, as we have said earlier, was not raised before the
High Court. We do not, therefore, allow the learned counsel
to raise this question before us for the first time. We
assume, therefore, without deciding that s. 20 of the Act
does not infringe Art. 19 (1 ) (g) of the Constitution.
Even so it was contended that the order of the Commissioner
of Excise and Taxation was arbitrary and in violation of the
principles of natural justice and, therefore, it operated as
an unreasonable restriction on the appellant’s fundamental
right to do business.
This argument was sought to be sustained on the following
grounds : _(1) Though under the Act yearly leases were
issued, in practice renewal was a matter of course. (2) On
the basis of the issuance of a licence heavy expenditure had
been incurred by the appellants. (3) No opportunity was
given to the appellants to establish that the locality was
suitable for carrying on the said business and that the
complaints made against them were false. And (4) Even the
High Court held that in regard to licensees against whom
there were no complaints a further inquiry should
M4 Sup.Cl/67-5
58
be held. In support of the contention we were taken through
all the necessary correspondence. The learned Judges on a
consideration of the entire material placed before them,
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held that the Commissioner of Excise and Taxation made a
bona fide enquiry and found that the locality was not
suitable for carrying on business in liquor in view of the-
various circumstances mentioned in the counter-affidavit.
We do not think we are justified in interfering with the
finding of fact arrived at by the High Court on the material
placed before it. On the said finding it cannot be held
that the order of the Commissioner was arbitrary or
unreasonable.
We cannot agree with the learned counsel that S. 22 controls
s. 20 of the Act for the former deals with the cancellation
of a licence and the latter with the issuance of a fresh
licence : they deal with two different subject-matters.
Lastly, the learned counsel for the appellants contended
that the order was mala fide. But this point was not
pressed before the High Court and we cannot allow it to be
raised for the first time before us.
In the result the appeals fall and are dismissed with costs.
V.P.S.
Appeal dismissed.
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