Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE SALVATION ARMY, WESTERN INDIA TERRITORY
DATE OF JUDGMENT10/02/1975
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BHAGWATI, P.N.
UNTWALIA, N.L.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 846 1975 SCR (3) 475
1975 SCC (1) 509
CITATOR INFO :
F 1975 SC2037 (19)
R 1975 SC2193 (3)
F 1978 SC1181 (6)
C 1980 SC1008 (20,51)
R 1989 SC 100 (16)
ACT:
Bombay Public Trusts Act, 1950, ss. 57 and 58 and Rule 32 of
rules framed under Act--Difference between tax and
fee--Liability for contribution by public trust at 2% of
gross income--If tax or fee.
HEADNOTE:
Section 57(1) of the Bombay Public Trusts Act, 1950 states
that there shall be established a Fund to be called the
’Public Trusts Administration Fund’ and that the fund shall
vest in the Charity Commissioner appointed under the Act.
One of the amounts which go to make the Fund is the
contribution made by a public trust under s. 58. Section 58
as amended by Amending Act, 1962, provides that in the case
of a public trust, other than a dharmada, the contribution
shall be at the prescribed rate on the gross annual income.
Gross annual income is defined to mean the gross income from
all sources, including donations and offerings, excluding,
inter alia payments made with a specific direction sat the
payment made, shall form part of the corpus of the public
trust. Rule 32 of the rules made under the Act prescribed
the rate of 2% of the gross annual income. In the Amending
Act, provision was made in s. 4 for retrospective operation
of the provisions of the Act and the rule.
The respondent was registered as a public limited company
under the Indian Companies Act, 1913, and also under the
Bombay Public Trusts Act, 1950. In the years 1954, 1955 and
1956 it received certain sums from its international
Organization. Upon these amounts and other collections in
India, in 1963, the respondent was called upon to pay the
contribution of 2% as required by s. 58 of the Act read with
r. 32. The respondent thereupon filed a writ petition in
the High Court challenging the levy. The High Court held
that though the levy was a fee in the beginning. it assumed
the character of a tax by the end of 31 March, 1958, when
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there was a substantial surplus with the Fund, and that
thereafter the levy was illegal and ultra vires as the
actual levy was made after it assumed the character of a
tax.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD : (1) The respondent has an independent legal
personality as it was registered under the Companies Act,
and so, the amounts Which it received cannot but be regarded
as donations coming within purview of s. 58 and r. 32.
[487C-D]
2 (a) A tax is a compulsory exaction of money by a public
authotiry for a public purpose enforceable by law and is not
a payment for any specific service rendered. The levy of a
tax is for the purpose of general revenue, which, when
collected, forms part of the public revenues of the State.
There is no element of quid pro quo between the tax payer
and the public authority. A fee, however, is generally
defined to be a charge for a special service rendered to
individuals by the government or some other agency like a
local authority or statutory corporation. The amount of fee
levied is supposed to be based on the expenses incurred om
rendering the services though, in many cases, the costs are
arbitrarily assessed. Fees are generally uniform but
absence of uniformity is not a criterion on which alone it
can be said that the levy is in the nature of a tax. As a
fee is regarded as a sort of return or consideration for
services rendered it is necessary that the levy of a fee
should be correlated to the expenses incurred in rendering
the services. It is also generally necessary that the
payments demanded for rendering services must be set apart
or specifically appropriated for that purpose and that they
should not be merged in the general revenue of the State to
be spent for general public purposes. It may not, however,
be possible to prove in every case that the fees collected
always approximate to the expenses that are incurred in
rendering the particular kind of services or in performing
any particular work for the benefit of certain individuals.
[481E-482C]
476
In the present case, the revenue expenditure, is about 62%
of the amount of revenue receipts from 1953 to 1970. As
there is approximate correlation, the levy is in the nature
of a fee. [484B-C]
Hingir-Rampur Coal Co. Ltd. v. The State of Orissa [1961] 2
S.C.R. 537 at 549, H. H. Sudhundra Tirtha Swamiar v.
Commissioner for Hindu Religious & Chairtable Endowments,
Mysore, [1963] Sup. 2 S.C.R. 302 at 323; The Commissioner,
Hindu Religious Endowments, Madras v. Sri Lakshmindra Tirtha
Swamiar of Shirur Mutt [1954] S.C.R. 1005 at 1037, 1040,
Mahant Sri Jaganath Ramanuj Das and Another v. The State of
Orissa and Another [1954] S.C.R. 1046 at 1053 Ratilal
Panachand Gandhi v. The State of Bombay [1954] S.C.R. 1055
at 1075 nagar Mahapalika Varanasi v. Durga Das Bhattachary
as Others [1968] 3 S.C.R. 374, at 385; and Government of
Madras v. Zenith Lamp and Electrical Lid. [1973] 1 S.C.C.
162, referred to.
Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd. v. Chief
Commissioner, Delhi [1970] 2 S.C.R. 348, at 354, followed.
(b) A review of the relevant provisions in the Act leads to
the conclusion that the provisions are enacted with a view
that public trusts are administered for the purpose intended
by the authors of the trust and for preserving the-trust
properties from waste and misappropriation by trustees.
Taking precautionary measures to see that public trusts are
administered for the purposes intended by the authors of the
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trust and exercising control and supervision with a view to
preserve the trust properties from being wasted or
misappropriated by trustees are certainly special services
for the benefit of the trust. Therefore it could not be
contended that no special benefits were or are being
conferred upon the public trust in administering the
provisions of the Act. [484F-H]
(3) The services are mostly rendered by the officers of the
Charity Organization’ With the proliferation of public
trusts in the State it became necessary to expand the
charity Organization and to increase the staff for
supervision and control. It also became necessary to have
more regional offices for the more effective and immediate
supervision and control. The expenditure in constructing
buildings for locating the head office and regional offices
and the increase in allowances or other amenities to the
staff have also to be included in the costs of the services.
When there is surplus it cannot immediately be said that the
surplus must necessarily go in reduction of the rate of
contribution to be levied thereafter. It would neither be
expedient nor prudent to lay down any abstract proposition
that whenever there is surplus in a particular year or years
that the surplus must always be taken into consideration and
the rate of the contribution should be reduced for the next
year or subsequent years. An Organization like the one in
question may have to incur capital expenditure for the
better allowances or other amenities to the staff have also
to be included in the costs of administration of the trust
and it might not be able to foresee all the contingencies in
which such expenditure Will have to be incurred for the more
efficient working of the Organization. But, at the same
time, when it is seen that after taking into account the
capital and other expenditure necessary for the efficient
functioning of the organization for the better
administration of the trust. a very large surplus is still
left, then the question will arise whether it is permissible
for the organization to continue the levy at the same rate
which would only result in further surplus and to invest
this surplus solely for earning income or to divert the
surplus for other objects, though charitable in nature.
Such levy for investment or diversion of the surplus would
not be consistent with the principles behind the levy of a
fee. No hard and fast rule applicable in all contingencies
can be formulated. While it is not necessary that all
available surplus should always go in reducing the rate of
contribution for subsequent years, the Organization cannot
be. allowed to accumulate unreasonable amounts, that is,
amounts which may not reasonably be required for the proper
and efficient working of the Organization in a foreseeable
future. In drawing the line, the Court will have to look
into the nature of the Organization, the potentiality for
its growth, the multiplication in its work consequent on its
expansion for rendering the services visualized by the Act
and the necessity for capital expenditure in the near future
as also the amount of levy collected or expected to be
collected in a year. [485C-486C]
477
(a) in the present case, there was an available surplus
which was used for purchasing a building. Even according to
the High Court investment of the surplus in buildings or
locating the head and regional offices cannot be said to be
diversion of the surplus for purposes alien to the object of
the organization namely, the better administration of the
trust Therefore, it could not be said that by the end of
March 1958, when there was some surplus the contribution had
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assumed the character of a tax [486C-E]
(b) But, by the end of March, 1970, there was a surplus Rs.
54 lacs. The rate of fee at 2 % cannot continue,
thereafter, without taking into account the corpus of Rs..
54 lacs and the income therefrom, If the Organization is
allowed to go on increasing its surplus year after year out
of the amount of fee collected under s. 58 of the Act it
would demonstrate that the fee levied was unjustifiably
disproportionate to the service rendered. The contribution
at the rate of 2% on the gross income after 31st March.
1970, undoubtedly, assumed the character of tax as that
merely augmented the income of the Charity Organisation.
Therefore, before levying any fee or determining its rate
after 1970 the Charity Organisation has to balance its
budget. [486G-487A]
(4) The High Court was of the view that the levy of
contribution was ultra vires at the time the levy was made
because it ceased to be a fee and became a tax. By virtue
of the retrospective operation of the amended s. 58 as
provided in s. 4 of the Amending Act, the respondent became
liable to pay contribution in respect of the 3 donations in
the year in which they were received, that is, in 1954 1955
and 1956. Therefore, even on the basis of the reasoning of
the High Court that the levy assumed the character of a tax
after 31st March, 1958, it could not be held that the levy
of contribution in those years became exonerated from the
liability. The fact that the actual levy was made after
1962 would not make any difference in the liability to pay
the contribution as the liability was incurred when the levy
had not assumed the character of tax even according to the
High [487D-H]
(5) (a) The respondent, therefore, is liable to pay
contributions in respect of the three sums and the High
Court was wrong in quashing the orders passed. [487H]
(b) After 31st March 1970, the levy at 2 % of the gross
income cannot be justified as a fee. [487H]
(c) This does not mean that no levy of contribution was
permissible thereafter. It only means that in levying a fee
thereafter it should have correlation with the services,
taking into consideration the existence of the surplus fund
and the income therefrom. [488A-B]
(d) Rule 32 is ultra vires. [488B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 487 and
488 of 1973.
From the Judgment and order dated the 31st January, 1972 of
the Bombay High Court in O.S. No. 38 & 39 of 1971.
Niren De, Attoney General of India, S. Baptista and M. N.
Shroff, for, the appellants. (in both the appeals).
P. P. Khambatia, Ashok Desai, A. G. Meneses, and K. John,
for the respondents. (In C.A. No. 487/73).
Ashok Desai, A. G. Meneses and K. J. John, for the
respondent Nos.. 1, 2 & 4-8 (In C.A. No. 488/73).
1. Civil Appeal No. 487 of 1973
MATHEW J.-The respondent in this appeal is the Salvation
Army, Western India Territory. It is a part of the world-
wide organization known as the Salvation Army. The
headquarters of the organization is
16-423SCI/75
478
in London.The Organization in India was registered as a
public limited company under the Indian Companies Act, 1913,
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having obtained a licence to carry on its activities without
suffixing the word limited, after its name. It is also
registered under the Bombay public Trusts Act, 1950
(hereinafter called the ’Act’) and carries on various
charitable activities. Ile Company has its headquarters in
Bombay. The funds of the Company are administered under the
Articles of Association by a Board consisting of a General,
a Chief of Staff and various other officers. The accounting
year of the Company is from 1st of October to the 30th of
September of each year. in the years ending 30-9-1954, 30-9-
1955 and 30-9-1956, the respondent received three sums from
the international Organization, namely, Rs. 1,97,302/-, Rs.
2,50,228-14-0 and Rs. 2,67,732-15-0. Besides these amounts,
the respondent had made collections in India. Upon all
these amounts the respondent was called upon to, pay &
contribution of 2 per cent as required by s. 58 of the Act
read with rule 32 of the Bombay Public Trust Rules. The
respondent claimed exemption from liability to pay
contribution upon the three donations. Appellant No. 3
disallowed the claim. The respondent’s appeal against the
order was dismissed by appellant No. 4. The respondent
thereupon filed a writ partition in the High Court of Bombay
for a declaration that the provision for levy of
contribution contained in s.58 of the Act and rules 32 and
33 of the Rules as also the pro,visions of sections 2 and 4
of the Maharashtra Act 29 of 1962 (hereinafter referred to
as the "Amending Act of 1962") were beyond the powers of the
State Legislature and that the levy of contribution on the
three donations was therefore illegal. The respondent also
prayed for quashing the orders passed by appellants 3 and 4
disallowing its claim for exemption from levy of
contribution upon the aforesaid sums.
A learned Single Judge of the High Court held that the levy
was bad as it was not a fee but tax.
Against this decision, an appeal was preferred before the
Division Bench by the appellants. The Bench came to the
conclusion that though the levy of 2 per cent on the gross
income of the public trusts was a fee in the beginning, it
assumed the character of a tax by the, end of 31st March,
1958 as there was a surplus of Rs. 30,44,541 by that time
and therefore, the levy assumed the character of tax and was
illegal from that date. The Court further held that the
levy of contribution on the three donations was ultra vires
as the actual levy was made after it assumed the character
of a tax. It is against this judgment that this appeal has
been filed on the basis of certificate granted by the High
Court.
The Act was brought into force from 14-8-1950. The object
of the Act is to regulate and make better provision for the
administration of public religious and charitable trusts in
the State of Bombay. 57(1) states that there shall be
established a fund to be called the Public Trusts
Administration.Fund and that the Fund shall vest In-the
Charity Commissioner appointed under the Act. ;Clauses (a)
to (f) of sub-section (2) of the section specify the amounts
which go to
479
make the fund. of these, clause (b) concerns the
contribution made under s.58.
Section 58 was amended by the Amending Act of 1962 and the
Amending Act came into force on 27-8-1962. That section, at
all times, prescribed that every public trust shall pay to
the Public Trusts Administration Fund annually such
contribution on such date and in such manner as may be
prescribed. The contribution to be paid was originally
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fixed by rule 32 which was also amended by the Amending Act
of 1962.
Section 58 as it originally stood provided that the
contribution prescribed under the section shall, in the case
of public trusts other than dharmada, be fixed at rates in
proportion to the gross annual, income of such public trust
and the Explanation stated that, for the purpose or the
section, the gross annual income shall include gross income
from all sources in a year excluding donation given or
offering made with a specific direction that they shall form
part of the corpus of the public trust.
Rule 32(1) of the Bombay Public Trust Rules, 195 1, framed
under s.84, clause (b), provided that every public trust
other than a trust exclusively for the purpose of secular
education imparted by a recognised institution or
exclusively for the purpose of medical relief shall pay
annually to the Public Trusts Administration Fund out of its
property or funds a contribution at the rate of 2 per cent
of its ,gross annual income or, where the public trust is a
dharmada, its gross annual collection or receipts. In sub-
rule (3) of Rule 32, it was provided that in calculating the
gross annual income or receipts for the purpose of assessing
the contribution the following deduction shall be allowed :
"donations given with specific directions that
they shall form part of the corpus (vide
Explanation to s.58)."
By a Government notification dated 3-12-1953, rule 32 was
amended. The provision for levy of contribution was
substantially the same as in sub-rule (1) of Rule 32 but the
amended sub-rule (3) of Rule 32 was as follows:
"(3) In calculating the gross annual income of
a Public Trust, or where the public trust is a
dharmada, its gross’ annual collection or
receipts, for the purpose of assessing the
contribution, the following deductions shall
be allowed, namely:"
and clause (iii) corresponding to the original clause (iii)
of Rule 32 (3) ran as follows :
"donation received during the year from any
sources."
This rule was patently ultra vires of s.58 itself, for, the
Explanation to s.58 excluded donations given or offerings
made with a specific direction that they shall form part of
the corpus of the public trust. But Clause (iii) of Rule
32(3), after its amendment in 1953, excluded all donations
received during the year from any source. The state
480
legislature therefore passed the Amending Act of 1962 which
inserted certain provisions of Rule 32 of the Rules as
substantive provisions in the Bombay Public Trust Act, 1950.
The legislation amended s.58 itself and the amended section
was substituted for the old section. The amended section,
so far as it is material, provides:
"58(1) Subject to the provisions of this
section, every public- trust shall pay to
the Public Trusts Administration Fund annually
such contribution at a rate or rates not ex-
ceeding five per cent of the gross annual
income, or as the case may be, of the gross
collection or receipt, on such date, and in
such manner, as may be prescribed.
The contribution prescribed under this section
shall:
(i) in the case of a dharmada, be fixed at a
rate or rates on the gross annual collection
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or receipts of the dharmada.
(ii) in the case of other public trusts, be
fixed at a rate or rates on the gross annual
income of such public trust. Explanation(1).
For the purpose of this sub-section ’ gross
annual income’ means gross income from all
sources in a year (including all donations and
offerings), but does not include any payment
made or anything given with a specific
direction that it shall form part of the
corpus of the public trust, nor include any
deductions which the State Government may
allow by rules............
Provision was also made for the period during which Rule 32
remained in operation and therefore s.4 of the Amending Act
of 1962 provided for retrospective operation of the
provisions of the Act. Section 4 provides :
"The substitution of section 58 in the
principal Act by section 2 of this Act shall
be and shall always be deemed to have been
made in the principal Act and the provisions
of clause (iii) of sub-rule (3) of rule 32 of
the Bombay Public Trust Rules, 1951, shall be
deemed to have been deleted from the date on
which those rules came into force; and ac-
cordingly, rule 32 of these rules as amended
shall be deemed always to have been validly
made and to have full effect, as if it had
been duly made under the principal Act as
amended by this Act and anything done or
action taken under that Rule shall be deemed
to have been validly done or taken."
An amendment was also effected by the Act itself in Rule 32
by deleting clause (iii) of sub-rule (3) of Rule 32.
The validity of these amendments was not challenged before
this Court.
The two main questions which arise for consideration in this
appeal are : (1) whether the levy of contribution under s.
58 read with rule 32(3) was a tax from the inception of the
levy or whether, although the levy was a fee in its
inception, it assumed the character
481
of tax in any subsequent year by reason of the accumulation
of the surplus of the income over the expenditure, and (2)
whether the levy of contribution on the three donations was
justified.
As already stated, the learned Single Judge was of the view
that the levy was in the nature of a tax from its inception
for the reason that the contribution levied had no
correlation to the services rendered. The learned Judge in
taking this view was largely influenced by the statement of
the income and expenditure of the charity organisation
contained in Exhibit 1 for the, years from 1953 to 19’70.
The learned Judge said that the ratio of revenue expenditure
to the receipt every year was 53.33 per cent on an average
and that there was always a surplus of about 47 per cent
after meeting all the annual recurring expenditure, that
accumulation to the extent of 47 per cent on an average
every year had ultimately brought about the result that even
after meeting the total expenditure, the surplus came to Rs.
44,60,973 on 31-3-1965, that it was augmented further to Rs.
84,49,473 31-3-1970 and therefore the levy was at all times
a tax and was beyound the power of the legislature. He
further held that the respondent was not liable to pay
contribution in respect of the three amounts.
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On appeal, the Division Bench, after considering the
distinction between a fee and a tax as laid down by this
Court came to the conclusion that the contribution at the
rate of 2 per cent of the income of the trusts was a fee
till the end of March 31, 1958 and that, on account of the
accumulation of surplus to the tune of Rs. 30,44,541 ,by the
end of the year 1958, it assumed the character of a tax and
therefore, after 31st March 1958, the levy became ultra
vires the powers of the legislature.
Now the first question for consideration is: What is the
nature of a fee ? It is idle to parade the familiar learning
on the question of the distinction between a tax and a fee..
A tax is a compulsory exaction of money by a public
authority for a public purpose enforceable by law and is not
a payment for any specific service rendered. The levy of a
tax is for the purpose of general revenue which when
collected forms part of the public revenues of the State.
There is no element of quid pro quo between the tax payer
and the public authority. A fee is generally defined to be
a charge for a special service rendered to individuals by
the government or some other agency like a local authority
or statutory corporation. The amount of fee levied is
supposed, to be based on the expenses incurred by the
Government or the agency in rendering the service though in
many cases the costs are arbitrarily assessed. Fees are
ordinarily uniform but absence of,uniformity is not a
criterion on which alone it can be said that a levy is in
the nature of tax. In the case of a fee, no account is
taken of the varying abilities of different recipients of
the service to pay. As a fee is regarded as a sort of
return or consideration for services rendered, it is
necessary that the levy of fees should be correlated to the
expenses incurred by the agency in rendering the services.
"If the special service rendered is distinctly and primarily
meant for the benefit of a specified class or area the
482
fact that in benefiting the specified class or area the
state as a whole may ultimately and indirectly be
benefited would not detract from the character of the levy
as a fee."(1). It is also generally necessary that the
payments demanded for rendering of such services must be set
,apart or specifically appropriated for that purpose and
that they should not be merged in the general revenue of the
State to be spent ,for general public purposes. It may not
be possible to prove in every case that the fees that are
collected by the Government or the agency always approximate
to the expenses that are incurred by it in rendering the
particular kind of services or in performing any particular
work for the benefit of certain individuals. "A levy in the
nature of a fee does not cease to be of that character
merely because there is an element of compulsion or
coerciveness present in it, nor is it a postulate of a fee
that it must have direct relation to the actual services
rendered by the authority to individual who obtains the
benefit of the service. If with a view to provide a
specific service, levy is imposed by law and expenses for
maintaining the service are met out of the amounts collected
there being a reasonable relation between the levy and the
expenses incurred for rendering the service, the levy would
be in the nature of a fee and not in the nature of
a.tax."(2) That there is correlation between the levy and
the services can be proved by showing that on the face of
the legislative provision itself, the collections are not
merged in the general revenue but are set apart and appro-
priated for rendering these services. Thus, two elements
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are essential in order that a payment may be regarded as a
fee. In the first place, it must be levied in consideration
of certain services which the individuals accept either
willingly or unwillingly and in the second place, the amount
collected must be earmarked to meet the expenses of ren-
dering these services and must not go to the general revenue
of the state to be spent for general public purposes. (3)
In Nagar Mahapaliga, Varanasi v. Durga Das Bhattacharya &
Others(4) the question was whether a certain by-law under
which the owners of rickshaws were liable to pay an annual
sum of Rs 30/and the drivers a sum of Rs. 5/- par took the
character of a fee. In the course of the judgment the Court
said :
"The High Court was of the opinion that the
amount of Rs. 68,000 spent for paying the bye-
lanes and Rs. 20,000 for lighting of streets
and lanes cannot be considered to have been
spent in rendering services to the rickshaw
owners and rickshaw drivers. The reason was
that
(1) see Hinger-Ramour Cod Co. Lt. v. The State of Orissa
[1961 ]2 S. C. R. 537 at
(2) see H. H. Sudhundra Thirtha Swamiar v. Commissioner
for Hindu Religious & Charitable Endownments Mysore, (1963)
Supp. 2 S. C. R. 302, at 323.
(3) see Commissioner Hindu Religious
Endowments. Madras v. Sri Lakshmindra
Thirtha Swamiar of Shirur Mutt. [1954] S. C. R. 1005, at
1037, 1040; Mahant Sri Jagannath Ramanuj Das and Another v.
The State of Orissa and Another, [1954] S. C. R. 1046 at
1053; and Ratilal Panachand Gandhi the State of Bombay
[1954] S. C. R. 1055 at 1075.
(4). [1968] 3. S. C. R. 374, at 385.
483
under s. 7(a) of the Act it was the statutory
duty of the Municipal Board to light public
streets and places and under cl. (h) of the
same section to construct and maintain public
streets, culverts, etc. The expenditure under
these two items was incurred by the Municipal
board in the discharge of its statutory duty
and it is manifest-that the licence fee cannot
be imposed for reimbursing the cost of
ordinary municipal services which the
Municipal Board was bound under the statute to
provide to the general public (see the
decision of the Madras High Court in India
Sugar and Refineries Ltd. v. The Municipal
Council, Hospet (I.L.R. 1943 Madras 521)."
In Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd. v. Chief Commis-
sioner, Delhi(1) the point for consideration was whether the
amount payable for renewal of licence to run the factory in
question was, a fee or tax. The Court observed:
"The High Court further found, which finding
being of fact, must be considered as final
that 60% of the amount of licence fees which
were being realized was actually spent on
services rendered to the factory owners. It
can, therefore, hardly be contended that the
levy of the licence fee was wholly, unrelated
to the expenditure incurred out of the total
realization."
In Government of Madras v. Zerith Lamp and Electrical
Ltd.(1), Court considered. in the context of levy of Court
fees, the relevant factors which might be taken into
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consideration in adjudging whether the levy was a fee or
tax. The Court said:
.lm15
"While levying fees the appropriate legislature is competent
to take into account all relevant factors, the value of the
subject-matter of the dispute, the steps necessary in the
prosecution of a suit or matters the entire cost of the
upkeep of courts and officers administering civil justice,
the vexatious nature of a certain type of litigation and
other relevant matters."
In the light of this discussion, let us see whether the levy
here was in fee and if it was a fee at the inception,
whether, by reason of the accumulation of surplus, it became
a tax in any subsequent year. According to exhibit 1, the
total receipts from all sources from the year 1953 to the
year 1970 came to Rs. 2,20,78,080/-. According to the
statement given by the Attorney General during the course of
argument the total contribution under s.58 of the Act came
to Rs. 1,73,56,874/- treating the figures, of total receipts
in the years 1953 to 1956 as receipts only under s.58. There
is a mistake in the figure, of the chart given by the
Attorney General for the years 1963, 1964, 1965 and 1966.
Substituting the correct figures for those years which tally
with the earlier chart given by the Attorney General, also
during the course of the arguments the amount of revenue
receipts
(1) [1970] 2 S. C. R. 348, at 354.
(2) [1973] 1 S. C. R. 162.
484
under s. 58 would come to Rs. 1,90,19,978/( instead of Rs.
1,73,56,874/-. The total revenue expenditure from 1953 to
1970 according to exhibit 1 is Rs. 1,17,86,443/-. Although
in exhibit 1 the total revenue expenditure is shown to be
53.33 per cent of the total of Rs. 2,20,78,080/- actually
the percentage has to be calculated with reference to the
figure of Rs. 1,90,19,978/-. Calculating on that basis, the
percentage will come to about 62. On the basis of the
decision of this Court in the Delhi Cloth and General Mills
case (supra) the levy was in the nature of fee as the
expenditure was 62 per cent of the contributions levied and
as there was approximate correlation.
It was, however, argued on behalf of the respondent on the
basis of the decisions in Corporation of Calcutta v. Liberty
Cinema(1) and Nagar Mahapalika, varanasi v. Durga Das
Bhattacharya (supra) that the exercise of the power of
supervision and control of public trusts under the
provisions of the Act would not be special services, that
performance of the statutory functions and duties under the
Act is owed to the public and cannot be regarded as special
benefits to the public trusts in the state for which a fee
can be exacted as consideration.
The object of the Act as seen from its preamble is to
regulate and make better provisions for the administration
of public religious and charitable trusts in the State of
Bombay. Chapter IV of the Act provides for registration of
public trusts. Chapter V deals with submission of the
budgets by the trustees of certain trusts and maintenance of
accounts. Chapter V-A concerns the investment of public
trust money and restrictions on alienations of trust
property. Chapter VI deals with control. It makes
provisions for supervision and control over public trusts,
for issuing directions by the Commissioner, for suspension
and removal of trustees and for protection of charities in
general. A review of the relevant provisions in these
chapters can only lead to the conclusion that the provisions
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are enacted with a view that public trusts are administered
for the purpose intended by the authors of the trusts and
for preserving the trust properties from waste and misap-
propriation by trustees. Taking precautionary measures to
see that public trusts are administered for the purposes
intended by the authors of the trusts and exercising control
and supervision with a view to preserve the trust properties
from being wasted or misappropriated by trustees are
certainly special services for the benefit of the trust.
Therefore, there is no substance in the argument that no
special benefits were or are being conferred up on the
public trusts in administering the provisions of the Act.
The question then is whether, by reason of the accumulation
of surplus from 1953 onwards, the levy of contribution
became a tax and if it became a tax, the point of time at
which the levy assumed that character. It is not dispute
that the collections by way of contribution exceeded the
expenditure from 1953 onwards.
The respondent submitted that surplus must be taken into
consideration in determining the character of the levy.
Relying upon the decisions in Mukundaraya v. State of
Mysore(1) and Dalpathbhai Hemhand v. Chansma
Municipality,(2) the respondent contended
(1) [1965] 2 S. C. R. 477.
485
that the benefit of the surplus should go to those who have
to pay the contributions and that the rate of the levy
should at any rate be reduced so as to maintain the just
relation between the levy and the services. In other words,
the argument was that if it is found that the cc imposed
resulted in surplus, the rate of the subsequent imposition
should correspondingly be reduced so that it may be
commensurate with the expenses that are to be incurred in
connection with the services.
As we said, the fee must, as far practically as possible, be
commensurate with the services rendered. One should not
seek for any mathematical accuracy in these matters but be
content with rough approximations. The services are mostly
rendered by the officers of the Charity Organization. With
the proliferation of public trusts, in the State it became
necessary to expand the Charity Organization and to increase
the staff for supervision and control. It also became
necessary to have more regional offices for the more
effective and immediate supervision sad control. The
expenditure in constructing buildings for locating the head
office and regional offices and the increase in the
allowances or other amenities to the staff have also to be
included in the costs of the services. When there is
surplus, it cannot immediately be said that the surplus must
necessarily go in reduction of the rate of contribution to
be levied thereafter. We think that it would neither be
expedient nor prudent to lay down any abstract proposition
that whenever there is surplus in a particular year or a
number of years, that surplus must always be taken into
consideration and the rate of the contribution should be
reduced for the next year or subsequent years. An
Organization like the one in question may have to incur
capital expenditure for the better administration of the
trusts and it might not be able to foresee all the
contingencies in which such expenditure will have to be
incurred for the more efficient working of the organization.
This Court has expressly stated in the Delhi Cloth and
general Mills case (supra) that services worth 61 per cent
of contribution would be sufficient quid pro quo to make a
levy a fee. So, when we find that in this case the
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Organization has been rendering services worth 62 per cent
of the contribution, it cannot per se be said that there is
no correlation between the fee levied and the services
rendered. But at the same time when it is seen that after
taking into account the capital and other expenditure
necessary for the efficient functioning of the Organization
for ’the better administration of the trusts, a large
surplus is still left, then the question will arise whether
it is permissible for the Organisation to continue the levy
at the same rate which will only result in further surplus
and to invest this surplus solely for earning income or to
divert the surplus for other objects, though charitable in
nature. We do not think any such levy for investment or
diversion of the surplus would be consistent with the
principle behind the levy of a fee. While we do not think
it necessary that all available surplus in a year or for
some years should always go in for reducing the rate of
contribution for the subsequent year or years,
(1) A.I.R. [1960] Mysore 18.
(2) A.I.R. [1968] Gujarat 38.
486
we are of the view that the organisation cannot be allowed
to accumulate an unreasonable amount unreasonable in the
sense that the amount might not be reasonably required for
the proper and efficient working of the Organisation in a
foreseeable future. No hard and fast rule applicable in all
contingencies can be formulated. The Court will have to
draw a line somewhere when the surplus must be taken into
consideration for reducing the levy of contribution. In
drawing the fine, the Court will have to look into the
nature of the organisation. the potentiality for its growth,
the multiplication in its work consequent on its expansion
for rendering the services visualized by the Act and the
necessity for capital expenditure in the near future, as
also the amount of levy collected or expected to be
collected in a year. As already stated, the Division Bench
was of the view that the stage when the surplus must be
taken into account to determine the character of the levy
was reached by the end of March, 31, 1958 when the available
surplus came to Rs. 30,44,541/-. The Division Bench was
alive to the desirability of locating the head office and
regional offices in buildings to be owned by the
Organisation and incurring of capital expenditure in that
behalf. The Charity Organisation has purchased a building
worth about Rs. 30 lakhs. Even according to the Division
Bench, investment of the surplus in buildings for locating
the head and regional offices cannot be said to be diversion
of the surplus for purposes alien to the object of the
organisation, namely, the better administration of the
trusts. Therefore, we do not think that the contribution
had assumed the character of a tax at the end of March,
1958.
The surplus in the account of the Public Trusts
Administration Fund at the end of March, 1970, was Rs.
84,49,473/- after meeting the capital expenditure of Rs.
17,46,794/- incurred during the years 1953 to 1970. In the
figure of Rs. 84,49,473/- is included the figure of Rs.
7,06,016/-, the accumulated balances under the repealed en-
actments transferred to the Public Trusts Administration
Fund, plus interest of Rs. 7,13,004/- on the said figure
vide exhibit No. 3. Even deducting the Rs. 14 lakhs from Rs.
84 lakhs, the surplus in the, account of the Public Trusts
Administration Fund at the end of March,, 1970, was Rs. 70
lakhs. Allowing the capital expenditure of Rs. 30 lakhs on
the buildings said to have been purchased by the Charity,
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Organisation, the surplus was Rs. 40 lakhs. As we said, as
a matter, of principle, expenses for service should be
correlated to the contribution levied under s. 58 of the
Act. And the capital expenses should be met from the
surplus funds including the sum of Rs. 14 lakhs (receipt
under s. 61 plus interest thereon: Total: Rs. 14 lakhs).
The surplus, at the end of March, 1970 being Rs. 40 lakhs
or’ to be more accurate, Rs. 54 lakhs, the rate of fee at 2
per cent cannot continue, in any event after March, 1970
without taking into account the corpus of Rs. 54 lakhs and
the income therefrom. We think that the contribution at the
rate of 2 per cent on the gross income of the trusts after
March 31, 1970 onwards undoubtedly assumed the character of
a tax as that merely augmented the income of the Charity
Organisation, If, the Organisation is allowed to go on
increasing its surplus year after year out of the amount of
fee collected under s. 58 of the Act, it would demonstrate
that the fee levied was unjustifiably disproportionate to
487
the service rendered. We are, therefore, of the opinion
that before levying any fee or determining its rate after
March, 1970. the Charity Organisation has to balance its
budget in the light of this judgment.
The respondent raised two contentions before the High Court
with respect to its liability to pay contribution in respect
of the three amounts in question. It was first contended
that these amounts were not received by way of donations,
and, second, that at the time when the respondent was sought
to be made liable for contribution on these amounts, the
levy had ceased to be fee and had assumed the character of
tax. The respondent made a return of these amounts on 8-1-
1960 on the basis that it was not liable to pay contribution
on these amounts. No decision was taken on this return
until 10-6-1963 and on that date a notice of demand was made
for’ contribution in respect of these amounts.
The respondent has an independent legal personality as it
was registered under the Companies Act and so the amounts
which it received cannot but be regarded as donations coming
within the purview of s. 58 of the Act and Rule 32. The
Division Bench held that these amounts were donations made
by the international organisation in London to the
respondent. We think that the High Court was right.
As already stated, the Amending Act came into force on 17-8-
1962. The Division- Bench was of the view that the levy of
contribution on these amounts was ultra vires for the reason
that at the time the levy was made it had ceased to be a fee
and become a tax. We do not think that the High Court was
right. No doubt, the demand for contribution was made only
after the Amending Act came into force. But by virtue of
the retrospective operation of the amended s. 58 as provided
in s. 4 of the Amending Act, the respondent became liable to
pay contribution in respect of the three donations in the
years in which they were received. It may be recalled that
these three amounts were received by the respondent in the
years 1954, 1955 and 1956. By virtue of the deeming
provision in s. 58 as amended, these donations became
eligible to pay the contribution in the relevant years. We
do not understand how these amounts which became eligible to
levy of contribution in those years by virtue of the deeming
provisions in s. 58 became exonerated for the liability even
on the basis of the reasoning of the Division Bench that the
levy assumed the character of a tax after 31st March, 1958.
The fact that the actual levy was made after 1962 would not
make any difference in the liability of the respondent to
pay the contribution in respect of these amounts as the
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liability was incurred when the levy had not assumed the
character of tax even according to the Division Bench.
We, therefore, hold that the respondent is liable to pay
contributions in respect of the three sums and that the
Division Bench went wrong in quashing the orders passed by
appellants 3 and 4 upholding the levy of contribution on
these sums. We also hold that after 31st March, 1970, the
levy at the rate of 2 per cent of the gross income of the
trust cannot be justified as a fee. This does not mean that
no
488
levy of contribution was permissible thereafter. We only
say that any% levy thereafter should have correlation with
the services, taking into consideration the existence of the
surplus fund which was not immediately required for further
expenditure by way of services including ,capital
expenditure. We declare that levy of contribution at the
rate of 2 per cent of the annual gross income of the trusts
became levy of tax after 31st March, 1970 and was without
the authority of law. Since there was a prayer in the writ
petition to declare Rule 32 as ultra vires, we think that
the respondent is entitled to this relief.
We allow the appeal to the extent indicated but make no
order as to costs.
II. Civil Appeal No. 488 of 1973
In this appeal, the points for consideration are practically
the same. For the reasons we have given in our judgment in
Civil Appeal No. 487 of 1973, we do not think that the
Division Bench was justified in holding that the respondent
was not liable to pay contribution in respect of the
donations in question here and in quashing the order dated
30th March, 1965. We, therefore, allow the appeal subject
to the. declaration of the nature of the levy after 31st
March, 1970, made in the judgment in Civil Appeal No. 487 of
1973. We make no order as to costs.
Appeal allowed.
V.P.S.
489