Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MUNICIPAL BOARD OF HARDWAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAGHUBIR SINGH ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/12/1965
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
RAMASWAMI, V.
SATYANARAYANARAJU, P.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1502 1966 SCR (2) 891
ACT:
U.P. Municipalities Act (2 of 1916), s. 128(1)(vii) and
(xiv)Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
In 1941 the appellant-Municipal Board issued a notification
under s. 128 (1) (xiv) of the U.P. Municipalities Act,,
1916, by which it imposed a toll on motor vehicles and
tongas entering or leaving the municipal limits with
passengers, at the rate of 2 as per passenger. In 1955, a
second notification was issued under s. 128(1)(vii) by which
the toll was increased from 2 as. to 4 as. The respondents,
who were owners of motor vehicles, filed petitions under ArT
226 challenging the toll. Thereafter, a third notification
was issued under s. 128(1)(xiv) by which the description of
the toll was amended. A single judge of the High Court held
that the toll could not be levied on vehicles leaving the
municipal limits and issued a writ prohibiting the
collecting of toll on such Vehicles. On appeal, a
Divisional Bench of the High Court held that toll could also
be levied on vehicles leaving the municipality, but it could
not be levied on the same vehicle if the toll had been
levied on its entry into the municipality.
In this Court, it was contended by the appellant that, cl.
(xiv) being residuary and enabling, brought the full
amplitude of the power of the State Legislature or levy toll
to the aid of el. (vii), and therefore, according to the
concept of a toll it could be levied on vehicles both on
entering into and departing from the municipality.
HELD:Section 128(1) (vii) which enabled the levy of toll on
a vehicle entering the municipality, exhausted all the power
delegated by the Legislature to the appellant and that power
could not be extended either by the considerations derived
from the nature of tolls or from the residuary el. (xiv).
Therefore, the toll could be collected only from vehicles
entering the municipality. The distinction made by the
Divisional Bench between vehicles which pay toll on entering
and which do not pay any toll till leaving was irrelevant,
because the question of vehicles leaving the municipality
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could not enter the discussion. [897 B-F]
Since the tolls were first imposed in 1941, el. (xiv) must
be viewed in the light of the Constitution Act of 1935. The
scheme of s. 128 of the U.P. Act is that it enumerates
certain taxes and confers powers on municipalities to levy
them and then it enacts el. (xiv) which is intended to cover
the taxes not enumerated which the Provincial Legislature
had authority to impose. The relevant powers of
theprovincial Legislature were found in Entries 52 and 53
of the Provincial Legislative List of the Constitution Act
of 1935. Entry 52 could not be relied did not enable the
Provincial Legislature to impose taxes carried over inland
routes. The power which flowed from made over to the
appellant to be exercised in the particular in el. (vii),
that is, on vehicles entering the municipality, the tolls to
be levied on vehicles leaving the municipality el. (vii)
ineffective. [895 A-C, E-G, H]
on because it on passengers Entry 53 was manner stated and
to permit would render
892
The power of the State Legislature derivable from Entries 56
and 59 of the State List of the Constitution was not
available for the second notification because, while Entry
56 permitted tax on passengers, the toll was not a tax on
passengers but on vehicles; and the power to levy tons under
Entry 59 continued to be restricted to vehicles entering the
municipality. Besides, cl. (vii) under which it was issued
limited the power to vehicles entering the municipality.
The third notification was irrelevant, as was issued after
the petitions were filed. [896 A-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 311 to 366
of 1964.
Appeals from the judgment and decrees dated December 6,
1957, December 16, 1958, January 29, 1959 of the Allahabad
High Court in Special Appeals Nos. 343 and 381-416 of 1955,
548 of 1958 49-55 and 57-67 of 1959 respectively.
M. C. Setalvad, B. P. Jha and J. P. Goyal, for the appel-
lant.
G. S. Pathak, B. Dutta and Naunit Lal, for the respondents
(in C.A.s Nos. 311-366/64).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidayatullah, J. These appeals involve a short common point
of law and to appreciate it the narration of a few simple
facts will be sufficient.
On October 29, 1941, the Hardwar Union Municipal Board (for
brevity called the Board in this Judgment) issued a
notification (No. 4188/XI-416-41) by which it imposed a toll
on motor vehicles and tongas entering or leaving the
municipal limits with passengers, at the rate of 2 annas per
passenger. There were nine classes of persons who were
exempted and one such class was persons travelling in motor
vehicles and tongas from Rishikesh. Exemption certificates
valid to the end of the calendar year were available in
respect of some of the other classes. The notification
purported to be issued in exercise of powers conferred by S.
128(1)(xiv) of the U.P. Municipalities Act 1916 (U.P. Act 2
of 1916). Accompanying the notification were rules for the
levy ,and collection of the toll. On February 22, 1955, a
second notification was issued (No. 830/XXIII-16(C)-53-54),
this time in exercise of the powers conferred by S.
128(1)(vii) of the Act, and it increased the toll from 2
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annas to 4 annas per passenger and added rickshaws to the
vehicles. This notification also removed the exemption in
favour of persons travelling from Rishikesh. The Board
established a toll-barrier on the Rishikesh/ Hardwar road at
a place called Kharkhari within the limits of Hardwar
Municipality. Toll was collected at that barrier from
893
vehicles entering the municipal area or departing from it,
at the rate of 4 annas per passenger travelling by motor
car, tonga or rickshaw. On September 18, 1957, a third
notification (No. 2706B-(a)XI-C-57) was issued, once again
in exercise of powers conferred by s. 128(1)(xiv) and the
Board amended the description of the toll in the
notification of 1941 and deleted the exemption which had
been granted to persons travelling between Rishikesh and
Hardwar. The final description of the tax reads
"In the Description of the tax
(i) . . . . . .
"A toll tax on motor vehicles, rickshaws and
tongas entering or leaving the limits of the
Hardwar Union Municipality with passengers to
be levied at the rate of annas 4 per
passenger".
(ii)Delete the clause (c) "All persons
travelling in motor vehicles and tongas from
and to Rishikesh’ given under the proviso 2 to
paragraph 1."
The last notification was issued after the respondents who
are owners of motor vehicles plying between Rishikesh and
Hardwar had filed their petitions under Art. 226 of the
Constitution challenging the toll.
The judgment, which is impugned here by the Board as
appellant, is by a Divisional Bench consisting of Mootham
C.J. and Shrivastava J. in a special appeal decided on
December 6, 1957. The special appeal was filed against a
judgment of Mehrotra J. dated September 26, 1955. Mr.
Justice Mehrotra had held that toll could not be levied at
all on vehicles going outside the Municipal limits and he
issued a writ ordering the Board to desist from collecting
toll on vehicles leaving Hardwar Union Municipality. He
upheld the levy of toll on vehicles entering the municipal
limits. Other contentions against, the notifications which
sought to have the levy of toll in any shape or form
declared illegal were rejected. The Divisional Bench
maintained the order but held that although toll could be
levied on vehicles leaving the municipal area, it could not
be levied on the same vehicle if it had been once levied on
its entry into the municipal area. The Divisional Bench
modified the order by adding a direction that the appellant
Board should not levy toll on vehicles leaving the municipal
limits, which had paid toll on entry into these limits. The
Bench observed further--
"We think, therefore, with respect, that the
learned Judge went too far when he said that a
toll cannot be
894
levied on a vehicle going out of the limits of
the Municipal Board. . . . . . . . ."
Following its own decision the Divisional Bench dismissed
the other special appeals but certified all cases as fit for
appeal to this Court and that is how these fifty-six appeals
are before us.
Now it has been ruled on many an occasion in this Court that
local authorities like the Board do not act as legislatures
when they impose a tax but as the agent of the State
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Legislatures. Their powers and the extent of these powers
must be found in the statute which erects them and endows
them with such powers. This proposition is so indisputable
that Mr. Setalvad for the Board did not seek to contradict
it in any way. We must, therefore, look at the U.P.
Municipalities Act first. Section 128(1) of the Act read in
1941 as follows :-
"128. Taxes which may be imposed :
(1)Subject to any general rules or special
orders of the Provincial Government in this
behalf, the taxes which a board may impose in
the whole or any part of a municipality are-
. . . . . . .
. . . . . . .
(vii)a toll on vehicles and other conveyances,
animals and laden coolies entering the
municipality;
. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . .
(xiv)any other tax which the Provincial
Legislature has power to impose in the
Province under the Government of India Act,
1935.
(The words "Provincial Legislature", "Province" and "the
Government of India Act 1935" have now been replaced by the
words "State Legislature", "State" and "the Constitution"
respectively.)
Mr. Setalvad has relied upon both the clauses of S. 128(1)
quoted above. He has further relied upon the concept of
tolls which according to him envisages collection both on
entry and departure. He has drawn particular attention to-
the first and the third notifications in which cl. (xiv) is
mentioned as the source of power and has contended that the
clause being residuary and enabling can bring the full
amplitude of the power of the legislature to levy tolls to
the aid of cl. (vii) which is restricted in its operation.
We shall now consider these arguments.
895
The scheme of S. 128 is that it enumerates by name certain
taxes, and confers power on the Boards to levy them and then
it enacts cl. (xiv) which is intended to cover other taxes
which the Provincial (now the State) Legislature has
authority to impose but which are not in the enumeration.
In this way the delegated powers of the Boards are equated
to the legislative powers of the Legislature of the Province
(now the State). Since tolls were first imposed in Hardwar
in 1941, we must view cl. (Xiv) in the light of the
Government of India Act 1935. The powers of the Provincial
Legislature in this context could flow from entries 52 and
53 only of the Provincial Legislative List in the Seventh
Schedule of the Constitution Act of 1935. These entries
read
52--"Dues on passengers and goods carried on
inland waterways;"
53-"Tolls".
The corresponding provisions under the Constitution are to
be found in entries 56 and 59 of the State List. They read
:
56--"Taxes on goods and passengers carried by
road or on inland waterways;"
59--"Tolls".
It will thus be seen that in 1941 the Provincial Legislature
had no power to impose a tax on passengers carried over
inland roads and whether or not the levy we are considering
could be regarded at all as a tax on passengers, it could
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not be so regarded in 1941. It could be justified as a toll
only under entry No. 53. The difficulty in accepting the
first notification in respect of toll on vehicles leaving
the municipality which is sought to be supported under cl.
(xiv)is this : the Provincial Legislature expressly gave a
limited power to levy toll on vehicles entering the
municipality.Power which flowed from entry 53, whatever it
might have been, was made over to the municipal Board to be
exercised in a particular manner and that manner was stated
in cl. (vii). If the matter is confirmed to cl. (vii) it is
clear that the Board could levy toll only on vehicles
entering the municipality and not on vehicles leaving the
municipality. The Legislature having expressly so limited
the power of the Board, we think that no extension of that
power could be contemplated under cl. (xiv) even if it may
be right to say that tolls as such can be levied on vehicles
leaving the municipality as well as on vehicles entering the
municipality--a point which we do not decide. The larger
power, if any, must be held to be cut down by necessary
implication. To permit tolls to be levied on vehicles
leaving the municipality would render ineffec-
896
tive that part of cl. (vii) which lays emphasis on vehicles
entering the municipality. Such an extension of power
through cl. (xiv) cannot be supported. When the Board
amended the notification in 1955 the position regarding
tolls remained unaltered. The power of the Legislature
derivable from entry 59 of the Constitution was not
available because the tax was not a tax on passengers but on
vehicles and the power to levy tolls continued to be res-
tricted to vehicles entering the municipality. That
restriction made it impossible to extend the power regarding
tolls in respect of vehicles leaving the municipality. The
second notification also drew power from cl. (vii) only and
that was patently wrong because that clause limited the
power to levy tolls on vehicles entering the municipality.
The third notification was irrelevant as it came after the
petitions were filed in the High Court and it was also
subject to the same restriction.
We were referred to dictionaries and to rulings of the
English Courts in an attempt to widen the meaning of the
word "toll". There were many kinds of tolls and all, of
course, must be taken to be comprehended by the entry
relating to tolls in the Government of India Act, 1935 or
the Constitution. There were for example toll-thorough and
toll-traverse which were the two main subdivisions and there
was toll-stallage. The first was a levy prescribed by towns
for animals or men that went through highways of a town or
over ferries, bridges etc. belonging to it. Toll-traverse
was charged for passing over a private person’s ground.
Toll-stallage was a charge for occupation of land by
pitching stalls in fairs and markets. A toll was thus a
tribute or custom paid for a privilege, generally for
passage over or for using a bridge, road, ferry, railway and
sometimes for occupation of market, port, anchorage etc. .
The justification for tolls was that the person charged
enjoyed a privilege and the amount went towards the
construction, improvement or upkeep of these things. Tolls
were a common feature of mediaeval Europe and England and
toll roads and turnpike roads were so common that it was
impossible to go any distance without having to pay some
charge. Tolls went out of fashion and were abandoned
because they were very unpopular and the charges for
maintenance of roads, bridges, ferries etc. were directly
levied as taxes. They lingered for sometime as octrois
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which were picturesquely described as "in gate" tolls being
collected at the gates of a town or toll-barriers. Even
octrois have disappeared in Europe and England but they have
continued to persist in India.
Whether such tolls were collected only on entry or only on
departure or both on entry and departure it is not easy to
say.
897
Mr. Setalvad could give no instance of any practice in which
they were levied both on entry and exit on the same vehicle.
The better view appears to be that they can be collected
only once and at the point of entry only though for
convenience, they may be collected at any one end as for
example toll for crossing a bridge which allows either entry
to the bridge or takes the toll after the bridge is
traversed. It is taken from those about to enter and from
those about to leave but not twice.
We need not concern ourselves with this problem which was
placed before us by Mr. Setalvad because toll as such can
only be collected under the Municipalities Act from vehicles
entering the municipal limits. This, in our opinion,
exhausts all the power delegated by the Legislature to the
municipal Boards and that power cannot be extended either by
considerations derived from the nature of tolls or from the
residuary cl. (xiv). It is, therefore, sufficient to say
that in the Hardwar Municipality the power to collect tolls
was limited in 1941 by cl. (vii) of S. 128 (1 ) and that
power continues to be so limited.
In this view of the matter the distinction made by the Divi-
sional Bench between vehicles which need not pay toll on
leaving the municipal limits because they have paid toll on
entry and vehicles which have not paid any toll till
leaving, may not be quite correct. Mr. Setalvad contended
that this distinction must not continue because the amount
of toll is dependent on the number of passengers in the
vehicle and the vehicle may enter with few passengers and
leave with many more. That in our opinion is an irrelevant
consideration because the right to levy toll is confined to
vehicles entering the municipality and no question of
vehicles leaving the municipality can enter the discussion.
The Divisional Bench was in error in introducing this
consideration and the decision of Mehrotra J. was right in
all the circumstances of the case. As, however, the owners
of vehicles have not appealed or objected, we will only
dismiss the appeals and order no modification in the order
of the Divisional Bench. The appellant Board shall bear the
cases of this appeal. One hearing fee.
Appeals dismissed.
898