Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BASAPPA RUDRAPPA BETGERI & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HUBLI DHARWAR MUNCIPAL CORPORATION
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/04/1971
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
SHELAT, J.M.
DUA, I.D.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 1427 1971 SCR 535
ACT:
Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act, 1925, ss. 73, 85-Levy of
house tax by municipality on lessees of buildings owned by
municipality-Validity of levy.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent Corporation was originally constituted as a
Borough under the Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act, 1925 having
been converted into a Corporation in 1962. The Borough
owned several buildings in the area of its jurisdiction and
some of these were given on lease to the appellants in 1953.
The leases were renewed in 1955. Neither in the original
leases nor in the fresh leases was there any mention of the
liability of the tenants to pay the house tax. Subsequent
to the execution of the fresh leases bills were received
from the respondent by the appellants calling upon them to
pay the house tax imposed in respect of the buildings
belonging to the respondent which were on lease with the
appellants. The appellants filed a suit challenging the
legality of the imposition of this house tax. The main
ground taken was that the Municipality could not impose a
house tax on buildings owned by itself. The trial court
held that the respondent was not competent to levy from the
tenants any sum in excess of the agreed rents and that in
the circumstances of this case notice under s. 206-A of the
Act was not necessary. The Additional District Judge in
appeal agreed that the levy was not valid but held the suit
not to be maintainable for want of a notice under s. 206-A.
The High Court in second appeal held that the levy was valid
and that a notice under s. 206-A was necessary. In appeal
by special leave to this Court,
HELD: There is nothing in the scheme of the Act to
indicate that buildings belonging to the municipality itself
cannot be subjected to the house-tax which can be imposed
under s. 73 of the Act. The language of s. 85 specifically
envisages imposition of such a tax on buildings belongIng to
the municipality. It clearly lays down that such a tax
shall be leviable primarily from the actual occupier of the
property on which the tax is assessed, even if he holds it
on a lease from the municipality. The fixation of such
responsibility primarily on the occupier holding a building
on lease from the municipality could only be laid down on
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the basis that the buildings owned by the municipality can
be subjected to the tax. Once the tax is imposed on such a
building it would be payable by the occupier if he holds it
as a lessee of the municipality. There is nothing anomalous
in such taxation because the tax is not levied by the
municipality on itself but on the lessee.
[On the above view the court did not find it necessary to
decide whether before the filing of the suit by the
appellants a notice under s. 206-A of the Act was
necessary.]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION :Civil Appeal No. 2206 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 23. 1966 of the Mysore High Court in Second Appeal
No. 888 of 1961.
536
S. V. Gupte Naunit Lal S.S. Khanduja and Swaranjit Sodhi
for the appellants.
K. R Chaudhuri, for the respondent
The Judgment of the Court. was delivered by
Bhargava, J.-This appeal by special leave arises out of a
suit challenging the validity of imposition of house-tax and
notices issued for realisation of that tax from the
appellants. The respondent, the Hubli Dharwar Municipal
Corporation, was originally constituted as a Borough under
the Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act, 1925 (hereinafter
referred to as "the Act"). At the relevant time, when the
disputes leading to the suit arose, it was still a Borough,
but it became a Corporation subsequently in the year 1962.
The Borough owned several buildings in Dharwar. Some of
these buildings were given on leases’, to the appellants.
These leases were executed in favour of the appellants by
the ]Borough some time in March and April, 1953.
Thereafter, by a General Committee Resolution No. 36 dated
29th June, 1953, the Borough decided to recover house-tax
and other municipal taxes from the private individuals who
were tenants of the municipal buildings leased out to them.
In pursuance of this Resolution, a notice was issued by the
President of the Borough that all the citizens in occupation
of the buildings owned by the Municipality must pay the
taxes assessed on them in respect of the premises under
their occupation. On 9th September, 1953, the appellants
preferred joint objections against the levy of the house-tax
and its realisation from them. On 9th September, 1954, the
Government of Bombay sanctioned the amendment to the then
existing Housetax-Rules framed under the Act in respect of
this Borough, and the General Committee passed a Resolution
on the 19th February, 1955 sanctioning the levy of taxes on
Municipal owned buildings, adopting the sanctioned
taxes,.and bringing them into force with effect from 1st
April, 1955 by giving necessary public notice as required by
law. Notice under section 77 was published on 25th
February, 1955 and then the taxes came into forct on 1st
April, 1955. Thereafter, fresh lease-deeds were executed by
the respondent in favour of the appellants on 11th May,
1955. It may be mentioned that, neither in’ the original
leases of 1953, nor in the fresh leases of 1955, was there
any mention about liability of the tenants to pay the house-
tax. Subsequent to the execution of these fresh leases,
bills were received from the respondent by the appellants
calling upon them to pay the house-tax imposed in respect of
the. buildings belonging the respondent which were on lease
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with the appellants. The appellants thereafter filed the
suit out of which the present appeal has arisen, challenging
the legality of the imposition of the tax. The main ground
taken was that the
537
Municipality could not impose a house-tax on buildings owned
by itself, so that the imposition of-this house-tax was
invalid in law. ’The suit was resisted on the plea that it
was a valid taxation. A further defence was taken that the
suit was bad for failure, on the part of the appellants to
give notice to the respondent under section 206-A of the
Act. The trial Court decreed the suit, holding that the
respondent was, not legally competent to levy from the
tenants, any sum in excess of the agreed rents, and the
bills issued for recovery of excess were not valid and that,
in the circumstances of this case. notice under s. 206-A of
the Act was not necessary. On appeal,.the and Additional
District Judge agreed with the trial Court that..- the levy
of the tax was not justified, but held that the suit,
without a proper notice under section 206-A of the Act was
not maintainable He therefore, allowed the appeal and
dismissed the suit with costs. On second appeal, the High
Court of Mysore upheld the dismissal of the suit, but on
both the grounds, viz., that the tax was validly levied, and
that the suit was not maintainable for want of proper notice
under section 206-A of the Act. It is against this decision
that the appellants have come up to this Court. It may be
mentioned that the appellants sued the Borough in a
representative capacity as representing all the tenants of
buildings belonging to the Borough.
Learned counsel for the appellants took us through the
various provisions of the Act and relied on the scheme of
the Act to urge that a Municipality could not tax its own
buildings. The power to impose a tax on buildings is
contained in section 73 of the Act, the relevant portion of
which is as follows
"73. (1) Subject to any general or special
orders which the State Government may make in
this behalf and to the provisions of sections
75 and 76 a municipality may impose for the
purposes of this Act any of the following
taxes, namely :-
(1) a rate on building or lands. or both
situate with-
in the municipal borough;"
A proviso to this provision,, which is
relevant, may also be quoted:
"-Provided further that:
(a) no tax imposed as aforesaid, other than a
special sanitary cess, a drainage tax or a
water-rate, shall,without the express consent
of, the Government be leviable in respect of
any building or part of any building or of any
vehicle, animal or other property, belonging
to Government and used solely for public
purpose and not used or intended to be used
for proposes of profit; and no toll shall be
leviable in respect of any’ animal or vehicle
538
used for the passage of troops or the
conveyance of Government stores or of any
other Government property, or for the passage
of military or police-officers on duty or the
passage or conveyance of any person or
property in their custody,
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Section 74 then provides for payment of an ad hoc sum ascer-
tained in the manner provided in that section by the
Government or district local board in lieu of a rate on
buildings vesting in the Government or in the district local
boards which are exempted under clause (a) of the proviso
quoted above. Section 75 then lays down the procedure for
imposition of the tax and s. 75(c) gives the right of filing
objections to the inhabitants of the borough. It may be
noted that the right of Ming objections is not confined only
to owners of buildings, but is granted to inhabitants of the
borough which will not exclude the Government or the
district local board in respect of their buildings which may
not satisfy the requirements of the proviso to section 73
inasmuch as they may not be actually used for public
purposes and, hence, may be liable to be taxed. Section 78
makes provision for preparation of an assessment list and
requires that that list should contain the names of the
owner as well as occupier, if known. Section 79 deals with
cases where the person primarily liable for payment of this
tax cannot be ascertained, and makes it sufficient to
designate him in the assessment book/as "the holder" of such
premises without further description. Section 80 lays down
the manner in which the completed assessment list is to be
published and gives a right to every person claiming to be
either the owner or occupier of property included in the
list, and any agent of such person, to inspect the list and
to make extracts therefrom without charge. Finally,
attention was drawn to the provisions of section 85, which
lays down who is to be primarily responsible for payment of
the tax, in the following language:-
"85. A tax imposed in the form of a rate on
buildings or land or both. shall be leviable
primarily from the actual occupier of the
property upon which the tax is assessed if he
is the owner of the property, or holds it on a
building, or other lease from the Government
or from the municipality, or on a building
lease from any person. Otherwise the tax
shall be primarily leviable as follows, namely
:-
(a) if the property is let from the lessor;
(b) if the property is sublet, from the
superior lessor,
(c) if the property Is unlet, from the
person in whom
the right to let the same vests
539
We are unable to agree, with learned counsel for the
appellants that this scheme of the Act contains any
indication that buildings belonging to the municipality
itself cannot be subjected to the house-tax which can be
imposed under section 73 of the Act. In fact, the language
of section 85 specifically envisages imposition of such a
tax on buildings belonging to the municipality. It clearly
lays down that such a tax shall be leviable primarily from
the actual occupier of the property on which the tax is
assessed, even if he holds it on a lease from the
municipality. The fixation of such responsibility primarily
on the occupier holding a building on lease from the
municipality could only be laid down on the basis that the
buildings owned by the municipality can be subjected to the
tax. Once the tax is imposed on such a building, it would
be payable by the occupier if he holds it as a lessee of the
municipality. The same-principle applies in the case of
buildings held on a lease from the Government. It may be
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noted that all Government buildings are not exempted from
the tax. Only those buildings are exempted which are used
solely for public purposes and are not used or intended to
be used for purposes of profit. Learned counsel urged that
it is anomalous that a, municipality should be permitted to
impose tax on buildings owned by itself But this argument
loses sight of the fact that the tax is primarily payable by
the occupier and not by the owner. The purpose of
imposition of tax by a, municipality on its own buildings is
to ensure that it is paid by the lessees of those buildings.
Of course, if the building is not on lease, the imposition
of the tax would serve no purpose at all. That, however,
will not make the imposition of tax by the municipality on
its own buildings invalid which imposition will be really
effective whenever that building is given out on lease to
any other person. In these circumstances, we fully agree
with the High Court that the tax was validly imposed and the
suit challenging its realisation from the appellants had to
fail.
In view of our decision on the validity of the tax, the
question whether a notice under section 206-A of the Act was
necessary or not becomes immaterial. The appeal fails and
is dismissed with costs.
G.C. Appeal dismissed.
540