Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KHEMKA & CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/02/1975
BENCH:
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
BENCH:
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 1549 1975 SCR (3) 753
1975 SCC (2) 22
CITATOR INFO :
R 1976 SC 410 (15)
E 1984 SC1194 (9,17,23,33)
RF 1988 SC 648 (6)
ACT:
Central Sales Tax Act 1956--S. 9(2)--Scope of Bombay Sales
Tax Act--S. 16(4)--If penalty under the Central Act could be
levied under s. 16(4) of the Bombay Act.
HEADNOTE:
Section 9(2) of the Central Sales-tax Act, 1956 provides
that the authorities for the time being empowered to assess,
re-assess, collect and enforce payment of any tax under the
general sales-tax law of the appropriate State shall, on
behalf of the Government of India, assess, re-assess,
collect and enforce payment of tax, including any penalty,
payable by a dealer under this Act as if the tax or penalty
payable by such a dealer under this Act is a tax or penalty
payable under the general sales-tax law of the State.
Section 16 of the Bombay Sales-tax Act provides for Payment
and recovery of tax. Sub-section (4) states that if the tax
is not paid by any dealer within the prescribed time, the
dealer shall pay a penalty in addition to sales-tax
assessed.
The assessee unsuccessfully contended before various sales-
tax authorities as well as before the High Court that levy
of penalty under s. 16(4) of the Bombay Sales-tax Act for
delay or default in payment of tax under the Central Sales
Tax Act was without jurisdiction as it was not warranted by
the provisions of s. 9(2) of the Central Sales-tax. Act,
1956.
In the Mysore case which was similar to the Bombay case,
however, the High Court allowed the assessee’s claim that
the levy of penalty under the Mysore Sales-tax Act in
respect of sales-tax payable under the Central Sales-tax Act
was ultra vires.
It was contended before this Court that there was no
provision in the Central Sales-tax Act for imposition of
penalty for delay or default in payment of tax and,
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therefore, imposition of penalty under the provisions of the
State Act for delay or default in payment of tax was
illegal.
[per Ray, C.J. and Khanna, J.] (Beg, J. concurring in the
final results).
Allowing the appeal,
HELD : The Mysore High Court correctly pointed out that the
words "as if the tax or penalty payable by such a dealer
under this Act" relate to tax or priority which is payable
only under the Central Act. [763B]
The provision in the State Sales Tax Act imposing penalty
for non-payment of sales-tax within the prescribed time is
not attracted to impose penalty on dealers under the Central
Sales Tax Act in respect of tax and penalty payable under
the Central Act. There is no lack of sanction for payment
of tax. Any dealer Who would not comply with the provisions
for payment of tax would be subjected to recovery
proceedings under the Public Demands Recovery Act. A
penalty is a statutory liability. The Central Act contains
specific provisions for penalty. Those are the only
provisions for penalty available against the dealers under
the Central Act. Each State Sales Tax Act contains
provisions for penalties. Theses failure to provisions in
some eases are also for failure to submit a return or
register-. It is rightly said that those provisions cannot
apply to dealers under the Central Act because the Central
Act makes similar provisions. The Central Act is a self-
contained code which, by the charging section-, creates
Iiability for tax and which by other sections creates a
liability for penalty and imposes penalty. Section 9(2) of
the Central Act creates the State authorities as agencies to
carry out the assessment. re-assessment. collection and
enforcement of tax and penalty payable by a dealer under the
Act. [765H; 766A-B]
754
(1)The words ’assess, re-assess, collect and enforce
payment of tax including any penalty payable by a dealer
under this Act’ mean that the tax as well as penalty is
payable only under the Central Act. By s. 9(2) of the
Central Sales Tax Act the State Sales-Tax Authorities are
created as agents of the Government of India. [76ID; B]
(2) The words "and for this purpose they may exercise all or
any of the powers they have under the general sales-tax law
of the State" in s. 9(2) of the Central Act relate to
"assess, re-assess, collect and enforce payment of tax in-
cluding any penalty payable by a dealer under this Act." In
that context the last limb of s. 9(2) of the Central Act,
namely, "and the provisions of such law .... ...... shall
apply accordingly" means that the provisions of the State,
Act ire applicable for the purpose of assessment,
reassessment, collection and enforcement of payment of tax
including penalty payable under the Central Act. The words
of the last part of s. 9(2) namely, "shall apply
accordingly" relate clearly to the words "and for this
purpose" with the result that the provisions of the State
Act shall apply only for the purpose of assessment, re-
assessment, collection and enforcement. [761G-H; 762A]
(3) The extent of liability for tax as well as penalty is
not attracted by the doctrine of ejusdem generis in the
application of the provisions of the State Act in regard to
assessment, re-assessment, collection and enforcement of
payment of tax including any penalty payable under the
Central Act. The doctrine of ejusdem genereis shows that
the genus in s. 9(2) of the Central Act is ’for this pur-
pose’. In other words, the genus is assessment, re-
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assessment, collection and enforcement of payment. The
genus is applicable in regard to the procedure for
assessment, reassessment, collection and enforcement of
payment. The genus is from whom to collect and against whom
to enforce. [762A-C]
(4) The deeming provision in the Central Act that the tax as
well as penalty levied under the Central Act will be deemed
as if payable under the general sales tax law of the State,
cannot possibly mean the tax or penalty imposed under any
State Act will be deemed to be tax or penalty payable under
the Central Act. The entire authority of the State
machinery is that "for this purpose" meaning thereby the
purpose of assessing, re-assessing, collecting and enforcing
payment of tax including any penalty payable under the
Central Act, they, meaning the State agencies, may exercise
powers under the general sales tax law of the State. The
words "for this purpose" cannot have the effect enlarging
the content of tax and the content of penalty under the
Central Act. Liability to pay tax as well as liability to
pay penalty is created by the Central Act. [762D-E]
(5) If the liability to pay tax is determined by the
provisions of the Central Act the liability to pay penalty
is also that which is payable under the Central Act. The
procedural law prescribed in the general sales-tax law of
the State applies to the matter of assessment, re-
assessment, collection and enforcement of payment of tax
under the Central Act because the liability to pay tax is
determined tinder the Central Act. Similarly liability to
pay penalty is determined with reference to the provisions
of the Central Act. [763D]
State of Kerala v. P. P. Joseph & Co., 255 STC 483;
followed.
(6) Rebate is a concession whereas penalty is an imposition.
The concession does not impose liability but penalty does.
It, therefore, stands to reason that rebate is included
within the procedural part of collection and enforcement of
payment of tax. Penalty, like imposition of tax, cannot be
included within the procedural part. [763G-H]
Orissa Cement Limited v. The State of Orissa & A Anr., 27
S.T.C. II 8; followed.
C. A. Abraham, Uppoottil, Kottayam v. The Income Tax
Officer, Kottayam & Anr., [1961] 2 S.C.R. 765 and
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Andhra Pradesh v. M/s.Bhikaji
Dadabhai & Co., [1961] 3 S.C.R. 923, distinguished.
(7) Penalty is within assessment proceedings just as tax is
within the assessment proceedings when the relevant Act by
substantive charging provision levies
755
tax as well as penalty. Penalty is not merely a sanction.
It is not merely an adjunct to assessment. It is not merely
consequential to assessment. It is not merely machinery.
Penalty is in addition to tax and is a liability under the
Act. penalty is not a continuation of assessment proceedings
and penalty partakes of the character of additional tax.
[765B-D]
Jain Brothers & Ors. v. Union of India, 77, I.T.R. 107
followed.
(8) Under a taxing statute liability does not begin on
assessment. There must be a liability created by the Act,
the Act must provide for assessment and the Act must provide
for enforcement of the taxing provisions. The mere fact
that there is machinery for assessment, collection and
enforcement of tax Ind penalty in the State Act does not
mean that the provision for penalty in the State Act is
treated as penalty under the Central Act. The meaning of
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penalty under the Central Act cannot be enlarged by the
provisions of machinery of the State Act incorporated for
working out the Central Act. [765E-F]
Jain Brothers & Ors.. v. Union of India, 77, I.T.R. 107 and
Chattura & Ors. v. Commisioner of Income-tax, Bihar, 15,
I.T.R. 302, followed.
Per BEG, J. (1) The provisions relating to penalties are
special and specific provisions in each Act. They are not
part of "the general sales tax law" of either the State or
of the Union. If the provisions relating to penalties, such
as those found in the Central Act and the State Acts, are
really special provisions which can be invoked in the
special circumstances given in each statute, the reference
to penalties in the concluding portion of s. 9(2) must be
interpreted to relate only to the special provisions
relating to penalties provided for specifically in the Cen-
tral Act. [782B-C]
(2) The rule to be applied with regard to a statute
purporting to impose a charge is "that the intention to
impose a charge upon the subject, must be shown by clear and
unambiguous language". If the language leaves room for
coming to the conclusion that only penalties specified in
the Central Act are enforceable by the machinery for
enforcement of liability under the general sales tax law of
a State, then, the legislative intent could safely be
presumed to be to confine penalties mentioned in the
concluding part of S. 9(2) to only those mentioned speci-
fically in the Central Act. [782F-G]
Oriental Bank Corporation v. Wright, [1880] 5 App. Cas. 842
@ 856 referred to.
(3) Section 76(a) of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959 repealed
the Bombay Sales Tax Act of 1953. Section 16 of the 1959
Act refers to an entirely different subject matter. At the
time when the assessment order was made, there was no
provision for imposition of any penalty under s. 16(4) of
the Bombay Act of 1953 which the Sales Tax Authorities and
the High Court sought to utilise to justify the penalty
imposed. [777G-H]
(4) In 1956 the Parliament could not have applied its mind
to provisions which came into existence afterwards. It
could not have incorporated them by reference as parts of a
procedure applicable to assessments which took place after
1959 when the Bombay Act of 1953 was repealed. At the time
of the passing of the Central Act, the relevant statute in
existence in Bombay was the Bombay Act, 1953. But s. 16(4)
of the Bombay Act of 1953 under which the sales tax
authorities purported to act, did not exist on the statute
book at the time of assessment. Unless it is assumed that
s. 9(2) of the Central Act, by necessary implication,
authorised the State Legislatures to go on imposing such
penalties for such breaches of duty as it pleased them to
Jay down on behalf of Parliament, subsequently enacted
Provisions of State enactments would not be available.[718A-
C]
Re. Delhi Laws Act (1912) etc. [1951] S.C.R. 747 referred
to.
(5) Section 13 of the Mysore Sales Tax Act 1957 was entirely
recast in 1958. it would be carrying the theory of
referential legislation too far to assume that s. 9(2) of
the Central Act, 1956 purported to authorise the State
Legislatures to
756
impose liabilities in the nature of additional tax or
penalties leaving their rates and conditions for their
imposition also to be determined by the State Legislatures
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as and when the State Legislatures decided to impose or
amend them. [778D]
(6) On a consideration of the provisions of s. 16 (4) of the
Bombay Act it seems clear that whatever may be the objects
of levying a penalty, its imposition gives rise to a
substantive liability which can be viewed either as an
additional tax or as a fine for the infringement of the law.
It views an imposition of a pecuniary liability which is
comparable to a punishment for the commission of an offence.
[779B]
(7) The imposition of a pecuniary liability, which take the
form of a penalty or fine for a breach of a legal
obligation, cannot be relegated to the region of mere
procedure and machinery for the realization of tax. Such
liabilities must be created by clear, unambiguous, and
express enactment. The language used should leave no
serious doubts about its effect so that the persons who are
to be subjected to such liability for the infringement of
law are not left in a state of uncertainty as to what their
duties or liabilities are. [779D]
(8) The provisions of s. 9(2) of the Central Sales Tax Act
make it clear that the powers of the State Sales Tax
Officers were specifically limited by the provisions of the
Central Act. They cannot go beyond these provisions. it is
also clear from s. 9(2) that these powers are exercisable
only "for this purpose". In other Words, they are not
authorised to collect dues for purposes extraneous to the
Central Act. [781H]
Per Mathew and Chandrachud, JJ. (dissenting)
(1) A careful analysis of s. 9(2) of the Central Act would
show that the authorities empowered to assess, reassess,
collect and enforce payment of tax payable under the general
sales tax law of the appropriate State shall assess, re-
assess, collect and enforce payment of tax including
penalties payable by a dealer under the Central Act as if
the tax or penalty payable by a dealer under the Central Act
is a tax or penalty payable under the general sales-tax law
of the State and for that purpose, the authorities may
exercise all or any of the powers they have under the
general sales tax law of the State. [767F-G]
(2) If the sales-tax authorities of a State have power, when
enforcing payment ofsales-tax payable under the general
sales-tax law of the State to impose penaltyfor non-payment
of tax within the prescribed time, they will have a like
power to impose penalty, for enforcing payment of the tax
payable under the Central Act-within the time prescribed.
It was not necessary that power to impose penalty for
enforcing the payment of tax payable by a dealer under the
Central Act should have been specifically provided in or
conferred separately by the sub-section upon the sales tax
authorities of the State, because, the power to enforce
payment of tax payable under the Central Act, in the same
manner as the power to enforce tax payable under the general
sales-tax law of the State, has been given by it. The
provision for imposition of penalty in s. 16 of the Bombay
Sales Tax Act facilitates the collection of tax as it is a
sanction for non-observance of the duty to pay the tax
within the prescribed time. It operates as a deterrent
against the commission of breach of that duty, and is a
means to enforce the payment of tax within the time
prescribed. [767H; 768A-D]
C. A. Abraham Unnoottil v. The Income Tax Officer [1961] 2
S.C.R. 765, Narsddi Krishna Reddy v. Income Tax Officer,
Tenali (1957) 31 I.T.R. 678. Commissioner of Income Tax v.
Bhikaji Dadabhai & Co., [1961] 3 S.C.R. 923 and Orissa
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Cement Limited v. The State of Orissa and Anr. 27 S.T.C. 1l8
referred to.
(3) If rebate can be given on the basis that it would
facilitate, expedite and stimulate the collection of tax
there is no reason why a penalty could not be imposed to
expedite, facilitate and stimuate the collection of tax and
as part of the process of collection. Payment of rebate is
a liability from the point of view of the Revenue, though it
is a concession from the point of view of the assessee. If
penalty is levy of money on an assessee, rebate means
payment of money to an assessee [770C-D]
757
(4) It is difficult to hold that Parliament invested the
State authorities with Power to assess, re-assess, collect
and enforce payment of tax payable under the Central Act as
if the tax ’is a tax payable under the general sales tax law
of the State, but denuded them of the power to invoke the
provision in the general salestax law of the State for
imposition of penalty for enforcing payment of the tax
payable thereunder, as that is an effective means to the
enforcement of payment of tax within the prescribed time.
[770F-G]
(5) The analogy of principal and agent has no relevance in
this context. If the power of enforcement of payment of tax
payable under the Central Act conferred on the authorities
of the State would include the power to impose penalties
provided in the general sales tax law of the State there is
an end of the matter. The whole falacy in the reasoning of
the High Court is the assumption that only the penalties
provided in the Central Act can be imposed by the
authorities by using the machinery of the sales-tax law of
the State as they alone are specifically mentioned in s.
9(2) and in ignoring what are the powers actually conferred
by the words enforce payment of tax as if the tax payable
by such a dealer under this Act is a tax payable under the
general sales tax law of the State" in the subsection.
[772A-B]
(6) It is clear from s. 9(2) that the penalties which could
be imposed by the State authorities by virtue of the express
provision in it are the penalties provided in s. 10 read
with s. 1OA. [772H]
(7) Where s. 9(2) says that assessment, re-assessment"
collection and enforcement of payment of tax due under the
Central Act should be made by the authorities of the State
as if the tax payable under that Act is tax payable under
the general sales-tax law of the State and for that purpose
"they may exercise all or any of the powers they have under
the sales tax law of the State", there can be no manner of
doubt that if for enforcing payment of tax due under sales-
tax law of the State, they have power to impose penalty,
they have the same power of imposing penalty for enforcing
payment of tax payable under the Central Act. The reason
why the sales tax authorities of the State were given
specific power under s. 9(2) to enforce the penalties
payable by a dealer under the Central Act is that those
penalties were not and perhaps could not have been provided
for in the sales-tax law of the State. The penalties
provided in s. 10 read with s. 10A of the Central Act are
not for the purpose of or in connection with assessment, re-
assessment, collection and enforcement of payment of tax
payable by a dealer under the Central Act and could not have
been imposed by the sales tax authorities of the State in
making assessment, re-assessment, collection or in enforcing
payment of the tax payable under the Central Act.
Therefore, express power had to be conferred upon the sales
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tax authorities of the State to enforce the penalties
payable by a dealer under the Central Act. [773C-G.]
(8)’In the nature and scheme of the Central Act. it was not
necessary to provide for imposition of penalty or for the
other methods of enforcing the payment of tax payable under
the Central Act since Parliament has adopted the machinery
provided in the general sales tax law of the State as
respects enforcement of the tax payable under the Central
Act. [774E]
(9) The expression "penalties" in the latter part of the s.
9(2) can only refer to penalties imposable under the general
sales tax law of the State in connection with assessment,
re-assessment, collection and enforcement of payment of tax.
The latter part of the sub-section only enumerates some of
the powers exercisable by the sales-tax authorities of the
State to assess, re-assess, collect and enforce payment of
tax payable under the Central Act. The language of the sub-
section beginning with "and for this purpose they may
exercise all or any of the powers they have under the
general sales tax law of the State, and the provisions of
such law, including provisions relating to returns,
provisional assessment, advance payment of tax .... appeals,
reviews, revisions, references, refunds, penalties makes it
clear that the word ’Penalties’ occurring therein can refer
only to penalties provided in the general sales-tax law of
the State. In other words the express mentionof the
power to impose ’penalties’ among the enumerated powers
beginning withthe words "and the provisions of such law
including the provisions relating topenalties" would put
it beyond doubt that the word "penalties"
758
in the latter part of the sub-section can only refer to
penalties imposable under the general sales tax law of the
State in relation to assessment, re-assessment, collection
and enforcement of payment of tax payable thereunder.
[775B-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2089 of
1969.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated
the 22nd February 1968 of the Bombay High Court in Sales Tax
Reference No. 36 of 1967 and
Civil Appeal No. 2118 of 1970
From the Judgment and order dated the 18th March, 1970 of
the Mysore High Court in Writ Petition No. 345 of 1970.
S. T. Desai, P. G. Bhartari and K. J. John, for the
appellant (In C.A. 2089/69).
M. Veerappa, for the appellant (in C.A. 2118/70).
Santosh Chatterjee and G. S. Chatterjee for the
Applicant/Intervener (State of West Bengal).
L. N. Sinha, Solicitor General, M. N. Shroff for the
Intervener (Union of India in C.A.2089/69).
L. N. Sinha, Solicitor General, M. G. Bhandare and M. N,
Shroff for respondent (C.A. No. 2089/69).
The Judgment of A. N. Ray, C.J. and H. R. Khanna,, J. was
delivered by Ray, C.J. K. K. Mathew, J. gave a dissenting
opinion on behalf of himself and Y. V. Chandrachud, J., M.
H. Beg, J. gave a separate Opinion.
RAY, C.J.-These appeals raise the question as to whether the
assessees under the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 hereinafter
referred to as the Central Act could be made liable for
penalty under the provisions of the State Sales Tax Act
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hereinafter referred to as the State Act. The penalty
imposed under the State Act is for default in payment of
taxes within the prescribed time.
The Central Act states section 9(1) that the tax payable by
any dealer under the Central Act on sales of goods effected
by him in the course of inter-state trade or commerce shall
be levied by the Government of India and the tax so levied
shall be collected by that Government in accordance with the
provisions of sub-section (2) in the State from which the
movement of goods, commenced.
Section 9(2) of the Central Act is as follows
"Subject to the other provisions of this Act
and the Rules made thereunder, the authorities
for the time being empowered to assess, re-
assess, collect and enforce payment of any tax
under the general sales tax law of the
appropriate State
759
shall, on behalf of the Government of India,
assess, re-assess, collect and enforce payment
it of tax, including any penalty, payable by a
dealer under this Act as if the tax or penalty
payable by such a dealer under this Act is a
tax or penalty payable, under the general
sales tax law of the State; and for this
purpose they may exercise all or any of the
powers they have under the general sales tax
law of the State; and the provisions of such
law, including provisions relating to returns,
provisional assessment, advance payment of
tax, registration of the transferee of any
business, imposition of the tax liability of a
person carrying on business on the transferee
of, or successor to, such business, transfer
of liability of any firm or Hindu undivided
family to pay tax in the event of the
dissolution of such firm or partition of such
family, recovery of tax from third parties,
appeals, reviews, revisions, references,
refunds, rebates, penalties, componding of
offences and treatment of documents furnished
a dealer as confidential shall apply
accordingly.
Provided that if in any State or part thereof
there is no general sales tax law in force,
the Central Government, may, by rules made in
this behalf make necessary provision for all
or any of the matters specified in this sub-
section."
Section 6 of the Central Act provides for liability to tax
on interState sales. Section 8 of the Central Act provides
for rates of tax on sales in the course of inter-State trade
or commerce. Section 9 of the Central Act provides for
collection of tax and penalties.
Section 10 of the Central Act provides penalties. The
Various grounds for penalties are fully enumerated there.
Section 10A(1) of the Central Act provides for imposition of
penalty in lieu of prosecution.
The contention on behalf of the assessee is that there is no
provision in the Central Act for imposition of penalty for
delay or default in payment of tax, and, therefore,
imposition of penalty under the provisions of the State Act
for delay or default in payment of tax is illegal.
The rival contention on behalf of the Revenue is that the
provision for penalty for default in payment of tax as
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enacted in the State Act is applicable to the payment and
collection of the tax under the Central Act and is
incidental to and part of the process of such payment and
collection.
The Solicitor-General on behalf of the Revenue placed
reliance on the decisions in K. V. Adinarayana Setty v.
Commercial Tax Officer, Kolar Circle’ Kolar 14 S.T.C. 587;
Commissioner of Sales Tax, Madhya Pradesh, Indore v.
Kantilal Mohanlal & Brothers 19 S.T.C. 377; M/s H. M.
Esufali H. M. Abdulali v. Commissioner of Sales Tax M.P.
Indore 24 S.T.C. 1; and Auto Pins (India) v. The State of
Haryana & o.s. 26 S.T.C. 466 in support of his contention.
The contentions of the Solicitor General are these : Section
9(1) of the Central Act speaks of tax. That section does
not mention penalty.
760
Tax will include collection and enforcement of payment. The
words "tax and penalty payable by a dealer under this Act"
indicate that the words "under this Act" in the Central Act
relate only to a dealer. Section 9 (2) of the Central Act
is a provision prescribing the procedure for assessing,
collecting and enforcing payment of tax. The words "collect
and enforce payment of tax, including any penalty" in
Section 9(2) of the Central Act include not only penalties
imposed by the Central Act but also penalties under the
State Act. The words ’as if the tax or penalty payable by
such a dealer under this Act is a tax or penalty payable
under the general sales tax law of the State" indicate that
tax or penalty is imposed by the Central Act and by
incorporating the State Act as a part of the Central Act the
liability to pay tax is enforced by penalty for delay or
default in payment of tax.
The Solicitor-General further submitted as follows : The
latter part of section 9(2) of the Central Act, viz., "for
this purpose they may exercise all or any of the powers they
have under the general sales tax law of the State; and the
provisions of such law........ shall apply accordingly"
shows that the enforcement provisions in the State Act for
delay or default in payment of tax are adopted by the
Central Act for working out the provisions relating to
assessment, re-assessment, collection and enforcement of tax
or penalties. Penalty is a sanction for nonpayment. If the
assessee does not pay and if there is no provision for
imposition penalty, there will be no sanction for
enforcement of payment The purpose for which the State Act
is incorporated in the Central Act is, inter alia, enforcing
payment of tax which includes penalty for delay and default
in payment of tax. In short, just as penalty is imposed for
non-payment of tax under the State Act that provision is
attracted for delay or default, in payment of tax under the
Central Act.
On behalf of the assessee it was said that the provisions
contained in section 9 (2) of the Central Act mean that only
if tax as well as penalty is payable by a dealer under the
Central Act then there can be collection and enforcement of
tax and penalty in the same manner as provided in sales tax
law of the State. Second, the Central Act must have a
substantive provision to warrant imposition of penalty. The
provision in a State Act regarding penalty for default in
payment cannot be applied when there is no substantive
provision relating to levy or penalty in the Central Act in
respect of that default. Third, section 9(2) of the Central
Act is procedural and only deals with utilisation of
existing machinery in State law. The State authorities are
empowered to exercise powers under the general sales tax law
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of the State to assess, re-assess, collect and enforce
payment of tax and penalty payable under the Central Act.
Just as tax payable under the Central Act can be collected
and enforced similarly, only penalty payable under the
Central Act can be collected and enforced.
Counsel on behalf of the assessees relied on the decisions
in B. H. Shah & Co. v. The State of Madras 20 S.T.C. 146;
The State of Madras v. M. Angappa Chettiar and Sons 22
S.T.C. 226; Guldas Narasappa Thimmaiah Oil Mills v.
Commercial Tax Officer, Raichur 25 S.T.C.
761
489; and Hurdatroy Jute Mills Private Ltd. Katihar & Ors.
v. Superintendent of Commercial Taxes, Purnea & Ors. 30
S.T.C. 151 in support of the proposition that the
substantive law for penalty under the State Act is not
incorporated in the Central Act.
Section 9(2) of the Central Act first provides that the
authorities empowered to assess, re-assess, collect and
enforce payment of any tax under the general sales tax law
of the appropriate State shall, on behalf of the Government
of India, assess, re-assess and enforce payment of tax
including any penalty payable by a dealer under the Central
Act. The State Sales Tax authorities are thus created
agents of the Government of India. The second important
part in section 9(2) of the Central Act is that the State
authorities shall assess, re-assess, collect and enforce
payment of tax including any penalty payable by the dealer
under the Central Act as if the tax or penalty payable by
such a dealer under the Central Act is a tax or- penalty
payable under the general sales tax law of the State. This
part of the section sets out the scope of work of the State
agencies. The words "assess, re-assess, collect and enforce
payment of tax including any penalty payable by dealer under
this Act" mean that the tax as well as penalty is payable
only under the Central Act.
To suggest that the words "under this Act" qualify dealer
will be unsound for two reasons. First, section 2 (b) of
the Central Act defines a dealer. A dealer is not defined
as dealer under the Central Act but as one who carries on
business of buying and selling. If the words " under this
Act" were to relate only to dealer then the words "under
this Act" would have to be scored out in relation to the
words "tax including any penalty payable". The result would
be that the words " payable by a dealer" in the context of
the words "as if the tax or penalty payable by such a dealer
under this Act" would be rootless.
It is only tax as well as penalty payable by a dealer under
the Central Act which can be assessed, re-assessed,
collected and enforced in regard to payment. The words "as
if the tax or penalty payable by such a dealer under the
Central Act is a tax or penalty payable under the general
sales tax law of the State’ have origin and root in the
words "payment of tax including any penalty payable by
dealer under the Central Act." Just as tax under the State
Act cannot be payable and collected and enforced, similarly
penalty under the State Act cannot be assessed, collected
and enforced.
The words "and for this purpose they may exercise all or any
of the powers they have under the general sales tax law of
the State in section 9(2) of the Central Act are important.
The words "and for this purpose" relate to "assess, re-
assess, collect and enforce payment of tax including any
penalty payable by dealer under this Act." In that context,
the Iast limb of section 9(2) of the Central Act viz. "and
the provisions of such law........ shall apply accordingly"
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mean that the provisions of the State Act are applicable for
the purpose of assessment, re-assessment, collection and
enforcement of payment of tax including penalty payable
under the Central Act. The words of the last part of
section 9(2) viz. "shall apply accordingly" relate clearly
762
to the words "and for this purpose" with the result that the
provisions of the State Act shall apply only for the purpose
of assessment, reassessment, collection and enforcement.
The doctrine of ejusdem generis shows that the genus in
section 9(2) of the Central Act is "for this purpose". In
other words, the genus is assessment, re-assessment,
collection and enforcement of payment. The genus is
applicable in regard to the procedure for assessment, re-
assessment, collection and enforcement of payment. The
genus is from whom to collect and against whom to enforce.
It is apparent that the extent of liability for tax as well
as penalty is not attracted by the doctrine of ejusdem in
the application of the provisions of the State Act in regard
to assessment, re-assessment, collection and enforcement of
payment of tax including any penalty payable under the
Central Act.
The deeming provision-in the Central Act that the tax as
well as penalty levied under the Central Act will be deemed
as if payable under the general sales tax law of the State
cannot possibly mean that tax or penalty imposed under any
State Act will be deemed to be tax or penalty payable under
the Central Act. The entire authority of the State
machinery is that "for this purpose" meaning thereby the
purpose of assessing, re-assessing, collecting and enforcing
payment of tax including any penalty payable under, the
Central Act, they, meaning the State agencies, may exercise
powers under the general sales tax law of the State. The
words "for this purpose" cannot have the effect of enlarging
the content of tax and the content of penalty payable under
the Central Act. Liability to pay tax as well as liability
to pay penalty is created by the Central Act. One of the
reasons why tax as well as penalty is the substantive
provision in the Central Act and is not incorporated by
reference to the State Act is illustrated by the history of
section 9(2) of the Central Act. The present section 9(2)
of the Central Act was formerly section 9(3) of the Central
Act. The Madras High Court in D. H. Shah & Co’s case
pointed out that the imposition of penalty under section
12(3) of the Madras Act, 1959 could not be attracted for
levy of penalty. The Madras High Court gave the reason that
then section 9(3) of the Central Act only adopted the
procedure of the State Act for assessment, re-assessment,
collection and. enforcement of tax as well as penalty
payable under the Central Act.
The Madras High Court in Angappa Chettiar & Sons case
(supra) (lave the correct reason that the power to collect
penalty under the then section 9(3) of the Central Act would
cover only the penalty payable under the Central Act and
would not include a power to impose penalty for a
contraventions or omission for which the Central Act did not
contain a provision. In that case, the Madras General Sales
Tax Act, 1939 which was incorporated by reference by section
9(3) of the Central Act as it then stood did not contain a
provision for levy of a penalty. Subsequently, section
16(2) of the Madras General Sales Tax Act 1959 provided for
levy of penalty for failure to disclose a relevant turnover.
The conclusion which the Madras High Court
763
arrived at was that provisions of then section 9(3) of the
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Central Act could not be applied for levy of a penalty under
section 16(2) of the Madras Act.
The Mysore High Court in Guldas Narasappa Thimmaiah Oil
Mills case (supra) which is the present appeal pointed out
that the provisions contained in section 13(1) and (2) of
the State Act in regard to penalty for default in making
payment could not be applicable because a comparable
provision was not to be found in the Central Act. The
Mysore High Court correctly pointed out that the words " as
if the tax or penalty payable by such dealer under this Act"
show that the words "payable by such a dealer under this
Act" relate to tax or penalty which is payable only under
the Central Act.
The, Mysore High Court relied on the decision of this Court
in State of Kerala v. P. P. Joseph & Co. 25 S.T.C. 483 in
support of the proposition that the St-ate law is applicable
only in regard to procedure for assessment, re-assessment,
collection and enforcement. If the liability to pay tax is
determined by the provisions of the Central Act the
liability to pay penalty is also that which is payable under
the Central Act. This Court in the Kerala case said that
the procedural law prescribed in the general sales tax law
of the State applies to the matter of assessment, re-
assessment, collection and enforcement of payment of tax
under the Central Act because the liability to pay tax is
determined under the Central Act. Similarly, liability to
pay penalty is determined with reference to the provisions
of the Central Act.
This Court in Orissa Cement Limited v. The State of Orissa &
Anr. 27 S.T.C. 118 considered whether rebate provided in
section 13(8) of the Orissa Sales Tax Act was available to
dealers if they paid the tax under the Central Act before
the due date of payment. It may be, stated that at the
relevant time of the decision in the Orissa Cement case
(supra) the provisions contained in the then section 9(3) of
the Central Act stated inter alia that "the provisions of
such law including the provisions relating to returns,
appeals, reviews, revision,,, references, penalties and
compounding of offences shall apply accordingly," and’ the
word "rebate" did not occur there. This Court said that
rebate for payment it of tax within the prescribed time
under the State Act was, available to dealers for payment of
tax under the Central Act on the reasoning that the power to
collect the tax assessed in the same manner as the tax on
the sale and purchase of goods under the general sales tax
law of the State would include within itself all concessions
given under the State Act for payment within the prescribed
time. The reason why rebate is allowed and penalty is
disallowed is that rebate is a concession whereas penalty is
an imposition. The concession does not impose liability but
penalty does. It, therefore, stands to reason that rebate
is included within the procedural part of collection and
enforcement of payment. Penalty like imposition of tax
cannot be included within, the procedural part.
The decision of this Court in C. A. Abraham, Uppoottil,
Kottaya 7 v. The Income Tax Officer, Kottayam & Anr. (1961)
2 S.C.R. 765 was belied on by the Solicitor General in
support of the proposition that
764
assessment" includes iability to pay penalty. The ratio of
the decision does not support the submission. In Abraham’s
case (supra) the assessee was subjected to tax for
suppressed income and penalties for concealing the income.
The question was whether section 44 of the Income Tax Act
would attract liability to pay. Section 44 of the Act
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stated that the assessee would be liable to assessment under
Chapter IV for the amount of tax payable and all the
provisions of that Chapter would apply. This Court said
that the word "assessment" had been used in its widest
connotation in Chapter IV of the Act. It was contended that
an order imposing penalty under section 28 of the Act could
not by virtue of section 44 be imposed. This Court held
that section 44 of the Act expressly enacted that the pro-
visions of Chapter IV would apply to the assessment of a
business carried on by a firm even after discontinuance of
its business. Section 28 is one of the sections in Chapter
IV. Section 28 imposed a penalty for the concealment of
income or the improper distribution of profits. ’The
defaults made in furnishing a return of the total income, in
complying with a notice and in concealing the particulars of
income were treated as penalties under section 28. Section
28 was held by this ,Court to be a provision enacted for
facilitating the proper assessment of taxable income and to
apply to an assessment under Chapter IV. ’The decision of
this Court in Abraham’s case (supra) is non-sequiter in
regard to the contentions advanced on behalf of the Revenue
in the present case. The reason is that in Abraham’s case
(supra) ’assessment and imposition of penalty is under the
same Chapter in the Act. The assessment is under Chapter
IV. Penalty is provided in a section under Chapter IV.
Penalty is arising in course of assessment under the same
Act.
This Court in Commissioner of Income-Tax, Andhra Pradesh v.
M/s. Bhikaji Dadabhai & Co. (1961) 3 S.C.R. 923 dealt with
the meaning of the word "assessment." The Income-tax Officer
there found that the assessee’s books of accounts were
unreliable and he issued a notice under section 40 of the
Hyderabad Income-tax Act to show cause why penalty should
not be imposed in addition to tax. The State, of Hyderabad
merged with the Indian Union during the pendency of the
proceedings before the Income Tax officer. By section 13 of
the Finance Act, 1950 the Hyderabad Income Tax Act ceased to
have effect from 1 April, 1950, but the operation of that
Act in respect of levy, assessment and collection of income
tax and super-tax in respect of periods prior thereto for
which liability to income-tax ,could not be imposed under
the Indian Income Tax Act was saved by section 13(1) of the
Finance Act. The question, was whether ’the Income-tax
Officer had power on 31 October, 1951 to impose penalty
under section 40 of the Hyderabad Income Tax Act. This
Court held that the, power of the Income-tax Officer to
impose penalty under section 40 of the Hyderabad Act in
respect of the year preceding the date of the repeal of the
Hyderabad income-tax Act was not lost because section 13 of
the Finance Act, 1950 saved its operation. The proceedings
for imposing penalty could be continued after the enactment
of the Finance Act, 1950. The decision of this Court in
Bhikaji Dadabhai & Co’s case (supra) shows that penalty is
imposed as a substantive liability.
765
The Income Tax Act 1961 imposes penalty under sections 270
and 271. These sections in the Income Tax Act provide for
imposition of penalty on contumacious or fradulent
assessees. Penalty is in addition to income tax, if any,
determined as payable by the assessee. Tax and penalty like
tax and interest are distinct and different concepts under
the Indian Income Tax Act. The word "assessment" could.
cover penalty proceedings if it is used to denote the whole
procedure for imposing liability on the tax payer as
happened in Abraham’s case (supra). Penalty is within
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assessment proceedings just as tax is within assessment
proceedings when the relevant Act by substantive charging
provision levies tax as well as penalty.
Penalty is not merely sanction. It is not merely adjunct to
assessment. It is not merely consequential to assessment.
It is not merely machinery. Penalty is in addition to tax
and is a liability under the Act. Reference may be made to
section 28 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 where penalty
is provided for concealment of income. Penalty is in
addition to the amount of income-tax. This Court in Jain
Brothers & Ors. v. Union of India 77 I.T.R. 107 said that
penalty is not a continuation of assessment proceedings and
that penalty partakes of the character of additional tax.
The Federal Court in Chatturam & Ors. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bihar 15 I.T.R. 302 said that liability does not
depend on assessment. There must be a charging section to
create liability. There must be, first a liability created
by the Act. Second, the Act must provide for assessment.
Third, the Act must provide for enforcement of the taxing
provisions. The mere fact that there is machinery for
assessment, collection and enforcement of tax and penalty in
the State Act does not mean that the provision for penalty
in the State Act is treated as penalty under- the Central
Act. The meaning of penalty under the Central Act cannot be
enlarged by the provisions of machinery of the State Act
incorporated for working out the Central Act.
This Court in State of Tamil Nadu v. K. A. Ramudu Chettiar &
Co. A.I.R. 1973 S.C. 2230 said that the power to enhance
assessment which was contained in the Madras Act of 1959
though such power was not available under the 1939 Act would
be available in respect of assessment under the Central Act.
Enhancement it of assessment is in the process of
assessment. It is a procedural power. The liability to tax
is created by the statute. Therefore, when the power to
assess is attracted a fortiori enhancement is within the
power.
For the foregoing reasons we are of opinion that the
provision in the state Act imposing penalty for non-payment
of income-tax within the prescribed time is not attracted to
impose penalty on dealers under the Central Act in respect
of tax and penalty payable under the Central Act. There is
no lack of sanction for payment of tax. Any dealer who
would not comply with the provisions for payment of tax,
would be subjected to recovery proceedings under the public
Demands Recovery Act. A penalty is a statutory liability.
The
766
Central Act contains specific provisions for penalty. Those
are the only provisions for penalty available against the
dealers under the Central Act. Each State Sales Tax Act
contains provisions for penalties. These provisions in some
cases are also for failure to submit return or failure to
register. It is rightly said that those provisions cannot
apply to dealers under the Central Act because the Central
Act makes similar provisions. The Central Act is a self
contained code which by charging section creates liablity
for tax and which by other sections creates a liability for
penalty and impose penalty. Section 9(2) of the Central Act
creates the State authorities as agencies to carry out the
assessment, reassessment, collection and enforcement of tax
and penalty by a dealer under the Act.
For these reasons the appeal of M/s Khemka & Co. is
accepted. The answer to the reference by the High Court is
discharged. The question is answered in the negative,,
viz., that the Tribunal was wrong in holding that penalty
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could be levied under section 16(4) of the Bombay Sales Tax
Act, 1953. The appeal of the State of Mysore in Civil
Appeal No. 2118 of 1970 is dismissed. The appellant will be
entitled to costs in Civil Appeal No. 2089 of 1969. In view
of the fact that in Civil Appeal No. 2118 of 1970 the Hi-II
Court made no order as to costs, the parties will pay and
bear their own costs.
MATHEW, J. We take up for consideration Civil Appeal No.
2089 of 1969 and the decision there will govern the decision
of Civil Appeal No. 2118 (NT) of 1970.
The question for consideration in Civil Appeal No. 2089 of
1969 is, whether, upon a correct construction of s.9 of the
Central Sales ’Tax Act (hereinafter referred to as the
’Central Act), it was permissible for the Sales Tax Officer
in question to invoke the provisions of s.16(4) of the
Bombay Sales Tax Act for imposing penalty for failure by the
dealer to pay the sales tax payable under the Central Act
within the prescribed time. The High Court of Bombay held
that the Sales tax Officer had power to impose the penalty
under that section and questioner in this appeal is whether
the High Court was right.
Section 9 of the Central Act, in its present form, was
introduced in 1969 with retrospective effect from the date
of the Act. Sub-section (I) provides that the tax. payable
by any dealer under the Act on sales of goods effected by
him in the course of inter-State trade or commerce shall be
levied by the Government of India and the tax so levied
shall be collected by that Government in accordance with the
provisions of sub-section (2); and sub-section (2) says :
"Subject to the other provisions of this Act and the rules
made thereunder, the authorities for the time being empower-
ed to assess, re-assess, collect and enforce payment of any
tax under the general sales tax law of the appropriate State
shall, on behalf of the Government of India assess, re-
assess,
767
collect and enforce payment of tax, including
any penalty, payable by a dealer under this
Act as if the tax or penalty payable by such a
dealer under this Act is a tax or penalty
payable under the general sales tax law of the
State; and for this purpose they may exercise
all or any of the powers they have under the
general sales tax law of the State; and the
provisions of such law, including provisions
relating to returns, provisional assessment,
advance payment of tax, registration of the
transferee of any business, imposition of the
tax liability of a person carrying on business
on the transferee of or successor to, such
business, transfer of liability of any firm or
Hindu undivided family to pay tax in the event
of the dissolution of such firm or petition of
such family, recovery of tax from third
parties, appeals, reviews, revisions,
references, refunds, penalties, compounding of
offences and treatment of documents furnished
by a dealer as confidential shall apply
accordingly."
Section 16 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act provides for payment
and recovery of tax. Sub-section (1) of the section says
that the tax shall be paid in the manner thereinafter
provided at such intervals as may be prescribed. Sub-
section (2) states that before any registered dealer
furnishes the returns, be shall, in the prescribed manner,
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pay into a Government treasury the full amount of the tax
due from him according to such returns. Sub-section (3)
provides that before any registered dealer furnishes a
revised return which shows a greater amount of tax to be due
than was payable in accordance with the original return, he
shall pay into a Government treasury the extra amount of the
tax. Sub-section (4) states that if the tax is not paid by
any dealer within the prescribed time, the dealer shall pay,
a penalty in addition to the amount of tax and sub-section
(6) enables the realization of tax and penalty as an arrear
of land revenue.
A careful analysis of s. 9(2) of the Central Act would show
that the authorities empowered to assess, re-assess, collect
and enforce payment of tax payable under the general sales
tax law of the appropriate State shall assess, re-assess,
collect and enforce payment of tax including any penalties
payable by a dealer under the Central Act as if the tax or
penalty payable by a dealer under that Act (Central Act) is
a tax or penalty payable under the general sales tax law of
the State and for that purpose, the authorities may exercise
all or any of the powers they have under the general sales
tax law of the State.
In effect, what s. 9 (2) says is that sales tax and
penalties payable by a dealer under the Central Act are
deemed to be sales tax and penalties payable under the
general sales tax law of the State and the sales tax
authorities of the State can exercise all or any ’Of the
powers they have under the general sales tax law of the
State for the purpose of assessment, re-assessment,
collection and for enforcing payment of that tax. So, if
the sales tax authorities of a State have power, when
enforcing payment of sales tax payable under the general
sales tax law of the State to impose penalty for non-payment
of tax within the prescribed time, they will have a like
power to impose
768
penalty for enforcing payment of the tax payable under the
Central Act within the time prescribed. It was not
necessary that power to impose penalty for enforcing the
payment of tax payable by a dealer under the Central Act
should have been specifically provided in or conferred
separately by the sub-section upon the sales tax authorities
of the State, because, the power to enforce payment of tax
payable under the Central Act in the same manner as the
power to enforce tax, payable under the general sales tax
law of the State has been given by it. As the power to
impose penalty is specifically provided for in s. 16 of the
Bombay Sales Tax Act for enforcing payment of tax payable
under it, it is unnecessary to speculate whether, but for
the express provision in that Act, a power to impose penalty
for enforcement of tax payable under that Act would have
been implied. The object of the provision for the
imposition of penalty in s. 16 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act
is to, provide a stimulant to the dealer to observe the
mandate of the section directing the payment of the tax
within the prescribed time. In other words the provision
for imposition of penalty in s.16 of the Bombay Sales Tax
Act facilitates the collection of tax as it is a sanction
for non-observance of the duty to pay the tax within the
prescribed time. It operates as a deterrent against the
commission of breach of that duty, and is a means to enforce
the payment of tax within the time prescribed.
In C. A. Abraham Uppoottil v. The Income Tax Officer(1) this
Court was concerned with the question whether the appellant
before the Court who was carrying on business in foodgrains
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in partnership with another person was liable to a penalty
for submitting the returns of the income of the firm even
after his partner’s death. It was found that certain income
of the firm was concealed and the Income Tax Officer not
only assessed the firm to tax for the suppressed income but
also imposed penalty for concealing the same. Section 44 of
the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922, at the material time stood
as follows
"Where any business... carried on by a firm
has been discontinued every person who was at
the time of such discontinuance a partner of
such firm, shall in respect of the income,
profits and gain of the firm be jointly and
severally liable to assessment under Chapter
IV for the amount of tax payable and all the
provisions of Chapter IV
shall, so far as may be, apply to any such
assessment."
It was contended for the assessee that a proceeding for
imposition of penalty and a proceeding for assessment of
income tax were distinct, that although s. 44 may be
resorted to for assessing tax due and payable by a firm
which has discontinued, an order imposing penalty under s.
28 cannot, by virtue of s.44, be passed. The Court said
that penalty "is imposable as a part of the machinery for
assessment of tax liability". The Court quoted with
approval the following observations ofSubba Rao, C. J. in
Mareddi Krishna Reddy v. Income-tax officer, Tenali(2)
The defaults enumerated therein (in s. 28) relate to the
process of assessment. Section 28, therefore, is a
(1) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 765 (2) [1957] 31 I.T.R. 678.
769
provision enacted for facilitating the proper
assessment of taxable income and can properly
be said to apply to an assessment made under
Chapter IV......"
The ratio of the decision is that penalty is imposed as part
of the machinery for assessment of tax and that the power
to assess would include the power to impose
penalty for the effective exercise of the power to assess.
It is a general principle of law that all powers which are
necessary and appropriate to effectuate the main grant of
power will be implied. Just as the provision for imposition
of penalty under s. 28 of the Income Tax Act, 1922
facilitated the collection of tax as Subba Rao, C. J. has
said and Is imposable as part of the machinery for
assessment of income tax, so also the provision for penalty
under s. 16 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act for non-payment of
sales tax within the time prescribed would facilitate the
collection of tax and is part of the machinery for enforcing
payment of tax.
In Commissioner of Income Tax v. Bhikaji Dadabhai & Co.(1)
the Income Tax Officer in question found that the books of
account of the respondent were unreliable and after
assessing the income for the year 1946-47, issued notice to
the respondent on December, 22, 1949, under s. 40 of the
Hyderabad income ’Tax Act to show cause why penalty should
not be levied in addition to the tax and, by an order dated
31-10-1951 directed payment of the penalty. The State of
Hyderabad merged with the Indian Union during the pendency
of the proceedings before the Income Tax Officer and by s.
13 of the .Finance Act, 1950, the Hyderabad Income Tax Act
ceased to have effect from April 1, 1950, but the operation
of that Act in respect of levy, assessment and collection of
income tax and super tax in respect of the period prior
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thereto for which liability to income tax should not be
imposed under the Indian Income Tax Act was saved. One
question before this Court was whether the Income Tax
Officer had power on October 31, 1951 to impose penalty
under s. 40(1) of the Hyderabad Income Tax Act. The Court
held that the power of the Income Tax Officer to impose
penalty under s. 40(1) of the Hyderabad Income Tax Act in
respect of the years preceding the date of the repeal of
that Act was not lost because by s. 13 of the Finance Act,
1950, the operation of the Hyderabad Act in respect of levy,
assessment and collection of income tax and super tax’ in
respect of the period prior to April 1, 1951. was saved and
therefore the proceedings for impose in the penalty could be
continued even after the enactment of s. 13(1) of the Indian
Finance Act, 1950.
The real significance of the ruling for the point under
consideration here. is that at the time when the penalty was
imposed, the only provisions of the Hyderabad Income Tax Act
which survived the repeal were those relating to levy,
assessment and collection of income tax and super tax in
respect of the period prior to April 1, 1951 and unless the
power to impose the penalty was included within the power co
levy, assess, or collect the tax, the imposition of penalty
would have been ultra vires the power of the Income Tax
Officer.
(1) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 923.
770
In Orissa Cement Limited v. The State of Orissa &
Another(1), the question was whether a dealer under the
Central Act could claim the benefit of s. 13(8) of the
Orissa Sales Tax Act, 1947, which provided that rebate of
one per cent on the amount of tax payable by a dealer shall
be allowed if such a tax is paid by the dealer on or before
the due date of payment, by virtue of s. 9 (3) (as it stood
then) of the Central Act. This Court said that the rebate
was offered to facilitate, expedite and stimulate the
collection of tax and was part of the process of collection
and that the appellant-dealer who paid the tax on the due
date was entitled to the rebate.
If rebate can be given on the basis that it would
facilitate, expedite and stimulate the collection of tax, we
see no reason why a penalty cannot be imposed to expedite,
facilitate and stimulate the collection of tax and as part
of the process of collection. It is said that penalty is
the imposition of a liability and is substantive in
character whereas rebate is a concession and is part of the
procedure. We are not clear whether this is a distinction
at all. Payment of rebate is a liability from the point of
view of the Revenue, though it is concession from the point
of view of the assessee. If penalty is levy of money on an
assessee, rebate means payment of money to an assessee.
What the ’is the difference ? No body has yet succeeded in
’drawing the precise line between a procedural and
substantive provision and in this case we do not think we
are required to do so for the simple reason that we are only
concerned with the question whether for the purpose of
enforcing the payment of tax payable under the Central Act,
the authorities of the State can exercise all the powers
they have under the general sales tax law of the State
whether one characterizes them as procedural or substantive.
It is difficult to imagine that Parliament, when it enacted
s. 9(2) of the Central Act and adopted the machinery of the
general sales tax law of the State for enforcing payment of
tax payable under the Central Act, did not want to avail of
the sanction of penalty for enforcing the payment of it
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which the general sales tax law of the State provides for
enforcing payment of tax due under that law. We find it
difficult to hold that Parliament invested the state
authorities with power to assess, re-assess, collect and
enforce payment of tax payable under the Central Act as if
the tax is tax payable under the general sales tax law of
the State, but denuded them of their power to invoke the
provision in the general sales tax law of the state for
imposition
(1)27 S.T.C. 118.
771
of penalty for enforcing payment of the tax payable
thereunder, as that is an effective means to the enforcement
of payment of tax within the prescribed time,
It was contended that only the penalties expressly,provided
for in the Central Act could be imposed by the sales tax
authorities of the State by employing the machinery for
collection of tax under the general sales tax law of the
State and that no penalty which is not provided for by the
Central Act could be imposed by the State authorities. In
this connection, the appellant placed great reliance upon
the decision of a Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court
in Mohan Lal Chokhany v. The Commercial Tax Officer(1). The
question there was whether penalty can be imposed for
failure to submit the return by a dealer under the Central
Act though only the general sales tax law of the State
provided for it. The Court came to the conclusion that no
penalty can be imposed. For doing so, the Court said :
firstly, that by S. 9(2) of the Central Act, the whole
machinery provided in the general sales tax law of the State
has not been incorporated in the Central Act; secondly, that
the authorities for the time being empowered to assess, re-
assess, collect and enforce payment of any tax under the
general sales tax law of the appropriate State are only so
empowered "on behalf of the Government of India" suggesting
thereby that the Government of India is to be the principal
and the State only the agent and that the agent can have no
greater power than the principal himself, so that if the
principal has no power to impose penalty for non-submission
or delayed submission of, returns, the State, "on behalf of
the Government of India", cannot impose such penalty,
thirdly, that s. 9(2) speaks only of penalty payable under
,this Act" (Central Act) and not of any penalty payable
under State law; fourthly, that the power of state
authorities is qualified by the words "as, if the tax or
penalty payable by such a dealer under this Act is a tax or
penalty payable under the general sales tax law of the
State", that this is the deeming provision and can deem no
more than what it says, namely, that the "penalty payable
under this (Central) Act", and not any other penalty, will
be deemed ’as if’ payable under the general sales tax law of
the State; and, fifthly, that the expressions in s. 9(2) of
the Central Act "for this purpose they may exercise all or
any of the powers they have under the general sales tax law
of the State" are limiting words, viz., for the enforcement
of tax and the penalties specified in the Central Act.
We do not understand how the analogy of principal and agent
has any relevance in this context. If the power of
enforcement of payment
(1) 28 S.T.C. 367.
772
of tax payable under the Central Act conferred on the
authorities of the State would include the power to impose
penalties provided in the general sales tax law of the
State, there is an end of the matter. The whole fallacy in
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the reasoning of the High Court is the assumption that only
the penalties provided in the Central Act can be imposed by
the authorities by using the machinery of the sales tax law
of the State as they alone are specifically mentioned in S.
9 (2) and in ignoring what are the powers actually conferred
by the words "enforce payment of tax.... as if the tax ....
payable by such a dealer under this Act is a tax......
payable under the general Sales tax law of the State", in
the sub-section.
The marginal note of s. 10 of the Central Act is ’penalties’
and the section enumerates six grounds for imposing penalty
from (a) to (f) : (a) failure of a dealer to get himself
registered as required by s. 7; (b) a registered dealer
falsely representing when purchasing any class of goods that
the goods of such class are covered by his certificate ,of
registration; (c) not being a registered dealer, falsely
representing when purchasing goods in the course of inter-
state trade or commerce that he is a dealer, (d) after
purchasing any goods for any of the purposes specified in
clause (b) of sub-section (3) of s. 8, failing without
reasonable excuse to make use of the goods for any such
purpose; (e) having in his possession any form prescribed
for the purpose of sub-section (4) of s. 8 which has not
been obtained by him in accordance with the provisions of
the Act or any rules made thereunder; and (f) collecting any
amount by way of tax in contravention of the provisions
contained in s. 9A. When a person comes within any of these
six grounds he shall be punishable with simple imprisonment
which may extend to six months or with fine ,or with both
and when the offence is a continuing offence, with a daily
fine which may extend to Rs., 50 per day during which the
offence continued.
Sub-section (1) of s. 10A provides that if any person
purchasing goods is guilty of an offence under clause (b) or
clause (c) or clause (d) of s. 10, the authority who granted
to him or, who is competent to grant to him a certificate of
registration under the Act may, after giving him a
reasonable opportunity of being heard, by order in writing,
impose upon him by way of penalty a sum not exceeding one-
and-a-half times the tax which would have been levied under
sub-section (2) of s. 8 in respect of the sale to him of the
goods if the sale had been a sale falling within that sub-
section. Sub-section (2) says that penalty imposed upon any
dealer under sub-section (1) shall be collected by the
Government of India in the manner provided in sub-section
(2) of s. 9.
It is clear from s. 9(2) that the penalties which can be
imposed by the State authorities by virtue of the express
provision in it are the penalties provided in section 10
read with s. 10A. The fact that s.9(2) expressly authorizes
the sales tax authorities of the State to
773
impose the penalties payable by a dealer under the Central
Act by employing the machinery of the general sales tax law
of the State does not mean that they have no power to
enforce payment of tax payable under the Central Act by
imposing penalty as provided in the general sales tax law of
the State. As we said, by virtue of s. 9(2), the machinery
provided in the general sales tax law of the appropriate
State for assessment, reassessment, collection and
enforcement of payment of tax payable under the Central Act
has been adopted and that machinery necessarily includes the
means and facilities provided in that law for the effective
exercise of the power to assess, re-assess, collect and
enforce payment of tax; and, therefore, the absence of an
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express provision, in the Central Act for imposition of
penalty for nonpayment of tax within the prescribed time
would not indicate that for enforcing payment of tax payable
under the Central Act, the authorities of the State have no
power to impose the penalty. When s. 9(2) says that
assessment, re-assessment, collection and enforcement of
payment of tax due under the Central Act should be made by
the authorities of the State as if the tax payable under
that Act is tax payable under the general sales tax law of
the State and for that purpose "they may exercise all or any
of the powers they have under the sales tax law of the
State", there can be no manner of doubt that if, for
enforcing payment of tax due under the sales tax law of the
State, they have power to impose penalty, they have the same
power of imposing penalty for enforcing payment of tax
payable under the Central Act. The express provision in s.
9(2) enabling the imposition of penalties payable under the
Central Act by the sales tax authorities ,of the State does
not in any way derogate from the grant of power to those
authorities to enforce the payment of tax payable under the
Central Act as if the tax was payable under the general
sales tax law of the State and to enforce payment of it
under the machinery of the general sales tax law of the
State. The reason why the sales tax authorities of the
State were given specific power under s. 9(2) to enforce the
penalties payable by a dealer under the Central Act is that
those penalties were trot and perhaps could not have been
provided for in the sales tax law of the State. The
penalties provided for in s. 10 read with s. 10A of the
Central Act are not for the purpose of or in connection with
assessment, re-assessment, collection and enforcement of
payment of tax payable by a dealer under the Central Act and
could not have been imposed by the sales tax authorities of
the State in making assessment, re-assessment, collection or
in enforcing payment of the tax payable under the Central
Act. Therefore, express power had to be conferred upon the
sales tax authorities of the State to enforce the penalties
payable by a dealer under the Central Act. This does not
mean that these authorities have no power to impose the
penalties provided in the general sales tax law of the State
and which are necessary to make power of assessment, re-
assessment, collection or enforcement of payment of tax
effective. How could these penalties have been separately
provided for in the Central Act when it is seen that the
sales tax authorities of the State were given power to
assess, reassess, collect and enforce payment of, tax
payable under the Central Act as if that tax were tax
payable under the general sales tax law of the State and to
exercise all or any
774
of the powers they have under the sales tax law of the State
for that purpose ? Parliament must be presumed to know when
it adopted the machinery of the general sales tax law of the
State for assessment, re-assessment, collection and
enforcement of tax payable under the Central Act, the
existence of the provisions for imposition of penalty in
connection with and for the purpose of assessment,
reassessment, collection and enforcement of payment of tax
in the sale tax law of the State. Therefore, there was no
necessity to provide separately for penalties in connection
therewith in the Central Act or give express power to sales
tax authorities of the State for imposition of penalties in
connection therewith. If, in the process of or for the
purpose of assessment, reassessment, collection and
enforcement of payment of tax payable under the sales tax
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law of the State, a penalty can be imposed, we do not
understand why it cannot be imposed in the process of or for
the purpose of making the assessment, re-assessment,
collection or enforcement of payment of tax payable under
the Central Act. Is it possible to imagine any reason for
Parliament to withhold from the sales tax authorities of the
State an effective means for enforcing the payment of tax
payable under the sales tax law of the State and which is
specifically provided for in that law for collection of tax
payable under the Central Act ? We think not. As we said,
in the nature and the scheme of the Central Act, it was not
necessary to provide for imposition of penalty or for the
other methods of enforcing the payment of tax payable under
the Central Act since Parliament has adopted the machinery
provided in the general sales tax law of the State as
respects enforcement of the tax payable under the Central
Act.
The decisions in B. H. Shah & Co. v. The State of Madras(1),
The State of Madras v. M. Angappa Chettiar & SonS (2),
Guldas Narasappa Thimmaiah Oil Mills v. Commercial Tax
Officer, Raichur(3) and Hardatroy Jute Mills Pvt. Ltd. v.
Superintendent of Commercial Taxes, Purnea(4) relied on by
the appellants do not require any elaborate consideration as
they do not advance any reasons other than those already
referred to in this judgment. The reasoning of the Madras
High Court in B. H. Shah & Co.’s case to the effect that
Parliament could not have adopted by s. 9(3) of the Central
Act (substantially corresponding to present s. 9(2) of the
Central Act) a provision of the general sales tax law of the
State which was not in existence at the time of the
enactment of s. 9(3) has no relevance here.
The appellant did not contend that the provision in question
for imposition of penalty in the general sales tax law of
the State was not in existence at the relevant time and
therefore they could not in any event have been adopted by
s. 9(2) We do not therefore think it necessary or proper to
consider the question whether Parliament can by legislation
adopt a State law and the future amendments thereto.
It was argued that the expression ’penalties’ occurring in
the latter part of s. 9(2) must refer to the penalties
mentioned in the former part
(1) 20 S.T.C. 146. (2) 22 S.T.C. 226.
(3) 25 S.T.C. 489. (4) 30 S.T.C. 151.
775
of the sub-section, namely, penalties payable by a dealer
under the Central Act. We see no reason why the expression
’penalties’ in the latter part of the sub-section should
refer to the penalties payable by a dealer under the Central
Act at all. The expression ’penalties’ in the latter part
of the sub-section can only refer to penalties imposable
under the general sales tax law of the State in connection
with assessment, reassessment, collection and enforcement of
payment of tax. The latter part of the sub-section only
enumerates some of the powers exercisable by the sales tax
authorities of the State to assess, reassess, collect and
enforce payment of tax payable under the Central Act. The
language of the sub-section beginning with "and for this
purpose they may exercise all or any of the powers they have
under the general sales tax’ law of the State; and the
provisions of such law, including provisions relating to
returns, provisional assessment, advance payment of
tax........ appeals, reviews, revisions, references,
refunds, penalties, . . ." makes it clear that the word
’penalties’ occurring therein can refer only to penalties
provided in the general sales tax law of the State. In
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other words, the express mention of the power to impose
’penalties’ among the enumerated powers beginning with the
’Words "and the provisions of such law including the
provisions relating to penalties" would put it beyond doubt
that the word ’penalties’ in the latter part of the
subsection can only refer to penalties imposable under the
general sales tax law of the State in relation to
assessment, .reassessment, collection and enforcement of
payment of tax payable thereunder.
We hold that the Sales Tax Officer was empowered to impose
penalty provided in s. 16(4) of the Bombay Sales Tax Act for
non-payment of the tax payable under the Central Act within
the prescribed time. We would dismiss Civil Appeal No. 2089
of 1969 and allow Civil Appeal No. 2118 (NT) of 1970 without
any order as to costs.
BEG, J.-Civil Appeal No. 2089 of 1969 arises out of an
assessment order relating to the period of assessment from
1-4-1959 to 30-12-1959. The order purports to have been
made under the Central Sales Tax Act of 1956 (hereinafter
referred to as the ’Central Act’) and the assessment year
given there is 1962-63. The total sales tax was assessed at
Rs. 44,181.92. In addition, a penalty of Rs. 8347.32 was
levied for delay in payment. The order passed on the appeal
to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax shows that the
only point pressed in the appeal related to the penalty
levied under Section 16(4) of the Bombay Sales Tax Act of
1953, (hereinafter referred to as ’the Bombay Act of 1953’).
As the appeal was rejected, a revision application was filed
before the Sales Tax Tribunal, Bombay, which also upheld the
penalty imposed under Section 16(4) of the Bombay Act of
1953. This provision laid down:
" 16(4) If the tax is not paid by any dealer
within the prescribed time the dealer shall
pay, by way of, penalty in addition to the
amount of tax, a sum equal to (i) one percent
of the amount of tax for each month for the
first three
776
months after the expiry of the prescribed
time, and (ii) two and one-half per cent for
each month subsequent to the first three
months as aforesaid during which he continues
to make default in the payment of the tax.
Provided that, where the tax has not been paid
by any dealer within the prescribed time but
the dealer has filed an appeal or an
application for revision in respect of such
tax, the authority hearing the appeal or the
application for revision may direct that the
penalty in respect of any period shall be paid
at such rate as it may think fit, the rate
being not less than one per cent and not more
than two and one half per cent of the amount
of tax for each month".
The High Court had, upon a reference to it, decided in
favour of the Department the question framed as follows :
"Whether having regard to the facts and
circumstances of the present case which is
under the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, the
Tribunal was justified in law in holding that
penalty could be levied under Section 16(4) of
the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1953 ?"
In the appeal now before us by special leave it has been
contended for the assessee that the penalty was levied
without jurisdiction as it was not warranted by the
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provisions of Section 9(2) of the Central Act, 1956.
Civil Appeal No. 2118 of 1970 arises out of an assessment
order relating to the assessment year 1964-65 under the
Central Act for a sum of Rs. 14,332.80 np. and a penalty of
Rs, 10,104.36 ps. levied for default in the payment of
penalty imposed under Section 13 of the Mysore Sales Tax Act
of 1957, (hereinafter referred to as ’the Mysore Act’),
which was assumed to be applicable by reason of Section 9(3)
of the Central Act. The ’relevant provision of the Mysore
Act lays down:
"Payment and recovery of tax
(1) The tax under this Act, shall be paid in
such manner and in such instalments, if any
and within such time, as may be prescribed.
(2) If default is made in making payment in
accordance with subsection (1) :
(i) the whole of the amount outstanding on the
date of default shall become immediately due
and shall be a charge on the properties of the
person or persons liable to pay the tax under
this Act; and
(ii) the person or persons liable to pay the
tax under this Act shall pay a penalty equal
to-
(a) one per cent of the amount of tax
remaining unpaid for each month for the first
three months, after the expiry of the time
prescribed under sub-section (1) and
777
(b) two and one-half per cent of such amount
for each month subsequent to the first three
months as aforesaid.
(3) Any tax assessed, or any other amount due
under this Act from, a dealer, may without
prejudice to any other mode of collection, be
recovered-
(a) as if it were an arrear of land revenue,
or
(b) on application to any Magistrate, by such
Magistrate as if it were, a fine imposed by
him. . . ."
In this case, the Commercial Tax Officer, Raichur, filed
application under Section 13(3)(b), of the Mysore Act before
the Munsif Magistrate of Raichur for recovery of the sum due
as penalty as if it was a fine imposed by the Court. The
Munsif Magistrate having issued a distress warrant for
recovery of this sum, the assessee applied to the High Court
under Section 13(4) of the Mysore Act which reads as
follows:
"The High Court may either suo motu or an
application by the Commissioner or any person
aggrieved by the order revise any order made
by a Magistrate under clause (b) of su
b-section
(3)".
Thereafter, the assessee filed a Writ Petition which was
heard together with the Sales Tax Revision petition. The
High Court had allowed the assessee’s claim that the levy of
penalty was ultra-vires. The State of Mysore had,
therefore, come up in appeal by special leave to this Court.
I have had the advantage of going the rough the judgments of
the learned Chief Justice and my learned brother Mathew.
Even if I was of the opinion that two views on an
interpretation of Section 9(2) of the Central Act are
equally well entertainable, as one could be on a mere
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reading of Section 9(2) of the Central Act only, I would,
with great respect, prefer the view adopted by the learned
Chief Justice on the principle that the assessee must get
the benefit of such uncertainty. It, however, seems to me,
on a careful consideration of the two possible views, that
reasons for accepting the contentions on behalf of the
assessee are quite compelling and decisive, 1, therefore,
proceed to state these shortly.
So far as the case from Bombay is concerned, I find that
Section ’76(a) of the Bombay Sales Tax Act of 1959
(hereinafter referred to as ’the Bombay Act of 1959),
repeals the Bombay Act of 1953. Section 16 of the Bombay
Act of 1959 refers to an entirely different subject matter.
Provisions relating to penalties are contained in Section 36
to Section 38 of the Bombay Act of 1959, which have been
amended from time to time. In any case, there was no provi-
sion, at the time when the assessment order was made, for
imposition of any penalty under Section 16(4) of the Bombay
Act of 1953, which the Sales Tax authorities and the High
Court sought to utilize to justify the penalty imposed.
778
Relying upon the principles indicated by this Court in Re
Delhi Laws Act (1912) etc.,(1) I think one could say that in
1956 the Parliament could not have applied its mind to
provisions which came into existence afterwards. It could
not, therefore, have incorporated them by reference as parts
of a procedure applicable to assessments which took place
after 1959 when the Bombay Act of 1953 was repealed. At the
time of the passing of the Central Act, the relevant statute
in existence in Bombay was the Bombay Act of 1953. But,
Section 16(4) of the Bombay Act of 1953 under which the
Sales Tax authorities purported to act, did not exist on
the, statute book at the time of assessment. Unless we
assume that Section 9(2) of the Central Act, by a necessary
implication, authorises the State Legislatures to go on
imposing such penalties for such breaches of duty as it
pleases them to lay down on behalf of Parliament,
subsequently enacted provisions of State enactments would
not be available.
I also find from the Mysore Act of 1957, that Section 13 of
the Act was entirely recast in 1958. It would, I think be
carrying the theory of referential legislation too far to
assume that Section 9(2) of the Central Act 1956 purported
to authorise the State Legislatures to impose liabilities in
the nature of additional tax or penalties leaving their
rates and conditions for their imposition also to be deter-
mined by the State Legislatures as and when the State
Legislatures decided to impose or amend them. It is,
evident that these differ from State to State, and, in the
same State, at different times. A conferment of such an
uncontrolled power upon the State Legislatures could, if it
was really intended, be said to travel beyond the province
of permissible delegated legislation on the principles laid
down long ago by this Court in Re-Delhi Laws’ case (supra)
as no guide lines are given in Section 9(2) about the
nature, conditions, or extent of penalties leviable. If
such a power was really conferred would it not amount to an
abdication of an essential legislative function with respect
to a matter found as item 92A of the Union List I of the
Seventh Schedule so that, according to article 246(1) of our
Constitution, Parliament has exclusive power to legislate on
a topic covered by it ? As this question was not argued
before us I would only say that the correct cannon of
construction to apply in such a case is that we should so
interpret Section 9(2) of the Central Act, if possible, that
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no part of it may conceivably be invalid for excessive
delegation. The well known maxim applicable in such cases
is : ut res magis valeat quami pereat.
It is evident from Section 16(4) of the Bombay Act of 1953
that there is a particular percentage of the amount of tax
levied which is prescribed as penalty to be paid as an
"addition to the amount of tax for every month after the
expiry of the prescribed period of default". In other
words, it is a liability in the nature of an additional or
penal tax. Section 13(3)(b) of the Mysore Act also makes it
clear that, on an application made to the Magistrate, such
as the tone made in the case which has come up before us
from Mysore, the penalty may be equated with a fine.
Section 63 of the Bombay Act
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 747.
779
of 1959 speaks of certain "Offences and penalties". Indeed,
Chapter 8 of that Act is itself headed as "Offences and
Penalties".
On a consideration of the provisions mentioned above, it
seems to me to be clear that whatever may be the objects of
levying a’ penalty, its imposition gives rise to a
substantive liability which can be viewed either as an
additional tax or as a fine for the infringement of the law.
The machinery or procedure for its realization comes into
operation after its imposition. In any case, it is an
imposition of a pecuniary liability which is comparable to a
punishment for the commission of an offence. It is a well
settled cannon of construction of statutes that neither a
pecuniary liability can be imposed nor an offence created by
mere implication. It may be debatable whether a particular
procedural provision creates a substantive right or
liability. But, I do not think that the imposition of a
pecuniary liability, which takes the form of a penalty or
fine for a breach of a legal obligation, can be relegated to
the region of mere procedure and machinery for the
realization of tax. It is more than that. Such liabilities
must be created by clear, unambiguous, and express enact-
ment. The language used should leave no serious doubts
about its effect so that the persons who are to be subjected
to such a liability for the infringement of law are not left
in a state of uncertainty as to what their duties or
liabilities are. This is an essential requirement of a good
government of laws. It is implied in the constitutional
mandate found in Section 265 of our Constitution : "No tax
shall be levied or collected except by authority I of law".
It was argued on behalf of the State that Section 9(2) of
the Central Act contains an express reference to provisions
relating to, interalia, "refunds, rebates, penalties,
compounding of offences". Relying upon these words in the
last part of Section 9(2) of the Act, it was urged that
there is no manner of doubt that the penalties leviable
under the State law can be utilised for the purpose of
enforcing the tax liabilities under the Central Act.
Section 9 of the Central Act itself has undergone several
amendments. In 1956 it stood as follows :
"9(1) The tax payable by any dealer under this
Act shall be levied and collected in the
appropriate State by the Government of India
in the manner provided in sub-section (2).
(2) The authorities for the time being
empowered to assess, collect and enforce
payment of any tax under the general sales tax
law of the appropriate State shall, on behalf
of the Government of India and subject to any
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rules made under this Act, assess, collect and
enforce payment of any tax payable by a dealer
under this Act in the same manner as the tax
on the sale or purchase of goods under the
general sales tax law of the State is
assessed, paid and collected; and for this
purpose they may exercise all or any of the
powers they have under the general sales tax
law of the
780
State; and the provisions of such law,
including provisions relating to returns,
appeals, reviews, revisions, references,
penalties and compounding of offences, shall
apply accordingly.
(3) The proceeds (reduced by the cost of
collection) in any financial year of any tax
levied and collected under this Act in any
State on behalf of the Government of India
shall, except in so far as those proceeds
represent proceeds attributable to Union
territories, be assigned to that State and
shall be retained by it; and the proceeds
attributable to Union territories shall form
part of the. Consolidated Fund of India".
It was amended by Act 31 of 1958, and Act 29 of 1969, and
Act 61 of 1972. We are only concerned here with the
amendment by Act 31 of 1958 because this Act introduced the
provisions which were in operation at the time when the
assessment orders under consideration were made.
Section 6 of the Central Sales Tax Second Amendment Act 31
,of 1958 changed Section 9(2) and (3) and introduced sub-s.
(4). These provisions read as follows :
"(2) The penalty imposed upon any dealer under
section 10-A shall be collected by the
Government of India in the manner provided in
sub-section (3) :
(a) in the case of an offence falling under
clause (b) or ’clause (d) of section 10, in
the State in which the person purchasing the
goods obtained the form prescribed for the
purposes of clause (a) of sub-section (4) of
section 8 in connection with the purchase of
such goods;
(b) in the case of an offence falling under
clause (c) of section 10, in the State in
which the person purchasing the goods should
have registered himself if the offence bad not
been committed.
(3) The authorities for the time being
empowered to assess, collect and enforce
payment of any tax under the general sales-tax
law of the appropriate State shall, on behalf
of the Government of India and subject to any
rules made under this Act, assess, collect and
enforce payment of any tax, including any
penalty, payable by a dealer under this Act in
the same manner as the tax on the sale or
purchase of goods under the general sales tax
law of the State is assessed paid and
collected; and for this purpose they may exer-
cise all or any of the powers they have under
the general sales-tax law of the State; and
the provisions of each law, including
provisions relating to returns, appeals,
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reviews, revisions, references, penalties and
compounding of offences,, shall apply
accordingly:
781
Provided that if in any State or part thereof
there is no general sales-tax law in force,
the Central Government may, by rules made in
this behalf, make necessary provision for all
or any of the matters specified in this
subsection and such rules may provide that a
breach of any rule shall be punishable with
fine which may extend to five hundred rupees;
and where the offence is a continuing offence,
with a daily fine which may extend to fifty
rupees for every day during which the offence
continues.
(4) The proceeds in any financial year of any
tax including any penalty, levied and
collected under this Act in any State (other
than a Union territory) on behalf of the
Government of India shall be assigned to that
State and shall be retained by it; and the
proceeds attributable to Union territories
shall form part of the Consolidated Fund of
India".
It will be seen that Section 9(1) of the Central Act 1956
provided only for "the manner" of levy Sec. 9(2). Again,
the new Sec. 9(2), empowered the Government of India
mentioned in Sec. 10A of this Act "in 9(3). It is clear
that Section 10, relating to the penalties provided by the
Central Act, was meant for penalties by way of imprisonment
and fine. Section 10A provided only for levy of certain
penalties at the rate specified there in lieu of
prosecutions under Sec. 10. This is the only kind of
penalty which was enforceable by the procedure laid down in
Section 9(3) of the Act as it stood after the 1958 amend-
ment. Section 9(2), after the Act 31 of 1958, also makes it
clear that Section 9(3), which corresponded to the earlier
Section 9(2) of he 1956 Act only lays down "the manner" of
this" collection " of he penalty. In other words, Sec. 9(2)
of the Act, as it stood after 1958, did not provide for an
imposition of a penalty as a substantive pecuniary liability
or tax. It only authorised collection of penalty in the
manner laid down in Section 19(3) of the Central Act as it
stood after 1958. The imposition of a penalty was regulated
exclusively by Sec. 10A of the Central Act and not by any
provision of the State Act.
It has to be remembered that Section 9(2) of the 1956 Act,
which corresponds to Section 9(3) after 1958, begins with :
" subject to the other provisions of this Act and the rules
made thereunder, the authorities for the time being
empowered to assess, re-assess, collect and enforce payment
of any tax under the general sales tax law of the
appropriate State shall. . . ." In other words, the powers
of the State Sales Tax Officers are specifically limited by
the provisions of the Central Act. They cannot go beyond
these provisions. The next part of Section 9(2) of the’
1956 Act further emphasises this aspect by making it clear
that these powers are exercisable only "for his purpose".
In other words, they are not authorised to collect lues for
purposes extraneous to the Central Act. We may then go to
the last part of Section 9(2) of the 1956 Act, which is
strongly .
782
relied upon on behalf of the States concerned to urge that
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the State provisions relating not merely to collection of
’taxes but imposition of penalties are incorporated by
reference into the provisions of the Central Act. In this
debatable area, I think the true meaning can only be found
by considering the provisions as a whole. The context of
the whole sales tax law of the State as well as that of the
law contained in the Central Act must be taken into account.
After considering the provisions of the Central Act as well
as the State Acts relating to penalties, one is irresistably
driven to the conclusion that provisions relating to
penalties are special and specific provisions in each Act.
They are not part of "the general sales tax law" of either
the State or of Union. If the provisions relating to
penalties, such as those found in the Central Act and the
State Acts, are really special provisions which can be
invoked in the special ,circumstances given in each statute,
we must interpret the reference to penalties in the
concluding portion of Section 9(2), preceding the proviso,
to relate only to the special provisions relating to
penalties ,Provided for specifically in the Central Act.
I think that the maxim of interpretation to apply here is
"Expressio Unius exclusio alterius". This is explained as
follows in Maxwell on the Interpretation of Statutes (12th
Edn. p, 293);
"By the rule usually known in the form of this
Latin Maxim, mention of one or more things of
a particular class may be regarded as silently
excluding all other members of the class;
expressum facit cessare tacitum".
No doubt this maxim has been described as "a useful servant
but a dangerous master". I can, however, think of no kind
of case more apt for its application than the one before us.
As the Privy Council said long ago, with regard to a statute
purporting to impose a charge in Oriental Bank Corporation
v. Wright,(1) that in such a case, the rule to be applied is
"that the intention to impose a charge upon the subject,
must be shown by clear and unambiguous language". If the
language leaves room for coming to the conclusion that only
penalties specified in the Central Act are enforceable by
the machinery for enforcement of liability under the general
Sales Tax law of a State, I think that the legislative
intent could safely be presumed to be to confine penalties
mentioned in the concluding part of Section 9(2) to only
those mentioned specifically in the Central Act.
For the reasons given above, I respectfully concur with the
opinion expressed and the orders proposed by May Lord the
Chief Justice.
C.A. 2089 of 1969 allowed.
C.A. 2118 of 1970 dismissed
P.B.R.
(1) (1880) 5 App. Cas. 842 at 856.
783