Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MURTHY MATCH WORKS, ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE ASSTT. COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE, ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/01/1974
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
CITATION:
1974 AIR 497 1974 SCR (3) 121
1974 SCC (4) 428
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1974 SC2349 (8)
R 1975 SC 583 (36)
RF 1975 SC1146 (18)
RF 1979 SC 478 (117)
F 1980 SC 286 (44,45,46)
RF 1984 SC1562 (11)
R 1987 SC2117 (28)
ACT:
Central Excise & Salt Act, 1944--S. 37 and the notification
issued there under whether court can review legislative
judgment--Constitution of India--Reasonable classification
of principles for determining.
HEADNOTE:
The match industry in India has grown over the decades.
From the point of view of manufacturing techniques the
safety match industry comprises of two distinct categories:
the machanised sector occupied by a few big manufacturers
and the non-mechanised sector comprising varying sizes of
production units. The Government classified the safety
match manufacturers into four categories depending on the
quantity turn out and other relevant factors. But the Tariff
commission recommended the abolition of sub-classification
for the purpose of levying excise duty and suggested
separate scales of excise duty to be levied for four classes
of units, namely, A, D, C and D. Based on these
recommendations the slab system of excise duty was abandoned
by the Government and the category wise rate was adopted.
As a result of the adoption of the differential duty scheme
the advantages offered to the ’C’ group went to the ’B’
group which in turn resulted in fall in production. It also
generated pseudo--C category producers from out of the
erstwhile B category which ultimately eliminated C category
producers. The Government, therefore, withdrew the tax
concession to C category and equated it with B category.
The Government of India had from time to time issued
notifications under s. 37 of the Central Excise and Salt
Act, 1944. The notification issued in 1967 levied excise
duty on the basis of manufacture of matches of which "any
process is ordinarily carried on with the aid of power". As
a result of this notification the B and C categories of old
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were now treated equally. The change in classification of
the manufacturers was based on the use of power which in
turn had a rational relation to the techniques and processes
of production and their ability to bear the burden of the
levy. This was done on the basis of recommendations of the
Central Excise Re-organisation Committee.
The High Court refused to strike down the notification. it
was contended in this Court that this unsocialistic step had
left the small producers in the cold and virtually compelled
them to retire from the industry and is thus discriminatory.
Dismissing the appeals to this Court,
HELD This is a criticism of legislative judgment, not a
ground of judicial review. The Court is being invited to
compel the legislative and executive wings to classify but
from the judicial inspection tower the court may only search
for arbitrary and irrational classification and its obverse,
namely, capricious uniformity of treatment where a crying
dissimilarity exists in reality. Unconstitutionality and
not unwisdom of a legislation is the narrow area of judicial
review. [129 E]
The question of classification is primarily for legislative
judgment and ordinarily does not become a judicial question.
The power to classify being extremely broad and based on
diverse considerations of executive pragmatism the
judicature cannot rush in where even the legislature warily
treads. All these operational restraints on judicial power
must weigh more emphatically where the subject is taxation.
[130 E]
It is equally well settled that merely because there is room
for classification it does not follow that legislation
without classification is always unconstitutional. The
court cannot strike down a law because it has not made the
classification which commends to the court as proper. Nor
can the legislative power be said to have been
unconstitutionally exercised because within the class a sub-
classification was reasonable but has not been made. [130 H]
122
In the present cage, a pertinent principle of
differentiation, which is visibly linked to production
prowess, has been adopted in the broad classification of
power-users .and manual manufacturers. It is irrational to
castigate this basis as unreal. [131 C]
K.T. Moopil Nair v. State of Kerala, [1961] 3 S.C.R. 77,
State of Kerala v. Haji K. Hail Kutty Naha. C. As Nos
1052 etc. of 1968; judgment dated August 13, 1968 and
Khandige Sham Bhat v. The Agricultural Income Tax Officer,
[1963] 3 S C.R. 809, 817, followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 1752 to
1769 of 1970
From the Judgment and Order dated the 24th April, 1970 of
the Mardas High Court in Writ Petitions Nos. 239, 346, 999,
1000, 1007, 1030, 1071, 1101, 1102, 1223, 1242, 1270, 1271,
1724, 1725, 1748, 2640 and 3252 of 1969.
Y. S. Chitle, V. M. Ganpule, K. R. Choudhury and K. Rajendra
Choudhury, for the appellants.
L. N. Sinha, Solicitor General of India, S. P. Nayar, and M.
N. Shroff, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J.-The core of the contention urged by the
appellants in these various appeals filed by certificate
under art. 133(1)(a) & (c) of the Constitution is that the
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excise duty on matches sought to be levied on these medium-
sized manufacturers of Shivakashi wears the mask of equality
but in its true face bears the marks of unequal justice
violative of art. 14 of the Constitution of India.
Shri Chitale, learned counsel for the appellants, has
focused his arguments on one grievance only and, we think,
with good reason that the discriminatory fiscal treatment of
his clients is unconstitutional, the vice being treatment of
dissimilar categories similarly. To compress his whole
argument in a single sentence, it is that the appellants,
small manufacturers of matches, have been subjected by the
impugned notification to excise duty at the same onerus rate
as has been applied to larger producers, wilfully
indifferent to a historically well recognised classification
between the smaller and the larger group of, match
manufacturers, and the injury sustained flows from this
failure to classify and deal differentially with sets of
producers who are unequal in their economic capabilities in
the matter of production and marketing a sort of traumatic
egality. In brief, equal treatment of unequal groups may
spell invisible yet substantial discrimination with
consequences of unconstitutionality. That dissimilar things
Should not be treated similarly in the name of equal justice
is of Aristotelian vintage and has been, by implication,
enshrined in our Constitution.
The facts which unfold the case of the appellants may now be
set out. The match industry in India has grown over the
decades and Shivakashi occupies an important place in the
production geography of matches. From the point of view of
manufacturing techniques, the safety match industry in our
country comprises two distinct categories the mechanised
sector occupied by a few big whales and the non-
123
mechanised sector comprising varying sizes of production
units ranging from the small fry organised on a cottage
industry basis to considerable producers who have developed
manufacturing and marketing muscles sufficient to compete
with the power-using big four-the WIMCO, the AMCO, the
ESAVI, and the Pioneer. The Tariff commission, Report on
this industry has stated
"Unlike units in the mechanised sector which
have powerdriven equipment for carrying out
all the important operations including
manufacture of splints and veneers, frame
filling dipping, box making, etc., those in
categories ’B’ and ’C’ follow almost identical
manufacturing process, obtaining their splints
and veneers from outside suppliers and getting
such important. operations as box-making and
frame filling done by outside domestic labour
on piece-rate basis. Only such of the
processes, as dipping, box filling,
banderolling and packing which under Excise or
Explosive Act regulations cannot be entrusted
to outside labour are carried out in the
factory sheds of the units and the workers
employed for these also are mostly paid on
piece-rate basis. All the operations,
whether, undertaken in the factory premises or
passed on to outside piece-work labour to be
carried out in the homes of the latter
conjointly with other members of the family,
are done by manual process. The same system
is followed by ’D’ category units as well,
except those sponsored by K. & V. 1. C. some
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of which manufacture their own splints and
veneers,"
Classified on the basis of quantity turn-out and other
germane factors, a fourfold categorisation into ’A’, ’B’,
’C’ and ’D’ was extent in the industry roughly corresponding
to the techniques of production and the use of power adopted
by each. The Tariff Commission explained this aspect and
reported on the operation of the differential excise levy
system on production and trade practices. Counsel for the
appellants has rested his case of discrimination by
subversive equality or rather non-discrimination where a
deserving differentiation is the desideratum, on the
findings of the Tariff Commission report. We might as well
give copious but relevant excerpts from it to discern the
foundation. of the argument. The Report runs on to state
"As indicated in Appendix 11, according to the
excise tariff classification units in
the match
industry now stand grouped into four classes,
namely ’X,’B’,’C’and’D’ not on any tech-
nological differentiation but on the basis of
output-’A’ class comprising factories whose
annual output exceeds 4,000 million match
sticks, ’B’ class comprising factories whose
annual output exceeds 500 million match sticks
but does not exceed 4,000 million match
sticks, ’C’ class comprising factories whose
annual output exceeds 50 million match sticks
but does not exceed 500 million match sticks
and ’D’ class comprising factories whose arm,
all output does- not exceed 50 million match
sticks. According to this classification the
factories belonging to WIMCO, AMCO and ESAVI
fall under category ’A, the rest comprising
the units
124
in the non-mechanised sector fall under the
other three categories, namely ’B’, ’C’, and
’D’,
..................................
"selling system
(iv) Small producers.-The system of selling
adopted by these manufacturers varied
according to their status and financial
resources. The system almost universally
followed by such producers is to make outright
sales, without any discount or commission to
wholesalers, both out-station and local. The
bigger, among such producers belonging to
category ’B’ are reported in some case s to
sell as well through dealers and sole selling
agents. Many of them have also got their own
depots and regular stockists in a limited
number of out-station centres. As regards ’C’
and ’B’ class producers, the system of sales
covert the following variants according to
facilities available to them : (i) outright
,sales to wholesale merchants, local or out-
station; (ii) sales through joints schemes of
depots which stock different brands from
several producers; (iii) sales by sending
goods in their own vans in bulk to
distributors and dealers in nearby states; and
(iv) .sales through their own salesman who
deliver goods in local markets on the
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shopkeepers on bicycles (a special feature of
’D’ class units).
From the replies received by us from units in
the small scale sector it would appear that
those in category ’B’ situated in the
Shivakasi/Sattur/Kovilpatti area have over
some years in the past established contacts
and developed a fairly wide selling system
enabling them to cater to the markets in
distant States including West Benga
l, U.P.,
Delhi, Gujarat and practically all the States
in the South. The size of their operations
has all along ,enabled them to undertake
supply in wagon loads at the concessional
rates, which is an important consideration for
developing distant markets to be served by
rail transport."
"Although they are not comparable to WIMCO in
having a country-wide distributive
Organisation, these units evinced till
recently all the symptoms of a steady and
healthy development, some of them having
reached the maximum limit (4,000 million
sticks) of Category ’D’ with a reputation for
their brands in far off markets. They had the
resources to support this progressive
development and a few of them have represented
that with an improvement of the climate of the
trade which has been completely vitiated by
the slab system of excise duties (see para-
graph 11) and given necessary facilities they
would be able to reestablish the markets they
had assiduously built up and even initiate a
scheme of gradual mechanisation of important
processes in their factories for the
betterment of the quality of their products.
In the present context, it is worth taking
note of the fact -that the credit for an
expanding market for matches produced in -the
non-mechanised sector is attributable largely
to the sales endeavours of factories which had
grown to be’B’class units that had necessary
resources for the purpose and were able the
maintain quality."
125
"In contrast to the ’B’ class units, the
selling system of those in category ’C’
betokens a position of serious weakness.
Except the C’ class units which have been
brought into existence by fragmentation of
bigger units and still operate under the
protecting wing of the sponsor (see paragraph
11), the new-comers in this class who have no
tradition, functions mostly with meagre
financial resources and have no comparable
advantage. Unable to sell their output in
wagon loads they are compelled to dispose of
it to local financing-cum-trading agencies at
rock bottom prices dictated by the latter for
what has now come to be called consignments of
"assorted labels". This, in effect, involves
a complete surrender by the ’C’ class
producers to the benefit of differential
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excise rebate allowed to them to the detriment
of others as well. The low purchase prices of
the goods enable such agencies to send
consignments of mixed brands to distant places
in wagon-loads and find a market by of
fering to
the wholesalers there extremely competitive
rates vis-a-vis the usual rates charged
by’B’class units, the retail selling prices
being the same for both. Our examination of
the problem of the small scale units in
category ’C’ indicates that basically their
problem is not different from other small
industries suffering similar exploitation by
middlemen. As in other cases they can best be
extricated from the grip of the middlemen by
the establishment of suitable sales co-
operatives. We draw the attention of the State
Governments to this problem for initiating
necessary measures for the purpose,
particularly of the Government of Madras, as
the concentration of such units is in that
State where the problem presents itself in the
most acute form, but offers favourable
prospects for the establishment of several
full-fledged sales cooperatives with adequate
membership."
"There is sufficient evidence to indicate that
the effects have been quite widespread and
recourse has been taken to fragmentation on a
fairly extensive scale."
The Sivakasi Chamber has stated as follows "In
the face of such unhealthy competition from
’C’ factories and the disadvantages over ’A’,
the ’B’ is unable to market its production
resulting in heavy accumulation of stocks. It
is now felt by ’B’ class factories that there
is no other salvation for them except to
convert ’B’ into ’C’ class factories in benami
names, as few have since done. It may be
pointed out that 16 long established ’B’
factories have reduced themselves to ’C’ class
with effect from 1st April, 1963 in this
Division alone in addition to the numerous
factories who have already converted from
’B’to’C’."As regards similar fragmentation of
the larger units in category ’C’ almost
identical views have been expressed by the
Tirunelevely Match Association, representing
150 ’C’ class match factories,in the following
words : "In view of the vast difference of
excise duty between. 1st and 3rd slab of
excise duty in ’C’.Class there is a tendency
and practice among the manufacturers to work
in the first slab only and to stop therewith.
In this way starting of small new units with
the motive to enjoy rebate in the first slab
126
of excise duty has become common and this has
clearly resulted in loss of revenue, as well
as working of units in less than the permitted
Capacity. It has been brought to our.
notice
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that the situation has deteriorated to such an
extent as a result of the slab system that
some erstwhile ’B’ units have suspended their
manufacturing activities altogether and
instead found it more profitable to patronise
a number of newly established ’C’ class units.
Their taking over the products of the latter
in their new role as a trading-cum-financing
agency has been facilitated by their
established market connections and
resourcefulness. Instances of ’B’ category
units owned by individual proprietors
downgrading themselves into category ’C’ and
having a number of ’C’ class units set up in
the name of near relations have also been
noticed by us in the course of our visits to
factories in the Sivakasi/Sattur/ Kovilpatti
area. The allegations about extensive
fragmentation were not denied by anybody at
the public inquiry."
*
"The volume of evidence, both direct and
indirect, that we have received in this
connection fully testifies to the fact that
’large scale fragmentation of ’B’ and ’C’
class units has taken place directly as a
result of the slab system-all motivated by the
attraction offered by the large duty
differential of 65 np for the lowest slab rate
under category ’C"’.
*
"From the evidence received by us "B" and "C"
class units ’have to offer their match boxes
generally at a discount of Rs. 2 to Rs. 3 per
bundle of 5 gross boxes, i.e. at about 40 to
60 nP. per gross less than the price charged
by WIMCO. While the quality of matches
produced by ’B’ class manufacturers has the
reputation of being generally good and
comparable to WIMCO’s matches, the ’C’ class
units do not have such reputation in the
market. The ’C’ class manufacturers are
handicapped by a further disadvantage on
account of the lower scale of their produc-
tion, inasmuch as they cannot usually offer a
wagon-load of matches at a time for despatch
to the upcountry markets for sale and have
generally to bear the central sales tax.
After carefully considering all aspects of the
case including estimates of costs of the
manufacturers, we are of opinion that a
differential of 20 nP. in the rates of excise
duty per gross of match boxes between ’A’ and
’B’ class units and a differential of 30 nP.
between ’B’ and ’C’ class manufacturers would
be quite adequate to safeguard their
respective interests. On similar
considerations a differential of 35 nP.
between ’C’ and ’D’ class units would also be
justified. For reasons stated in paragraph 11
and as stressed therein, we are definitely
against continuance of the slabs introduced in
classes ’A’ ’B’ and ’C’ carrying dif
ferential
rates of excise duty, which have entailed
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serious repressions on the entire industry.
We, therefore, recommend the following scales
of excise duty to be levied for the four
classes respectively :
’For ’A’ class................Rs 4.60 per gross boxes
’For ’B’ class................Rs.4.40 per gross boxes
For ’C’ class.................Rs.4.10 per gross boxes
’For ’D’ class................Rs.3.75 per gross boxes
127
The Tariff Commission recommended the abolition of sub-
classification for the purposes of excise duty and suggested
separate scales of excise duty to be levied for the four
classes of units, namely, ’A’, ’B’ ’ C’ and ’D’. Based on
these recommendations, the slab system of excise duty was
abandoned by Government and the category-wise rate was
adopted. The impact on production of the differential duty
scheme was a process of splintering of the ’B’ group to
inhale the advantages offered to the ’C’ group resulting in
a reduction in total production, thanks to the thinning
tendency in the ’B’ group. Indeed, the fiscal misdirection,
by showing concessional rates to the ’C’ category as against
’B’ category, generated pseudo-’C’ category producers from
out of the erstwhile ’B’ category so that the bona fide
small scale manufacturers falling in the C’ category were
flooded out. Moreover, the genuine C’ category
manufacturers were exploited by the middlemen who snapped up
the margin of tax concession for themselves, defeating the
object of concessional duty for the small producer. This
dilemma induced Government to revise its fiscal thinking and
led to the impugned notification which withdrew the tax
concession to the C’ category and equated it with the ’B’
category.
Section 3 of the Central Excise and salt Act, 1944 empowers
the levy and collection of duties on goods produced or
manufactured in the State, the rate being set forth in the
First schedule to the Act. Item 38 in the First Schedule
relates to matches. Section 37 contains the rulemaking
power and S. 37(1) confers power on the Central Government
by rules to exempt any goods from the whole or any part of
the duty imposed by the Act. Under this power the Central
Government issued a notification adopting a "classification"
approach for extending concessional rates. Originally, a
broad classification was made as between matches
manufactured by use of machinery and those by other means.
Among the second category a sub-classification was made as
’B’, C’ and ID’ for the purposes of concessional rates. In
1966, a uniform leavy of Rs. 4.15 per gross of match boxes
was made doing away with ’B’ to ID’ classes. In 1967 this
position was revised by notification No. 162 of 1967, which
is challenged before us. It reads
"In exercise of the powers conferred by sub-
rule (1) of rule 8 of the Central Excise
Rules, 1955, and in supersession of the
Notification of the Government of India in the
Ministry of Finance (Department of Rev
enue and
Insurance) No. 115/67 Central Excise, dated
the 8th June, 1967, the Central Government
hereby exempts matches specified in column (2)
of the Table below, falling "under Item No. 38
of the First Schedule to the Central Excise
and Salt Act, 1944 (1 of 1944) and cleared by
any manufacturer for home consumption, from so
much of the duty of excise leviable thereon as
is in excess of the rate specified in the
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corresponding entry in column (3) of the said
table:
128
TABLE
Category Description of matches Rate (Rs per gross
of boxes 50 mat-
ches each)
1. Matches in or in relation to the manufacture
of which any process is ordinarily carried
on with the aid of power .. 4 .60
2. Matches in or in relation to the manufacture
of which no process is ordinarily carried
on with the aid of power .. 4 .30
------------------------------------------------------------
Provided that--
(1) Matches referred to in category 2 and
cleared for home consumption during the
financial year from a factory from which the
total clearance of matches during that year is
not, as per declaration made by the
manufacturer under this notification ’
estimated to exceed 75 million matches, shall
be allowed to be cleared at the rate of Rs.
3.75 per gross of boxes 5O matches each, upto
75 million matches and the quantity of
matches, if any, cleared in excess, and upto
100 million matches shall be allowed to be
cleared at the rate of Rs. 4.30 per gross of
boxes of 50 matches each; and if the clearance
in such factory exceeds 100 million matches
during the financial year, the manufacturer
shall be required to pay at the rate of Rs. 4
30 per gross of boxes of 50 matches each, on
the entire quantity cleared during the
financial year........"
The upshot of this system of duty is that ’B’ and ’C’
categories of old will now be treated equally and the
grievance of the petitioners, who are ’C’ category
manufacturers is that clubbing them together with the far
stronger ’B’ type manufacturers is virtually condemning them
to gradual extinction. Treating unequals as equals and
compelling both to bear equal burdens is to show the ’C’
type manufacturers the way out. It is urged that the test
of capacity of each group in the industry to bear the levy,
recognised in the past and approved in the Tariff Commission
Report, is given the go-bye now.
The contention, in reply, by the State is that at present
the classification of the manufacturers is based on the use
of power which in turn has a rational relation to the
techniques and processes of production and their ability to
bear the burden of the levy. It is further argued that the
Government did give effect to the recommendations of the
Tariff Commission regarding the four-fold classification
but, finding certain evils developing, the Central Excise
Re-organisation Committee went into the subject and
suggested methods to re-orient the scale and scope of excise
duty. This Committee’s report led to the current noti-
fication and the dichotomy between mechanised and non-
mechanised industry proceeds on a rational differentia which
has a substantial relation to the legislative end.
There is no doubt that in the past among the non-mechanised
manufacturers of matches a further classification based on
viability
129
had been made. It is also true that the financial
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resources, the capacity to command a market on their own
without depending on intermediaries, etc., marked off the
’B’ category from the ’C’ category. But then experience
gathered subsequently disclosed certain evils which the
State took note of and endeavoured to set right. Ulitmately
the present notification was issued obliterating the
distinction which gave a concessional edge to the ’C’ group
over the ’B’ group.
The learned counsel for the appellants persuasively pleaded
that this unsocialistic step has left the small producers
like his clients in the cold and virtually compelled them to
retire from the industry. May be, there is force in this
grievance. Instead of protecting the tiny manufacturer from
the injurious intermediary and inhibiting the larger pro-
ducer from resorting to the device of self-division and
other make believe tactics, the State has resorted to a
policy of equal levy from both which, according to the
counsel, hits the poor and helps the better-off. This is a
criticism of legislative judgment, not a ground of judicial
review.
We agree that bare equality of treatment regardless of the
inequality of realities is neither justice nor homage to the
constitutional principle. Anatole France’s cynical
statement comes to our mind in this context
"The law, in its majestic equality, forbids
the rich as well as the poor to sleep under
bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal
bread."
The forensic focus turns on unconstitutional non-
classification of the ’B’ and ’C’ categories and the vice of
lugging all non-mechanised ’Producers together into one
mass. The Court is being invited to compel the legislative
and executive wings to classify, but we feel that from the
judicial inspection tower the Court may only search for
arbitrary and irrational classification and its obverse,
namely, capricious uniformity of treatment where a crying
dissimilarity exists in reality.
Right at the threshold we must warn ourselves of the
limitations of judicial power in this jurisdiction. Mr.
Justice Stone of the Supreme Court of the United States has
delineated these limitations in United States v. Butler(1)
thus :
"The power of courts to declare a statute
unconstitutional is subject to two guiding
principles of decision which ought never to be
absent from judicial consciousness. One is
that courts are concerned only with the power
to enact statutes, not with their wisdom. The
other is that while unconstitutional exercise
of power by the executive and legislative
branches of the government is subject to
judicial restraint, the only check upon our
exercise of power is our own sense of self-
restraint For the removal of unwise laws from
the statute books appeal lies not to the
courts but to the bellot and to the processes
of democratic government."
In short, unconstitutionality and not unwisdom of a
legislation is the narrow area of judicial review. In the
present case unconstitu-
(1) 297 U.S. 1=56 Sup.Ct.312=80 L. ed.477 (1936)=American
Constitutional Law--hird edn. by Tresolini and Shapiro.
130
tionality is alleged as springing from. lugging together two
dissimilar categories of match manufacturers into one
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compartment for like treatment.
Certain principles which bear upon classification may be
mentioned here. It is true that a State may classify
persons and objects for the purpose of legislation and pass
laws for the purpose of obtaining revenue or other objects.
Every differentiation is not a discrimination. But
classification can be sustained only if it is founded on
pertinent and real differences as distinguished from
irrelevent and artificial ones. The constitutional standard
by which the sufficiency of the differentia which form a
valid basis for classification may be measured, has been
repeatedly stated by the courts. If it rests on a
difference which bears a fair and just relation to the
object for which it is proposed, it is constitutional. To
put it differently, the means must have nexus with the ends.
Even So, a. large latitude is allowed to the State for
classification upon a reasonable basis and what is
reasonable is a question of practical details and a variety
of factors which the court will be reluctant and perhaps
ill-equipped to investigate. In this imperfect world
perfection even in grouping is an ambition hardly ever
accomplished. In this contest, we have to remember the
relationship between the legislative and judicial
departments of government in the determination of the
validity of classification. Of course, in the last analysis
courts possess the power to pronounce on the
constitutionality of the acts of the other branches whether
a classification is based upon substantial differences or is
arbitrary, fanciful and consequently illegal, At the same
time, the question of classification is primarily for
legislative judgment .and ordinarily does not become a
judicial question. A power to classify being extremely
broad and based on diverse considerations of executive
pragmatism, the judicature cannot rush in where even the
legislature warily treads. All these operational restraints
on judicial power must weigh more emphatically where the
subject is taxation.
One facet of the equal protection clause, upheld by the
Indian Courts and relevant to the present case, is that
while similar things must be treated similarly, dissimilar
things should not be treated similarly. There can be
hostile discrimination while maintaining a facede of
equality. Procrustean cruelty cannot be equated with
guarantee of constitutional equality, and we have to examine
whether such is the lot of the appellants.
This Court has in several rulings highlighted this sensitive
under-side of equal protection. Indeed, the complaint of
the petitioners is that by abolition of the difference in
fiscal burden between categories ’B’ and ’C’ an insidious
subversion of equal treatment has been effected.
Another proposition which is equally settled is that merely
because there is room for classification it does not follow
that legislation without classification is always
unconstitutional. The court cannot strike down a law
because it has not made the classification which commends to
the court as proper. Nor can the legislative power be said
to have been unconstitutionally exercised because within the
class a sub-classification was reasonable but has not been
made.
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It is well-established that the-modern State,- in exercising
its sovereign power of taxation, has to deal with complex
factors relating to the objects to be taxed, the quantum to
be levied, the conditions subject to which the levy has to
be made, the social and economic policies which the tax is
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designed to subserve, and what not. In the famous words of
Holmes, J., in Bain Peanut Co. v. Pinson(1) :
"We must remember that the machinery of
Government would not work if it were not
allowed a little play in its joints."
In the present case, a pertinent principle of
differentiation, which is visibly linked to productive
prowess, has been adopted in the broad classification of
power-users and manual manufacturers. It is irrational to
castigate this basis as unreal. Indeed, the soundness of
this distinction is not denied. The challenge is founded on
the failure to miniclassify between large and small sections
of manual match manufacturers. But ours is not to reason
why, that being a policy decision of Government dependent on
pragmatic wisdom playing on imponderable forces at work.
Our jurisdiction halts where the constitutional touchstone
of a rational differentia having a just relation to the
legislative and of revenue raising is satisfied. Gratuitous
judicial advice on the socialistic direction of fiscal
policy is de trop. We desist from that enterprise and leave
the petitioners and men of his ilk to seek other democratic
remedies in that behalf, it being beyond our area normally
to demolish the tax structure because micro-classification
among a large group has not been done by the State.
Absolute justice to every producer is a self-defeating
adventure for any administration and genera I direction, not
minute classification, is all that can be attempted. For
these reasons we find ourselves in agreement with the High
Court in its refusal to strike down the notification under
S. 3 of the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944.
Before concluding we may make a passing reference to the few
decisions cited by appellants’ counsel. In K. T. Moopil
Nair v. State of Kerala(2), Sinha, C.J., emphasized that
art. 14 may be violated even though the law may, on the
face, be equal if in substance unequal things are treated
equally. In State of Kerala v. Haji K. Haji Kutty Nahia(3),
Shah J., observed :
"There objects, persons or transactions
essentially dissimilar are treated by the
imposition of a uniform tax, discrimination
may result, for, in our view, refusal to make
a rational classification may itself in some
cases operate as denial of equality.
A similar view has been taken in Khandige Sham Bhat v. The
Agricultural Income Tax Officer (4).
it is sound law that refusal to make rational classification
where grossly dissimilar subjects are treated by the law
violates the mandate of art. 14. Even so, where the limited
classification adopted in the present case is based upon a
relevent differentia which has a nexus to the
(1) [1930] 282 US 499; 501.
(2) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 77.
(3) C.As. Nos. 1052 etc. of 1968; judgment dated August 13,
1968.
(4) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 809,817.
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legislative and of taxation, the. court cannot strike down
the law on the score that there is room for further
classification. Refusal to classify is one thing and it
bears on constitutionality, not launching on micro-
classification to work out perfect justice is left to
executive expediency and legislative judgment and not for
forensic wisdom. "The relationship between the legislative
and judicial departments of government in the. determination
of the validity of classification is wellsettled...... the
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authorities state with unanimity that the question of
classification is primarily for the legislature and that it
can never become a judicial question except for the purpose
of determining, in any given situation, whether the
legislative action is clearly unreasonable. The legislative
classification is subject to judicial revision only to the
extent of seeing that it is founded on real distinctions the
subjects classified, and not on artificial or irrelevant
ones used for the purpose of evading the constitutional
prohibition." (American Jurisprudence 2d : vol. 16; para
496).
"In a classification for governmental purposes there cannot
be an exact exclusion or inclusion of persons and things.
The constitutional command for a state to afford equal
protection of the law sets a goal not attainable by the
invention and application of a precise formula.
Classification in law as in the other departments of
knowledge or practice, is the grouping of things in
speculation or practice because they agree with one another
in certain particulars, and differ from other things in
those particulars. It is almost impossible in some matters
to foresee and provide for every imaginable and exceptional
case, and a legislature ought not to be required to do so at
the risk of having its legislation declared void, although
appropriate and proper upon the general subject upon which
such legislation is to act, so long as there is no
substantial and fair ground to say that the statute makes an
unreasonable and unfounded general classification, and
thereby denies to any person the equal protection of the
laws. Hence, a large latitude is allowed to the states for
classification upon any reasonable basis, and what is
reasonable is a question of practical details into which
fiction cannot enter." (ibid para 504).
We have said enough to delineate the finer frontiers of the
jurisdiction of the court and-the legislature. Having
sensitive regard to the obligation of the State to bring the
law, including the tax law, into pulsing relationship with
life, including the life of the country’s economy, we see
nothing so grossly unfair as to attract the lethal power of
the court to strike down the notification under challenge.
We dismiss the appeals but in the circumstances without
costs to the respondents.
P.B.R.
Appeals dismissed
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