Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MYSORE & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
T. V. SUNDARAM IYENGAR & SONS (P) LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/11/1979
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1980 AIR 148 1980 SCR (2) 1
1980 SCC (1) 66
CITATOR INFO :
D 1981 SC 774 (12,17,18)
RF 1991 SC1650 (6)
ACT:
Motor Vehicles Taxation Act, 1957-Section 3(2)-Vehicle
passing through a State for short period-If "kept" within
the meaning of section.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent bought new cars and chassis manufactured
in Bombay and brought them by road. In the course of their
journey from Bombay to Madras the vehicles passed through
the territory of the State of Mysore for over 400 miles. The
Road Transport Authorities of the State of Mysore demanded
payment of road tax on the vehicles under section 3(2) of
the Mysore Motor Vehicles Taxation Act, 1957 which provides
that taxes are leviable on motor vehicles belonging to or in
the possession or control of persons not ordinarily resident
in the State of Mysore and kept in the State for periods
shorter than a quarter but not exceeding thirty days.
Allowing the respondent’s writ petition the High Court
held that vehicles which passed through the State were not
"kept" in the State within the meaning of section 3(2) of
the Act and so were not taxable under it.
In appeal to this court it was contended on behalf of
the appellant that the vehicles passing through the
territory of the State over a distance of 400 miles with
halts on the way could be said to have been "kept" for use
on loads in the State within the meaning of the section and
were therefore taxable.
Dismissing the appeal,
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HELD : A vehicle in transit through the State of Mysore
or even making necessary halt for short intervals during
transit cannot be said to be a vehicle kept for use on roads
in the State of Mysore. [6 B-C]
The word "kept", which has not been defined in the Act,
has to be interpreted in its ordinary popular sense
consistent with the context. In association with the use of
the vehicle the word "kept" has an element of stationeries
which is something different from a state of transit or a
course of journey through the State. A mere state of running
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through or even halting of the vehicle in the course of the
journey through the State for its outside destination, will
not be sufficient to constitute "keeping" of that vehicle in
the State within the meaning of section 3(2). [4 C-E & 5 E]
Dudley v. Holland [1963] 3 All. E.R. 732, Biggs v.
Mitchell (1862), 31 L.J.M.C. 163 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 272 of
1970.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 14-4-1969 of the Mysore High Court in W.P. No.
2889/67.
R. N. Nath and M. Veerappa for the Appellant.
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M. Natesan and Mrs. S. Gopalakrishnan for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKARIA, J. Whether a motor vehicle passing through
the territory of the State of Mysore on way to its
destination in another State is a motor vehicle "kept" in
the State of Mysore (now Karnataka) within the contemplation
of Section 3(1) of the Mysore Motor Vehicles Taxation Act,
1957 (hereinafter referred to as the Taxation Act), is the
short question that falls for consideration in this appeal
by special leave directed against a judgment, dated April
14, 1969, of the High Court of Mysore. The material facts
bearing on the question are as follows :
The respondent, M/s. T. V. Sundaram Iyengar & Sons.
Pvt. Ltd., whose registered office is in the State of Tamil
Nadu, is a dealer in motor vehicles which are manufactured
at Bombay. Some of those vehicles are sold in Mysore State,
while others are sold outside Mysore State. But those
vehicles which are sold outside the State of Mysore in other
States pass through its territory under temporary
registration number plates issued after receipt of token tax
by the Bombay Motor Vehicles Authority. Such vehicles enter
the State of Mysore at its border in Belgaum District and go
out at its border in Kolar District, thus running through
the territory of Mysore State by road over a distance of
about 400 miles.
The R.T.O., Belgaum, issued a communication, dated
September 27, 1966, to the respondent demanding tax on such
vehicles (new cars and chassis) passing through the
territory of Mysore. After exhausting, his remedies under
the Taxation Act, the respondent filed a petition under
Article 226 of the Constitution, to challenge the validity
of the demand notices and the Circular, dated October 10,
1966, issued by the Transport Commissioner, directing
recovery of tax at the rates specified in Part of the
Schedule to the Taxation Act, in respect of those vehicles
which do no more than pass through the State of Mysore to
reach their destination.
The Division Bench of the High Court, who heard the
writ petition held that such vehicles which merely pass
through Mysore State are not those "kept" in the State of
Mysore within the meaning of Section 3(2) of the Taxation
Act. and, as such, are not taxable under the Taxation Act.
In the result, the High Court allowed the writ petition and
quashed the direction of the Commissioner in paragraph 6 of
his Circular of October 10, 1966, for the recovery of the
tax in question from the respondent. Hence. this appeal by
the State.
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The material part of Section 3 reads as follows :
"s. 3. Levy of tax.-(1) a tax at the rates
specified in part A of the Schedule shall be levied on
all motor vehicles suitable for use on roads, kept in
the State of Mysore:
Provided that in the case of motor vehicles kept
by a dealer in or manufacturer of such vehicles for the
purpose of trade, the tax shall only be levied and paid
by such dealer or manufacturer on vehicles permitted to
be used on roads in the manner prescribed by rules made
under the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939.
Explanation.-A motor vehicle of which the
certificate of registration is current shall, for the
purpose of this Act, be deemed to be a vehicle suitable
for use on roads.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-
section (1), taxes at the rates specified in Part B of
the Schedule shall be levied on motor vehicles
belonging to or in the possession or control of
persons, not ordinarily residing in the State of Mysore
and kept in the State of Mysore by such persons for
periods shorter than a quarter, but not exceeding
thirty days.
(3)............................................"
The appellant-State maintains that sub-section (2) of
the Section was applicable to such vehicles because while
passing through the territory of the State they use the
roads of the State over a distance of 400 miles during their
journey interspersed by halts in the State, and therefore,
it can be said that such vehicles are kept for use on roads
in the State within the meaning of Section 3(2). According
to the learned counsel for the appellant the test of whether
a vehicle is exigible to tax under Section 3(2) is whether
it is suitable for use on roads and, in fact, substantially
uses the roads in the State of Mysore. In the present case,
the argument proceeds, this test was satisfied because for
an appreciable period such vehicles remain in the territory
of the State and use its roads, and as such, are taxable
under sub-section (2) of Section 3.
The contention does not stand a close examination. Sub-
section (2) is to be read with sub-section (1). Thus read,
it is plain that in order to be taxable under the Section a
Motor vehicle must be capable of use on road, and further it
must be kept in the State of Mysore, though in the case of
vehicles belonging to persons not resident in the State, the
duration of such ’keeping’ may be for a
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period shorter than a quarter but not exceeding thirty days.
In the present case, there is no dispute that the vehicles
concerned are capable of use on roads, and in fact, they
journey by road through the State. The problem thus
resolves itself into the issue : Whether the motor vehicles
of the respondent which merely pass through the State of
Mysore are ’kept’ for the duration of their journey in the
State of Mysore within the meaning of Section 3(2) ? In our
opinion, the High Court has rightly answered this question
in the negative.
The word ’kept’ has not been defined in the Taxation
Act. We have, therefore, to interpret it in its ordinary
popular sense, consistently with the context. The word
’kept’ has been repeatedly used in the Section. In sub-
section (1), it occurs in association with the phrase "for
use on roads". In that context the ordinary dictionary
meaning of the word ’keep in’ is ’to retain’, ’to maintain’
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or cause to stay or remain in a place ’to detain’, ’to stay
or continue in a specified condition, position etc.’ In
association with the use of the vehicle, therefore, the word
’kept’ has an element of stationariness. It is something
different from a mere state of transit or a course of
journey through the State. It is something more than a mere
stoppage or halt for rest food or refreshment etc., in the
course of transit through the territory of the State.
The unsoundness of the contention of the appellant’s
counsel, viz, that a vehicle capable for use on roads, owned
by a non-resident, remaining for one or two days in the
territory of Mysore State in course of transit, will also be
exigible to tax under section 3, can be demonstrated by
taking an example. Supposing the respondents take their
vehicles (capable for use on road) by rail through the
territory of Mysore State to their outside destination, and
in the course of that journey, the train halts for a week,
in all, at stations in Mysore State, then, if the wide
interpretation demanded by the appellant is adopted such
vehicles will be exigible to tax. This indeed will be an
absurd result. Such an interpretation of the word ’kept’
will be wholly beyond the ken of the Legislature.
In the view we take, we can derive support from two
decisions of the English Courts.
In Dudley v. Holland,(1) the appellant carried on a
garage business adjoining a public road. He had bought a
motor car in the course of
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his business and was offering for sale in the garage
showroom. He moved that car into the public road in order to
allow the showroom to be rearranged. There was no excise
licence in force for the car. It was found there by a police
constable. The appellant was charged with unlawfully keeping
on a public road a mechanically propelled vehicle for which
an excise licence was not in force, contrary to Section 7 of
the Vehicles (Excise) Act, 1962. The question for the
opinion of the Court was whether the mere presence of a
stationary mechanically propelled vehicle on a public road,
constitutes "keeping" the vehicle on the road within the
meaning of Section 7 of the Vehicles (Excise) Act, 1962.
Lord Parker, C.J., who delivered the leading judgment of the
Court, answered this question in the negative, in these
terms:
"I approach the word ’keeps’ in what seems to me
the ordinary meaning of some continuing process; not a
mere isolated moment, but a keeping of the car there,
at any rate for some interval of time. It is no doubt a
matter of degree and fact in every case......In my
judgment, ’keeping’ means something more than that,
both according to its ordinary meaning and when it
appears in conjunction with the other word ’uses’."
The principle is applicable to the present case. A mere
state of running through or even halting of the vehicle in
the course of the journey through the State of Mysore for
its outside destination, will not be sufficient to
constitute ’keeping’ of that vehicle in the State within the
meaning of Section 3.
The other case is Biggs v. Mitchell.(1) The ratio of
this case has been extracted in words and Phrases Legally
Defined, Vol. 3 at page 116. In Biggs v. Mitchell, the
interpretation of the word ’keep’, as used in Section 11 of
Statute (1772) 12 Geo. 3 c. 61, came up for consideration.
That Section enacted that no person or persons should have
or ’keep’ at any one time, being a dealer or dealers in
gunpowder, more than 200 lb. of gunpowder, and not being
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such more than 50 lb. of gunpowder in any house, mill, etc.,
occupied by the same person or persons within certain
limits. The question before the Court was whether a person
who receives powder in the course of transit, and makes a
necessary halt, instead of sending it on immediately, can be
said to be "keeping’ the same within the meaning of Section
11. Crompton, J. answered this question thus:
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"It seems to me that it is not made out that the
mere halting in London, for the purpose of sending from
one railway to another, when it is necessary that there
should be halting in some place or other, is a
’keeping’.....I think there can be no keeping within s.
11, when it is in course of transit."
On parity of reasoning, a vehicle in transit through
the State of Mysore or even making a necessary halt for a
short interval during transit, cannot be said to be a
vehicle ’kept’ for use on roads in the State of Mysore.
In the light of all that has been said above, we uphold
the interpretation put by the High Court on Section 3 of the
Taxation Act, and answer the question posed at the
commencement of this judgment in the negative, and dismiss
this appeal, leaving the parties to pay and bear their own
costs in this Court.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
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