Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7791 of 1997
PETITIONER:
B. KRISHNA BHAT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KARNATAKA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/03/2001
BENCH:
S.P. Bharucha, N. Santosh Hegde & Y.K. Sabharwal
JUDGMENT:
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SANTOSH HEGDE, J.
The appellant before us along with some other
petitioners had filed Writ Petition Nos.4394-4410/88 before
the High Court of Karnataka at Bangalore contending, inter
alia, that the Bangalore Development Authority (the BDA) had
no sanction under Section 29 of the Bangalore Development
Authority Act, (for short the BDA Act) to levy any tax,
cess or fee on the owners of lands and buildings situated
outside the corporation limits of the Bangalore City
Corporation. They had also contended that Section 29 of the
Act was unconstitutional, ultra vires and void. A learned
Single Judge who heard the said writ petition after
examining the various provisions of the Act as well as the
Bangalore Municipal Corporation Act, 1949 (the Corporation
Act) came to the conclusion that under the BDA Act, there
was no inherent power to assess, impose and recover taxes,
cess and fees other than the betterment tax. The court also
held that the power to levy and recover taxes, cess and fees
has to be expressly conferred on the BDA by the BDA Act and
such power cannot be presumed by mere implication. It
further held that there was no material on record to hold
that the BDA has been rendering any service to the members
of the public who own lands and/or buildings which service
should correspond to taxes, cess and fees recoverable
because such tax is service related. The said finding of
the learned Single Judge came to be affirmed by the
appellate Bench in Writ Appeal Nos.223-39/92. After the
said judgment of the Division Bench, an Ordinance was
promulgated which later became an Act of the Legislature
whereby the principal BDA Act came to be amended by the
Bangalore Development Authority (Amendment) Act, 1993. By
this Amending Act, Sections 28- A, 28-B and 28-C were
incorporated in the said Act. By these amendments, the BDA
was statutorily entrusted with the obligation of providing
certain civic amenities specified in Section 28A of the Act
and in Section 28B, the BDA was specifically empowered to
levy and collect property tax in the same manner and at the
same rate as was provided in the Corporation Act. Under
Section 28C, the BDA was given the status of a local body to
collect the cess payable under the various Acts specified in
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the said Section and Section 7 of the Amending Act validated
all the collection made by the BDA which was declared as
without authority of law by the earlier judgment of the High
Court.
The Amending Act was challenged again by the appellant
in a writ petition on the ground that the Amending Act
suffered from the vice of excessive delegation and was also
arbitrary and violative of Article 14 of the Constitution.
It was also argued that the Amending Act not having removed
the vice pointed out by the High Court, it was beyond the
legislative power to validate an invalid collection of tax.
The said challenge being negatived by the High Court, the
appellant is before us in this appeal.
Before us, the appellant contends that the delegation of
power to the BDA is bad because the BDA is only a statutory
body and not being an elected body, could not have been
entrusted with any taxing power. For this proposition the
appellant strongly placed reliance on a judgment of this
Court in Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Birla Cotton,
Spinning and Weaving Mills, Delhi & Anr. (1968 (3) SCR
251). In the said judgment the majority, while upholding
the validity of the delegated legislation and negativing the
contention of excessive delegation, among other factors,
found that delegation to an elected body was in itself a
safe way of delegation because an elected body responsible
to the people including those who pay taxes would act
responsibly in the exercise of the said delegated power.
But this Court in that case nowhere held that delegation of
a taxing power to a non-elected body would suffer from the
vice of excessive delegation. Therefore, the argument of
the appellant grounded solely on the ratio laid down in
Birla Cotton Mills case (supra) should fail.
In re the Delhi Laws Act, 1912, The Ajmer-Merwara
(Extension of Laws) Act, 1947 and The Part C States (Laws)
Act, 1950 (1951 SCR 747 at 750), the main requirement of
delegation of legislative power was explained by Patanjali
Sastri, J. as follows :
It is now established beyond doubt that the Indian
Legislature, when acting within the limits circumscribing
its legislative power, has and was intended to have plenary
powers of legislation as large and of the same nature as
those of the British Parliament itself and no constitutional
limitation on the delegation of legislative power to a
subordinate unit is to be found in the Indian Councils Act,
1861, or the Government of India Act, 1935, or the
Constitution of 1950. It is therefore as competent for the
Indian Legislature to make a law delegating legislative
power, both quantitatively and qualitatively, as it is for
the British Parliament to do so, provided it acts within the
circumscribed limits (ii) Delegation of legislative
authority is different from the creation of a new
legislative power. In the former, the delegating body does
not efface itself but retains its legislative power intact
and merely elects to exercise such power through an agency
or instrumentality of its choice. In the latter, there is
no delegation of power to subordinate units but a grant of
power to an independent and co-ordinate body to make laws
operative of their own force. For the first, no express
provision authorising delegation is required. In the
absence of a constitutional inhibitation, delegation of
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legislative power, however extensive, could be made so long
as the delegating body retains its own legislative power
intact. For the second, however, a positive enabling
provision in the constitutional document is required. (iii)
The maxim delegatus non protest delegare is not part of the
constitutional law of India and has no more force than a
political precept to be acted upon by legislatures in the
discharge of their function of making laws, and the courts
cannot strike down an Act of Parliament as unconstitutional
merely because Parliament decides in a particular instance
to entrust its legislative power to another in whom it has
confidence or, in other words, to exercise such power
through its appointed instrumentality, however repugnant
such entrustment may be to the democratic process. What may
be regarded as politically undesirable is constitutionally
competent. (iv) however wide a meaning may be attributed to
the expression restrictions and modification, it would not
affect the constitutionality of the delegating statute.
The abovesaid observations of this Court in the said
Delhi Laws’ case (supra) have been consistently followed by
this Court in all the later cases. Applying the said
principles to the facts of this case, we must hold that the
delegation in question has been made to a statutory body
which is entrusted with the duty of development of the City
of Bangalore and the areas adjacent thereto. The process of
development is statutorily controlled and in the said
process certain developmental activities under Sections 29
and 30 of forming lay out, maintaining roads, bridges, sewer
etc. are also contemplated. Therefore, the BDA as such
cannot be treated as a stranger for the purpose of being
delegated the authority to levy property tax in property
which is situated within its jurisdiction. These levies and
collections are not left to the arbitrary wisdom/discretion
of the delegated authority but are governed by the procedure
to be adopted under the Corporation Act which itself has
provided an elaborate machinery for determining such levy
and collection thereof. Therefore, by no stretch of
imagination can it be contended that this delegation is
either beyond the scope of the legislative power or is in
excess of the same. It cannot also be argued that the said
delegation is unguided or arbitrary.
Another limb of the appellants argument in challenging
the Amending Act is that the Legislature has blindly
incorporated the machinery provisions of the Corporation Act
under Section 109, for the purpose of levying and collecting
the tax which, according to the appellant, is arbitrary
inasmuch as the tax collected by the Corporation was to be
utilised for large number of functions enumerated in Section
59 of the Corporation Act while the amount so collected
under the BDA Act is to be utilised for limited functions
specified under Section 28A of the Amending Act. We do not
find any force in this argument also. It is true that under
Section 59 of the Corporation Act, the Corporation is
obligated to perform as many as 23 functions specified
therein while under Section 28A of the BDA Act, the BDA has
to perform only 3 or 4 functions. But on behalf of the
respondents, it is pointed out to us that a complete reading
of the BDA Act shows that the BDA also has to perform many
other functions which are similar to those enumerated in
Section 59 of the Corporation Act. That apart, it is
pointed out that under the Corporation Act the Corporation
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is empowered to collect other revenues also apart from those
enumerated in Section 109 of the Corporation Act while the
BDA can collect only that tax which it is authorised to
collect under Section 28B of the Act, hence there can be no
comparison of the collection of the BDA and its expenditure
with that of the Corporations revenue and expenditure.
Therefore, we are in agreement with the respondents and hold
that the authorisation of collection of property tax by the
BDA based on the procedure laid in the Corporation Act is
neither arbitrary nor in excess of the power of delegation.
Therefore, the challenge to this Section should also fail.
The next argument of the appellant is in regard to
Section 7 of the Amending Act whereby the past collection of
property tax made by the BDA which was declared to be
without authority of law by the High Court is sought to be
validated. In support of this contention the appellant
submits that in the previous writ petition the High Court
not only found that there was lack of statutory authority to
collect the property tax but also held that such property
tax can be collected only if the BDA provided certain civic
amenities which the High Court on facts had found that the
BDA was not providing. Hence, it is argued that the said
finding of the High Court having become final for the period
prior to the date of the Amending Act, such collection of
tax could not have been validated. Relevant part of Section
7 of the Amending Act reads thus :
Notwithstanding anything contained in any judgment,
decree or order of any Court, Tribunal or other authority to
the contrary, levy, assessment or collection of any tax on
land or building or on both and levy and collection of
cesses on such tax on land or building made or purporting to
have been made and any action or thing taken or done
(including any notice or orders issued or assessment made
and all proceedings held and any levy and collection of tax
or cess or amount purported to have been collected by way of
tax or cesses) in relation to such levy, assessment or
collection under the principal Act before the twenty fourth
day of July, 1992 shall be and shall be deemed to be valid
and effective as if such levy, assessment or collection or
action or thing, had been made, taken or done under the
principal Act as amended by this Act and accordingly .---
It is seen from the said Section in the Amending Act
that the collection which was held to be invalid and was
directed to be refunded under the High Court judgment in the
previous proceeding was sought to be validated without
indicating how the Legislature has remedied the want of
services pointed out by the High Court. In the earlier
case, the High Court had held that in the principal Act
there was no specific provision to levy taxes similar to
those leviable under the Corporation Act. It also came to
the conclusion that any such tax even if it were to be
levied by the BDA with the sanction of the Legislature,
could be levied only if the BDA performed certain functions
mentioned in the said judgment. The Court further came to
the conclusion that such functions not being performed by
the BDA, collection of tax, apart from being unauthorised
for want of statutory sanction, is also bad because the BDA
did not render any service in lieu of such collection.
Therefore, it is seen that by the said judgment the High
Court had held that the collection of tax by the BDA was
service-related. In other words, such power of levy can be
vested in the BDA only if the BDA renders certain services
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to the subscribers to such tax and it is in this context
that the High Court gave a specific finding that no such
services had been rendered. This finding not having been
challenged by the BDA had become final. Therefore, so far
as collections made prior to the coming into force of the
Amending Act being a collection without any service
rendered, the same cannot be validated even by the
introduction of Section 7 of the Amending Act. The finding
of the High Court in regard to want of services could not
have been either ignored or reversed by the Legislature
while validating the earlier collection because it has no
such power to reverse the finding of a court. This Court in
a catena of cases has laid down that when a Legislature sets
out to validate a tax declared by a court to be illegally
collected, it is not sufficient for the Legislature to
merely declare that the decision of the court shall not be
binding because that would amount to reversing the decision
rendered by a court in exercise of judicial power which
authority the Legislature does not possess. It is also a
settled principle in law that when invalidity of collection
of levy is pointed out by the court based on non-existence
of certain necessary facts, it is not open to the
Legislature to merely controvert that finding of the court
and validate such collection by proceeding on the basis that
such finding of the court is incorrect. In the case of Shri
Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd. & Anr. v. Broach Borough
Municipality & Ors. (1970 (1) SCR 388 at 392) this is what
a Constitution Bench of this Court had held :
When a legislature sets out to validate a tax declared
by a court to be illegally collected under an ineffective or
an invalid law, the cause for ineffectiveness or invalidity
must be removed before validation can be said to take place
effectively. The most important condition, of course, is
that the legislature must possess the power to impose the
tax, for, if it does not, the action must ever remain
ineffective and illegal. Granted legislative competence, it
is not sufficient to declare merely that the decision of the
Court shall not bind for that is tantamount to reversing the
decision in exercise of judicial power which the legislature
does not possess or exercise. A courts decision must
always bind unless the conditions on which it is based are
so fundamentally altered that the decision could not have
been given in the altered circumstances. Ordinarily, a
court holds a tax to be invalidly imposed because the power
to tax is wanting or the statute or the rules or both are
invalid or do not sufficiently create the jurisdiction.
Validation of a tax so declared illegal may be done only if
the grounds of illegality or invalidity are capable of being
removed and are in fact removed and the tax thus made
legal.
This above ratio laid down in the said case has been
consistently followed by this Court in all subsequent cases
where this question arose for consideration. See M/s.
Hindustan Gum & Chemicals Ltd. v. State of Haryana & Ors.
(1985 (Supp.) 2 SCR 630).
Applying the said principles to the facts of the present
case, it is seen that the invalidity pointed out by the High
Court about the lack of services rendered at the relevant
point of time is an invalidity which was not capable of
being removed to justify the levy of tax by an Amending Act
and the Legislature could not have either ignored this
finding of fact by the High Court or overruled the same.
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Therefore, in our opinion, in respect of the tax collected
for the period before the date of the Amendment there could
have been no validation of such collection. Hence, the
Amending Act so far as it validates the collection of
property tax by the BDA, cannot be sustained for a period
prior to the date of the Amending Act.
We however make it clear that in this appeal we have not
decided the nature of levy under Section 28B after it was
introduced by the Amending Act as to whether it is a tax
simpliciter requiring no service at all or whether it is a
tax in the nature of a fee requiring services as held by the
learned Single Judge in the earlier round of litigation.
Our examination of the validity of the Amending Act has been
confined only to the arguments addressed before us. In
regard to the validation of the past collection, our finding
is based on the finding given by the High Court in the
earlier judgment which has become final and as a consequence
of such finding the validation of such collection is
impermissible. Therefore, Section 7 of the Amending Act so
far as it validates collection of property tax made by the
BDA prior to the introduction of Section 28B has to be
declared as invalid and beyond the legislative power.
This declaration of ours in regard to the illegality of
the validation of the property tax collected prior to the
Amendment, however, does not apply to the collection made by
the BDA of the cesses required to be collected by it under
Section 28C of the Act. The collection contemplated under
Section 28C is not a levy under the BDA Act. It is a levy
imposed under the Acts mentioned in that Section, namely,
the Karnataka Compulsory Primary Education Act, 1961;
Karnataka Health Cess Act, 1962; Karnataka Public Libraries
Act, 1965; and the Karnataka Prohibition of Beggary Act,
1975. The cess in question is not for the benefit of the
BDA but the same is collected by the BDA only as an agent.
It is for this purpose that under Section 28A the BDA was
deemed to be a local authority so that it could collect the
cess under the said respective Acts. These collections as
an agent do not suffer from want of legislative sanction.
The only lacking part was that under the respective Acts
referred to hereinabove, the said collection could be made
by a local authority only, which the BDA was not until
Section 28C was introduced. This lacuna was removed by
introduction of Section 28C and the BDA has been made a
deemed local authority for the purpose of such collection.
Therefore, once the BDA has been declared as a deemed local
authority with retrospective effect, we find no difficulty
in accepting the validity of this collection. Hence, the
validity of Section 28C has to be upheld and consequently
all the cesses collected by the BDA under the Acts referred
to under Section 28C have to be declared as validly
collected.
For the reasons stated above, we uphold the validity of
Sections 28B and 28C of the BDA Act which are under
challenge while we declare that that part of Section 7 of
the Amending Act which validates the collection of property
tax by the BDA before the introduction of Sections 28A and
28B as invalid; consequently the said collection is liable
to be refunded as directed by the court in earlier
proceedings. Accordingly, this appeal is partly allowed to
the extent indicated hereinabove. No costs.
J. (S.P. Bharucha)
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J. (N. Santosh Hegde)
J. (Y K Sabharwal)
March 30, 2001