Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JAWAHARMAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
22/09/1965
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 764 1966 SCR (1) 890
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1975 SC1389 (11,15,17,26,28)
MV 1985 SC 421 (75)
RF 1988 SC 191 (30)
ACT:
Rajasthan Passengers and Goods Taxation (Amendment and Vaii-
dation) Act 1964 (22 of 1964), ss. 2 and 4-Act validating
State Finance Acts of 1961 and 1962-Whether legislature can
itself validate defect caused by non-observance of Art. 255
of the Constitution-Retrospective taxation whether valid and
reasonable.
HEADNOTE:
The Rajasthan State Legislature passed Act 18 of 1959 to
levy tax Oil passengers and goods carried in motor vehicles.
For the purpose of the tax roads were divided into two
categories i.e. those which were asphalted etc. arid those
which were not. In respect of goods Carried on the, former
category of roads the State Government was authorised by s.
3 of ’he Act to levy tax at a maximum of 1/8th of the value
of the fares and freights in respect of goods carried on the
second category of roads the maximum was 1/12th. By, a
notification under the Act the maximum rates were levied
with effect from May 1, 1959. The said s. 3 was amended by
the Finance Acts of 1961 and 1962 to raise the maximum rates
leviable under that section and the relevant notifications
actually levied the same. The Acts of 1961 and 1962 however
suffered from the infirmity that that the assent of the
President had not been obtained in respect of them as
required by Art. 255 of the Constitution. To cure the
defect Ordinance No. 4 of 1964 was issued. The Ordinance
was replaced on September 9, 1964 by Act 22 of 1964 for
which the assent of the President was duly obtained.
Section 2 of the Act of 1964 retrospectively re-enacted the
amendments to s. 3 of the principal Act made law the Acts of
1961 and 1962. Section 4 of the Act validated all the
collections and levies under the earlier Acts and also
purported to cure the infirmity in the said earlier Act
arising from noncompliance with Art. 255. The petition who
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was asked to pay tax under the Ordinance of 1964 challenged
the validity of the said Ordinance -,is well as the Act of
1964 in petitions under Art 32 of the Constitution of India.
It was contended on behalf of the petitioners that ss. 2
and 4 of the imputed Act purported to validate the earlier
invalid Finance Act of 1961 1964. It was urged that the
failure of the legislature to comply with the provisions of
Art. 255 rendered ’he said Acts void ab initio and as such
they Could not be validated by subsequent legislation. It
was further urged that the said earlier Acts had been held
invalid by the Rajasthan -High Court in the case of Vijai
Singh and it would be incompetent to the State Legislature
to validate the said Acts in spite of the decision of a
court to competent jurisdiction
HELD(i) It was factually not correct to say that the Acts
of 1961 and 1962 had been struck down as void ab initio
by a court of competent jurisdiction. The High Court in
Vijai Singh’s case had on the office hand though it
unnecessary to pronounce its considered opinion on that
aspect of the matter. Act 22 of 19641 was passed on
September 9, 1964 while the judgment of the High
Court was delivered in Novem-
891
be, 1964 and so at the time when the Act was passed the
earlier Finance Acts had Dot been struck down at all. [899
B-E]
Vijai Singh and Another v. Deputy Commissoiner Excise & Tax
tion (Appeals) Ajmer and Kotah Divisions, Jaipur & Ors.
I.L.R. (1965) 15 Raj. 285, referred, referred to.
(ii) An Act which suffers from the infirmity that it does
riot comply with the requirements of Art. 255 can be
validated by subsequent legislation. Article 255 itself
provides that no Act of the Legislature 01 a State and no
provision in any such Act shall be invalid by reason only
that some recommendation or previous sanction required by
the Constitution was not given, if assent to the Act was
given by the President later. If an Act is passed without
obtaining the previous assent of the President it does not
become void but remains unenforceable till such assent is
obtained. The said infirmity is cured by subsequent assent
and the law becomes enforceable. The legislature can also
in a suitable case adopt the course. of passing a subsequent
law reintroducing the provisions of the earlier law which
had not received the assent of the President and obtaining
his assent thereto is prescribed by the Constitution.
Legally there is no bar to the legislature adopting either
of the courses mentioned above. [899 F-H; 900 A-D]
(iii) Section 2 of the Act of 1964 does not in fact
purport to validate the Finance Acts of 1961 and 1962. What
it does is to amend retrospectively s. 3 of the principal
Act by inserting a proviso to sub-s. (1) of the said
section. On its plain reading s. 2 has the effect of
inserting the said proviso to s. 3(1) of the principal Act;
and since the amendment so made is,in term retrospective,
when a tax is levied for the periods covered by clauses (a)
and (b) of the proviso thus introduces in s. 3(1) of the
principal Act, the Court must proceed to deal with the
matter on the basis that these clauses had been introduced
in the principal at Art right up from the commencement. [900
E-G]
The power to legislate includes the power to legislate.
prospectively as well as retrospectively and in that behalf,
tax legislation is no different from any offer legislation.
The power to tax can be competently exercised by the
legislature either prospectively or retrospectively; and
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that is precisely what s. 2 has done in the present case.
Therefore there was no substance in the argument that s. 2
of the Act was invalid [1900]
(iv) The Act of 1964 and all its provisions had received the
assent of the President and so prima facie the assent of the
President to the Act would help the Act to validate the
provisions of The earlier Acts which were not enforceable by
reason of the fact that they had not secured his assent as
required by Art. 225. But the assent of the President could
not serve to make s. 4 valid. 1902 C-D]
What s. 4 in truth and in substance says is that the failure
to comply with the requirements of Art. 255 does not
invalidate the Finance Acts in question and will not
invalidate any action taken or to be taken, under their
respective relevant provisions. In other words the
legislature seems to say by s. 4 that even though Art. 255
may not have been complied with by the earlier Finance Acts,
it is competent to s. 4 whereby it will prescribe that the
failure to comply with Art. 255 does not really matter and
the assent of the President to the Act amounts to this that
the President also agrees that the Legislature is empowered
to say that the infirmity resulting from the non-compliance
with Art. 255 does not matter. This approach is entirely
misconceived. [902 D-F]
The legislature no doubt can validate an earlier Act which
-"s invalid by reason of Art. 255 and such an Act may
receive ’he assent of the
892
President which will make the Act effective. The
legislature cannot, however, itself declare by a statutory
provision that the failure to comply with Art. 255 can be
cured by its own enactment, even if the said enactment
received the assent of the President. Even the assent of
the President cannot alter the constitutional position
tinder Art. 255. The assent of the President cannot by any
legislative provision be deemed ’to have been given to an
earlier Act at a time when it was not so given. In this
context there is no scope for a retrospective deeming
provision in regard to the assent of the President. The
infirmity in question can be cured only by obtaining the
assent of the President and not by any legislative flat. In
enacting s. 4 the State Legislature clearly exceeded its
jurisdiction. [903 A-D, F-G]
M. P. V. Sundararamier & Co. v. The State of Andhra
Pradesh & Another, [1958] S.C.R. 1422, distinguished.
(v) It is idle to contend that merely because a taxing
statute purports to operate retrospectively the
retrospective operation per se involves contravention of the
fundamental right of the citizen guaranteed under Art. 19(1)
(f) or (g). In the present case having regard to the legis-
lative background of the provision prescribed by s. 2 there
could be little doubt that there was no element of
unreasonableness involved in the retrospective operation of
cl. (b) of the, proviso added by the said section to s. 2(1)
of the principal Act. [905 D-F]
(vi) Section 2 of the impugned Act had laid down the rates
of tax only up to the period ending March 26, 1962. It was
silent about the period after that date. The petitioner
therefore could not be taxed for the period after that date
on the strength of cls. (a) and (b) of the proviso to s. 2.
If s. 4 had been valid then the tax at the enhanced rates
prescribed by the Act of 1962 would also have been valid;
but r.ince s. 4 was invalid the tax could be validly and
legitimately le-tied for the period after March 26, 1962
only at the rates prescribed in 1959. [906 D-F]
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JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION.-Write Petition No. 19 of 1965.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for en-
forcement of fundamental rights.
M. M. Tiwari and Ganpat Rai, for the petitioner.
G. C. Kasliwala, Advocate-General Rajasthan, K. K. fain
and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Gajendragadkar C.J. The petitioner, Jawaharinal, carries on
business of plying his motor buses on four routes under the
Stage Carriage Permits granted to him under the relevant
provisions of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939. The three
respondents to his petition respectively are : The State of
Rajasthan, the Deputy Commissioner, Excise and Taxation
(Appeals), Jaipur, and the Taxation Officer, (The Rajasthan
Motor Vehicles) Sikar, State of Rajasthan. It appears that
respondent No. 3 passed several :assessment orders imposing
different amounts of tax against his
893
five vehicles which were running on the four routes in
question. The periods for which these assessment orders
were passed differed from vehicle to vehicle; but, on the
whole, they covered the period between the 1st April, 1962
and the 30th September, 1964. The total amount of tax
imposed in respect of these vehicles by the assessment
orders in question is Rs. 19,062-93P. These orders have
been passed under section 2 of the Rajasthan Passengers and
Goods Taxation (Validation) Ordinance, 1964 (Ordinance No. 4
of 1964). This Ordinance was made and promulgated by the
Governor of Rajasthan on May 15, 1964.
Aggrieved by these orders, the petitioner filed appeals
before respondent No. 2, but respondent No. 2 refused to
entertain the said appeals unless the petitioner paid in
advance the tax imposed by the orders under appeal. Whilst
these appeals were pending before respondent No. 2, the
petitioner moved for stay in respect of the recovery of the
tax assessed, but the said application was rejected on the
ground that there was no provision in law to. entertain any
such application. That is why the petitioner submitted an
application before the Commissioner, Commercial Taxes,
Rajasthan on the 3rd February, 1962 and prayed that his
buses should not be attached and sold in execution of the
orders of assessment, against which he had preferred
appeals, pending the hearing and final disposal of the said
appeals. The Commissioner rejected this application on the
8th February, 1962. Respondent No. 3 then proceeded to
attach one of the buses of the petitioner, viz., Bus No.
RJP-854 and took possession of it. The petitioner thereupon
paid the amount of the taxes as assessed by the impugned
orders, but the payment was made under protest.. The present
petition has been filed by the petitioner under Art. 32 of
the Constitution challenging the validity of the assessment
orders in question. The main ground on which the validity
of the said orders is challenged, is that the Ordinance
under which the impugned orders were passed and the
Rajasthan Passgengers and Goods Taxation (Amendment and
Validation) Act 1964 (No. 22 of 1964) (hereinafter called
the Act) which repealed and replaced the said Ordinance, are
constitutionally invalid. The petitioner prays that this
Court should hold that the Act is invalid, and should, by an
appropriate writ, quash the impugned orders of assessment
passed against him. The petitioner also claims that pending
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the final disposal of his petition, the respondents, their
servants, and agents should be, restrained from realising
the tax as directed by the impugned orders and from seizing
the other buses of the petitioner for the purpose of
recovering the said tax.
894
In order to appreciate the contention of the petitioner that
the Act is invalid, it is necessary to mention the
legislative background of the Act. The Le-islature of
respondent No. 1 passed an Act in 1959 (No. 18 of 1959 known
as the Rajasthan Passengers and Goods Taxation Act, 1959
(hereinafter called the principal Act’). This Act received
the assent of the President on April 2, 1959; was published
in the Rajasthan Gazette on April 30, 1959, and came into
force on May 1, 1959. The validity of this Act has been
upheld by this Court in M/s Sainik Motors, Jodhpur & Ors. v.
The State of Rajasthan(1). Section 3 of the, principal Act
authorised the State Government to levy, charge and collect
tax on all fares and freights in respect of all passengers
carried and goods transported by motor vehicles in Rajas-
than. The said section further provided that the rate of
the tax shall not exceed 1/8th of the value of fare or
freight in the case of cemented, tarred, asphalted,
metalled, gravel and kankar roads, and shall not exceed 1/12
of such value in other cases as may be notified by the State
Government from time to time.
Section 21 of the principal Act authorised the Government of
Rajasthan to frame rules consistent with the said Act for
securing the payment of tax and generally for the purposes
of carrying into effect its provisions. Accordingly, the
Government of Rajasthan framed suitable rules which came
into force on the 21st May, 1959. Thereupon, a notification
was issued by respondent No. 1 on the 30th April, 1959 under
s. 3 of the said Act and ;It came into force, on May 1,
1959; it directed the manner in which, and the rates at
which, the tax shall be charged and recovered. These rates
were the same as had been prescribed by s. 3 of the same Act
as maximum permissible rates. This notification was made
effective on and from the 1st May, 1959. There is no dis-
pute that the principal Act is valid and that the
notification issued under it is also valid.
In 1961, the Rajasthan Finance Act (No. 14 of 1961) was
passed. Section 8 of this Act purported to amend s. 3 of
the principal Act. As a result of this amendment, the
maximum rate at which the State Government could levy,
charge and collect tax on fares and freights was increased
from 1/8th to 15 per cent in the first category of cases;
and in the second category of cases it was increased from
1/12th to 10 per cent. In pursuance of the provisions of
this Finance Act, respondent No. 1 issued a notification on
the 9th March, 1961 levying tax at the said maximum
permissible rates. Neither the bill in respect of this Act
received
(1) [1962] 1 S.C.R. 517.
895
assent of the President before it was introduced in the
State Legislature, nor did this Act receive his assent after
it was passed.
In 1962, the Rajasthan Finance Act (No. 11 of 1962) was
passed. Section 9 of this Act amended s. 3 of the principal
Act authorised the increase of the two respective taxes to
20 per cent and 15 per cent respectively. A notification
was then issued respondent No. 1 under the provisions of s.
9 of tile said Act. is notification authorised levy of taxes
at the maximum rates permissible under s. 9. Neither the
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bill in respect of this Act before it was introduced in the
State Legislature, nor this Act after it was passed received
the assent of the President.
Then followed the Finance Act (No. 13 of 1963). This Act
purported to amend s. 11 of the principal Act; but with this
amendment we are not concerned in the present proceedings.
It appears that the constitutional validity of the, material
provisions of the principal Act and rules and notifications
issued under it as well as the constitutional validity of
the Finance Acts 1961 and 1962 and the notifications issued
respectively thereunder was challenged by a number of bus
operators by writ petitions filed by them before the
Rajasthan High Court under Art. 26 of the Constitution.
During the pendency of these writ petitions, the Rajasthan
Ordinance No. 4 of 1964 was promulgated. Later, the said
Ordinance was repealed and replaced by the Act with which we
are concerned in the present proceedings. This Act came
into force on the 9th September, 1964, having received the
assent of the President on the 8th September, 1964.
The writ petitions filed by the other bus operators were
decided by the said High Court on the 30th November, 1964
vide Vijai Singh and another v. Deputy Commissioner, Excise
& Taxation (Appeals), Ajmer and Kotah Divisions, Jaipur &
other(1). In substance, the High Court has held in that
case that the earlier Finance Acts of 1961 and 1962 suffered
from the infirmity that they did not comply with the
requirements of Art. 255 of the Constitution. It, however,
did not think it necessary to finally determine the question
as to whether by reason of the said infirmity, the said
earlier Acts were void or not, because in its opinion, the
Act of 1964 "is not merely an amending and a curative Act in
that limited sense, but it is really an Act which virtually
re-enacts the provisions of the earlier Acts which suffered
from a constitutional infirmity" (P. 300). The High Court
examined the contentions raised by the petitioners that
(1) [1965] I.L.R. 15 Raj. 285.
896
the provisions of the Act were invalid, and has rejected the
petitioners’ case that the said provisions suffered from any
constitutional infirmity. In the result, the petitions
filed before it challenging the validity of the Act failed.
It appears that the petitioners had also challenged the
validity of the recovery of penalty for non-payment of tax,
and the High Court held, following its earlier decisions,
that the levy of any penalty in the cases before ,At would
be illegal and, therefore, must be struck down. In other
words, except for the limited relief granted in respect of
the levying of the penalty, the substantial contention
raised by the petitioners challenging the validity of the
Act has been rejected by the High Court. Against this
judgment, the High Court has -ranted certificates of fitness
for leave to appeal to this Court and the record in the said
appeals is being printed in the High Court. In that sense,
the said appeals can be said to be pending before this
Court.
The learned Advocate-General who has appeared for the res-
pondents in the present writ proceedings, requested us to
postpone the hearing of this writ petition and take it up
along with the appeals to which we have just referred. We
did not, however, accede to this request, because we thought
that it would not be right to postpone the hearing of the
present writ petition for an indefinitely long period, and
so, we allowed the learned Advocate General to argue the
matter fully and refer us to the judgment of the Rajasthan
High Court which is under appeal in the said appeals. We
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made it clear to the learned Advocate-General that our deci-
sion in the present writ petition would cover the decision
of the said appeals in so far as it would relate to the
validity of the provisions of the Act which are impugned
before us by the present petitioner and not to that part
which covered the question of penalty. Accordingly, the
learned Advocate-General has elaborately addressed us on the
relevant points and has taken us through the relevant
portions of the judgment of the Rajasthan High Court in the
case of Vijai Singh(1).
The respondents filed their written statement in the present
proceedings and they urged that the petitioners challenge to
the validity of the relevant provisions of the Act should
not be sustained. According to them, the Act is
constitutionally valid and the impugned orders of assessment
are fully justified by the said provisions. That is how the
main question which falls to be considered in the present
writ petition is whether the relevant provisions of the Act
are valid or not.
(1) (1965) I.L.R. 15 Raj. 285.
897
Let us therefore proceed to refer to the provisions of the
Act enquire whether the petitioner is justified in
challenging their validity. The Act consists of five
sections. Section 1 gives its tile; s. 2 amends s. 3 of the
principal Act; s. 3 deals with validation of certain lump
sum payments in lieu of tax s. 4 purports to validate
certain sections of the Rajasthan Acts 14 of 1961, 11 of
1962 and 13 of 1963; it also purports to validate the tax
levied, paid or payable and action taken or things done
during the period between the 9th day of March, 1961 and the
date of commencement of this Act. The last section 5
repeals Ordinance No. 4 of 1964. In the present proceedings
we are not concerned with lump sum payments; and so, s. 3
does not fall to be considered.
At this stage it is convenient to set out sections 2 and 4;
they read as under
"2. In section 3 of the Rajasthan Passengers
and Goods Taxation Act, 1959 (Rajasthan Act 18
of 1959) hereinafter referred to as the
principal Act, to subsection (1), the
following proviso shall be and be deemed
always to have been added, namely --
Provided that the tax shall be charged in
respect of all passengers carried and goods
transported by motor vehicles,-
(a) during the period between the 1st day of
May, 1959 and the 8th day of March, 1961, at
the rate of-
(i) one-eighth of the value of the fare or
freight in case of cemented, tarred,
asphalted, metalled, gravel and kankar roads
and
(ii) one-twelfth of the fare or freight, in
other cases, subject to a minimum of one Naya
Paisa in any one case, the amount of tax being
calculated to the nearest Naya Paisa; and
(b) during, the period between the 9th day
of March, 1961 and the 25th day of March,
1962, at the rate of-
(i) fifteen per cent of the value of the
fare or freight in the case of cemented,
tarred, asphalted, metalled, gravel and kankar
roads, and
C.I/65-14
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898
(ii) ten per cent of the fare or freight in
other cases subject to a minimum of one Naya
Paisa in any one case, the amount of tax being
calculated to the nearest Naya
Paisa".
"4. Notwithstanding any judgment, decree or order of any
Court, but subject to the provisions of this Act, section 8
of the Rajasthan Finance Act, 1961 (Rajasthan Act 14 of
1961), section 9 of the Rajasthan Finance Act, 1962
(Rajasthan Act 11 of 1962), and section 14 of the Rajasthan
Finance Act, 1963 Rajasthan Act 13 of 1963) shall not be
deemed to be invalid, or ever to have been invalid during
the period between the 9th day of March, 1961 and the date
of commencement of this Act, merely by reason of the fact
that the Bills, which were enacted as the Acts aforesaid,
were introduced in the Rajasthan State Legislature without
the previous sanction of the President under the proviso to
Art. 304(b) of the Constitution and were not assented to by
the President and the tax levied, paid or payable, the
composition fee paid ,or payable and any action taken or
things done or purporting to have been taken or done during
the period aforesaid under the Rajasthan Passengers and
Goods Taxation Act, 1959 (Rajasthan Act 18 of 1959), as
amended by the Acts aforesaid, shall be deemed always to
have been validly levied, paid, payable, taken or done in
accordance with law and the aforesaid enactments shall be,
and be deemed always to have been, validly enacted,
notwithstanding the aforesaid defects, and accordingly.
(a) no suit or other proceeding shall be
instituted, maintained or continued in any
court for the refund of any tax or fee so paid
or for any other relief on the ground of
invalidity of the said sections of the Acts
aforesaid; and
(b) no court shall enforce any decree or
order directing any such refund or relief".
Mr. Tiwari for the petitioner contends that ss. 2 and 4 pur-
port to validate the earlier invalid Finance Acts of 1961
and 1962. He argues that the failure of the Legislature to
comply with the provisions of Art. 255 of the Constitution
renders the
899
said Acts void ab initio and as such, they cannot be
validated by subsequent legislation. Mr. tiwari also urges
that the ,aid earlier Acts have been held to be invalid by
the Rajasthan High Court in the case of Vijai Singh(1) and
it would be incompetent to the State Legislature to validate
the said Acts in spite of the decision of a court of
competent jurisdiction.
We are not impressed by this argument. In the first place,
it is not clear that the Rajasthan High Court has held that
the, said earlier Finance Acts are void ab initio; in fact,
as we have already pointed out, the said High Court thought
it unnecessary to pronounce its considered opinion on that
aspect of the matter, because it held that the Act of 1964
with which it was primarily dealing in the said proceedings
not merely amended or cured the earlier Finance Acts, but
re-enacted the provisions of the said Acts, and so, the
provisions of the said Acts became operative by their own
force. Therefore, factually, it is not correct to say that
the said earlier Acts have been struck down as void ab
initio by any court of competent jurisdiction. Besides, in
assessing the validity of this argument, it is necessary to
remember that the Act was passed on September 8, 1964 and
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the judgment of the Rajasthan High Court was pronounced on
November 30, 1964; and so, it is clear that at the time when
the Act was passed the earlier Finance Acts had not been
struck down at all.
The next question to consider is whether an Act which
suffers from the infirmity that it does not comply with the
requirements of Art. 255, can be validated by subsequent
legislation. There are two answers to this question.
Article 255 provides, inter alia, that no Act of the
Legislature of a State and no provision in any such Act,
shall be invalid by reason only that some recommendation or
previous sanction required by this Constitution was not
given, if assent to the Act was given by The President
later. The position with regard to the laws to which Art.
255 applies, therefore, is that if the assent in question is
given even after the Act is passed, it serves to cure the
infirmity arising from the initial non-compliance with its
provisions. In other words, if an Act is passed without
obtaining the previous assent of the President, it does not
become void by reason of the said infirmity; it may be said
to be unenforceable until the assent is secured. Assuming
that such a law is otherwise valid, its validity cannot be
challenged only on the ground that the assent of the
President was not obtained earlier as required by the other
relevant provisions of the Constitution. The said infirmity
is cured by the
(1) (1965) I.L.R. 15 Raj. 285.
900
subsequent assent and the law becomes -enforceable. It is
unnecessary for the purpose of the present proceedings to
consider when such a law becomes enforceable, whether
subsequent assent makes it enforceable from the date when
the said law purported to come into force, or whether it
becomes enforceable from the date of its subsequent assent.
Besides, it is plain that the Legislature may, in a suitable
case, adopt the course of passing a subsequent law re-
introducing the provisions of the earlier law which had not
received the assent of the President, and obtaining his
assent thereto as prescribed by the Constitution. We see no
substance in the argument that an Act which has not complied
with the provisions of Art. 255, cannot be validated by
subsequent legislation even where such subsequent Act
complies with Art. 255 and obtains the requisite assent of
the President as prescribed by the Constitution. Whether
the infirmity in the Act which has failed to comply with the
provisions of Art. 255, should be cured by obtaining the
subsequent assent of the President or by passing a
subsequent Act re-enacting the provisions of the earlier law
and securing the assent of the President to such Act, is a
matter which the Legislature can decide in the circumstances
of a given case. Legally, there is no bar to the
legislature adopting either of the said two courses.
Therefore, the preliminary objection raised by Mr. Tiwari
against the validity of the Act fails.
That takes us to the construction of section 2 and 4 of the
Act. It would be noticed that s. 2 in fact does not purport
to validate the earlier Finance Acts of 1961 and 1962. What
it does ;Is to amend retrospectively S. 3 of the principal
Act by inserting a proviso to sub-s. (1) of the said
section. On its plain reading, s. 2 has the effect of
inserting the said proviso to s. 3(1) of the principal Act;
and since the amendment so made is, in terms, retrospective,
when a tax is levied for the periods covered by clauses (a)
& (b) of the proviso thus introduced in s. 3(1) of the
principal Act, the Court must proceed to deal with the
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matter on the basis that these clauses had been introduced
in the principal Act right up from the commencement. We
have already noticed that the principal Act has been held to
be valid by this court; and so, we see no basis for the
argument that in amending s. 3(1) of the principal Act, S. 2
of the Act has contravened any Constitutional prohibition.
It is well-recognised that the power to legislate includes
the power to Legislate prospectively as well as
retrospectively, and in that behalf, tax legislation is no
different from any other legislation. If the Legislature
decides to levy a tax, it may levy such tax
901
either prospectively or even retrospectively. When
retrospective legislation is passed imposing a tax, it may,
in conceivable cases, become necessary to consider whether
such retrospective taxation is reasonable or not. But apart
from this theoretical aspect of the matter, the power to tax
can be competently exercised by the legislature either
prospectively or retrospectively; and that is precisely what
s. 2 has done in the present case. Therefore, there is no
substance in the argument that s. 2 of the Act is invalid.
As the said S. 2 has been drafted, it appears clear that
clause (a) of the priviso added by it to s. 3 (1) of the
principal Act, covers the period between last of May, 1959
and the 8th of March, 1961, whereas clause (b) covers the
period between the 9th March, 1961 and the 25th March, 1962.
The first period had in fact been already covered by a
notification validly issued on April 30, 1959 under s. 3 of
principal Act; and so, it is not easy to understand why it
was thought necessary to refer to this period by the said
retrospective amendment. The second period had been
attempted to be covered by Finance Act 14 of 1961 and the
notification issued thereunder. In order to make the
provisions of the-said notification effective, the
Legislature has adopted the legitimate expedient it of
making the said provisions a part of the amendment which has
been introduced to s. 3 (1) of the principal Act; and so,
the rates prescribed by clause (b) can be validly imposed
during the said retrospective amendment. The second period
had been the Finance Act 11 of 1962 and the notification
issued under it has not been included in the retrospective
amendment introduced by s. 2; this period ranges between
26th March, 1962 and the 9th September, 1964; and so, the
rates prescribed by the notification issued under the,
relevant provisions of the said Finance Act are not re-
enacted by the amendment made by s. 2. In other words, s.2
does not purport to re-enact, by retrospective amendment,
the rates prescribed by the notification issued under the
Finance Act 11 of 1962. We are inclined to take the view
that the draftsmen of the Act have referred to the first
period unnecessarily in the said proviso and have failed to
refer to the third period, through oversight. This
infirmity tends to show that the drafting of :2 has been
casual and somewhat careless. As we will presently point
out, the consequence would be that the higher rates
prescribed for the period between 26th March, 1962 and the
9th September. 1964 by the notification issued under Finance
Act 11 of 1962, are not saved by the general provisions of
s. 4 of the Act. It is to the said provisions that we must
now turn.
Section 4 consists of three parts. In its first part, it
provides that the several sections of the three Finance Acts
enumerated by
902
it, shall not be deem-Id to be invalid, or ever to have been
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invalid, during the period there specified, merely by reason
of the fact that Art. 255 of the Constitution had not been
complied with. Part 2 of the said section provides inter
alia that the tax levied, paid or payable during the period
as amended by the said specified Acts, shall be deemed
always to have been validly levied, paid or payable; and
part 3 prescribes that the aforesaid enactments shall be,
and be deemed always to have been, validly enacted, notwith-
standing the aforesaid defects. The question which arises
for our decision is whether this section is valid.
ln dealing with this question, we must, of course bear in
mind the fact that the Act and all its provisions have
received the assent of the President and so, prima a facie,
the assent of the President to the Act would help the Act to
validate the provisions of the earlier Acts which were not
enforceable by reason of the fact that they had not secured
his assent as required by Art. 255. But can the assent of
the President to the Act serve the purpose of making s. 4
valid ? What s. 4 in truth and in substance says is that the
failure to comply with the requirements of Art. 255 will not
invalidate the Finance Acts in question and will not
invalidate any action taken, or to be taken, under their
respective relevant provisions. In other words, the
Legislature seems to say by s. 4 that even though Art. 255
may not have been complied with by the earlier Finance Acts,
it is competent to pass s. 4 whereby it will prescribe that
the failure to comply with Art. 255 does not really matter,
and the assent of the President to the Act amounts to this
that the President also agreed, that the Legislature is
empowered to say that the infirmity resulting from the non-
compliance with Art. 255 doe,; not matter. In our opinion,
the Legislature is incompetent to declare that the failure
to comply with Art. 255 is of no consequence and, with
respect, the assent of the President to such declaration
also does not serve the purpose which subsequent assent by
the President can serve under Art. 255.
The learned Advocate-General has strenuously contended
before us that we should look at the substance of the matter
and not decide the validity of s. 4 merely because the words
used in it may not be happy or appropriate. We agree that
questions of this character must be judged on considerations
of substance and not merely of form, and we have tried to
read s. 4 as favourably as we can while appreciating the
argument of the learned Advocate General; but the words used
in all the three parts of s. 4 are clear and unambiguous;
they indicate that the Legislature thought that it was
competent to it to cure, by its own legislative process, the
903
infirmity resulting from the non-compliance with Art. 255
When it passed the earlier Finance Acts in question, and it
was probably advised that such a legislative declaration
would’be valid and effective, provided it received the
assent of the President. In our opinion, the approach
adopted by the Legislature in this case is entirely
misconceived. The Legislature, no doubt, can validate an
earlier Act which is invalid by reason of non-compllance
with Art. 255 and such an Act may receive the assent of the
President which will make the Act effective. The
Legislature cannot, however, itself declare by statutory
provision that the failure to comply with Art. 255 can be
cured by its own enactment, even if the said enactment
received the assent of the President. In our opinion even
-the assent of the President cannot alter the true
constitutional position under Art. 255. The assent of the
President cannot, by any legislative process, be deemed to
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have been given to an earlier Act at a time when in fact it
was not so given. in this context there is no scope for a
retrospective deeming provision in regard to the assent of
the President. It is somewhat unfortunate that the casual
drafting of s. 2 leaves the period covered by Act It of 1912
and the notification issued thereunder as unenforceable as
before, and the omnibus and general provisions of s. 4 are
of no help in regard to the said period.
The learned Advocate-General strongly relied on the last
part of S. 4. This part provides that the aforesaid
enactments shall be, and be deemed always to have been,
validly enacted, notwithstanding the aforesaid defects. The
clause "notwithstanding the aforesaid defects" emphatically
points to the fact that the Legislature thought that it
could legislate retrospectively, and by such retrospective
legislation, it could itself cure the infirmity in question.
What has been overlooked by the Legislature is the fact that
the infirmity in question can be cured only by obtaining the
assent of the President and not by any legislative fiat. We
have given our anxious consideration to the problem raised
by the wording of s. 4 and we have come to the conclusion
that it would not be possible to uphold its validity. On
many occasions, this Court has tried to look at the
substance of the matter and determine the issue in spite of
the fact that the words or expressions used in the relevant
provisions are either slovenly inappropriate or unhappy.
But in the present case, however benevolently or favourably
we look at the provisions of s. 4, we see no escape from the
conclusion that in enacting it, the Legislature appears to
have clearly assumed that it can by itself cure the
infirmity resulting from the non-compliance with Art. 255
and all that it has to do in such a case is to obtain the
a,-,sent of the President to its own view about its power to
cure
904
such an infirmity. We are satisfied that it is necessary
that the true position in regard to the scope and effect of
Art. 255 must be ,clearly brought out in order to avoid any
misapprehension in future.
In support of his argument that the form adopted by the
Legislature in enacting s. 4 is not inappropriate, the
learned Advocate General has referred us to a decision of
this Court in M.P.V. Sundararamier & Co. v. The State of
Andhra Pradesh and Another(1). It is true that in that
case, s. 2 of the Sales Tax Laws Validation Act, 1956 (No. 7
of 1956), which is a Central Act, used phraseology which is
similar to the phraseology adopted by s. 4 of the Act; but
it would be fallacious to compare the said provision with s.
4, because the ban which s. 2 of the said Act intended to
lift could validly be Iifted by a Parliamentary statute.
Art. 286(2) of the Constitution which was, in force at the
relevant time had provided, inter alia, that except in so
far as Padiament may by law otherwise provide, no law of a
State shall impose, or authorise the imposition of, a tax on
the sale or purchase of goods where such sale or purchase
takes place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce.
What s. 2 of the said Act did was to make a law as expressly
authorised by Art. 286(2); and naturally in exercise of the
power conferred on it by the said provision, it enacted the
provisions of s. 2 and made them retrospective. It is
significant that the power to lift the ban which was
exercised retrospectively by Parliament, vested in
Parliament and not in any outside authority like the
President; and so, Parliament was perfectly competent to
validate the several State Acts which were held to be
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invalid, by adopting the legislative expedient of making a
law as authorised by Art. 286(2) and providing for its
retrospective operations The position with regard to s. 4 is
logically and fundamentally different; the infirmity which
rendered the earlier Finance Acts unenforceable, could’ be
cured not by the Legislature itself acting on its own, but
by the assent of the President; and in so far as the
Legislature by enacting s. 4 purports to prescribe by its
own fiat that the infirmity in question should be deemed to
have been cured, it has clearly exceeded its legislative
jurisdiction. Therefore, we do not think that the decision
of this Court in Sundararamier & Co.’s case(1) can be of any
help to the learned Advocate-General in support of his
argument that s.4 has been validly enacted.
There is one more point which still remains to be
considered. Mr. Tiwari urged that the retrospective
operation of the amend-
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1422.
905
ment made by s. 2 of the Act in s. 3 (1) of the principal
Act, should be held to be unconstitutional inasmuch as the
retrospective operation of the provision prescribed by cl.
(b) of the proviso added by s. 2 suffers from the infirmity
that it imposes enhanced tax duty retrospectively. His
argument is, where a taxing statute purports to impose a tax
retrospectively, it necessarily involves an element of
unreasonableness and that virtually amounts to contravention
of the citizens’ fundamental rights guaranteed under Art.
19(1)(f) or (g) of the Constitution. For the purpose of the
present writ petition, we will assume that notwithstanding
the proclamation of emergency issued by the President under
Art. 352, the constitutional bar created by Art. 358 does
not operate against the petitioner inasmuch as he relies
upon the contravention of his fundamental right prior to the
date, of the proclamation. It is on that assumption that we
wish to deal with the contention raised by Mr. Tiwari. In
our opinion, the said contention is plainly unsound. We
have already stated that the power to make laws involves the
power to make them effective prospectively as well as
retrospectively, and tax laws are no exception to this rule.
So, it would be idle to contend that merely because a taxing
statute purports to operate retrospectively, the
retrospective operation per se involves contravention of the
fundamental right of the citizen taxed under Art. 19(1) (f)
or (1). It is true that Cases may conceivably occur where
the Court may have to consider the question as to whether
excessive retrospective operation prescribed by a taxing
statute amounts to the contravention of the citizens’
fundamental right; and in dealing with such a question, the
Court may have to take into account all the relevant and
surrounding facts and circumstances in relation to the
taxation. In the present case, having regard to the
legislative background of the provision prescribed by s. 2,
there can be little doubt that there is no element of
unreasonableness involved in the retrospective operation cl.
(b) of the proviso added by the said section to s. 3(1) of
the principal Act.
The result is that s. 2 of the Act is valid and the tax in
question can be recovered from the petitioner for the
periods covered by clauses (a) and (b) of the proviso as
therein prescribed. In this connection, it will be recalled
that the provision prescribed by cl. (a) of the proviso is
really superfluous, because the same lax could have been
validly recovered at the prescribed rates under e
notification issued on April 30, 1959 under s. 3 of the
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principal Act. But as we have already pointed out, the
period between arch 26, 1962 to September 9, 1964 is not
covered by the provisions inserted by s. 2 in s. 3(1) of the
principal Act; and so,
906
the provisions of s. 2 are of no assistance to the
respondents in imposing a tax against the petitioner at the
enhanced rates initially prescribed by s. 9 of the Finance
Act 11 of 1962. If we bad held that s. 4 of the Act was
valid, then the impositoin of the tax at the enhanced rates
prescribed by ,he said s. 9 would also have been valid; but
;in view of the fact that we have come to the conclusion
that s. 4 is invalid, it follows that the tax which can be
legitimately and validly imposed against the petitioner for
the said period must be levied under the notificaion issued
on April 30, 1959 under s. 3 of the principal Act. No
doubt, Mr. Tiwari attempted to argue that in view of the
fact that the said s. 3 had been amended by s. 9 of the
Finance Act 11 of 1962, the notification issued under the
original section 3 of the principal Act ceases to be
operative. This contention is clearly misconceived. If the
said Finance Act is unenforceable and the notification issu-
ed thereunder is of no effect, then S. 3 of the principal
Act would remain unamended for the period in question and
the notification initially issued under it would remain.
operative.
As a consequence of this conclusion, it follows that the
petitioner is entitled to claim that the tax assessed
against him in respect of his vehicles for the period
between 26th March, 1962and the 9th September, 1964 at the
enhanced rates is invalid, and that the taxing authorities
concerned will have to levy the tax at the rates prescribed
by the notification issued on the 30th April, 1959 under s.
3 of the principal Act as it originally stood. It is true
that this result sounds very anomalous, because for the
period immedeately preceding the period in question, the tax
is validly recoverable at the enhanced rates, whereas for
the period in question, it has to be recovered at a lower
Tate; but, for this anomaly, the defective drafting of S. 2
and s. 4 of the Act is entirely responsible.
Before we part with this petition, we would like to refer
briefly to two decisions of this Court to which --reference
was made during the course of the argument, before us. ’in
Rai Ramkrishna & Others v. The State of Bihar(1), the
validity of the Bihar Taxation on Passengers and Goods
(Carried by Public Service Motor Vehicles) Act, 1961 (No. 17
of 1961) was challenged on the ground that it sought to
validate taxes already recovered under an invalid Finance
Act. Rejecting the argument that such retrospective
validation of tax illegally recovered amounts to the
contravention of the citizens’ fundamental right under Art.
19(1) (f) or (g), this Court held that if in its essential
features a taxing
(1) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 897.
907
statute is within the competence of the Legislature which
passed 1 its character is not necessarily changed merely by
its rotrospec tive operation so as to make the said
retrospective operation either unreasonable or outside its
’legislative competence.
A similar view has been expressed by this Court in Jaora
Sugar Mills (Pvt.) Ltd. v. The State of Madhva Pradesh &
Others(1).
The result is, the writ petition is partly allowed and the
pugned orders of assessment are set aside in so far as they
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relate to the period between 26th March, 1962 and the 9th
Septemberm, 1964, and we direct the assessing authorities to
levy a proper assessment in the ligght of the judgemnt. The
assement orders in respect of the remaining period are valid
and the petitioner’s prayer that they should be sot aside,
is rejected. in view of the fact that the petitioner has
succeeded only partially, we direct that parties should bear
their own costs.
Petition allowed in part.
(1) [1966] 1 S.C.R. 518.
908