Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT OF MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
J. S. BASAPPA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/11/1963
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SARKAR, A.K.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 1873 1964 SCR (5) 517
CITATOR INFO :
D 1965 SC1942 (28)
O 1967 SC1738 (3,6,7)
RF 1969 SC 78 (23,25,31)
E 1969 SC 343 (11)
ACT:
Jurisdiction of Civil Courts-Statute conferring finality of
orders of assessment-levy of tax without jurisdiction-If
Civil Courts’ jurisdiction excluded-Composit turnover-
Transactions Validly taxed and those not, severability of-
Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1908 (IX of 1908), ss. 11, 12.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent, a groundnut-oil merchant filed three suits
alleging that the property in some goods remained with him
till the exept of the-goods to an extra-provincial point
and till the payment of price after export, and sales tax
was not demandable on these sales under the Madras General
Sales Tax Act, 1933. The appellant contended that the sales
were not inter-provincial sales, the suits were not
maintainable in a civil court, the respondent had not
exhausted his’ alternative remedies and the suits were
barred by limitation under s. 18 of the Act.
Before the High Court an additional ground based upon the
decision in M/s. Ram Narain Sons Ltd. v. Assistant
Commissioner of Sales Tax, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 483 was raised
that the whole assessment was invalid because it included an
illegal levy which, was not severable from the legal
demand.,
Held: (i) SectioN 18 of the Sales Tax Act applies to
suits for damages and compensation in respect of acts done
under the Act. ’Me period of limitation prescribed in that
section does not apply to the kind of suits which were filed
by the respondent.
(ii) The jurisdiction of civil courts is not necessarily
taken away when the decision of a tribunal is made, final,
because the civil court’s jurisdiction to examine the order
with reference to fundamental provisions of the statute,
non-compliance with which would make the proceedings illegal
and without jurisdiction, still remains unless the statute
goes further and states either expressly or by necessary
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implications that the civil court’s jurisdiction is
completely taken away.
(iii) Applying the above principle the jurisdiction of
the civil court was not taken away as the taxing of
’outside’ sales was a matter wholly outside the jurisdiction
of the taxing authorities.
Firm of Illuri Subhayya Chetty & Sons v. State of Andhra
Pradesh, [1964] 1 S.C.R 752 and Secretary of State
represented by the Collector of South Arcot v. Mask & Co. 67
I.A. 222.
518
(iv) The entire assessment was void because it was not
possible in the present case to separate from the composite
turnover transaction which were validly taxed from those
which were not, in as much as this pertains to the domain of
tax officers and the courts have no powers within that
domain.
M/s. Ram Narain Sons Ltd. v. Assistant Commissioner of
Sales Tax, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 483 and Bennett & White,
(Calgary) Ltd. v. Municipal District of Sugar City, [1951]
A.C. 786.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 494-496 of
1962.
Appeal from the judgment and decrees dated March 12, 1957,
of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in A.S. Nos. 566 to 568 of
1961.
A.V. Viswanatha Sastri, T.V.R. Tatachari and B.R.G.K. Achar,
for the appellants.
Bhimsankaram, Chander Kohli and E. Udayaratnam, for
respondents.
November 20, 1963. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-This judgment will dispose of Civil Appeals
Nos. 494 to 496 of 1962. The State of Andhra Pradesh which
now stands substituted for the Provincial Government of
Madras is the appellant. The respondent is one J.S.
Basappa, a groundnut-oil merchant of Kurnool who was selling
oil within the Province and also exported it to extra-
Provincial points. These three appeals concern salestax for
the years 1944-45, 1945-46 and 1946-47. They arise out of
three suits filed by Basappa against the Provincial
Government of Madras now represented by the Government of
Andhra Pradesh, the details of which are given below.
For the year 1944-45, Basappa was assessed to sales-tax
amounting to Rs. 12,983-2-2 of which, according to him, a
sum of Rs. 1,594-1-5 only represented sales within the
Province. He claimed that the remaining sales took place
outside the Province of Madras. He submitted that property
in the goods remained with him till the export of the goods
to an extraProvincial point and till payment of price after
export. He claimed that these sales could not be included
in
519
his ’turnover under the Madras General Sales-tax Act, 1939
(Act No. IX of 1939) and sales-tax was wrongly demanded from
him. In respect of this assessment, he filed O.S. No. 14 of
1950 (original No. 0. S. 40 of 1949) in the Court of the
Subordinate Judge, Kurnool for refund of Rs. 11,389-0-9 ps.
The Madras State Government in a written statement traversed
’all the allegations and stated that delivery of the goods
was made in Kurnool when the goods were booked and further
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that the goods were despatch. ed at buyer’s risk and
remained at buyer’s risk through out, it also contended that
the notice under s. 80 was not proper and the suit was not
in accordance with that notice and was not maintainable
because the orders under the Sales-tax Act were made final
by s. 11(4) of the Sales-tax Act and because Basappa had not
exhausted his other remedies under the Salestax Act.
Lastly, it contended that the suit was barred by time not
having been filed within six months from ’the date of the
act complained of as required by s. 18 of the Sales-tax Act
or within one year as required by Art. 16 of the Indian
Limitation Act.
In respect of the year 1945-46, Basappa filed O.S. No. 44 of
1949 claiming a refund of Rs. 8,356/on similar grounds, and
in respect of the year 1946-47 he filed O.S. No. 23 of 1949
for a declaration that the levy of Rs. 9,23 3-6-7 was
illegal and without jurisdiction and for a permanent
injunction to restrain the taking authority from collecting
the tax. In this suit, in addition to the’defences also
taken in the other suits it was contended that, the suit was
incompetent as a revision application was pending with the
Board of Revenue.
These suits were disposed of by the Subordinate Judge,,
Kurnool by a common judgment dated February 22, 1951. -The
main points which were decided were:- (1) whether the
suits were not maintainable as (a) the civil court had no
jurisdiction and (b) the assessee had not exhausted his
other remedies, (2) whether the suits were barred by time,
and ( 3) whether the sales took place outside -the Province
of Madras and the
520
levy of the tax in respect of some- of the transactions was
illegal. The Subordinate Judge held that. there was nothing
in the Sales-tax Act to exclude the jurisdiction of, the
civil court and that the finality spoken of by s’ 11 ,of the
Sales-tax Act- was, a finality arising under the Sales-tax
Act and had, no reference to-, the jurisdiction of the civil
court. He -also held that Basappa was not required to
exhaust his other remedies before moving the civil court by
suit. On, the second point, the Subordinate Judge: held
that O.S. No.. 14 of 1950 and 44 of 1949 were barred by time
under s. 18 of the Sales-tax Act or Art. 16 of the
Limitation Act whichever might be applied. The learned
Subordinate Judge held that Art. 62 of the Limitation Act
was not ’applicable because Basappa had not pleaded in these
two-.suits that payment of the, tax was made under a
mistake. The Subordinate Judge,, however, held that O.S.
No. 23 of 1949 was in time. In O.S. No. 14 of 1-950 and 44
of 1949, he recorded findings that tax amounting to Rs.
7,203-12-9-in respect of O.S. 14 of 1950 and Rs. 5,370-7-0
in respect of O.S. No. 44 of 1949 were wrongly levied,,
because those amounts concerned sales which took place
outside the Province of Madras. In O.S. 23 of 1949 he held
that sales of the value of Rs. 79,465/- took Place outside
the Province and tax in respect of them at 1 % (which was
the uniform rate applicable to all the three years) was not
demandable.’ A -declaration to this ’effect’ was granted and
an injunction was issued restraining the State Government’
from recovering Rs. 793-10-6 from Basappa. In the result.
O.S. No.14 f 1950 and 44 of 1949 were dismissed’ ’with costs
and O. S. No. 23 ’of 1949 was ’partially decreed with
proportionate costs.
Basappa appealed in: all the three suits against the
decision, of the Subordinate; Judge, Kurnool. The
Government of Madras objected-in-the appeal of Basappa from%
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the. decision in 0.S. No. 23 of 1949 in respect: of the
decree for Rs. 793-10-6. In the High Court,’ applications
were made in, the appeals for urging an: -additional ground
that the whole assess-
521
ment, was invalid because it included an illegal levy which
was not severable from the legal demand. This ground ’was
based upon the decision of this Court in M/s. Ram. Narain
Sons Ltd. v. Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax and others
(1) This request was not opposed and permission was granted
to Basappa. . The High Court differed from the Subordinate
Judge on the question of limitation and held that neither s.
18 of the Sales-tax Act nor Art. 16 of the Limitation Act
was applicable to., the suits, which were governed by Art.
62 ’of the Limitation Act. The High Court accordingly held
that O.S. 14 of 1950 and O.S. 44 of 1949 which were
dismissed as barred by time were not barred. On the’ main
question, the High Court classified all the sales into four
categories which were:
1. Where the plaintiff himself was the
consignor as well as the consignee,
2. Where the plaintiff himself was the
consignor and the ’buyer the consignee,
3. Where the buyer was the consignor as
well as the consignee, and
4. Where a third party was shown as the
consignor, the consignee being the plaintiff.
The Subordinate Judge had held that sales-tax was properly
demandable in respect of categories 2 and 3 but not in
respect of categories 1 and 4. The second part of the
decision was not assailed before the High Court. The High
Court again considered categories 2 and 3 and held that
sales coming under those categories were properly assessable
to sales-tax as the sales took place within the Province of
Madras. The High Court, however,, acting upon the decision
of this court in Ram Narain’s case(1) held that the legal
and the illegal levies were so mixed up that the entire
demand for tax was rendered illegal and void. In the
result, the appeals filed by Basappa were allowed and the
cross-objection filed by the Provincial Government of Madras
was dismissed. The High Court certified these cases and the
present appeals have been filed.
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 483.
522
Three questions are raised by Mr. A.V. Viswanatha Sastri.
They are, (1) that the civil court had no Jurisdiction to
try these suits, (2) that the suits O.S. 14 of 1950 and 44
of 1949 were barred by time under s. 18 of the Sales-tax Act
and (3) that the High Court was wrong in holding that the
assessments were not capable of being split up and in
declaring the total assessments to be void.
The first two points give no trouble at all. Section 18 of
the Act reads:
"No suit shall be instituted against the,
Govern. ment and no suit, prosecution or other
proceeding shall be instituted against any
Officer or servant of the State Government in
respect of any act done or purporting to be
done under this Act, unless the suit,
prosecution or other proceeding is instituted
within six months from the date of the act
complained of."
This section applies to suits for damages and compensation
in respect of acts under the Act. It is worded in familiar
language by which ’authorities, including Government, are
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protected and indemnified in respect of bona fide acts done
or purporting to be done under powers conferred by the
statute. The periodof limitation prescribed in the section
does not apply to the kind of suits which were filed by
Basappa. This Point has no substance and was not even
pressed in the High Court.
Similarly, the first point must also be decided against the
State of Andhra Pradesh, because of a recent, decision of
this court in Firm of tlluri Subhayya Chetty Sow v. The
State of Andhra Pradesh(1) That case was decided under s.
18A of the Madras General Sales-tax Act which was inserted
by s. 10 of the Madras General ’Sales-tax Amendment Act,
1951 which came into force on May 15, 1951. That section
reads
"No suit or other proceeding shall, except as
expressly ’provided in this Act, be instituted
(1) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 752.
523
in any Court to set aside or modify: any
assessment made under this Act."
The present appeals have to be decided without the
assistance of s. 18A, because the suits were filed in the
Court of Subordinate Judge, Kurnool and were decided by him
before the amendment came into force . Prior to the
insertion of s. 18A there was no: specific provision taking
away the jurisdiction of the civil court except s. 11(4) by
which a finality attached to orders passed in appeal. Under
that section, appeals were provided in respect of orders of
assessment and there was also a provision for revision in s.
12. It was provided by sub-s. (4) of s. II that "every
order passed in appeal under this section, shall, subject to
the powers of revision conferred by s. 12, be final.’.’
While enacting s. 18A the Legislature added an elaborate
machinery which did not exist earlier for correcting
assessments.
Mr. Sastri contends that in deciding whether the civil
court’s jurisdiction is barred we must take into account the
provisions of s. 11 and s. 12, because these provisions
which provide adequate remedies " march with the
construction" of s. 11(4). He submits that the finality
which was conferred on the appellate order subject to a
revision must necessarily be a finality against
determination of the same question by the civil court. It
is pointed out by-,this court in Chetty’s case(1) that the
exclusion of the jurisdiction of the civil court is not to
be readily inferred and that even -if a provision giving the
orders a finality was enacted, civil courts-still have
jurisdiction to interfere where fundamental, provisions of
the Act are not complied with, or where the statutory
Tribunals do not act in conformity with the fundamental
principles of judicial procedure. Gajendragadkar, J. speak-
ing for the court on that occasion summed up the law as
follows:
"In dealing with the question whether Civil
Courts’ jurisdiction to entertain a suit is
barred or not,’ it is necessary to bear in
mind the fact that there. is a general
presumption that there
(1) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 752.
524
must be a. remedy in the. ordinary civil
courts to a citizen claiming that an amount-
has been recovered from him illegally and that
such a remedy can be held to be barred only on
very clear and unmistakable indications to the
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contrary. The exclusion of the jurisdiction
of Civil Courts to entertain civil. causes
will not be assumed unless the relevant
statute contains an express provision to
that, effect, or leads to a necessary and
inevitable implication of that nature. The
mere fact that a special statute, provides for
certain remedies may not by itself necessarily
exclude the jurisdicti on of the civil courts
to deal with a case brought before it in
respect of some of the matters covered by the
said statute.,"
Referring to the remarks of Lord Thankerton in Secretary of
State represented by the Collector of South Arcot v. Mask &
Co.(1)-"it is also well-settled that that even if
jurisdiction is so excluded, the civil courts have
jurisdiction to examine into cases where the, provisions of
the Act have not been complied with, or the statutory
tribunal has not acted in conformity with the fundamental
principles of judicial Procedure"-it was observed:
"It is necessary to add that these
observations, though made in somewhat wide
terms, do not justify the assumption that if a
decision has been made by a taxing authority
under the, provisions of the relevant taxing
statute, its validity can be challenged by a
suit on the ground that it..is incorrect on
the merits and as- such, it can be claimed
that the provisions of the said statute have
not been complied with. Non-compliance with
the provisions of the statute to which
reference is made by the Privy Council must,
we think, be non-compliance with such
fundamental provisions of the statute. as
would make the entire proceedings before the
appropriate authority illegal and without
jurisdiction. Similarly, if an appropriate
authority has acted in violation
(1) 67 I.A. 222 at 236.
525
of the fundamental principles of judicial
procedure, that may also tend to make the
proceedings illegal and void and this
infirmity may affect the validity of the order
passed by -the authority in question."
It was thus held that the civil court’s jurisdiction may not
be taken away by making the decision of a tribunal final,
because’ the civil court’s jurisdiction to examine the
order, with reference to fundamental provisions of the
statute non-compliance with which would make the proceedings
illegal and without jurisdiction, still remains, unless the
statute goes further and states either expressly or by
necessary implication that the civil court’s jurisdiction is
completely taken away,.
Applying these. tests, it is clear that without a provision
like s. 18A in the Act, the jurisdiction of the civil court
would not be ’taken and at least where the action of the
authorities is wholly outside the law and is not a mere
error in the exercise of jurisdic tion. Mr. Sastri says
that we must interpret the Act in, the same way as if s. 18A
was implicit in it and that s. 18A was added to make
explicit what was already implied. We cannot agree. The
finality that statute conferred upon orders of ’assessment,
;.Subject, however, to appeal and revision, was a finality
for the purposes of ’the Act. It did not make valid an
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action which was not warranted by the Act, as for example,
the levy , of tax on a commodity ;which was not taxed at all
or was exempt. In. the. present case, the taxing of sales
which did not take place within the State was a matter
wholly. outside the jurisdiction of the taxing authorities
and in respect of such illegal action. the jurisdiction of
the civil, court continued to subsist. In our judgment the-
suits were competent.
The last question is whether the assessment as a whole must
fail or only in respect of the part which was utside the’
jurisdiction of the sales tax authorities We have already
reproduced the four categories into ’Which all the
transactions of sale ’were classified. The High Court and
the Court below. found that
526
categories 1 and 4 represented transactions of sale which
could not be taxed at all by the authorities as those
transactions took place outside the State. It may be
mentioned that the Sales-tax Act did not then contain any
provision which established a nexus between the sales and
the Province. That provision came later. The High Court
relying upon Ram Narain’s case(" held that the assessments
as a whole must fail. In Ram Narain’s case a portion of the
assessment was invalid under Art. 286 of the Constitution
and the question was whether the total assessment must fail.
This Court observed:
"The necessity for doing so is, however
obviated by reason of the fact that the
assessment is one composite whole relating to
the pre-Constitution as well as the post-
Constitution periods and is invalid in toto.
There is authority for the proposition that
when an assessment consists of a single
undivided sum in respect of the totality of
the property treated as assessable, the
wrongful inclusion in it of certain items of
property which by virtue of a provision of law
were expressly exempted from taxation renders
the assessment invalid in toto."
This Court cited with approval a passage from Bennett &
White (Calgary) Ltd. and Municipal District of Sugar City
No. 5(2) where the Judicial Committee observed :
"When an assessment is not for an entire sum,
but for seperate sums, dissected and earmarked
each of them to a separate assessable item, a
-court can sever the items and cut out one or
more along with the sum attributed to it,
while affirming the’ residue. But where the
assessment consists of a single undivided sum
in respect of the totality of property treated
assessable and when one component (not
dismissible as ’de minimis) is on any view not
assessable and wrongly included, it would seem
clear that such .a procedure is barred and the
assessment is
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 483.
(2) [1951] A.C, 786 at 816.
527
bad wholly. That matter is covered by
authority. In Montreal Light Heat & Power
Consolidated v. City of Westmount (1926)
S.C.R. (Can.) 515 the court (see especially
per Anglin C.J.) in these conditions held that
an assessment Which was bad in part was
infected throughout and treated it as
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’invalid. . Here their Lordships are of
opinion, by parity. of reasoning,; that the
assessment was invalid in toto."
It is urged by Mr. Sastri that the tax here is at the
uniform rate of 1 % and as all the returns and documents
necessary to seprate the bad part from the good are
available, there is no need to cansel the whole assessment.
He contends that these cases are rather governed by the
other rule that where the assessment is for separate sums,
only that portion need be declared illegal which is void.
It is necessary to explain the distinction between the two
classes of cases and how they are to be distinguished. A
difference in approach arises only in those cases where the
assessment of many matters results in amounts of tax which
though parts of the whole assessment, stand completely
separate. There the court can declare the "separate
dissected and earmarked’, items illegal and excise them from
the levy. In doing so, the court does not arrogate to
itself the functions of the taxing authorities; but where
the tax is a composite one and to separate the good part
from the bad, proceedings in the nature of assessment have
to be undertaken, the civil court lacks the jurisdiction.
Here, theamount of tax is a percentage of the turnover and
the turnover is a mixed one and it is thus not merely a
question of cutting off some items which are separate but of
entering upon the function of assessment which only the
authorities under the. Sales-tax Act can undertake. Cases
of assessment based upon gross valuation such as the case
from Canada refered to by the Judicial’ Committee afford a,
parallel to a case of assessment of a composite turnover
such as we have here. Just as in the Canadian case it was
not possible to separate the valuation of movable properties
from
528
that of immovable properties, embraced in a gross valuation
roll, so also here, it is not possible to separate from’ the
composite ’turnover transactions which are .validly taxed,
from those which are not, for that must pertain to the
domain of tax officers and the courts have no powers within
that domain. In our opinion, the High Court was right in
declaring the total assessment: to be affected by -the
portion which was illegal
and void.
In the result, these appeals fail and are dismissed with
costs, one set only.
Appeals dismissed