Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
POLYCHEM LIMITED & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/08/1998
BENCH:
CJI, K. VENKATASWAMI
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
K. Venkataswami, J.
The short question that arises for our consideration in
this appeal is whether the State Government is empowered to
collect differential supervision charges with retrospective
effect under Section 58-A of the Bombay Prohibition Act,
1949?
The facts leading to the filling of this appeal are as
follows:-
The first appellant is a company registered under the
provision of the Companies Act, 1956. The second appellant
is a share-holder and director of the first appellant-
company. The appellants, for the sake of convenience, will
be referred to hereinafter as the ’Company’. The company is
engaged in the manufacture of alcohol potable liquor,
country liquor and alcohol based chemicals. As required
under Section 58 A of the Act read with Condition No.2 of
the License issued to the Company in Form ’I’, the Company
used to pay in advance the supervision charges towards the
costs of the staff deputed for the purpose of supervising
the operation of manufacture, storage and issue of spirit.
The Inspector of prohibition and Excise by a letter dated
19th July, 1979 informed the company that the wages and
dearness allowance of Government servants were increased
retrospectively and on account of that the supervision
charges payable by the Company comes to Rs. 1,54,379.79 for
the period 1970 to 1979. However, pursuant to the said
letter dated 19th July, 1979, no steps were taken by the
respondents to collect the differential amount from the
Company. While so, the Company on 7th April, 1983 received a
demand Notice dated 21st March, 1989 calling upon the
Company to pay the differential amount of supervision
charges amounting to Rs. 99,702.10 immediately within 15
days from the date of the receipt of the said Demand Notice,
failing which legal action to recover the amount as arrears
of land revenue would be taken.
Aggrieved by the said demand of differential
supervision charges retrospectively, the company moved the
High Court by filing a writ Petition No. 1672/83 under
Article 226 of the Constitution of India. The said Writ
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Petition was heard along with writ Petition No. 940/82 and
the main judgment was rendered in Writ Petition No. 940/82.
A Division Bench of the Bombay High Court upheld the
impugned demand of differential supervision charges
retrospectively. The Company, aggrieved by the judgment of
the Bombay High Court dated 12.9.90, has preferred this
appeal by special leave.
Learned counsel appearing for the appellants-company
submitted that the impugned judgment of the Division Bench
runs counter to an earlier Division Bench judgment of the
same High Court on the same point. It is stated that another
Division Bench in M/s J.E. Bilmoria & sons Vs. The State of
Maharashtra & Ors. [1990 (2) Bombay C.R. 108 (Nagpur Bench)]
has quashed similar demand of differential supervision
charges retrospectively. Therefore, the judgment under
appeal, ignoring the earlier division Bench judgment on the
same point, cannot be sustained.
Learned counsel appearing for the respondents, placing
reliance on the reasoning given in the judgment under
appeal, supported the conclusions reached by the Division
Bench.
Section 58-A of the Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949
enables the Statement Government to levy and collect what is
called supervision charges. It is common ground that this
supervision charges are collected in advance at the
beginning of every quarter. The question for consideration
is whether this collection of supervision charges in advance
can be revised as a consequence of revision of salaries to
Government servants. While upholding such revision and
collection of differential supervision charges
retrospectively, the learned judges in the judgment under
appeal held that the liability to pay supervision charges
and the quantification of the same are two different
concepts and, therefore, the liability was not imposed with
retrospective effect, but merely rates are revised with
retrospective effect. The Division Bench for coming to the
above conclusion placed reliance on a single Judge’s
judgment in Writ Petition No. 631/82. As a matter or fact,
we find that the judgment of the learned Single judge in
Writ Petition No. 631/82 was expressly overruled by an
earlier Division Bench of the Bombay High Court on 1.8.89 in
M/s J.E. Bilmoria’s case (supra). We presume that this
Division Bench judgment was not brought to the notice of the
latter Division Bench, otherwise they would not have taken
diametrically opposite view without referring the issue to a
larger Bench. We further notice that the judgment in M/s
J.E. Bilmoria’s case was not challenged by the Revenue as
per the information passed on by Mr. Nargolkar, learned
counsel for the respondents.
In M/s J.E. Bilmoria’s case, the reasonings of the
Division Bench to hold that the demand of differential
supervision charges retrospectively was without
jurisdiction, are in the following words:-
"We have already pointed out above
the provisions of Section 58-A of
the Bombay Prohibition Act the
relevant rules and the conditions
of licence, which bear upon the
question of supervision charges. If
in pursuance of the provisions of
Section 58-A of the Bombay
Prohibition Act, the rules and the
conditions of licence, advance
payment of the supervision charges
had to be made at the beginning of
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every quarter and without payment
of those charges, the articles
could be removed from the bonded
warehouse for sale evidently the
duty of the licensee, who stores
articles in the bonded warehouse,
would be only to pay the amount
which has been ascertained and had
to be paid in advance. Neither of
these provisions clothes the State
Government or the commissioner with
the authority to charge the
supervision charges with
retrospective effect. Obviously,
when section 58-A uses the words
"the cost of such staff shall be
paid to the State Government", that
would have reference to the cost of
the staff as obtaining for the
period during which the goods are
stored in the bonded warehouse and
not the incidence which the State
would have to bear by reason of
such a remote circumstance as the
upward revision of the pay-scales
of its own employees at & latter
date.
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We must bear in mind the
nature of excise duty as indicated
in M/s Mc Dowell & Co. ’s case,
A.I.R. 1977 S.C. 1459 (supra) that
it is an indirect duty which the
manufacturer or producer passes on
to the ultimate consumer, that is,
ultimate incidence will always to
be on the customer. By attempting
to pass on the incidence of upward
revision of pay-scales to the
licensees, several years after the
removal of the articles from the
bonded warehouse, the respondents
would make it impossible for the
petitioners to pass on the cost of
storing the articles in the bonded
warehouse to the ultimate consumer,
and this clearly the respondents
cannot be permitted to do, because
such a situation had never been
anticipated by the petitioners, and
by the unilateral action of the
respondents, no additional
liability can be imposed on the
petitioners.
As observed in (Income Tax
Officer V. I.M.C. Ponnoose), A.I.R.
1970 S.C. 385, it is open to a
sovereign legislature to enact laws
which have retrospective operation.
Even when the parliament enacts
retrospective laws such laws are no
doubt prima facie of questionable
policy, and contrary to the general
principle that legislation by which
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the conduct of mankind is to be
regulated ought, when introduced
for the first time, to deal with
future acts, and ought not to
change the character of past
transactions carried on upon the
faith of the then existing law. The
Courts will not, therefore, ascribe
retrospectivity to new laws
affecting rights unless by express
words or necessary implication, it
appears that such was the intention
of the legislature. Here, it does
not appear to us that Section 58-A
of the Bombay prohibition Act
permitted the Government
retrospectively to raise the
quantum of costs, nor is there any
warrant to infer that there was
delegation to the rule making
authority to charge the amount of
costs on the basis of the events
which could not have been
anticipated at the time the costs
were assessed.
After describing in detail how
the petitioners order their
affairs, the petitioners have
stated in ground No. (vi) of para 2
of the petition that on a rational
interpretation of the relevant
conditions and provisions, the
petitioners were entitled to know
in advance the costs payable by
them so as to enable them to fix
the price of goods, and the
respondents, having acted in the
manner and permitted to the
petitioners to sell the goods on
the effective representation that
the cost of supervision charges for
incoming quarter was fixed for the
said quarter, cannot now be
permitted to go back on their said
representation and demand
additional amount, more so with
retrospective effect from
5.5.1970."
On a scrutiny of these two Division Bench judgments,
the view taken in M/s J.E. Bilmoria’s case commends to us
and we are of the view that the reasonings given therein are
well-founded. We are, therefore, of the view that the
impugned demand of differential supervision charges
retrospectively cannot be sustained and accordingly the
judgment under appeal is set aside and the Writ Petition No.
1672/83 filed by the company stands allowed. The question
posed at the beginning is answered in the negative.
In the result, the appeal is allowed accordingly with
no order as to cost.