Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TATA ENGINEERING AND LOCOMOTIVE CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/02/1964
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
SHAH, J.C.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 40 1964 SCR (6) 885
CITATOR INFO :
D 1970 SC 564 (17)
RF 1973 SC 106 (11)
R 1974 SC1300 (24)
R 1981 SC1368 (7)
RF 1983 SC 937 (12)
RF 1984 SC 420 (46)
RF 1986 SC1370 (90)
ACT:
Corporation-Position of-Whether citizen-Whether petition
under Art. 32 by Corporation claiming a fundamental right
guaranteed under Art. 19 competent-Doctrine of piercing the
corporate veil -Exceptions to rule that Corporation has a
separate legal entity-Levy of Sales Tax
challenged--Constitution of India, Arts. 19, 32 and 286(1)
(a).
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners were ordered to pay sales-tax on account of
certain transactions made by them in the State of Bihar.
Their contention was that the sales in question took place
outside the state and hence they were entitled to the
protection of Art. 286(1)(a). Their plea was rejected by
the Sales-tax authorities and it was held that Art.
286(1)(a) did not apply to them. The petitioners challenged
the orders of the sales-tax authorities by writ petitions
filed by them under Art. 32 of the Constitution.
A preliminary objection was taken on behalf of respondents
that the petitions were not competent as those were filed by
corporations or companies and the provisions of Art. 19 did
not apply to them as corporations were not citizens.
Dismissing the writ petition,
Held.-The petitions under Art. 32 were incompetent although
in each of them one or two of the share-holders of the
petitioning companies or corporations had also joined.
Article 19 guarantees rights to citizens as such and
associations cannot lay claim to the fundamental rights
guaranteed by that Article solely on the basis of their
being an aggregation of citizens. Once a company or a
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corporation is formed, the business which is carried on by
the said company or corporation is the business of the
company or corporation and is not the business of the
citizens who got the company or corporation formed or incor-
porated and the rights of the incorporated body must be
judged on that footing and cannot be judged on the
assumption that they are the right attributable to the
business of individual citizens. The petitioners cannot be
heard to say that their share-holders should be allowed to
file the present petitions on the ground that in substance,
the corporations and companies are nothing more than
association of share-horders and members thereof. If their
contention is accepted, it would really mean that what the
corporations or companies cannot achieve directly, they can
achieve indirectly by relying upon the doctrine of lifting
the veil. If the corporations and companies are not
citizens, it means that the Constitution intended that they
should not get the benefit of Art. 19.
886
The position of a corporation is that it is in law equal to
a natural person and has a legal entity of its own. That
entity is entirely separate from that of its shareholders.
It bears its own name and has a seal of its own. Its
assets are separate and distinct from those of its members.
It can sue and be sued exclusively for its own purpose. Its
creditors cannot obtain satisfaction from the assets of its
members. The liability of the members or share holders is
limited to the capital invested by them. The creditors of
the members have no right to the assets of the corporation.
However. there are some exceptions to the rule that the
corporation or a company has a jurisfic or legal entity and
the doctrine of lifting the veil of a corporation and
examining its face in substance has been applied in many
cases but the same does not apply in the present case.
State of Trading Corporation of India Ltd. v. The Commercial
Tax Officer & Ors. A.I.R. 1963 S.C. 1811, Smt. Ujjam Bai
v. State of Uttar Pradesh. [1963] 1 S.C.R. 778, Indo-China
Steam Navigation Co. Ltd. v. Additional Collector of
Customs. [1964] 6 S.C.R. 594, Kailash Nath v. State of U.P.
A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 790, Thakur Amar Singhji V. State of
Rajasthan, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 303, M/s. Mohanlal Hargovind v.
State of Madhya Pradesh. [1955] 2 S.C.R. 509, Y. Mahaboob
Sheriff V. Mysore State Transport Authority. [1960] 2 S.C.R.
146, J. V. Gokar & Co. (P) Ltd. v. Assistant Collector of
Sales-tax (inspection), [1960] 2 S.C.R. 852, Universal
Imports Agency v. Chief Controller of Imports & Exports
[1960] 1 S.C.R. 305, State Trading Corporation of India Ltd.
v. State of Mysore, 14 S.T.C. 188, State Trading Corporation
of India Ltd. v. State of Mysore. 14 S.T.C. 416, Salomon v.
Salomon & Co. [1897] A.C. 22, H.L. The English & Scottish
Joint Co-operative Wholesale Society Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Agricultural Income-tax Assam. 1948 I.T.R. 270, Daimler
Company Ltd. v. Continental Tyre and Rubber Co. (Great
Britain) Ltd. [1916] A. C. 307 and All India Bank Employees’
Association v. National Industrial Tribunal & Ors. [1962] 3
S.C.R. 269, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petitions Nos.112 and 113 of
1961 etc.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for
enforcement of, Fundamental rights.
N. A. Palkhivala, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and
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Ravinder Narain, for the petitioners (in W.P. Nos. 112 and
113 of 61 and 79 to 80 of 1962).
M. C. setalvad, D. P. Singh, m. K. Ramamurthi, R. K. Garg
and S. C. Agarwal. for the respondents (in W.P. Nos. 112 and
113 of, 1961).
887
S. V. Gupte, Additional Solicitor-General, N. S. Bindra
and R. H. Dhebar, for the respondents (in W.P. Nos. 79 and
80 of 62).
G. S. Pathak, B. Dutta, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and
Ravinder Narain, for the petitioners (in W.P. Nos. 202-
204/1961).
A. Ranganadham Chetty and T. V. R. Tatachari, for the
respondents (in W.P. Nos. 202 and 203 of 1961).
Lal Narain Sinha, M. K. Ramamurthi, R. K. Garg and S. C.
Agarwal, for the respondent (in W.P. 204 of 1961).
February 25, 1964. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, C.J.-These writ petitions have been placed
for hearing before us in a group, because they raise a
common question of law in regard to the validity of the
demand for sales tax which has been made against the
respective petitioners by the Sales-tax Officers for
different areas. The facts in respect of each one of the
writ petitions are not the same and the years for which the
demand is made are also different; but the pattern of
contention is uniform and the arguments urged in each one of
them are exactly the same. Broadly stated. the case for the
petitioners is that the appropriate authorities purporting
to act under the different Sales Tax Acts- are attempting to
recover from the petitioners sales-tax in respect of
transactions to which the petitioners were parties, though
the said transactions are not taxable under Art. 286 of the
Constitution. Art. 286(1) (a) provides that no law of a
Sales shall impose, or authorise the imposition of, a tax on
the sale or purchase of goods where such sale or purchase
takes place outside the State; and the argument is that the
sales in question are all sales which took place outside the
State and as such, are entitled to the protection of Art.
286(1) (a). The authorities under the respective Sales Tax
Acts have rejected the petitioners’ contention that the
transactions in question are inter-State sales and have held
that Art. 286(1)(a) is not applicable to them. A similar
finding has been recorded against the petitioners under Art.
286(2). The petitioners’ grievance
888
is that by coming to this erroneous conclusion, a tax is
being levied against them in respect of transactions
protected by Art. 286(1)(a) and that constitutes a breach of
their fundamental rights under Art. 3 1 (1). It is this
alleged infringement of their fundamental rights that they
seek to bring before this Court under Art. 32(1).
It has been urged on their behalf that the right to move
this Court under Art. 32(1) is itself a fundamental right,
and so, under Art. 32(2) an appropriate order should be
passed setting aside the directions issued by the Sales-tax
Authorities calling, upon the petitioners either to pay the
sales-tax, or to comply with other directions issued by them
in that behalf.
For dealing with the points raised by these writ petitions,
it is not necessary to set out the facts in respect of each
one of them. For convenience we will refer to the facts set
out by the Tata Engineering & Locomotive Co. Ltd., the
petitioner in W.Ps. Nos. 112 and 113 of 1961. The peti-
tioner is a company registered under the Indian Companies
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Act, 1913 and carries on the business of manufacturing,
inter alia, Diesel Truck and Bus chassis and the spare parts
and accessories thereof at Jamshedpur in the State of Bihar.
The company sells these products to dealers, State Transport
Organisations and others doing business in various States of
India. The registered office of the petitioner is in
Bombay. In order to promote its trade throughout the
country, the petitioner has entered into Dealership Agree-
ments with different persons. The modus adopted by the
petitioner in carrying on its business in different parts of
India is to sell its products to the dealers by virtue of
the relevant provisions of the Dealership Agreements.
Accordingly, the petitioner distributes and sells its
vehicles to dealers, State Transport Organisations and
consumers in the manner set out in the petition. The
petitioner contends that the sales in respect of which the
present petitions have been filed were effected in the
course of inter-State trade and as such, were not liable to
be taxed under the relevant provisions of the Sales Tax Act.
The Sales-tax Officer, on the other hand, has head that the
sales had taken place within the State of Bihar and were
intra-State sales and as such, were liable to assessment
under the Bihar Sales Tax
889
Act. In accordance with this conclusion, further steps are
threatened against the petitioner in the matter of recovery
of the sales-tax calculated by the appropriate authorities.
The petitioner is a company and a majority of its share-
holders are Indian citizens, two of whom have joined the
present petitions.
The petitioners in W.Ps. Nos. 79 and 80/-1962 are the
Automobile Products of India Ltd. and Another. The majority
of the share-holders of this company are also citizens of
India and one of them has joined the petitions.
Writ petitions Nos. 202-204/1961 have been filed by the
State Trading Corporation of India Ltd. The shareholders of
this Corporation are the President of India, and two
Additional Secretaries, Ministry of Commerce and Industry,
Government of India; one of these Secretaries, has joined
the petitions. It may incidentally be stated at this stage
that these writ petitions were heard by a Special Bench of
this Court on the 26th July, 1963 in order to determine the
constitutional question as to whether the State Trading
Corporation Ltd. can claim to be a citizen within the
meaning of Art. 19 of the Constitution. The majority
decision rendered in these writ petitions on the
preliminary, issue referred to the Special Bench was that
the petitioner as a State Trading Corporation is not a
citizen under Art. 19, and so, could not claim the
protection of the fundamental rights guaranteed by the said
Article [vide State Trading Corporation of India Ltd. v. The
Commercial Tax Officer and Others(1)]. That is why this
petitioner along with other petitioners have made the
petitions in the names of the companies as well as one or
two of their shareholders respectively. It is argued on
behalf of the petitioners that though the company or the
Corporation may not be an Indian citizen under Art. 19, that
should not prejudice the petitioners case, because, in
substance, the Corporation is no more than an instrument or
agent appointed by its Indian share holders and as such, it
should be open to the petitioners either acting themselves
as companies or acting through
(1) A.I.R. 1963 S.C 1811,
890
their shareholders to claim the relief for which the present
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petitions have been filed under Art. 32.
These petitions are resisted by the respective States on the
ground that the petitions are not competent under Art. 32.
The respondents contend that the main attack of the
petitioners is against the findings of the Sales-tax
Officers in regard to the character of the impugned sale
transactions and they urge that even if the said findings
are wrong, that cannot attract the provisions of Art. 32.
The validity of the respective Sales-tax Acts is not
challenged and if purporting to exercise their powers under
the relevant provisions of the said Acts, the appropriate
authorities have, during the course of the assessment
proceedings, come to the conclusion that the impugned
transactions are intra-State sales and do not fall under
Art. 286(1)(a), that is a decision which is quasi-judicial
in character and even an erroneous decision rendered in such
assessment proceedings cannot be said to contravene the
fundamental rights of a citizen which would justify recourse
to Art. 32. In other words, the alleged breach of the
petitioners’ fundamental rights being referable to a quasi-
judicial order made by a Tribunal appointed under a valid
Sales-tax Act, does not bring the case within Art. 32. That
is the first preliminary ground on which the competence of
the writ petitions is challenged. In support of this plea,
reliance is placed by the respondents on a recent decision
of a Special Bench of this Court in Smt. Ujjam Bai v. State
of Uttar Pradesh(1).
There is another preliminary objection raised by the
respondents against the, competence of the writ petitions,
and that is based upon the decision of this Court in the
case of the State Trading Corporation of India Ltd. (2). It
is urged that the decision of this Court that the State
Trading Corporation is not a citizen, necessarily means that
the fundamental rights guaranteed by Art. 19 which can be
claimed only by citizens cannot be claimed by such a
Corporation, and so, there can be no scope for looking at
the substance of the matter and giving to the shareholders
indirectly the right which the Corporation as a separate
(1) [1963] 1 S.C.R. 778.
(2) A.I.R. 1963 S.C. 1811.
891
legal entity is not directly entitled to claim. The
respondents have urged that in dealing with the plea of the
petitioners that the veil worn by the Corporation as a
separate legal entity should be lifted and the substantial
character of the Corporation should be determined without
reference to the technical position that the Corporation is
a separae entity, we ought to bear in mind the decision of
this Court in the case of the State Trading Corporation of
India Ltd.(1). Basing themselves on this contention, the
respondents have also argued that if the fundamental rights
guaranteed by Art. 19 are not available to the petitioners,
then their plea that the sales-tax is being collected from
them contrary to Art. 31(1) must fail and in support of this
contention reliance is placed upon a recent decision of this
Court in the case of Indo-China Steam Navigation Co. Ltd. v.
The Additional Collector of Customs and Others(2).
Logically, the second preliminary objection would come
first, because if the petitioners cannot claim the status of
citizens and are not, therefore, entitled to base their
petitions on the allegation that their fundamental rights
under Art. 19 have been contravened, that would be the end
of the petitions. It has been conceded before us by all the
learned counsel appearing for the petitioners that it is
only if both the preliminary objections raised by the
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respondents are over-ruled that the hearing of the writ
petitions would reach the stage of considering the merits of
their pleas that the sales which are sought to be taxed fall
under Art. 28 6 (1) (a) of the Constitution. If the
respondents succeed in either of the two preliminary
objections raised by them, the writ petitions would fail and
there would be no occasion to consider the merits of the
pleas raised by them. Since we have come to the conclusion
that the second preliminary objection raised by the
respondents must be upheld, we do not propose to pronounce
any decision on the first preliminary objection. However,
as the point covered by the said objection has been
elaborately argued before us, we would prefer to indicate
briefly the broad arguments urged fry both the parties in
that behalf.
(1) A.I.R. 1963 S.C. 1811. (2) (1964) 6 S.C.R. 594.
892
The controversy between the parties as to the scope and
effect of the provisions contained in Art. 32 on which the
validity of the first preliminary objection rests,
substantially centres round the question as to what is the
effect of the decision of this Court in Smt. Ujjam Bai’s
case(1). The petitioners argue that though the majority
view in that case was that the writ petition filed by Ujjam
Bai was incompetent, it would appear that the reasons given
in most of the judgments support the petitioners’ case that
where the fundamental rights of a citizen are contravened,
may be by a quasi-judicial order, in pursuance of which a
tax is attempted to be recovered from a citizen, the
erroneous conclusion in regard to the nature of the
transaction must be held to contravene the fundamental right
of the citizen, and as such, would justify the petitioners
in moving this Court under Art. 32.
On the other hand, the respondents urge that the effect of
the decision. in Ujiam Bai’s case plainly tends. to show
that if a quasi-judicial decision has determined a matter in
regard to the taxability of a given transaction, there can
be no question about the breach of fundamental rights which
would justify an application under Art. 32. The argument is
that the intervention of a quasi-judicial order changes the
complexion of the dispute between the parties, and in cases
of that character, the only remedy available to an aggrieved
citizen is to take recourse to the appeals and other
proceedings prescribed by the taxing statute in question.
Art. 32 is not intended to confer appellate jurisdiction on
this Court so as to review or examine the propriety of
quasi-judicial orders passed by appropriate authorities
purporting to exercise their powers and jurisdictions under
the several taxing statutes. It may be that after
exhausting the remedies by way of appeals and revisions
prescribed by the statute, the party may come to this Court
under Art. 136, but Art. 32 is inapplicable in such cases.
In Ujjam Bai’s case(1), the first issue which was referred
to the Special Bench was whether an order of assessment made
by an authority under a taxing statute which is intra vires
is open to challenge as repugnant to
(1) [1963] 1 S.C.R. 778.
893
Art. 19 (1)(g), on the sole ground that it was based on a
misconstruction of a provision of the Act or of a
notification issued thereunder; and the second question was,
can the validity of such an order be questioned in a
petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution? The majority
view expressed in this case was against the petitioner. S.
K. Das J. who delivered the main judgment on behalf of the
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majority view observed that where a quasi-judicial authority
makes an ,order in the undoubted exercise of its
jurisdiction in pursuance of a provision of law which is
intra vires, an error -of law or fact committed by that
authority cannot be impeached otherwise than on appeal,
unless the erroneous determination relates to a matter on
which the jurisdiction of that body depends; and so, he held
that if the impugned order of assessment is made by an
authority under a valid taxing statute in the undoubted
exercise of its jurisdiction it cannot be challenged under
Art. 32 on the sole ground that it is passed on a
misconstruction of a provision of the Act or of a
notification issued thereunder.
Subba Rao J., on the other hand, took the view that Art. 32
confers wide jurisdiction on this Court to enforce the
fundamental rights, and he held that it is the duty of this
Court to entertain a writ petition wherever a fundamental
right of a citizen is alleged to have been contravened,
irrespective of whether the question raised involves a
question of jurisdiction, law, or fact; this is the minority
view pronounced in Ujjam Bai’s case.
Hidayatullah J., who agreed broadly with the majority view,
expressed the opinion that if a quasi-judicial tribunal
embarks upon an action wholly outside the pale of the law he
is enforcing, a question of jurisdiction would be involved
and that would justify an application under Art. 32.
Ayyangar J. held that if it appeared that the impugned order
of assessment was based upon a plain and patent
misconstruction of the provisions of the taxing statute,
that itself would give rise to a plea that the authority was
acting beyond its jurisdiction and in such a case, a
petition under Art. 32 may be justified. Proceeding on this
view, the learned Judge held that the construction placed by
the taxing authority was not shown to be patently erroneous.
894
and so, he was not prepared to grant any relief to Ujjam
Bai. That is how the learned Judge agreed with the majority
decision.
Mudholkar J., who also agreed with the majority decision,
was disposed to make an exception in cases where an
erroneous construction of the law would lead to the recovery
of a tax which is beyond the competence of the legislature,
or is violative of the provisions of Part III or of any
other provisions of the Constitution.
It would, thus, be seen that though the majority decision
was that Ujjam Bai’s petition should be dismissed, the
reasons given in the judgments pronounced by the learned
Judges who agreed with the majority decision are not all
uniform and-do not disclose an identity of approach or of
reasons, and that naturally has given rise to the arguments
in the present writ petitions, both parties suggesting that
the majority decision in the case of Ujjam Bai supports the
rival views for which they contend.
Mr. Setalvad has strongly urged that if a misconstruction of
the notification on which Ujjam Bai rested her case, was not
held to justify a petition under Art. 32, that would
necessarily mean that the misconstruction of the nature of
the transaction would be no better, even though in this
’latter case, the wrong decision on the question as to the
character of the sale transaction may involve -taxing a
transaction which is protected by Art. 286(1) (a). One can
understand the argument, said Mr. Setalvad, that a breach of
the fundamental rights, however it is caused would justify
recourse to Art. 32; that would be consistent and logical;
but once it is held that a breach of the fundamental rights
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alleged to have been caused by a misconstruction of a
notification or a statute placed by an appropriate authority
acting under the provisions of a valid taxing law does not
attract Art. 32, it is not logically possible to urge that
another kind of breach alleged to have been caused by a
misappreciation of the nature of the transaction and an
erroneous conclusion as to its taxable character would make
any difference. In the first case, the erroneous
construction of the notification violates the provisions of
Art. 265 of the Constitution and thereby brings in the
breach of Art.
895
31 (1); in the other case, the misconstruction as to the
taxable character of the transaction violates Art. 28 6 (1 )
(a) and thereby brings in Art. 31 (1). Therefore, it is
urged that he necessary consequence of the decision in Ujjam
Bai is that even if the Sales-tax Officer has held wrongly
that the impugned transactions are not inter-State
transactions, the remedy of petition under Art. 32 is not
open to the aggrieved citizen.
On the other hand, Mr. Palkhivala has strenuously urged that
the decision in Ujjam Bai rested on the basis that the
misinterpretation of the notification did not involve the
violation of any constitutional limitations or prohibitions
and he has referred us to some passages in the judgments of
Das, Kapur and Mudholkar JJ. In support of his argument
that where an erroneous decision of a salestax officer
results in the violation of a constitutional prohibition or
limitation, different considerations would arise and an
aggrieved citizen would be entitled to move this Court under
Art. 32, Mr. Palkhivala has emphasised the fact that whereas
Das J. expressly held that the view taken in Kailash Nath v.
State of U.P.(1) was not right, he approved of the other
decisions which were cited at the Bar and exhaustively
discussed on the ground that those decisions ’fall under the
category in which an executive authority acts without
authority of law, or a quasi-judicial authority acts in
transgression of a constitutional prohibition and without
jurisdiction"(2). These decisions are: Thakur Amar Singhji
v. State of Rajasthan(3); M/s. Mohanlal Hargovind Dass v.
The State of Madhya Pradesh(4); Y. Mahaboob Sheriff v.
Mysore State Transport Authority(5); J. V. Gokar & Co.
(Private) Ltd. v. The Assistant Collector of Sales-tax
(Inspection) (6); and Universal Imports Agency v. Chief
Controller of Imports and Exports ( 7 ) . To the same effect
is the observation made by Kapur J. when the learned Judge
stated that in the case of M/s. Mohanlal Hargovind Dass ( 4
) ’:he dispute did not turn upon a misconstruction of any
statute by any quasi-judicial authority, but that was a case
(1) A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 790(2) [1963] 1 S.C.R. at 842.
(3) [1955] 8 S.C.R. 303.(4) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 509.
(5) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 146.(6) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 852.
(7) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 305.
896
in which the very transaction was outside the taxing powers
of the State and any action taken by the taxing
authorities was one without authority of law.
In support of the same argument, both Mr. Pathak and Mr.
Palkhivala strongly relied upon the two subsequent decisions
of this Court where writ petitions filed under Art. 32 were
entertained on grounds somewhat similar to those on which
the present writ petitions are founded, The State Trading
Corporation of India Ltd. and Another v. The State of Mysore
and Another(1) and The State Trading Corporation of India
Ltd. and Others v. The State of Mysore and Another(2).
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Basing himself on these decisions, Mr. Pathak has argued
that the question as to whether a particular transaction of
sale attracts the protection of Art. 286(1) (a) is a
collateral fact the decision of which confers jurisdiction
on the Sales-tax Officer; and he contends that the decision
of the Sales-tax Officer, who is a Tribunal of limited
jurisdiction, on a collateral jurisdictional point can
always be challenged under Art. 32 of the Constitution if
the said decision impinges upon the citizen’s right
protected by Art. 28 6 (1) (a).
Mr. Palkhivala urged the argument of jurisdiction in a
slightly different way. He contended that the concept of
jurisdiction on which he relied was not based on the view
that jurisdiction means authority to decide. According to
him, the concept of jurisdiction was of a different category
and was of a vital character when constitutional limitations
or prohibitions were involved in the decision of any case
brought before a Sales-tax Officer.
On the other hand, Mr. Setalvad has urged that the Sales-tax
Officer is not a Tribunal of limited jurisdiction and the
charging sections in the respective Sales-tax Acts leave it
to the Sales-tax Officer and the heirarchy of officers
contemplated by them to decide the question about the
taxability of any given transaction and impose a tax on it
in accordance with the provisions of the Acts. Where a
tribunal is entitled to deal with transactions which fall
(1) 14 S.T.C. 188.
(2) 14 S.T.C. 416.
897
under the charging sections of the statute, it would be
erroneous to contend that the decision of the Tribunal on
the said question about the taxability of the transaction is
the decision on a collateral jurisdictional fact. If the
said argument is accepted, logically, it may mean that all
questions the decision of which inevitably precedes the
imposition of the tax, would be collateral jurisdictional
fact; and that clearly cannot be the effect of the charging
sections of the different Acts.
In regard to the point of constitutional limitations and
prohibitions raised by Mr. Palkhivala, Mr. Setalvad contends
that if the provisions of Art. 286(1) (a) makes the decision
of the Sales-tax Officer on the character of the sale trans-
action one of jurisdiction, then it is difficult to see why
his decision on other points should also not partake of the
same character. In that connection, he emphasised the fact
that the provisions of Art. 286(1) (a) cannot be
distinguished from the provisions of Art. 265. As we have
already indicated, having regard to the fact that we have
come to the conclusion that the other preliminary objection
urged by the respondents must be upheld, we do not propose
to express any opinion on this part of the controversy
between the parties.
That takes us to the question as to whether the petitioners,
some of whom are companies registered under the Indian
Companies Act and one of whom is the State Trading
Corporation, can claim to file the present writ petitions
under Art. 32 having regard to the decision of this Court in
the case of the State Trading Corporation of India Ltd. (1).
The petitioners argue that the said decision merely held
that the State Trading Corporation of India Ltd. was not a
citizen. The question as to whether the veil of the
Corporation can be lifted and the rights of the shareholders
of the said Corporation could be recognised under Art. 19 or
not, was not decided, and it is on this aspect of the
question that arguments have been urged before us in the
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present writ petitions.
The true legal position in regard to the character of a
corporation or a company which owes its incorporation to
(1) A.I.R. 1963 S.C. 1811.
134-159 S.C.-57
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a statutory authority, is not in doubt or dispute. The
corporation in law is equal to a natural person and has a
legal entity of its own. The entity of the corporation is
entirely separate from that of its shareholders; it bears
its own name and has a seal of its own; its assets are
separate and distinct from those of its members; it can sue
and be sued exclusively for its own purpose; its creditors
cannot obtain satisfaction from the assets of its members;
the liability of the members or shareholders is limited to
the capital invested by them; similarly, the creditors of
the members have no right to the assets of the corporation.
This position has been well-established ever since the
decision in the case of Salomon v. Salomon & Co. (1) was
pronounced in 1897; and indeed, it has always been the well-
recognised principle of common law. However, in the course
of time, the doctrine that the corporation or a company has
a legal and separate entity of its own has been subjected to
certain exceptions by the application of the fiction that
the veil of the corporation can be lifted and its face
examined in substance. The doctrine of the lifting of the
veil thus marks a change in the attitude that law had
originally adopted towards the concept of the separate
entity or personality of the corporation. As a result of
the impact of the complexity of economic factors, juidical
decisions have sometimes recognised exceptions to the rule
about the juristic personality of the corporation. It may
be that in course of time these exceptions may grow in
number and to meet the requirements of different economic
problems, the theory about the personality of the
corporation may be confined more and more.
But the question which we have to consider is whether in the
circumstances of the present petitions, we would be
justified in acceding to the argument that the veil of the
petitioning corporations should be lifted and it should be
held that their shareholders who are Indian citizens should
be permitted to invoke the protection of Art. 19, and on
that basis, move this Court under Art. 32 to challenge the
validity of the orders passed by the Sales-tax Officers in
respect of transactions which, it is alleged, are not
taxable.
(1) [1897] A. C. 22. H.L.
899
Mr. Palkhivala has very strongly urged before us that having
regard to the fact that the controversy between the parties
relates to the fundamental rights of citizens, we should not
hesitate to look at the substance of the matter and
disregard the doctrinaire approach which recognises the
existence of companies as separate juristic or legal
persons. If all the shareholders of the petitioning
companies are Indian citizens, why should not the Court look
at the substance of the matter and give the shareholders the
right to challenge that the contravention of their
fundamental rights should be prevented. He does not dispute
that the shareholders cannot claim that the property of the
companies is their own and cannot plead that the business of
the companies is their business in the strict legal sense.
The doctrine of lifting of the veil postulates the existence
of dualism between the corporation or company on the one
hand and its members or shareholders on the other. So, it
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is no good emphasising that technical aspect of the matter
in dealing with the question as to whether the veil should
be lifted or not. In support of his plea, he has invited
our attention to the decision of the Privy Council in The
English and Scottish Joint Co-operative Wholesale Society
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Agricultural Income-tax, Assam(1),
as well as the decision of the House of Lords in Daimler
Company Ltd. v. Continental Tyre and Rubber Company (Great
Britain) Ltd.(2).
It is unnecessary to refer to the facts in these two cases
and the principles enunciated by them, because it is not
disputed by the respondents that some exceptions have been
recognised to the rule that a corporation or a company has a
juristic or legal separate entity. The doctrine of the
lifting of the veil has been applied in the words of Palmer
in five categories of cases : where companies are in the
relationship of holding and subsidiary (or sub-subsidiary)
companies; where a shareholder has lost the privilege of
limited liability and has become directly liable to certain
creditors of the company on the ground that, with his
knowledge, the company continued to carry on business six
months after the number of its members was reduced
(1) [1948] I.T.R. 270. (2) [1916] A.C. 307.
900
below the legal minimum; in certain matters pertaining to
the law of taxes, death duties and stamps, particularly
where the question of the "controlling interest" is in
issue; in the law relating to exchange control; and in the
law relating to trading with the enemy where the test of
control is adopted(1). In some of these cases, judicial
decisions have no doubt lifted the veil and considered the
substance of the matter.
Gower has similarly summarised this position with the
observation that in a number of important respects, the
legislature has rent the veil woven by the Salomon case.
Particularly is this so, ’says Gower, in the sphere of
taxation and in the steps which have been taken towards the
recognition of enterprise-entity rather than corporate-
entity. It is significant, however, that according to
Gower, the courts have only construed statutes as "cracking
open the corporate shell" when compelled to do so by the
clear words of the statute; indeed they have gone’ out of
their way to avoid this construction whenever possible.
Thus, at present, the judicial approach in cracking open the
corporate shell is somewhat cautious and circumspect. It is
only where the legislative provision justifies the adoption
of such a course that the veil has been lifted. In
exceptional cases where courts have felt "themselves able to
ignore the corporate entity and to treat the individual
shareholders as liable for its acts",(2) the same course has
been adopted. Summarising his conclusions, Gower has
classified seven categories of cases where the veil of a
corporate body has been lifted. But it would not be
possible to evolve a rational, consistent and inflexible
principle which can be invoked in determining the question
as to whether the veil of the corporation should be lifted
or not. Broadly stated, where fraud is intended to be
prevented, or trading with an enemy is sought to be
defeated, the veil of a corporation is lifted by judicial
decisions and the shareholders are held to be the persons
who actually work for the corporation.
That being the position with regard to the doctrine of the
veil of a corporation and the principle that the said
(1) Palmer’s Company Law 20th Ed. p. 136.
(2) Gower" Modern Company Law, 2nd Ed. pp. 193 & 195.
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901
veil can be lifted in some cases, the question which arises
for our decision is; can we lift the veil of the petitioners
and say that it is the shareholders who are really moving
the Court under Art. 32, and so, the existence of the legal
and juristic separate entity of the petitioners as a
corporation or as a company should not make the petitions
filed by them under Art. 32 incompetent? We do not think we
can answer this question in the affirmative. No doubt, the
complaint made by the petitioners is that their fundamental
rights are infringed and it is a truism to say that this
Court as the guardian of the fundamental rights of the
citizens will always attempt to safeguard the said
fundamental rights; but having regard to the decision of
this Court in State Trading Corporation of India Ltd. (1) we
do not see how we can legitimately entertain the
petitioners’ plea in the present petitions, because if their
plea was upheld, it would really mean that what the
corporations or the companies cannot achieve directly, can
be achieved by them indirectly by relying upon the doctrine
of lifting the veil. If the corporations and companies are
not citizens, it means that the Constitution intended that
they should not get the benefit of Art. 19. It is no doubt
suggested by the petitioners that though Art. 19 is confined
to citizens, the Constitution-makers may have thought that
in dealing with the claims of corporations to invoke the
provisions of Art. 19, courts would act upon the doctrine of
lifting the veil and would not treat the attempts of the
corporations in that behalf as falling outside Art. 19. We
do not think this argument is well-founded. The effect of
confining Art. 19 to citizens as distinguished from persons
to whom other Articles like 14 apply, clearly must be that
it is only citizens to whom the rights under Art. 19 are
guaranteed. If the legislature intends that the benefit of
Art. 19 should be made available to the corporations, it
would not be difficult for it to adopt a proper measure in
that behalf by enlarging the definition of ’citizen’
prescribed by the Citizenship Act passed by the Parliament
by virtue of the powers conferred on it by Articles 10 and
11. On the other hand, the fact that the Parliament has not
chosen to make any such provision indicates that it was not
the intention of the
(1) A.I.R. 1963 S.C. 1811.
902
Parliament to treat corporations as citizens. Therefore, it
seems to us that in view of the decision of this Court in
the case of the State Trading Corporation of India Ltd.(1)
the petitioners cannot be heard to say that their
shareholders should be allowed to file the present petitions
on the ground that, in substance, the corporations and
companies are nothing more than associations of shareholders
and members thereof. In our opinion, therefore, the
argument that in the present petitions we would be justified
in lifting the veil cannot be sustained.
Mr. Palkhivala sought to draw a distinction between the
right of a citizen to carry on trade or business which is
contemplated by Art. 19(1)(g) from his right to form
associations or unions contemplated by Art. 19 (1) (c). He
argued that Art. 19(1)(c) enables the citizens to choose
their instruments or agents for carrying on the business
which it is their fundamental right to carry on. If
citizens decide to set up a corporation or a company as
their agent for the purpose of carrying on trade or
business, that is a right which is guaranteed to them under
Art. 19(1)(c). Basing himself on this distinction between
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the two rights guaranteed by Art. 19(1)(g) and (c)
respectively, Mr. Palkhivala somewhat ingeniously contended
that we should not hesitate to lift the veil, because by
looking at the substance of the matter, we would really be
giving effect to the two fundamental rights guaranteed by
Art. 19(1). We are not impressed by this argument either.
The fundamental right to form an association cannot in this
manner be coupled with the fundamental right to carry on any
trade or business. As has been held by this Court in All
India Bank Employees’ Association v. National Industrial
Tribunal and Others(2), the argument which is thus
attractively presented before us overlooks the fact that
Art. 19, as contrasted with certain other articles like
Arts. 26, 29 and 30, guarantees rights to the citizens as
such, and associations cannot lay claim to the fundamental
rights guaranteed by that Article solely on the basis of
their being an aggregation of citizens, that is to say, the
right of the citizens composing the body. The respective
rights guaranteed by Art. 19(1)
(1) A.I.R. 1963 S.C. 1811.
(2) [1962] 3 S.C.R. 269.
903
Cannot be combined as suggested by Mr. Palkhivala, but must
be asserted each in its own way and within its own limits;
the sweep of the several rights is no doubt wide, but the
combination of any of those two rights would not justify a
claim such as is made by Mr. Palkhivala in the present
petitions. As soon as citizens form a company, the right
guaranteed to them by Art. 19(1)(c) has been exercised and
no restraint has been placed on that right and no
infringement of that right is made. Once a company or a
corporation is formed, the business which is carried on by
the said company or corporation is the business of the
company or corporation and is not the business of the
,citizens who get the company or corporation formed or
incorporated, and the rights of the incorporated body must
be judged on that footing and cannot be judged on the
assumption that they are the rights attributable to the
business of individual citizens. Therefore, we are
satisfied that the argument based on the distinction between
the two rights guaranteed by Art. 19(1)(c) and (g) and the
effect of their combination cannot take the petitioners’
case very far when they seek to invoke the doctrine that the
veil of the corporation should be lifted. That is why we
have come to the conclusion that the petitions filed by the
petitioners are incompetent under Art. 32, even though in
each of these petitions one or two of the shareholders of
the petitioning companies or corporation have joined.
The result is, the second preliminary objection raised by
the respondents is upheld and the writ petitions are
dismissed as being incompetent under Art. 32 of the
Constitution. There would be no order as to costs.
Petitions dismissed.