Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MITHAN LAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF DELHI & ANOTHER(with connected petition)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/04/1958
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BOSE, VIVIAN
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
DAS, S.K.
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 682 1959 SCR 445
ACT:
Sales Tax--Building contracts-Tax on supply of materials in
construction works-Competence of Parliament-Delegation of
authority to extend taxation law-Notification by Govenrment-
Validity--Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941 (Ben. VI of
1941), SS. 2, 4-Part C States (Laws) Act, 1950 (XXX of
1950), S. 2 Constitution of India, Arts. 246(4), 248(2).
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners were building contractors carrying on busi-
ness in Delhi, which under the Constitution of India became
a Part C State. In exercise of the power conferred by Art.
246(4) of the Constitution,, Parliament enacted the Part C
States (Laws) Act, 1950, by virtue of which the Chief
Commissioner of Delhi issued a notification extending the
operation of tile Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941, to
Delhi. Acting under the provisions of this Act, the sales
tax officer imposed tax oil the petitioners in respect of
materials supplied in execution of the building contracts.
After paying it for some years the petitioners challenged
the validity of the assessment on the grounds, inter alia,
that (1) as there was no sale of materials used in execution
of a building contract, a tax thereon was not authorised,
and (2) in any event, the provisions of the Act under which
tile sales tax officer sought to levy the tax were
unconstitutional and invalid
Held, (1) It is within tile competence of Parliament to
impose a tax on the supply of materials in building
contracts and to impose it under the name of sales tax, and
as Parliament has the power to legislate for Part C States
tile imposition of the tax on the, petitioners is valid.
State of Madras v. Gannot Dunkerley and Co. (Madras) Ltd.,
[1939] S.C.R- 379, held inapplicable.
(2) Section 2 of the Part C States (Laws) Act is not repug-
nant to Art. 248(2) on the ground that it conferred on the
Government authority to extend a taxation law to Part C
States. When a notification is issued under s. 2 of the Act
by the appropriate Government extending the law of a Part A
State to a Part C State, the provisions of the law which is
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extended become incorporated by reference,in the Act itself,
and therefore a tax;imposed thereunder is a tax imposed by
Parliament.
(3) Section 2 Of,, the Act, is not bad as an
unconstitutional delegation of legislative powers.
57
446
In re The Delhi Laws Act, 1912, [1951] S.C.R. 747, followed.
(4) The expression "enactment which is in force in a Part A
State " in s. 2 of the Act must be construed as meaning
",statute which is in operation in a part A State " as
distinct from a statute which had been repealed, and cannot
be interpreted as having reference to individual sections or
provisions of a statute.
(5) The notification in question whether it is viewed as
one extending a subsisting statute to Delhi or as extending
it which modifications so far as the impugned provisions are
concerned, is intra vires s. 2.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURTSDTCTION: Petitions Nos. 15 & 16 of 1955.
Petitions under Article 32 of the Constitution of India, for
enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
Radhey Lal Aggarwal, for the petitioners.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-Genneral of India and R. H.
Dhebar, for the respondents.
T. M. Sen, for the States of Madras and Mysore
(Interveners).
G. C. Mathur and C. P. Lal, for the State of U. P.
(Intervener).
Sardai, Bahadur, for the State of Kerala (Intervener).
Ratnaparkhi, A. G., for M/s. Raipur Provincial Engineering
Co. (Intervener).
1958. April 7. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMA AIYAR J.-The petitioners are building
contractors carrying on business in Delhi, and they have
filed the present applications under Art. 32 of the
Constitution challenging the validity of certain provisions
of the Bengal, Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941 (Ben. VI of
1941), which had been extended to the State of Delhi by a
notification dated April 28,
The impugned provisions of the Act may ’now be referred to
Section 2(d) of the Act defines "goods as including "all
materials, articles and commodities, whether or not to be
used in the construction fitting
447
out, improvement or repair of immovable property Sale" is
defined in s. 2 (g) as including " any transfer of property
in goods for cash or deferred payment or other valuable
consideration, including a transfer of property in goods
involved in the execution of a
contract................................. Section 2(b)
defines " contract as meaning, omitting what is not
relevant,
" any agreement for carrying out for cash or deferred
payment or other valuable consideration-the construction,
fitting out, improvement or repair of any building, road,
bridge or other immovable property." "Sale price" is defined
in s. 2(h)(ii) as meaning valuable consideration for "the
carrying out of any contract, less such portion as may be
prescribed of such amount, representing the usual proportion
of the cost of labour to the cost of materials used in
carrying out such contract " Turnover" is defined in s.
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2(i), and is as follows:
" Turnover " used in relation to any period mean,, the
aggregate of the sale-prices or parts of sale prices
receivable, or if a dealer so elects, actually received by
the dealer during such period after deducting the amounts,
if any, refunded by the dealer in respect of any goods
returned by the purchaser within such period."
Section 4, which is the charging section, provides,
that.................... every dealer whose gross turnover
during the year immediately preceding the commencement of
this Act exceeded the taxable quantum shall be liable to pay
tax under this Act on all sales effected after the date so
notified."
The Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941, was a law passed
by the Legislature of the Province of Bengal and applied
only to sales effected within that Province, and, after the
partition of the Country, to sales effected within the State
of West Bengal. Under the Government of India Act, 1935,
Delhi was a Chief Commissioner’s Province administered by
the Governor General, and under the Constitution, it became
a Part C State, and Art. 239 vested its administration in
the President acting through a Chief Commissioner
448
or a Lieutenant-Governor as he might think fit. Article
246(4) which is material for the present purposes as
follows:
Parliament has power to make laws With respect to any matter
for any part of the territory of India not included in Part
A or Part B of the First Schedule notwithstanding that such
matter is a matter enumerated in the State List."
In exercise of the power conferred by this
Article,Parliament enacted the Part C States (Laws) Act No.
XXX of 1950, and s. 2 thereof is as follows:
"The Central Government may, by notification in the Official
Gazette’, extend to any Part C State (other than Coorg and
the Andaman and Nicobar Islands) or to any part of such
State, with such restrictions and modifications as it thinks
fit, any enactment which is in force in a Part A State at
the date of the Notification............."
On April 28, 1951, the Chief Commissioner of Delhi issued a
notification under this section extending the operation of
the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941, to Delhi as from
November 1, 1951. Acting under the provisions of this Act,
the Sales Tax Officer, Karolbagh, Delhi issued on June 12,
1952, notices to the petitioners calling upon them, to
submit returns of their receipts from building contracts and
to deposit the taxes due thereon. In compliance with these
notices, the petitioners were sending quarterly returns of
their taxable turnover and assessment orders were also made
in respect of their annual turnover for the. years 1951-1952
and 1952-1953, and the amounts due thereunder had also been
paid. For the year 1953-1954, the quarterly returns had
been submitted and the tax due thereon deposited, and
proceedings were pending for assessment of tax for that
year. This was the position when the Madras High Court
pronounced its, decision in Gannon Dunkerley & Co. v. State
of Madras (1), that the provisions of the Madras General
Sales Tax Act, 1939, imposing tax on the supply of materials
in construction works were ultra vires the powers of the
Provincial Legislature under Entry 48
(1) [1954] 5 S.T.C. 216.
449
in List II, Sch. VII to the Government of India Act,
1935.
Basing themselves on this judgment, the petitioners who had
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been acting so far on the view that the provisions of the
Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941, imposing tax on
construction contracts were valid and had been paying tax in
that belief, filed Civil Writs Nos. 244-D and, 247 of 1954
in the Punjab High Court challenging the validity of those
provisions on the ground that there was no sale of materials
used in execution of a building contract, and that a tax
thereon was not authorised by Entry 48. They accordingly
prayed (a) for a writ of certiorari quashing the assesssment
for the years 1951-1952 and 1952-1953, (b) for a writ of
prohibition restraining proceedings for assessment of sales
tax for the year 1953-1954 or realisation of any tax for
that year, and (c) for a writ of mandamus directing the
respondents to forbear in future from assessing the
petitioners to sales tax under the impugned provisions.
Both these petitions were summarily dismissed by the High
Court on October 18, 1954, and the orders of dismissal, not
having been challenged in appropriate proceedings have
become final.
Now, the present attempt of the petitioners is to reopen the
question which had been answered against them by the High
Court of’ Punjab by resort to proceedings under Art. 32 of
the Constitution. It is therefore not surprising that the
learned Solicitor General appearing for the respondents
should have taken preliminary objections of a serious
character to the maintainability of these petitions. He
contended that the petitioners having filed petitions under
Art. 226 claiming the very reliefs which they have now
prayed for and on he very grounds now put forward, and those
petitions having been dismissed and no appeals having been
filed against the orders of dismissal, they had no right to
invoke the jurisdiction of this Court under Art. 32 for
obtaining the same reliefs. He further contended that the
claim of the petitioners that the assessments in question,
being
450
unauthorised, constituted an interference with their
fundamental right to carry on business under Art 19 (1)(g)
could not be maintained inasmuch as assessment proceedings
had "been completed and the tax realised He also argued that
even if the petitioners were right in their contention that
the assessments were unauthorised, their remedy was to sue
for refund of the taxes paid, and that the applications for
writ of certiorari to quash the orders of assessment were
misconceived. It was further contended that the payments
having been made, by the petitioners voluntarily-it might be
under a misconception of their rights they had no right to
claim refund of the amounts even by action. These
contentions raise questions of considerable importance; but
it is unnecessary to express our opinion thereon, as the
petitioners also pray for a writ of mandamus directing the
respondents to forbear from imposing sales tax in future,
and it will be more satisfactory to decide the case on the
merits.
The contention of the petitioners based on the decision of
the Madras High Court in Gannon Dunkerley & Co. v. State of
Madras (4) is that the State Legislatures acting under Entry
48 have no competence to enact laws imposing tax on the
supply of materials in execution of works contract, as there
is no sale of those materials by the contractor. The
decision in Gannon Dunkerley & Co. v., State of Madras (1)
was taken on appeal to this Court in Civil Appeal No. 210 of
1956, and by our judgment, The State of Madras v. Gannon
Dunkerley & Co., (Madras) Ltd.(2) pronounced on April 1,
1958, we have affirmed it, and if the present case is
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governed by ’that judgment, the petitioners would clearly be
entitled to succeed. But it is contended by the learned
Solicitor-General that that decision has no application to
the present petitions’ because the impugned law was enacted
not by a State Legislature in exercise of the power
conferred by Entry 54 in List II but by Parliament by virtue
of the authority granted by Art. 246(4) of the Constitution,
(1) [1954] 5 S.T.C. 216 (2)[1959] S.C.R. 379.
451
and that it was within the competence of Parliament acting
under, that Article, to impose a tax on the supply of
materials in building contracts, even though there was no
sale of those materials within Entry 54.
In our opinion,. this contention is well-founded. Art. 246,
Cls., (2), and (3), of the Constitution confer on the
Legislatures, of the States mentioned in Parts A and B the
power, to make laws with respect to the matters enumerated
in Lists II and III of Sch. VII, and one of those. matters
is Tax on the sale of goods ", Entry 54 in List II. It is
with reference to the corresponding Entry in the Government
of India Act, 1935, Entry 48 in List II, that we have held
in The State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley & Co., Madras Ltd
(1) that the power to tax sale of goods conferred by that
Entry has reference only to sales as defined in the Indian
sale of Goods Act, 1930. But here, we are concerned not
with a law of a State, mentioned in Part A or Part But with
that of a State in Part C. Under Art. 246(4) it is
Parliament that has the power to legislate for Part C
States, and that power is untrammelled by the limitations
prescribed by Art. 246, Cls. (.2) and (3), and Entry 54 of
List II , and is plenary and absolute, subject-only to such
restrictions as are imposed by the Constitution,and there is
none such which is, material to the present question. It
would therefore be competent to Parliament to impose tax on
the supply of materials in building contracts and to impose
it under the name of., sales tax, as has been done by the
Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia or by the
Legislatures of the American States. The decision in The
State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley Co., Madras Ltd. which
was given on a statute passed by the Provincial Legislature.
under the Government of India Act, 1935, has therefore no
application to the present case.
It is argued that though Parliament his’ the power under
Art.264(4) to make a law imposing tax on construct a
contracts that power is subject to the limitation contained
in Art., 248, that under that Article it is Parliament that
has the exclusive power
(1) [1959] S.C.R.379
452
to enact laws in respect of matters not enumerated in the
Lists, including taxation, and that such a power could
properly be exercised only by Parliament itself imposing a
tax and not by its extending the operation of a taxation law
passed by the Legislature of a State ; and that s. 2 of the
Part C States (Laws) Act must be held to be bad as being
repugnant to Art. 48(2) in so far as it conferred on the
Government authority to extend a taxation law to Part C
States. This argument proceeds on a misapprehension of the
true scope of Art. 248. That Article has reference to the
distribution of legislative powers between the Centre and
the States mentioned in Parts A and 13 under the three Lists
in Sch. VII, and it provides that in respect of matters not
enumerated in the Lists including taxation, it is Parliament
that has power to enact laws. It has no application to Part
C States, for which the governing provision is Art. 246(4).
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Moreover, when a notification is issued by the appropriate
Government extending the law of a Part A State to a Part C
State, the law so extended derives its force in the State to
which it is extended from s. 2 of the Part C States (Laws)
Act enacted by Parliament. The result of a notification
issued under that section is than, the provisions of the law
which is extended become incorporated by reference, in the
Act itself, and therefore a tax imposed thereunder is a tax
imposed by Parliament. There is thus no substance in this
contention.
It is next contended for the petitioners that even assuming
that Parliament was competent to impose a tax on the supply
of materials in a building contract and that could be done
by a notification extending the law of a Part A State, the
notification dated April 28, 1951, is, in so far as it
relates to the impugned provisions, in excess of the
authority conferred by s. 2, because that section limits the
authority of the central Government to extend laws of Part A
States to Part C States, to " any enactment which is in
force " at the date of the notification, and, as the
impugned provisions of the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act,
1941, were ultra vires Entry 48 under which the Legislature
453
of the Province of Bengal derived its power to impose sales
tax, they were not " in force " in the State of West Bengal
at the date of the notification, and could not therefore be
extended to the State of Delhi. According to the
petitioners, " enactment in force" in s. 2 must be construed
as meaning provisions of a statute which are valid and
enforceable. We are unable to agree with this contention.
Though the language of s. 2 might, in the abstract, be
susceptible of the construction which the petitioners seek
to put upon it, in the context that is not, in our opinion,
its true meaning. What is intended by that section is that
with reference to different topics of legislation on which
the several States in Part A had enacted different statutes,
the authority acting under s. 2 should have the discretion
to extend that statute in any of the Part A States which is
best suited to the conditions in the particular Part C State
to which it is to be extended, and that, further, the
authority should have the power to extend it with suitable
it restrictions and modifications ". It could not have been
intended by this section that the authority concerned should
take upon itself to examine, the vires of each and every one
of the provisions in the statute, and then extend only such
of them as it considers to be valid. In our view, the
expression " enactment which is in force in a Part A State "
must be construed as meaning " statute which is in operation
in a Part A State" as distinct from a statute which had been
repealed and it cannot be interpreted as having reference to
individual sections or provisions of a statute.
But even if we accept the narrow construction contended for
by the petitioners, that would not make any difference in
the result, as the authority conferred by s. 2 on the
Government to extend the enactments in force in Part A State
includes a power to do so with restrictions and
modifications, and it was within the competence of the
Government acting on this provision to incorporate on its
own authority the impugned provisions by way of modification
of the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941. It is said
that,
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454
the notification does not, as a fact, purport to modify the
Bengal Act, but merely extends the whole of it on a mistaken
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notion that it is all valid. But that does not affect the
position. The notification intends that all the provisions
of the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941, should operate
in the State of Delhi, and if that could be effectuated by
recourse being had to any of the powers of the Legislature,
that should be done and the legislation upheld as referable
to that power.
Ut res magis valeat quam pereat.
It is lastly urged that s. 2 of the Part C States (Laws) Act
is bad for the reason that it confers on the Government a
power to modify laws passed by State Legislatures, and that
it is an unconstitutional delegation of legislative powers
to authorise an outside authority to modify a law enacted by
a Legislature on what are essentially matters of policy.
Now, it should be noted that in re The Delhi Laws Act, 1912
etc. (1) one of the questions referred for the opinion of
this Court related to the vires of this very provision, and
the answer of the majority of this Court was that the first
portion of the section, which is what is material for the
present discussion, was valid. Counsel for the petitioners,
however, relies on the decision of this Court in Rajnarain
Singh v. The Chairman, Patna Administration Committee, Patna
and another (2), wherein it was held than an executive
authority could be authorised by a statute to modify either
existing or future laws but not in any essential feature,
and that a modification which involved a change of policy of
the Act would be bad. It is argued that it is a question of
policy whether taxes should be imposed on the supply of
materials in building contracts, and that, therefore, the
power conferred by s. 2 on the Government to extend a law
with modifications cannot be exercised so as to modify a
provision of the Bengal Finance. (Sales Tax) Act, 1941,
relating to that matter. The answer to this contention is
that the modification made by the Central Government,
assuming that is its true character, does not involve any
change of policy underlying the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax)
Act, 1941. Indeed, the modification gives effect to the
policy of that
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 747.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 290.
455
enactment which was to bring construction contracts within
the ambit of the taxation powers of the State, and which
failed only for want of legislative authority. Whether we
view the notification as one extending a subsisting statute
to Delhi or as extending it with modifications so far as the
impugned provisions are concerned, it is intra vires S. 2.
failed, the petitions are dismissed with costs.
Petitions dismissed.