Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 18
PETITIONER:
WESTERN COALFIELDS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SPECIAL AREA DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY, KORBA AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT26/11/1981
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
DESAI, D.A.
CITATION:
1982 AIR 697 1982 SCR (2) 1
1982 SCC (1) 125 1981 SCALE (3)1775
CITATOR INFO :
D 1983 SC 937 (12)
D 1988 SC1369 (14)
F 1988 SC1708 (13)
D 1988 SC1737 (53)
RF 1989 SC 222 (3)
RF 1991 SC1676 (47,48,49,53)
ACT:
Madhya Pradesh Nagar Tatha Gram Nivesh Adhiniyam (23 of
1973), S 69(d), Madhya Pradesh Municipalities Act 1961, S.
127A and Madhya Pradesh Municipal Corporation Act 1956, Ss.
135, 136.
Property Tax-Levy of-Whether special Area Development
Authority has all the powers of taxation which a Municipal
Corporation or Municipal Council has-Whether incorporation
of earlier Act in a later Act or reference to the powers
conferred by earlier Acts.
Constitution of India 1950, Act 285(1), M.P.
Municipalities Act 1961, s. 147 Expln. and M.P. Municipal
Corporation Act 1956, s. 141-Property tax on leased lands-
Land owned by State Government-Taken on lease by Company-
Entire share capital of company subscribed by Central
Government-Liability to payment of property tax-Whether
arises.
Coal Mines Nationalisation Act 1973, s. 5, Mines &
Mineral (Regulation and Development) Act 1957 s. 2 and M.P.
Nagar Tatha Gram Nivesh Adhiniyam 1973, s. 69(d)-Power
conferred on State Legislature to impose property tax
whether in conflict with the power to regulate and develop
coal mine conferred by Nationalisation Act.
HEADNOTE:
The Madhya Pradesh Municipalities Act, 1961 by S. 127
(1) (i) empowered a municipal council to impose, in the
whole or any part of the municipality, "a tax payable by the
owners of houses, buildings or lands situated within the
limits of Municipality with reference to annual letting
value of the house, building or land called property tax".
The corresponding provision in the Madhya Pradesh Municipal
Corporation Act, 1956 was section 132(1)(a), and it provided
that "the Corporation shall impose a tax payable by the
owners of buildings or lands situated within the city with
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 18
reference to the gross annual letting value of the building
or land called the property tax". The procedure for
imposition of taxes was spelt out in section 129 of the
Municipalities Act and section 133 of the Municipal
Corporation Act. Section 127A was inserted in the
Municipalities Act for imposition of property tax and
provided by sub-clause (1) that as and from the financial
year 1976-77 there shall be charged, levied and paid for
each financial year a tax on the lands or buildings or both
situated in a municipality at specified rates. Sub-clause
(2) exempted properties owned by or vesting in the Union
Government, State Government or the Council from the levy.
Similar
2
provisions were inserted in sections 135 and 136 of the
Municipal Corporation Act.
Respondent No. 1 was constituted the Special Area
Development Authority under section 65 of the Madhya Pradesh
Nagar Tatha Gram Nivesh Adhiniyam (23 of 1973). Clauses (c)
and (d) of section 69 of the Act conferred upon the
Development Authority powers for the purpose of municipal
administration and for the purpose of taxation. These
clauses were inserted by Ordinance 26 of 1975 which came
into force on February 27, 1976. The Ordinance was replaced
by the Madhya Pradesh Nagar Tatha Gram Nivesh (Sanshodhan)
Adhiniyam 1976 (6 of 1976).
On June 24, 1976 respondent 1 entered into an agreement
with the appellant company under which the company agreed to
contribute a sum of rupees 3 lakhs annually to the "seed
capital" of the Authority in consideration of the Authority
agreeing not to exercise its power of taxation or of levying
any other charges on the assets and activities of the
company. The agreement was to remain in force for a period
of ten years beginning from the calendar year 1976 and the
annual payments due from 1977 were to be made in January
every year. The appellant company paid the contribution for
the year 1976. In the same year the company was called upon
by the Sales Tax authorities to pay "the tax on the entry of
goods" which was introduced by the Madhya Pradesh Sthaniya
Kshetra Me Mal Ke Pravesh Par Kar Adhyadesh 1976 in
substitution of octroi tax. While the company was pursuing
that matter with the State Government, contending that it
was not liable to pay the entry tax by reason of the
agreement, on January 4, 1977 respondent 1 made a further
demand of Rs. 3 lakhs on the company for contribution for
the year 1977. That amount not having been paid as provided
in the agreement, respondent 1 terminated the agreement by
its letter dated February 4, 1977.
By a notice issued under section 65 of the Madhya
Pradesh Nagar Tatha Gram Nivesh Adhiniyam ’Act of 1973’ on
February 21, 1977 and by another notice issued under section
164(3) of the Madhya Pradesh Municipalities Act 1961 on
April 15, 1977, the Chief Executive Officer of respondent 1
called upon the company to pay a sum of about Rs. 13 lakhs
by way of property tax for the year 1976-77. On July 16,
1977 the company was called upon to pay a further sum of
about Rs. 13 lakhs as property tax for the year 1977-78.
The company disputed its liability to pay on the ground
that no tax was leviable on its property since the company
was owned wholly by the Government of India and that
respondent 1 was estopped from levying the property tax by
reason of the agreement of 1976. Having failed to pursuade
respondent 1 to accept its point of view, and also having
failed in the High Court the appellant company came to this
Court in appeal.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 18
In the appeals to this Court it was contended: (1) that
respondent 1 can exercise only such powers to levy property
tax as the Municipal Corporation or the Municipal Council
had under the Madhya Pradesh Municipal Corporation Act, 1956
or the Madhya Pradesh Municipalities Act, 1961 as these Acts
stood on February 27, 1976, when clause (d) was inserted in
section 69 of the Act of 1973. Section 127A and section 135
which create and levy the charge of property
3
tax having been inserted in the Municipalities Act and the
Municipal Corporation Act respectively with effect from
April 1, 1976 i.e. subsequent to the insertion of clause (d)
in section 69 of the Act of 1973, Respondent 1 was
incompetent to exercise the powers of the Municipality or
the Municipal Corporation under section 127A of the
Municipal Corporation Act or section 136 of the Municipal
Corporation Act; (2) that respondent 1 cannot impose the
property tax without following the procedure prescribed by
section 129 of the Municipalities Act and section 133 of the
Municipal Corporation Act; (3) that Article 285(1) of the
Constitution envisages that the property of the Union shall
save in so far as Parliament may by law otherwise provide be
exempt from all taxes imposed by a State or by any authority
within a State. Section 127A(2) of the Madhya Pradesh
Municipalities Act and section 136 of the Madhya Pradesh
Municipal Corporation Act also provide that the property tax
shall not be leviable, on "buildings and lands owned by or
vesting in the Union Government". The appellant companies
being wholly owned by the Government of India, the lands and
buildings owned by the companies cannot be subjected to
property tax; (4) that the lands having been taken on lease
for a period of 30 years by the appellant companies, it is
the State Government and not the appellant companies who can
be called upon to pay the tax; and (5) that Parliament
enacted the Coal Mines Nationalisation Act, 1973 for
acquisition of coal mines and utilisation of coal resources
to subserve the common good. The lands and buildings on
which respondent 1 had imposed the property tax are used for
the purposes of and are covered by coal mines. The taxing
power of the State legislature comes in conflict with the
power and function of the Union to regulate and develop the
mines as envisaged by the Nationalisation Act, and is an
impediment since it substantially increased the cost of the
developmental activities.
Dismissing the appeals,
^
HELD: (i) Section 69(d) of the Act of 1973 must be read
to mean that respondent 1 shall have all the powers of
taxation which a Municipal Corporation or a Municipal
Council has at the time when respondent 1 seeks to exercise
those powers. [14 A]
(ii) The Act of 1973 does not provide for any
independent power of taxation or any machinery of its own
for exercising the power of taxation. It rests content by
referring to the provisions contained in the two Municipal
Acts. The three Acts are supplemental, from which it must
follow that amendments made to the earlier Acts after the
enactment of section 69(d) shall have to be read into that
section. Without recourse to such a construction the power
of taxation conferred by that section will become
ineffectual. [14 B-C]
(iii) A reading of the reference to the two earlier
Municipal Acts as a reference to those Acts as they stand at
the time when the power of taxation is sought to be
exercised by respondent 1 will not cause repugnancy between
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 18
the two earlier Acts on one hand and the Act of 1973 on the
other, nor will it cause any confusion in the practical
application of the earlier Acts, because the Act of 1973
does not contain any independent provision or machinery for
exercising the power of taxation. [14 D]
4
(iv) If an earlier legislation is incorporated into a
later legislation, the provisions of earlier law which are
incorporated into the later law become a part and parcel of
the later law. Therefore, amendments made in the earlier law
after the date of incorporation cannot by their own force,
be read into the later law. That is because the legislature,
cannot be assumed to intend to bind itself to all future
amendments or modifications which may be made in the earlier
law. [12 D-E]
(v) Where a statute is incorporated by reference into a
second statute, the repeal of the first statute by a third
does not affect the second. Likewise, where certain
provisions from an existing Act have been incorporated into
a subsequent Act, no addition to the former Act, which is
not expressly made applicable to the subsequent Act, can be
deemed to be incorporated in it. [12G-13A]
(vi) The broad principle that where a subsequent Act
incorporates provisions of a previous Act then the borrowed
provisions become an integral and independent part of the
subsequent Act and are totally unaffected by any repeal or
amendment in the previous Act, is subject to four
exceptions, one of which is that the principle will not
apply to cases "where the subsequent Act and the previous
Act are supplemental to each other". [13 D]
Secretary of State for India in Council v. Hindustan
Co-operative Insurance Society, Limited, 58 Indian Appeals,
259, Clarke v. Bradlaugh, [1881] 8 Q.B.D. 63 69; Collector
of Customs, Madras v. Nathella Samathu Chetty & Anr., [1962]
3 S.C.R. 786 and State of Madhya Pradesh v. M.V. Narasimhan,
[1976] 1 SCR 6, referred to.
In the instant case, subsequent amendments made to the
Municipal Corporation Act and the Municipalities Act will
also apply to the power of taxation provided for in section
69(d) of the Act of 1973. The Act of 1973 did not by section
69(d), incorporate in its true signification any particular
provision of the two earlier Acts. It provided that, for the
purpose of taxation, the Special Area Development Authority
shall have the powers which a Municipal Corporation or a
Municipal Council has under the Madhya Pradesh Municipal
Corporation Act, 1956 or the Madhya Pradesh Municipalities
Act, 1961. The case, therefore, is not one of incorporation
but of mere reference to the powers conferred by the earlier
Acts. [13 E-F]
2(i) Section 127A of the Municipalities Act and section
135 of the Municipal Corporation Act create by their own
force, the liability to be brought to property tax and the
right to levy that tax. Nothing further is required to be
done by the Municipality or the Municipal Corporation in
order to impose the property tax. The procedure preliminary
to the imposition of other taxes which is prescribed by
sections 129 and 133 of the two Acts, can have no
application to the imposition of the property tax. [14 F-15
A]
(ii) The property tax is imposed by respondent 1 under
section 127A of the Municipalities Act and section 135 of
the Municipal Corporation Act. It is not imposed under
section 127 of the former Act or section 132 of the latter
Act. It is, therefore, not necessary to follow the procedure
prescribed by sections 129 and 133 of the respective Acts.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 18
[15 B-C]
5
3. Even though the entire share capital of the
appellant companies has been subscribed by the Government of
India, it cannot be predicated that the companies themselves
are owned by the Government of India. The companies, which
are incorporated under the Companies Act, have a corporate
personality of their own, distinct from that of the
Government of India. The lands and buildings, are vested in
and owned by the companies; the Government of India only
owns the share capital. [16 A-B]
Rustom Cavasjee Cooper v. Union of India, [1970] 3
S.C.R. 530, 555, Heavy Engineering Mazdoor Union v. The
State of Bihar, [1969] 3 S.C.R. 995, Andhra Pradesh State
Road Transport Corporation v. The Income-tax Officer & Anr.
[1964] 7 S.C.R. 17 & Tamlin v. Hansaford [1950] K.B. 18
referred to.
4. The Explanation to section 147 of the Municipalities
Act says that the property tax has to be paid by the owner
of the land or building and that a tenant of land or
building or both, who holds the same under a lease for an
agreed period, shall be deemed to be the owner thereof.
Section 141(1) of the Municipal Corporation Act provides
that the property tax shall be paid primarily by the owner.
By sub-section (2) of section 141, the property tax levied
on the owner can also be recovered from the occupier of the
land or the building.[18D-E]
5(i) The power conferred by the State Legislature on
Special Area Development Authorities to impose the property
tax on lands and buildings is not in conflict with the power
conferred by the Coal Mines Nationalisation Act on the Union
Government to regulate and develop coal mines so as to
ensure rational and scientific utilisation of coal
resources. [21 G]
(ii) The paramount purpose behind the declaration
contained in section 2 of the Mines and Minerals (Regulation
and Development) Act, 1957 is not in any manner defeated by
the legitimate exercise of taxing power under section 69(d)
of the Act of 1973. [21 H-22A]
H.R.S. Murthy v. Collector of Chitoor and Another,
[1964] 6 S.C.R. 666, State of Haryana & Anr. v. Chanan Mal
[1976] 3 SCR 688 and The Ishwari Khetan Sugar Mills (P) Ltd.
v. The State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. [1980] 3 SCR 331
referred to.
Baijnath Kedia v. State of Bihar & Ors. [1970] 2 S.C.R.
100, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 1025-26
of 1978.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment order dated
the 15th April, 1978 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in
Misc. Petition Nos. 61 and 62/78 respectively.
With
Civil Appeal No. 213 of 1979
6
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated the 15th April, 1978 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court
in Misc. Petition o.555 of 1977.
L.N. Sinha, Attorney General, R. B. Datar and Miss A.
Subhashini for the Appellants.
Y.S. Dharamadhikari, N. M. Ghatate and S. V. Deshpande
for the Respondent.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 18
Y.S. Chitale, Suresh Sethi and S. K. Bhattacharya for
the applicant intervener Municipal Corpn. of Delhi.
Altaf Ahmed for the applicant intervener J & K State
Agro. Industrial Corpn. Ltd.
S. K. Gambhir for the applicant intervener State of
M.P.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, C.J. These appeals by special leave
involve the question of the legality of the demand for
Property-tax made by respondent 1 on the appellant
Companies. Civil Appeal No. 213 of 1979 filed by the Bharat
Aluminium Company Ltd. arises out of Misc. Petition No. 555
of 1977 filed by it in the High Court of Madhya Pradesh
under Article 226 of the Constitution. Respondent 1 is the
Special Area Development Authority, Korba, District
Bilaspur, M.P., respondent 2 is its Chairman and respondent
3 is the State of Madhya Pradesh. Since the three appeals
raise similar questions, we will refer to the facts of Civil
Appeal No. 213 of 1979 only. Civil Appeals Nos. 1025 and
1026 of 1978 are by Western Coalfields Ltd.
The appellant, Bharat Aluminium Company Ltd., is a
Government Company incorporated under the Companies Act,
1956, the entire share capital being owned by the Government
of India. Respondent 1, the Special Area Development
Authority for the Korba Special Area, is constituted under
section 65 of the Madhya Pradesh Nagar Tatha Gram Nivesh
Adhiniyam (23 of 1973), referred to hereinafter as ’the Act
of 1973’. That Act was passed by the Madhya Pradesh
Legislature in order "to make provision for planning and
development and use of land; to make better provision for
the preparation of development plans and zoning plans with a
view to ensuring that town planning schemes are made in a
proper manner and their execution is made effective; to
constitute Town
7
and Country Planning Authority for proper implementation of
town and country development plan; to provide for the
development and administration of special areas through
Special Area Development Authority; to make provision for
the compulsory acquisition of land required for the purpose
of the development plans and for purposes connected with the
matters aforesaid". Chapter VIII of the Act, consisting of
sections 64 to 71, is entitled "Special Areas". Section 64
empowers the State Government to declare any area as a
special area by issuing a notification. Section 55 provides
that for every Special Area there shall be a Special Area
Development Authority consisting of a Chairman and such
other members as the Government may determine from time to
time. The Chairman and the members of the Development
Authority are appointed by the Government. Section 68, which
prescribes the functions of the Development Authority, lays
down by clauses (v) and (vi) that the Development Authority
shall make provision for the municipal services and
municipal management of the Special Area. Section 69, by
clauses (c) and (d), confers upon the Development Authority
powers for the purpose of municipal administration and for
the purpose of taxation. These two clauses of section 69 and
clauses (v) and (vi) of section 68 were inserted in their
present shape by Ordinance 26 of 1975 which came into force
on February 27, 1976. The Ordinance was replaced by the
Madhya Pradesh Nagar Tatha Gram Nivesh (Sanshodhan)
Adhiniyam, 1976 (6 of 1976).
Section 69(d) of the Act of 1973 reads thus:
"69. Powers: The Special Area Development
Authority shall
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 18
(d) for the purpose of taxation have the powers
which is municipal corporation or a municipal council
has, as the case may be, under the Madhya Pradesh
Municipal Corporation Act, 1956 (No. 23 of 1956) or the
Madhya Pradesh Municipalities Act, 1961 (No. 37 of
1961),
(a) where the municipal corporation of
municipal council existed in such area prior to
its designation as special area under section 64,
according to the municipal law by which such
special area was governed, and
(b) where no municipal corporation or
municipal council existed in such area prior to
its designation as special area under section 64,
according to such of the aforesaid Acts as the
State Government may direct."
8
Clauses (a) and (b) above are sub-clauses of clause (d).
(They should better have not been so numbered alphabetically
since the main clauses themselves are similarly numbered).
Since there was no Municipal Corporation or Municipal
Council in the Korba Special Area prior to the constitution
of the Development Authority, the Government was required
under sub-clause (b) above to direct whether the Madhya
Pradesh Municipal Corporation Act, 1956, or the Madhya
Pradesh Municipalities Act, 1961, shall apply to the Korba
Special Area for the purposes of clauses (v) and (vi) of
section 68 and clauses (c) and (d) of section 69. Such a
direction was first issued by Notification dated January 28,
1976 published in the Government Gazette, dated February 27,
1976 by which the Development Authority, Korba, was directed
to exercise the powers and perform the functions of a Class
I Municipality constituted under the Madhya Pradesh
Municipality Act, 1961. This Notification became effective
from February 27,1976 from which date Ordinance No. 26 of
1975 was made effective. By another Notification, dated
March 15, 1977, published in Government Gazette, dated July
15, 1977, the Development Authority, Korba, was directed
under the aforesaid clauses of sections 68 and 69 to
exercise the powers and perform the functions under the
Madhya Pradesh Municipal Corporation Act, 1956.
Section 127(1)(i) of the Madhya Pradesh Municipalities
Act, 1961 empowers a municipal council to impose, in the
whole or any part of the municipality, "a tax payable by the
owners of houses, buildings or lands situated within the
limits of Municipality with reference to annual letting
value of the house, building or land called property tax".
The corresponding provision in the Madhya Pradesh Municipal
Corporation Act, 1956 is section 132 (1)(a). It says that
"the Corporation shall impose a tax payable by the owners of
buildings or lands situated within the city with reference
to the gross annual letting value of the building or land
called the property tax". The procedure for imposition of
taxes is contained in section 129 of the Municipalities Act
and section 133 of the Municipal Corporation Act.
In 1964, the Madhya Pradesh State Legislature had
enacted the Madhya Pradesh Nagariya Sthawar Sampatti Kar
Adhiniyam, which was made applicable to the whole State,
including the urban areas. By section 36 of the aforesaid
Adhiniyam, local authorities were prohibited from recovering
the property tax from November 24, 1970.
9
Towards the beginning of 1976, the Government decided
to abolish octroi tax and to impose in its place a ’tax on
the entry of goods’. To compensate the municipal councils
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 18
and the municipal corporations for the loss arising from the
abolition of the octroi tax, the Government decided to
confer powers on these bodies for levying property tax. For
conferring powers to levy tax on the entry of goods in place
of octroi tax, the Madhya Pradesh Sthaniya Kshetra Me Mal Ke
Pravesh Par Kar Adhyadesh, 1976 (6 of 1976) was promulgated.
For conferring powers to levy property tax, Ordinance No. 4
of 1976 was promulgated. Both of these Ordinances were
published in the Madhya Pradesh Gazette, dated April 30,
1976 from which date they came into force. Ordinance No. 4
of 1976 inserted certain provisions in the Municipalities
Act and the Municipal Corporation Act. This ordinance was
replaced by Act No. 50 of 1976. By section 1(2) of that Act,
the provisions inserted in the Municipalities Act and the
Municipal Corporation Act, with which we are concerned, were
deemed to have come into force with effect from April 1,
1976. Section 127A which was inserted in the Municipalities
Act for imposition of property tax reads as follows, in so
far as relevant:
"127A. (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in
this chapter, as and from the financial year 1976-77,
there shall be charged, levied and paid for each
financial year a tax on the lands or buildings or both
situate in a municipality other than class IV
municipality at the rate specified in the table below:
(i) where the annual letting 6 per centum
value exceeds Rs. 1,800 of the annual
but does not exceed letting value.
Rs. 6,000.
(ii) X X X X X X
(iii)X X X X X X
(iv) X X X X X X
(v) where the annual letting 20 per centum
value exceeds of the annual
Rs. 24,000 letting value
(2) The property tax levied under sub-section (1)
shall not be leviable in respect of the following
properties, namely:
10
(a) building and lands owned by or vesting in
(i) the Union Government;
(ii) the State Government;
(iii)the Council."
Similar provisions were inserted in sections 135 and 136 of
the Municipal Corporation Act.
On June 24, 1976, respondent 1 (the Special Area
Development Authority, Korba) entered into an agreement with
the appellant Company under which the Company agreed to
contribute a sum of Rupees three lakhs annually to the "seed
capital" of the Authority in consideration of the Authority
agreeing not to exercise its power of taxation or of levying
any other charges on the assets and activities of the
Company under the Act of 1973 as amended from time to time
or under any other Act or notification. The agreement was to
remain in force for a period of ten years beginning from the
calendar year 1976 and the annual payments due from 1977
were to be made in January every year. The appellant Company
paid the contribution for the year 1976 as agreed. In the
same year, the Company was called upon by the Sales Tax
authorities to pay the tax on entry of goods which was
introduced in substitution of the octroi tax. While the
Company was pursuing that matter with the State Government,
contending that it was not liable to pay the entry tax by
reason of the aforesaid agreement, on January 4, 1977
respondent 1 made a further demand of Rs. 3 lakhs on the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 18
Company for contribution for the year 1977. That amount not
having been paid as provided in the agreement, respondent 1
terminated the agreement by its letter dated February 4,
1977. The Company sent a cheque for Rs. 3 lakhs to
respondent 1 on April, 28, 1977.
By a notice issued under section 65 of the Act of 1973
on February 21,1977 and by another notice issued under
section 164(3) of the Madhya Pradesh Municipalities Act 1961
on April 15, 1977, the Chief Executive Officer of respondent
1 called upon the Company to pay a sum of Rs. 13,22,160 by
way of property tax for the year 1976-77. By a letter dated
May 21, 1977 respondent 1 reduced the demand by Rs. 3 lakhs
being the amount paid by the Company by way of contribution
for the year 1977, under the agreement of 1976. On July 16,
1977 the Company was called upon to pay a further sum of Rs.
13,65,673.50 as property tax for the year 1977-78.
11
The appellant Company disputed its liability to pay the
aforesaid amounts on the grounds, principally, that no tax
was leviable on its property since the Company was owned
wholly by the Government of India and that respondent 1 was
estopped from levying the property tax by reason of the
agreement of 1976. Having failed to persuade respondent 1 to
accept its point of view, the Company filed o Writ Petition
in the Madhya Pradesh High Court asking that the demands be
quashed. Civil Appeal No. 213 of 1979 by special leave is
directed against the dismissal of the Writ Petition.
In the other two appeals (Nos. 1025 and 1026 of 1978),
the appellant, Western Coalfields Ltd., is also a hundred
per cent undertaking of the Government of India. That
Company has been called upon by respondent 1 to pay property
tax for the years 1976-77 and 1977-78 in the sum of Rs.
3,71,461 for each year. The Writ Petitions (61 and 62 of
1978) filed by it were dismissed by the High Court,
following the judgment delivered in the Writ Petition filed
by the Bharat Aluminium Company Ltd.
Civil Misc. Petitions Nos. 13211 of 1979 and 3767 of
1980 are for intervention by the Jammu and Kashmir State
Agro Industries Corporation Ltd. and the Delhi Municipal
Corporation respectively. The Delhi High Court has held in
L.P.A. 105 of 1979 that the Delhi Municipal Corporation has
the power to levy property-tax on the property of the Jammu
and Kashmir State Agro Industries Corporation Ltd., whose
share capital is owned by the State of Jammu and Kashmir and
the Union of India in the proportion of 51% and 49%
respectively. In Special Leave Petition No. 10688 of 1979
filed against the judgment, the question raised is whether
the property of a public corporation owned wholly by the
State Government and the Union Government is exempt from
taxes by reason of articles 285 and 289 of the Constitution.
We have allowed both the parties to intervene in these
appeals.
The learned Attorney General, who appears on behalf of
the appellants, has raised four or five principal points,
any one of which, if accepted, will result in the success of
these appeals. However, we are unable to accept any of
these.
The first contention of the learned Attorney General is
that respondent I can exercise only such powers to levy
property tax as the Municipal Corporation or the Municipal
Council had under the Madhya Pradesh Municipalities
Corporation Act, 1956, or the Madhya Pradesh Municipalities
Act, 1961, as these Acts stood on
12
February 27, 1976, when clause (d) was inserted in its
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 18
present form in section 69 of the Act of 1973. It is urged
that the provisions conferring powers of taxation under the
aforesaid two Acts must be taken to have been incorporated
in section 69(d) of the Act of 1973 and any subsequent
change in those provisions by amendment of the two Acts
cannot be availed of by respondent 1. Section 127A and
section 135 which, by their own force, create and levy the
charge of property tax were inserted in the Municipalities
Act and the Municipal Corporation Act respectively with
effect from April 1, 1976, that is, subsequent to the
insertion of clause (d) in section 69 of the Act of 1973.
Relying on this, it is argued that respondent 1 was
incompetent to exercise the powers of the Municipality or
the Municipal Corporation under section 127A of the
Municipalities Act or section 135 of the Municipal
Corporation Act.
The answer to this contention will depend mainly upon
whether the provisions of the Municipalities Act and the
Municipal Corporation Act were incorporated into the Act of
1973 by its section 69(d). It is well-settled that if an
earlier legislation is incorporated into a later
legislation, the provisions of earlier law which are
incorporated into the later law become a part and parcel of
the later law. Therefore, amendments made in the earlier law
after the date of incorporation cannot, by their own force,
be read into the later law. That is because the legislature,
which adopts by incorporation the existing provisions of
another law, cannot be assumed to intend to bind itself to
all future amendments or modifications which may be made in
the earlier law. In other words, the incorporating Act does
nothing more than borrow certain provisions of an existing
Act and instead of setting out, verbatim, those provisions
in its own creation, refers to them as a matter of
convenience in the mode of drafting. (See Secretary of State
for India in Council v. Hindustan Co-operative Insurance
Society Limited; Craies on Statute Law, 7th Edition, pages
360-361.)
The principle, broadly, is that where a statute is
incorporated by reference into a second statute, the repeal
of the first statute by a third does not affect the second
(see Clarke v. Bradlaugh). Likewise, logically, where
certain provisions from an existing Act have been
incorporated into a subsequent Act, no addition to the
former Act, which is not expressly made applicable to the
subsequent Act,
13
can be deemed to be incorporated in it. (see Secretary of
State for India in Council v. Hindusthan Cooperative
Insurance Society Ltd). (supra) But these rules are not
absolute and inflexible. In the case last cited, the Privy
Council qualified its statement of the law by saying that
the principle, that an amendment of the first law which is
not expressly made applicable to the subsequent
incorporating Act cannot be deemed to be incorporated into
the second Act, applies "if it is possible for the
subsequent Act to function effectually without the addition"
(page 267). Besides, as held by a Constitution Bench of this
Court in the Collector of Customs, Madras v. Nathella
Samathu Chetty & Anr. the decision of the Privy Council
could not be extended too far so as to cover every case in
which the provisions of another statute are adopted by
absorption (see page 837). Finally, in State of Madhya
Pradesh v. M. V. Narasimhan this Court held, after an
examination of the relevant decisions, that the broad
principle that where a subsequent Act incorporates
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 18
provisions of a previous Act then the borrowed provisions
become an integral and independent part of the subsequent
Act and are totally unaffected by any repeal or amendment in
the previous Act, is subject to four exceptions, one of
which is that the principle will not apply to cases "where
the subsequent Act and the previous Act are supplemental to
each other".
Applying these principles, we are of the opinion that
in the instant case, subsequent amendments made to the
Municipal Corporation Act and the Municipalities Act will
also apply to the power of taxation provided for in section
69(d) of the Act of 1973. The Act of 1973 did not, by
section 69(d), incorporate in its true signification any
particular provision of the two earlier Acts. It provides
that, for the purpose of taxation, the Special Area
Development Authority shall have the powers which a
Municipal Corporation or a Municipal Council has under the
Madhya Pradesh Municipal Corporation Act, 1956 or the Madhya
Pradesh Municipalities Act, 1961. The case therefore is not
one of incorporation but of mere reference to the powers
conferred by the earlier Acts. As observed in Nathella
Sampathu Chetty, there is a distinction between a mere
reference to or a citation of one statute in another and an
incorporation which in effect means the bodily lifting of
the provisions of one enactment and making them part of
another, so much so that the repeal of the former leaves the
latter wholly untouched.
14
Section 69(d) of the Act of 1973 must accordingly be read to
mean that respondent 1 shall have all the powers of taxation
which a Municipal Corporation or a Municipal Council has for
the time being, that is to say, at the time when respondent
1 seeks to exercise those powers.
The Act of 1973 does not provide for any independent
power of taxation or any machinery of its own for exercising
the power of taxation. It rests content by pointing its
finger to the provisions contained in the two Municipal
Acts. The three Acts are therefore supplemental, from which
it must follow that amendments made to the earlier Acts
after the enactment of section 69(d) shall have to be read
into that section. Without recourse to such a construction,
the power of taxation conferred by that section will become
ineffectual. A reading of the reference to the two earlier
Municipal Acts as a reference to those Acts as they stand at
the time when the power of taxation is sought to be
exercised by respondent 1, will not, possibly, cause
repugnancy between the two earlier Acts on one hand and the
Act of 1973 on the other, nor indeed will it cause any
confusion in the practical application of the earlier Acts,
because the Act of 1973 does not contain any independent
provision or machinery for exercising the power of taxation.
The first contention of the Attorney General must therefore
fail.
The second contention is that assuming that section
127A of the Municipalities Act or section 135 of the
Municipal Corporation Act, which were introduced by an
amendment made after the enactment of section 69(d), can be
invoked for levying the property tax, respondent 1 cannot
impose that tax without following the procedure prescribed
by sections 129 and 133 of the aforesaid Acts, respectively.
This contention is devoid of substance. Sections 127A and
135 create, by their own force, the liability to be brought
to property tax and the right to levy that tax. They
provide:
Notwithstanding anything contained in this
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 18
chapter, as and from the financial year 1976-77, there
shall be charged, levied and paid for each financial
year a tax on the lands or buildings or both.......at
the rate specified in the table below:"
Nothing further is required to be done by the Municipality
or the Municipal Corporation in order to impose the property
tax and therefore the procedure preliminary to the
imposition of other taxes which is prescribed by sections
129 and 133 of the two Acts, can
15
have no application to the imposition of the property tax.
Apart from this the position is put beyond doubt by the
language of sections 129 and 133 of two Acts. Section 129 of
the Madhya Pradesh Municipalities Act prescribes the
procedure for "the imposition of any tax under section 127".
Similarly section 133 of the Madhya Pradesh Municipal
Corporation Act prescribes the procedure for "the imposition
of any tax under section 132". The property tax is imposed
by respondent 1 under section 127A of the Municipalities Act
and section 135 of the Municipal Corporation Act. It is not
imposed under section 127 of the former Act or section 132
of the latter Act. It is therefore not necessary to follow
the procedure prescribed by sections 129 and 133 of the
respective Acts. This position is made clear, out of
abundant caution, by clause (4) of section 133 of the
Municipal Corporation Act, which provides that nothing
contained in section 133 shall apply to the tax mentioned in
clause (a) of sub-section (1) of section 132, which shall be
charged and levied in accordance with section 135. Section
132(1)(a) refers to property tax.
The learned Attorney General contends that the taxing
authority must all the same apply its mind to the question
whether it wants to bring to tax the land or the building or
both. It is not possible to accept this submission because
sections 127A and 135 of the two Acts in question leave no
such choice open to the taxing authority. The obligation
which the statute places upon it is to impose tax on lands
where there are lands only and they can be taxed, on
buildings where buildings alone can be brought to tax and on
both lands and buildings where lands are built upon and both
can be brought to tax. This is not, as said by the Attorney
General rationalising the taxing power. What we have said is
the plain meaning of the taxing provision.
The third contention of the Attorney General flows from
the provisions of article 285(1) of the Constitution which
says that the property of the Union shall, save in so far as
Parliament may by law otherwise provide, be exempt from all
taxes imposed by a State or by any authority within a State.
Section 127A(2) of the Madhya Pradesh Municipalities Act and
section 136 of the Madhya Pradesh Municipal Corporation Act
also provide that the property tax shall not be leviable,
inter alia, on "buildings and lands owned by or vesting in
the Union Government". Relying on these provisions, it is
contended by the Attorney General that since the appellant
companies are wholly owned by the Government of India, the
lands
16
and buildings owned by the companies cannot be subjected to
property tax. The short answer to this contention is that
even though the entire share capital of the appellant
companies has been subscribed by the Government of India, it
cannot be predicated that the companies themselves are owned
by the Government of India. The companies, which are
incorporated under the Companies Act, have a corporate
personality of their own, distinct from that of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 18
Government of India. The lands and buildings are vested in
and owned by the companies: the Government of India only
owns the share capital. In Rustom Cavasjee Cooper v. Union
of India (The Banks Nationalisation case) it was held:
"A company registered under the Companies Act is a
legal person, separate and distinct from its individual
members. Property of the Company is not the property of
the shareholders. A shareholder has merely an interest
in the Company arising under its Articles of
Association, measured by a sum of money for the purpose
of liability, and by a share in the profit."
In Heavy Engineering Mazdoor Union v. The State of
Bihar & Ors., the Heavy Engineering Corporation Limited was
incorporated under the Companies Act and its entire share
capital was contributed by the Central Government. It was
therefore a Government Company under section 617 of the
Companies Act. On the question as to whether the Corporation
carried on an industry under the authority of the Central
Government within the meaning of section 2(a) of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, it was held by this Court
that an incorporated company has a separate existence and
the law recognises it as a juristic person, separate and
distinct from its members. The mere fact that the entire
share capital of the respondent company was contributed by
the Central Government and the fact that all its shares were
held by the President and certain officers of the Central
Government did not make any difference to that position.
The decision of this Court in the Andhra Pradesh State
Road Transport Corporation v. The Income-tax Officer & Anr.
puts the matter beyond all doubt. In that case, the Andhra
Pradesh Road
17
Transport Corporation claimed exemption from taxation under
article 289 of the Constitution by which, the property and
income of a State is exempt from union taxation. This Court,
while rejecting the Corporation’s claim, held that though it
was wholly controlled by the State Government it had a
separate entity and its income was not the income of the
State Government. Gajendragadkar, C. J., while speaking for
the Court, referred to the judgment of Lord Denning in
Tamlin v. Hansaford in which the learned Judge observed:
"In the eye of the law, the corporation is its own
master and is answerable as fully as any other person
or corporation. It is not the Crown and has none of the
immunities or privileges of the Crown. Its servants are
not civil servants, and its property is not Crown
property. It is as much bound by Acts of Parliament as
any other subject of the King. It is, of course, a
public authority and its purposes, no doubt, are public
purposes, but it is not a government department nor do
its powers fall within the province of government".
In Pennington’s Company Law, 4th Edition, pages 50-51, it is
stated that there are only two decided cases where the court
has disregarded the separate legal entity of a company and
that was done because the company was formed or used to
facilitate the evasion of legal obligations. The learned
author, after referring to English and American decisions,
has summed up the position in the words of an American
Judge, Sanborn, J. to the effect that as a general rule, a
corporation will be looked upon as a legal entity and an
exception can be made "when the notion of legal entity is
used to defeat public convenience, justify wrong, protect
fraud, or defend crime", in which case, "the law will regard
the corporation as an association of persons". In cases such
as those before us, there is no scope for applying the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 18
doctrine of lifting the veil in order to have regard to the
realities of the situation. The appellant companies were
incorporated under the Companies Act for a lawful purpose.
Their property is their own and it vests in them. Under
section 5(1) of the Coal Mines (Nationalisation) Act, 26 of
1973, which applies in the instant case, the right title and
interest of a nationalised coal mine vest, by direction of
the Central Government, in the Government company. If the
lands and building on which respondent 1 has imposed the
18
property tax cannot be regarded as the property of the
Central Government for several other purposes like
attachment and sale, there is no reason why, for taxing
purposes, the property can be treated as belonging to that
Government as distinct from the company which has a juristic
personality.
The learned Attorney General resisted the taxation on
the lands by contending that they belong to the Madhya
Pradesh State Government and were taken on lease for a
period of 30 years by the appellant companies. It is urged
that if at all the lands can be subjected to property tax,
it is the State Government and not the appellant companies
who can be called upon to pay that tax. This contention does
not appear to have been taken before the assessing
authority. No documents seem to have been filed before it to
bear out facts which are sought to be placed before us nor
indeed have we evidence before us to show that the lands
belong to the State Government. The appellants may, if so
advised, raise this particular point in future assessments.
We would, however, like to draw attention to the Explanation
to section 147 of the Madhya Pradesh Municipalities Act
which says that though the property tax has to be paid by
the owner of the land or building, as the case may be, for
the purposes of that section a tenant of land or building or
both, who holds the same under a lease for an agreed period
with a convenant for its renewal thereafter, shall be deemed
to be the owner thereof. Section 141(1) of the Madhya
Pradesh Municipal Corporation Act provides that the property
tax shall be paid primarily by the owner. By sub-section (2)
of section 141, the property tax levied on the owner can
also be recovered from the occupier of the land or the
building. These provisions shall have to be borne in mind by
the appellants before any attempt is made before the
assessing authority to transfer or avoid the impost of the
property tax.
Finally, the learned Attorney General raised a
contention of fundamental importance which was not raised in
the High Court. The lands and buildings on which respondent
1 has imposed the property tax are used for the purposes of
and are covered by coal mines. Basing himself on that
consideration the Attorney General argues:
(1) By virtue of the declaration contained in section
2 of Mines and Minerals (Development and
Regulation) Act, 1957, the legislative field
covered by Entry 23,
19
List II passed on the Parliament by virtue of
Entry 54, List I.
(2) The Parliament enacted the Coal Mines
Nationalisation Act, 1973 for acquisition of coal
mines with a view to reorganising and
reconstructing such coal mines so as to ensure the
rational, coordinated and scientific development
and utilisation of coal resources as best to
subserve the common good.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 18
(3) Under section 5 of the Nationalisation Act, the
acquired properties were vested in a Government
Company in order to carry out more conveniently
the object of that Act, and for that purpose, the
properties were freed from all encumbrances by
section 6 of the Act.
(4) The taxing power of the State legislature must be
construed as limited in its scope so as not to
come in conflict with the power and function of
the Union to regulate and develop the mines as
envisaged by the Nationalisation Act.
(5) The impugned tax is manifestly an impediment in
the discharge of the aforesaid function since it
substantially increases the cost of the
developmental activities. The tax is not in the
nature of a fee.
Apart from the fact that there is no data before us
showing that the property tax constitutes an impediment in
the achievement of the goals of the Coal Mines
Nationalisation Act, the provisions of the M.P. Act of 1973,
under which Special Areas and Special Area Development
Authorities are constituted afford an effective answer to
the Attorney General’s contention. Entry 23 of List II
relates to "Regulation of mines and mineral development
subject to the provisions of List I with respect to
regulation and development under the control of the Union".
Entry 54 of List I relates to "Regulation of mines and
mineral development to the extent to which such regulation
and development under the control of the Union is declared
by Parliament by law to be expedient in the public
interest". It is true that on account of the declaration
contained in section 2 of the Mines and Minerals
(Development and Regulation) Act, 1957, the legislative
field covered by Entry 23 of List II will pass on to
Parliament by virtue of Entry 54, List I. But in order to
20
judge whether, on that account, the State legislature loses
its competence to pass the Act of 1973, it is necessary to
have regard to the object and purpose of that Act and to the
relevant provisions thereof, under which Special Area
Development Authorities are given the power to tax lands and
buildings within their jurisdiction. We have set out the
objects of the Act at the commencement of this judgment. one
of which is to provide for the development and
administration of Special Areas through Special Area
Development Authorities, Section 64 of the Act of 1973,
which provides for the constitution of the special areas,
lays down by sub-section (4) that: Notwithstanding anything
contained in the Madhya Pradesh Municipal Corporation Act,
1956, the Madhya Pradesh Municipalities Act, 1961, or the
Madhya Pradesh Panchayats Act, 1962, the Municipal
Corporation, Municipal Council, Notified Area Committee or a
Panchayat, as the case may be, shall, in relation to the
special area and as from the date the Special Area
Development Authority undertakes the functions under clause
(v) or clause (vi) of section 68 cease to exercise the
powers and perform the function and duties which the Special
Area Development Authority is competent to exercise and
perform under the Act of 1973. Section 68 defines the
functions of the Special Area Development Authority, one of
which, as prescribed by clause (v), is to provide the
municipal services as specified in sections 123 and 124 of
the Madhya Pradesh Municipalities Act, 1961. Section 69,
which defines the powers of the Authority, shows that those
powers are conferred, inter alia, for the purpose of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 18
municipal administration. Surely, the functions, powers and
duties of Municipalities do not become an occupied field by
reason of the declaration contained in section 2 of the
Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957.
Though, therefore, on account of that declaration, the
legislative field covered by Entry 23, List II may pass on
to the Parliament by virtue of Entry 54, List I, the
competence of the State Government to enact laws for
municipal administration will remain unaffected by that
declaration.
Entry 5 of List II relates to "Local Government, that
is to say, the constitution and powers of municipal
corporations and other local authorities for the purpose of
local self-Government". It is in pursuance of this power
that the State Legislature enacted the Act of 1973. The
power to impose tax on lands and buildings is derived by the
State Legislature from Entry 49 of List II: "Taxes on lands
and buildings". The power of the municipalities to levy tax
on lands and buildings has been conferred by the State
Legis-
21
lature on the Special Area Development Authorities. Those
authorities have the power to levy that tax in order
effectively to discharge the municipal functions which are
passed on to them. Entry 54 of List I does not contemplate
the taking over of municipal functions.
Shri Dharmadhikari, who appears on behalf of the
respondents, has drawn our attention to the judgment of a
Constitution Bench of this Court in H.R.S. Murthy v.
Collector of Chittoor and Another, which provides a complete
answer to the Attorney General’s contention. In that case,
under the terms of a mining lease, the lessee worked the
mines and bound himself to pay a dead rent if he used the
leased land for the extraction of iron ore and to pay
surface rent in respect of the surface area occupied or used
by him. Demands were made upon the lessee for successive
years for the payment of land cess under sections 78 and 79
of the Madras District Boards Act, 1920. Those demands were
challenged by the lessee on the ground, inter alia, that the
provision imposing the land cess quoad royalty under the
mining leases must be held to have been repealed by the
Central Act viz. the Mines and Minerals (Regulation and
Development) Act, 1958, and the Mines and Minerals
(Regulation and Development) Act, 1957. This contention was
repelled by this Court by holding that sections 78 and 79 of
the Madras District Boards Act had nothing to do with the
development of mines and minerals or their regulation. The
proceeds of the land cess were required to be credited to
the District fund which had to be used for everything
necessary for or conducive to the safety, health,
convenience or education of the inhabitants or the amenities
of local area concerned. It was further held by the Court
that the land cess was not a tax on mineral rights but was
in truth and substance a "tax on lands" within the meaning
of Entry 49 of the State List. The reasoning adopted in this
decision shows that it is not correct to say that the
property tax provided for in the Act of 1973 is beyond the
legislative competence of the State Legislature; that tax
has nothing to do with the development of mines. The power
conferred by the State Legislature on Special Area
Development Authorities to impose the property tax on lands
and buildings is therefore not in conflict with the power
conferred by the Coal Mines Nationalisation Act on the Union
Government to regulate and develop the Coal mines so as to
ensure rational and scientific utilisation of coal
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 18
resources. The paramount purpose behind the declaration
contained in section 2 of the Mines and Minerals (Regulation
and Develop-
22
ment) Act, 1957 is not in any manner defeated by the
legitimate exercise of taxing power under section 69(d) of
the Act of 1973.
The decision of this Court in Baijnath Kedia v. State
of Bihar & Ors., on which the learned Attorney General
relies, is distinguishable. In that case, the Bihar
Government demanded dead rent, royalty and surface rent from
the appellant contrary to the terms of his lease on the
strength of the amended section 10(2) of the Bihar Land
Reforms Act, 1950, and the amended Rule 20 of the Bihar
Rules. This Court held that the pith and substance of the
amended section 10(2) fell within Entry 23 although it
incidentally touched land and that, therefore, the amendment
was subject to the overriding power of Parliament as
declared in section 15 of the Mines and Minerals (Regulation
and Development) Act, 1957. By the aforesaid declaration and
the enactment of section 15, the whole of the field relating
to minor minerals had come within the jurisdiction of
Parliament and no scope was left for the enactment of the
second proviso to section 10 of the Bihar Land Reforms Act.
The second sub-rule added to Rule 20 was held to be without
jurisdiction for the same reason.
That the declaration in section 2 of the Mines and
Minerals (Regulation and Development) Act, 1957 does not
result in invalidation of every State legislation relating
to mines and minerals is demonstrated effectively by the
decision in State of Haryana & Anr. v. Chanan Mal. The
Haryana State Legislature passed the Haryana Minerals
(Vesting of Rights) Act, 1973, under which two notifications
were issued for acquisition of right to saltpeter, a minor
mineral, and for auctioning certain saltpeter bearing areas.
It was held by this Court that the Haryana Act was not in
any way repugnant to the provisions of the Act of 1957 made
by Parliament and that the ownership rights could be validly
acquired by the State Government under the State Act.
The decision of a Constitution Bench of this Court in
The Ishwari Khetan Sugar Mills (P) Ltd. v. The State of
Uttar Pradesh & Ors., is even more to the point. In that
case, 12 sugar undertakings stood transferred to and were
vested in a Government undertaking under the U.P. Sugar
Undertakings (Acquisition) Ordinance, 1971, which later
became an Act. It was contended on behalf of
23
the sugar undertakings that since sugar is a declared
industry under the Industries (Development and Regulation)
Act, 1951, Parliament alone was competent to pass a law on
the subject and the State Legislature had no competence to
pass the impugned Act by reason of Entry 52, List I read
with Entry 24, List II. The majority, speaking through one
of us, Desai J., held that the legislative power of the
State under Entry 24, List II, was eroded only to the extent
to which control was assumed by the Union Government
pursuant to the declaration made by the Parliament in
respect of a declared industry and that the field occupied
by such enactment was the measure of the erosion of the
legislative competence of the State legislature. Since the
Central Act was primarily concerned with the development and
regulation of declared industries and not with the ownership
of industrial undertakings, it was held that the State
legislature had the competence to enact the impugned law.
Justice Pathak and Justice Koshal, who gave a separate
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 18
judgment concurring with the conclusion of the majority,
preferred to rest their decision on the circumstance that
the impugned legislation fell within Entry 42, List III-
’Acquisition and requisition of property’- and was therefore
within the competence of the State Legislature.
These are the main points argued by the learned
Attorney General on behalf of the appellant Companies. In
the High Court, an additional point was taken, based upon
the agreement dated June 24, 1976, which was entered into
between the appellant Companies and respondent 1. It was
contended in the High Court that respondent 1 had waived its
power of taxation by that agreement and, therefore, the
imposition of property tax was invalid. The High Court has
given weighty reasons for rejecting that argument and we
endorse those reasons. We adopt, particularly, the reasoning
of the High Court that in the meeting of January 29, 1976,
respondent 1 had decided to give up its right to impose the
Octroi tax only. The Chairman of respondent 1, therefore,
acted beyond the scope of his authority in entering into the
agreement with the appellant Companies, under which
respondent 1 bound itself not to impose any tax whatsoever.
For these reasons the appeals fail and are dismissed
with costs.
N.V.K. Appeals dismissed.
24