Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
D. CAWASJI & CO., ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MYSORE & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/10/1974
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 813 1975 SCR (2) 511
1975 SCC (1) 636
CITATOR INFO :
R 1976 SC2243 (23)
RF 1990 SC 313 (20)
RF 1990 SC 772 (31)
RF 1991 SC1676 (72)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950-Art. 226-Payment of taxes made
under mistake of law-Period of limitation when commence-
Jurisdiction of the High Court.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants paid certain amounts to the government as
excise duty and education cess for the years 1951-52 to
1965-66 in one case and from 1951-52 to 1961-62 in the
other. The High Court struck down the provisions of the re-
levant Acts as unconstitutional. In writ petitions before
the High Court claiming refund, the appellants contended
that the payments in question were made by then under
mistake of law; that the mistake was discovered when the
High Court struck down the provisions as unconstitutional
and that the petitions were therefore in time. But the High
Court dismissed them on the ground of inordinate delay.
Dismissing the appeals,
HELD : Where a suit will lie to recover moneys paid under a
mistake of law, filim writ petition for refund of tax within
the period of limitation would lie. For filing a writ
petition to recover the money paid under a mistake of law
the starting point of limitation is from the date of which
the judgment declaring as void the particular law under
which the tax was paid was rendered. Even in cases where it
is filed within three years, the court has a discretion.
have in regard to the facts and circumstances of each case
not to entertain the application. [513H; 514A-B]
State of Madhya Pradesh v. Bhailal Bhal and Others [1964] 6
S.C.R. 261 relied on, State of Kerala v. Aluminium
Industries Ltd. (1965) 16 S.T.C. 689, referred to and Trilok
Chand Motichand and Others v. H. B. Munshi, Commissioner of
Sales Tax, Bombay (1970) 25 S.T.C. 289 held inapplicable.
In the instant case having regard to the conduct of the
appellants in not claiming the amounts in the earlier Writ
petitions without any justification, there is no
justification in interfering with discretion exercised by
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the High Court in dismissing the writ petitions. The
appellants did not pray for refund of the amounts paid by
way of cess for the years 1951-52 to 1965-66 and they gave
no reasons before the High Court in these petitions why they
did not make the prayer for refund of the amounts paid
during the years in question. Avoiding multiplicity of
unnecessary legal proceedings should be the aim of all
courts. The appellants should not be allowed to split up
their claim for refund and file writ petitions in a piece-
meal fashion. If the appellants could have, but did not,
without any legal justification claim refund of the amounts,
paid during the years in question in the earlier writ
petitions there is no reason why they should be allowed to
claim the amounts by filing writ petitions again. [517B-C]
In the second batch of appeals the reason why this Court did
not go into the question of the validity of the Act was that
relevant materials were not placed before the court by the
appellant for successfully challenging its validity and they
were therefor to blame themselves. [518141]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals No@. 437, 451,
452-476 and 477-459 of 1974.
Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment & Order dated the
30th November, 1972 of the Mysore High Court in W-Ps. Nos.
26662671, 2673-2681/68, 181, 196-199, 194-195, 200-204/67,
180, 182-193/67 and 2653-2665/68 respectively. -L319SupCI/75
512
R. J. Kolah, In CAs Nos. 450-451,453,468-471, 479-484 of
74 only) A. Jagannath Shetty, K. J. John, J. B.
Dadaclhanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for the
appellants.
B. Sen (In CA. No. 437/74) Chandrakant Raju, Advocate for
Kamatka (In CA. No. 477/74) and M. Veerappa, for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
1. Civil Appeals Nos. 437-451 & 477-489 of 1974.
MATHEW, J.-The appellants filed writ petitions be-fore the
High Court of Mysore under Article 226 of the Constitution
for a declaration that the Mysore Elementary Education Act,
1941, and the amendments to it by the Mysore Elementary
Education (Amendment Act XII of 1955) Providing for levy and
collection of Education Cess on items on which Education
Cess is being levied as prescribed in the schedules of the
respective Acts were beyond the competence of the Mysore
State Legislature and for refund of the Educational Cess
paid during 1951-52 to 1965-66 on shop rentals and tree tax
in respect of toddy and duty of excise in respect of arrack
and special liquor. The High Court dismissed the writ
petitions by a common judgment and these appeals are
directed against that judgment.
The High Court of Mysore had, in D. Cawasji & Co. v. The
State of Mysore and Others(1), struck down the provisions of
the Mysore Elementary Education Act and the amendments to it
on May 2, 1968. That decision was affirmed by this Court in
State of Mysore and Others v. D. Cawasji & Co. and
Others(2). Before the decision of this Court, the Mysore
Legislature had passed the Mysore Education Cess (Validation
and Levy) Act, 1969 on September 10, 1969 validating the
levy and the collection of cess under the Act. But the
Validation Act was held to be invalid by the Mysore High
Court. The writ petitions were filed before the High Court
in June and July, 1968, i.e. after the decision of the
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Mysore High Court in D. Cawasji & Co. v. State of Mysore and
Others(1) and before this Court rendered its judgment.
The contention of the appellants before the High Court was
that the payments of cess in question were made by them
under a mistake of law; that they discovered the mistake
only on May 2, 1968 when the High Court, by its judgment,
declared that the provisions of the Act and the amendments
thereto were unconstitutional, and that, as they filed the
writ petitions within three months’ of that decision, the
writ petitions were within time.
The High Court found that there was delay in filling the
petitions and, it was mainly for that reason that the High
Court dismissed .
In State of Madhya Pradesh v. Bhailal Bhai and Others(1) Das
Gupta, J. who delivered the judgment of the Court, while
holding that
(3) [1964] 6 S. C. R. 261.
513
the High Courts have power, for the purpose of enforcement
of fundamental rights and statutory to give consequental
relief by ordering repayment of money realised by the
Government without the authority of law, said that the
special remedy provided in Article 226 is not intended to
supersede completely the modes of obtaining relief by an
action in a civil court or to deny defence legitimately open
in such actions and that among the several matters which the
High Courts rightly take into consideration in the exercise
of that discretion is the delay made by the aggrieved party
in seeking this special remedy and the excuse there is for
’it. He further said that if a person comes to the court
for relief under Article 226 on the allegation that he has
been assessed to tax under a void legislation and having
paid it under a mistake is entitled to get it back, the
court, if it finds that the assessment was void, being made
under a void provision of law, and the payment was made by
mistake, is still not bound to exercise its discretion
directing repayment; and that whether repayment should be
ordered in the exercise of this discretion win depend in
each case on its own facts and circumstances and that it is
not easy nor is it desirable to lay a general rule. He was
of the view that if there has been unreasonable delay the
court ought not ordinarily to lend its aid to a party by
this extraordinary remedy of mandamus. On the question of
the period of limitation within which the petition must be
filed, he observed that the period of limitation prescribed
for recovery of money paid under a mistake of law is three
years from the date when the mistake is known and that that
period may ordinarily be taken to be a reasonable standard
by which delay in seeking remedy under Article 226 can be
measured. He further said that the court may consider the
delay unreasonable even if it is less than the period of
limitation prescribed for a civil action, but, where the
delay is more than this period, it will almost always be
proper for the court to hold that it is unreasonable.
In State of Kerala v. Aluminium Industries Ltd.(1) a Bench
of seven judges of this Court followed the view taken in
State of Madhya Pradesh v. Bhailal Bhai (supra) on the
question of the period of limitation within which the
petition has to be filed.
Section 17(1)(c) of the Limitation Act, 1963, provides that
in the case of a suit for relief on the ground of mistake,
the period of limitation does not begin to run until the
plaintiff has discovered the mistake or could, with
reasonable diligence, have discovered it. In a case
where.payment is made under a mistake of law as contrasted
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with a mistake of fact, generally the mistake becomes known
to the party only when a court makes a declaration as to the
invalidity of the law. Though a party could, with
reasonable diligence, discover a mistake of fact even before
a court makes a pronouncement, it is seldom that a person
can, even with reasonable diligence, discover a mistake of
law before a judgment adjudging the validity of the law.
Therefore, where a suit will lie to recover moneys paid
under a mistake of law, a writ petition for refund of tax
within the period of
(1) (1965) 16 S.T.C. 689.
514
limitation prescribed i.e. within 3 year of the knowledge of
the take, would also lie. For a writ petition to recover
the money paid under a mistake of law, this Court has said
that the starting point of limitation is from the date on
which the judgment declaring as void. the particular law
under which the tax was paid was rendered, as that would
normaly be the date on which the mistake becomes known to
the party. If any writ petition is filed beyond three
years’ after that date, it will almost always be proper for
the court to consider that it is unreasonable to entertain
that petition though, even in cases where it is filed within
three years, the court has a discretion, having regard to
the facts and circumstances of each case. not to entertain
the application.
We are aware that the result of this view would be to enable
a person to recover the amount paid as tax even after
several years of the date of payment, if some other party
would successfully challenge the validity of the law under
which the payment was made and if only a suit or writ
petition is filed for refund by the person within three
years from the date of declaration of the invalidity of
the law. That might both be inexpedient and unjust so
far as the State is concerned.
A tax is intended for immediate expenditure for the
common good and it would be unjust to require its repayment
after it has been in whole or in part expended, which would
often be the case, if the Buis or application could be
brought at any time within three years of a court declaring
the law under which it was paid to be invalid, be it a
hundered years’ after the date of payment. Nor is there any
provision under which the court deny refund of tax even if
the person who paid it has collected it from his customers
and has no subsisting liability or intention to refund it to
them, or, for any reason, it is impracticable to do so.
In the U.S.A., it is generally held that in the absence of a
statute to the contrary, taxes voluntarily paid under a
mistake of law with full knowledge of facts cannot be
recovered back while taxes paid under a mistake of fact may
ordinarily be recovered back (see Corpus Juris Secundum,
vol. 84, p. 637). Although s. 72 of the Contract Act has
been held to cover cases of payment of money under a mistake
of law, as the State stands in a peculiar position in
respect of taxes paid to it, there are perhaps practical
reasons for the law according a different treatment both in
the matter of the heads under which they could be recovered
and the period of limitation for the recovery.
The task of writing legislation to protect the interest of
the nation is committed to Parliament and the legislatures
of the States. We are refering to this aspect only to alert
the attention to the present state of law.
Now, the High Court relied on the decision of this Court in
Titokchand Motichand and Others v. H. B. Munshi,
Commissioner of Sales Tax, Bombay(1) for its conclusion that
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relief for refund cannot be
(1) (1970) 25 S.T.C. 289.
515
granted in the proceeding and that the appellants must
resort to the ordinary remedy of suits.
In Tilokch Motichand case, the petitioners before this court
had realised several amounts from their customers outside
Bombay cot account of sales tax. The Sales Tax Officer, by
his order dated March 17, 1958, forfeited the same under
s.21(4) of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1953. On March 28,
1958, the petitioners filed a writ petition in the High
Court of Bombay seeking a writ of mandamus restraining the
Sales Tax Officer from recovering the amount from them on
the ground that s. 21(4) was ultra vires the powers of the
State Legislature and that the order of forfeiture was
violative of Articles 19(1) (f) and 265 of the Constitution.
On November 28, 1958, the writ petition was dismissed by a
learned Single Judge on the ground that the petitioners,
having defrauded other persons, were not entitled to any
relief. The appeal filed against the said order by the
petitioners was dismissed on July 13, 1959. Before the
appeal was dismissed, the Collector of Bombay attached the
petitioners’ properties and the petitioners paid the amount
to the Collector of Bombay between August 3, 1959 and August
8, 1960. In Kantilal Babulal & Bros. v. H. C. Patel(1) de-
cided on September 29, 1967, this Court struck down s.
12A(4) of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 as violative of
Article 19(1)(f). The petitioners thereupon filed a writ
petition under Article 32 of the Constitution on February 9,
1968, claiming refund of the amount paid by them under s. 72
of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 on the ground that they
paid the amount under a mistake of law and that they dis-
covered the mistake only when this Court struck down s. 12
(A) (4) of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946. The petitioners
also alleged that they paid the amount to the collector
under coercion and they were entitled to recover the same.
The contention of the, petitioners was, for the grounds on
which this Court struck down s. 12A(4) of the Bombay Sales
Tax Act, 1946, s.21(4) of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1953,
was also liable to be struck down. It was in these
circumstances that this Court had to consider the question
whether the petitioners were entitled to the relief claimed
By a majority of the Court it was decided that there was
inordinate clay in filing the petition and there-
fore it should be dismissed. Hidayatullah, C.J. observed :
"His (the petitioner’s) contention is that the
ground on which his petition was dismissed was
different and the ground on which the statute
was struck down was not within his knowledge
and therefore he did not know of it and pursue
it in this Court. To that I answer that law
will presume that he knew the exact ground of
unconstitutionality. Everybody is presumed to
know the law. It was his duty to have
brought the matter before this Court for
consideration. In any event, having set the
machinery of law in motion, be cannot abandon
it to resume it after a number of years, be-
cause another person more adventurous than him
in his turn got the statute declared
unconstitutional, and got a favour able
decision..... I. agree with the opinion of my
brethren
(1) [1968] 1 S.C.R. 735.
Bachawat and Mitter, jj. that there is no
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question here of a mistake of law entitling
the petitioner to invoke analogy of the
Article in the Limitation Act .... ".
Bachawat, J. said that the payment made by the petitioners
were made not under any mistake of-law and, therefore, they
cannot claim any relief on the ground of mistake. Mitter,
J. was of the view that after the decision of the Bombay
High Court, the petitioners did not willingly pay the amount
forfeited, but that they made the payment after attachment
of their properties and, therefore, the amounts were really
paid under coercion and the period of limitation would
normally run from the date of the payment.
We are not quite sure that if the maxim that everyone is
presumed to know the law is applied, there will be any case
of payment under a mistake of law unless that presumption is
rebutted in the first instance, for, the moment it is
assumed that everyone is presumed to know the law, it is
clear that no one can make a mistake as to the law. It is
sometimes said that every man is presumed to know the law,
but this is only a slovenly way of stating the truth that
ignorance of the law is not in general an excuse(1). "There
is no presumption in this country that every person knows
the law; it would be contrary to common sense and reason if
it were SO"(2).
Be that as it may, the High Court deduced the conclusion
from the decision in Tilokchand Motichand’s (supra) case
that the question whether a declaration by a court that a
law is unconstitutional and therefore void would not always
furnish the starting point of limitation for a suit for
recovery of the amount paid under that law and that the
question must be decided on the facts of each case. The
Court further said that the parties should seek relief under
Article 226 as expeditiously as possible. and even if the
ordinary remedy by way of a suit is not barred by
limitation, it will be proper exercise of discretion under
Article 226 of the Constitution to decline to interfere in
cases where the persons approach the court after several
years, in the absence of special and sufficient grounds.
If one thing is clear from the judgments rendered in
Tilokchand Motichand’s case (supra) by the Judges who formed
the majority, it is this : they did not consider the
payments made by the petitioners a.% payments made under a
mistake of law. Therefore, we, do not see the relevance of
that case for the decision of the case here.
But, that however, is not the end of the matter. In the
earlier writ petitions which culminated in the decision in
D. Cawasji & Co. v. The State of Mysore and Others (supra)
the appellant did pray for refund of the amounts paid by
them under the Act and the High Court considered the prayer
for refund in each of the writ petitions and allowed the
prayer in some petitions and rejected it in the others on
the ground of delay. The Court observed that these writ
petitioners whose prayers had been rejected would be at
liberty to institute suits
(1) See erick Pollock, "Jurisprudence and Legal Essays",
p. 89.
(2) Soo Maule, J. in Martindale v. Falkner ( 1846) 2 C.D.
706, 719.
517
or other proceeding. We are not sure that, in the context,
the High Court meant, by ’other proceedings’, applications
in the nature of proceeds under Article 226, when it is seen
that the Court refused to entertain the relief for refund on
the ground of delay in the proceedings under Article 226 and
that in some cases the Court directed the parties to file
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representations before Government. Be that as it may, in
the earlier writ petitions, the appellants did not pray for
refund of the amounts paid by way of cess for the years
1951-52 to 1965-66 and they gave no reasons before the High
Court in these writ petitions why they did not make the
prayer for refund of the amounts paid during the years in
question. Avoiding multiplicity of unnecessary legal
proceedings should be an aim of all courts. Therefore, the,
appellants could not be allowed to split up their claim for
refund and file writ petitions on this piece-meal fashion.
If the appellants could have, but did not, without any legal
justification, claim- refund of the amounts paid during the
years in question, in the earlier writ petitions, we see no
reason why the appellants should be allowed to claim the
amounts by filing writ petitions again. In the
circumstances of this case, having regard to the conduct of
the appellants in not claiming these amounts in the earlier
writ petitions without any justification, we do not think we
would be justified in interesting with the discretion
exercised by the High Court in dismissing the writ petitions
which were filed only for the purpose of obtaining the
refund and directing them resort to the remedy of suits.
We dismiss the appeals but make no order as to costs.
11 Civil Appeals Nos. 452-476 of 1974
The appellants filed writ petitions before the High Court of
Mysore challenging the levy of health cess under the Mysore
Health Cess Act, 1951 (hereinafter referred to as the ’1951
Act’) for the reason that the Act is outside the legislative
competence of the Mysore Legislature as well as on the
ground that levy of health cess under the 1951 Act on shop
rentals and tree tax items in respect of toddy and arrack is
ultra wires sub-section (1) of s. 3 of the 1951 Act and s.
9(1) and (2) read with the schedule to the Elementary
Education Act, 1951. They also prayed for quashing the
conditions in the annual notification for sale of excise and
claimed refund of the health cess on shop rentals and tree
tax in respect of toddy and arrack paid by them for the
years 1951-52 to 1961-62.
Before the High Court, a Preliminary objection raised by the
learned Advocate General on behalf of the State of Mysore
that since the writ petitions were filed more than three
years after the payments were made, the court should not
entertain them. The High Court sustained the objection and
dismissed the writ petitions. These appeals are directed
against that order.
The 1951 Act under which the health cess was collected from
the appellant was in force in the State till it was repealed
and re-enacted by the Mysore Health Cess Act, 1962
(hereinafter referred to as the ’1962 Act’) with effect from
April 1, 1962. M/s. D. Cawasji & Co. and several other
excise contractors challenged the validity of levy
518
and collection of health cess under the 1951 Act as well as
under the 1962 Act filing writ petitions before the High
Court of Mysore They were disposed of by a common judgment
[see Surm Buth & Co. v. The Deputy Commissioner (Excise) &
Another(1). By the judgment, the High Court struck down
explanation to clause, (1) of Schedule A to the 1962 Act but
rejected all other prayers. That decision was challenged
before this Court and this Court, by its judgment dated
September 26, 1966 (see Shinde Brothers v. Deputy Com-
missioner(2) declared that the State of Mysore had no
competence to levy and collect health cess under the Mysore
Health Cess Act, 1962, on shop rent and directed refund of
health cess illegally collected under the Health Cess Act,
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1962. And as regards the prayer for declaration that the
levy of health cess under the 1951 Act was illegal and for
refund of the cess collected under that Act, this Court
declined to go into that question; the Court however, said
that "the petitioners will, however, be at liberty to file
suits, if so advised, to recover the amounts alleged to have
been paid by them under the Health Cess Act, 1951".
Within two months of the disposal of appeals by this Court,
the appellants filed writ petitions before the High Court
challenging the validity of the 1951 Act and praying for
refund of health cess collected under the 1951 Act for the
period from 1951-52 to 1961-62. The High Court held that
there was inordinate delay in filing the writ _petitions and
dismissed them on that ground without entering into the
merits of the petitions.
The appellants contended that the High Court went wrong in
domissing the writ petitions on the ground that there was
inordinate delay in filing them. It may be recalled that
the 1951 Act had been repealed in 1962 and that the refund
was claimed in respect of the amounts paid before 1962 under
the 1951 Act. Merely because this Court has said that the
appellants can challenge the validity of Act, it they are so
advised, by a suit. it would not follow that they can
challenge its validity in writ petition without encountering
legitimate pleas available to the respondent. If there was
inordinate delay is filing the writ petitions, there was
nothing in the judgment of ’Court which prevented the High
Court in dismissing them on that ground. The reason why
this Court did not go into the question of the validity of
the 1951 Act was that relevant materials were not, placed
before the Court by the appellants. When this Court said
the ’the appellants, if so advised, were at liberty to file
suit for the relief claimed, it cannot be taken as a
sanction to the appellants by the .Court for approaching the
High Court for relief under Article 226
(1) (1966) 1 Mysore Law Journal 554.
(2) A.I.R. 1967 S.C, 1512.
519
without regard to the question of delay in filing the
petitions. The appellants, as they did not place the
relevant materials before this Court for successfully
challenging the validity of the 1951 Act, are to blame
themselves. The appellants were directed by this Court to
Ale suits, if they were so advised.
In these circumstances, we do not think that the High Court
went wrong in dismissing the writ petitions on the ground of
inordinate delay. We dismiss the appeals, but make no order
as to costs.
P.B.R. Appeals
dismissed.
520