Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Writ Petition (civil) 539 of 2000
PETITIONER:
Gujarat Ambuja Cements Ltd.& Anr.
RESPONDENT:
Union of India & Anr.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/03/2005
BENCH:
Ruma Pal & Arun Kumar
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
With
W.P) Nos. 411, 431, 432, 450,
466, 467, 493, 551, 564, and 573 of 2000.
W.P) Nos. 1, 122, 123, 209, 234,
283, 311 and 493 of 2001.
W.P) Nos. 606 of 2002
W.P.(C) Nos. 294, 584, 585 of 2003
W.P) Nos.26, 328, 329 of 2004
C.A. No. 9247 of 2003
RUMA PAL, J.
These writ petitions have been filed challenging the
constitutional validity of Sections 116 and 117 of the Finance Act
2000 and Section 158 of the Finance Act, 2003 by which the
decision of this Court in Laghu Udyog Bharati & Anr. Vs.
Union of India & Ors. (1999) 6 SCC 418, striking down Rules
2(1)(d), (xii) and (xvii) of the Service Tax Rules, 1994 (as
amended in 1997) was sought to be overcome.
The writ petitioners are the customers or clients of goods
transport operators and forwarding and clearing agents. There
are three main grounds on which they have based their
challenge. They contend that the basis of the decision rendered
in Laghu Udyog Bharati had not been removed or displaced by
the impugned sections and could not therefore overrule, replace
or override this Court’s decision. The second ground of
challenge is that Parliament was legislatively incompetent to
enact the law. It is stated that the imposition of the impugned
levy encroaches upon the State Government’s power as defined
in Entry 56 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution
which pertains to ’Taxes on goods and passengers covered by
road or on inland waterways’. The submission is that Parliament
could not by resorting to the residuary Entry 97 of List 1 of the
Seventh Schedule circumvent Entry 56 of List II and in the guise
of levying service tax in fact levy a tax on the transport of goods.
The constitutional validity of the imposition has also been
challenged on the ground that it operated in discriminatory
manner by singling out only the customers of goods transport
operators and clearing and forwarding agents to pay tax whereas
the recipients of other kinds of similar services were not
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subjected to such imposition.
Service tax was introduced for the first time under Chapter
V of the Finance Act, 1994. Section 66 of the Act was the
charging section and provided for the levy of service tax at the
rate of five per cent of the value of the taxable services provided
to any person by the person responsible for collecting the service
tax. In other words, the levy was on the provider of the taxable
services. "Taxable service" was defined in Section 65 to include
only three services namely any service provided to an investor by
a stock broker, to a subscriber by the telegraph authority and to a
policy holder by an insurer carrying on general insurance
business. Section 68 required every person providing taxable
service to collect the service tax at specified rates. Section 69 of
the Finance Act, 1994 provided for the registration of the
persons responsible for collecting service tax. Sub-sections (2)
and (5) indicated that it was the provider of the service who was
responsible for collecting the tax and obliged to get registered.
These Sections viz., 65, 66, 68 and 69 are pivotal to the present
issue. They were amended thrice. The remaining sections of the
1994 Act substantially continued as originally enacted with minor
changes. Under Section 70 of the Finance Act, 1994, every
person responsible for collecting the service tax must furnish or
cause to be furnished to the Central Excise Officer in the
prescribed form and verified in the prescribed manner, a
quarterly return. Sections 71, 72, 73 and 74 deal with the filing of
returns, provisions for assessment, reopening of assessments
and rectification of mistakes of assessment orders. Section 75
provides for payment of interest at the rate of one-half per cent
for every month or part of a month by which the person
responsible for collecting the service tax, delays in paying the tax
to the credit of the Central Government. Section 76 deals with
the imposition of penalty for failure to collect the service tax.
Section 77 deals with the penalty for failure to furnish the
prescribed return. Section 78 deals with the penalty for
suppressing the value of taxable service and Section 79 for
penalty for failure to comply with notices. No other section is
required to be noted except Section 94 of the Act which
empowers the Central Government to make rules for carrying out
the provisions of Chapter V of the Act. Pursuant to such power,
the Service Tax Rules, 1994 were framed.
By the Finance Act, 1997 the first amendments to Section
65, of the Finance Act 1994 were made inter alia, by extending
the meaning of ’taxable service’ from three services to 18
different services categorized in Section 65(41), clauses (a) to
(r). We are only concerned with clauses (j) and (m) of sub-
section (41) to Section 65. Clause (j) made service to a client
by clearing and forwarding agents in relation to clearing and
forwarding operations, a taxable service. Similarly, service to a
customer of a goods transport operator in relation to carriage of
goods by road in a goods carriage was, by clause (m), also
included within the umbrella of taxable service. The phrases
"clearing and forwarding agent" and "goods transport operator"
were defined as follows:
(j) "clearing and forwarding agent" means any
person who is engaged in providing any
service, either directly or indirectly,
connected with clearing and forwarding
operations in any manner to any other
person and includes a consignment agent"
(m) "goods transport operator" means any
commercial concern engaged in the
transportation of goods but does not include
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a courier agency"
The charge of service tax in respect of the services
rendered by clearing and forwarding agents and goods
transport operates remained on the person responsible for
collecting the service tax under Section 66 (3).
"66(3) With effect from the date notified
under Section 84 of the Finance Act,
1997, there shall be charged a service
tax at the rate of five per cent of the
value of the taxable services referred to
in sub-clauses (g), (h), (i), (j), (k), (l),
(m), (n), (o), (p), (q),and (r ) of clause
(41) of Section 65 which are provided to
any person by the person responsible
for collecting the service tax."
The ’person responsible for collecting the service tax’
under this Section was therefore the person providing the
service. The phrase itself was also defined under sub-section
(28) of Section 65 to mean "a person who is required to collect
service tax under this chapter or is required to pay any other sum
of money under this Chapter and includes every person in
respect of whom any proceedings under this Chapter have been
taken" and ’assessee’ was defined in sub-section (5) of Section
65 as meaning "a person responsible for collecting the service
tax and includes his agent". By the 1997 amendment under
Section 68-1A the service tax in respect of taxable services from
items (g) to (r ) of Section 65 (41) was directed to be collected
from "such person and in such manner as may be prescribed"
and it was said that all provisions of Chapter V "shall" apply to
such person as if he is the person responsible for collecting the
service tax in relation to such services. However, Sub-sections
(2) and (5) of Section 69 continued to refer to the persons
responsible for collecting the service as the provider of the
taxable service.
We are told that the goods transport operators as well as
the clearing and forwarding agents went on an all India strike
protesting against the imposition of service tax on them. Perhaps
this might have precipitated an amendment to the Service Tax
Rules 1994. Rules 2(1)(d),(xii) and (xvii) of the Service Tax
Rules, 1994 were amended by imposing the tax in effect on the
customers of clearing and forwarding agents and goods transport
operators. As far as clearing and forwarding agents were
concerned the relevant amendments to the Rules were carried
out and brought into effect by two notifications both dated 16th
July 1997. As far as the levy of service tax on customers of
goods and transport operators were concerned, the amendments
were made and brought into effect with effect from 16th
November, 1997.
The imposition of service tax on customers was challenged
by many of the present petitioners in Laghu Udyog Bharati.
During the pendency of writ petitions, on 2nd June 1998
notification No.49/98 was issued exempting services provided by
goods transport operators from the levy of service tax altogether
and by the Finance Act, 1998 all provisions in the Finance Act,
1994 including Section 65 (41) sub-clause (m) relating to the levy
of service tax on services provided by goods transport operators
were omitted with effect from 16th October, 1998. By the Finance
Act (No. 2), 1998, Section 69 was also amended. The various
sub-sections including sub sections (2) and (5) were omitted. The
body of the sections now require every person liable to pay
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service tax to make an application for registration without
indicating who was so liable. The Service Tax Rules, 1994 were
consequently also amended by the Service Tax (Amendment)
Rules, 1998 to delete the provisions relating to service by goods
transport operators.
These facts were taken into account by this Court in Laghu
Udyog Bharati but because the exemption granted on 2nd June
1998 was prospective and no exemption had been granted with
regard to the period from 16th July, 1997 to 2nd June 1998 and
also because customers of clearing and forwarding agents
continued to be liable to pay service tax, the writ petitions were
disposed of on merits.
In upholding the challenge to Rule 2(1)(d), (xii) and (xvii),
this Court noted:
"It is clear from the reading of these provisions
that according to the Finance Act the charge
of tax is on the person who is responsible for
collecting the service tax. It is he, who by
virtue of the provisions of Section 65(5) is
regarded as an assessee. He is the person
who provides the service."
It was held that in the circumstances
"\005 the definitions contained in Rule 2(d)
(xii) and (xvii), which seek to make the
customers or the clients as the assessee, are
clearly in conflict with Section 65 and 66 of the
Act."
This Court construed Section 68(1-A) to hold that
"Section 68(1-A) cannot be so interpreted as to make a person
an assessee even though he may not be responsible for
collecting the service tax". What the Court in effect said was
that since the charging section (Section 66) provided for the tax
to be paid by the provider, Section 68-1A, which was merely the
section which laid the machinery for collecting the tax, would
not change the nature of the tax.
Finally this Court said that Sections 70 and 71 clearly
showed "that the return which has to be filed pertains to the
payment which are received by the person rendering the
service in respect of the value of the taxable services. Surely,
this is a type of information which cannot, under any
circumstances, be supplied by the customer. Moreover the
operative part of sub-section (1) of Section 70 clearly stipulates
that it is a person responsible for collecting the service tax who
is to furnish the return".
In the circumstances it was concluded that "by rules
which are framed, the person who is receiving the services
cannot be made responsible for filing the return and paying the
tax. Such a position is certainly not contemplated by the Act".
Striking down the Service Tax Rules 2(1)(d) (xii) and (xvii),
this Court directed that any tax which had been paid by the
customers or clients of the clearing and forwarding agents or of
the goods transporters should be refunded within 12 weeks from
their making a demand for refund. Consequently, the present
writ petitioners made applications for refund of the tax paid by
them. In some cases, the tax was refunded. In certain cases the
refund was not made on the ground that the petitioners had failed
to prove that the tax paid had not been passed on to other
persons. In some case as in W.P. No. 563 of 2000 the customer
deducted service tax from the freight charges payable to the
transporters/petitioner. After the decision in Laghu Bharati
Udyog, the customer refunded the money to the transporter in
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question.
At this stage on 12th May 2000, the Finance Act 2000
sought to amend Finance Act of 1994 in the manner indicated
in Section 116:
"116 Amendment of Act 32 of 1994.\027During
the period commencing on and from the 16th
day of July, 1997 and ending with the 16th day
of October, 1998, the provisions of Chapter V
of the Finance Act, 1994 shall be deemed to
have had effect subject to the following
modifications, namely:-
(a) In section 65.--
(1) for clause (6), the following clause had
been substituted namely:-
(6) "assessee" means a person liable for
collecting the service tax and includes\027
(i) his agent; or
(ii) in relation to services provided by a
clearing and forwarding agent, every
person who engages a clearing and
forwarding agent and by whom
remuneration or commission (by
whatever name called) is paid for
such services to the said agent; or
(iii) in relation to services provided by a
goods transport operator, every
person who pays or is liable to pay
the freight either himself or through
his agent for the transportation of
goods by road in a goods carriage;
(ii) after clause (18), the following
clauses had been substituted,
namely:-
’(18A) "goods carriage" has the meaning
assigned to it in clause (14) of section 2 of the
Motor Vehicles Act, 1988;
(18B) "goods transport operator" means any
commercial concern engage in the
transportation of goods but does not include a
courier agency; :
(iii) in clause (48), after sub-clause (m), the
following sub-clause had been inserted
namely:-
"(ma) to a customer, by a goods transport
operator in relation to carriage of goods by
road in a goods carriage;
(b) in section 66, for sub-section (3), the
following sub-section had been substituted
namely:-
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"(3) On and from the 16th day of July, 1997,
there shall be levied a tax at the rate of five
per cent, of the value of taxable services
referred to in sub-clauses (g), (h), (i),(j),(k) (l),
(m), (ma), (n) and (o) of clause (48) of section
65 and collected in such manner as may be
prescribed,";
(c ) in section 67, after clause (k), the
following clause had been inserted, namely:-
"(ka) in relation to service provided by goods
transport operator to a customer, shall be the
gross amount charged by such operator for
services in relation to carrying goods by road
in goods carriage and includes the freight
charges but does not include any insurance
charges;".
Section 117 of the Finance Act, 2000 seeks to
retrospectively validate the taxes earlier collected under the
Service Tax Rules which this court had directed to be refunded. It
reads:-
117. Validation of certain action taken
under Service Tax Rules.-- Notwithstanding
anything contained in any judgment, decree or
order of any court, tribunal or other authority,
sub-clauses (xii) and (xvii) of clause (d) of
sub-rule (1) of rule 2 of the Service Tax Rules,
1994 as they stood immediately before the
commencement of the Service Tax
(Amendment)Rules, 1998 shall be deemed to
be valid and to have always been valid as if
the said sub-clauses had been in force at all
material times and accordingly,-
(i) any action taken or anything done or
purported to have been taken or
done a any time during the period
commencing on and from the 16th
day of July, 1997 and ending with the
day, the Finance Act, 2000 receives
the assent of the President shall be
deemed to be valid and always to
have been valid for all purposes, as
validly and effectively taken or done;
(ii) any service tax refunded in
pursuance of any judgment, decree
or order of any court striking down
sub-clauses (xii) and (xvii) of clause
(d) of sub-rule (1) of rule 2 of the
Service Tax Rules, 1994 before the
date on which the Finance Act, 2000
receives the assent of the President
shall be recoverable within a period
of thirty days from the date on which
the Finance Act 2000 receives the
assent of the President, and in the
event of non payment of such service
tax refunded within this period, in
addition to the amount of service tax
recoverable, interest at the rate of
twenty-four per cent, per annum shall
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be payable, from the date
immediately after the expiry of the
said period of thirty days, till the date
of payment.
Explanation.\027For the removal of doubts, it
is hereby declared that no act or omission on
the part of any person shall be punishable as
an offence which would not have been so
punishable if this section had not come into
force."
While the writ petitions challenging the validity of
the amendments made by the Finance Act 2000 to Chapter V
of the Finance Act, 1994 were pending, the Finance Act, 2003
was assented to by the President on 14th May 2003. By Section
158 of that Act, Sections 68(1), 71 and Section 94 of the 1994
Act were further amended. Section 158 provides:
"During the period commencing on and from
16th day of July, 1997 and ending with the 16th
day of October 1998, the provisions of
Chapter V of Finance Act, 1994, as modified
by Section 116 of the Finance Act, 2000, shall
have effect subject to the following further
modifications, namely: -
(a) in section 68, in sub-section (I), the
following proviso shall be inserted at the
end and shall be deemed to have been
inserted on and from the 16th day of July,
1997, namely, : -
Provided that \026
(i) in relation to services provided by a
clearing and forwarding agent, every
person who engages a clearing and
forwarding agent and by whom
remuneration or commission (by
whatever name called) is paid for such
services to the said agent for the period
commencing on and from the 16th day of
July, 1997 and ending with the 16th day
of October, 1998; or
(ii) in relation to services provided by goods
transport operator every person who
pays or is liable to pay the freight, either
himself or through his agent for the
transportation of goods by road in good
carriage for the period commencing on
and from the 16th day of November, 1997
and ending with the 2nd day of June,
1998.
shall be deemed always to have been a person
liable to pay service tax, for such services provided
to him, to the credit of the Central Government."
In addition, Section 71 which provides for the filing of
returns was amended to provide, with retrospective effect, for the
insertion of Section 71A. Under the newly inserted section, the
provisions of Sections 69 and 70 do not apply to a person
referred to in the proviso to sub-section (1) of Section 68 as far
as the filing of returns in respect of service tax for the period
commencing from 16th July 1997 was concerned. It seeks to
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provide that "such persons shall furnish return to the Central
Excise Officer within six months from the day on which the
Finance Bill, 2003 receives the assent of the President in the
prescribed manner on the basis of the self assessment of the
service tax and the provisions of Section 71 shall apply
accordingly". This period was extended by this Court by order
dated 17.11.2003 for a period of two weeks with effect from the
date of the order. Section 94 as originally enacted for the rule
making power of the Central Government was amended to read
with effect from 16th July 1997, that the Central Government
would also have the power to frame rules relating to the manner
of furnishing returns under Section 71A.
There cannot be any doubt that the object of these sections
is to nullify the effect of this Court’s decision in Laghu Udhyog
Bharati by retrospectively amending and validating provisions
held to be illegal. It is a well settled principle that validation of a
tax declared illegal may be done only if the grounds of illegality or
invalidity are capable of being removed and are in fact removed
and the tax thus made legal (vide Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd. vs.
Broach Borough Municipality : 1970 1 SCR 388 Indian
Aluminum Co. & Ors Vs. State of Kerala (1996) 7 SCC 637, K.
Sankaran Nair V. Devaki (1996) 11 SCC 428; R.Krishna Bhat
v. State of Karnataka (2001) 4 SCC 227; N.A. Cooperative
Mkg. Federation v. Union of India AIR 2003 SC 1329). As a
proposition of law this cannot be and is not disputed. The
question is whether by enacting Sections 116 and 117 of the
Finance Act, 2000 and Section 158 of the Finance Act 2003, the
bases on which this Court struck down Rule 2(1)(d), (xii) and
(xvii) of the Service Tax Rules, 1994 had been displaced or
removed.
As we read the decision in Laghu Udhyog Bharati, the
basis was the patent conflict between Sections 65, 66 , 68(1)
and 71 of the Finance Act, 1994 as amended in 1997 on the
one hand and Rules 2(1) (d) (xii) and (xvii) of the Service Tax
Rules 1994 on the other. Each of these sections of the Finance
Act 1994 as amended in 1997 proceeded on the basis that the
tax was imposable on the person providing the service. All the
other sections regarding the liability to furnish returns,
assessments, penalties etc. flowed from that. It was because
unamended Section 66 spoke of the liability to pay tax in
respect of services "which are provided to any person by the
person responsible for collecting the service tax" and Section
65(5) defined "assessee" as meaning "a person responsible for
collecting the service tax", that this Court held that clauses (xii)
and (xvii) of Rule 2(1) (d) of the Service Tax Rules were illegal.
As is apparent from Section 116 of the Finance Act, 2000,
all the material portions of the two Sections which were found to
be incompatible with the Service Tax Rules were themselves
amended so that now in the body of the Act by virtue of the
amendment to the word "assessee" in Section 65(5) and the
amendment to Section 66(3), the liability to pay the tax is not on
the person providing the taxable service but, as far as the
service provided by clearing and forwarding agents and goods
transport operators are concerned, on the person who pays for
the services. As far as Section 68(1A) is concerned by virtue of
the proviso added in 2003, the persons availing of the services
of goods transport operators or clearing and forwarding agents
have explicitly been made liable to pay the service tax.
As we have said, Rule 2(1)(d) (xii) and (xvii) had been
held to be illegal in Laghu Udhyog Bharati only because the
charging provisions of the Act provided otherwise. Now that the
charging section itself has been amended so as to make the
provisions of the Act and the Rules compatible, the criticism of
the earlier law upheld by this Court can no longer be availed of.
There is thus no question of the Finance Act, 2000 overruling
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the decision of this Court in Laghu Udhyog Bharati as the law
itself has been changed. A legislature is competent to remove
infirmities retrospectively and make any imposition of tax
declared invalid, valid. This has been the uniform approach of
this Court. Such exercise in validation must of course also be
legislatively competent and legally sustainable. Those issues
are considered separately. On the first question, we hold that
the law must be taken as having always been as is now brought
about by the Finance Act, 2000. The statutory foundation for
the decision in Laghu Udhyog Bharati has been replaced and
the decision has thereby ceased to be relevant for the purposes
of construing the present provisions (vide Ujagar Prints vs.
Union of India) . Therefore subject to our decision on the
question of the legislative competence of Parliament to enact
the law, and assuming the amendments in 2003 to be legal for
the time being, we reject the submission of the writ petitioners
that by the amendments brought about by Sections 116 and
117 of the Finance Act 2000, the decision in Laghu Udhyog
Bharati has been legislatively overruled.
The next question is whether the levy of service tax on
carriage of goods by transport operators was legislatively
competent. Laghu Udhyog Bharati did not consider the
question of legislative competency. Before we consider the
scope of the impugned Act, it is necessary to determine the
scope of the two Legislative Entries namely Entry 97 of List I and
Entry 56 of List II. It has been recognized in Godfrey Phillips
(supra) that there is a complete and careful demarcation of taxes
in the Constitution and there is no overlapping as far as the fields
of taxation are concerned. This mutual exclusivity which has
been reflected in Article 246(1) means that taxing entries must be
construed so as to maintain exclusivity. Although generally
speaking a liberal interpretation must be given to taxing entries,
this would not bring within its purview a tax on subject matter
which a fair reading of the entry does not cover. If in substance,
the statute is not referable to a field given to the State, the Court
will not by any principle of interpretation allow a statute not
covered by it to intrude upon this field.
Undisputedly, Chapter V of the Finance Tax Act, 1994 was
enacted with reference to the residuary power defined in Entry 97
of List I. But as has been held in International Tourist
Corporation vs. State of Haryana (1981) 2 SCC 319;
"before exclusive legislative competence can be claimed for
Parliament by resort to the residuary power, the legislative
incompetence of the State legislature must be clearly
established. Entry 97 itself is specific in that a matter can be
brought under that Entry only if it is not enumerated in List II or
List III and in the case of a tax if it is not mentioned in either of
those Lists".
In that case Section 3(3) of the Punjab Passengers and
Goods Taxation Act, 1952 was challenged by transport
operators. The Act provided for the levy of the tax on
passengers and goods plying in the State of Haryana. According
to the transport operators, the State could not levy tax on
passengers and goods carried by vehicles plying entirely along
the national highways. According to them this was solely within
the power of the Centre under Entry 23 read with 97 of List I.
The submission was held to be patently fallacious by this Court.
It was held that Entry 56 of List II did not exclude national
highways so that the passengers and goods carried on national
highways would fall directly and squarely within Entry 56 of List
II. It was said that the State played a role in the maintenance of
the national highway and there was sufficient nexus between the
tax and passengers goods carried on the national highway to
justify the imposition.
The writ petitioners in this case have, relying on this
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judgment, argued that the Act falls squarely within Entry 56 of
List II and therefore could not be referred to Entry 97 of List I. We
do not agree.
There is a distinction between the object of tax, the
incidence of tax and the machinery for the collection of the tax.
The distinction is important but is apt to be confused. Legislative
competence is to be determined with reference to the object of
the levy and not with reference to its incidence or machinery.
There is a further distinction between the objects of taxation in
our constitutional scheme. The object of tax may be an article or
substance such as a tax on land and buildings under Entry 49 of
List II, or a tax on animals and boats under Entry 58 List II or on
a taxable event such as manufacture of goods under Entry 84
of List-I, import or export of goods under Entry 83 of List-I, entry
of goods under Entry 52 of List II or sale of goods under Entry 54
List II to name a few. Theoretically, of course, as we have held
in Godfrey Phillips India Ltd. Vs. State of U.P. & Ors. 2005
Scale Page 367, ultimately even a tax on goods will be on the
taxable event of ownership or possession. We need not go into
this question except to emphasise that, broadly speaking the
subject matter of taxation under Entry 56 of List II are goods and
passengers. The phrase "carried by roads or natural water ways"
carves out the kind of goods or passengers which or who can be
subjected to tax under the Entry. The ambit and purport of the
entry has been dealt with in Rai Ramakrishna & Ors. Vs. State
of Bihar 1963(1) SCR 897 where it was said in language which
we cannot better:-
"Entry 56 of the Second List refers to taxes
on goods and passengers carried by road or
on inland waterways. It is clear that the
State Legislatures are authorized to levy
taxes on goods and passengers by this
entry. It is not on all goods and passengers
that taxes can be imposed under this entry;
it is on goods and passengers carried by
road or on inland waterways that taxes can
be imposed. The expression "carried by
road or on inland waterways" is an adjectival
clause qualifying goods and passengers,
that is to say, it is goods and passengers of
the said description that have to be taxed
under this entry. Nevertheless, it is obvious
that the goods as such cannot pay taxes,
and so taxes levied on goods have to be
recovered from some persons, and these
persons must have an intimate or direct
connection or nexus with the goods before
they can be called upon to pay the taxes in
respect of the carried goods. Similarly,
passengers who are carried are taxed under
the entry. But, usually, it would be
inexpedient, if not impossible, to recover the
tax directly from the passengers and so, it
would be expedient and convenient to
provide for the recovery of the said tax from
the owners of the vehicles themselves".
(p.908)
(See also: Sainik Motor Jodhpur Vs. The State of
Rajasthan 1962(1) SCR 517).
Having determined the parameters of the two legislative
entries the principles for determining the constitutionality of a
Statute come into play. These principles may briefly be
summarized thus:
a) The substance of the impugned Act must be looked at to
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determine whether it is in pith and substance within a
particular entry whatever its ancilliary effect may be.
(Prafulla Kumar Mukerjee vs. Bank of Commerce Ltd. &
Ors. AIR 1947 PC 60,65; A.S. Krishna Vs. State of
Madras 1957 SCR 399; State of Rajasthan v. G. Chawla
1959 Supp. (1) SCR 904; Katra Education Society v.
State of U.P. 1996 (3) SCR 328; D.C. Johar & Sons (P)
Ltd. v. STO Ernakulam 1971 (27) STC 120; Kanan
Devan Hills Produce v. State of Kerala (1972) 2 SCC
218).
b) Where the encroachment is ostensibly ancillary but in
truth beyond the competence of the enacting
authority, the statute will be a colourable piece of
legislation and Constitutionally invalid (A.S. Krishna
v. State of madras (supra); A.B. Abdul Kadir v.
State of Kerala (1976) 3 SCC 219, 232; Federation
of Hotel & Restaurant v. Union of India (supra at
p.651). If the statute is legislatively competent the
enquiry into the motive which persuaded Parliament
or the State legislature into passing the Act is
irrelevant. (Dharam Dutt & Ors. v. Union of India &
Ors. 2004(1) SCALE 425).
c) Apart from passing the test of legislative competency,
the Act must be otherwise legally valid and would
also have to pass the test of constitutionality in the
sense that it cannot be in violation of the provisions of
the constitution nor can it operate extraterritorially.
(See: Poppat Lal Shah v. State of Madras 1953
SCR 677).
The provisions relating to service tax in the Finance
Act, 1994 make it clear under Section 64(3) that the Act
applies only to taxable services. Taxable services has been
defined, as we have already noted, in Section 65(41). Each of
the clauses of that sub section refers to the different kinds of
services provided. Most of the taxable services cannot be
said to be in any way related to goods or passengers carried
by road or waterways. For example, Section 65(41) (g)
provides for service rendered to a client by a consulting
engineer, Section 65(41)(k) refers to service to a client by a
manpower recruitment agency, Section 65(41) (o) refers to
service by pandal or shamiana contractors and so on. The
rate of service tax has been fixed under Section 66. Section
67 provides for valuation of taxable service for the purposes of
charging tax. The provision for valuation of service rendered
by collecting and forwarding agents has been dealt with
under sub-clause (j) and service provided by goods transport
operators has been provided under clauses (l). (subsequently
renumbered as clause (ma)). These clauses read respectively
as under:-
"(j) in relation to service provided by a
clearing and forwarding agent to a client,
shall be the gross amount charged by such
agent from the client for services of clearing
and forwarding operations in any manner."
"(ma) in relation to service provided by
goods transport operator to a customer, shall
be the gross amount charged by such
operator for services in relation to carrying
goods by road in a goods carriage and
includes the freight charges but does not
include any insurance charges".
As far as clause (j) is concerned it does not speak of goods
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or passengers, nor to carriage of goods nor is it limited to service
by road or inland waterways. Clause (ma) shows that the
valuation of the service tax includes the freight charges, but is
not limited to it.
It is clear therefore that Section 66 read with Section
65(41)(j) and (ma) Chapter V of the Finance Act 1994 do not
seek to levy tax on goods or passengers. The subject matter of
tax under those provisions of the Finance Act 1994 is not goods
and passengers, but the service of transportation itself. It is a
levy distinct from the levy envisaged under Entry 56. It may be
that both the levies are to be measured on the same basis, but
that does not make the levy the same. As was held in
Federation of Hotel and Restaurant Association of India etc.
v. Union of India & Ors., (1989) 3 SCC 634:
"..subjects which in one aspect and for one
purpose fall within the power of a particular
legislature may in another aspect and for
another purpose fall within another legislative
power\005\005\005. Indeed, the law ’with respect to’
a subject might incidentally ’affect’ another
subject in some way; but that is not the same
thing as the law being on the latter subject.
There might be overlapping; but the
overlapping must be in law. The same
transaction may involve two or more taxable
events in its different aspects. But the fact
that there is an overlapping does not detract
from the distinctiveness of the aspects."
(pg.652-653)
Since service Tax is not a levy on passengers and goods
but on the event of service in connection with the carriage of
goods, it is not therefore possible to hold that the Act in pith and
substance is within the States exclusive power under Entry 56 of
List II. What the Act ostensibly seeks to tax is what it, in
substance, taxes. In the circumstances, the Act could not be
termed to be a colourable piece of legislation. It is not the case
of the petitioners that the Act is referable to any other entry apart
from Entry 56 of List II. Therefore the negation of the petitioners
submission perforce leads to the conclusion that the Act falls
within the residuary power of Parliament under Entry 97 of List I.
Incidentally a similar challenge to the legislative
competence of Parliament to levy service tax was negatived in
Tamil Nadu Kalyana Mandapam Assn. V. Union of India 2004
(167) ELT 3 (S.C) which was a case where the levy of service
tax was challenged by owners of Kalayan Mandapam/ Mandap
Keepers. By virtue of the 1997 amendment service provided to a
client by Mandap keepers including the services if any rendered
as a caterer was treated as a taxable service. The challenge,
inter-alia, was that service tax on Mandap keepers was
colourable legislation as the said tax was not on service but was
in pith and substance only a tax on the sale of goods and/or a tax
on land. The writ petition filed before the Madras High Court
was rejected and the constitutionality of the levy was upheld. It
was then urged before this Court by the appellants that Entries
18, 14 and 54 of List II covered the levy in question and,
therefore, resort could not be had to Entry 97 in List I of the
Seventh Schedule of the Constitution. It was held by this Court
that although certain items of the service might have been
referable to any other entry, the service element was the "more
weighty, visible and predominant". Therefore, the nature and
character of the levy of the service tax was distinct from a tax on
the sale or hire purchase of goods and from a tax on land.
The point at which the collection of the tax is to be made is
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a question of legislative convenience and part of the machinery
for realization and recovery of the tax. The manner of the
collection has been described as "an accident of administration;
it is not of the essence of the duty" . It will not change and does
not affect the essential nature of the tax. Subject to the legislative
competence of the Taxing Authority a duty can be imposed at the
stage which the authority finds to be convenient and the most
effective whatever stage it may be. The Central Government is
therefore legally competent to evolve a suitable machinery for
collection of the service tax subject to the maintenance of a
rational connection between the tax and the person on whom it is
imposed. By Sections 116 and 117 of the Finance Act 2000, the
tax is sought to be levied from the recipients of the services.
They cannot claim that they are not connected with the service
since the service is rendered to them.
In a similar fact situation under an Ordinance the Central
Government was authorized to levy and collect a duty of excise
on all coal and coke dispatched from collieries. Rules framed
under the Ordinance provided for collection of the excise duty by
the railway administration by means of a surcharge on freight
recoverable either from the consignor or the consignee. The
imposition of excise duty on the consignee was challenged on
the ground that the consignee had nothing to do with the
manufacture or production of the coal. Negativing this
submission this Court in R.C. Jall V. Union of India AIR 1962
SC 1281, 1286 said:-
"The argument confuses the incidence of
taxation with the machinery provided for the
collection thereof ".
In Rai Ramakrishna (supra) the tax under Entry 56 of List
II was held to be competently levied on the bus operators or bus
owners even though the object of levy was passengers ( which
they were not) because there was a direct connection between
the object of the tax viz., goods and passengers and the owners
of the transport carrying the goods or passengers. There is thus
nothing inherently illegal or unconstitutional to provide for service
tax to be paid by the availer or user.
The writ petitioners have relying upon the decision in
Dwarka Prasad v. Dwarka Das Saraf 1976 (1) SCC 128,
contended that the amendment to section 68 by the introduction
of a proviso in 2003, was invalid. It is submitted that as the body
of the section did not cover the subject matter, there was no
question of creating an exception in respect thereto by a proviso.
According to the writ petitioners, the proviso cannot expand the
body by creating a separate charge. It is submitted that by
merely amending the definition of the word "assessee" it could
not be understood to mean that thereby all customers of the
services in question were liable.
The submission is misconceived for several reasons.
Section 68 is a machinery section in that it provides for the
incidence of taxation and is not the charging section which is
Section 66. The amendments to Section 66 brought about in
2000 changed the point of collection of tax from the provider of
the service to ’such manner as may be prescribed’. Section
68(1A) as it stood in 1997 provided for the collection and
recovery of service tax in respect of the services referred in
clauses (g) to (r) of Section 65(41), which included both the
services with which we are concerned, from such person and in
such manner as may be prescribed. The 1998 Finance Act
maintained this. Now the Service Tax Rules 1994 provided for
the collection and recovery of tax from the user or payers for the
services. This was the prescribed method. All that the proviso to
Section 68(1A) did was to prescribe the procedure for collection
with reference to services of goods transport operators and
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clearing agents which services had already been expressly
included under the Finance Act 2000 into the definition of taxable
service.
The decision in Dwarka Prasad vs. Dwarka Das Saraf
(supra) relied upon by the writ petitioner does not in any way
forbid a proviso from supplementing the enacting clause. All that
the decision says is that a proviso must prima facie be read and
considered in relation to the principal matter to which it is a
proviso. It is not a separate or an independent enactment. The
introduction of the proviso to Section 68(1)(A) by the Finance
Act, 2003 does not seek in any manner seek to expand that sub-
section. In fact it gives effect to it.
The final challenge to the 2000 amendment to the Service
Tax Act, 1994 is that it operated in a discriminatory manner in
that it chose the recipient of the services to be the assessee only
in the case of services rendered by goods transport operators
and clearing and forwarding agents. We are unable to accept
the submission. Because of the inherent complexity of fiscal
adjustments of diverse elements in the field of tax, the legislature
is permitted a large discretion in the matter of classification to
determine not only what should be taxed but also the manner in
which the tax may be imposed. Courts are extremely
circumspect in questioning the reasonability of such classification
but after a "judicial generosity is extended to legislative wisdom,
if there is writ on the statute perversity, madness in the method
or gross disparity, judicial credibility may snap and the measure
may meet with its funeral". (Vide: Ganga Sugar Corporation vs.
State of U.P. )
The same judicial wariness was expressed in Federation of
Hotel and Restaurant Association of India etc. v. Union of
India & Ors., (1989) 3 SCC 634 where it was said:
"It is now well settled that though taxing
laws are not outside Article 14, however,
having regard to the wide variety of diverse
economic criteria that go into the formulation
of a fiscal policy legislature enjoys a wide
latitude in the matter of selection of persons,
subject matter, events etc., for taxation. The
tests of the vice of discrimination in a taxing
law are, accordingly, less rigorous. In
examining the allegations of a hostile,
discriminatory treatment what is looked into
is not its phraseology, but the real effect of
its provisions. A legislature does not, as an
old saying goes, have to tax everything in
order to be able to tax something. If there is
equality and uniformity within each group,
the law would not be discriminatory.
Decisions of this Court on the matter have
permitted the legislatures to exercise an
extremely wide discretion in classifying items
for tax purposes, so long as it refrains from
clear and hostile discrimination against
particular persons or classes." (pg.659)
(Emphasis added)
In the case before us the discrimination is not, even
according to the writ petitioners, by reason of the subject
matter of tax. It is also not the writ petitioners’ case that
within the separate classes of services covered by the
different clauses in Section 65(41), there is any
discrimination or that the law operates unequally within the
classes. According to them the discrimination lies in the
method of collection of the tax followed. But as we have said
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this is not of the essence of the tax and the mere difference
in the machinery provisions between the different classes of
service cannot found a challenge of discrimination . If the
legislature thinks that it will facilitate the collection of the tax
due from such specified traders on a rationally discernible
basis, there is nothing in the said legislative measure to
offend Article 14 of the Constitution . It is therefore outside
the judicial ken to determine whether the Parliament should
have specified a common mode for recovery of the tax as a
convenient administrative measure in respect of a particular
class. That is ultimately a question of policy which must be
left to legislative wisdom. This challenge also accordingly
fails.
Although the challenge to the constitutional validity and
legality of the levy of service tax is rejected, the writ petitioners
have some subsidiary complaints. They say that although the
levy of service tax from the users of the services rendered by the
goods transport operators was introduced with effect from
16th November, 1997, the levy was exempted for the period
subsequent to 2nd June, 1998 in view of the notification dated
2nd June, 1998 which is still operative. Yet the respondents had
raised demands for service tax for periods subsequent to 2nd
June, 1998. It has been conceded by the Union of India that the
amendments made in the Act would have to be read along with
the notifications so that the levy and collection of service tax
would be only in respect of services rendered by goods transport
operators between the period from 16th November, 1997 to
2nd June, 1998. Similarly there can be no tax liability on users of
the services of the clearing and forwarding agents beyond
1.9.1999 when by notification No. 7/99 dated 23.8.99, the levy of
service tax on the services provided by clearing and forwarding
agents were exempted. Furthermore the liability to pay interest or
penalty on outstanding amounts will arise only if the dues are not
paid within the period of two weeks from the order passed by
this Court on 17th November, 2003. In those cases in which the
tax may have been paid but not refunded to the writ petitioners,
for whatever reason, there is no question of levy of any interest
or penalty at all.
With these clarifications, the writ petitions are dismissed
without any order as to costs.