Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 8193 of 2003
PETITIONER:
State of Rajasthan & Anr..
RESPONDENT:
J.K. Udaipur Udyog Ltd. & Anr.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/09/2004
BENCH:
RUMA PAL & ARUN KUMAR
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
WITH
C.A. Nos.8194-8201 OF 2003,
C.A. Nos. 8203-8206 OF 2003
RUMA PAL
A scheme was framed by the first appellant granting
exemption to industrial units from payment of sales tax on
intra-state and inter-state sale of goods and by-products
manufactured within the State of Rajasthan. By a subsequent
notification the extent of the percentage of exemption available
to sick industries was sought to be corrected. The
disputes in these appeals relate to the interpretation of the
scheme and the effect of the corrigendum.
The scheme was part of the New 4th Industrial Policy of the
State. The Policy stated that the object of the scheme was to
make Rajasthan "a most favoured destination for industries" and
to encourage the setting up of industries in the State. The policy
describes the nature of the exemptions which were sought to be
granted to the different kinds of industries with exemption/
deferment incentives for 11 years in respect of some industries
and 14 years for others. A greater incentive was granted to
industries being set up in the five industrial growth centres in the
State. The incentives available during the first year were to be
gradually tapered off to a particular percentage of the fixed
capital investment at different rates in respect of some industries.
However, in respect of cement industries the percentage of
exemption proposed was at a flat rate of 25% for 11 years.
According to the policy the scheme would also give benefits for
the first time to sick units. The sick units were classified into
two categories as follows:
(1) "Those units which have not availed
of any benefits in the past will get
full benefits at par with a new unit.
(2) Those units which have availed of
sales tax benefits in the past will get
ST benefit on a tapering basis up to
11 years (maximum 80% and
minimum10% exemption/deferment
on a tapering basis)".
Pursuant to this Policy the Rajasthan Sales
Tax/Central Sales Tax Exemption Scheme for Industries,
1998 (referred to as ’the scheme’) was framed and
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notified in exercise of the powers conferred on the
State Government by section 15 of the Rajasthan Sales
Tax Act, 1994 (referred to as "RST Act") and by sub-
section (5) of Section 8 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956
(referred to as ’the CST Act"), The scheme came into
force from 1st April 1998. Clause 1-(b) of the scheme
envisages that "an industrial unit which commences
commercial production during the operative period of this
scheme, shall be entitled to claim benefits under this
scheme." Clause 3(a) provides that the scheme shall be
applicable to:
(i) the new industrial units;
(ii) the industrial units going for
expansion;
(iii) the industrial units launching
diversification; and
(iv) the sick industrial units.
A "New Industrial Unit" has been defined in clause
2(k) as:-
(i) "New Industrial Unit" means an industrial
unit which commences commercial
production during the operative period of
this Scheme including a unit set up on the
site of an existing industrial unit by
making separately identifiable capital
investment; subject however, that where
an industrial unit manufacturing the same
product is established on the site of an
existing unit, the benefit permissible for a
new unit shall be available to it only on
the production in excess of 80% of the
installed capacity of the existing unit.
(ii) "New Industrial Unit" shall also include a
sick unit:-
(a) which has not availed of any
benefits of exemption from tax
or deferment of tax;
(b) which has been appraised by
financial institution and
appropriate rehabilitation plan
has been formulated; and
(c) which has been purchased by a
new management other than by
way of collusive transfer and
such management has made
additional fixed capital
investment not less than 25% of
the depreciated value of the
assets of such unit".
The respondents in these appeals viz M/s. J.K.
Udyog and J.K. Synthetics Ltd were writ petitioners before
the High Court of Rajasthan and are companies which
manufacture cement in different units within the State of
Rajasthan. The respondent-companies in these appeals
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are undisputedly ’sick’.
The description of the type of units, extent of the
percentage of exemption from tax liability, the maximum
exemption permissible under the scheme and the
maximum time limit for availing the exemption under the
scheme have been set out in Annexure ’B’ to the Scheme.
We set out below the material portion of Annexure B
to the exemption scheme.
Sl.
No.
Type of Units
Extent of the
percentage of
exemption from
total tax liability
Maximum exemption
in terms
of percentage
of eligible fixed
capital investment(FCI)
Maximum availing
limit
for
exemption
from tax.
1
2
3
4
5
1
New Units other than
the units mentioned
at S.No.2 and
3 and units going in
for expansion
or diversification
1st year
2nd year
3rd year
4th year
5th year
6th year
7th year
8th year
9th year
10th year
11th year
100
%
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
50%
40%
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40%
30%
30%
100%of eligible fixed
capital investment in
cases where
such investment
exceeds Rs.1,50,00 Iacs,
and 125% of eligible FCI
in cases where
such investment does
not exceed Rs.150,00 lacs
Eleven years
2
.
(a)New Units
of knitwears, gems
and jewellery, textile,
electronics
and telecommunications,
computer software,
foot wears and
leather goods,
and ceramic
(b) Very
Prestigious Units
1st year
2nd year
3rd year
4th year
5th year
6th year
7th year
8th year
9th year
10th year
11th year
12th year
13th year
100
%
100
%
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
50%
40%
40%
30%
30%
30%
30%
125% of eligible fixed
capital investment
Thirteen years
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3
All categories of
cement Plants/
units
including pioneering
to Prestigious unit
Very prestigious/Premier
Units except
mini cement
plants mentioned
in Annexure-A
25% of
total
liability
100% of eligible FCI
Eleven years
4
Sick Units:
(a) Sick units which
have not availed
of benefits of exemption
from tax or determent
of tax previously,
Same
benefits
which
are
available
to new
Units at
S. No.1
Eleven years
(b) Other sick
units which have
availed of the benefits
of exemption from tax
or deferment of tax
1st year
2nd year
3rd year
4th year
5th year
6th year
7th year
8th year
9th year
10th year
11th year
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
10%
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10%
10%
100% of eligible
fixed capital investment
in cases where
such investment
exceeds Rs.150.00 lacs
and 125% of FCI in
cases where
such investment does
not exceed Rs.150.00 lacs
Eleven years
It is apparent from this annexure that for the
purposes of deferring the rate of exemption the industries
were classified into three categories under Srl. Nos. 1, 2
and 3 according to the kind of Industry. Cement
plants/units have been separately placed in Srl.No.3.
According to the respondent-companies, however,
sick units were treated as a special category, and
irrespective of the nature of the industry, were covered by
Srl.4. It is the respondent’s case that as far as their
cement units were concerned they were not covered by Srl.
No 3 but by Srl. No.4 (a) and thus, according to them,
they were entitled to the higher benefits accorded to new
units under Srl. No.1. According to them the words under
column 3 against Srl. No.4 made this clear.
According to the appellants on the other hand, this
was never the intention of the State Government which had
wanted to treat sick industrial units of a particular kind on
par with new industrial units of that kind in the matter of
grant of exemption. But we are anticipating the dispute
which is considered in detail subsequently. Returning to
the scheme : - the procedure for obtaining exemption
under the scheme has been provided in clause 4, the
relevant extract of which reads as under:
"Sanction of benefits under the
Exemption Scheme and issue of Eligibility
Certificate:-
(a) In order to avail the benefit under
this Scheme, the applicant industrial
unit shall have to obtain sanction
from the State Level Screening
Committee or District Level
Screening Committee, as the case
may be. The Screening
Committees shall act as quasi-
judicial authorities whose decisions
shall be final subject to other
provisions provided for in this
Scheme.
(b) \005\005
(c) \005\005..
(d) \005\005.
(e) The appropriate Screening
Committee shall, after having
examined the application of an
industrial unit and after having
gathered or collected such other
information, documents or evidence
as may be considered necessary
and after having got conducted
such further enquiry as deemed
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proper in the circumstances of the
case, sanction the benefits under
this Scheme to the said unit if it is
found fully covered by the
provisions of this Scheme and is not
in any way debarred or disqualified
to claim the said benefits.
However, in particular, the said
Screening Committee shall reject
the application of the applicant,
unit\027
(i) where its case does not fall within
the parameters of this Scheme, or
(ii) where it has failed in spite of
adequate opportunity being given,
to supply any information asked for
or adduce any evidence required
for; or
(iii) where any case of avoidance or
evasion of tax is pending against it
at any forum or it is found penalized
for such offence, within a period of
two years immediately preceding
the date of the filing of the
application; however, the said
Screening Committee may waive
this disqualification in an
appropriate case if the offence is
technical or venial in nature or has
been compounded.
(f) In case of sanction of benefits under the
Scheme, such sanction shall be
communicated in writing to the
Assessing Authority of the applicant
unit, who shall issue Eligibility Certificate
to the said unit in Form\027C, appended
to this notification, within a period of
seven days from the date of the receipt
of the sanction, and a copy of such
Certificate shall also be sent to the
Member Secretary of the concerned
Screening Committee.
(g) The Eligibility Certificate issued under
this Scheme shall remain in force till the
permissible exemption from tax in
accordance with the provisions of this
scheme is not exhausted, or till such
Certificate is not amended, suspended
or revoked.
(h) The benefits under this Scheme shall be
available from the date of the application
filed by the applicant unit completed in
all respects, as certified by the member
Secretary of the appropriate Screening
Committee.
(i) During the currency of the Eligibility
Certificate, the unit concerned shall be
exempted from payment of tax on the
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intra-State sales/inter-State sales of the
goods and by-products manufactured by
it within the State including the waste
items derived therefrom and the packing
material used therewith."
The order in which the steps envisaged for grant of benefits
under this clause of the scheme was therefore;
1) making of an application by the industrial unit;
2) the certification of the application as complete and the
provisional availability of the benefits (clause 4(h) );
3) The examination of the application by the Screening
Committee after collecting information/enquiry etc
Clause (4( e));
4) The sanction or rejection of the application by the
Screening Committee . (Clause (4(e));
5) In case of sanction, the communication of the sanction
to the Assessing Authority. (Clause (4 (f))
6) The issuance of Eligibility Certificate by the Assessing
Authority within seven days. (Clause 4( f));
7) The availability of exemption from payment of tax
during the currency of the Eligibility Certificate until the
exemption was either exhausted or unless the
certificates were amended, suspended or revoked.
(Clauses 4(i)).
The respondent companies applied for exemption under
the scheme claiming benefits at par with units under Srl.No.1. As
far as M/s. J.K. Synthetics Limited is concerned, the Director of
Industries certified that the application was complete. The
certificate issued under Section 4(h) on 20th February, 1999
made it clear:
"This certificate will not be treated as
sanction of incentive under the Sales Tax
Exemption Scheme, 1998. Incentive if
any availed under Clause 4(h) of the
aforesaid scheme will be entirely at the
risk of the unit, subject to decision of the
State level Screening Committee. A
suitable undertaking shall be taken by the
concerned assessing authority in this
regard from the unit."
In terms of the requirement, M/s. J.K. Synthetics Limited
gave an undertaking in writing to the effect that the incentives
availed by the company from the date of completion of the
application till the grant of sanction of eligibility certificate would
be entirely at the risk of the company and in case the company’s
application was rejected for any reason, the company shall pay
the tax which was being availed of on the basis of the certificate
of completion.
While the application of M/s. J.K. Synthetics was pending
for consideration by the Screening Committee, the corrigendum
was issued on 30th September, 1999, by the Finance Department
inter-alia, amending the third column against Srl.No.4 of
Annexure B by replacing the phrase "New units at Srl. No. 1"
with "New units at Srl. No. 1,2 and 3 as the case may be". Thus
sick cement units under Srl.No.4 (a) were expressly put on par
with new cement units under Srl.No.3.
M/s. J.K. Synthetics Limited submitted a representation
to the Screening Committee that the corrigendum should not
affect the company. The Screening Committee deferred its
decision on the ground that as the particular unit of M/s. J.K.
Synthetics Limited in respect of which the exemption was
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claimed was not sick, although the company itself had been
declared sick, it should await the rehabilitation programme duly
approved by the BIFR providing the benefit of sales tax
incentives scheme to all such units. While deferring the case till
the approval of the rehabilitation programme by BIFR, the
Screening Committee said that the unit could avail of the benefit
under the scheme to the extent permissible under the
corrigendum. Neither any sanction under clause 4(e) and
consequently no Eligibility Certificate under clause 4(f) have
been issued to M/s. J.K. Synthetics Limited under the scheme till
today.
As far as M/s. Udaipur Udyog Limited is concerned, its
application under the scheme was certified as complete under
Clause 4(h)on 26th July, 1999 and was sanctioned on 30th
December, 1999. However the quantum of benefit was granted
in terms of the corrigendum from the date of issuance of the
corrigendum. The eligibility certificate was issued to M/s. J.K.
Udyog on 29th February, 2000 also restricting the benefits under
the scheme on the basis of the corrigendum.
Since the respondent had been availing of the higher rates
of exemption against Srl.No.1, consequent upon the decision of
the Screening Committee granting the benefits under the
corrigendum, provisional assessment orders and notices were
issued to both the respondent companies by the Sales Tax
Authorities over the differential sales tax.
M/s. J.K. Synthetics Limited and J.K. Udyog Limited filed
separate writ petitions before the High Court of Rajasthan
challenging the corrigendum dated 30th September, 1999; in the
alternative a prayer was made to hold that the corrigendum had
no application to the respondent companies; for quashing the
decisions of the Screening Committee in so far as the
respondent companies were given the benefit of the exemption
scheme on the basis of the corrigendum and for quashing the
provisional assessment orders and notices.
The submission of the respondent companies before the
High Court inter alia was that the scheme as originally framed
allowed the companies to avail of the benefit of the exemption
scheme under the Srl.No. 4(a) read with Srl. No. 1 for a period of
11 years up to a maximum limit of hundred percent of the
companies’ eligibility fixed capital investment at percentages of
the total tax liability ranging from 100% in the first year to 30% in
the 11th year. These rights of the companies under the scheme
were claimed to be crystalised with effect from the date of the
certification of their applications under clause 4 (h), which could
not be taken away by the corrigendum with retrospective effect.
The learned single judge accepted the submission of the
respondent companies that the impugned corrigendum really
amounted to an amendment of the scheme. But it was held that
the State Government was competent to modify the scheme
and, therefore, the respondent companies were entitled to relief
in terms of the scheme as originally notified up to the date of
amendment and subsequent thereto as provided in the
corrigendum. Since the corrigendum had been published in the
Official Gazette on 7th January, 2000 it was held that it would be
applicable with effect from that date.
Several appeals were preferred both by the State of
Rajasthan as well as by the respondent companies from the
decision of the learned Single Judge. The Division Bench
disposed of all the appeals by the judgment impugned before
us. The Appellate Court agreed with the learned Single Judge
that the corrigendum notification was in fact an amendment of
the scheme and therefore, this would operate only prospectively
i.e. from 7th January, 2000. The plea of the respondent
companies that the State Government was bound by the
principles of promissory estoppel from modifying or amending the
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scheme was negated by the Division Bench. The respondent
companies have not sought to challenge this conclusion before
us. The Division Bench however held that the rights of the
respondent companies of enjoying the benefit under the original
scheme including the maximum amount of exemption, the
maximum period of exemption, and the percentage of exemption
were available to the respondent companies with effect from the
date of certification of their applications under clause 4(h) and
were substantive and that these rights could not be affected
adversely unless the subsequent notification clearly manifested
an intention to do so. It was held that the corrigendum did not
contain any such explicit provision nor could any inference be
drawn that accrued rights were to be affected. It was held that
even if this proposition was unacceptable, the amendment was
arbitrary and violative of Article 14 being discriminatory vis-‘-vis
other sick industries. It was further held that the amendment
could not discriminate against sick cement plants which had not
availed of benefits of tax exemption earlier, so that such sick
industries were treated in a manner worse than sick cement
industries which had availed of exemptions from sales tax earlier.
The Division Bench accordingly held that the respondent
companies were entitled to avail of the benefits under the
scheme as originally notified in the manner provided in column 3
of Serial No. 1 of Annexure B read with Serial No. 4(a) and that
such rights were not affected by the corrigendum published on
7th January, 2000. However. the corrigendum notification itself
was not quashed as had been prayed for.
The appellants have impugned the decision of the Division
Bench and have contended that the Division Bench had erred in
fact and in law in coming to the conclusion that the respondent
companies had a vested right to the benefits of the scheme as
available to new units under Srl. No. 1 of Annexure ’B’ to the
scheme. It is pointed out that as far as J.K. Synthetics is
concerned its application has not been sanctioned at all. It is
contended that the corrigendum notification was in fact a
corrigendum and not an amendment, and that the corrigendum
merely made explicit the intention of the State Government to
treat the sick units of a particular industry on par with new units
of such industries. It is further contended that even if the
corrigendum were construed as an amendment, the State
Government had the power to withdraw or modify the benefit of
the scheme not only under Section 15 of the RST Act read with
Section 8(5) of the CST Act but also under clause (9) of the
scheme which provides for the power to the State Government to
review or modify the exemption scheme "as and when needed in
public interest". It is submitted that an exemption is in the nature
of a concession and was by that reason a defeasible right. It is
submitted that exemptions granted could not create any vested
right in the beneficiaries of the exemption to the continued grant
of the exemption until and unless the beneficiary was able to
establish that the State Government was bound by the principles
of promissory estoppel from modifying or withdrawing the
concession. It is submitted that since the respondent companies
had failed to establish any promissory estoppel on the part of the
State Government, the Government could withdraw or modify the
concession given at least from the date of the publication of the
corrigendum notification. As far as the High Court’s findings on
the issue of discrimination is concerned, it is submitted that in
fact there were no other cement units in the State in comparison
with which it could be said that the respondents-companies were
being unfairly treated. The language of Srl. No.3 in Annexure B
was also relied upon to contend that the corrigendum was not
discriminatory and merely treated sick cement units and new
cement units equally.
Counsel for the respondent-companies has submitted
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that there was no power in the State Government to issue the
corrigendum with retrospective effect. It is submitted that the
scheme was issued not only under Section 15 of the RST Act but
also under Section 8(5) of the CST Act. The exercise of the
power was thus, to use counsel’s language, ’inseverable’. It is
argued that as there is no power under Section 8(5) of the CST
Act to withdraw an exemption with retrospective effect the entire
exercise of issuing the corrigendum must fail. In addition, it is
submitted that even Section 15 of the Act did not allow the State
Government to withdraw an exemption with retrospective effect.
It is stated that under clause 4(h) read with clause 5(g), on the
date on which the respondents-companies’ application was
certified as being complete, rights accrued to the industrial units
which could not be withdrawn and it was not necessary to rely
upon the principle of promissory estoppel for the purpose of
claiming continued exemption. It is submitted that the
subsequent notification was not a corrigendum but an
amendment of the scheme and could not be construed as
amounting to withdrawal of the rights conferred under the
scheme as originally published. It is submitted that sick units
have been treated as a class apart irrespective of the nature of
industry. It is also submitted that the corrigendum if construed in
the manner advocated by the appellants, would be violative of
Article 14. Finally, it is submitted that in any event this Court
should protect the respondent-companies in so far as they had
availed of the benefits of the scheme as originally published at
least from the date of the order of the High Court. It is submitted
that the High Court had struck down the corrigendum notification,
Therefore, Annexure B as originally notified would revive. The
decision of the High Court not having been stayed by this Court,
the respondent-companies had not and indeed could not recover
the sales tax from their customers by virtue of Section 14(2) of
the RST Act and it would in these circumstances be inequitable
to saddle them with sales tax liability for the period subsequent to
the decision of the High Court. Reliance has been placed on the
decision of this Court in State of Rajasthan V. Mahaveer Oil
Industries and Ors. 1999 (4) SCC 357 in support of the
submission.
The issue whether the subsequent notification should be
read as a correction or an amendment of the scheme as
originally notified would be relevant only if the appellants sought
to give retrospective effect to it. Since the appellants have stated
before us that they do not intend to take away the benefits which
may have actually been enjoyed by the respondent companies
prior to the date of publication of the corrigendum viz 7th January,
2000, a determination of the issue would be an academic
exercise and a consideration of the several decisions cited with
regard to the principles for deciding whether a statutory provision
has retrospective effect, is unnecessary. The question is whether
the subsequent notification could operate as far as the
respondent companies are concerned with effect from 7.1.2000.
The answer to this question would depend upon the nature of the
rights of the respondent companies under the scheme.
An exemption is by definition a freedom from an obligation
which the exemptee is otherwise liable to discharge. It is a
privilege granting an advantage not available to others. An
exemption granted under a statutory provision in a fiscal statute
has been held to be a concession granted by the State
Government so that the beneficiaries of such concession are not
required to pay the tax or duty they are otherwise liable to pay
under such statute. The recipient of a concession has no legally
enforceable right against the Government to grant a concession
except to enjoy the benefits of the concession during the period
of its grant. This right to enjoy is a defeasible one in the sense
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that it may be taken away in exercise of the very power under
which the exemption was granted. [See: Shri Bakul Oil
Industries & Anr. V.State of Gujarat; 1987 (1) SCC 31;
Kasinka Trading v. Union of India (1995)1 SCC 274; Shrijee
Sales Corpn. v. Union of India (1997) 3 SCC 398].
In this case the scheme being notified under the power in
the State Government to grant exemptions both under Section
15 of the RST and Section 8(5) of the CST in the public interest,
the State Government was competent to modify or revoke the
grant for the same reason. Thus what is granted can be
withdrawn unless the Government is precluded from doing so on
the ground of promissory estoppel, which principle is itself
subject to considerations of equity and public interest.
[See: Sales Tax Officer v. Shree Durga Oil Mills (1998) 1 SCC
572]. The vesting of a defeasible right is therefore, a
contradiction in terms. There being no indefeasible right to the
continued grant of an exemption (absent the exception of
promissory estoppel), the question of the respondent companies
having an indefeasible right to any facet of such exemption such
as the rate, period etc. does not arise.
In any event, the High Court erred in fact in holding that
M/s. J.K. Synthetics had a vested right to the benefits of the
scheme. Clause 4 of the scheme clearly provides that the
benefits under the scheme were subject to the sanction of the
Screening Committee. No sanction has been issued to M/s. J.K.
Synthetics till date.
Apart from this, the exemption being a creature of the
scheme is subject to the scheme. Clause 9 of the scheme makes
it clear that the right under the scheme was temporary in the
sense that the scheme could be modified or reviewed. It is true
that clause 9 also provides that such review or modification could
take place only in the public interest. But nevertheless the right
conferred was a modifiable or revocable one. If any right under the
scheme is held to be unmodifiable it would be contrary to the
scheme itself. Therefore even if one were to assume that the
respondent companies were entitled to the benefits of the scheme
on par with new units under Srl.No.1 with effect from the date of
the certification of their application under clause 4(h), the right
could be modified with effect from the date on which the scheme
was modified. The further argument of the respondent that the
subsequent notification could not be construed as a modification
and would apply only to subsequent applicants is unacceptable.
There is no ambiguity in the language of the subsequent
notification. On the contrary the use of the word corrigendum
itself indicates the intention was to correct and to rectify what the
State Government thought had been erroneously done.
Coming now to the question of public interest. The 4th New
Industrial Policy pursuant to which the scheme had been framed
by the State Government was indisputably in the public interest.
Therefore, if the intention of the State Government was to
effectuate the policy by issuing the subsequent notification it
cannot be said that the State Government was not acting in the
public interest. The Industrial Policy which resulted in the
exemption scheme expressly provided that the rate of benefits
which were to be given to sick industrial units which had not
availed of any such benefits in the past would be at par with a new
unit. But does this mean that the words "new unit" in the policy
referred to industries under Srl. No.1 ? We think not. New units of
different kinds of industries had been separately classified both
under the policy and under Srl.Nos.1,2 and 3 of Annexure B to
the scheme. Each of the three categories at Srl.Nos.1,2 and 3
have been granted different rates of exemption Serial No.1
relates to new industries not covered by Srl.No.2 and 3. It is
therefore, the residuary category and any new industry covered by
Srl. Nos. 2 and 3 would not be covered by Srl.No.1. Serial No.2
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speaks of particular industries such as knitwears, gems and
jewellery, textile, electronics telecommunications, computer
software, footwear and leather goods and ceramics. This
category of industries has been sub-classified under the heads of
(a) "new units" and (b) very prestigious units". A very prestigious
unit is not defined in the scheme itself but is referred to in the
industrial policy as those industries which have a fixed capital
investment of Rs.50 crore or more and regular employment of 250
persons. Srl.No.3 makes no such distinction and refers to "all
categories" of cement plants except mini cement plants
mentioned in Annexure ’A’ to the scheme. Subject to the
exception of Annexure A all categories of cement plants/units
including new units have been allowed exemption of 25% of the
total tax liability for 11 years. There is no tapering of the incentive
for the 11 years that the benefit was to be available as is the case
under the other Serial Numbers. "All categories" would
necessarily include new cement plants and sick industrial units
falling within the definition of Clause 2(k)(ii), which was also
entitled to the same level of benefit as all other new cement units.
It would be incongruous to grant sick industrial units which do not
fall within clause 2(k)(ii) higher benefits than sick industrial units
which do. Since a sick industrial unit is granted a particular
benefit subject to the fulfillment of various conditions, it implies
that the industry which fulfils the conditions would be better off
than the one which does not. If we were to accept the
respondents’ interpretation of the original notification under
Srl.No.4(a) and (b), higher benefits would be available to sick
industrial units which did not comply with the conditions imposed
under clause 2(k)(ii). Such a conclusion is not only illogical but
would serve to make a distinction between sick industrial units on
an irrational basis. Clause 2(k)(ii) therefore indicates that the
highest benefit that a sick industrial unit can claim under the
scheme, is to be treated at par with new industries.
The thrust of the industrial policy was to give an incentive to
new entrepreneurs. It is true that there are separate provisions for
’sick industries’ but given the main object of the policy to make
Rajasthan a "most favoured destination for industries", it could not
have been the intention of the State Government to give a lower
benefit to new industries and to give higher benefits to sick
industrial units already established in the State. However, when
the scheme was first notified although the body of the scheme
effectuated the objective, the entry under column 3 against
Srl.No.4 in Annexure B did not clearly reflect this. Doubtless the
interpretation put by the respondent companies and accepted by
the High Court on the entries against Srl.No. 4 as it originally
stood in Annexure B, is a possible interpretation, but in our opinion
Annexure B was equally susceptible of the interpretation put
forward by the appellants before us particularly in the context of
the Industrial Policy.
It was to clarify this ambiguity that the subsequent
notification was issued by the State Government to correct or
amend Annexure B to the extent that it could be interpreted in a
manner not in keeping with the published industrial policy of the
State and the substantive provisions of the scheme.
For these reasons also the corrigendum cannot be said to
be violative of Article 14. On the contrary, if the corrigendum were
not to be given effect to, the entire scheme would operate
irrationally by making an invidious distinction between sick cement
units as we have already said. The irrationality is also apparent
vis-a-vis industries referable to Srl.No.2. Under the scheme, the
highest rate of exemption and greatest benefits is granted to new
units under Srl.No.2. If the respondents’ interpretation of the
corrigendum is accepted, a sick industry of a particular kind which
otherwise falls under Srl.No.2 would, by virtue of the entry against
Srl.No.4, be entitled to much lesser than new units of the same
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kind of industry as it would be treated on par with new units of
different kinds of industries under Srl.No.1. This is perhaps the
reason why the corrigendum was not challenged by those
industries covered by Srl. No.2 which are sick and which are not
new industrial units within the meaning of clause 2(k)(ii) of the
scheme. Although it appears to us that Srl.No.3 would include all
categories of cement industries, the question whether Srl. No. 4(b)
would relate to sick cement industries not covered by clause 2(k)
(iii) or Srl. No.4(a) is not an issue which requires to be finally
decided in this case, particularly when there is no such industry
before us which claims the benefit of clause 4(b).
Learned counsel for the respondents’ additional contention
is that the Screening Committee had proceeded on the basis that
the sick cement units were covered under Srl.No.4 and not
Srl.No.3. It is argued that such decision of the Screening
Committee being final in terms of Clause 4(a) of the scheme, it
was not open to the State to contend otherwise. The argument is
without force. The finality given to the decision of Screening
Committee in terms of Clause 4(a) is "subject to other provisions
provided for in the scheme". Any decision of the Screening
Committee cannot be contrary to the provisions of the scheme.
Besides all that the Screening Committee has held is that the
respondent companies are to be treated on par with other cement
companies, with effect from the date of the subsequent
notification. That is also what the appellants contend, namely that
Srl.No.4(a) expressly puts sick cement units on par with new
cement units under Srl.No.3.
The respondent companies are therefore required to avail of
the benefits under the scheme on the basis of the corrigendum
with effect from 7.1.2000. Learned counsel for the respondent
companies may be right in his contention that if a sanction is
granted and an Eligibility Certificate issued on the basis of the
sanction, then having regard to the provisions of Section 4(h) the
period of exemption under the sanction ought to cover the date of
the certification of the application as complete under Clause 4(h).
But it is again unnecessary to decide the ambit of the Screening
Committee’s power, as the appellants have not argued that the
benefits of the higher rate of exemption already availed of by the
respondent companies with effect from the date of certification
under clause 4(h) up to 7th January, 2000 should be taken away
from them.
This brings us to the last argument of the respondent
companies viz. that they should not be made liable for the sales
tax on the basis of the corrigendum for the period they had availed
of the exemptions after the decision of the High Court. The
submission proceeded on the basis that the High Court had
quashed the corrigendum Notification. As we have noted earlier
the Division Bench had not quashed the corrigendum notification
but had contented itself with construing it. The mere fact that this
Court has not granted a stay of operation of the decision of the
High Court would not give the respondent companies any right to
the fruits of that decision if the decision is ultimately reversed by
this Court. Besides the respondent-companies should have been
aware that with the admission of the appeal from the High Court’s
order their rights thereunder were precarious. [See: Union of
India v. West Coast Paper Mills Ltd. 2004(2) SCC 747, 753].
The mere circumstance that the respondent companies
having availed of the exemption scheme were prohibited from
collecting the tax from its customers or that they had not
collected the sales tax from their customers, (which assertion is
strongly disputed by the appellants), is of no consequence. The
primary liability to pay the Sales Tax is on the seller. The seller
may or may not be entitled to recover the same from the
purchaser. The State Government is entitled to recover the same
from the respondent-companies irrespective of the fact that the
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respondent-companies may have lost the chance of passing on
their liability to pay sales tax to their purchasers.
It is true that this Court has on some occasions granted
relief from payment of sales tax to an assessee despite having
found against the assessee on equitable considerations. But on
every occasion there was something more than the mere
impossibility of the assessee passing on the tax to its
purchasers. Thus in the case of British Physical Lab India Ltd.
V. State of Karnataka and Anr. 1999 (1) SCC 170, the State
Government had itself issued a notification reducing the rate of
tax. The notification was struck down by Court. The State
Government then sought to recover the difference between the
reduced rate as had been notified by it and the rate generally
applicable. This Court granted relief to the assessee since the
State Government had itself issued the notification concerned.
Similarly in Shree Cement Limited and Anr. v. State of
Rajasthan and Others 2000(1) SCC 765, relief was granted
having regard to the peculiar history of the case. By three
notifications covering 1990 to 1994 issued by the State of
Rajasthan the rate of tax payable by local dealers in respect of
inter-state sales had been reduced. The notifications were
challenged by cement manufacturers from outside the State.
The High Court rejected the challenge. When the non local
cement manufacturers came to this Court, this Court held that
the notifications were void and quashed them. [Shri Digvijay
Cement Companies v. State of Rajasthan, 1997 (5) SCC 406].
A fourth notification was subsequently issued by the State of
Rajasthan similar to the earlier three notifications which had
been quashed. The fourth notification was challenged directly
before this Court by means of a writ petition under Article 32.
This time the Bench which entertained the writ petition
disagreed with the view expressed earlier by this Court in respect
of Shri Digvijay Cement and referred the matter to a larger
Bench. The Constitution Bench overruled the decision in Shri
Digvijay Cement. The question then was whether the local
manufacturers would be entitled to the benefit of the decision of
the Constitution Bench despite the fact that the notifications
under which they had availed of a lower rate of tax had been
decided against them in Shri Digvijay Cement. This Court held
in favour of the local manufacturers. The circumstance that the
notifications were subsequently held to be valid by a larger
Bench operated to protect them from liabilities which had arisen
by virtue of the earlier erroneous decision.
In State of Rajasthan and anr. v. Mahaveer Oil
Industries & others 1999(4) SCC 357, this Court allowed the
assessee to retain benefits under a scheme upto 4.4.1994
despite the fact that the assesses were held not entitled to such
benefits, on the ground that in another proceeding this Court had
allowed similar industries to retain the benefit up to 4.4.1994.
What is of significance is that the assesses were denied further
benefit even though they had been successful before the Single
Judge, before the Division Bench of the High Court and no stay
had been obtained from this Court at any stage. It was said:
"The respondents have been aware
throughout that the judgment of the Single
Judge was appealed against. Even after the
Division Bench dismissed the appeal the
matter was carried further by filing the present
special leave petition/appeal before this Court.
The respondents continued to enjoy the
benefits of the said two Schemes since no
stay was obtained. Nevertheless, the
question whether the respondents are entitled
to the said benefits, has been sub judice
throughout. Since the appeal is now being
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decided against the respondents, they cannot
claim the benefit of an eligibility certificate
which was granted entirely on account of a
judgment of a Single Judge in their favour
which is now being set aside."
As far as M/s. J.K. Synthetics is concerned, their right to
obtain benefits under the scheme by reason of clause 4(b) was in
any event provisional. The undertaking given by this company
was to the effect that the benefits of the scheme were being
availed at the risk of the company till the sanction was granted by
the Screening Committee. Since no sanction has been granted to
the company, the company was aware that its rights to the
benefits under the scheme were conditional and that it might be
called upon to meet its sales tax liabilities in the event sanction
was not granted on its application.
In such circumstances it must be open to the State
Government to recover sales tax dues as it is entitled to under the
RST Act allowing the respondent companies to only keep such
benefits as had been already availed of by then upto 7th January,
2000 and thereafter at the rates specified and according to the
provisions of the scheme as modified by the corrigendum
notification. However no interest or penalty will be charged from
the respondent companies by the appellants on the differential
amounts for the period the matter was sub judice before this
Court provided the respondent companies pay the principal
amount of sales tax within such time as may be specified by the
appellants in this regard.
We, therefore, allow the appeals and set aside the
impugned decision without any order as to costs.