Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
FEDERATION OF HOTEL & RESTAURANT ASSOCIATIONOF INDIA, ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/05/1989
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 1291 1988 SCR (3) 998
1988 SCC (3) 91 JT 1988 (2) 519
1988 SCALE (1)1088
CITATOR INFO :
R 1989 SC 19 (29)
F 1989 SC 30 (3)
F 1989 SC1256 (8)
F 1989 SC1308 (11)
R 1990 SC1106 (43)
RF 1991 SC1173 (6)
ACT:
Hotel Expenditure Act, 1987: Sections 2-5, 6 and 24--Tax
at 10% ad valorem on chargeable expenditure where room
charges in hotels were Rs.400 per day per individual--Valid-
ity of--Competence of Parliament to impose--Classification
of hotel for tax purposes-Whether arbitrary, violative of
Article 14--Whether violative of Article 19(1)(g).
Constitution of India, 1950: Articles 14 and 19(1) (g),
Articles 246 and 248, Entry 97 List I and Entries 54 and 62,
List 11, Seventh Schedule--Hotel Expenditure Act,
1987---Legislative competence of Parliament to impose
tax--Classification of hotels based on room charges--Whether
arbitrary--Whether permissible--Whether Act imposed unrea-
sonable restriction on freedom of trade.
Uttar Pradesh Taxation And Land Revenue Laws Act, 1975/
Maharashtra Tax On Luxuries (Hotels And Lodging Houses) Act
1987/ Kerala Tax On Luxuries In Hotels And Lodging Houses
Act, 1976--Validity of.
HEADNOTE:
The Expenditure Tax Act, 1987, envisaged a tax at 10% ad
valorem on chargeable expenditure incurred in the class of
hotels wherein room charges for any unit of residential
accommodation were Rs.400 per day per individual. Section 5
of the Act defined chargeable expenditure to include expend-
iture incurred in or payments made in such class of hotels
in connection with the provision of any accommodation,
residential, or otherwise, food or drink whether at or
outside the hotel, or for any accommodation in such hotel on
hire or lease or any other services envisaged in that Sec-
tion.
The petitioners, who were engaged in, or associated with
the hotel industry challenged the constitutional validity of
the Act on grounds of
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919
lack of legislative competence and violation of Articles 14
and 19(1)(g) of the Constitution. It was contended that the
Act, in its true nature and character, was not one imposing
an expenditure-tax, as known to law, accepted notions of
Public Finance, and to legislative practice but was, in pith
and substance, either a tax on luxuries falling within Entry
62 of List II of the Seventh Schedule, or a tax on the
consideration paid for the purchase of goods constituting an
impost of the nature envisaged in entry 54 of List II, and
was clearly outside the legislative competence of the Union
Parliament; that the Act was violative of Article 14 as the
basis on which the hotels were classified was arbitrary an
unintelligible, having no rational-nexus with the taxing-
policy under the Act, inasmuch as persons similarly situat-
ed, and who incurred the same extent and degree of expendi-
ture on the same luxuries, were differentiated on the sole
basis that in one case the expenditure was incurred in a
hotel where one of the rooms had a charge of Rs.400 per day
per individual marked for it, while in the other though
equally wasteful expenditure was incurred in a more luxuri-
ous restaurant, the latter expenditure was exempt, that even
if more sophisticated and expensive food and drinks and
other services, envisaged in clauses (a) to (d) of Section 5
were provided in a hotel or catering establishment which
fell outside the class, the expenditure incurred thereon is
unaffected by the law, that the standards and measures for
the computation of the chargeableexpenditure under the Act
was vague and arbitrary, that the expression ’other similar
services’ in clauses (d) of Section 5 was non-specific and
vague; and that the Act was violative of petitioners’ funda-
mental right under Article 19(1)(g) as it imposed unreasona-
ble onerous restrictions on their freedom of business.
The respondent-Union of India sought to sustain the
legislative competence of Parliament to enact the law under
Article 248 read with Entry 97 of List I of the Seventh
Schedule, contending that the law, in pith and substance,
was not one ’with respect to luxuries under Entry 62, List
1, and the tax on expenditure, as the legislative had chosen
to conceive it, was referrable to residuary power, that the
economists’ concept of such an expenditure tax was at best
an idea of the manner of effectuation of fiscal programme
and was no limitation on the legislative power, that the
legislative-power recognised the demarcation of distinct
aspects of the same matter as distinct topics of legislation
and that the challenge to legislative competence overlooked
the dichotomy of these distinct aspects, the line of demar-
cation, though sometimes thin and subtle, being real, that
the measure adopted for the levy of the tax did not neces-
sarily determine its essential character and that the object
on which the expenditure was laid-out might or might not be
an item of
920
luxury, or the expenditure might constitute the price of the
goods but, what was taxed was the expenditure aspect which,
in itself, was susceptible of recognition, as a distinct
topic of legislation.
Dismissing the Writ Petitions, this Court
HELD: (R.S. Pathak, CJ., Sabyasachi Mukharji, S. Natara-
jan and M.N. Venkatachaliah--Per: Venkatachaliah, J.)
1.1 A law imposing the expenditure tax is well within
the legislative competence of Union Parliament under Article
248 read with Entry 97 of List I. [940E-F]
1.2 The tax envisaged by the Expenditure Tax Act, 1987,
is essentially a tax on expenditure and not on luxuries or
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sale of goods falling within the State power. The distinct
aspect, namely, the expenditure aspect of the transaction
failing with the Union power must be distinguished and the
legislative competence to impose a tax thereon sustained.
[947D-E]
2.1 If a legislature with limited or qualified jurisdic-
tion transgresses its powers, such transgression may be
open, direct and overt, or disguised, indirect and covert.
The latter kind of trespass is figuratively referred to as
"colourable legislation", connoting that although apparently
the legislature purports to act within the limits of its own
powers yet, in substance and in reality, it encroaches upon
a field prohibited to it, requiring an examination, with
some strictness, the substance of the legislation for deter-
mining as to what the legislature was really doing. [939E-F]
Prafulla Kumar Mukherjee and Ors. v. Bank of Commerce,
[1945] FCR 179, referred to.
2.2 Wherever legislative powers are distributed between
the Union and the States, situations may arise where the two
legislative fields might apparently overlap. It is the duty
of the Courts, however difficult it may be, to ascertain to
what degree and to what extent, the authority to deal with
matters failing within these classes of subjects exists in
each legislature and to define, in the particular case
before them, the limits of the respective powers. It could
not have been the intention that a conflict should exist;
and, in order to prevent such a result the two provisions
must be read together and the language of one interpreted,
and, where necessary modified by that of the other. [939F-G]
921
Union Colliery Co. of British Columbia v. Bryden, [1899]
AC 580 at 587; Lefroy Canada’s Federal System., referred to.
2.3 The law ’with respect to’ a subject might inciden-
tally ’affect’ another subject in some way; but that is not
the same thing as the law being on the latter subject. There
might be overlapping; but the overlapping must be in law.
The same transaction may involve two or more taxable events
in its different aspects. But the fact that there is an
overlapping does not detract from the distinctiveness of the
aspects. [941E]
Governor General in Council v. Province of Madras,
[1945] FCR 179 (P.C.) at 193 and Laskin Canadian Constitu-
tional Law, referred to.
2.4 The consequences and effects of the legislation are
not the same thing as the legislative subject matter. It is
the true nature and character of the legislation and not its
ultimate economic results that matters. [944C]
2.5 The scope of the present legislation cannot be
considered by reference to legislative practice because
firstly, the question of legislative-practice as to what a
particular legislative-entry could be held to embrace is
inapposite while dealing with a tax which is suigeneris or
non-descript imposed in exercise of the residuary powers so
long as such tax is not specifically enumerated in Lists II
JUDGMENT:
ing that the appropriate legislature had limited the notion
of a tax of this kind within any confines. [944E-G]
Walace Brothers and Company Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income Tax, Bombay City and Bombay Suburban District, [1948]
LR 75, IA 86; Navinchandra Mafatlal v. CIT, Bombay City,
[1955] 1 SCR 829; Union of India v. H.S. Dhillon, [1972] 2
SCR 33 at 61; Attorney General for Ontario v. Attorney-
General for Canada, [1912] AC 571 at 581; Croft v. Dunphy,
[1933] AC 156 and Azam Jha Bahadur v. Expenditure Tax Offi-
cer, [1972] 1 SCR 470 referred to.
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2.6 The subject of a tax is different from the measure
of the levy. The measure of the tax is not determinative of
its essential character or of the competence of the legisla-
ture. [946F-G]
M/s. Sainik Motors v. State of Rajasthan, [1962] 1 SCR
517 and Encyclopaedia Britannica on Luxury Tax, Vol. 14 p.
459, referred to.
922
3.1 Though taxing laws are not outside Article 14,
however, having regard to the wide variety of diverse eco-
nomic criteria that go into the formulation of a fiscal-
policy, legislature enjoys a wide latitude in the matter of
selection of persons, subject-matter, events, etc., for
taxation. A legislature does not, have to tax everything in
order to be able to tax something. if there is equality and
uniformity within each group, the law would not be discrimi-
natory. The tests of the vice of discrimination in a taxing
law are, accordingly, less rigorous. [948G-H]
3.2 In examining the allegations of a hostile, discrimi-
natory treatment what is looked into is not its phraseology,
but the real effect of its provisions. The classification
must be rational and based on some qualities and character-
istics which are to be found in all the persons grouped
together and absent in the others left out of the class.
Besides, differentia must also have a rational nexus with
the object sought to be achieved by the law. However, no
precise or set formulae or doctrinaire tests or precise
scientific principles of exclusion or inclusion are to be
applied. The test could only be one of palpable arbitrari-
ness applied in the context of the felt needs of the times
and societal exigencies informed by experience. [949A, C-E]
3.3 Classification based on differences in the value of
articles or the economic superiority of the persons of
incidence are well-recognised. A reasonable classification
is one which includes all who are similarly situated and
none who are not. In order to ascertain whether persons are
similarly placed, one must look beyond the classification
and to the purposes of the law. [949E-F]
Jaipur Hosiery Mills Ltd. v. State of Rajasthan, [1970]
2 SCR 26; Hiralal v. State of U.P., [1973] 2 SCR 502; State
of Gujarat v. Sri Ambika Mills Ltd., [1974] 3 SCR 760; G.K.
Krishnan v. Tamil Nadu, [1975] 2 SCR 715; I.T.O. v. N. Takim
Roy Limbe, [1976] 3 SCR 413; Secretary of Agriculture v.
Central Roig Refining Co., [1949] 338 U.S. 604; M/s. Hoechst
Pharmaceuticals Ltd. v. State of Bihar, AIR 1983 SC 1019 and
Wallace Mendelson: Supreme Court Statecraft; The Rule of Law
and Men, p. 4, referred to.
3.4 In the present case, the bases of classification
cannot be said to be arbitrary or unintelligible nor as
being without a rational nexus with the object of the law. A
hotel where a unit of residential accommodation is priced at
over Rs.400 per day per individual is, in the legislative
wisdom, considered a class apart by virtue of the economic
superiority of those who might enjoy its custom, comforts
and services.
923
This legislative assumption cannot be condemned as irration-
al. Judicial veto is to be exercised only in cases that
leave no room for reasonable doubt. Constitutionality is
presumed. [952B-C]
3.5 The words "other similar services" in Section 5(d)
were intended to embrace services like-but not identical
with--those described in the preceding words. The content of
the expression "other similar services" following, the
preceding expressions "by way of beauty parfour, health
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club, swimming pool or ..... "has a definite connotation
in the interpretation of such words in such statutory con-
tents. The matter is one of construction whether any partic-
ular service fails within the section and not one of consti-
tutionality. [953E-F]
4. A taxing statute is not, per-se, a restriction of the
freedom under Article 19(1)(g). The policy of a tax, in its
effectuation, might, of course, bring in some hardship in
some individual cases. But that is inevitable, so long as
law represents a process of abstraction from the generality
of cases and reflects the highest common-factor. The mere
excessiveness of a tax or even the circumstance that its
imposition might tend towards the diminution of the earnings
or profits of the persons of incidence does not, per-se, and
without more. constitute, violation of the rights under
Article 19(1)(g). [954F-G]
Per Ranganathan, J. (Concurring),
5.1 In the context of the social and economic conditions
that prevailed in India, it was a luxury for any person to
stay in hotels charging high rents and providing various
types of facilities, amenities and conveniences such as
telephone, television, air-conditioner, etc. An expenditure
on something which is in excess of what is required for
economic and personal well-being would be expenditure on
luxury although the expenditure may be of a nature which is
incurred by a large number of people including those not
economically well off. [958G-H]
Abdul Kadir & Sons v. State of Kerala, [1976] 2 SCR 690,
relied on.
5.2 The legislature has, particularly in a taxing stat-
ute, a considerable amount of latitude and it cannot be held
that, in fixing the standards of indication of luxury, the
legislature, has not applied its mind. In fact, the figures
have been amended from time to time and, it has to be pre-
sumed that the legislature had good reason for fixing these
standards. From the scheme of the legislations, the state
legislations fall
924
within the scope of Entry 62, List I and are, therefore,
clearly within the competence of the State legislatures and
are not liable to be challenged. [959D; 957C]
6.1 In interpreting the scope of the legislative entries
in the three lists, it has to be kept in mind that, while on
the one hand, it is desirable that each entry in each of the
lists should receive the broadest interpretation, it is
equally important, on the other, that the three lists should
be read together and harmoniously. [959E-F]
6.2 The power of the State legislature to make laws with
respect to any of the matters enumerated in List II is
subject to the exclusive power of Parliament to make laws
with respect to any of the matters enumerated in List I.
Hence, if a matter is covered by an entry in the Union List,
no restrictions can be read into the power of Parliament to
make laws in regard thereto. [959G-H; 960A]
6.3 The legislative entries are so arranged that the
power to enact laws in general and the power to impose taxes
are separately dealt with. Under Article 246(1), the Parlia-
ment has exclusive powers to make laws with respect to any
of the matters, including power to impose taxes, enumerated
in List I. [960B-C]
M.P.V. Sundararamier & Co. v. The State of Andhra Pra-
desh Another, [1958] SCR 1422 at pp. 1479 and 1490, referred
to.
7. It cannot be held that the tax cannot be considered
to be an expenditure tax because it is not on expenditure
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generally but is restricted to specific types of expendi-
ture. There is no legal, judicial, economic or other concept
of expenditure tax that would justify any such restrictive
meaning. If, conceptually, the expenditure incurred by a
person can be a subject-matter with reference to which a tax
can be levied, such taxation can be restricted only to
certain items or categories of expenditure, and its base
need not necessarily be so wide as to cover all expenditure
incurred by an assessable entity. Selection of objects and
goods for taxation is the essence of any tax legislation and
any limitation is an unlimited curtailment of this selective
power of taxation of Parliament. [960H; 961A-B, F]
8.1 There is not much of legislative practice which
would justify importing any limitation on the concept of a
tax on expenditure under entry 97 of List I. Once it is
granted that the tax need not exhaust the entire universe of
the subject-matter, the extent of the subject matter
925
that should be covered or selected for imposing tax should
be entirely left to Parliament subject only to any criteria
of discrimination or unreasonableness that may attract the
provisions of Part 1II of the Constitution. [962D-E, F-G]
State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley Co., [1959] SCR 379;
Navinchanda Mafat Lal v. CIT. [1955] 1 SCR 829; Naynit Lal
v. AAC, [1965] 1 SCR 909; Harikrishna Bhargava v. Union,
[1966] 2 SCR 22 and Bhagwandas Jain v. Union of India,
[1981] 2 SCR 808, referred to.
8.2 Legislative lists cannot be interpreted on the
assumption that there is a deemed entry "Taxes on Expendi-
ture" added to List I as a result of the decision in Azam
Jha’s case, [1972] 1 SCR 470. Entries cannot be added to the
legislative Lists on the basis of decisions of this Court.
In Azam Jha’s case, the pith and substance of the Act con-
sidered did not fail under any of the entries in List II or
III. However, in the instant case, the legislation coveres
only certain types of expenditure. The decision in Azam
Jha’s case cannot help in determining whether the Expendi-
ture Act 1987 should be construed as imposing tax on expend-
iture or and on luxuries. [964A-C]
Azam Jha Bahadur v. Expenditure Tax Officer, [1972] 1
SCR 470 distinguished.
9. Merely because the 1987 Act as well as the State Acts
levy taxes which have ultimate impact on persons who enjoy
certain luxuries, the pith and substance of both cannot be
considered to be the same. The object of a tax on luxury is
to impose a tax on the enjoyment of certain types of bene-
fits, facilities and advantages on which the legislature
wishes to impose a curb. The idea is to encourage society to
cater better to the needs of those who cannot afford them.
Such a tax may be on the person offering the luxury or the
person enjoying it. It may be levied on the basis of the
amount received for providing, or the amount paid for or
expended for enjoying, the luxury. Conceivably, it could be
on different bases altogether. The object of an expenditure
tax is to discourage expenditure which the legislature
considers lavish or Ostentatious. The object of the first
would be to discourage certain types of living or enjoyment
while that of the second would be to discourage people from
incurring expenditure in unproductive or undesirable chan-
nels. If a general Expenditure Tax Act, like that of 1957,
had been enacted, no challenge to its validity could have
been raised because it incidentally levied the tax on ex-
penditure incurred on luxuries. The fact that there will be
some overlapping then or that here there is a good deal of
such
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926
overlapping, because the States have chosen to tax only some
types of luxuries and the Centre to tax, atleast for the
time being, only expenditure which results in such luxuries,
should not be allowed to draw a curtain over the basic
difference between the two categories of imposts. [968E-H;
969A-B]
This distinction is not obliterated merely because of
the circumstances that both legislatures have chosen to
attack the same area of vulnerability, one with a view to
keep a check on ’luxuries’ and the other with a view to curb
undesirable ’expenditure’. [969C]
Kerala State Electricity Board v. Indian Aluminium Co.,
[1976] 1 SCR 562; In the Central Provinces & Berar Sales of
Motor Spirit and Lubricants Taxation Act, 1938, [1939] FCR
18; Province of Madras v. Boddu Paidanna & Sons, [1942] FCR
90; G.G.-in-Council v. Province of Madras, [1945] FCR 179;
Ralla Ram v. East Punjab, [1948] FCR 207; Bhagwan Dass Jain
v. Union, [1981] 2 SCR 808; Hingir-Rampur Coal Co. Ltd. v.
State of Orissa, [1961] 2 SCR 537 and Sainik Motors v. State
of Rajasthan, [1962] 1 SCR 517, referred to.
A.H.F. Lefroy: Canadian Constitution and Laskin: Canadi-
an Constitutional Law, referred to.
&
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 1395 of 1987.
etc.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
N.A. Palkhiwala, T.R. Andhyarujina, Soli J. Sorabjee, R.
Dada, S. Ganesh, J.R. Gagrat, R.B. Aggarwala, P.G. Gokhale,
V.B. Aggarwala, R.J. Gagrat, R.B. Hathikhanawala, R.F.
Nariman, P.H. Parekh, Sanjay Bhartari, M.K. Menon, R.K.
Dhillon, Ms. Rohini Chhabra, Ms. Sunita Sharma and Ms.
Ayesha Misra for the Petitioners.
K. Parasaran, Attorney General, B. Datta, Addl. Solici-
tor General, Dr. V. Gauri Shankar, S.K. Dholakia, P.S. Poti,
G.A. Shah, V. Jaganatha Rao, K. Sudhakaran, Ms. A. Subha-
shini, B.B. Ahuja, H.K. Puri, A Subba Rao, A.S.Bhasme, K.R.
Nambiar, M.N. Shroff, M. Veerappa, R. Mohan, R. Ayyamperumal
and J.P. Mishra for the Respondents.
The following judgments of the Court were delivered:
927
VENKATACHALIAH, J. In these writ-petitions under Article
32 of the Constitution of India, petitioners who are engaged
in, or associated with, the Hotel Industry in India chal-
lenge the constitutional validity of the Expenditure-Tax
Act, 1987 (Central Act 35 of 1987). The Act envisages a tax
at 10 per cent ad valorem on ’chargeable-expenditure’ in-
curred in the class of Hotels wherein "room-charges" for any
unit of residential accommodation are Rupees Four Hundred
per day per individual. The ’Chargeable-expenditure’ as
defined in Section 5 of the Act include expenditure incurred
in or payments made in such class of hotels in connection
with the provision of any accommodation, residential or
otherwise, food or drink whether at or outside the hotel; or
for any accommodation in such hotel on hire or lease; or any
other services envisaged in that Section. However, any
expenditure incurred in or paid for in "foreign exchange" or
by persons who enjoy certain diplomatic privileges and
immunities are exempt.
The challenge to the vires of the ’Act’ is on grounds of
lack of legislative-competence and of violation of the
rights under Article 14 and 19(1)(g). Union of India seeks
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to sustain the legislative competence to enact the impugned
law under Article 248 read with Entry 97 of List I of the
Seventh Schedule.
2. Writ Petition No. 1395 of 1987 is quite comprehensive
as to the array of parties and may generally be regarded as
representative of the contentions urged in support of the
challenge. The first petitioner therein is "The Federation
of Hotel & Restaurant Association of India"--which is said
to be a representative body of over 1,000 member-petitioners
in India. Petitioners 2 to 5 are said to be the Regional
Associations of the Federation and Petitioners 6 and 7 are
two Hotel companies which own several hotels in India.
Petitioners 8 and 9 are Indian citizens who are the direc-
tors and shareholders of petitioners 6 and 7 respectively.
Petitioner 10, is a practising chartered-accountant who
claims to use the services in the several Hotels in India
owned by the members of the Federation. The array of peti-
tioners is quite comprehensive so as to include all inter-
ests affected so as to satisfy the requisite standing to sue
from all points of view.
3. The Expenditure Tax Bill No. 90 of 1987, preceding
the impugned Act was introduced in the Union Legislature on
21.8.1987. It became an Act on 14.9.1987. It extends to the
whole of India except the State of Jammu and Kashmir. The
requisite notification under Section 1(3) of the Act was
issued on 14.10.1987 appointing 1.11.1987
928
as the date on which the Act shall come into force.
The Expenditure Tax Bill No. 90 of 1987 states the
following as its objects and reasons:
"The Bill seeks to impose a tax on expenditure incurred in
hotels were the room charges for any Unit of residential
accommodation are four hundred rupees or more per day per
individual. This tax will be levied at the rate of ten per
cent of the expenditure incurred in connection with provi-
sion of any accommodation, food, drinks, and certain other
categories of services. This tax will not apply to expendi-
ture incurred in foreign exchange or in the case of person
enjoying diplomatic privileges."
(Emphasis supplied)
4. A brief survey of the provisions of the Act is
perhaps necessary to apprehend and assess the grounds of
challenge in their true perspective. Section 4 is the charg-
ing section which says:
"Subject to the provisions of this Act, there shall be
charged on and from the commencement of this Act, a tax at
the rate of ten per cent of the chargeable expenditure."
The expression ’chargeable-expenditure’ is defined in
clauses (a), (b), (c) and (d) of Section 5, which read:
"For the purposes of this Act, chargeable expend-
iture means any expenditure incurred in, or payments made
to, a hotel to which this Act applies, in connection with
the provision of,--
(a) any accommodation, residential or otherwise;
or
(b) food or drink by the hotel, whether at the
hotel or outside, or by any other person at the hotel; or
(c) any accommodation in such hotel on hire or
lease; or
(d) any other services at the hotel, either by the
hotel or by any other person, by way of beauty parlour,
health
929
club, swimming pool or other similar services."
(Rest of the provisions of Section 5 are omitted
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as unnecessary for the present)
The expression ’Assessee’, ’Hotel’, ’Room-charges’ are
some of the material expressions defined in the interpreta-
tion clause.
2(1) "assessee" means a person responsible for
collecting the expenditure-tax payable under the provisions
of this Act.
2(6) "Hotel" includes a building or part of a
building where residential accommodation is, by way of
business, provided for a monetary consideration.
2(10) "room charges" means the charges for a unit
of residential accommodation in a hotel and includes the
charges for--
(a) furniture, air-conditioner, refrigerator,
radio, music, telephone, television, and
(b) such other services as are normally included
by a hotel in room rent,
but does not include charges for food, drinks and
any services other than those referred to in sub-clauses (a)
and (b). Section 3 is the crucial provision which lays down
the differentia for the classification of the Hotel to which
the ’Act’ applies.
Section 3 is the crucial provision which lays down the
differentia for the classification of the Hotel to which the
’Act’ applies. That section provides that the ’Act’ shall
apply in relation to any ’chargeableexpenditure’, incurred
in a hotel wherein the "room-charges" for any unit of resi-
dential accommodation at the time of incurring of such
expenditure are Rs.400 or more per day per individual. The
levy of tax is confined to such class of Hotels which satis-
fy that statutory-standard. Where, however, composite
charges are payable in respect of both residential accommo-
dation and food, then the "room charges" for purposes of
determination of the criteria attracting the Act shall have
to be apportioned in the manner to be prescribed. Section 3
930
enables the assessing-officer to determine the ’room-
charges’ on such reasonable basis as he may deem fit where:
.lm60
"(i) a composite charge is payable in respect of
residential accommodation, food, drinks and other services,
or any of them, and the case is not covered by the provi-
sions of sub-section (2), or
(ii) it appears to the Income-tax Officer that the
charges for residential accommodation, food, drinks or other
services are so arranged that the room charges are under-
stated and other charges are overstated,"
Sections 6 and 24 envisage and provide for the authori-
ties to administer Act and engrafts the machinery and proce-
dure of the Income-tax Act. Section 6(1) says:
"Every Director of Inspection, Commissioner of Incometax,
Commissioner of Income-tax (Appeals), Inspecting Assistant
Commissioner of Income-tax, Income-tax Officer and Inspector
of Income-tax shall have the like powers and perform the
like functions under this Act as he has and performs under
the Income-tax Act, and for the exercise of his power and
the performance of his functions, his jurisdiction under
this Act shall be the same as he has under the Income-tax
Act."
Section 24 provides:
"The provisions of the following sections and
Schedules of the Income-tax Act the Income-tax (Certificate
Proceedings) Rules, 1962, as in force from time to time,
shall apply with necessary modifications as if the said
provisions and the rules referred to expenditure-tax instead
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of to income-tax:
2(43B) and (44), 118, 125, 125A, 128 to 136 (both
inclusive), 138, 140, 144A, 159 to 163 (both inclusive),
166, 167, 170, 171, 173 to 179 (both inclusive), 187, 188,
189, 220 to 227 (both inclusive), 229, 231, 232, 237 to 245
(both inclusive), 254 to 262 (both inclusive) 265, 266, 268,
269, 278B, 278C, 278D, 278E, 281, 281B, 282, 283, 284, 287,
288, 288A, 288B, 289 to 293 (both inclusive), the Second
931
Schedule and the Third Schedule:
Provided that references in the said provisions
and rules to the "assessee" shall be construed as references
to an assessee as defined in this Act."
Section 8(1) provides that every "person responsible for
collecting" the tax as defined in Section 2(8) shall, before
the expiry of four months from the 31st day of March in each
year furnish or caused to be furnished to the Income-tax
Officer, in the prescribed form and varified in the pre-
scribed manner a return in respect of the immediately pre-
ceding financial year showing (a) the aggregate of the
payments received in respect of "chargeable-expenditure";
(b) the amount of the tax collected; (c) the amount of the
tax paid to the credit of the Central Government; and (d)
such other particulars as may be prescribed.
The incidence of the tax is on the persons who incur the
"chargeable-expenditure" in the class of hotels to which the
Act applies. Section 7 enjoins upon the "person responsible
for collecting" the duty to collect the taxes and pay the
same to the credit of the Central Government. The "room-
charges" of Rs.400 per day per individual stipulated in
Section 3 is the differentium which keeps apart the class of
hotels to which the Act applies. Petitioners say that Sec-
tion 3 merely defines the place, viz., the Hotel where a
room carries a charge of Rs.400 per day marked on it and the
rest of the incidents and consequences of the provisions of
the ’Act’ envisage the levy of a tax on the ’luxuries’
provided at such a place. The legislation, it is urged, is
squarely within Entry 62 of List II within the State-power.
The Act, it is contended, does not impose an "Expenditure
Tax" but taxes ’Luxuries’. Even if the legislation has an
"expenditure dampening" objective and seeks to inhibit, by
creation of disincentives, ostentatious and wasteful expend-
iture, the classification, it is said, has no rational
basis. Persons similarly situated and who incur the same
extent and degree of expenditure on the same luxuries are
differentiated on the sole basis that in one case the ex-
penditure is incurred in a Hotel where one of the rooms has
a charge of Rs.400 per day per individual marked for it,
while in the other though equally wasteful expenditure is
incurred in a more luxurious Restaurant, the latter expendi-
ture is exempt. It is urged that even if more sophisticated
and expensive food and drinks and other services, envisaged
in clauses (a) to (d) of Section 5, are provided in a hotel
or catering establishment which falls out-side the class,
the expenditure incurred thereon is unaffected by the law.
932
This aspect of under-inclusiveness is assailed as violative
of Article 14.
5. Petitioners further contend that the several provi-
sions of the Act which impose certain statutory-obligations
of an onerous nature, the breach of which are visited with
penal consequences, render the law an unreasonable restric-
tion on the petitioners’ fundamental rights under Article
19(1)(g).
The contentions urged in support of the petitions admit
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of being noticed and formulated in the following terms:
(a) The ’Act’, in its true nature and character, is not one
imposing an ’Expenditure-Tax’, as known to Law, accepted
notions of Public Finance, and to legislative practice but
is, in pith and substance, either a tax on Luxuries falling
within Entry 62 of List II of the Seventh Schedule; or a tax
on the consideration paid for the purchase of goods consti-
tuting an impost of the nature envisaged in entry 54 of List
II, and clearly outside the legislative competence of the
Union Parliament;
(b) that even if the ’Act’ is held to impose a tax which is
"sui-generis" or a "non-discript", tax with respect to which
the Union Parliament is competent to make a law under Arti-
cle 248 and Entry 97 of List I, then, at all events, the
’Act’ is violative of Article 14 in as much as the differen-
tium on which the Hotels are classified is arbitrary and
unintelligible has no rational-nexus with the taxing-policy
under the ’Act’.
(c) that the ’Act’ is violative of Petitioners’
fundamental-right under Article 19(1)(g) as it imposes
unreasonable onerous restrictions on their freedom of busi-
ness.
6. Re.’ Contention (a):
Sri Palkhivala, learned Senior Counsel for the petition-
ers, contended that the appellation of ’Expenditure Tax’
given to the impost is a misnomer as the concept of "Expend-
i-
ture-Tax" as known to law and recognised by the theorists of
public finance is not a tax on a few stray items of expendi-
ture but is a term of Art which has acquired a technical
import as ’nomen-juris’ and that the import envisaged by the
Act, in its true nature and character, is no more and no
less than a tax on Luxuries under Entry 62 list II within
the State’s exclusive power. Learned Counsel urged that the
delicate balance in the demarcation in
933
a federal polity of legislative powers between the Union and
the States would impose on the Union, the repository of the
residuary power, the sensitive task of recognising both the
line of demarcation as well as the constitutional
mandate--and a disciplined reluctance--not to cross it. The
contention as to lack of legislative-competence emphasises
two aspects--one with a negative implication and the other
of a positive import. Negatively, it is urged that the
impost is not, and does not satisfy the concept of an
"Expenditure tax" which has a technical connotation both in
law and in public finance. A tax on certain stray items of
expenditure is not, it is contended, a general "expenditure
tax". The nomenclature of the levy is really a mere iII-
fitting legal mask for what is really a tax under Entry 62
list I. The nomenclature of the tax, it is urged, is irrele-
vant in deciding its true nature and character. It belongs
to the rudiments of the subject, says the learned counsel,
that a constitutional-grantee of a power cannot enlarge its
own by choosing for the legislation enacted in exertion of
that power, a nomenclature that corresponds to and semanti-
cally subsumes with the grant. Shri Palkhivala submitted
that the true nature and concept of "expenditure tax", as
known to the theories of public finance has a specific, well
accepted legal connotation and is a tax levied on income or
capital spent or "consumed" in distinguishment of income or
capital "saved". It is this concept of ’expenditure tax’, as
a fiscal tool, which has certain social and economic objec-
tives informing its policy. The present impost and its
incidents, it is urged, have no rational connection with the
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concept of "expenditure tax" known to and accepted by the
principles of public finance and recognised by established
Legislative practice.
7. Referring to the economists’ concept of "expenditure
tax", learned counsel referred us to the report of the Study
Group "On taxation of Expenditure" (Government of India,
Ministry of Finance, April 1987)
"An expenditure tax is generally
taken to mean a direct tax on personal con-
sumption, i.e., the total annual consumption
(minus an exemption, if any) of an individual
tax payer or family. This implies that the tax
will be payable in the year in which consump-
tion takes place. One can conceive of the tax
base being computed by adding up all items of
expenditure, which are by law defined as
consumption
e
x
p
e
nditure, ....................................
................ or, alternatively, by
summing up all the receipts and substracting
therefrom expenses of earning
934
income as well as outflows in the form of
savings (going into different types of invest-
ments, including repayment of past loans). In
practice, the latter method would be prefera-
ble."
(Emphasis
Supplied)
"India has the distinction, shared with Sri
Lanka, of having actually experimented with a
direct tax on consumption expenditure though
the idea itself had caught the imagination of
many tax theorists in developed countries,
some of whom had developed practical systems
for implementation. In both India and Sri
Lanka, the tax was introduced on the basis of
the recommendations of Prof. Nicholas Kaldor.
Prof. Kaldor had been invited to come to India
by the Indian Statistical Institute to make an
investigation of the Indian tax system in the
light of the revenue requirements of the
Second Five Year Plan. In his report, he
recommended the introduction of a direct tax
on personal consumption expenditure as a limb
of a comprehensive and self checking system
comprising the income tax, (which was already
in operation in India), a tax on capital gains
(which had been tried for two years in the
post-war period and then withdrawn), an annual
tax on net wealth, a general gift tax and a
tax on personal expenditure. He envisaged that
these five levies would be assessed simultane-
ously on the basis of a single comprehensive
return, ..... "
(Emphasis
Supplied)
"Under the scheme of expenditure
taxation suggested by Prof. Kaldor, a taxpayer
would not be required to give any detailed
account of his outlays on consumption but only
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a statement of his total outlay as part of a
comprehensive tax return showing all his
receipts, investments, etc., and all the items
for which he claimed exemption .... "
"In India too, although the expendi-
ture tax was tried twice and was given up,
there has been a revival of interest in making
expenditure the base for personal taxation. In
particular, it has been maintained that India
should seriously consider moving towards a
progressive expenditure tax for three impor-
tant reasons:
935
(a) it will promote savings;
(b) it would be, on the whole, more
equitable than the present or any practicable
form of income tax; and
(c) it will significantly reduce the
inducement for direct tax evasion."
In Musgrave on ’Public Finance’, referring
to the concept of Personal Expenditure Tax, it
is stated:
" .... In analogy to the income tax, the
taxpayer would determine his total consumption
for the year, subtract whatever personal
exemptions or deductions were allowed, and
apply a progressive rate schedule to the
remaining amount of taxable consumption".
(Emphasis
Supplied)
Sri Palkhivala also referred to certain passages of Nicholas
Kaldor "On Expenditure Tax" and the same eminent economists
report on "Indian Tax Reform", to reinforce the submission
that the conceptualisation of ’Expenditure-Tax’, as a fiscal
tool for economic regulation, has a specific and definite
connotation and the "Tax" so conceptualised by experts on
public finance is an entirely different idea from the
one--built into the present legislation. The very concept of
’Expenditure Tax’ envisaged in the impunged legislation, it
is urged, is unknown to accepted principles of public fi-
nance and is the result of a grave misconception as to the
essential nature and incidents of what in law and legisla-
tive practice is recognised as ’Expenditure Tax’. The whole
exercise, learned counsel said, is a draft on credibility
and that the Finance Minister’s speech on the Bill leaves no
doubt that what the Government wanted from the law was
really a tax on "Luxuries". The impost, it is urged, is not
susceptible of any other legitimate understanding than that
it is in substance and effect, a tax on "Luxuries" within
the States’ power. Sri Palkhivala emphasised the relevance
of what was implicit in the observations of this court in
Azam Jha Bahadur v. Expenditure Tax Officer, [1972] 1 SCR
470 made while upholding the legislative competence of the
Union Parliament to enact the Expenditure Tax Act 1957, as
referable to the residuary Entry 97 of List I. The implica-
tion of the observations of this Court at page 479 of the
report, according to learned counsel, is that what distin-
guished
936
an "expenditure-tax" from a levy under Entry 62 of List II,
was that the scheme of taxation took into account the total-
ity of expenditure over a unit of time, as distinct from
sums laid out on stray purchases of luxuries.
8. Shri Palkhivala, then, submitted that the notion of
expenditure tax, as recognised by legislative-practice is a
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relevant factor. In Croft v. Dunphy, [1933] AC 156 Lord Mc
Millan held that when power is conferred on the legislature
on a particular topic it is important, in determining the
scope of the power, to have regard to what, in legislative
practice, is ordinarily treated as embraced within the topic
and particularly in legislative practice of the State which
has conferred the power. In Wallace Brothers & Co. Ltd. v.
CIT, Bombay City, [1948] L.R. 75, IA 86 Lord Uthwatt re-
ferred to the permissibility and, indeed, the importance to
refer to the legislative-practice as to what is ordinarily
treated as within the topic of legislation in understanding
the scope of a legislative-power. The notion of expendi-
ture-tax in the scheme of the Expenditure Tax Act, 1957,
would, it is urged, detract from such legislative-practice.
9. The second limb of the argument is that the impost is
clearly of the nature of a tax on luxuries within Entry 62
of List I. The simple test, according to the argument, is
whether, if a State legislature had enacted a similar law it
would not have been held to be within its competence under
Entry 62 of List II? The answer would, according to the
submission, be in emphatic affirmation, Referring to the
concept of a luxury tax, learned counsel referred to the New
Encyclopaedia Britanica Vol. 7 which referring to "luxury-
tax" says:
"Luxury tax, excise levy on goods or
services considered to be luxuries rather than
necessities. Modern examples are taxes on
jewellery and perfume. Luxury taxes may be
levied with the intent of taxing the rich, as
in the case of the late 18th-and early 19th-
century British taxes on carriages and man-
servants; or they may be imposed in a deliber-
ate effort to alter consumption patterns,
either for moral reasons or because of some
national emergency. In modern times, the
revenue production of luxury taxes has proba-
bly overshadowed the moral argument for them.
Furthermore, the progressive nature of the
early taxes began to be lost as more
lower--income people’s "luxuries" were taxed
in the interest of generating additional
revenue; an example is the amusement tax."
937
On the analogy of the wealth-tax envisaged by Entry 86
of List I it was urged that even as the concept of "wealth"
for the imposition of a tax thereon is not the individual
components of the assets of the assessee but a totality of
all assets which the assessee owns, so is the concept of
"expenditure" which does not consist of a few stray items of
expenditure but a systematised reckoning of expenditure for
and during a particular unit of time.
10. It was then urged that recourse to the residuary
power under Article 248 read with Entry 97 of List I should
be the very last refuge and would be available if, and only
if, the other entries in the State and concurrent lists do
not cover the topic.
Reliance was also placed on the observations of the
Federal Court in Subrahmanyan Chettiar v. Muttuswami Goun-
dan, AIR 1941 FC 47 where it was held:
"But resort to that residual power
should be the very last refuge. It is only
when all the categories in the three Lists are
absolutely exhausted that one can think of
falling back upon a nondescript."
Shri Palkhivala recalled the following
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words of caution sounded by Chinnappa Reddy,
J. in International Tourist Corporation v.
State of Haryana, [1981] 2 SCR 364:
" ..... Before exclusive legisla-
tive competence can be claimed for Parliament
by resort to the residuary power, the legisla-
tive incompetence of the State legislature
must be clearly established. Entry 97 itself
is specific that a matter can be brought under
that entry only if it is not enumerated in
List II or List III and in the case of a tax
if it is not mentioned in either of those
lists. In a Federal Constitution like ours
where there is a division of legislative
subjects but the residuary power is vested in
Parliament, such residuary power cannot be so
expansively interpreted as to whittle down the
power of the State legislature. That might
affect and jeopardise the very federal princi-
ple. The federal nature of the constitution
demands that an interpretation which would
allow the exercise of legislative power by
Parliament pursuant to the residuary powers
vested in it to trench upon State legislation
and which would thereby destroy or belittle
state autonomy must be rejected ......"
938
Sri Palkhivala also sought to demonstrate how, looked at
from another angle, the levy presents an anomalous situation
by splitting-up a transaction which would otherwise be one
of sale of goods and isolating the price of the goods for
separate treatment as a distinct subject-matter for levy of
expenditure-tax, thus robbing the State-power of its sub-
stance.
Learned Advocate General for the State of Kerala who
intervened made submissions which while being substantially
on the lines of the petitioners’ contentions, however,
sought to qualify that legislative-competence to the extent
of operation of the ’Act’ in the Union territories could be
sustained.
11. Learned Attorney General on the contrary, submitted
that the law, in pith and substance, is not one "with re-
spect to" Luxuries under Entry 62 List I and the tax on
expenditure, as the legislature has chosen to conceive it,
is referrable to residuary power. Learned Attorney General
said that the economists’ concept of such a expenditure tax
is at best an idea of the manner of effectuation of fiscal
programme and is no limitation on the legislative power.
Indeed, if a topic is not shown to fall within the fields of
legislation in Lists II or III, no further inquiry is neces-
sary in order to support the legislative competence of the
Union to legislate on the topic. The purpose of incorporat-
ing a separate List for the Union, as observed in Union of
India v. H.S. Dhillon, [1972] 2 SCR 33 at 671 is:
".......... there is some merit and
legal effect in having included specific items
of List I for when there are three lists it is
easier to construe List II in the light of
Lists I and II. If there had been no List 1,
many items in List 11 would perhaps have been
given much wider interpretation than can be
given under the present scheme. Be that as it
may, we have the three lists and a residuary
power and therefore it seems to us that in
this context ira Central Act is challenged as
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being beyond the legislative competence of
Parliament, it is enough to enquire if it is a
law with respect to matters or taxes enumerat-
ed in List II. If it is not, no further ques-
tion arises."
(Emphasis
Supplied)
Learned Attorney General characterised the petitioners’
contention that the impugned impost is really a tax on
luxuries or that one
939
aspect of the taxable event in the sale of goods had imper-
missibly been isolated for the creation of an artificial
idea ’expenditure’, suffers from certain basic fallacies.
The legislative-powers, it is urged, recognise the demarca-
tion of distinct aspects of the same matter as distinct
topics of legislation and that the present challenge to
legislative competence overlooks the dichotomy of distinct
aspects of the same matter constituting distinct fields of
legislation, the line of demarcation, though sometimes thin
and subtle, being real. Learned Attorney-General further
contended that the measure adopted for the levy of the tax
does not necessarily determine its essential character and
that the object on which the expenditure is laid-out might
be an item of luxury or it might not be one; or the "expend-
iture" might constitute the price of the goods but, what is
taxed is the "expenditure" aspect which, in itself, is
susceptible of recognition, as a distinct topic of legisla-
tion.
12. We have bestowed our careful consideration to these
rival contentions. The principal question is whether the tax
envisaged by the impugned law is within the legislative
competence of the Union Parliament. In that sense, the
constitutionality of the law becomes essentially a question
of power which in a federal constitution, unlike a legally
omnipotent legislature like the British Parliament, turns
upon the construction of the entries in the legislative
lists. If a legislature with limited or qualified jurisdic-
tion transgresses its powers, such transgression may be
open, direct and overt, or disguised, indirect and covert.
The latter kind of trespass is figuratively referred to as
"colourable legislation", connoting that although apparently
the legislature purports to act within the limits of its own
powers yet, in substance and in reality. it encroaches upon
a field prohibited to it, requiring an examination, with
some strictness, the substance of the legislation for the
purpose of determining what is that the legislature was
really doing. Wherever legislative powers are distributed
between the Union and the States, situations may arise where
the two legislative fields might apparently overlap. It is
the duty of the Courts, however difficult it may be, to
ascertain to what degree and to what extent, the authority
to deal with matters falling within these classes of sub-
jects exists in each legislature and to define, in the
particular case before them, the limits of the respective
powers. It could not have been the intention that a conflict
should exist; and, in order to prevent such a result the two
provisions must be read together, and the language of one
interpreted, and, where necessary modified by that of the
other.
The Judicial Committee in Prafulla Kumar Mukherjee and
Ors. v. Bank of Commerce, [1945] FCR 179 referred to with
approval the
940
following observations of Sir Maurice Gwyer CJ. in Subrah-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 39
manyan Chettiar’s case:
"It must inevitably happen from time to time
that legislation, though purporting to deal
with a subject in one list, touches also on a
subject in another list, and the different
provisions of the enactment may be so closely
intertwined that blind observance to a strict-
ly verbal interpretation would result in a
large number of statutes being declared in-
valid because the legislature enacting them
may appear to have legislated in a forbidden
sphere. Hence the rule which has been evolved
by the Judicial Committee, whereby the im-
pugned statute is examined to ascertain its
’pith and substance’, or its ’true nature and
character,’ for the purpose of determining
whether it is legislation with respect to
matters in this list or in that."
This necessitates as an "essential of federal Government
the role of an impartial body, independent of general and
regional Governments", to decide upon the meaning of deci-
sion of powers. The Court is this body.
13. The position in the present case assumes a slightly
different complexion. It is not any part of the petitioners’
case that ’expenditure-tax’ is one of the taxes within the
States’ power or that it is a forbidden field for the Union
Parliament. On the contrary, it is not disputed that a law
imposing ’expenditure-tax’ is well within the legislative
competence of Union Parliament under Article 248 read with
Entry 97 of List I. But the specific contention is that the
particular impost under the impugned law, having regard to
its nature and incidents, is really not an ’expenditure tax
at all as it does not accord with the economists’ notion of
such a tax. That is one limb of the argument. The other is
that the law is, in pith and substance, really one imposing
a tax on luxuries or on the price paid for the sale of
goods. The crucial questions, therefore, are whether the
economists’ concept of such a tax qualifies and conditions
the legislative-power and, more importantly, whether "ex-
penditure" laid-out on what may be assumed to be "luxuries"
or on the purchase of goods admits of being isolated and
identified as a distinct aspect susceptible of recognition
as a distinct field of tax-legislation.
14. In Lefroy’s ’Canada’s Federal System’ the learned
author referring to the "aspects of legislation" under
Sections 91 and 92 of the
941
Canadian Constitution i.e., British North America Act 1867
observed that "one of the most interesting and important
principles which have been evolved by judicial decisions in
connection with the distribution of Legislative Power is
that subjects which in one aspect and for one purpose fall
within the power of a particular legislature may in another
aspect and for another purpose fall within another legisla-
tive power. Learned author says:
"..... that by ’aspect’ must be understood
the aspect or point of view of the legislator
in legislating the object, purpose, and scope
of the legislation that the word is used
subjectively of the legislator, rather than
objectively of the matter legislated upon."
In Union Colliery Co. of British Columbia v. Bryden,
See. 1899 AC 580 at 587, Lord Haldane said:
"It is remarkable the way this Board has
reconciled the provisions of section 91 and
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section 92, by recognizing that the subjects
which fall within section 91 in one aspect,
may, under another aspect, fall under section
92."
Indeed, the law ’with respect to’ a subject might inci-
dentally ’affect’ another subject in some way; but that is
not the same thing as the law being on the latter subject.
There might be overlapping; but the overlapping must be in
law. The same transaction may involve two or more taxable
events in its different aspects- But the fact that there is
an overlapping does not detract from the distinctiveness of
the aspects. Lord Simonds in Governor General in Council v.
Province of Madras, [1945] FCR 179 P.C. at 193 in the con-
text of concepts of Duties of Excise and Tax on Sale of
Goods said:
" ..... The two taxes the one levied on a
manufacturer in respect of his goods, the
other on a vendor in respect of his sales,
may, as is there pointed out, in one sense
overlap. But in law there is no overlapping.
The taxes are separate and distinct imposts.
If in fact they overlap, that may be because
the taxing authority, imposing a duty of
excise, finds it convenient to impose that
duty at the moment when the excisable article
leaves the factory or workshop for the first
time on the occasion of its sale ...... "
15. Referring to the "aspect" doctrine
Laskin’s "Canadian Constitutional Law" states:
942
"The ’aspect’ doctrine bears some resemblance
to those lust noted but, unlike them, deals
not with what the ’mat-
ter’ is but with what it ’comes within’ .....
"
(p.
115)
" ..... it applies where some of the consti-
tutive elements about whose combination the
statute is concerned (that is, they are its
’matter’), are a kind most often met with in
connection with one class of subjects and
others are of a kind mostly dealt with in
connection with another. As in the case of a
pocket gadget compactly assembling knife
blade, screwdriver, fishscaler, nailfile,
etc., a description of it must mention every-
thing but in characterizing it the particular
use proposed to be made of it determines what
it is."
(p.1
16)
" ..... I pause to comment on certain
correlations of operative incompatibility and
the ’aspect’ doctrine. Both grapple with the
issues arising from the composite nature of a
statute, one as regards the preclusory impact
of federal law on provincial measures bearing
on constituents of federally regulated con-
duct, the other to identify what parts of the
whole making up a ’matter’ bring it within a
class of subjects ..... "
(p.
117)
The distinction between what is "ancil-
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lariness" and what "incidentally affecting"
the treatise says:
" .... There is one big difference
though it is little mentioned. Ancillariness
is usually associated with an explicit ’statu-
tory provision of a peripheral nature; talk
about ’incidentally affecting’ crops up in
connection with the potential of a non-differ-
entiating statute to affect indiscriminately m
its application matters assertedly immune from
control and others. But it seems immaterial
really whether it is its words or its works
which draw the flotsam within the statute’s
wake."
.lmo (p.115)
16, Referring to the flexibility in the modes of effec-
tuating a tax in view of innate complexities in the fiscal
adjustment of diverse
943
economic factors inherent in the formulation of a policy of
taxation and the variety of policy-options open to the
State, J Rauls in "Modern Trends in Analytical and Normative
Jurisprudence" (Introduction to Jurisprudence by Lord Lloyd
of Hampstead & Freeman, 5th Edn.) observed:
" ..... In practice, we must usually
choose between several unjust, or second best,
arrangements; and then we look to nonideal
theory to find the least unjust scheme. Some-
times this scheme will include measures and
policies that a perfectly just system would
reject. Two wrongs can make a right in the
sense that the best available arrangement may
contain a balance of imperfections, an adjust-
ment of compensating injustices."
Adverting to "Expenditure-dampening" policies and the
choice of measures designed to reduce the aggregate demand
for goods and services, the "Dictionary of Economic Terms"
by Allan Gilpin says:
"Expenditure-dampening Policies: Government
measures designed to reduce the aggregate
demand for goods and services in the communi-
ty. The measures may consist of raising taxes
(q.v.) lowering government expenditure or
curtailing hire-purchase or other credit
facilities.
EXPENDITURE-SWITCHING POLICIES.
Expenditure-switching Policies: Government
measures designed to influence the pattern of
expenditure by the community. For example, the
taxing of imported goods may effect a switch
of expenditure from imported to homeproduced
goods; devaluation of the nation’s currency
may have the same effect as imports become
more expensive. See EXPENDITURE-DSAMPENING
POLICIES."
Learned Attorney General also referred to the following
observations in The British Tax System (by J.A. Kay M.A.
King) to indicate that a tax on expenditure need not neces-
sarily be an expenditure-tax in the economists’ reckoning of
things:
"An annual expenditure tax, which
seeks to measure an individual’s spending in
each separate year of assessment, poses very
serious administrative problems, because
944
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 39
it requires that his assets be assessed annu-
ally ...... "
" ..... But there is a much easier way of
reaching a more accurate answer. You simply
measure how much foreign currency you took
with you, add the amount of currency you
bought while abroad, and substract what was
left when you got back. You measure, not the
expenditure itself, but the sources of the
expenditure, and can thus achieve a simple and
reliable measure on the basis of a small
number of recorded (and readily verifiable)
transactions."
It is trite that the true nature and character of the
legislation must be determined with reference to a question
of the power of the legislature. The consequences and effect
of the legislation are not the same thing as the legislative
subject matter. It is the true nature and character of the
legislation and not its ultimate economic results that
matters.
Indeed, as an instance of different aspects of the same
matter, being the topic of legislation under different
legislative powers, reference may be made to the annual-
letting value of a property in the occupation of a person
for his own residence being, in one aspect, the measure for
levy of property-tax under State-law and in another aspect
constitute the notional or presumed income for purpose of
income-tax.
16. Petitioners’ reference to legislative-practice as
determining the scope of the present legislation does not
assist them. There are two infirmities in the contention.
The first is that the question of legislative-practice as to
what a particular legislative-entry could be held to embrace
is inapposite while dealing with a tax which is sui-generis
or non-descript imposed in exercise of the residuary powers
so long as such tax is not specifically enumerated in Lists
II & III. Secondly, there is no conclusive material indicat-
ing that the appropriate legislature had limited the notion
of a tax of this kind within any confines. It is relevant to
recall the words of Lord Uthwatt in Walace Brothers case in
1959 SCR 379 at 402;
"The point of the reference is emphatically
not to seek a pattern to which a due exercise
of the power must conform. The object is to
ascertain the general conception involved in
the words in the enabling Act."
But as observed in Navinchandra Mafatlal v. CIT, Bombay
City,
945
[1955] 1 SCR 829 the meaning the word "income" is given in
the Income-tax Act is not determinative of its content as an
entry in a legislative list. Das J. observed:
" ..... It is, therefore, clear that none of
the authorities relied on by Mr. Kolah estab-
lish what may be called a legislative practice
indicating the connotation of the term "in-
come", apart from the Income-tax statute. In
our view, it will be wrong to interpret the
word "income" in entry 54 in the light of any
supposed English legislative practice as
contended for by Mr. Kolah ....... "
(p.
835)
17. In Union of India v. H.S. Dhillion, [1972] 2 SCR 33
at 61 this Court dealt with the scope of the Residuary power
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under Entry 97 List I. Referring to following observations
of Lord Loreburn in AttorneyGeneral for Ontario v.
Attorney-General, for Canada (See: (1912) AC 571 at 581:
"Now, there can be no doubt that
under this organic instrument the powers
distributed between the Dominion on the one
hand and the provinces on the other hand,
cover the whole area of self-government within
the whole area of Canada. It would be subver-
sive of the entire scheme and policy of the
Act to assume that any point of internal
selfgovernment was withheld from Canada."
(Emphasis Supplied)
It was held that the last portion of the above excerpt
applied a fortiori to the Constitution of the Sovereign,
Democratic Republic. Sikri CJ. proceeded to observe (See:
1972 (2) SCR 33 at 61):
" .... If this is the true scope of residu-
ary powers of Parliament, then we are unable
to see why we should not, when dealing with a
Central Act, enquire whether it is legislation
in respect of any matter in List II for this
is the only field regarding which there is a
prohibition against Parliament. If a Central
Act does not enter or invade these prohibited
fields there is no point in trying to decide
as to under which entry or entries of List I
or List III a Central Act would rightly fit
in."
Then, considering the includibility of the value of agricul-
tural
946
property in the wealth of the assessee under the Wealth Tax
Act despite the exclusionary words in Entry 86, List I the
learned Chief Justice said:
" ..... We are definitely of the opinion, as
explained a little later, that the scheme of
our Constitution and the actual terms of the
relevant articles, namely, Art. 246, Art. 248
and Entry 97 List I, show that any matter,
including tax, which has not been allotted
exclusively to the State Legislatures under
List II or concurrently with Parliament under
List III, falls within List I, including Entry
97 of that list read with Art. 248."
It was held that the subject did not fall under Entry 49
List II and that despite the exclusion in Entry 86 List I
the Union, as the repository of the residuary power, had the
competence to legislate as long as the topic was not allot-
ted to or within the State-power. It was further observed:
"It seems to us unthinkable that the
Constitutionmakers, while creating a sovereign
democratic republic, withheld certain matters
or taxes beyond the legislative competency of
the legislatures in this country either legis-
lating singly or jointly ..... "
" ..... There is no principle that we know
of which debars Parliament from relying on the
powers under specified entries 1 to 96, List
I, and supplement them with the powers under
Entry 97 List I and Art. 248, and for that
matter powers under entries in the Concurrent
List."
(p. 74)
18. The subject of a tax is different from the measure
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of the levy. The measure of the tax is not determinative of
its essential character or of the competence of the legisla-
ture. In M/s. Sainik Motors v. State of Rajasthan, [1962] 1
SCR 5 17 the provisions of a State-law levying a tax on
passengers and goods under Entry 56 of List I were assailed
on the ground that the State was, in the guise of taxing
passengers and goods, in substance and reality taxing the
income of the stage carriage operators or, at any rate, was
taxing the "fares and freights", both outside of its powers.
It was pointed out that the operators were required to pay
the tax calculated at a rate related to the value of the
fare and freight. Repelling the contention, Hidayatullah J.
speaking for the Court said:
947
" .... We do not agree that the Act, in its pith and
substance, lays the tax upon income and not upon passengers
and goods. Section 3, in terms, speaks of the charge of the
tax "in respect of all passengers carried and goods trans-
ported by motor vehicles", and though the measure of the tax
is furnished by the amount of fare and freight charged, it
does not cease to be a tax on passengers and goods ..... "
Indeed, reference may be made to the following statement in
Encyclopaedia Britannica (Vol. 14 page 459) on ’Luxury Tax’:
"A different approach to luxury
taxation, much less frequently found, seeks to
single out the luxury component of spending on
a given object rather than taxing specified
goods and services as luxuries. One example of
this is the Massachusetts 5% tax on restaurant
meal of $1 or more ......"
(Emphasis supplied)
19. The submissions of the learned Attorney-General that
the tax is essentially a tax on expenditure and not on
Luxuries or sale of goods falling within the State power,
must, in our opinion, be accepted. As contended by the
learned Attorney General, the distinct aspect namely, ’the
expenditure’ aspect of the transaction falling with the
Union power must be distinguished and the legislative compe-
tence to impose a tax thereon sustained. Contention (a) is,
in our opinion, unsubstantial and, accordingly, fails.
20. Re: Contention (b):
It is urged that the application of the Act is confined
to hotels where the "room-charges" for any unit of residen-
tial accommodation are Rs.400 or more per day per individu-
al, while expenditure of greater magnitude and quantum
incurred in other hotels is not exigible to the tax, either
because such room-charges are less than Rs.400 or because
the establishment which, though providing food and drink and
other services envisaged by Section 5, may not provide
residential accommodation. This distinction, it is said, is
violative of the constitutional pledge of equality. The
averments in this behalf in the memorandum of writ petition
are these:
"There is no basis or intelligible differentia
for discriminating between the levy of the tax
on expenditure over food or drink provided by
a hotel and the food or drink provided by
948
a restaurant or eating house not situated in a
hotel (or in a hotel to which the Act does not
apply) even though the cost of food or bever-
age is higher than that on similar items in an
applicable Hotel. There is also no intelligi-
ble differentia for discriminating between
levying of tax on expenditure on food and
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drinks outside the hotel which is provided by
the hotel and not levying tax on expenditure
on food and drinks incurred outside the hotel
but which is not provided by the hotel, even
though the latter expenditure may be more
greater than the former ...."
"The arbitrariness and lack of intelligible
differentia is even more apparent in respect
of clause 5(d) read with Exception (c). To
give an example, if a shop or office is owned
by the hotel in the hotel, any expenditure
incurred in such a shop or office would at-
tract expenditure tax but if such a shop or
office is not owned or managed by the hotel
even though situated in the hotel premises,
such expenditure in by the hotel would not be
liable to the impugned expenditure tax."
"By way of illustration it may be
pointed out that in the City of Bombay there
are numerous restaurants like, Talk of the
Town, China Garden, Gazebo and Gaylord which
are similarly situated in every way to restau-
rants located in applicable hotels, from the
point of view of their decor, furnishing, the
range of the menu, the pricing of the items,
the standards of service. The clientele of
such restaurants are also as affluent as the
class of people who patronise restaurants
which are located in applicable hotels. Fur-
ther more, many of the said independent res-
taurants are far more luxurious and expensive
than restaurants and/or dining rooms attached
to applicable hotels in the City of Bombay
which have one or more rooms charging a daily
tariff of rupees 400 or more per person."
It is now well settled though taxing laws are not out-
side Article 14, however, having regard to the wide variety
of diverse economic criteria that go into the formulation of
a fiscal-policy legislature enjoys a wide latitude in the
matter of selection of persons, subject-matter, events,
etc., for taxation. The tests of the vice of discrimination
in a taxing law are, accordingly, less rigorous. In examin-
ing the allegations
949
of a hostile, discriminatory treatment what is looked into
is not its phraseology, but the real effect of its provi-
sions. A legislature does not as an old saying goes, have to
tax everything in order to be able to tax something. If
there is equality and uniformity within each group, the law
would not be discriminatory. Decisions of this Court on the
matter have permitted the legislatures to exercise an ex-
tremely wide discretion in classifying items for tax pur-
poses, so long as it refrains from clear and hostile dis-
crimination against particular persons or classes.
But, with all this latitude certain irreducible desid-
erata of equality shall govern classifications for differen-
tial treatment in taxation laws as well. The classification
must be rational and based on some qualities and character-
istics which are to be found in all the persons grouped
together and absent in the others left out of the class. But
this alone is not sufficient. Differentia must have a ra-
tional nexus with the object sought to be achieved by the
law. The State, in the exercise of its Governmental power,
has, of necessity, to make laws operating differently in
relation to different groups or class of persons to attain
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certain ends and must, therefore, possess the power to
distinguish and classify persons or things. It is also
recognised that no precise or set formulae or doctrinaire
tests or precise scientific principles of exclusion or
inclusion are to be applied. The test could only be one of
palpable arbitrariness applied in the context of the felt
needs of the times and societal exigencies informed by
experience.
21. Classifications based on differences in the value of
articles or the economic superiority of the persons of
incidence are well recognised. A reasonable classification
is one which includes all who are similarly situated and
none who are not. In order to ascertain whether persons are
similarly placed, one must look beyond the classification
and to the purposes of the law.
In Jaipur Hosiery Mills Ltd. v. State of Rajasthan,
[1970] 2 SCC 27 a notification under the Rajasthan Sales-tax
Act, 1950, exempting from tax the sale of garments which did
not exceed Rs.4 per piece was assailed. This court found the
classification permissible. It was held:
" ..... It has to be borne in mind that in
matters of taxation the Legislature possesses
the large freedom in the matter of classifica-
tion. Thus wide discretion can be exercised in
selecting persons or objects which will be
taxed and the statute is not open to attack on
the mere ground that it
950
takes some persons or objects and not others.
it is only when within the range of its selec-
tion the law operates unequally and cannot be
justified on the basis of a valid classifica-
tion that there would be a violation of Arti-
cle 14."
In Hiralal v. State of UP, [1973] 2 SCR 502 this Court said:
" .... it is open to the legislature to
define the nature of the goods, the sale or
purchase of which should be brought to tax.
Legislature was not incompetent to separate
the processed or split pulses from the unsplit
or unprocessed pulses and treat the two as
separate and independent goods."
" ..... But the legislature has wide powers
of classification in the case of taxing stat-
utes."
(p.
510)
" ..... The classification between the
processed or split pulses .and unprocessed
or unsplit pulses is a reasonable classifica-
tion. It is based on the use to which those
goods can be put. Hence, in our opinion, the
impugned classification is not violative of
Art. 14."
(p.
511)
In State of Gujarat v. Sri Ambika Mills Ltd., [1974] 3
SCR 760 Mathew J. said:
"Statutes are directed to less than universal
situations. Law reflects distinction that
exist in fact or at least appear to exist in
the judgment of legislations--those who have
the responsibility for making law fit fact.
Legislation is essentially empiric. It ad-
dresses itself to the more or less crude
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 39
outside world and not to the neat, logical
models of the mind. Classification is inherent
in legislation. To recognize marked differ-
ences that exist in fact is living law; to
disregard practical differences and concen-
trate on some abstract identities is lifeless
logic."
"In the utilities, tax and economic regulation
cases, there are good reasons for judicial
self-restraint if not judicial deference to
legislative judgment. The legislature after
all has the affirmative responsibility. The
Courts have only the
951
power to destroy, not to reconstruct. When
these are added to the complexity of economic
regulation, the uncertainty, the liability to
error, the bewildering conflict of the ex-
perts, and the number of times the judges have
been overruled by events--self-limitation can
be seen to be the path to judicial wisdom and
institutional prestige and stability."
(p. 784)
In G.K. Krishnan v. Tamil Nadu, [1975] 2 SCR 715 Mathew
J. referred to the following observations of the Supreme
Court of U.S.A. in San Antonio School District v.
Bodrigues,:
"Thus we stand on familiar ground when we
continue to acknowledge that the Justices of
this Court lack both the expertise and the
familiarity with local problems so necessary
to the making of wise decisions with respect
to the raising and disposition of public
revenues. Yet, we are urged to direct the
States either to alter, drastically the
present system or to throw out the property
tax altogether in favour of some other form of
taxation. No scheme of taxation, whether the
tax is imposed on property, income, or pur-
chases of goods and services, has yet been
devised which is free of all discriminatory
impact. In such a complex arena in which no
perfect alternatives exist, the Court does
well not to impose too rigorous a standard of
scrutiny lest all local fiscal schemes become
subjects of criticism under the Equal Protec-
tion Clause."
(p. 729)
In I.T.O. v. N. Takim Roy Limbe, [1976] 3 SCR 413 it was
held:
" ..... Given legislative competence, the
legislature has ample freedom to select and
classify persons, districts, goods, proper-
ties, incomes and objects which it would tax,
and which it would not tax. So long as the
classification made within this wide and
flexible range by a taxing statute does not
transgress the fundamental principles underly-
ing the doctrine of equality, it is not vul-
nerable on the ground of discrimination merely
because it taxes or exempts from tax some
incomes or objects and not others. Nor the
mere fact that tax falls more heavily on some
in the same category, is by itself a ground to
render the law invalid. It is only
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952
when within the range of its selection, the
law operates unequally and cannot be justified
on the basis of a valid classification, that
there would be a violation of Article 14."
In the present case, the bases of classification cannot
be said to be arbitrary or unintelligible nor as being
without a rational nexus with the object of the law. A hotel
where a unit of residential accommodation is priced at over
Rs.400 per day per individual is, in the legislative wisdom,
considered a class apart by virtue of the economic superior-
ity of those who might enjoy its custom, comforts and serv-
ices. This legislative assumption cannot be condemned as
irrational. It is equally well recognised that judicial veto
is to be exercised only in cases that leave no room for
reasonable doubt. Constitutionally is presumed. These words
of James Bradley Thayer may be recalled:
"This rule recognizes that, having regard to
the great, complex ever-unfolding exigencies
of government, much which will seem unconsti-
tutional to one man, or body of men, may
reasonably not seem so to another; that the
constitution often admits of different inter-
pretations; that there is often a range of
choice and judgment; that in such cases the
constitution does not impose upon the legisla-
ture any one specific opinion, but leaves open
this range of choice; and that whatever choice
is rational is constitutional."
(Emphasis
Supplied)
[See: Supreme Court Statecraft; The Rule of
Law and Men: Wallace Mendelson: p. 4. ]
Thayer also referred to the words of a Chief Justice of
Pennsylvania way back in 1811 which are also worth recall-
ing:
"For weighty reasons, it has been assumed as a
principle in constitutional construction by
the Supreme Court of the United States, by
this court, and every other court of reputa-
tion in the United States, that an Act of the
legislature is not be declared void unless the
violation of the constitutional is so manifest
as to leave no room for reasonable doubt."
In Secretary of Agriculture v. Central Roig Refining
Co., [1949] 338 U.S. 604 the Supreme Court of USA said:
953
" ..... This court is not a tribunal for
relief for crudities and inequities of compli-
cated experimental economic Legislation."
In M/s Hoechst Pharmaceuticals Ltd. v. State of Bihar,
AIR 1983 SC 1019 it was observed:
" ..... On questions of economic regulations
and related matters, the court must defer to
the legislative-judgment. When the power to
tax exists, the extent of burden is a matter
for the discretion of the law-makers. It is
not the function of the Court to consider the
propriety or justness of the tax or enter upon
the reality of Legislative policy. If the
evident intent and general operations of the
tax legislation is to adjust the burden with a
fair reasonable degree of equality, the con-
stitutional requirement is satisfied ..... "
22. It is contended that the standards and measures for
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the computation of the "chargeable-expenditure" under the
Act is vague and arbitrary. It is pointed out that the
expression or "other similar services" in clauses (d) of
Section 5 is non-specific and vague. This argument does not
commend itself to us. It is true that when the statute says
"other similar services" it does not contemplate that the
"other services" shall, in all respects, be the same. If
they were the same then words would, indeed, be unnecessary.
These were intended to embrace services like--but not iden-
tical with--those described in the preceding words.
The content of the expression "other similar services"
following, as it does, the preceding expressions "by way of
beauty parlour, health club, swimming pool or ..." has a
definite connotation in the interpretation of such words in
such statutory contexts. The matter is one of construction
whether any particular service falls within the section and
not one of constitutionality.
We find contention (b) also not acceptable either.
23. Re: Contention (c):
It is urged that the provisions of the Act impose an
unreasonable restriction on the petitioners’ fundamental
right under Article 19(1)(g). It is averred in the petition:
954
".... The various taxes to which the hotel
industry is subject to are mentioned in the
earlier part of this Petition. Thus in respect
of food and beverages consumed in a hotel, the
element of taxes representing sales tax and
the present Expenditure-Tax works out, for
example in Maharashtra, to as much as thirty
five per cent. Likewise, in respect of the
room tariff, element of tax works out, for
example in Gujarat, to as much as thirty seven
per cent. The details of the said calculations
are given in Exhibit ’D’ annexed to this
Petition. The hotel industry today is subject
to an extremely heavy dose of taxation in the
shape of incometax and even the recent tax on
works contracts. The Petitioners say that the
tourism, industry is now not in a position to
sustain any additional burden and the impugned
tax is literally the last straw on the camel’s
back ...." "
It is also contended:
" ..... Several of the hotels belonging to
members of Petitioners Associations have
entered into long-term contracts for supply of
food and beverages and for providing accommo-
dation. The execution of such contracts would
become onerous and even impossible in view of
the levy of the present Expenditure-Tax. There
is no provision in the Act or any separate
legislation whereby hotels can pass on such a
tax to persons who have contractually agreed
to avail of any services at contracted
rates ..... "
24. A taxing statute is not, per-se, a restriction of
the freedom under Article 19(1)(g). The policy of a tax, in
its effectuation, might, of course, bring in some hardship
in some individual cases. But that is inevitable, so long as
law represents a process of abstraction from the generality
of cases and reflects the highest common-factor. Every
cause, it is said, has its martyrs. Then again, the mere
excessiveness of a tax or even the circumstances that its
imposition might tend towards the diminution of the earnings
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or profits of the persons of incidence does not, per-se, and
without more, constitute violation of the rights under
Article 19(1)(g). Fazal Ali J., though in a different con-
text, in Sonia Bhatia v. State of U.P. & Ors., [1981] 3 SCR
239 at 258 observed:
" ..... The Act seems to implement one of
the most important constitutional directives
contained in Part IV of
955
the Constitution of India. If in this process
a few individuals suffer severe hardship that
cannot be helped, for individual interests
must yield to the larger interests of the
community or the country as indeed every noble
cause claims its martyr."
Contention (c) is also insubstantial.
25. In the result, for the foregoings reasons, these
petitions fail and are dismissed. However, in the circum-
stances of the case there will be no order as to costs.
RANGANATHAN, J. 1. I have perused the judgment of my
learned brother Venkatachaliah, J. in this batch of writ
petitions as well as in the two connected batches of matters
viz. CA Nos. 338 and 339 of 1981 and WP Nos. 254-261 of
1981. I respectfully agree with his conclusions in all these
matters but wish to add a few words, primarily in so far as
the constitutional validity of the Expenditure Act, 1987 is
concerned. As my learned brother has set out, analysed and
discussed in detail the provisions of the various statutes,
the validity of which is in question, I shall avoid a repe-
tition of the same and confine myself only to the considera-
tion of the crucial issues for determination.
2. The contentions of the assessees in the three batches
of cases above referred to, prima facie, sought to make out
a state of direct collision between a group of State enact-
ments on the one hand and a couple of Central enactments on
the other, which cannot be averted save by declaring one set
of the enactments to be invalid. The powerful, if also
"diplomatic", endeavour of the learned Attorney General,
appearing for the Union of India, was to show that these
sets of enactments are not really on a collision course at
all but, on the contrary, are proceeding on parallel lines
and that each of the sets of legislations is quite safe from
attack on the ground of legislative incompetence. Whether
this contention is acceptable and both sets of enactments
can be saved or whether one of the two has to give way to
the other is the question for consideration in these batches
of cases.
3. The set of State enactments which blazed the trial
(to be followed up by others) and hence are prior inpoint of
time, is that comprising of various statutes passed by
several States in India. The specific State legislation
which are in challenge in the petitions and appeals before
us (as indicated in the brackets at the end) are:
956
(a) Gujarat Tax on Luxuries (Hotels and Lodging Houses) Act
(No. 24 of) 1977.
(C.A. 338,339/1981; W.P.
Nos. 7990, 8338, 8339,
9110of 1981)
(b) Tamil Nadu Tax on Luxuries in Hotels and Lodging Houses
Ordinance, 1980 followed by an act (Act No. 6 of 1981)
(WP 162/82)
(c) Karnataka Tax on Luxuries (Hotels and Lodging Houses)
Act (No. 22 of) 1979.
(WP 1271-2/82)
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(d) West Bengal Entertainments and Luxuries (Hotels and
Restaurants) Tax Act (No. 21 of) 1972.
(WP 5321/85)
The States of Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra and Kerala have
also passed similar enactments, being the:
(a) Uttar Pradesh Taxation and Land Revenue Laws Act, (No.
8) of 1975;
(b) Maharashtra Tax on Luxuries (Hotels & Lodging Houses)
Act (XLI of) 1987; and
(c) Kerala Tax on Luxuries in Hotels and Lodging Houses Act
(No. 32 of) 1976 repealing Kerala Ordinance No. 5 of 1976.
4. The above statutes have apparently been enacted by
the various State Legislatures in exercise of the legisla-
tive powers conferred on them under article 246(3) of the
Constitution, read with Entry 62 of List II in the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution of India, which runs:
"62. Taxes on luxuries, including taxes on entertainments,
amusements, betting and gambling."
(Some aspects thereof are also sought to be related to Entry
54 of List II, but as this stands on the same footing as
Entry 62 for the purposes of the present case, no separate
reference is made to Entry 54 hereinafter). This is clear
because the short title to each of the above
957
enactments describes it as an Act to provide for the "impo-
sition" or "the levy and collection" of a tax on "luxuries"
or "entertainment and luxuries" in or provided in "hotels"
or "hotels and restaurants" or "hotels and lodging houses".
Although "luxuries and entertainments" may be provided or
availed of in various ways and could all be made the subject
matter of a tax by virtue of the entry above referred to,
these enactments are confined only to one type of such
entertainments and luxuries viz. those provided in hotels,
restaurants or lodging houses as defined under the relevant
enactments. Also, only certain specified classes of enter-
tainments or luxuries provided in such places are brought to
tax. The details of the imposition, levy and collection of
the taxes vary with the enactments and need not be repeated
here. It is quite clear from the scheme of the legislations
that they all fall within the scope of Entry 62 of List II
set out earlier. My learned brother has held so and I agree.
Indeed, their validity would, perhaps, have gone unchal-
lenged but for the enactment of Parliament of the Hotel
Receipts Tax, 1980, (hereinafter referred to as ’the 1980
Act’). When, in pursuance of the 1980 Act, a tax on some of
the receipts of a hotelier was sought to be charged w.e.f.
1st February, 1981, it was but natural for some of the
affected hoteliers to rush to Court for relief against this
two-pronged taxation of their receipts. Writ petitions were
filed challenging the competence of both sets of enactments
and these have now come up for final hearing. It must,
however, be mentioned here that the levy of the Hotel-Re-
ceipts Tax was withdrawn after a year; nevertheless it was
in operation for one assessment year and hence the challenge
to its validity is not purely academic. The validity of the
1980 Act has been upheld by my learned brother as traceable
to Entry 82 of List I in the Seventh Schedule to the Consti-
tution. Taxes on income other than agricultural income. I
respectfully agree.
5. The relief conferred by the withdrawal of the 1980
Act was, however, short-lived; it was only a "lull before
the storm" which descended on all hoteliers in the form of
the Expenditure Tax Act, 1987 (hereinafter referred to as
’the 1987 Act’). Before referring to this enactment, the
validity of which has been challenged in writ petition no.
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1393 of 1987, it will be convenient to run back on the time
machine by a period of three decades.
6. Mr. Nicholas Kaldor, Reader in Economics in the
University of Cambridge, was the proponent of a levy styled
as "Expenditure Tax". When the Government of India requested
him, sometime in the firties, 10 have a look at the system
of direct taxation prevailing in this country and make his
recommendations for a comprehensive scheme
958
of tax reform, he suggested, inter alia, the levy of an
"expenditure tax". His opinion was that such a levy, supple-
menting an income tax levy at rates lower than those preva-
lent then, would enable the Government to more effectively
harness its resources. In the course of arguments before us,
copious references have been made to passages from Nicholas
Kaldor’s book (’An Expenditure Tax’ published by George
Allen & Unwin Ltd. of U.K.) and his ’Survey Report on Indian
Tax Reform’ (published by the Government of India) out it
will be sufficient to mention here that Prof. Kaldor’s
report was implemented by Parliament by enacting the Expend-
iture Tax Act, 1957 (hereinafter referred to as ’the 1957
Act’). The validity of the above Act was challenged before
this Court but unsuccessfully. The decision of this Court is
reported as Azarnjah v. E.T.O., [1972] 1 SCR 470. The nature
and scope of the Act have been dealt with in the above
decision and it is unnecessary to repeat the same here.
7. The 1957 Act was withdrawn after a few years; to be
precise, with effect from assessment year 1965-66. It was
given up both because it was found to be too cumbersome and
difficult to administer and also because the yield of reve-
nue therefrom was not substantial due to the limited number
of assessees it covered. After it was given up, as already
mentioned, the 1980 Act occupied the field for a very short
time, the pendency of writ petitions challenging its validi-
ty having perhaps largely contributed to its withdrawal.
After some interval, now, Parliament has come in with the
1987 Act. The ambit and scope of this Act along with, on the
one hand, its distinguishing features, as contrasted with
the 1957 and 1980 Acts and its similarities, when compared
to the State legislations, on the other, have been brought
out in the judgments of brother Venkatachaliah J. and do not
need repetition here. It is in this background that we have
to determine the pith and substance of the 1987 Act and
decide whether Parliament had the legislative competence to
enact the same or not.
8. The short question that one has to answer in these
cases is whether the levies in question by the States and
the Union can both stand or whether we have to treat the
levies as either tax on ’luxuries’ or as tax on ’income’ or
’expenditure’ and thus uphold one of them but not both. I do
not think there can by any doubt at all that, in the context
of the social and economic conditions that prevailed in
India, it was a luxury for any person to stay in hotels
charging high rents and providing various types of facili-
ties, amenities and conveniences such as telephone, televi-
sion, air-conditioner, etc. The decision of this Court in
Abdul Kadir & Sons v. State of Kerala, [1976] 2 SCR 690, and
959
in particular, the discussion at pages 699 to 701 places
this beyond all doubt. This aspect has also been discussed
by Thakkar, J. of the Gujarat High Court (as His Lordship
then was) in the judgment under appeal and I am in agreement
with his reasonings and conclusion that the Gujarat statute
has been validly enacted in exercise of the powers available
to the State legislatures under Entry 62 of List I1. This
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applies equally to the other impugned State enactments as
well.
9. It has been argued that the monetary ceilings for the
rents have been fixed at such low figures that even tempo-
rary stay at a not so comfortable hotel or lodging house,
when a person is constrained to go outside his hometown,
will become a luxury, according to these standards. Indeed
some statistics have been supplied by the Gujarat petition-
ers in support of such a contention. But this, I think, is a
matter which must be left to legislative determination. As
is well known the legislature has, particularly in a taxing
statute, a considerable amount of latitude and there is nO
material to hold that, in fixing the standards of indication
of luxury the legislature, has not applied its mind. In
fact, the figures have been amended from time to time and,
one has to presume that the legislature had good reason for
fixing these standards. The State legislations are there-
fore, clearly, within the competence of the State legisla-
tures and are not liable to be challenged.
10. It seems equally cleat that the pith and legislation
of the 1980 Act is, as held by Venkatachaliah, J. traceable
to Entry 82 of List I. In interpreting the scope of the
legislative entries in the three lists, we have to keep in
mind that, while on the one hand, it is desirable that each
entry in each of the lists should receive the broadest
interpretation, it is equally important, on the other, that
the three lists should be read together and harmoniously.
Our attention was drawn to some of the entries in List II
which show that the legislative power in respect thereof are
to be exercised subject to the powers of Parliament envis-
aged under List I, vide entry Nos. 2, 17, 22, 23, 24, 26,
27, 32, 33 and 50. There is no doubt that these entries have
to be read subject to the entries of List I which have been
mentioned or the powers of Parliament referred to therein.
These, however, are instances of entries which, on their
very language, are controlled by entries in List I. But even
apart from these instances, the language of clause (1) and
(3) of article makes it clear that the power of the State
legislature to make laws with respect to any of the matters
enumerated in List II is subject to the exclusive power of
Parliament to make laws with respect to any of the matters
enumerated in List I. Hence, if a matter is
960
covered by an entry in the Union List, no restrictions can
be read into the power of Parliament to make laws in regard
thereto. This is so far as the general power of legislation
is concerned. As pointed out by this Court in Sundararami-
er’s case, (1958 S.C.R. 1422 at pp. 1479 and 1490), the
legislative entries are so arranged that the power to enact
laws in general and the power to impose taxes are separately
dealt with. The subject matters of taxation available to
Parliament are. enumerated in entries 82 to 97 of List I,
those available to the State legislatures in entries 45 to
63 of List II and those available to both in entry 44 of
List III. Under s. 246(1) Parliament has exclusive power to
make laws with respect to any of the matters--and this
includes the power to impose taxes--enumerated in List I. In
this situation and in view of the fact that the 1980 Act is,
in pith and substance, a tax on income, its constitutional
validity can be in no doubt at all.
11. But can the Union enactment of 1987 also be support-
ed for the same reasons, as imposing an expenditure tax
which, as held in Azam Jha’s case, 1972 1 SCR 470, falls
within the scope of Entry 97 of List I? Sri Palkiwala says
it cannot be. His first contention is that the tax levied by
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the 1987 Act is not, in fact and in truth, an expenditure
tax. He says that it is not sufficient for the legislature
to give such a description or label to a tax proposed to be
levied by it as does not fall under List II and claim that
it should be upheld under Entry 97. The tax sought to be
imposed should be one which has real existence and recogni-
tion in the world of economics. According to him, the eco-
nomic concept of an expenditure tax is of a tax that is
levied not on isolated items of expenditure but one on the
totality of the expenditure incurred by an assessable enti-
ty, just as income tax has gained recognition as a tax on
the total income of a taxable entity. That was the concept
of the expenditure tax which Nicholas Kaldor had in mind,
which was embodied in the 1957 Act and which, hence, was
endorsed with approval by this Court. A tax on a few items
of expenditure, it is said, is not necessarily the same as
an expenditure tax. Referring to the decisions of this Court
upholding the levy of Wealth Tax and Gift Tax in as far as
it affected agricultural lands: Gift Tax Officer v. D.H.
Nazareth etc., [1971] 1 SCR 195 and Union of India v. H.S.
Dhillon, [1972] 2 SCR 33, it is submitted that the decisions
may well have been different had they been concerned with an
imposition only on "lands and buildings" by reference to
their capital value or only on "agricultural lands" on the
occasion of a gift.
12. It is difficult to accept the contention that the
tax cannot be considered to be an expenditure tax because it
is not on "expenditure"
961
generally but is restricted to specific types of expendi-
ture. There is, no legal, judicial, economic or other con-
cept of expenditure tax that would justify any such restric-
tive meaning. If, conceptually, the expenditure incurred by
a person can be a subject-matter with reference to which a
tax can be levied, there is no reason why such taxation
should not be restricted only to certain items or categories
of expenditure and why its base should necessarily be so
wide as to cover all expenditure incurred by an assessable
entity. After all, even under the 1957 Act, all expenditure
of all persons was not liable to tax. It substantially
covered only certain types of assessees and certain types of
expenditure (for several types of expenditure were exempted)
and that too only when it exceeded certain limits. The
analogy of the Income-tax or Wealth Tax or Gift Tax Acts
also does not really help us. Though they are enactments
which cover a larger area of the subject matter taxed, that
was because the legislature found it expedient to do so and
not because they were obliged to cover the entire area of
income, wealth or gift. An Act imposing a tax, for example,
on hotel receipts alone or dividends alone or on capital
gains alone will not be any the less a tax on income within
the scope of Entry 82 of List I. Likewise even if the legis-
lature had confined its levy of wealth tax only to certain
assets such as lands and buildings or the Gift Tax Act had
levied a tax only on gifts of agricultural land, they would
not have ceased to fall within the scope of the relevant
entries of the Union List, so long as, in pith and sub-
stance, they are found respectively to be taxes on the
capital value of the assets in question or on the transac-
tion of gift. The Central Excise Act, for example, does not
levy excise duty on the manufacture and production of all
goods and additional excise duty is levied only in respect
of certain goods. So also, in regard to sales tax. It is
indeed even possible to say that no tax levy in respect of
any subject matter can or does operate universally without
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any exceptions or exemptions. Selection of objects and goods
for taxation is the essence of any tax legislation and any
limitation of the nature suggested is an unwarranted cur-
tailment of this selective power of taxation of Parliament.
13. There is also no established legislative practice
which would enable one to limit the concept of an expendi-
ture tax in the manner suggested. So far as expenditure tax
is concerned, the only legislation earlier in force was the
1957 Act which was in force for a period of eight years.
Such short lived legislation can hardly furnish the founda-
tion of an argument to limit the scope of legislative power
to the manner in which it was exercised under that enact-
ment. If, after withdrawing this legislation, Parliament
considered that it was not worthwhile or possible to impose
a tax on all expenditure and that it would
962
be sufficient, expedient or necessary to impose such a levy
only on lavish spending in certain directions, that cannot
certainly be precluded on any theory of established legisla-
tive practice, as was done in State of Madras v. Gannon
Dunkerley Co., [1959] SCR 379 in respect of sales tax. In
that case the legislative trend prevalent over decades was
relied upon in interpreting the expression "sale of goods"
used in the Constitution. But there the Court was concerned
with a legal term, "sale", which had acquired a definite
connotation in law and in legislative instruments and that
analogy cannot be availed of to interpret the scope of Entry
97. On the other hand, even a fairly long-established legis-
lative practice under which income tax levy by the Centre
was restricted to items of income stricto sensu (as con-
trasted with capital gains) was not considered sufficient to
place that type of restriction on the interpretation of the
expression "taxes on income" used in the Central Legislative
List: vide, Navinchanda Mafat Lal v. CIT, [1955] 1 SCR 829.
Not only that, the validity of later definitions of "income"
under the Income-tax Act which have a much wider ambit has
been upheld as covered by the above legislative entry. See,
in this context, the decisions in Naynit Lal v. AAC, AIR
1965 SC 1375, Bhargava v. Union, [1966] 2 SCR 22 and Bhag-
wandas v. Union, [1981] 2 SCR 808. There is not even that
much of legislative practice, so far as expenditure tax is
concerned, which would justify our importing any limitation
on the concept of a "tax on expenditure" under Entry 97 of
List I. A perusal of the decision of this Court upholding
the validity of the 1957 Act Azam Jha’s case, [1972] 1 SCR
470 does not also justify the reading in of any such limita-
tion. The wider coverage of the tax made it easier for the
Court to pin point its subject matter as "expenditure" and
to treat it as a matter falling under the residuary entry,
but it does not justify the inference sought to be drawn
that a tax cannot be said to be a tax with reference to
"expenditure" because it does not tax expenditure in general
but confines itself to certain types or categories of ex-
penditure. Once it is granted that the tax need not exhaust
the entire universe of the subject-matter, the extent of the
subject matter that should be covered or selected for impos-
ing tax should be entirely left to Parliament. subject only
to any criteria of discrimination or unreasonableness that
may attract the provisions of Part III of the Constitution.
14. The fact that the 1987 Act seeks to tax only the
expenditure on items which can be described as luxuries is,
however, used by Sri Palkiwala to support his other conten-
tion (which has really troubled me considerably) that the
pith and substance of both sets of legislations is the same,
that they both impose a tax only on luxuries or
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963
entertainments and that the distinction sought to be made on
behalf of the Revenue that one is a tax on ’luxuries’ while
the other is a tax on the expenditure incurred by a person
on luxuries is only a distinction between "Tweedledum" and
"Tweedledee". The object and effect of a tax on luxuries is
only to curb expenditure on luxuries and such a tax may be
imposed, levied or collected either from the provider of
luxuries or the person who enjoys them. The object of an
expenditure tax is also similar and that can also be levied
either on the person who spends the moneys directly, or
through some other person, or even from the person who
benefits by the incurring of such expenditure. The provision
of a luxury and the payment for it are only obverse sides of
the same coin and cannot, from any practical point of view,
be considered as two separate and independent subject mat-
ters of taxation. It is a well settled proposition that the
entries in the legislative lists should be given the broad-
est of connotation and, hence, a tax on luxuries by refer-
ence to the expenditure thereon will fall clearly under the
entry in the State List. The pith and substance of both sets
of legislation, therefore, fails only under entry No. 62 of
the State List. This being so, Entry 97 of List I will have
no applicability at all; that can be called in aid only to
cover matters not specifically enumerated or taxes not
mentioned in List II or III. It is, therefore, not possible.
it is urged, to sustain the validity of the 1987 Act by
reference to Entry 97 of List I.
15. The learned Attorney General sought to meet this
contention in two ways. He first urged that the pith and
substance of the two legislations are different. A tax on
’luxuries’ measured by reference to the amount charged or
paid therefore is totally different from a tax to curb opu-
lent or ostentatious expenditure even though the categories
of expenditure brought in for taxation by a particular
statute may be restricted. The latter cannot be described as
a tax on ’luxuries’ and does not fall within the scope of
Entry 62 of the State List and, in the absence of any refer-
ability to any other entry of List II’, it is safe from
attack under Article 248(2) and will also be covered, if
need be, by Entry 97 of List I. The second argument is that,
after the decision in Azatn Jha’s case, [1972] 1 SCR 470
holding that a "tax on expenditure" will be legislation
covered by Entry 97 in List I, the constitutional position
is the same as if, before item 97, a specific entry had been
inserted in List I (say, Entry no. 96A) which reads "Taxes
on expenditure". The result, he says, is that the Central
legislation will be squarely covered by an entry in List I
and so we need not embark on any investigation as to whether
it falls or does not fall under any entry in List II or List
III.
964
16. It seems to me that there is a fallacy in the second
line of argument addressed by the learned Attorney General.
I do not think that the legislative lists can be interpret-
ed, as suggested by him, on the assumption that there is a
deemed entry, "Taxes on Expenditure". added to List I as a
result of the decision in Azam Jha’s case [1972] 1 SCR 470.
One cannot add entries to the legislative lists on the basis
of decisions of this Court. In Azam Jha’s case, the pith and
substance of the Act considered did not fall under any of
the entries in List II or III. That being so, this Court
upheld it by reference to Entry No. 97 describing the tax,
having regard to its pith and substance, as a tax on expend-
iture. Here, however, we have a legislation which covers
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only certain types of expenditure and the contention of the
petitioners is that ,these are all items of expenditure
pertaining to luxuries. The decision in Azam Jha’s case
cannot help us to determine whether the legislation before
us should be construed as imposing a tax on expenditure or
one on luxuries. If, in spite of its dealing with only
certain types of expenditure relatable to luxuries, it can
be said to be, in pith and substance, not a tax on luxuries,
then we may hold that parliament can legislate with refer-
ence to it and, for purposes of convenience, take advantage
of its description as a tax on expenditure to rest it on
Entry 97 of List I. In other words, Entry 97 of List I
cannot come to our rescue unless we are in a position to say
that the substance of the Central legislation in question is
not a tax on luxuries, entertainments or amusements. This
takes us to the first part of the argument of the learned
Attorney General.
17. Is there a tenable and true distinction between the
tax on expenditure levied by the Act and a tax on luxuries?
Are Parliament and the State Legislatures dealing with the
same ’matter’ and taxing one and the same thing, though
describing it differently--or are they taxing two different
matters or things? Sri Palkiwala says that the subject
matter of taxation is ’luxury’ and that it is meaningless to
consider the expenditure incurred on it as a separate and
distinct subject matter. The acceptance of such an argument,
he says, will lead to double taxation in respect of almost
every matter on earth. For instance, A may be taxed on the
salary or interest or dividend paid to him by B as his
income and, at the same time, B can be asked to pay a tax on
the expenditure incurred by him by way of such salary,
interest or dividend payment. A can be asked to pay a wealth
tax on the capital value of the assets acquired by him and
also asked to pay an expenditure tax on the money spent on
such acquisition. A can be asked to pay a sales tax on the
goods sold by him to B and also asked to pay or collect a
tax on the expenditure incurred by B to purchase the same.
965
Such instances, he says, can be multiplied and will reduce
the argument to an absurdity.
18. The Attorney General, on the other hand, submits
that the question whether both legislation relate to the
same matter does not bring out correctly the controversy in
issue. He says that if the expression "matter", in this
context, is understood in its widest sense. it will create
chaos in the matter of interpretation of the lists. Accord-
ing to him, for applying the doctrine of pith and substance
we have to understand the expression ’matter’ not in a
’gross’, but in a ’rare’ sense. He develops this contention
by invoking, to his aid, what may be called the ’aspect’
rule as explained in certain text books and judicial deci-
sions.
19. A.H.P. Lefroy in his ’Canadian Constitution’ observes,
at
p. 98:
"Sec. XXI. Aspect of legislation: Subjects
which in one aspect and one purpose fall
within s. 92 of the Federation Act and so are
proper for provincial legislation may. in
another aspect and for another purpose fall
within s. 97 and so be proper for Dominion
legislation. And as the cases which illustrate
the principle show, by ’aspect’ here must be
understood the aspect or point of view of the
legislator in legislating, the object, purpose
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and scope of the legislation. The word is used
subjectively of the legislator, rather than
objectively of the matter legislated upon."
To similar effect is the passage from Laskin’s "Canadian
Constitutional Law" extracted in the judgment of Venkatacha-
liah, J. the Federal Court in the C.P. & Berar Act case
[1939] FCR 18 also touches upon the ’aspect’ theory at p.
49:
"Here are two separate enactments, each in one
aspect conferring the power to impose a tax
upon goods; and it would accord with sound
principles of construction to take the more
general power, that which extends to the whole
of India as subject to an exception created by
the particular power, that which extends to
the Province only."
(emphasis
added)
A similar reference to the ’aspect’ of legislation can be
seen in Kerala State Electricity Board v. Indian Aluminium
Co., [1976] 1 SCR 562 at p. 573-4.
966
"The argument of the learned Solicitor General
appearing on behalf of the Kerala Electricity
Board in support of his submission that the
legislation falls under Entries 26 and 27 of
List II may be summarised as follows: Those
entries do not enable the State Legislatures
to legislate with regard to all conceivable
goods like arms, ammunition, atomic minerals
etc. as was argued by Mr. Sen. A legislature
while legislating with regard to matters
within its competence should be deed to know
its limits and its legislative authority and
should not be deemed to be legislating beyond
its jurisdiction. One thing that has always
got to be kept clear in one’s mind is that
there may be more than one aspect with regard
to a particular subject matter".
(emphasis
added)
Relying on this principle, backed by these observations, the
learned Attorney-General submits that, properly understood,
the pith and substance of the 1987 Act is ’expenditure’, not
’luxuries’.
20. At first blush, the argument of the learned Attorney
General may sound a little subtle and somewhat artificial
but, on some reflection, legislative competence will indeed
be seen to vary with different aspects of a subject matter
as understood in a wide sense. This can be seen from some of
the decided cases. The first triumvirate of cases that arose
in India under the Government of India Act, viz. In re
Central provinces & Berar Act XIV of 1953, [1939] FCR 18;
Province of Madras v. Boddu Paidanna & Sons, [1942] FCR 90
and G.G. in Council v. Province of Madras, [1945] FCR 179,
were concerned with the question whether the impugned tax
was one on the sale of goods or an excise duty. Interpreting
the word ’subject matter’ in a broad sense it could perhaps
be said that both were taxes with respect to goods. But this
concept alone was not sufficient to dispose of the case
because the relevant legislative entries did not talk of
taxes with respect to goods but referred to taxes in respect
of two different activities referable to goods (conveniently
described as the ’taxable event’), one the manufacture and
production of goods and the other with sale thereof. In the
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light of these legislative entries the two different activi-
ties could properly regarded as two different matters for
taxation and the relevant legislation was held to be one
concerned with ’sale’ and not with ’manufacture’. In other
words, there could be two enactments "each in one aspect
conferring the power to impose a tax upon goods". The legis-
lation was held not to be vitiated merely because there was
an element of overlapping in that both excise duty and sales
tax became
967
leviable on the same assessee in respect of the same goods
and by reference to the same sale price when the first sale
after manufacture occurs, one by reference to the ’manufac-
ture’ aspect and the other by reference to the ’sales’
aspect. This bifurcation of the two different aspects per-
taining to goods was justified by the language of the legis-
lative entries themselves which referred separately to the
different sets of activities and put them down in different
legislative lists. Again, on the same principle, the manu-
facture of electricity may attract excise duty at the point
of its captive consumption (under Entry 84 of List I) and
also a tax on the consumption or sale of electricity (refer-
rable to Entry 53 of List II).
21. The power to levy taxes with respect to ’property’
has created similar problems. All States (or corporations
and municipalities therein) levy a property tax on the owner
or occupier which is almost universally measured by refer-
ence to its annual value (viz. the rent it would fetch if
let from year to year). The Income-tax Act also charges a
tax on the same basis. In other words, in a realistic and
practical sense, the tax was levied by both legislatures on
the same amount and with reference to the same matter. But
both levies have been upheld under the 1935 Act, the former
as a ’tax on lands and buildings, hearths and windows’
(Entry 42 of List II) and the latter as a tax on income
(under Entry 84 of List I.) Ralla Ram [1948] FCR 207 pointed
out that they were different types of levies one on the land
and buildings (generally, but not necessarily, measurable by
reference to the income derived or capable of being derived)
and the other on the income (actually or notionally) derived
from it. The pith and substance of the former, it was said,
was not ’income’ (from the property) though the tax was
levied on the basis thereof. Expressed differently, it could
be said that, though both were taxes with respect to proper-
ty, they touched different aspects of the above subject
matter; the first was a tax on the aspect of ownership or
occupation of property; the second on the aspect of income
from property. The decision of this Court in Bhagwan Dass
Jain v. Union, [1981] 2 SCR 808 is also to the same effect.
22. The Hingir -Rampur Coal Co. case [1961] 2 SCR 537
was concerned with the validity of an Orissa Act which
sought to levy a cess not exceeding 5% of the valuation of
the coal stacked at pit’s mouth. The question was whether
this was in pith and substance a duty of excise (Entry 84 of
List I) or a fee to regulate and control the coal mining
industry (Entry 66 and 23 of List II). Here again though the
method adopted for recovering the impost was the same as
that of an
968
excise duty, the validity of the tax was upheld as it relat-
ed to the aspect of control over the industry rather than to
the aspect of an impost on production of coal.
23. Sainik Motors case [1962] 1 SCR 517 furnishes an
illustration which comes nearer to the question at issue
before us. In that case a Rajasthan Act purported to levy a
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tax on passengers and goods measuring it by reference to the
fares and freights charged by operators for carriage of such
passengers or goods. If it were to be treated as a tax on
’fares and freights’ it would be a tax on income which the
State legislature could not levy. But, if treated as a tax
on passengers and goods carried by road it was valid under
Entry 56 of List II. The validity of the Act was upheld on
the latter ground, the court pointing out that the tax was
on goods and passengers though measured by reference to
fares and freights. This dichotomy could perhaps also be
justified on the basis of the language of Entry 89 of List
I. That entry makes a distinction between the two types of
imposts and illustrates that two different aspects of the
same matter viz. taxes in respect of vehicles carrying
passengers or goods can form separate matters for taxation.
24. In the light of the above entries and decisions, I
think that the learned Attorney General is right in urging
that, merely because the 1987 Act as well as the State Acts
levy taxes which have ultimate impact on persons who enjoy
certain luxuries, the pith and substance of both cannot be
considered to be the same. The object of a tax on luxury is
to impose a tax on the enjoyment of certain types of bene-
fits, facilities and advantages on which the legislature
wishes to impose a curb. The idea is to encourage society to
cater better to the needs of those who cannot afford them.
For instance, a luxury tax may, to cite a catchy example,
encourage construction of "janata" hotels rather than five
star hotels. Such a tax may be on the person offering the
luxury or the person enjoying it. It may be levied on the
basis of the amount received for providing, or the amount
paid for or expended for enjoying, the luxury. Conceivably,
it could be on different bases altogether. The object of an
expenditure tax--and, that, conceptually, there can be an
expenditure tax is borne out by Azam Jha’s case (supra)--is
to discourage expenditure which the legislature considers
lavish or ostentatious. The object of the first would be to
discourage certain types of living or enjoyment while that
of the second would be to discourage people from incurring
expenditure in ’unproductive or undesirable channels. If a
general Expenditure Tax Act, like that of 1957, had been
enacted, no challenge to its validity could have been
969
raised because it incidentally levied the tax on expenditure
incurred on luxuries. The fact that there will be some
overlapping then or that here there is a good deal of such
overlapping, because the States have chosen to tax only some
types of luxuries and the Centre to tax, atleast for the
time being, only expenditure which results in such luxuries,
should not be allowed to draw a curtain over the basic
difference between the two categories of imposts. For in-
stance, if the conflict alleged had been between the present
State Acts and an Act of Parliament taxing expenditure
incurred in the construction of theatres or the maintenance
of race horse establishments or the like, there would have
been no overlapping at all and the pith and substance of the
central tax could well be described as "expenditure" and not
"luxuries". This distinction is not obliterated merely
because of the circumstance that both legislatures have
chosen to attack the same area of vulnerability, one with a
view to keep a check on ’luxuries’ and the other with a view
to curb undesirable ’expenditure:.
For these reasons, I agree with my learned brother
Venkatachaliah, J. that the validity of the three impugned
enactments has to be upheld and these writ petitions and
appeals dismissed.
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N.P.V. Petitions dismissed.
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