Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SUDHIR CHANDRA NAWN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
WEALTH-TAX OFFICER, CALCUTTA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/04/1968
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
MITTER, G.K.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 59 1969 SCR (1) 108
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1970 SC 169 (6)
R 1970 SC 192 (5)
APL 1970 SC 999 (9)
RF 1972 SC1061 (61,89,100,139,174)
RF 1977 SC1657 (4)
F 1980 SC 271 (10,11)
R 1990 SC 85 (22)
ACT:
Wealth Tax Act, 1957, s. 3-Validity and scope of-
Constitution of India, Art. 246 Cls. (1) & (3); 7th Schedule
Entry 86 List I and Entry 49 List II-scope of-If Parliament
competent to legislate to levy wealth-tax on assets
including land and buildings.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner moved under Art. 32 for a writ to quash an
order of assessment and penalty and notices of demand for
recovery of tax for the years 1959-60, 1960-61 and 1961-62
under the Wealth Tax Act, 1957. It was contended, inter
alia, on his behalf that (i) Wealth tax is chargeable only
on the accretion of wealth during the financial year; (ii)
Parliament could not have intended that the same assets
should continue to be charged to tax year after year; (iii)
since the expression "net wealth" in s. 3 includes non-
agricultural lands and buildings of an assessee and power to
levy tax on lands and buildings is, reserved to the State
Legislatures by Entry 49 List II of the 7th Schedule to the,
Constitution, Parliament was incompetent to legislate for
the levy of wealth tax on the capital value of assets which
include non-agricultural lands and buildings; and
(iv) s. 7(1) of the Act was ultra vires.
HELD:That (i) The charge imposed by s. 3 is clearly on the
"not wealth on the corresponding valuation date’ and not on
the increase in the wealth of the assessee, or accretion to
the wealth of the assesee since the last valuation date.
[110 C-D]
(ii) There is no constitutional prohibition against
Parliament levying tax in respect of the same subject-matter
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or taxing event in successive assessment periods. [110 D]
(iii) The tax which is imposed by entry 86 List I is not
directly a tax on lands and buildings. It is a tax imposed
on the capital value of the assets of individuals and
companies on the valuation date. Wealth-tax is not imposed
on the components of the assets of the assessee but on the
total assets which he owns after taking his liabilities into
account. On the other hand, entry 49 List II of the Seventh
Schedule contemplates the levy of tax on lands and buildings
or both as units. It is normally not concerned with the
division of interest or ownership in the units of lands or
buildings which are brought to tax. [110 G-H; 111 C-D]
Tax on lands and buildings is directly imposed on lands and
buildings, and bears a definite relation to it, while tax on
the capital value of assets bears no definable relation to
lands and buildings which may form a component of the total
assets of the assessee. [111 D]
Ratta Ram v. The Province of East Punjab, [1948] F.C.R. 207;
referred to.
Even assuming that there is some overlapping between the two
entries, the Parliament had power to legislate in respect of
levy of wealth-tax ,in respect of the lands and buildings
which may form part of the assets of an assessee. [112 D-E]
109
In re : The Central Provinces and Berar Act No. XIV of 1938.
[1939] F.C.R. 18, 49; referred to.
Exclusive power of the State Legislature under clause (3) of
Art. 246 has to be exercised subject to cl. (1) ie., the
exclusive power which the Parliament has in respect of the
matters enumerated in List I. Assuming that there is a
conflict between entry 96 List I and entry 49 List II, which
is not capable of reconciliation, the power of Parliament to
legislate in respect of a matter which is exclusively
entrusted to it must supersede pro tanto the exercise of
power of the State Legislature. [113 D-E]
Khan Bahadur Chowakkaran Kaloth Mammad Kevi v. Wealth-tax
Officer, Calicut, 44 I.T.R. 277; Vysyaraju Badri
Narayanamurthy v. Commissioner of Wealth-tax, Bihar &
Orissa, 56 I.T.R. 298; and Sri Krishna Rao L.Balckai v.
Third Wealth-tax Officer, A.I.R. 1963 Mys. 111; referred to.
Observations of Jagdish Sabai, J. in Oudh Sugar Mills Ltd.,
Hargaon v. State of U.P. and another, A.I.R. 1960 All. 136;
disapproved.
(iv) Section 7(1) of the Wealth-tax Act is not ultra vires.
Section 7 ,only directs that the valuation of any asset
other than cash has to be made subject to the rules. It
does not contemplate that there shall be rules before an
asset can be valued. Failure to make rules for valuation of
a type of asset cannot therefore affect the vires of s. 7.
[114 F--G]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petitions Nos. 153 to 155 of
1967.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for the
enforcement of fundamental rights.
Nirmal Mukherjee and P. K. Mukherjee, for the petitioner.
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General, T. A. Ramachandran and R.
N. Sachthey, for respondents Nos. 1 to 3.
Naunit Lal, for intervener No. 1.
M. R. K. Pillai, for intervener No. 2.
C. B. Agarwala and O. P. Rana, for intervener No. 3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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Shah, J. For the years 1959-60, 1960-61 and 1961-62 the
petitioner was assessed to tax under the Wealth-tax Act,
1957, by the Wealth-tax Officer, C-Ward, District 11 (1),
Calcutta. The petitioner failed to pay the tax and
proceedings for recovery of tax and penalty were taken
against him. The petitioner then moved this Court for a
writ quashing the order of assessment and penalty and
notices of demand for recovery of tax. The petition was
sought to be supported on numerous grounds, none of which
has, in our judgment, any substance. The plea that wealth-
tax is chargeable only on the accretion of wealth during the
financial year is contrary to the plain words of the
charging section. Section 3 of the Wealth-tax Act, as it
stood in the relevant years, declared that there shall be
charged for every financial year a
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tax in respect of the net wealth. on the corresponding
valuation date of every individual, Hindu undivided family
and company ,it the rate or rates specified in the Schedule.
The expression net wealth" is defined in s. 2(m) as meaning
"the amount by which the aggregate value computed in
accordance with the provisions of the Act of all the assets,
wherever located, belonging to the assessee on the valuation
date, including assets required to be included in this net
wealth as on the date under the Act, is in excess of the
aggregate value of all the debts owed by the assessee on the
valuation date, other than............. The expression
"assets" is defined in s. 2(e) as inclusive of property of
every description, movable or immovable, but not including
agricultural land and growing crops, grass or standing trees
on such land. By s. 3 charge is imposed upon the net wealth
of an assessee on the corresponding valuation date. The
charge thereby imposed is on the "net wealth on the
corresponding valuation date" and not on the increase in the
wealth of the assessee, or accretion to the wealth of the
assessee since the last valuation date.
It was urged that the Parliament could not have intended
that the same assets should continue to be charged to tax
year after year. But there is no constitutional prohibition
against the Parliament levying tax in respect of the same
subject-matter or taxing event in successive assessment
periods.
The Parliament enacted the Wealth-tax Act in exercise of the
power under List I of the Seventh Schedule entry 86 "Taxes
on the capital value of assets, exclusive of agricultural
lands, or individuals and companies : taxes on the capital
of companies". That was so assumed in the decision of this
Court in Banarsi Dass, v. Wealth-tax Officer, Special
Circle, Meerut(1), and counsel for the petitioner accepts
that the subject of Wealth-tax Act falls within the terms of
entry 86 List I of the Seventh Schedule. He says, however,
that since the expression "net wealth" includes non-
agricultural lands and buildings of an assessee, and power
to levy tax on lands and buildings is reserved to the State
Legislature by entry 49 List II of the Seventh Schedule, the
Parliament is incompetent to legislate for the levy of
wealth-tax on the capital value of assets which include non-
agricultural lands and buildings. The argument advanced by
counsel for the petitioner is wholly misconceived. The tax
which is imposed by entry 86 List I of the Seventh Schedule
is not directly a tax on lands and buildings. It is a tax
imposed on the capital value of the assets of individuals
and companies, on the valuation date. The tax is not
imposed on the components of the assets of the assessee : it
is imposed on the total assets which the assessee owns, and
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in determining the net wealth not only the encumbrances
specifically charged against
(1) 56 I.T.R. 224.
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any item of asset, but the general liability of the assessee
to pay his debts and to discharge his lawful obligations
have to be taken into account. In certain exceptional
cases, where a person owes no debts and is under no
enforceable obligation to discharge any liability out of his
assets, it may be possible to break up the tax which is
leviable on the total assets into components and attribute a
component to lands and buildings owned by an assessee. In
such a case, the component out of the total tax attributable
to lands and buildings may in the matter of computation bear
similarity to a tax on lands and buildings levied on the
capital or annual value under entry 49 List II. But the
legislative authority of Parliament is not determined by
visualizing the possibility of exceptional cases of taxes
under two different heads operating similarly on tax-payers.
Again entry 49 List II of the Seventh Schedule contemplates
the levy of tax on lands and buildings or both as units. It
is normally not concerned with the division of interest or
ownership in the units of lands or buildings which are,
brought to tax. Tax on lands and buildings is directly
imposed on lands and buildings, and bears a definite
relation to it. Tax on the capital value of assets bears no
definable relation to lands and buildings which may form a
component of the total assets of the assessee. By
legislation in exercise of power under entry 86 List I tax
is contemplated to be levied on the value of the assets.
For the purpose of levying tax under entry 49 List II the
State Legislature may adopt for determining the incidence of
tax the annual or the capital value of the lands and
buildings. But the adoption of the annual, or capital value
of lands and buildings for determining tax liability will
not, in our judgment, make the fields of legislation under
the two entries overlapping.
In Ralla Ram v. The Province of East Punjab(1) the Federal
Court held that the tax levied by s. 3 of the Punjab Urban
Immoveable Property Tax Act, 17 of 1940, on buildings and
lands situated in a specified area at such rate not
exceeding twenty per centum of the annual value of such
buildings and lands, as the Provincial Government may by
notification in the Official Gazette direct in respect of
each such rating area was not a tax on income, but was a tax
on lands and buildings within the meaning of item No. 42 of
List II of the Seventh Schedule of the Government of India
Act, 1935. In that case it was contended that under the
provisions of the Punjab Act the basis of the tax was the
annual value of the buildings and since the same basis was
used in the Income-tax Act for determining the income from
property and generally speaking the annual value is the
fairest standards for measuring income and, in many cases,
is indistinguishable from it, the tax levied by the impugned
Act was in substance a tax on income. The Court pointed out
that the annual value is not neces-
(1) [1948] F.C.R. 207.
112
sarily actual income, but is only, a standard by which
income may be measured, and merely because the Income-tax
Act had adopted the annual value as the standard for
determining the income, it did not follow that, if the same
standard is employed as a measure for any other tax, that
latter tax becomes also a tax on income.
In the case of a tax on lands and buildings, the value,
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capital or annual, would be determined by taking the land or
building or both as a unit and subjecting the value to a
percentage of tax. In the case of wealth-tax the charge is
on the valuation of the total assets (inclusive of lands and
buildings) less the value of debts and other obligations
which the assessee has to discharge. Merely because in
determining the taxable quantum under taxing statutes made
in exercise of power under entries 86 List I and 49 List II,
the basis of valuation of assets is adopted, trespass on
the, field of one legislative power over another may not be
assumed.
Assuming that there is some overlapping between the two
entries, it cannot, on that account be said that the
Parliament had no power to legislate in respect of levy of
wealth-tax in respect of the lands and buildings which may
form part of the assets of the assessee. As observed by
Gwyer, C.J., in In re: The Central Provinces and Berar Act
No. XIV of 1938(1) :
". . . . that a general power ought not to be
so construed as to make a nullity of a
particular power conferred by the same Act and
operating in the same field, when by reading
the former in a more restricted sense effect
can be given to the latter in its ordinary and
natural meaning."
Apparently an entry "taxes on lands and buildings" is a more
general entry than the entry in respect of a tax on the
annual value of assets of an individual or a company, and by
conferring upon Parliament the power to legislate on capital
value of the assets including lands and buildings, the power
of the State Legislature was pro tanto excluded.
The scheme of Art. 246 of the Constitution which distributes
legislative powers upon the Parliament and State Legislature
must be remembered. Article 246 provides:
"(1) Notwithstanding anything in clauses (2)
and 3 Parliament has exclusive power to make
laws with respect to any of the matters
enumerated in List I in the Seventh Schedule.
(1) [1939] F.C.R. 18,49.
113
(2) Notwithstanding anything in clause (3),
Parliament, and, subject to clause (1), the
Legislature of any State also, have power to
make laws with respect to any of the matters
enumerated in List III in the Seventh
Schedule.
(3) Subject to clauses (1) and (2), the
Legislature of any State has exclusive power
to make laws for such State or any part
thereof with respect to any of the matters
enumerated in List II in the Seventh
Schedule. "
Exclusive power to legislate conferred upon Parliament is
exercisable, notwithstanding anything contained in cls. (2)
& (3), that is made more emphatic by providing in cl. (3)
that the Legislature of any State has exclusive power to
make laws for such State or any part thereof with respect to
any of the matters enumerated in List II in the Seventh
Schedule, but subject to cls. (1) and (2). Exclusive power
of the State Legislature has therefore to be exercised
subject to cl. (1) i.e. the exclusive power which the
Parliament has in respect of the matters enumerated in List
I. Assuming that there is a conflict between entry 86 List I
and entry 49 List II, which is not capable of
reconciliation, the power of Parliament to legislate in
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respect of a matter which is exclusively entrusted to it
must supersede pro tanto the exercise of power of the State
Legislature. The problem reviewed from any angle is
incapable of a decision in favour of the assessee.
The High Courts have consistently taken the view in cases in
which the question under discussion expressly fell to be
determined, that the power to levy tax on lands and
buildings under entry 49 List II does not trench upon the
power conferred upon the Parliament by entry 86 List I, and
therefore the enactment of the Wealth-tax Act by the
Parliament is not ultra vires. In Khan Bahadur Chowakkaran
Kaloth Mammad Kevi v. Wealth-tax Officer, Calicut(1), the
High Court of Kerala held that wealth-tax is specifically
and in substance covered by entry 86 of the Union List of
the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution of India, and there
is really no conflict and no overlapping between the juris-
diction of the Parliament under entry 86 of the Union List
to enact a law levying a tax on the capital value of assets,
and of the State Legislature under entry 49 of the State
List, to enact a law levying a tax on lands and buildings.
A similar view was expressed by the Orissa High Court in
Vysyaraju Badri Narayanamurthy v. Commissioner of Wealth-
tax, Bihar & Orissa (2) ; and also in Sri Krishna Rao L.
Balckai v. Third Wealth-tax Officer (3) .
Reliance was, however, placed by counsel for the petitioner
upon certain observations made by Jagdish Sahai, J. in Oudh
(1) 44 I.T.R. 277.
(3) A.I.R. 1963 Mys. 111.
(2) 56 I.T.R. 298.
114
Sugar Mills Ltd. Hargaon v. State of U.P. and another(1).
In that case the validity of the U.P. Large Land Holdings
Act 31 of 1957 was challenged on the ground that the power
to tax covered by the Act was not conferred upon the State
Legislature by List II entry 49. The Court in that case
held that the tax under the Act was a tax on the holding and
not on the annual value or the capitalised value of the land
and the annual value was only the measure of the tax.
Jagdish Sahai, J., proceeded, however, to observe that the
meaning of the word "assets" in entry 86 of List I should
exclude land, both agricultural as well as non-agricultural,
from its ambit in order to give full scope to the expression
"Taxes on land" occurring in entry 49 of List R. But it was
not necessary for deciding the question falling to be
determined in that case to enter upon the question whether a
tax on the capitalised value of non-agricultural lands
forming part of the assets of an assessee is covered by
entry 86 List I or entry 49 List It. That is so expressly
stated by the learned Judge. The Court was concerned only
to deal with the question whether the U.P. Large Land
Holdings Act fell within entry 49 of List H. The
observations made by the learned Judge were plainly obiter,
and, in our judgment, do not correctly interpret entry 86
List I.
The plea that s. 7(1) of the Wealth-tax Act is ultra vires
the Parliament is also wholly without substance. That
clause provi-
"Subject to any rules made in this behalf, the
value of any asset, other than cash, for the
purposes of this Act, shall be estimated to be
the price which in the opinion of the Wealth-
tax Officer it would fetch if sold in the open
market on the valuation date."
It was urged that no rules were framed in respect of the
valuation of,’ lands and buildings. But s. 7 only directs
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that the valuation of any asset other than cash has to be
made subject to the rules. It does not contemplate that
there shall. be rules before an asset can be valued.
Failure to make rules for valuation of a type of asset
cannot therefore affect the vires of s. 7. It was also said
that s. 7(1) which requires that the asset shall be valued
at the price which it would fetch if sold in the open market
on the valuation date, was expropriatory. This contention
was not raised in the petition, and no ground is made out
for holding that the rate at which wealth-tax is levied is
expropriatory.
The petitions fail and are dismissed with costs. One
hearing fee
R.K.P.S. Petitions dismissed.
115