Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KEWAL KRISHAN PURI & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/05/1979
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1980 AIR 1008 1979 SCR (3)1217
1980 SCC (1) 416
CITATOR INFO :
E 1980 SC1037 (1,6)
C 1980 SC1124 (3,10,11,24,36)
RF 1981 SC1127 (7)
E 1981 SC1863 (25)
RF 1982 SC1012 (6)
R 1983 SC 634 (20)
R 1983 SC1246 (26,27,28,29,32,37)
R 1984 SC1870 (16)
F 1985 SC 218 (1,7,8,10,12,13,15)
R 1989 SC 100 (16)
RF 1992 SC1383 (12,13)
RF 1992 SC2084 (8)
ACT:
Punjab Agricultural Produce Market. Act, 1961 Ss. 23,
26 and 28 & Punjab Agricultural Produce (General) Rules, R
29-Marketing Development Fund & fee-Validity-Principles for
satisfying the rest for a valid levy of market fees.
HEADNOTE:
Punjab Agricultural Produce Markets Act, 1961 Ss. 23,
26 and 28 & Punjab Agricultural Produce (General) Rules, R
29-Marketing Development Fund & Marketing Committee Fund-
Utilisation of market fees-Validity of purposes enumerated
in clauses of Ss. 26 and 28 examined
The Punjab Agricultural Produce Markets Act, 1961 which
was passed by the composite State of Punjab is an Act for
the better regulation of the purchase,sale, storage and
processing of agricultural produce and the establishment of
markets for agricultural produce in the State. Section 3
envisages the establishment of the State Agricultural
Marketing Board for the entire State and it is provided in
sub-sec (9) that "The Board shall exercise superintendence
and control over. the committees" Section 6(1 ) provides for
"declaration of notified market area" and the State
Government is empowered to declare the area notified under
s. S or any portion thereof to be a notified market area for
the purpose of the Act in respect of the agricultural
produce notified under s. 5 or any part thereof. The market
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areas and market yards were declared. putting restriction on
the traders to carry on their trade under a licence granted
by the various Markets Committees established and
constituted within the specified boundaries or areas. After
the declaration of the notified market area no person can
establish or continue any place for the purchase, sale,
storage and processing of the agricultural produce except
under a licence granted in accordance with the provisions of
the Act, the Rules and the Bye-laws. Section 23 empowers the
committee to levy the fees subject to such rules as may be
made by the State Government in this behalf on the
agricultural produce bought or sold by licensees in the
notified market area at a certain percentage. Under s.
27(1), all Moneys received by a Committee shall be paid into
a fund to be called the Market Committee Fund and all
expenditure incurred shall be defrayed out of such fund,
while under s. 25 all receipts of the Board are to be
credited into a fund to be called the Marketing Development
Fund and the purposes for which it may be expended are
enumerated in s. 26 viz. better marketing of agricultural
produce on co-operative lines, collection and dissemination
of market rates and news. grading and standardisation of
agricultural produce etc. Section 28 catalogues the purposes
for which the Marketing Committee Fund may be utilised viz.
acquisition of sites for the market. maintenance and
improvement of the market, construction and repair of
buildings which are necessary for the purpose of the market
etc.
In the composite State of Punjab and even after the
bifurcation of the State for about a period of three years
the maximum rate of market fee which could
1218
be levied by the various market communities under s. 23 was
50 paise for every one hundred rupees. the fee was
thereafter raised from time to time.
A number of writ petitions were Filed in the High Court
challenging the power of the Board to incease the levy of
fee. All the writ petitions were heard together and the
increase Ind levy of fee upto Rs. 2/- by the various Market
Committees in the State of Haryana was upheld and the writ
petition of the Haryana dealers were dismissed while those
of the Punjab dealers were allowed and the increase of u-a e
brought about by Act 13 of 1974 to the extent of Rs, 2.25
Was struck down. [M/s. Hanuman Dall & General Mills, Hisar
v. State of Haryana & others AIR 1976 P & H 1]
In Punjab, by amendment Act 14 of 1975, s. 23 of the
Act was again amended authorising the imposition of market
fee at a rate not exceeding Rs. 2.20 per hundred rupee only,
and this increase in the rates of fee was again challenged
in the High Court and a Full Bench upheld the increase.
[Kewai Puri & Anr. v. State of Punjab & Ors., AIR 1977 P & H
347]. This view was challenged in the appeal to this Court.
Both in the State of Punjab and the State of Haryana
the rate of market fee was further raised from Rs. 2/- to
Rs. 3/-. It was unsuccessfully challenged in the High Court
by the dealers of each of the States, who thereafter
preferred appeals to this Court against the Judgment of the
High Court and also challenged the increases in fee, in writ
petitions in this Court.
In the appeals and writ petitions it was contended that
the levy of the market fee realised from the buyers under s.
23 of the Act could not be correlated I with the service to
be rendered to the payers of the fees, and therefore cannot
be justified and sustained on the well known concept of fee
as pointed out by this Court in several decisions, and that
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the items of expenditure authorised and enumerated in ss. 26
and 28 of the Act, go beyond the scope of the purpose of the
utilisation of the market fees.
On the question of the validity of the fixation of
market fee under s. 23 of the Act from time to time and the
scope and the purpose of the utilisation of such fees:
^
HELD: 1. The impost of fee and the liability to pay it
is on a particular individual or a class of individuals.
They are under the obligation to submit accounts, returns or
the like to The authorities concerned in cases where
quantification of the amount of fee depends upon the same. I
hey have to undergo the botherations and harassmentss,
sometimes justifiably and sometimes even unjustifiably, in
the process of discharging their liability to pay the fee.
The authorities levying the fee deal with them and realise
the fee from them. By operation of the economic laws in
certain kinds of imposition of fee the burden may be passed
on to different other persons one after the other. [1229H-
1230B]
In the instant case, the Market Committees and the
Market Board assumed to themselves the liberty of utilising
and spending the realisations from market fees to a
considerable extent. as if it was a tax, although in reality
it was not so. [1240D]
2. Rendering some service, however remote the service
may be, cannot strictly speaking satisfy the element of quid
pro required to be established in cases
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of the impost of fee. Registration fee, however has to be
taken to stand on a different footing altogether. In the
case of such a fee the test of quid pro quo is not to be
satisfied with such direct close or proximate relationship
as in the case of many other fees. By and large registration
fee is charged as a regulatory measure. [1241B]
3. This Court in a large number of cases had the
occasion to examine the nature of fee and tax and from a
conspectus of the various authorities the following,
principles for satisfying the test for a valid levy of
market fees on the agricultural produce bought or sold by
licences in a notified market area are deducible :-
(i) That the amount of fee realised must be earmarked
for rendering services to the licencees in the notified
market area and a good and substantial portion of it must be
shown to be expended for this purpose. [1243H]
(ii) That the services rendered to the licensees must
be in relation to the transaction of purchase or sale of the
agricultural produce. [1244B]
(iii) That while rendering services in the market area
for the purpose of facilitating the transactions of purchase
and sale with a view to achieve the objects of the marketing
legislation it is not necessary to confer the whole of the
benefit on The licensees but some special benefits must be
conferred on them which ‘have a direct, close and reasonable
correlation between the licensees and the transactions.
[1244C]
(iv) That while conferring some special benefits on the
licensees it is permissible to render such service in the
market which may be in the general interest of all concerned
with the transaction taking place in the market. [1244D]
(v) That spending the amount of market fees for the
purpose of augmenting the agricultural produce. its facility
of transport in villages. and to provide other facilities
meant mainly or exclusively for the benefit of agriculturist
is not permissible on the ground that such in services in
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the long run go to increase the volume of transaction, in
the market ultimately benefiting the traders also. Such an
indirect and remote benefit to the traders is in no sense a
special benefit to them. [1244E-F]
(vi) That the element of quid pro quo may not be
possible, or even necessary, to be established with
arithmetical exactitude but even broadly and reasonably i;
must be established by the authorities who charge the fees
that the amount is being spent for rendering services to
these on whom falls the burden of the fee. [1244G]
(vii) At least a good and substantial portion of the
amount collected on account of fees, may be in the
neighbourhood of two-thirds or three-fourths, must be shown
with reasonable certainty as being spent for rendering
services of the kind mentioned above. [1244 H]
The Commissioner Hindu Religious Endowments, Madras v.
Sri Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutt, [1954]
SCR 1005; Matthews v. Chicorv Marketing Board, 60 CLR. 263;
Attorney General for British Columbia & Esquimalt & Nanaimo
Railway Co. & Ors., (1950) Appeal Cases. 87: H. H.
1220
Sudhundra Thirtha Swamiar v. Commissioner for Hindu
Religious & Charitable Endowment, Mysore [1963 Suppl. 2 SCR
302; Mahant Sri Jagannath Ramanuj Das & Anr. v. The State of
Orissa & Anr., [1954] SCR 1046; Ratilal Panachand Gandhi v.
The State of Bombay and ors. [1954] SCR 1055; The Hingir-
Rampur Coal Co. Ltd. & ors. v. The State of Orissa & Ors.,
[1961] 2 SCR 537; Parton v. Milk Board (Victoria) 80 CLR
229; Corporation of Calcutta & Anr. v. Liberty. Cinema
[1965] 2 SCR 477; Har Shankar & ors. etc. etc. v. The Dy.
Excise & Taxation Commr. & ors. [1975] 3 SCR 254; Nagar
Mahapalika Varanasi v. Durga Das Bhattacharya & ors., [1968]
3 SCR 374; The Delhi Cloth & General Mills Co. Ltd. v. Chief
Commissioner Delhi & Ors.,1970] 2 SCR 348; Indian Mica &
Micanite Industries Ltd. v State of Bihar & Ors. [1971]
Suppl. SCR 319; Secretary Government of Madras Home
Department & Anr. v. Zenith Lamp & Electrical Ltd. [1973] 2
SCR 973; State of Maharashtra & Ors. v. The Salvation Army,
Western India Territory,[1975] 3 SCR 475; Govt. of Andhra
Pradesh & Anr. v. Hindustan Machine Tools Ltd. [1975] Suppl.
SCR 394; The Municipal Council Madurai v. R. Narayanan etc.,
[1976] 1 SCR 333; The Chief Commissioner Delhi and Anr. v.
The Delhi Cloth & General Mills Co. Ltd. & Anr. AIR 1978, SC
1181; P P. Kutti Keya & Ors. v. The State of Madras & Ors.,
AIR 1954 Madras, 621; MCVS Arunachala Nadar etc. v. The
State of Madras & Ors., [1959] Suppl. 1 SCR 92; Mohmmad
Hussain Gulam & Anr. v. State of Bombay & Ors., [1962] 2 SCR
659;Lakhan Lal & Ors. etc. v. The State of Bihar & Ors.,
[1968] 3 SCR 534; referred to.
4. (i) A dispute arose between the parties as to
whether the licence is granted for the whole of the area or
for particular places therein. On examining Form in the
Rules meant for grant of licence under s. 10, it is found
that the licence is granted for one or more places of
business specified in col. 6 situated in a particular
notified market area named at the top of the licence. There
will be no sense in specifying the place of business in the
licence if the licensee is to be permitted to establish his
place of business any where in a notified market area which
is too big and extensive for the control and supervision of
a particular Market Committee. Market yards are declared
under s. 7. For each notified market area there can be one
principal market yard and one or more sub-market yards as
may be necessary. The marginal note of sec 8 is, "No private
market to be opened in or near places declared to be
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markets." [1246D-E]
(ii) There is no special provision in this statute for
an establishment of markets or markets proper as per the
definition contained in cl. (i) and (k) of s. 2 of the Act,
it is reasonable to assume that the intention of the
legislature is to constitute the market yards as the market
proper and ordinarily and generally the market would be the
same but may include some other places where transactions of
purchase of agricultural produce by the traders from the
producers has been allowed in order to avoid rush in the
precincts of the market proper. But one thing is certain
that the whole of the market area in no sense can be equated
with market or market proper. Nobody can be’ allowed to
establish a purchasing centre of his own at any place he
likes in the market area without there being such a
permission or authority from The Market Committee. After all
the whole object of the Act is the supervision and control
cf the transactions of purchase by the traders from the
agriculturists in order to prevent exploitation of the
latter by the former. [1240H-1247A]
1221
5. The whole object of the Act is the supervision and
control of the transactions of purchase by the traders from
the agriculturists in order to prevent exploitation of the
latter by the former. The supervision and control can be
effective only in specified localities and places and not
throughout the extensive market area. [1247B]
6. Rule 24(1) in both the States framed under the Act
provides that "all agricultural produce brought into the
market for sale shall be sold by open auction in the
principal or sub-market yard", which indicates that market
is generally the principal and sub-markets yards. The
benefit of market fee, therefore, has to be correlated with
the transactions taking place at the specified place in the
market area and not in the whole of the area.[1247D]
7. The duties and powers of a market committee are
enumerated in s. 13 and this indicates that the Committee is
primarily concerned with the establishing of a market in the
notified area and with providing facilities in the market
for persons visiting it and in connection with the
transactions taking place there. [1247F]
8. Reading s. 23 along with r. 29 it would be noticed
that the power of the Committee to levy fees is subject to
the Rules as may be made by the State Government. The fee is
levied on ad valorem basis at a rate which cannot exceed the
maximum mentioned in s. 23 by the legislature. But the power
to fix the rate from time to time within the maximum limit
has been conferred on the Board and the Committee is merely
bound to follow it. [1248G-H]
9. Section 23 in express language controls the power of
the Committee to levy fees subject to the rules. The power
given to the Board to fix the rate of market fees from time
to time under rule 29 is not ultra vires the provisions of
the Act, as sub-sec.(a) of s. 3 confers power on the Board
to exercise superintendence and control over the committees,
which power, in the context and the scheme of the marketing
law, will take within its ambit the power conferred on the
Board under rule 29(1). [1249C]
State of Punjab & Anr. v. Hari Krishan Sharma, [1966] 2
SCR 982; distinguished
10. The fee levied is not on the agricultural produce
in the sense of imposing any kind of tax or duty on the
agricultural produce. Nor is it a tax on the transaction of
purchase or sale. The levy is an impost on the buyer of the
agricultural produce in the market in relation to
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transactions of his purchase. The agriculturists are not
required to share any portion of the burden of this fee. In
case the buyer is not a licensee then the responsibility of
paying the fees is of the seller who may realise the same
from the buyer. But such a contingency cannot arise in
respect of the transactions of sale by an agriculturist of
his agricultural produce in the market to a dealer who must
be a licensee. Probably such an alternative provision was
meant to be made for outside buyers who are not licensees
when they buy the agricultural produce from or through the
licensees.[1249D-E]
11. Every Market Committee is obliged under sub-sec.
(2) (a) of s. 27 to pay out of its funds to the Marketing
Board as contribution such percentage of its income derived
from licence fee, market fee and fines levied by the
1222
courts as specified in sub-cl. (i) and (ii). The purpose of
this contribution as mentioned in sub-sec.(2) (a) is to
enable the Board to defray expenses of the office,
establishment of the Board and such other expenses incurred
by it in the interest of the Committees in general. The
income of almost all the Market Committees were several
lakhs of rupees per year and, therefore, each is required to
pay 30 per centum of its income to the Board by virtue of
the amendment brought about by Punjab Act 4 of 1978. Under
s. 25 all receipts of the Board are to be credited into a
fund to be called the Marketing Development Fund. Purposes
for which the Marketing Development Fund may be expended are
enumerated in s. 26 and the purposes for which the Market
Committee Funds may be expended are catalogued in s.
28[1250A-C]
12. No serious objection to the items of expenditure
mentioned in clauses (xii), (xiv), (xv) and (xvi) can be
taken. Clause (x) and clause (xi) cannot form the items of
expenditure of the market fees. The whole of the State is
divided into market areas. The propaganda in favour of
agricultural improvement and expenditure for production and
betterment of agricultural produce will be in the general
interest of agriculture in the market area. So long as the
concept of fee remains distinct and limited in contrast to
tax such expenditure out of the market fee cannot be
countenanced in law. [1252F-G]
13. The first part of cl. (xiii) may be justified in
the sense of imparting education in marketing to the staff
of the Market Committee. But imparting education in
agriculture in general cannot be correlated with the market
fee. [1252H]
14. How ill-conceived the second part of clause (xvii)
is ? Is it permissible to spend the market fees realised
from the traders for any purpose calculated to promote the
national or public interest ? Obviously not. No market
Committee can be permitted to utilise the fund for an
ulterior purpose howsoever benevolent, laudable and
charitable the object may be. The whole concept of fee will
collapse if the amount realised by market fees could be
permitted to be spent in this fashion. [1253A-B]
Technically and legally, one may not have any objection
to the expenditure of such money for the purposes mentioned
in clauses (x), (xi), (xiii) and (xvii). [1253D]
15. It is not necessary to strike down any clauses of
s. 28 as being unconstitutional merely on the ground that
the expenditure authorised therein goes beyond the scope of
the purpose of the utilisation of the market fees. The
authorities have to bear this in mind and on a proper
occasion the matter will have to be dealt with by courts in
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the light of this Judgment where a concrete case comes of
raising of a loan, spending the money so raised which cannot
be reasonably connected with the purposes for which the
market fee can be spent, as to whether such a loan can be
repaid or interest on it can be paid out of the realisations
of the market fees. [1253G]
16. The Board in the State is the Central Controlling
and superintending authority over all the Market Committees,
the primary function of which is to render service in the
market. Parting with 30% income by a Market Committee in
favour of the Board is not so excessive or unreasonable so
as to warrant any interference with the law in this regard
on the ground of violation of the principle of quid pro quo
in the utilisation of the market fee realised
1223
from the traders in the market area. Emphasised that the
Marketing Development Fund can only be expended for the
purposes of the Market Committees in a general way, or to be
more accurate, as far as practicable, for the purposes of
the particular Market Committee which makes the
contribution. [1254C-D]
17. Section 26 of the Act provides for purposes for
which the Marketing Development Fund may be expended. The
Marketing Development Fund constituted primarily and mainly
out of the contributions by the Market Committees from
realisation of market fee can also be expended for the
purposes of the market in the notified market area in
relation to the transactions of purchase and sale of
agricultural produce and for no other general purpose or in
the general interest of the agriculture or the
agriculturists. The purposes mentioned in clauses (i), (ii),
(iii), (iv), first part of clause (v), clauses (vi), (vii),
(viii), (ix), (xii), first part of clause (xiii), clauses
(xiv), (xv) and (xvi) held valid. The Marketing Development
Fund constituted out of the Market fees cannot be expended
for the purposes mentioned in second part of clause (v),
clauses (x), (xi), second part of clause (xiii) and clause
(xvii). As the purpose of the law will be served by
restricting the operation of s. 26, it is not necessary to
strike down those provisions as being constitutionally
invalid. [1254E, 1255F-1256A]
18. The High Court has extracted s. 28 of the Act but
has failed to scan the effect of the various purposes in
some of the clauses. [1256H-1257A]
19. The High Court seems to be of the view that since
transportation is very essential for the development of a
market and to enable the growers of the agricultural produce
to bring the same to the market, the construction of link
roads becomes an essential purpose of the market committees.
It may be so but the purpose cannot be allowed to be
achieved at the cost of the market fee realised from the
dealers. [1257G]
20. The impost must be correlated with the service to
be rendered to the payers of the fees in the sense and to
the extent pointed out. [1260A]
21. Everybody seems to have allowed himself to be
carried too far by the sentiment of the laudable object of
the Act of doing whatever is possible to do under it for the
amelioration of the conditions and the uplift of the
villagers and the agriculturists. Undoubtedly the Act is
primarily meant for that purpose and to the extent it is
permissible under the law to achieve that object of
utilising the money collected by the market fee, it should
be done. But if the law does not permit carrying on the
sentiment too far for achieving of all the laudable objects
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under the Act, then primarily it becomes the duty of the
Court to allow the law to have an upper hand over the
sentiment and not vice versa. [1263G-H]
22. If insecticides and pesticides are for use at the
place where actually the marketing operations are carried on
it would be a justifiable expenditure. But if they are meant
to be supplied to the agriculturists for use at their
village homes or in their fields surely they cannot be valid
expenditure out of the collections of the market fee.
[1267G-H]
In the instant cases the authorities took full liberty
to treat the realisation from market fee as a general
realisation of tax which they were free to spend in any
manner they liked for the purposes of the Act, the
development of the area, for giving a fillip to agricultural
production and so forth and so on. The
1224
sooner the authorities are made to realise the correct
position in law the better it will be for all concerned.
[1269F]
23. Taking a reasonable and practical view of the
matter and on appreciation of the true picture of
justifiable and legal expenditure in relation to the market
fee income, even though it had to be done on the basis of
some reason- able guess work, the court did not disturb the
raising of an imposition of the rate of market fee upto Rs.
2/- per hundred by the various Market Committees and the
Boards both in the State of Punjab and Haryana. After all,
considerable development work seems to have been done by
many Market Committees in their respective markets. The
charging of fee @ Rs. 2/- therefore, is justified and fit to
be sustained. [1269G-1270A]
24. The dealers of Haryana did not feel aggrieved when
the High Court maintained the raising of the market fee to
the extent of Rs. 2/- per hundred rupees. The court did not
uphold the raising of the fee from Rs.2/- to Rs. 3/-as on
the materials placed before it, it is clear that this has
been done chiefly because of the wrong impression of law
that the amount of market fee can be spent for any
development work in the notified market area and especially
for the development of agriculture and the welfare of the
agriculturists. The High Court was wrong in maintaining this
use on an erroneous view of the matter.[1270B-C]
25. In future if the market fee is sought to be raised
beyond the rate of Rs.2/- per hundred rupees, proper
budgets, estimates, balance-sheets showing the balance of
the money in hand and in deposit, the estimated income and
expenditure, etc. should carefully be prepared. On drawing
the correct balance sheets and framing of the correct
estimates and budgets the authorities as also the State
Government will be able to know the correct position and to
decide reasonably as to what extent the raising of the
market fee can be justified taking an over-all picture of
the matter and keeping in view the reason behind the
restrictions of sales tax laws concerning the transactions
of foodgrains and the other agricultural produce. Then, and
then only, there may be a legal justification for raising
the rate of the market fee further to a reasonable
extent.[1270E-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1083 of
1977.
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(Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 28-1-1977 of the Punjab Haryana High Court in Civil
Writ No. 5697/75)
CIVIL APPEAL NO: 1616 OF 1978
(Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 18-9-1978 of the Punjab & Haryana High Court in CWP
No. 3849/78)
CIVIL APPEAL NOS;1700-1761 OF 1978
(Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 30-8-1978 of the Punjab & Haryana High Court in Civil
Writ Petition Nos. 3351, 2662, 3094, 3221, 3303, 3330,
3347, 3348, 3349, 3350,
1225
3384, 3390, 3393, 3459, 3460, 3489, 3517, 3533, 3548, 3551,
3563, 3570, 3576, 3598, 3615, 3665, 3673, 3773, 3775, 3776,
3826, 3827, 3883, 4024, 4171/77, 37/78, 178, 212, 283, 335,
381, 423, 483, 577, 666, 751, 887, 976, 1021, 1058, 1104,
1164, 1280, 1469/78, 2625/77, 1556/78, 1578/78, 1635, 1859,
1980, 1997 and 2095/78.
CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 1762-1773 OF 1978.
(Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 30-8-1978 of the Punjab & Haryana High Court in Civil
Writ Petition Nos. 45/78, 888, 1251 1451, 1556 3300, 3330,
3293/77, 3292, 3337, 3385 and 3426/77)
CIVIL APPEAL NOS.1626-1627 OF 1978.
(Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 30-8-1978 of the Punjab & Haryana High Court in Civil
Writ Petition Nos. 4171/77 and 1356/78)
AND
WRIT PETITION NOS. 4436, 4470, 4472, 4481, 4485,4564, 4420,
4450, 4460, and 4484 OF 1978
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution)
For the Appellants in CA No. 1083/77:A. K. Sen Mr.
Ravinder Bana, and Bhal Singh Malik For the RR. 1-2 in CA
No. 1083/77: S. N. Kackar, Sol. Genl., Hardev Singh and R.
S. Sodhi, For the Intervener-State Agricultural Market Board
and Market Committee, Nai Mandi in CA No. 1083/77: V. M.
Tarkunde, and S. C. Patel. For the Applicant Intervener: in
CA No. 1083/77 Mrs. Urmila Kapoor. For the Respondent No. 3
in CA No. 1083/77 H. L. Sibbal, G. G. Garv and Mr. Atma Ram.
For the Petitioner in the W.P. except in WPs. Nos. 4481,
4470, 4564 Bhal Singh Malik, B. Datta and K. K. Manchanda.
For the Petitioners in W.P. Nos.4481, 4564, and for the
Appellants in CA No. 1616/78 S.K. Walia, and Mr. M.P. Jha.
For the Petitioner in W.P. No.4470/78 Sarva Mitter. For the
Respondents in WP.4430, 4472, 4481, 4485/78 and CA 1616/78
W.P.4564/78: Hardev Singh, G. C. Garg and R. S. Sodhi. For
the Appellants in CA Nos. 1700-1761/78 Anil Diwan, (1703)
Adarsh Kumar Goel (in all appeals) Praveen Kumar, Adv.
(1703) Miss Bina Gupta, Adv. (1703) Madan Gopal Gupta (1703
to 1752) Sarva Mitter (1751-1761 and all other) For the
Petitioners in W.P. Nos. 4420, 4450, 4460, 4484/78: A. K.
Sen, (4420) Dr. L. M. Singhvi, (4460) B. Dutta, K. K.
Manchanda and Bhal Singh Malik, For R. 1 in Appeal Nos.
1700-1761/78 and WP Nos. 4420, 4450, 4460 and 4484/78:
1226
P. N. Lekhi, (FP 4420) and R. N. Sachthey, For RR. 2-3 in
Appeal Nos. 1760-1761/78 and WP Nos. 4420, 4450, 4460 and
4484/78:V. M. Tarkunde, (in CA 1700 and WP 4420) Gian Singh,
(WPs. 4420, 4450 4460, 4484 and CAs 1760-1761) S. C. Patel.
For the Appellants in CA Nos. 1626-1627/78: Mrs. Urmila
Kapoor, For the Appellants in CA Nos. 1762-1773/78: K. K.
Mohan.
For the other appearing RR. in CA Nos. 1762-1763: S. C.
Patel,
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The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
UNTWALIA, J.-In these groups of Civil Appeals and Writ
Petitions, broadly speaking, the question which falls for
determination is the validity of certain provisions of the
Punjab Agricultural Produce Markets Act, 1961 (Punjab Act
No. 23 of 1961). hereinafter referred to as the Act, and the
Rules framed by the State of Punjab and Haryana under the
said Act as also the validity of the fixation of market fees
from time to time by the various Market Committees in the
States aforesaid under the direction of the Punjab State
Agricultural Produce Marketing Board and the Haryana State
Agricultural Produce Marketing Board. All these cases have
been heard together and are being disposed of by a common
judgment.
In the erstwhile composite State of Punjab the Act was
passed in the year 1961 to consolidate and amend the law
relating to the better regulation of the purchase, sale,
storage and processing of agricultural produce and the
establishment of markets for agricultural produce in the
State. Under section 3 of the Act the State Agricultural
Marketing Board was constituted for the entire area of the
composite State, which later, in the year 1966 came to be
bifurcated into the States of Punjab and Haryana. Under the
various provisions of the Act, which will be noticed shortly
hereinafter, market areas and market yards were declared
putting restrictions on the traders to carry on their trade
under a licence granted by the various Market Committees
established and constituted in accordance with sections 11
and 12, within the specified boundaries or areas. The
traders were required to take out licences on payment of a
licence fee. Under section 23 of the Act a Market Committee
was required and authorised to levy on ad-valorem basis fees
on the agricultural produce bought or sold by licensees in
the notified market area at a rate not exceeding the rate
mentioned in section 23 from time to time for every one
hundred rupees.
1227
In the composite State of Punjab and even after the
bifurcation of the States for about a period of three years
the maximum rate of market fee which could be levied under
section 23 was 50 paise for every one hundred rupees.
Various Market Committees levied a fee of 50 paise per
hundred rupees and no dealer made any murmur of grievance of
it. In the bifurcated State of Punjab by Act 25 of 1969 the
rate of 50 paise was raised to Re. 1/-. It was further
raised to Rs. 1.50 by Act 28 of 1973. Thereafter by
Ordinance 4 of 1974 which was replaced by Act 13 of 1974 the
rate was raised to Rs. 2.25. Several dealers filed a number
of Writ Petitions in the High Court of Punjab and Haryana
challenging the increase in the rate of market fee from time
to time, the last one being by Act 13 of 1974. Similarly in
the State of Haryana the rate of 50 paise was raised to Re.
1/- by Haryana Amendment Act 28 of 1969. It was further
raised to Rs. 1.50 by Act 21 of 1973. By Ordinance 2 of 1974
which was replaced by Act 17 of 1974 in the State of Haryana
the fee was raised to Rs.2/- for every one hundred rupees,
as against the rise of Rs. 2.20 in the State of Punjab.
Several dealers of the State of Haryana also challenged in
the High Court the levy and increase of market fee from time
to time. All the Writ Petitions were heard together. The
increase and levy of fee upto Rs. 2/- by the various Market
Committees in the State of Haryana was upheld and the Writ
Petitions of the Haryana dealers were dismissed while those
of the Punjab dealers were allowed and the increase of rate
brought about by Ordinance 4 and Act 13 of 1974 to the
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extent of Rs. 2.25 was struck down. This decision of the
High Court is reported in M/s. Hanuman Dall & General Mills,
Hissar v. The State of Haryana and others. The date of the
decision is November 8, 1974. In Punjab by Amendment Act 14
of 1975 section 23 of the Act was again amended authorising
the imposition of market fee at a rate not exceeding Rs.
2.20 per hundred rupees. Telegraphic instructions were
issued by the Punjab Board to the various Market Committees
directing them to charge Rs. 2/- only with effect from
August 23, 1975 after the passing of the Act 14 of 1973 on
August 8, 1975. The increase in the rates of fee, the last
one being in August, 1975, were again challenged in the High
Court. But the Full Bench which finally heard the Writ
Petition upheld the increases by its judgment delivered on
January 28, 1977, which is reported in Kewal Krishan Puri
and another v. The State of Punjab and others. Civil Appeal
1083 of 1977 has been preferred in this Court from the said
judgment of the High Court.
1228
Both in the State of Punjab and the State of Haryana
the rate of market fee was further raised from Rs. 2/- to
Rs.3/-. It was unsuccessfully challenged in the High Court.
The dealers have preferred appeals from the judgments of the
High Court as also filed Writ Petitions in this Court. In
the State of Punjab the fee was raised to Rs. 3/-by
Ordinance 2 of 1978 which must have been replaced by an Act.
The Ordinance was promulgated on April 28, 1978. The Writ
Petition 4436 of 1978 has been filed in this Court
challenging the previous increases in the fee along with the
last increase of Rs. 3/-. The High Court upheld it by its
judgment dated May 18, 1978. Special Leave Petition (Civil)
2768 of 1978 was preferred from this judgment. Writ Petition
No. 3849 of 1978 was filed in the High Court by a large
number of dealers, which was dismissed in limine by order
dated September 18, 1978. Civil Appeal 1616 of 1978 arises
out of this Writ Petition. Several other dealers have filed
separate Writ Petitions also being Writ Petitions 4470,
4472, 4481, 4485 and 4564 of 1978 challenging in the
increase of market fee in the State of Punjab.
In the State of Haryana the rate of fee was raised from
Rs. 2/- to Rs.3/- with effect from September 5, 1977 by
Ordinance 12 of 1977 replaced by Act 22 of 1977. The Haryana
State Marketing Board directed all the Market Committees in
that State to collect market fee @ Rs. 3/- with effect from
5-9-1977. A number of Writ Petitions were filed in the High
Court challenging the said increase and the High Court
dismissed all the Writ Petitions by its judgment dated
August 30, 1978. Civil Appeals 1700 to 1773 of 1978 and
Civil Appeals 1626 and 1627 of 1978 are from the judgment of
the High Court dated August 30, 1978. The said increase has
also been challenged by filing Writ Petitions in this Court
and they are Writ Petitions 4420, 4450, 4460 and 4484 of
1978.
Although by now there is a catena of cases of this
Court pointing out the difference between "tax" and "fee"
with reference to the constitutional provisions and
otherwise also, the problem before us has presented some new
angles and facets. We, therefore, think it advisable and
necessary to review many of the earlier decisions to pin-
point the precise difference as far as practicable in order
to resolve the rival contentions of the parties. The
arguments of the learned counsel for the parties whenever
thought necessary would be referred to at the appropriate
places hereinafter in this judgment.
Clause (2) of Article 110 and clause (2) of Article 199
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of the Constitution, the former occurring in the Chapter of
Parliament and the
1229
latter in relation to the State Legislature, are in
identical terms as follows:-
"A Bill shall not be deemed to be a Money Bill by
reason only that it provides...........for the demand
or payment of fees for licences or fees for services
rendered.......
The Constitution, therefore, clearly draws a
distinction between the imposition of a tax by a Money Bill
and the impost of fees by any other kind of bill. So also in
the Seventh Schedule both in List I and in a distinction has
been maintained in relation to the entires of tax and fees.
In the Union List entries 82 to 92A relate to taxes and
duties and entry 96 carves out the legislative field for
fees in respect of any of the matters in the said list
except the fees taken in any Court. Similarly in the State
List entries relating to taxes are entries 46 to 63 and
entry 66 provides for fees in respect of any of the matters
in List II but not including fees taken in any Court. Entry
relating to fees in List III is entry 47. Our Constitution,
therefore, recognises a different and distinct connotation
between taxes and fees.
The leading case of this Court which has been referred
and followed in many subsequent decisions is the case of The
Commissioner, Hindu religious Endowments, Madras v. Sri
Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutt. The point
decided therein was that the provision relating to the
payment of annual contribution contained in section 76(1) of
the Madras Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments Act,
1951 is a tax and not a fee and so it was beyond the
legislative competence of the Madras State Legislature to
enact such a provision. The meaning given to the word "tax"
by Latham C.J. of the High Court of Australia in Matthews v.
Chicory Marketing Board has been quoted with approval at
page 1040 and has been often repeated in many other
decisions. Generally speaking a fee is defined to be a
charge for a special service rendered to individuals by some
governmental agency. A question arises-"special service"
rendered to whom which kind of individuals? Mr. V.M.
Tarkunde who appeared for the Haryana Marketing Board
stressed the argument that service rendered must be
correlated to those on whom the ultimate burden of the fee
falls. In our opinion this argument is neither logical nor
sound. The impost of fee and the liability to pay it is on a
particular individual or a class of individuals. They are
under the obliga-
1230
tion to submit accounts, returns or the like to the
authorities concerned in cases where quantification of the
amount of fees depends upon the same. They have to undergo
the botherations and harassments, sometimes justifiably and
sometimes even unjustifiably, in the process of discharging
their liability to pay the fee. The authorities levying the
fee deal with them and realize the fee from them. By
operation of the economic laws in certain kinds of
impositions of fee the burden may be passed on to different
other persons one after the other. A few lines occurring at
page 119 in the judgment of the Privy Council in the case of
Attorney-General for British Columbia and Esquimalt and
Nanaimo Railway Company and others may be quoted with
advantage. They are as follows:-
"It is probably true of many forms of tax which
are indisputably direct that the assessee will desire,
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if he can, to pass the burden of the tax on to the
shoulders of another but this is only an economic
tendency. The assessee’s efforts may be conscious or
unconscious, successful or unsuccessful; they may be
defeated in whole or in part by other economic forces.
This type of tendency appears to their Lordships to be
something fundamentally different from the "passing on"
which is regarded as the hall-mark of an indirect tax."
The authorities, more often than not, almost
invariably, will not be able to know the individual or
individuals on whom partly or wholly the ultimate burden of
the fee will fall. They are not concerned to investigate and
find out the position of the ultimate burden. It is
axiomatic that the special service rendered must be to the
payer of the fee. The element of quid pro quo must be
established between the payer of the fee and the authority
charging it. It may not be the exact equivalent of the fee
by a mathematical precision, yet, by and large, or
predominantly, the authority collecting the fee must show
that the service which they are rendering in lieu of fee is
for some special benefit of the payer of the fee. It may be
so intimately connected or interwoven with the service
rendered to others that it may not be possible to do a
complete dichotomy and analysis as to what amount of special
service was rendered to the payer of the fee and what
proportion went to others. But generally and broadly
speaking it must be shown with some amount of certainty,
reasonableness or preponderance of probability that quite a
substantial portion of the amount of fee realised is spent
for the special benefit of its payers.
1231
We may now extract some very useful and leading
principles from the decision of this Court in Shirur Mutt’s
(1954 S.C.R., 1005, supra) pointing out the difference
between tax and fee. At pages 1040-41 says Mukherjea J., as
he then was:
"The second characteristic of tax is that it is an
imposition made for public purpose without reference to
any special benefit to be conferred on the payer of the
tax. This is expressed by saying that the levy of tax
is for the purposes of general revenue, which when
collected forms part of the public revenues of the
State. As the object of a tax is not to confer any
special benefit upon any particular individual, there
is, as it is said, no element of quid pro quo between
the tax-payer and the public authority...."
"a ’fee’ is generally defined to be a charge for a
special service rendered to individuals by some
governmental agency."
At page 1042 the learned Judge. enunciates-"The
distinction between a tax and a fee lies primarily in the
fact that a tax is levied as a part of a common burden,
while a fee is a payment for a special benefit or privilege
Public interest seems to be at the basis of all impositions,
but in a fee it is some special benefit which the individual
receives." After pointing out the ordinarily there are two
classes of cases where Government imposes ’fee’ upon
persons, the first being the type of cases of the licence
fees for Motor Vehicles or the like and in the other class
of cases ..the Government does some positive work for the
benefit of persons and the money is taken as the return for
the work done or services rendered" (vide page 1043), it is
said further-"If the money thus paid is set apart and
appropriated specifically for the performance of such work
and is not merged in the public revenues for the benefit of
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the general public, it could be counted as fees and not a
tax. There is really no generic difference between the tax
and fees and as said by Seligman, the taxing power of a
State may manifest itself in three different forms known
respectively as special assessments, fees and taxes.
"Finally at page 1044 the striking down by the High Court of
the imposition of fee under section 76. Of the Madras Act
was upheld on the ground-"It may be noticed, however, that
the contribution that has been levied under section 76 of
the Act has been made to depend upon the capacity of the
payer and not upon the quantum of benefit that is supposed
to be conferred on any particular religious institution."
Benefit conferred or any particular religious institution
would have been undoubtedly benefit conferred on the payer
of the fee.
1232
After the decision of this Court in Shirur Mutts case
(supra) section 76 of the Madras Act was amended. The effect
of the amendment came to be considered by this Court in the
case of H. H. Sudhundra Thirtha Swamiar v. Commissioner for
Hindu Religious & Charitable Endowments. Mysore.(1)
Pointing out the various differences between the earlier law
and the amended one at pages 320-21 the imposition of fee
was upheld.
In two other cases of this Court following the ratio of
Shirur Mutt’s decision the imposition of fee was upheld,
vide, Mahant Sri Jagannath Ramanuj Das and another v. The
State of Orissa and another and Ratilal Panachand Gandhi v.
The State of Bombay and other . (3)
We now proceed to consider. some more decisions of this
Court in which apparently some different phrases were used
for explaining the meaning of the word ’fee’ and its
distinction from ’tax’. Both sides placed reliance upon
those decisions. But if the phrases are understood in the
context they were used and with reference to the facts those
cases it would be noticed that the leading principle has not
basically undergone any change.
In the case of The Hingir-Rampurr Coal Co. Ltd. & Ors.
v. The State of Orissa and others(4) the challenge was to
the cess levied by the orissa Mining Areas Development Fund
Act, 1952. The petitioners’ stand in the first instance was
that the cess levied was not a fee but a duty of excise on
coal and hence beyond the competence of the State
Legislature. Alternatively they contended that even if it
was a fee it was beyond the competence of the State
Legislature for some If other reason not necessary to be
mentioned here. The cess imposed was upheld as a ’fee’
relatable to Entry 23 of List II read with Entry 66. In
other words it was upheld as a ’fee’ in respect of
regulation of mines and mineral development. Gajendragadkar
J., as he then was, delivered the judgment on behalf of the
majority and discussed the point at some length. At page 545
are to be found a few words which go directly against the
contention of Mr. Tarkunde. Says the learned Judge:-"...a
fee is levied essentially for services rendered and as such
there is an element of quid pro quo between the person who
pays the fee and the public authority which imposes it."
1233
(Emphasis supplied). Mr. Tarkunde, however, relied upon a
passage at the same page which runs thus:-
"If specific services are rendered to a specific
area or to a specific class of persons or trade or
business in any local area, and as a condition
precedent for the said services or in return for them
cess is levied against the said area or the said class
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of persons or trade or business the cess is
distinguishable from a tax and is described as a fee."
The above passage does not mean that the service
rendered is unconnected with or not meant for the payer of
the fee. As pointed out earlier, service rendered to an
institution like a Math is a service rendered to the payer
of the fee. Similarly services rendered to a specific area
or to a specific class of trade or business in any local
area must mean, and cannot but mean, that it is for the
special benefit of the person operating in that area. The
service rendered was to the mining area for the benefit of
the mine owners at that area. The area or trade does not pay
the fee nor does it get the benefit in vacuum. The fee is
paid by the person who is liable to pay it and service to
the payer does not mean any personal or domestic service to
him but it means service in relation to the transaction,
property or the institution in respect of which he is made
to pay the fee. Says the learned Judge at page 549:-
"It is true that when the Legislature levies a fee
for rendering specific services to a specified area or
to a specified class of persons or trade or business,
in the last analysis such services may indirectly form
part of services to the public in general. If the
special service rendered is distinctly and primarily
meant for the benefit of a specified class or area the
fact that in benefitting the specified class or area
the State as a whole may ultimately and indirectly be
benefitted would not detract from the character of the
levy as a fee. Where, however, the specific service is
indistinguishable from public service, and in essence
is directly a part of it, different considerations may
arise. In such a case it is necessary to enquire what
is the primary object of the levy and the essential
purpose which it is intended to achieve. Its primary
object and the essential purpose must be distinguished
from its ultimate or incidental results or
consequence . That is the true test in determining the
character of the levy." (underlining, ours)
At pages 549-50 in the decision of The Hingir-Rampur
Coal Co. Ltd. (supra), reference has been made in passing to
the decision of
1234
the Australian High Court in Patron v. Milk Board
(Victoria).(1) The majority which, amongst others, included
Dixon J., held the purported levy to be invalid because it
was the imposition of a duty of excise, there being no
element of quid qua to the person on whom the levy had been
imposed. Since a few lines from the judgment of Dixon J.,
occurring at pages 258-259 will be very helpful in tackling
with the problem we are faced with, we may quote them. here.
They are as follows:-
"It is an exaction for the purposes of expenditure
out of a Treasury fund. The expenditure is by a
government agency and the objects are governmental. It
is not a charge for service. No doubt the
administration of the Board is regarded as beneficial
to what may loosely be described as the milk industry.
But the Board performs no particular service for the
dairyman or the owner of a milk depot for which his
contribution may be considered as a fee or
recompense......................On the other hand it is
a trading tax. "Customs and excise duties are, in
their essence, trading taxes, and may be said to be
more concerned with the commodity in respect of which
the taxation is imposed than with the particular person
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from whom the tax is exacted": Attorney General for
British Columbia v. Kingcome Navigation Co [1934] A.C.
45, at p. 59.
At page 554 is to be found the final conclusion of
Gajendragadkar J., which is the crux of the matter. It
runs:-
Thus the scheme of the Act shows that the cess is
levied against the class of persons owning mines in the
notified area and it is levied to enable the State
Government to render specific services to the said
class by developing the notified mineral area. There is
an element of quid pro quo in the scheme, the cess
collected is constituted into a specific fund and it
has not become a part of the consolidated fund, its
application is regulated by a statute and is con fined
to its purposes, and there is a definite correlation
between the impost and the purpose of the Act which is
to render service to the notified area." (underlining,
ours).
In the case of Corporation of Calcutta and another v.
Liberty cinema(2) the respondent was charged by the Calcutta
Corporation a
1235
very high licence fee assessed according to the sanctioned
seating capacity of the Cinema house. The High Court
quashed the imposition. In appeal to the Supreme Court the
stand of the appellant Corporation was that the levy was a
tax and section 548(2) of the Calcutta Municipal Act did not
suffer from the vice of excessive delegation: while the
respondent cinema contended that the levy was a fee and had
to be justified as being imposed in return for services to
be rendered. Alternatively the respondent submitted that if
it was a tax it was invalid as it amounted to an illegal
delegation of legislative functions. The majority view was
expressed by Sarkar J., as he then was, and the impost was
upheld as a tax. In the minority opinion delivered by
Ayyangar J., it was held that even in the case of a licence
fee a correlation between the fee charged and the service
rendered was necessary to be established. It was, therefore,
held to be a tax but invalidly imposed under a power
suffering from the vice of unconstitutional legislative
delegation. In the cases before us the licence fees charged
from the various traders in the market areas are not
excessive and have not been attacked on any ground
whatsoever. We are. therefore, not concerned to find out
whether an element of quid pro quo is necessary in cases of
all kinds of licence fees. Some licences are imperative to
be taken only by way of regulatory measure, some are in the
nature of grant of exclusive right or privilege of the
State, such as, excise cases noticed by this Court in the
case of Har Shankar & ors. etc. etc. v. The Dy. Excise &
Taxation Commr. & Ors (1) Some may be cases of licence fees
where element of qid pro quo is necessary to be
established. But what is important to be pointed out from
the case of Liberty Cinema (supra) is that in the case of a
fee of the kind with which we are concerned in this case the
element of quid pro quo must be established. Otherwise the
imposition of fee will be bad. In the majority opinion, it
is stated at page 490:-
"The conclusion to which we then arrive is that
the levy under s.548 is not a fee as the Act does not
provide for any service to him. No question here arises
of correlating the to the person on whom it is
imposed. The work of inspection done by the Corporation
which is only to see that the terms of the licence are
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observed by the licensee is not a service to him. No
question here arises of correlating the amount of the
levy to the costs of any service. The levy is a tax."
1236
Ayyangar J., also said at page 526 that there being no
correlation between the fee charged and the service
rendered the impugned levy was not authorised.
Mr. Tarkunde at one stage of the hearing endeavoured to
submit, although the Solicitor-General appearing for the
State of Punjab and Mr. H. L. Sibbal for the Punjab
Marketing Board had made no such submissions, that the
impugned impost could be justified as a tax. There was no
lack of legislative competence in imposing a tax of the kind
under issue. Counsel further submitted that in almost all
the cases in absence of quid pro quo the levy was held to be
bad and unsustainable as a tax for want of legislative
competence. On the other hand learned counsel for the
appellants and the petitioners M/s. A. K. Sen, Anil Dewan,
B. S. Malik and A. K. Goel pointed out that at no pointed of
time the respondent sought to justify the impost as a tax
obviously because it would have then violated the provisions
of the Sales Tax law which did not authorise the imposition
of such a tax beyond a certain percentage, and as a tax it
could not be but a sales tax. Finally this controversy was
not pursued when we pointed out that at no stage the
question was raised and no attempt any stage was made to
justify it as a tax. Obviously the Market Committees could
not be competent under the Act to impose any tax: on the
sale and purchase of the agricultural produce in the market
nor did it ever purport to do so The nature of the impost
and the power. under which it was levied squarely and
uniformally remained within the realm of the fee and fee of
the kind which could not but sustained on the establishment
of the element of quid pro quo between the authority
charging the fee and its payer.
The next case to be considered is the decision of this
Court in Nagar Mahapalika Varanasi v. Durga Das Bhattacharya
& ors.(l) in which it was held that the annual licence fee
charged from the rickshaw owners and the drivers by the
Varanasi Municipal Board could be justified only on the
basis of the element of quid pro quo. The fee was held to be
ultra vires and illegal because after excluding certain
items of expenditure the balance did not constitute
sufficient quid pro quo for the amount of the licence fee
charged. It could not be sustained as a tax. Certain major
items of expenditure incurred by the Municipal Board were
attributable to the discharge of its statutory duty and,
therefore, at page 386 it was said by Ramaswami J.,-it is
manifest that the licence fee cannot be imposed for
reimbursing the cost of ordinary municipal serves which the
Municipal
1237
Board was bound under the statute to provide to the general
public." The expenditure incurred by the Municipal Board for
the benefit of the licensees constituted 44% of the total
income of the Municipal Board and hence it was held that
there was no sufficient quid pro quo established in the
circumstances of the case. In Delhi Cloth & General Mills
Co. Ltd. v. Chief Commissioner Delhi & ors.(l) the High
Court had found the 60% of the amount of licence fees
charged from the mills was actually spent on services
rendered to the factory owners. On that basis sufficient
quid pro was found to exist and the impost was upheld by
this Court also. We may, however, add that the rule of 60%
cannot be of universal application. It is not a static rule.
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The cases of licence fees are, generally speaking, on some
different footing. There is a substantial element of
regulatory measure involved in them. Over and above that a
good portion of the fee, may be in the neighbourhood of 60%
or more, must be correlated to the service rendered to the
person from whom the fee is charged. But there may be cases
where, as in the instant one, the licence fee charged by way
of regulatory measure is not exorbitant or excessive. But
the other kind of fee charged has got to be justified on the
ground of existence of sufficient quid pro quo between the
payer of the fee and the authority charging it. In such a
case from a practical point of view it may be difficult to
find out with arithmetical exactitude as to what amount of
fee has gone in incurring the expenditure for the services.
But, broadly speaking, a good and substantial portion of it
must be shown as being spent for the services rendered.
Now we come to the decision of this Court in Indian
Mica & Micanite Industries Ltd . v. State of Bihar & ors.(2)
wherein Hegde J., speaking on behalf of a Constitution Bench
of this Court, reviewed all the earlier cases and pointed
out at page 323 that-"While a tax invariably goes into the
consolidated fund, a fee is earmarked for the specified
services in a fund created for the purpose." Concludes the
learned Judge at pages 324-25:-
"From the above discussion it is clear that before
any levy can be upheld as a fee, it must be shown that
the levy has reasonable co-relationship with the
services rendered by the Government. In other words the
levy must be proved to be a qui pro quo for the
services rendered. But in these matters it will be
impossible to have an exact co-relationship. The co-
relationship expected is one of a general character and
not as of arithmetical exactitude."
1238
Difference between a licence to regulate a trade, business
or profess on in public interest and in a case where a
Government which is the owner of a particular property may
grant permit or licence to some one to exploit that property
for his benefit for consideration has been pointed out at
page 325. The State of Bihar had failed to place materials
in the High Court to establish the reasonable co-
relationship between the value of the services rendered with
the fee charged. For some special reasons the case was
remanded. But one thing may be pin-pointed from a passage
occurring at page 327 that the expenses of maintaining an
elaborate staff by the Excise Department were not only for
the purposes of ensuring that denaturing is done properly by
the manufacturer but also for the purpose of seeing that the
subsequent possession of denatured spirit in the hands
either of a wholesale dealer or retail seller or any other
licensee or permit-holder is not misused by converting the
denatured spirit into alcohol fit for human consumption and
thereby evade payment of heavy duty. But the appellant
before the Supreme Court or other similar licensees had
nothing to do with the manufacturing process. They were only
the purchasers of manufactured denatured spirit. In that
context it was said-"Hence the cost of supervising the
manufacturing process or any assistance rendered to the
manufacturers cannot be recovered from the consumers like
the appellant." When we come to discuss even from the
admitted facts in relation to the levy of impugned market
fees, we shall point out that the authorities concerned as
also the High Court labour under the impression that the
fee realized from the traders in the market could be spent
for any purpose of development of agriculture by providing
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all sorts of facilities to the agriculturists including the
facilities of link roads for the purpose of trans port of
their agricultural produce to the markets how so ever
distant these link roads may be from the market proper or
any other purchasing centre in the market.
In the case of Secretary, Government of Madras, Home
Department and another v. Zenith Lamp & Electrical Ltd.(1)
the character of Court fees came up for consideration as to
whether they are taxes or fees or whether they are sui
generis. Although after referring to the various Entries of
the Seventh Schedule in the different lists it was noticed
that Court fees were not taxes and they were covered by
separate Entries of fees exclusively meant for Courts, yet
the broad principles of the requirement of quid pro quo were
made applicable in the cases of Court fees also. Even so,
Sikri C.J. speaking for the Court pointed out at page 982-
"But even if the meaning is the same,
1239
what is ’fees’ in a particular case depends on the subject-
matter ill relation to which fees are imposed." The learned
Chief Justice further observed at the same page-"In other
words, it cannot tax litigation, and make litigations pay,
say for road building or education or other beneficial
schemes that a State may have. There must be a broad co-
relationship with the fees collected and the cost of
administration of civil justice." If the view taken by the
High Court in the market fee cases were to hold good, then
pushing it to the logical conclusion one will have to say
that giving all sorts of facilities to the litigants for
their travel from the village homes to the Courts would also
be a service of them In cases of court fees one has to take
broad view of the matter to find out whether there exists a
broad co-relationship with the fees collected and the cause
of administration of justice. Even mixing the amount of
court fee collected with the general fund will be
permissible. It may not be kept in a separate fund or
earmarked separately. The very fact that in relation to
court-fees there are separate Entries in the Seventh
Schedule e.g. Entry 77 List I and Entry 3 of List II,
indicates that even though the character of the levy is not
very much different from that of the general types of fees,
in the matter of approach for finding out the element of
quid pro quo quite a different test has not to be applied as
indeed, to some extent it has to be applied in many kinds of
fees depending upon the totality of the facts and
circumstances. Each case has to be judged from a reasonable
and practical point of view for finding out the element of
quid pro quo.
In the case of State of Maharashtra & ors. v. The
Salvation Army, Western India Territory(1) Mathew J.,
speaking for the Court after resume of some earlier
decisions of this Court upheld to a certain extent the fee
charged under the Bombay Public Trust Act, 1950 on the
ground that taking precautionary measures to see that Public
Trusts are administered for the purpose intended by the
authors of the Trust and exercising control and supervision
with a view to preserve the trust properties from being
wasted or misappropriated by trustees are certainly special
services for the benefit of the trust. Thus special benefits
for the payer of the fee were established, as benefits to
the trust were benefits to the trustees who are required to
pay the fees out of the trust income. But then it was
further pointed out that in spite of accumulation of the
surplus from 1953 onwards the authorities went on charging
the fee of 2% which has assumed the character of a tax.
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After giving certain guidelines the levy was declared to be
without the authority of law after 31st March, 1970.
1240
Observations of one of us (Chandrachud J., as he then
was), speaking for the Court in the case of Government of
Andhra Pradesh & Anr. v. Hindustan Machine Tool Ltd.(1) at
page 401 are quite apposite and may be usefully quoted
here:-
One cannot take into account the sum total of the
activities of a public body like a Gram Panchayat to
seek justification for the fees imposed by it. The
expenses incurred by a Gram Panchayat or a Municipality
in discharging its obligatory functions, are usually
met by the imposition of a variety of taxes. For
justifying the imposition of fees the public authority
has to show that services are rendered or intended to
be rendered individually to the particular person on
whom the fee is imposed. The Gram Panchayat here has
not even prepared an estimate of what the - intended
services would cost it.’
The levy of house-tax was held to be lawful but the
levy of Permission Fee had to be struck down as being
illegal. In the instant case also it would be noticed that
the Market Committees and the Market Boards assumed to
themselves the liberty of utilizing and spending the
realizations from market fees to a consider able extent, as
if it was a tax, although in reality it was not so. In The
Municipal Council Maduri v. R. Narayanan etc.(2) endeavour
was made as in the case of Nagar Mahapalika Varanasi (supra)
to justify the impost by the Municipal Council as a tax.
Krishna Iyer J., speaking for the Court repelled that
argument and since the impost could not to justified as fee
the resolution of the Municipal Council was held to be
invalid. In the Chief Commissioner, Delhi and another v. The
Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd. and others(3) the
question for consideration was whether the registration fee
charged on the document satisfied the two conditions of fee
which were enumerated in the fol- lowing language:-
"(i) there must be an element of quid pro quo that
is to say the authority levying the fee must
render some service for the fee levied
however remote the service may be;
(ii) that the fee realised must be spent for the
purposes of the imposition and should not
form part of the general revenues of the
State."
1241
The second condition was found not to be fulfilled and
hence the impost was held to be bad. We would like to point
out that the first condition is rather couched in too broad
and general a language. Rendering some service, however
remote the service may be, cannot strictly speaking satisfy
the element of quid pro quo required to be established in
cases of the impost of fee. But then, as pointed out, in
some of the cases noticed earlier the registration fee has
been taken to stand on a different footing altogether. In
the case of such a fee the test of quid pro quo is not be
satisfied with such direct, close or proximate co-
relationship as in the case of many other kinds of fees. By
and large registration fee is charged as a regulatory
measure.
The history of the marketing legislation was traced by
Venkatarama Aiyar J. in the case of P. P. Kutti Keya and
others v. The State of Madras and others.(1) A number of
Writ Petitions were disposed of by one judgment delivered on
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10-7-1953. Appeals in some of these Writ Petitions were
brought to this Court in the case of M.C.V. S. Arunachala
Nadar etc. v. The State of Madras & others.(2) Al- though
the Courts were concerned mainly with the question of the
constitutional validity of the marketing law which is beyond
any pale of challenge now, it would be interesting to note
that the Madras High Court had taken the view that the funds
raised from the merchants for construction of a market in
substance amounted to an exaction of a tax. We are not going
to approve such a narrow view in relation to the application
of the amounts realized by market fees, yet we are not going
to make it too broad either, so as to take within its sweep
any remote service which may ultimately or tangentically be
of some benefit to the grain trade in the market. Subba Rao
J., as he then was, speaking for the Court in Arunachala
Nadar’s. case (supra) traced the history of the marketing
legislation at pages 95-96 and pointed out at page 98:-"The
Act, therefore, was the result of a long exploratory
investigation by experts in the field, conceived and enacted
to regulate the buying and selling of commercial crops by
providing suitable and regulated markets by eliminating
middlemen and bringing face to face to the producer and the
buyer so that they may meet on equal terms, thereby
eradicating or at any rate reducing the scope for
exploitation in dealings." At page 102 is to be found some
discussion with regard to the licence fees which, says the
learned Judge, "do not appear to be so high as to cripple
the trader’s business." The question of charge of the market
fee apart from the licence fee did not fall for
consideration in this case. The Bombay
1242
Marketing Statute came to be considered in the case of
Mohammad Hussain Gulam Mohammad and another v. The State of
Bombay and another.(1) Wanchoo J., as he then was, speaking
for the Court repelled the attack at page 669 on section 11
of the Bombay Act which gives power to the Market Committee
subject to the provisions of the rules and subject to such
maxima as may be prescribed to levy fees on the agricultural
produce bought and sold by licensees in the market area. The
attack was that the impost was in the nature of sales tax.
It was repelled on the ground that:-
"Now there is no doubt that the market committee
which is authorised to levy this fee renders services
to the licensees, particularly when the market is
established. Under the circumstances it cannot be held
that the fee charged for services rendered by the
market committee in connection with the enforcement of
the various provisions of the Act and the provisions
for various facilities in the various markets
established by it, is in the nature of sales tax. It is
true that the fee is calculated on the amount of
produce bought and sold but that in our opinion is only
a method of realising fees for the facilities provided
by the Committee."
Since the market was not found to have been properly
established it was held that the market committee could not
enforce any of the pro visions of the Act or the Rules or
the bye-laws. Therefore, the question of the rate of market
fee did not fall for consideration. The Bihar Statute came
up for consideration of this Court in the case of Lakhan
Lal and others etc. v. The State of Bihar and others.
Bachawat J., upheld the validity of the various actions
taken by the State Government under the Act and the Rules
and finally said at page 539:-"But there is no material on
the record to show that the Government acted unreasonably or
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that the market is so wide that the sale and purchase of
agricultural produce within it cannot be effectively
controlled by the market committee or that the growers
within the area cannot conveniently bring their produce to
the market yards." In contrast in the present case the whole
of the State has been divided into different market areas,
although the principal market yard is only one in one area
with some sub market yards appertaining to it. We do not
mean to suggest in pointing out this difference that the
declaration of the whole market area is unreasonable. But
the market fee has to be realized from the traders on the
purchase of the agricultural produce in the market which
consists of the market yards and some purchas-
1243
ing centres established at some other places in the area due
to the urgency or exigency of the situation. Such a fee
cannot be utilised for the purpose of rendering all sorts of
facilities and services for the benefit of the
agriculturists throughout the area. It may be very necessary
to render such services to the agriculturists; rather, they
must be rendered. But the laudable and in itself cannot
justify the means to achieve that end if the means have got
no sanction of the law. In the Bihar case it was found at
page 540:-
"The market committee has appointed a dispute
subcommittee for quick settlement of disputes. It has
set up a market intelligence unit for collecting and
publishing the daily prices and information regarding
the stock, arrival and despatches of agricultural
produce. It has provided a grading unit where the
techniques of grading agricultural produce is taught.
the contract form for purchase and sale is
standardised. The provisions of the Act and the Rules
are enforced through inspectors and other staff
appointed by the market committee. The fees charged by
the market committee are correlated to the expenses
incurred by it for rendering these services. The market
fee, of 25 naya paise per Rs. 100/ worth of
agricultural produce and the licence fees prescribed by
Rules 71 and 73 are not excessive. The fees collected
by the market committee form part of the market
committee fund which is set apart and earmarked for the
purposes of the Act. There is sufficient quid pro quo
for the levies and they satisfy the test of "fee" as
laid down in Commissioner Hindu Religious Endowments
Madras v. Sri Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur
Mutt-[954] S.C.R., 1005."
It would be noticed that even the rate of 25 paise per
hundred rupees had to satisfy all these tests. In the
instant cases we are concerned with the rates of market fee
which are much higher than the Bihar rate. Correlative
service also, therefore, must satisfy the tests of rendering
more services in the market area. The fund cannot be
permitted to be utilised for an end, such as, augmenting the
agricultural produce etc., if it has no reasonably direct or
close connection with the services rendered to the payers of
the fee.
From a conspectus of the various authorities of this
Court we deduce the following principles for satisfying the
tests for a valid levy of market fees on the agricultural
produce bought or sold by licensees in a notified market
area:-
(1) That the amount of fee realised must be
earmarked for rendering services to the
licensees in the notified
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1244
market area and a good and substantial
portion of it must be shown to be expanded
for this purpose.
(2) That the services rendered to the licensees
must be in relation to the transaction of
purchase or sale of the agricultural produce.
(3) That while rendering services in the market
area for the purpose of facilitating the
transactions of purchase and sale with a view
to achieve the objects of the marketing
legislation it is not necessary to confer the
whole of the benefit on the licensees but
some special benefits must be conferred on
them which have a direct, close and
reasonable correlation between the licensees
and the transactions.
(4) That while conferring some special benefits
on the licensees it in permissible to render
such service in the market which may be in
the general interest of all concerned with
the transactions taking place in the market.
(5) That spending the amount of market fees for
the purpose of augmenting the agricultural
produce, its facility of transport in
villages and to provide other facilities
meant mainly or exclusively for the benefit
of the agriculturists is not permissible on
the ground that such service in the long run
go to increase the volume of transactions in
the market ultimately benefitting the traders
also. Such an indirect and remote benefit to
the traders is in no sense a special benefit
to them.
(6) That the element of quid pro quo may not be
possible, or even necessary, to be
established with arithmetical exactitude but
even broadly and reasonably it must be
established by the authorities who charge the
fees that the amount is being spent for
rendering services to those on whom falls the
burden of the fee.
(7) At least a good and substantial portion of
the amount collected on account of fees, may
be in the neighbourhood of two-thirds or
three-fourths, must be shown with reasonable
certainty as being spent for rendering
services of the kind mentioned above.
1245
In the light of the principles culled out and
enunciated above, we now proceed to examine the relevant
provisions of the Act and the rules framed thereunder as in
force in the States of Punjab and Haryana. We shall examine
the relevant provisions with reference to the Punjab Act and
the Rules and will only refer to those of Haryana when some
difference of some significance or consequence has got to be
pointed out.
Under clause (f) of section 2 of the Act "dealer" is
defined to mean :-
"any person who within the notified market area
sets up, establishes or continues or allows to be
continued any place for the purchase, sale, storage or
processing of agricultural produce notified under sub-
section (l) of section 6 or purchases, sells, stores or
processes such agricultural produce."
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Clause (hh) inserted by Punjab Act 4O of 1976 says:-
"licensee" means a person to whom a licence is
granted under section 10 and the rules made under this
Act and includes any person who buys or sells
agricultural produce and to whom a licence is granted
as Kacha Arhtia or commission agent or otherwise but
does not include a person licensed under section 13."
As per clause (i):-
market" means a market established and regulated
under this Act for the notified market area, and
includes a market proper, a principal market yard and
sub-market yard."
The definition of "market proper" is to be found in clause
(k) to mean:-
"any area including all lands with the buildings
thereon, within such distance of the principal market
or sub-market yard, as may be notified in the official
gazette by the State Government, to be a market
proper."
"Notified market area" in clause (b) means any area notified
under section 6 and clause (n) provides:-
" "Principal market yard" and "sub-market yard"
mean an enclosure, building or locality declared to be
a principal market yard and sub-market yard under
section 7."
As already stated the State Agricultural Marketing Board is
constituted under section 3 and while enumerating the powers
and duties of the
1246
Board it is provided in sub-section (9) that "The Board
shall exercise superintendence and control over the
Committees." The provision of "Declaration of notified
market area" is to be found in section 6(1) which empowers
the State Government to declare the area notified under
section 5 or any portion thereof to be a notified market
area for the purposes of the Act in respect of the
agricultural produce notified under section 5 or any part
thereof. As already pointed out the whole of the State was
intended to be divided in various market areas and was also
declared as such under section 6. Under sub-section (3) of
section 6 after the declaration of the notified market area
no person can establish or continue any place for the
purchase, sale, storage and processing of the agricultural
produce except under a licence granted in accordance with
the provisions of the Act, the Rules and the byelaws. A
dispute arose between the parties before us as to whether
the licence is granted for the whole of the area or for
particular places therein. On examining Form in the Rules
meant for grant of licence under section 10 we find that the
licence is granted for one or more places of business
specified in column 6 situated in a particular notified
market area named at the top of the licence. There will be
no sense in specifying the place of business in the licence
if the licensee is to be permitted to establish his place of
business any where in a notified market area which is too
big and extensive for the control and supervision of a
particular market committee. Market yards are declared under
section 7 and for each notified market area there can be one
principal market yard and one or more sub-market yards as
may be necessary. The marginal note of section 8 is "No
private market to be opened in or near places declared to be
markets." There is some difference in the provisions of the
Act as introduced by the Haryana Amendment in relation to
the establishment of notified market area, declaration of
market yards and the inhibition on any person to establish
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or continue any place for the purchase "sale, storage and
processing of any agricultural produce." There was also a
controversy before us as to the exact interpretation of the
language of the two Statutes in relation to such inhibition.
But for the purposes of the cases before us it is not
necessary to further encumber the judgment by attempting to
reconcile by harmonious construction the various provisions
of the two Acts in relation to this matter. Suffice it to
say that there is no special provision in the Statute for
establishment of markets or markets proper as per the
definition contained in clauses (i) and (k) of section 2 of
the Act, yet it is reasonable to assume that the intention
of the legislature is to constitute the market yards as the
market proper and ordinarily and generally the market would
be the same but may
1247
include some other places where transactions of purchase of
agricultural produce by the traders from the producers has
been allowed in order to avoid rush in the precincts of the
market proper. But one thing is certain that the whole of
the market area in no sense can be equated with market or
market proper. No body can be allowed to establish a
purchasing centre of his own at any place he likes in the
market area without there being such a permission or
authority from the Market Committees. After all the whole
object of the Act is the supervision and control of the
transactions of purchase by the traders from the
agriculturists in order to prevent exploitation of the
latter by the former. The supervision and control can be
effective only in specified localities and places and not
throughout the extensive market area.
We have already pointed out that there is no separate
notification or declaration establishing a market or market
proper. But Rule 24(1) in both the States framed under the
Act provides that:-"All agricultural produce brought into
the market for sale shall be sold by open auction in the
principal or sub-market yard." This also indicates that
market is generally the principal and sub-market yards. The
benefit of market fee, therefore, has to be correlated with
the transactions taking place at the specified place in the
market area and not in the whole of the area.
Sections 9 to 10A deal with the procedure of taking out
licences, The State Government is empowered under section ll
to establish a market committee for every notified market
area and to specify its headquarters. The question of
constitution of committees is dealt within section 12. The
duties and powers of a market committee are enumerated in
section 13. It would be seen from clause (a) of subsection
(l) of section 13 that it is the duty of the committee to
establish a market in the notified market area "providing
such facilities for persons visiting it in connection with
the purchase, sale, storage, weighment and processing of
agricultural produce concerned as the Board may from time to
time direct." This also indicates that the Committee is
primarily concerned with providing facilities in the market
for persons visiting it and in connection with the
transactions taking place there.
Now we come to the most important section viz section
23. It read as follows:-
"A Committee shall, subject to such rules as may
be made by the State Government in this behalf, levy on
ad-valorem basis fees on the agricultural produce
bought or sold by licensees in the notified market area
at a rate not exceeding three rupees for every one
hundred rupees:-
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1248
Provided that-
(a) no fee shall be leviable in respect of any
transaction in which delivery of the
agricultural produce bought or section in
which delivery is actually made."
(b) a fee shall be leviable only on the parties
to a transaction in which delivery is
actually made."
There is a slight variation in section 23 as amended by
Haryana Act 21 of 1973. Therein some market fee may be
charged on the agricultural produce even brought for
processing by licensees in the notified area. But we are not
concerned with the charge of such a fee in any of these
cases.
Rule 29 of the Punjab Rules says:-
"Levy and collection of fees on the sale and
purchase of agricultural produce.
(1) Under section 23 a Committee shall levy fees
on the agricultural produce bought or sold by licensees
in the notified market area at the rate to be fixed by
the Board from time to time.
Provided that no such fees shall be levied on the
same agricultural produce more than once in the same
notified market area. A list of such fees shall be
exhibited in some conspicuous place at the office of
the Committee concerned:
........................................................
(2) The responsibility of paying the fees
prescribed under sub-rule (l) shall be of the buyer and
if he is not a licensee then of the seller who may
realise the same from the buyer. Such fees shall be
leviable as soon as an agricultural produce is bought
or sold by a licensee."
The Haryana Rule is substantially the same.
Reading section 23 along with Rule 29 it would be
noticed that the power of the Committee to levy fees is
subject to the Rules as may be made by the State Government.
The fee is levied on ad-valorem basis at a rate which cannot
exceed the maximum, mentioned in section 23 by the
legislature. But the power to fix the rate from time to time
within the maximum limit has been conferred on the Board and
the Committee is merely bound to follow it. One of the
arguments before us on behalf of the appellants and the
petitioners was that it was the Board which fixed the rate
of Rs. 2/- first and thereafter Rs. 3/-
1249
per hundred rupees. The Committee abdicated its function in
this regard and, therefore, the levy of fee is contrary to
the principle of law laid down by this Court in the case of
State of Punjab and another v. Hari Krishan Sharma(l). But
the distinction between the said case and the present one is
that under the former there was no provision in section 5(l)
of the Punjab Cinemas (Regulation) Act of 1952 that the
power of the licensing authority to grant licence was
subject to any rule, the rule in its turn providing an over
riding power in the State Government in the matter of grant
of licence. The control of the Government provided in sub-
section (2) was of a limited kind. On the other hand section
23 in express language controls the power of Committee to
levy fees subject to the rules. The power given to the Board
to fix the rate of market fees from time to time under rule
29 is not ultra vires the provisions of the Act, as in our
opinion sub-section (9) of section 3 confers power on the
Board to exercise superintendence and control over the
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Committees, which power, in the context and the scheme of
the marketing law will take within its ambit the power
conferred on the Board under rule 29(1).
It is further to be pointed out that the fee levied is
not on the agricultural produce in the sense of imposing any
kind of tax or duty on the agricultural produce Nor is it a
tax on the transaction of purchase or sale. The levy is an
impost on the buyer of the agricultural produce in the
market in relation to transactions of his purchase. The
agriculturists are not required to share any portion of the
burden of this fee. In case the buyer is not a licensee then
the responsibility of paying the fees is of the seller who
may realise the same from the buyer. But such a contingency
cannot arise in respect of the transactions of sale by an
agriculturist of his agricultural produce in the market to a
dealer who must be a licensee. Nor was any such eventuality
occurring in any of the cases before us was brought to our
notice. Probably such an alternative provision was meant to
be made for outside buyers who are not licensees when they
buy the agricultural produce from or through the licensees.
Any way we are not concerned with that question.
Under section 27(1):-
"All moneys received by a Committee shall be paid
into a fund to be called the Market Committee Fund and
all expenditure incurred by the Committee under or for
the purposes of this Act shall be defrayed out of such
fund, and any surplus remaining after such expenditure
has been met shall be invested in such manner as may be
prescribed."
1250
Every Market Committee, is obliged under sub-section section
(2) (a) of section 27 to pay out of its fund to the
Marketing Board as contribution such percentage of its
income derived from licence fee, market fee and fines levied
by the courts as specified in sub-clause(i) and (ii). The
purpose of this contribution as mentioned in sub-section
2(a) is to enable the Board to defray expenses of the office
establishment of the Board and such other expenses incurred
by it in the interest of Committees in general. The income
of almost all the Market Committees were several lakhs of
rupees per year and, therefore, each is required to pay 30
per centum of its income to the Board by virtue of the
amendment brought about by Punjab Act 4 of 1978 Under
section 25 all receipts of the Board are to be credited into
a fund to be called the Marketing Development Fund. Purposes
for which the Marketing Development Fund. Purposes for
which the Marketing Development Fund may be expanded are
enumerated in section 26 and the purposes for which the
Market Committee Funds may be expended are catalogued in
section 28 We think we shall have to read both the sections
in full one by one. First we refer to section 28 which runs
as follows:-
Subject to the provisions of section 27 the Market
Committee Funds shall be expended for the following
purposes:-
(i) acquisition of sites for the market;
(ii) maintenance and improvement of the market;
(iii)construction and repair of buildings which
are necessary for the purposes of the market
and for the health convenience and safety of
the persons using it.
(iv) provision and maintenance of standard weights
and measures;
(v) pay. leave allowances, gratuities,
compassionate allowances and contributions
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towards leave allowances, compensation for
injuries and death resulting form accidents
while on duty, medical aid, pension or
provident fund of the persons employed by the
Committee.
(vi) payment of interest on loans that may be
raised for purpose of the market and the
provisions of a sinking fund in respect of
such loans;
(vii)collection and dissemination of information
regarding all matters relating to crop
statistics and marketing in respect of the
agricultural produce concerned’
1251
(viii)providing comforts and facilities, such as
shelter, shade, parking accommodation and
water for the persons, draught cattle,
vehicles and pack animals coming or being
brought to the market or on construction and
repair of approach roads; culverts, bridges
and other such purposes;
(ix) expenses incurred in the maintenance of the
offices and in auditing the accounts of the
Committees;
(x) propaganda in favour of agricultural
improvements, and thrift;
(xi) production and betterment of agricultural
produce;
(xii)meeting any legal expenses incurred by the
Committee;
(xiii)imparting education in marketing or
agriculture;
(xiv)payments of travelling and other allowances
to the members and employees of the
Committee, as prescribed:
(xv) loans and advances to the employees;
(xvi)expenses of and incidental to elections; and
(xvii)with the previous sanction of the Board, any
other purpose which is calculated to promote
the general interests of the Committee or the
notified market area or with the previous
sanction of the State Government, any purpose
calculated to promote the national or public
interest."
Let us first scan these clauses one by one on the
footing that the Market Committee Fund will ordinarily and
generally and almost wholly will be created out of the
income of a particular Market Committee on account of market
fees realised by it from the traders in the market. A
portion of it may be on account of fines, licence fees, from
weighment, arbitration fees etc. But those amounts compared
to the huge realisations on account of market fees would be
almost negligible. By and large the purposes enumerated in
clauses (i) to (ix) are relatable to the service to be
rendered in the market in relation to the transactions of
purchase and sale of the agricultural produce. We shall deal
with the problem of payment of interest on loans that may be
raised for purposes of the market as mentioned in clause
(vi) shortly hereinafter. Apropos clause (viii) the
attention of all concerned must be focussed here because the
last part of this clause had led the autho-
1252
rities and also the High Court to think that construction of
link roads, culverts and bridges any where in a notified
market area is covered by this clause. In our opinion it is
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not so. In the context of the language of all the clauses
preceding clause (viii) and clause (viii) itself it is plain
that what is meant by "construction and repair of approach
roads; culverts, bridges" is only for the purpose of the
facility of going into the market from the nearest public
road. Supposing a market has been established consisting of
principal market yard or sub-market yards at a particular
place where there is no facility for the carts or the trucks
and other vehicles to go, then approach roads, and if
necessary even culverts and bridges may be constructed, or
repaired out of the Market Committee Fund. Such an
expenditure within the limited limit will be with the object
of facilitating the taking place of the transactions of
purchase and sale in the market and will confer some special
benefits to the traders apart from a share of the benefit
going to the agriculturists who are not required to share
any burden of the market fee. But as we have pointed out
above, if one were to give a very wide meaning to this
phrase of construction and repair of approach roads,
culverts and bridges to say that such construction can be
permitted any where in the market area for the facility of
the agriculturists which ultimately will benefit the traders
also, then the whole concept of correlation of fee and its
character of having an element of quid pro quo will dwindle
down and become an empty formality. Uplift of villages and
helping the agriculturists by all means is the duty and the
obligation of the State no doubt and it has to do it by
incurring expenses out of the public exchequer consisting of
the income from various kinds of taxes etc.
One may not have any serious objection to the items of
expenditure mentioned in clauses (xii), (xiv), (xv) and
(xvi). But the other clauses do require some careful
examination. Obviously clause (x) and clause (xi) cannot
form the items of expenditure out of the market fees. In
face of the view of the law expressed by us above the
propaganda in favour of the agricultural improvement and
expenditure for production and betterment of agricultural
produce will be in the general interest of agriculture in
the market area. The whole of the State is divided into
market areas. So long as the concept of fee under our
Constitution remains distinct and limited in contrast to tax
such expenditure out of the market fee cannot be
countenanced in law. The first part of clause (xiii) may be
justified in the sense of imparting education in marketing
to the staff of the Market Committee. But imparting
education in agriculture in general cannot be correlated
with the market fee. The first part of clause (xvii) is too
vague to merit any
1253
discussion on the language of the clause itself until and
unless we are faced with concrete examples of such
expenditure. But how ill-conceived the second part of clause
(xvii) is, is abundantly clear from the decisions of the
Punjab High Court mentioned above and to be discussed
shortly hereinafter. Is it permissible to spend the market
fees realised from the traders for any purpose calculated to
promote the national or public interest ? Obviously not. No
Market Committee can be permitted to utilise the fund for an
ulterior purpose howsoever benevolent, laudable and
charitable the object may be. The whole concept of fee will
collapse if the amount realised by market fees could be
permitted to be spent in this fashion. We may, however,
mention one matter pointedly in connection with the Market
Committee Fund. Under section 32 the Committee may borrow
money for carrying on the purposes for which it is
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established on the security of any property vested in and
belonging to the Committee. It may obtain a loan from the
State Government or the Board. In the various figures and
charts submitted before us it was shown that the Market
Committees had raised money by loan and other methods. That
also will form the market committee fund. Technically and
legally, therefore, one may not have any objection to the
expenditure of such money for the purposes mentioned in
clauses (x), (xi) (xiii) and (xvii). As we indicated above
clause (vi) provides for payment of interest on loans, but
that is confined to loans that may be raised for purposes of
the market and not for any other purpose, whereas, the power
of the Committee to raise loans under section 32 is very
wide. The Act, however, is silent as to where from interest
will be paid or the principal will be returned in regard to
the amount of loan raised for a purpose other than the
purpose of the market. Since we find that the matter has
proceeded at various stages in the High Court as also in
this Court under a great confusion of the correct position
of law, we do not propose to express any opinion in this
regard at this stage. Nor do we propose to strike any clause
of section 28 as being unconstitutional merely on the ground
that the expenditure authorised therein goes beyond the
scope of the purpose of the utilisation of the market fees.
The authorities have to bear this in mind and on a proper
occasion the matter will have to be dealt with by courts in
the light of this judgment where a concrete case comes of
raising of a loan, spending the money so raised which cannot
be reasonably connected with the purposes for which the
market fee can be spent, as to whether such a loan can be
repaid or interest on it can be paid out of the realizations
of the market fees.
One of the points mooted before us was as to how far
the market committees can be compelled to part with 30% of
their income in favour of the Marketing Board. If so, for
what purposes the Board
1254
fund, namely, the Marketing Development Fund can be
expanded. It is to be remembered that market fee is levied
by each and every Market Committee separately in its own
area and if a good and substantial portion of this fee has
got to be expanded for rendering services in the area to the
payers of the fee in relation to the transactions taking
place therein, then logically speaking it flows from it that
any money paid to the Board out of the collections of the
market fee has also got to be expended in the very same area
of the particular Market Committee. But such a strict
construction from a practical point of view is not possible.
The Board in the State is the Central Controlling and
superintending authority over all the Market Committees, the
primary function of which is to render service in the
market. Parting with 30% income by a Market Committee in
favour of the Board is not so excessive or unreasonable so
as to warrant any interference with the law in this regard
on the ground of violation of the principle of quid pro quo
in the utilisation of the market fee realised from the
traders in the market area. We would, however, like to
emphasise that the Marketing Development Fund can only be
expended for the purposes of the Market Committees in a
general way, or to be more accurate, as far as practicable,
for the purposes of the particular Market Committee which
makes the contribution.
We shall now read section 26 of the Act providing for
purposes for which the Marketing Development Fund may be
expended. It reads as follows:-
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"The Marketing Development Fund shall be utilised
for the following purposes:-
(i) better marketing of agricultural produce;
(ii) marketing of agricultural produce on
cooperative lines;
(iii)collection and dissemination of market rates
and news;
(iv) grading and standardisation of agricultural
produce;
(v) general improvements in the markets or their
respective notified market areas;
(vi) maintenance of the office of the Board and
construction and repair of its office
buildings, rest-house and staff quarters;
1255
(vii)giving aid to financially weak Committees in
the shape of loans and grants;
(viii)payment of salary, leave allowance,
gratuity, compassionate allowance,
compensation for, injuries or death resulting
from accidents while on duty, medical aid,
pension or provident fund to the persons
employed by the Board and leave and pension
contribution to Government servants on
deputation;
(ix) travelling and other allowances to the
employees of the Board, its members and
members of Advisory Committees;
(x) propaganda, demonstration and publicity in
favour of agricultural improvements;
(xi) production and betterment of agricultural
produce;
(xii)meeting any legal expenses incurred by the
Board;
(xiii) imparting education in marketing or
agriculture;
(xiv)construction of godowns;
(xv) loans and advances to the employees;
(xvi)expenses incurred in auditing the accounts of
the Board; and
(xvii)with the previous sanction of the State
Government, any other purpose which is
calculated to promote the general interests
of the Board and the Committee; or the
national or public interest.
On a parity of the reasoning which we have applied in
the case of Market Committee Fund we may point out that the
Market Development Fund constituted primarily and mainly out
of the contributions by the Market Committees from
realisations of market fees, can also be expended for the
purposes of the market in the notified market area in
relation to the transactions of purchase and sale of the
agricultural produce and for no other general purpose or in
the general interests of the agriculture or the
agriculturists. On that basis we may, as at present advised
hold as valid the purposes mentioned in clauses (i), (ii),
(iii), (iv), first part of clause (v) clauses (vi), (vii),
(viii), (ix), (xii), first part of clause (xiii), clauses
(xiv), (xv) and (xvi). At the same time we hold that the
Marketing Development Fund constituted out of the Market
fees cannot be expended for the purposes mentioned in second
part of clause (v), clauses (x), (xi), second part of clause
(xiii) and clause (xvii). We do not propose to strike down
these provisions as being constitutionally invalid as the
purpose of the
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1256
law will be served by restricting the operation of section
26 in the manner we have done.
We now proceed to examine the decisions of the High
Court in the light of the principles of law enunciated
above. The first decision in the case of M/s Hanuman Dall &
General Mills (supra) is the decision of a Division Bench of
the High Court. It should be recalled that by this judgment
delivered on 8-11-1974 the High Court maintained the raising
of the market fee from Rs. 1.50 to Rs. 2/- in Haryana but
struck down the rise from Rs. 1.50 to Rs. 2.25 in Punjab. In
the cases before us a lot of new materials contained in new
statements and charts were filed before us on either side.
We shall examine only a few of those materials and that too
very cursorily as in our view no useful purpose will be
served, nor is it possible to do so for the first time in
this Court, by their thorough examination. The very basis of
the materials submitted on either side seems to be not well
grounded on a correct appreciation of law. Too many disputes
of facts have been raised before us. It is not possible to
resolve all of them nor do we find that it will be useful to
do that exercise. We shall presently show that even on the
materials placed before the High Court and on the findings
recorded by it, many of which do not seem to be in dispute,
the requirement of law is not satisfied to the extent it is
essential in a case of this nature.
In the case of Hanuman Dall and General Mills (supra)
the High Court examined many of the leading and important
judgments of this Court which we have reviewed, earlier and
also placed reliance upon an earlier Division Bench decision
of the same High Court in Ram Sarup v. The Punjab State. In
para 31 of the judgment at page 12 the view of the High
Court-"that the amount of fees so collected are not to be
spent exclusively for rendering services to the payers of
the fees but can also be utilised for carrying out the
purposes or objects of the Act under which they are levied,"
is not quite correct. In the same paragraph the High Court
felt constrained to add that the amount cannot, however, be
utilised for purposes which have no connection with the main
purposes of the Act for which fee is levied, nor can it be
spent for carrying out the governmental functions of the
State. If many of the purposes mentioned in the Act, as we
have shown above, are outside the ambit of the service
element and fall within the realm of the governmental
functions, then it is plain that to say by generalisation
that the fee money can be spent for the purposes or objects
of the Act is not quite correct. The High Court has
extracted section
1257
28 of the Act but has failed to scan the effect of the
various purposes in some of the clauses.
After referring to the income and expenditure
statements of Market Committee, Hissar from 1969-70 to 1973-
74 the conclusion of fact drawn at page 15 is that the
market fee constitutes more than 80% of the income of the
Market Committee and the amount spent on "works" is nearly
one-half of the total expenditure. The further finding is
"the major item on which the amount has been spent under the
head ’works’ consists of the amount deposited with the
public works department, Hissar, as contribution for
construction of village link roads." On that finding itself
it is manifest that Public Works Department was carrying out
the governmental functions of construction of roads
including village link roads spread throughout the whole of
the notified market area of Hissar. The said link roads
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could not be taken to be approach roads within the meaning
of clause (viii) of section 28 of the Act as seems to be the
view of the High Court. The error of law becomes writ large
in the last sentence occurring in paragraph 34 of the
judgment at page 15 which says:-
"In any case, the construction of roads within the
notified market area is a work of Public importance and
promotes the general interest of the committee and the
notified market area which is one of the purposes
enumerated in Cl. (xvii) of Section 26 of the Act."
The High Court further proceeds to say:-
"After giving my careful consideration, I am of
the opinion that the expenditure on the construction of
link roads for which amounts were deposited with the
Public Works Department is fully justified as it is for
the benefit of the growers, the licensed dealers and
the general public and promotes the interests of the
notified market area."
The High Court seems to be of the view that since
transportation is very essential for the development of a
market and to enable the growers of the agricultural produce
to bring the same to the market, the construction of link
roads becomes an essential purposes of the market
committees. It may be so but the purpose cannot be allowed
to be achieved at the cost of the market fee we realised
from the dealers. The High Court point out that the money
cannot be spent in construction of the government activities
for providing main roads in the State. How, then, the Market
Committees can be made to contribute a very big chunk of
their market fee income in construction of the link roads
throughout all villages ? To push the matter logically,
1258
if a link road is to be constructed from a village to the
main road for enabling an agriculturist to transport his
produce upto the main road then the Market Committee should
be under an obligation to construct or at least to maintain
the main road also in order to enable that agriculturist to
react the market which may be at distance of say 20 miles
from the link road. It is plain that construction of such
link road is as much a part of the governmental activity as
that of the main roads.
It is interesting to find out from paragraph 36 of the
judgment that the Market Committees were made to pay
donations to educational institutions imparting general
education. The Market Committee, Hissar, spent Rs.
1,07,794/- on the water supply scheme for a village. Even
the High Court was constrained to disapprove of this. It
also spent a sum of Rs. 6,00,000/- for the construction of a
Panchayat Bhawan. Many other instances are mentioned in
paragraph 37 of the judgment which show that the Market
Committees were getting enormous income from market fees and
they were made to squander away a good portion of that money
unauthorisedly, although none of the purposes in itself was
objectionable or bad. Rather, they were very laudable. But
taking an overall view of the matter the High Court felt
persuaded in the case of Haryana to uphold the maximum limit
of Rs. 2/- by adding "no interference seems to be called for
at this time." In the case of Punjab, however, the
allegation of the petitioners before the High Court was that
the market committees were collecting lakhs of rupees every
month and the Marketing Board was collecting crores of
rupees. The Marketing Board was asked to contribute one
crore of rupees to the Guru Gobind Singh Medical College
which had been recently established at Faridkot. A good
portion of the money was already paid and the High Court was
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constrained to observe that "the State Government shall be
well advised to compensate the Agricultural Marketing Board
and the Market Committees for the misutilisation of their
funds for this unauthorised purposes". The High Court held
at page 19, column 2:-
"In the historical background, set out above, I am
convinced that the enhancement in the amount of fee
from one rupee and fifty paise to two rupees and
twenty-five paise per one hundred rupees was not
genuine and it was made with a view to enable the
market committees and the Agricultural Marketing Board
to reimburse themselves for the amounts which they were
directed to contribute to Guru Govind Singh Medical
College at Faridkot. The Market Committees were having
enough income and could meet their legitimate
requirements from the amounts of fees which were being
realised prior to the enhancement."
1259
The enhancement of fee from Re. 1/- to Rs. 1.50 was upheld
but the further increase to Rs. 2.25 was knocked down.
We may note here that in the batch of appeals we heard
there was no appeal from the judgment of the High Court in
the case of Hanuman Dall & General Mills. We may reasonably
assume, therefore, that the dealers of Haryana were
reconciled for payment of the market fees upto the maximum
limit of two rupees per hundred rupees. In the case of
Punjab, as we traced the history at the very outset, the
maximum fixed later was Rs. 2.20 by Act 14 of 1975. But by
telegraphic instructions issued by the Board the Market
Committees were asked to charge Rs. 2/- only with effect
from 23-8-1975. This was challenged before the High Court
but unsuccessfully in the case of Kewal Krishan Puri and
another v. The State of Punjab and others (supra). Civil
Appeal 1083 of 1977 is from this judgment of the High Court.
The Full Bench judgment in this case also suffers more or
less from the same kind of error in the approach of the
legal problem as is to be found in the earlier Division
Bench decision. In paragraph 13 of the judgment at page 352
the High Court repelled the attack on clauses (x), (xi) and
(xiv) of section 26 of the Act on the ground:-
"The broad object of the legislation like the
present one is only to protect the producers of
agricultural produce from being exploited by middlemen
and profiteers and to enable them to secure a fair
return of their produce. The Legislation like the
present one has its root in the attempt on the part of
the nation to provide a fair deal to the growers of
crops and also to find a market for its sale at proper
rates without reasonable chances of exploitation. If
this object is kept in view, then the clauses of which
the constitutionality has been challenged, would
certainly fall within the ambit of Entry 28. Clauses
(x), (xiii) and (xiv) would help the growers to make
improvements in the production of agricultural produce
with the result that their agricultural produce would
find a better market resulting in getting them high
price for their agricultural produce."
It is to be emphasised at this stage that the question
is not of the legislative competence to enact those clauses,
nor is there a question of the fee assuming the character of
a tax and therefore, its imposition being beyond the
legislative competence of the State Legislature. The precise
and the short question is whether the Market Committees and
the Board can be authorised to spend the amount realised by
market fees, as fee and fee alone for achieving all the
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objects of the Act when such expenditure cannot be justified
and sustained on the well-known
1260
concept of fee as pointed out by this Court in several
decisions. The impost must be correlated with the service to
be rendered to the payers of the fees in the sense and to
the extent we have pointed out above. Again the High Court
fell into an error in paragraph 15 of the judgment when,
while upholding the construction and repair of approach
roads, culverts and bridges in the larger sense of the term
it said:-
"If the approach roads, culverts or bridges are in
such a bad shape that they would become hindrance in
the mobility of the produce from one part of the
notified market area to the principal market yard, then
the worst sufferer would be the grower for whose
benefit the Act has been enacted."
The Full Bench approved the view of the Division Bench in
the earlier case as is apparent from paras 17 and 18 of the
judgment at pages 352 and 353.
We have said a bit earlier that the Market Committee
and the Board laboured under a mistaken notion that they
could spend the income from the market fee for all good
purposes and objects of the Act in the general interest of
agriculture and agriculturists in the village. We are going
to extract some of the averments made in the affidavit of
the Secretary of the Market Committee of Moga from the
judgment of the High Court at pages 354 and 355:-
"Besides the above, the answering-respondent has
undertaken the cleaning of mandis, lining of village
khals (water courses), link roads; constructions of
culverts and bridges; supply of pesticides and spray
pumps on subsidized basis as also the electrification
of villages. All these activities are going to cost the
answering-respondent an amount of several lakhs of
rupees."
"Para 8 of the writ petition is denied. It is
wrong to suggest that the Board and the answering-
respondent have already given Rs. 5 crores to the
Markfed without charging any interest. The fact of the
matter is that on account of the withdrawal of the
Cotton Corporation of India from the various markets,
the price of cotton came down suddenly. In order to
provide and ensure a reasonable price to the farmer,
the Government asked the Markfed to enter the market.
For this purpose, the Board contributed some amount of
money. So far as the answering-respondent is concerned,
it has not contributed any money at all. The answering-
respondent believes that the Board has contributed only
an amount of Rs. 1.43 crores and not 5 crores."
1261
"It may, however, be submitted that the entire
money collected by the Market Committees is being used
for the purposes envisaged under the Act."
"The Market Committees have to provide facilities
as envisaged under the Act. The petitioners had asked
for the copies of balance sheets. The balance sheets
were originally prepared when the accounts of the
Committees were being audited by "the Chartered
Accountants." Now, the accounts are being audited by
the Examiner, Local Fund Accounts which is a Government
Agency. The preparation of balance sheets involved
unnecessary expenditure and wastage of time and energy.
Consequently, the practice of preparing balance sheets
was given up a few years back."
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These paragraphs were placed before us also from the records
of Civil Appeal 1083 of 1977. After quoting the various
paragraphs from counter-affidavit the High Court says in
paragraph 20 of the judgment at page 355:-
"From the aforesaid specific averments made in the
written statement, referred to above, it is clear that
to carry out the purposes of the Act it had become
necessary to enhance the rate of the market fee and
such an enhancement stands fully justified."
When certain documents were placed before the High Court to
show that the Board was indulging in activities which had no
correlation to the object to be achieved under the Act and
that the enhancement of the market fee could not be
justified the High Court, in the first instance, did not
feel inclined to put absolute reliance upon those documents
as they were filed with the replication of the petitioners.
But it did not stop there. It proceeded further at page 356,
para 22 to say, on an impression of law which we have not
countenanced, that:-
"So far as Annexures W-11 and W-12 are concerned,
any expenditure incurred by the Marketing Board on the
setting up of the rice shellers or ginning factories or
by the Market Committees on the construction of the
link roads would not be inconsistent with the
provisions of the Act and the object to be achieved
under the Act. The setting up of the rice shellers
would be for the benefit of the producers and, as
earlier observed, construction of the link roads also
would be for their advantage. So far as Annexure W-10
1262
is concerned, there can be no gainsaying that giving of
donation for the Chief Minister’s Flood Relief Fund by
the Board or the Market Committee would not be
justified as the same has no correlation with the
object to be achieved under the Act and in case any
respect, it would certainly be unauthorised and
illegal. But, in the instant case, the petitioners have
failed to show that any amount was contributed towards
the Chief Minister’s Flood Relief Fund and that the
enhancement in the fee had any correlation with such a
contribution. In this view of the matter, on the basis
of Annexures W-10, W-11 and W-12, the enhancement in
the fee to be levied by the Committees cannot be struck
down."
In several Civil Writ Petitions filed in the High Court
by the dealers of the various Market Committees of Haryana
the challenge, was to the raising of the rate of market fee
from Rs. 2/- to Rs.3/-. The High Court rejected all those
petitions by the judgment dated 30-8-1978 which is the
subject matter of appeal in Civil Appeal No. 1708 of 1978
and the analogous ones. After referring to the earlier
judgments of the Court this judgment of the Division Bench
also proceeds on the same lines at it was bound to. To a
large extent we are saved from the unnecessary botheration
of examining the voluminously new materials placed before us
in view of the counter filed on behalf of the Haryana
Marketing Board in the High Court portions of which are
extracted in the judgment. It will be useful to give the
whole of the extract from the judgment of the High Court. It
runs as follows:-
"It is well known to every one that the recent
floods in Haryana were unprecedented and created havoc
in the State Almost one-third of Haryana was submerged
under water damaging the standing crops and uprooting
the inhabitants making them homeless. The State has to
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resort to quick measures, for removing the miseries of
the people and to rehabilitate them
.......................................................
.......................................................
The projected income from market-fee in the year 1977-
78 was Rs. 9 crores. But due to the floods at the old
rate of 2% it is expected to be Rs. 7.77 crores. The
Committees will only be able to achieve the projected
income of 1977-78 as anticipated in the beginning of
the year only if the fee is charged at enhanced rate of
3%. Only with the projected income the Board will be
able to provide the services envisaged by it to the
farmers of the area. The Board allot-
1263
ted works amounting to Rs. 8.53 crores in the year
1976-77, out of which the Board will be able to
complete the development works worth Rs. 5.62 crores
upto 31st March, 1978, leaving a spill over of Rs. 2.91
crores for the year 1978-79. In addition to this spill-
over, Board also anticipated to take new development
works amounting to Rs. 3 crores during 1978-79. The
projected income during the year 1978-79 taking into
account the enhanced rate of market-fee will be Rs.
6.20 crores whereas the expenditure will be to the tune
of Rs. 8.97 crores including the development works,
miscellaneous other services and the cost of
establishment. The deficit of Rs. 2.77 crores had to be
met by the Board by raising loan from other sources.
Thus even this enhanced fee will not be sufficient to
meet the expenditure which the Board proposes to incur
for the purposes under the Act. Thus the enhancement of
market-fee from 2% to 3% is wholly reasonable and
justified and has a reasonable correlation with the
services rendered or to be rendered."
Quoting passages from the earlier judgments of the High
Court, it upheld the levy of the fee @ Rs. 3/- per hundred
rupees and dismissed all the writ petitions.
The challenge by the dealers of the Moga Market
Committee by Civil Writ Petition No. 2015 of 1978 filed in
the High Court failed as per the judgment of the High Court
delivered on 18-5-1978 wherein the Full Bench decision was
followed. Special Leave Petition No. 2768 of 1978 has been
filed from the said judgment. The purposes enumerated in the
Full Bench decision and repeated in this judgment also for
the purpose of justifying the increase in the rate of fee
from Rs. 2/- to Rs. 3/- per hundred rupees are the stereo-
type ones including Rural Integrated Development Scheme,
night-shelter, link roads and bridges. Every body seems to
have allowed himself to be carried too far by the sentiment
of the laudable object of the Act of doing whatever is
possible to do under it for the amelioration of the
conditions and the uplift of the villagers and the
agriculturists. Undoubtedly the Act is primarily meant for
that purpose and to the extent it is permissible under the
law to achieve that object of utilising the money collected
by the market fee, it should be done. But if the law does
not permit carrying on of the sentiment too far for
achieving of all the laudable objects under the Act, then
primarily it becomes the duty of the Court to allow the law
to have an upper hand over the sentiment and not vice versa.
We must not be misunderstood to say that we are against the
sentiment expressed in the interests of the
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agriculturists. Nor are we opposed in the least to the
achievement of all the laudable objects envisaged under the
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Act. Let them all be achieved by all means known to law by
meeting the expenses after augmenting the public revenue or
by diverting the expenditure from wasteful or unimportant
channel to the more important one under the Act. But surely
we cannot countenance the achievement of all those objects
by utilising a good and substantial portion of the market
fee collections when the utilisation goes against the
concept of quid pro quo which is very essential in case of
fees. As we have already stated Civil Appeal 1616 of 1978
arised from the order of the High Court dated 18-9-1978
dismissing the connected Writ Petition filed by a few
hundred dealers of various Market Committees in the State of
Punjab challenging the increase of the market fee from Rs.
2/- to Rs. 3/-. Before us in the Writ Petitions not only the
increase of the rate from Rs. 2/- to Rs. 3/- has been
challenged but the previous increases have also been
challenged. For the reasons to be briefly stated hereinafter
we do not feel persuaded to interfere with the charging of
the market fee Rs. 2/- per hundred rupees by the various
Market Committees in the States of Punjab and Haryana. But
surely on the facts as they are, the increase of the rate
from Rs. 2/- to Rs. 3/- is not justified in law by any of
the Market Committees in either of the two States.
Mr. Tarkunde drew our attention to the report of the
Royal Commission submitted in 1928 and the recent Report of
the National Commission on Agriculture. It has been
emphasised in those reports that in order to make the
marketing system efficient and useful link and village roads
should be constructed providing transport facilities for the
transport of the agricultural produce to the marketing
centres. There cannot be any doubt that in any scheme of
development of Agriculture and marketing in a wide sense, a
chain of connections may be found between one activity or
the other. It is not only in regard to agriculture but it is
so in any other kind of production, distribution and
marketing. Our attention was drawn also to the use of the
word "secondary" or "indirect" in some of the decisions in
relation to the element of quid pro quo. But in our opinion
there is a misconception in understanding the true scope of
the matter and not drawing the dividing line at the
appropriate place for determining the real controversy.
Examples of trust cases were given before us that control of
the trustees is not for the personal benefit of the trustees
but for the beneficiaries, although the liability to pay the
fee is of the trustees. The misconception lies in the fact
that the impost of fee is not a personal impost on any
person in the sense that unconnected with any undertaking or
property or the like, it is just an impost on his person. It
is not so. When the trustee is charged fee for the benefit
of the
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religious institutions and the beneficiaries it is a benefit
to the trustee. Similarly, as pointed out in the Mining Act
and the factory cases charge of fee from the mine owners in
the area or the factory owners in the factory for the
purpose of developing and protecting the mines and the
factories is a service to the owners. If one were to push
the example of a factory beyond the limit of the conception
of fee, one could say that the fee charged from the factory
owners can be utilised for pushing end augmenting the output
of the raw-materials required in the manufacturing process
in the factory, it is also a benefit to the factory owner.
Is it reasonably possible to travel as wide as that? Neither
the Royal Commission nor the National Commission suggested
as to how the integrated development of marketing and the
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agricultural produce is to be financed. They were not
concerned with that aspect of the matter. None can have any
objection to the carrying out of the integrated development
but it must be carried out by legal means raising the
finance in a way known to law.
The improvements, checks, controls and regulations must
be carried out in the market or in its vicinity. Much of the
facilities provided in the market yards or around it will
also be for the direct benefit of the producers. But then,
being intimately connected with marketing operations the
benefit to the producers must be deemed to be special or
direct benefit to the traders also. Under the Marketing
Rules the auction cannot be conducted by any person other
than the person engaged by the Committee. [Rule 24(5)], and
weighments and measurements of agricultural produce intended
for sale are to be made through licensed weighments or
measures in the principal or a sub-market yard [vide Rule
28(2)]. Reading these Rules in the background of the
recommendations of the Commissions, and even otherwise, it
is plain they are meant for the protection of the
agriculturists. But since they are intimately connected with
the marketing operations, just like factory cases, they are
also meant for the special benefit of the traders. The
literal meaning of the phrase "quid pro quo" is "one for the
other" meaning thereby-"you charge the fee for the service."
Service to the mining area, factory, market or marketing
operations are services to the payer of the fee.
Mr. P.N. Lekhi, learned counsel for the State of
Haryana placed some new materials before us to show that big
projects of development of marketing had been undertaken in
India with the help of the World Bank loans. All very good,
we wish God speed to all these projects. The only check
which the law has to put is-"please don’t spread your net
too wide only on the traders. Keep it within bounds so long
your levy has got the character of fee. You may raise funds
by any other means known to law or to the economic world."
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Now we refer to some additional documents placed before
us. But before we do so we repeat what we have said above
that the materials placed on either side before us is so
voluminous and cumbersome that no definite finding with any
accuracy could be arrived at on that basis as there seems to
be disputes in regard to the nature and accuracy of many of
the figures either on the receipt side or on the expenditure
side. We have, however, referred to some of the admitted
facts even from the judgments of the High Court. We may
refer to a few more.
In the affidavit of Shri R. K. Singh, Director of
Marketing, Punjab and Secretary of Punjab State Agricultural
Board filed in the High Court giving rise to Civil Appeal
No. 1083/77, which is not a new material in that sense. It
was stated in paragraph 6:-
"It is submitted that respondent No. 3 is duty
bound to bring about general improvement of a notified
market area, production and betterment of agriculture
etc. Under the Act and the answering-respondent is duty
bound to approve such expenditure under the Act. It is
also submitted that electricity plays a major role in
the production and betterment of agriculture and for
the general improvement of area. In view of its
importance respondent No. 3 sought and respondent No.2
approved the expenditure on the electrification of the
villages situate within the jurisdiction of respondent
No. 3."
In the Writ Petition, respondent No. 2 was the
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Marketing Board and respondent No. 3 was the concerned
Marketing Committee. In the same case in the High Court
additional affidavit was filed by Shri Tirath Singh,
Chairman of the Punjab Board. It is stated in paragraph 7
that apart from development works in the budget estimates in
the year 1975-76, there were other development projects to
be taken in hand some of which were enumerated in that
paragraph. We may take up only two or three items out of the
same to show in contrast how one will be within the limits
of law and the others will widely beyond it. Item No. (iii)
reads as follows:-
"To provide Rest Houses, Cattle Sheds, Cart Sheds,
Light and Water arrangements in all the market yards."
A good portion of these facilities will be utilised by
the agriculturists who would be coming to the market yards
for sale of their produce. Yet in the view we have expressed
above it will be a service to the trader directly connected
with the marketing operations. In contrast we quote items
(x) and (xii):-
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(x) Continuation of programme of link-roads.
(xii) Improvement of agricultural production by
providing improved seeds, green manuring seeds, plant
protection equipment insecticides and pesticides."
One has to stretch one’s imagination almost to a breaking
point to say that the programme of link roads and
improvement of agricultural say production by the means
mentioned in item (xii) can all be carried out by the impost
of fee in the market.
In a new affidavit of Shri N. S. Bakshi filed in this
Court in Civil Appeal 1083 of 1977 it is stated in paragraph
6 that in the entire Khanna market notified area there is
one principal yard; two sub-yards and only two purchase
centres and no weighing bridge or any weighing facilities
has been provided by the Committee. It is stated in
paragraph 7 that "amount of Rs. 3/- lacs lying with the
Khanna Market Committee during March, 1978 in Banks was got
deposited in the Government Treasury under the orders and
directions of the Board." These facts are disputed. But we
are merely stating them for the future guidance of the
authorities that they should proceed in the matter
cautiously keeping in view the law laid down by this Court
in earlier cases, such as, Salvation Army case, and in the
light of this judgment. In the additional affidavit of Shri
K. K. Puri it is stated that from the information gathered
it was learnt that the Punjab Board had spent about a crore
of rupees by way of subsidy @ 75% for the metallic bins for
the use of the villagers for their domestic use; a crore for
air spray; five crores to the Punjab State Electricity
Board, one crore given to MARKFED, one and a half crore to
Soil Conservation Department and yet nine crores were lying
surplus with the various Market Committees. The figure may
be exaggerated but are not quite groundless. We are merely
quoting them for the future caution of the authorities
concerned. Puri has further pointed out in paragraph 17 of
his affidavit that in the Estimated Expenditure in the
proposed Budget of the Moga Committee for the years 1976-77
and 1977-78 several lakhs of rupees were shown for
insecticides and pesticides apart from other inadmissible
expenses. We may again pin-point the difference. If
insecticides and pesticides are for use at the place where
actually the marketing operations are carried on it would be
a justifiable expenditure. But if they are meant to be
supplied to the agriculturists for use at their village
homes or in their fields surely they cannot be valid
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expenditure out of the collections of the market fee.
Mr. Tarkunde filed an abstract of the statement of
income from market fee and licence fee and expenditure
incurred therefrom by
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the Market Committee, Hissar as worked out from Annexure R-I
to R-V filed in the High Court. It would be seen from this
abstract that in the year 1974-75 the income from market fee
was Rs. 24,08,141/- and from licence fee about Rs. 6,000/-
only. A sum of Rs. 7,89,670/- was contributed under section
27 of the Act to the Board and a sum of Rs. 14,73,732/- was
spent on Works including link roads. Similar was the
position in the year 1975-76. In 1976-77 income from licence
fee was only Rs. 16,000/- and odd and incomes from market
fee was Rs. 38,27,233 /-. A big chunk to the tune of Rs.
12,19,383/- went as contribution to the Board and Rs.
24,47,408/- were spent on works including link roads.
Similar abstracts were given in respect of other Market
Committees showing exactly the same position. Abstracts were
also given to us by Mr. Tarkunde showing the income of the
Haryana Board by contribution made by the various Market
Committees and the expenditure incurred therefrom. In the
abstract statement figures of expenditure both of admissible
and inadmissible items had been clubbed together. It is,
therefore, not possible to get any correct picture from
these abstracts.
How admittedly the authorities concerned have travelled
wide beyond limit for the application of the fee money will
be apparent from the counter affidavit of the Haryana Board
filed in the High Court giving rise to Civil Appeal 1700 of
1978. In paragraph 10(i) it is stated:-
"The construction of link roads within the
notified market area is a work of public importance and
promotes the general interest of the farmers, traders
and the notified market area which is one of the
purposes enumerated in clause XVII of section 28 of the
Act."
In para 10(ii) it is admitted:-
"Thus the enhancement of market fee from 2% to 3%
is wholly reasonable and has co-relation with the
services rendered or to be rendered. 65% of its income
had to be rightly deposited with the P.W.D. and the
Government, as the Committee had got its link roads
constructed through Government Agency and is still
getting so constructed."
It is thus a clear admission that 65% of the income has gone
by way of contribution to the P.W.D. fund for construction
of the link roads. It is in substance a contribution to the
Public Exchequer for helping the Government Agency in
performing its governmental functions and duties. In no way
such a contribution can be justified out of the mar-
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ket fee income. From Annexure R-II appended to the aforesaid
affidavit of the Board it would be seen that in the year
1974-75 a sum of Rs. 1,07,338/- was given as aid to animal
husbandry for the uplift of cattle wealth and its product.
This illustrates to what extent the concept of fee in lieu
of service has been stretched. A sum of Rs. 6,00,000/- and
odd was spent for improving the quality of cotton seeds for
seeds purposes. In a Gober Gas Plant Rs. 15,55,000/- were
invested. This item was sought to be explained before us by
Mr. Tarkunde that this expenditure was incurred with the
help of the subsidy received from the State and the Central
Governments. The scheme of the Gober Gas Plant was launched
for the promotion of interest of market area. It is not
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explained as to how it was connected with the marketing
operations in the area and how much was the subsidy and what
portion of the amount was spent out of the market fee
Income. Similarly in Annexure R-III from the statement of
income and expenditure of the Haryana Board for the year
1975-76 it would appear that a sum of Rs. 1,28,70,662/- was
spent "on general improvement in M.C. and other notified
area and construction of F.A.C.C." Apart from that the other
items of expenditure are a sum of Rs. 20,00,000/- in
purchase and acquisition of land for new mandies and Rs.
10,00,000/- and odd for purchase of land, construction of
building for Board’s office and staff quarters in the
mandies. Again in this year a sum of Rs. 95,00,000/- and odd
is shown to have been spent on Gober Gas plant. It may be
inclusive of the figure of the earlier year. Then from
Annexure R-IV, the statement for the year 1976-77, it will
be found that a sum of rupees one crore was given as loan to
Haryana Electricity Board. We have taken some of these items
just by way of example to illustrate that the authorities
took full liberty to treat the realisation from market fee
as a general realisation of tax which they were free to
spent in any manner they liked for the purposes of the Act,
the development of the area, for giving a filling to
agricultural production and so forth and so on. The sooner
the authorities are made to realise the correct position in
law the better it will be for all concerned.
But taking a reasonable and practical view of the
matter and on appreciation of the true picture of
justifiable and legal expenditure in relation to the market
fee income, even though it had to be done on the basis of
some reasonable guess work, we are not inclined to disturb
the raising of an imposition of the rate of market fee upto
Rs. 2/- per hundred rupees by the various Market Committees
and the Boards both in the State of Punjab and Haryana.
After all, considerable development work seems to have been
done by many Market
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Committees in their respective markets. The charging of fee
@ Rs. 2/-, therefore, is justified and fit to be sustained.
We accordingly do it. As pointed out earlier the dealers of
Haryana did not feel aggrieved when the High Court
maintained the raising of market fee to the extent of Rs.
2/- per hundred rupees. We are, however, not inclined to
uphold the raising of the fee from Rs. 2/- to Rs. 3/-, as on
the materials placed before us it is clear that this has
been done chiefly because of the wrong impression of law
that the amount of market fee can be spent for any
development work in the notified market area and specially
for the development of agriculture and the welfare of the
agriculturists. On the basis of the facts and figures placed
before us from the High Court records and also some new
materials filed here we have come to the conclusion that
there was no justification in raising the fee from Rs. 2/-
to Rs. 3/-. The High Court was wrong in maintaining this
rise on an erroneous view of the matter. We, therefore,
allow the appeals and the writ Petitions to the extent and
in the manner indicated above and direct the Market
Committees and the State Marketing Boards not to realize
market fee at the rate of Rs. 3/- per hundred rupees on the
basis of their impugned decisions and actions which have
been found to be invalid by us. We leave the parties to bear
their own costs throughout
Before we part with these cases we would like to
observe that in future if the market fee is sought to be
raised beyond the rate of Rs. 2/-per hundred rupees, proper
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budgets, estimates, balance-sheets showing the balance of
the money in hand and in deposit, the estimated income and
expenditure, etc. should carefully be prepared in the light
of this judgment. It may be, as was submitted before us,
that it is not imperative either for the Market Committees
or the Board to prepare balance-sheets because their
accounts are audited by government auditors but for the
purposes of raising the market fee any further, the balance-
sheets will give a true picture of the position also with
the budgets and estimates. Then, and then only there may be
a legal justification for raising the rate of the market fee
further to a reasonable extent. On drawing of the correct
balance-sheets and framing of the correct estimates and
budgets the authorities as also the State Government will be
able to know the correct position and to decide reasonably
as to what extent the raising of the market fee can be
justified taking on overall picture of the matter and
keeping in view the reason behind the restrictions of sales
tax law concerning the transactions of food-grains and the
other agricultural produce.
N.V.K. Appeals and petitions allowed.
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