07 December 1962
Supreme Court
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CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF NAGPUR Vs THE NAGPUR HANDLOOM CLOTH MARKETCO. LTD.

Bench: SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ),GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.,WANCHOO, K.N.,GUPTA, K.C. DAS,SHAH, J.C.
Case number: Appeal (civil) 288 of 1960


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PETITIONER: CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF NAGPUR

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE NAGPUR HANDLOOM CLOTH MARKETCO. LTD.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/12/1962

BENCH: SHAH, J.C. BENCH: SHAH, J.C. SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. WANCHOO, K.N. GUPTA, K.C. DAS

CITATION:  1963 AIR 1192            1963 SCR  Supl. (2) 796

ACT: Municipal Corporation-Levy of taxes-Water rates- Conservancy and      property      taxes-Individual       shop-keepers-- Liability-Building,   if  includes  part  of   a   building- Residential  and  non-residential-Liability-Connotation   of ’family’-If    postulates   relationship-City   of    Nagpur Corporation  Act, 1948 (C.P. and Berar 2 of 1950), s. 5  (7) City of Nagpur Corporation Rules, r.  10 (a) (b) (c).

HEADNOTE: The Nagpur Handloom Cloth Market Company Ltd. constructed in the  City  of  Nagpur  on plots owned  by  it  a  number  of buildings  with two floors, the ground floor intended to  be used as shops and the first floor to be used for residential purposes.   For  the use of the shops  lavatories  connected with  the  sewers of the corporation  drainage  system  were constructed and water supply for the shops was obtained from a  corporation water standards The corporation levied  among other taxes, under s. 114 of the City of Nagpur  Corporation Act, 1948, conservancy tax and water rates on the is of  the letting value of  797 the  buildings.   Most of the shops were occupied  by  shop- keepers and in the year 1953 the corporation served  notices of assessment on individual’ shop-keepers of the  respective shops.   Some of the shop-keepers filed  objections  against the  notices  served  on  them and  on  rejection  of  these objections  filed appeals under. ss. 387 and 130 of the  Act but   without  success.   Nearly  two  years   after   these proceedings  the company and one of the shopkeepers filed  a writ petition in the High Court of Bombay to quash the order of  demand  dated  February 2, 1958,  and  to  prohibit  the Corporation from applying r. 10 (a) of the Assessment Rules. The High Court allowed the writ petition holding that r.  10 (a)  applied  only to residential houses and not  to  houses occupied   for  non-residential  purpose-;   and   therefore separate  assessment of the shops in the occupation  of  the shop.   keepers   was  invalid.   The  contention   of   the Corporation  that in view of the great delay in  filing  the

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petition, the petition should fail was rejected by the  High Court.  The present appeal came before this Court by way  of special leave. Held, that the expression "building" in s. 5 (7) of the  Act would  include a part of a building.  By reason of s. 5  (7) and  the  implication  of  r.  10 (a)  and  r.  10  (c)  the Corporation is competent to treat each tenement occupied  by a  different person as a separate building for levy of  tax. The expression ’family’ in r. 10 (a) does not in the setting of the rules postulates the existence of relationship either by blood or by marriage between the persons residing in  the tenement.   Even  a single person may be  regarded  for  the purpose  of  the rule as a family and a master  and  servant would also be so regarded.  The expression "occupying" in r. 10  (a)  applies  equally  to  uses  residential  and   non- residential.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE,  JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal  No.  288  of 1960. Appeal  by  special  leave  from  the  judgment  and   order dated,August  8, 1958, of the Bombay High Court  in  Special Civil Application No. 174 of 1958. G.  S.  Pathak-  S.  M. Hajarnavis,  O.  C.  Mathur,  J.  B. Dadachanji and Bavinder Narain, for the appellant. M. C. Setalvad, Attomey-General of India, Al.  Y. Phadke and Naunit Lal, for the respondents. 798 1962.   December 7. The judgment of the Court was  delivered by SHAH,  J.-The  Nagpur Handloom Cloth  Market  Company  Ltd.- hereinafter called ’the Company’constructed on certain plots owned  by it, two houses-each house consisting of  a  ground floor,  intended  to  be used as shops and  an  upper  floor intended  to be used for residential purposes.  For the  use of  the  occupants of the shops, 20  flush  lavatories  with underground sewers connected with the drainage system of the Nagpur  Corporation  were constructed by the  Company.   The Corporation  of Nagpur had also erected a  municipal  public water  Standard within 200 yards of the houses.   Among  the taxes  levied by the Municipal Corporation under s.  114  of the City of Nagpur Corporation Act, 1948-hereinafter  called "the Act’ were the conservancy tax and the water-rate  which under the rules applicable thereto were leviable as rates on the annual letting value of buildings’ and lands within  the Corporation area.  It is common ground that the shops  which in  the aggregate number 201, are occupied  by  shop-keepers under a scheme under which on payment of stipulated amounts, the  occupants will be full owners of the shops, and on  the liability of all the occupants being discharged the  Company will  be  dissolved.  However the scheme  under  which  this arrangement was made has not been placed before us and it is not possible on the material before us to ascertain what the true relation between the shop-keepers and the Company is. For  the year 1953-54 the Corporation of Nagpur proposed  to assess the shop-keepers numbering one hundred and fifty five who  occupied  the  shop built by  the  Company  to  private conservancy tax water rate and property tax on each shop  as a,  separate unit of assessment, and assessment  notices  in that behalf were issued to the Managing Director of 799 the  Company on September 26, 1953.  The  Company  requested the Corporation by letter dated September 30, 1953 that  the

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assessment notices be served on the ’individual  shopkeepers of the respective shops regarding the assessment made by the Corporation’.    The   Corporation  thereupon   served   the individual shop-keepers with notices of assessment. 120  out of  155  shop-keepers served with the notice  of  assessment preferred  objections submitting inter alia that  the  taxes could  be  assessed only on the Company.   These  objections were  heard  before the Objection Officer appointed  by  the Corporation.   The  Managing Director of the Company  and  a representative   of   the   shop-keepers   submitted   their respective  cases  on behalf of the Company  and  the  shop- keepers.   By his order dated April 19, 1954  the  objection Officer  held  that the Company be treated as owner  of  the houses and the shop-keepers as occupants and that the demand for  tax  be  ’primarily  made  from  the  occupants’.    No proceeding  challenging  this order were  initiated  by  the shop-keepers  or  the Company and the  assessment  list  was authenticated  as  required  by  the  relevant  rules.   The Corporation thereafter served demand notices upon the  shop- keepers  calling  upon  them to pay the taxes  due  by  them pursuant to the assessment list. On  December 16, 1954 some of the occupants appealed to  the Chief Executive Officer under s. 387 of the Act  challenging the validity of the assessment.  The Deputy Chief  Executive Officer rejected the appeals against the order passed by the Objection   Officer  to  the  Chief  Executive  Officer   as incompetent and observed that in any event the anneals which were   not  presented  within  the  period   of   limitation prescribed  by s. 379 of’ the Act, were barred.   The  shop- keepers  and the Company preferred separate appeals  to  the District  Judge, Nagpur, against the order of the  Objection Officer.  The District judge by his order dated October  28, 1955 held that the 800 appeals  were  barred  by  the law  of  limitation  and  the appellants before him had made out no ground for condonation of delay.  The shop-keepers again moved the Chief  Executive Officer to reconsider the order of assessment of tax.   That Officer  by  his order dated April 18, 1956 held  that  even though  the  order  passed by  the  Deputy  Chief  Executive Officer  dismissing  the previously filed appeals’  as  ,not maintainable,  and observing that the proper remedy  of  the shop-keepers and the, Company aggrieved was an appeal  under s.  130  of the Act was erroneous, the  appeals  before  him being  barred  by the law of limitation., he was  unable  to grant  any redress to the appellants.  The  Chief  Executive Officer also opined that the houses having been divided into separate  shops and allotted to the  Company’s  shareholders who  carried on their business independently and  each  such allotted  having  a  separate source of  income  within  the meaning  of  rule  10  (a)  of  the  assessment  rules,  the Objection  Officer  was right in holding that each  shop  be treated  as an independent unit, and be separately  assessed for the conservancy cess and water rate. Nearly two years thereafter the Company and one  Sitaram-One of  the shop-keepers-preferred a writ petition in  the  High Court  of Bombay at Nagpur for writs of certiorari  quashing the  order of demand dated February 19, 1958 and also  bills for the assessment years 1956-57 and 1957-58 and for a  writ of  mandamus prohibiting the Corporation from  applying  the provisions  of rule 10 (a) for the purposes  of  conservancy tax  and  water rate, and directing the Corporation  not  to treat  the individual shops on the ground floor of  the  two houses  as  separate  units of  assessment  for  purpose  of conservancy  tax and water rate.  The High Court  held  that

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rule  10  (a)  of  the  assessment  rules  applied  only  to residential  houses  and  not to houses  occupied  for  non- residential  purposes and therefore separate  assessment  of the shops  801 in  the  occupation  of  the  shop-keepers  was,  under  the provisions  of  the  Act,  read  with  the  relevant  rules, invalid.   The High Court accordingly allowed  the  petition and  quashed  the notice of demand dated February  19,  1958 made  by the Corporation for levy of tax.   The  Corporation has, with special leave, appealed to this Court. Three  principal contentions are raised by counsel  for  the Corporation in support of the appeal :-               (1)   That  under  the  Act  there  are  three               distinct stages dealing with- the liability of               taxpayers to pay tax-imposition of tax  autho-               rised by a statute according to the  procedure               prescribed in that behalf, assessment or               levy of tax according to the provisions of the               statute  and the rules framed thereunder;  and               collection  of  tax.  Each stage  being  self-               contained,   if  no  objection  is   made   to               assessment  as prescribed by the  statute  and               the  rules made thereunder and in  the  manner               provided  in that behalf, in a proceeding  for               recovery   of   tax,  the  validity   of   the               assessment cannot be challenged.               (2)   The objection raised by the Company  was               only  against the demand and not  against  the               assessment,  and that in any event  there  was               gross delay in the commencement of proceedings               in  the High Court for obtaining relief by  an               application  for a writ, and on  that  account               the company had disentitled itself to relief.               (3)   That    even   on   the    merits    the               interpretation  placed by the High Court  upon               rule:10(a)   of  the  assessment   rules   was               erroneous  and therefore each occupant of  the               shops whose               802               name  was  entered in the assessment  list  as               framed  was liable to pay the conservancy  tax               and the water rate in respect of the     shop               in his occupation. Part  IV  of the Act deals with- taxation  i.e,  imposition, assessment and recovery of taxes.  Sections 114 and 115  set out the taxes which the Corporation is obliged to impose  or may impose and the procedure in that behalf.  Sections 1  16 to 140 deal with the assessment of property tax and ss.  154 to  169 deal with recovery of taxes.  Section  130  provides for  a  right  of appeal to the  District  Court  against  a dispute  as  to  the liability of any land  or  building  to assessment  of property tax or as to the basis or  principle of assessment of property tax.  Section 164 provides for  an appeal  against  a notice of demand for tax due  under  sub- section  (1) of s. 155 This appeal lies to a  Magistrate  by whom  under  the direction of the District  Magistrate  such class of cases is to be tried.  A general right of appeal is granted by s. 387.  Any person aggrieved by an order  passed under  the Act or under any rule or bye-law made  thereunder failing  to  obtain redress may appeal  to  any  Corporation Officer  appointed  by the Chief Executive Officer  to  hear such  appeals,  or failing such appointment,  to  the  Chief Executive Officer. The  procedure for assessment of conservancy tax  and  water

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rate is prescribed not by the provisions of the Act, but  by the rules framed under the C. P. & Berar Municipalities  Act of  1922  which by virtue of s. 3(2) of the Act  are  to  be deemed  to  have  been  made under  the  provisions  of  the Corporation  Act  of 1948.  The procedure  for  recovery  is however governed by the provisions of ss. 154 to 167 of  the Act.   The subject of taxation in the matter of  conservancy tax and water rate is therefore found distributed in the Act and the Rules under three heads of 803 2 imposition, assessment and recovery of taxes. For  the purpose of the pro-sent case it is  unnecessary  to express any opinion on the plea raised by Mr. Pathak for the Corporation   that  the  tax-payer  cannot   challenge   the correctness  of an order of assessment, in a proceeding  for recovery  of  tax,  though  it may  appear  that  under  the analogous  provisions  contained  in  the  Bombay   District Municipal Act III of 1901 and the Bombay Municipal  Boroughs Act, XVIII of 1925, in an appeal against a notice of  demand to  a  Magistrate  the  correctness  or  propriety  of   the assessment may, be challenged. See The Municipal Borough  of Ahmedabad v. The Aryodaya Ginning and Manufacturing  Company Ltd.  (1)  and The Municipality of Ankleshwar  v.  Chhotalal Ghelabhai Gandhi (2). There  has undoubtedly been great delay in moving  the  High Court by a petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution.  The order  of the Objection Officer was made on April  19,  1954 and the appeal against that order was dismissed on April 22, 1955.  Even the second order by the Chief Executive  Officer was  made  on  April  18, 1956  and  for  nearly  two  years thereafter  no  proceeding was commenced in the  High  Court challenging the validity of that order.  The High Court was, however,  of  the  view that  because  the  Chief  Executive Officer  in  the first instance held that the  appeal  filed before him was not competent and the remedy of the tax payer was  to move the District Court under s. 130 of the Act  and that  in the appeal preferred in the year 1956 he held  that the  appeal was maintainable and dismissed it on the  merits while observing that it was barred by limitation, there  was some  ground  for  not regarding the  shop-keepers  and  the Company  as guilty of laches.  The High Court also  observed that  after the order passed by the Chief Executive  Officer in 1956 the Corporation was moved by an application (1) 1. L. R. (1941) Bom. 658, (2) (1954) 57 Bom.  L. R. S 547, 804 under  s.  143  of the Act, and since the  decision  of  the Corporation  on  the  application, the  petition  was  filed without delay.  This ground may appear to us inadequate  but the High Court has exercised its discretion in holding  that the petition notwithstanding the delay should be entertained and  we are unable in a matter essentially of discretion  to set  aside  the judgment of the High Court  on  this  ground alone,  especially when the petitioners have claimed  relief not  only in respect of the assessment for the year  1953-54 but also in respect of assessment of tax for the years 1956- 57 and 1957-58. The  question that falls then to be determined is about  the true  interpretation of rule 10 (a) of the assessment  rules relating to the conservancy tax and water rate.  Section 114 of the Act requires the Corporation to levy, amongst others, a property tax, a latrine or conservancy tax payable by  the occupier  or  owner  upon  private  latrines,,  privies   or cesspools   or  upon  premises  or  compounds  cleansed   by Corporation agency and a water rate where water is  supplied

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by  the  Corporation.  For assessment of the  property  tax, machinery  is  prescribed  in the Act itself,  but  no  such machinery  is  prescribed  in  the Act  in  respect  of  the conservancy  tax  and water rate.  Under the  C.P.  &  Berar Municipalities Act, II of 1922, by s. 66 various taxes could be  imposed by the Municipalities governed thereby (and  the Municipality of Nagpur was governed by that Act) and latrine or  conservancy tax and water rate were two out of the  many taxes  leviable.   By  s. 71 of the Act of  1922  power  was conferred upon the State Government to make rules under  the Act,  inter  alia,  regulating the  assessment  of  tax’  In exercise  of  the powers the Government  of  Madhya  Pradesh framed  diverse sets of rules dealing with assessment,  levy and collection of taxes.  Rules were made on August 19, 1941 declaring  liability of buildings and lands for  conservancy tax  in respect of private latrines, and Rule 2 thereof,  in so far as it is  805 material, provided that- "2. There shall be imposed- (i)       x x x         x               (ii)  On  every  building or land to  which  a               private latrine., privy or cesspool is attach-               ed,  or  any resident whereof uses  a  private               latrine,  privy or cesspool, which  is  either               cleansed  by municipal agency or is  connected               with  the municipal underground sewer’ or  the               premises or compounds of which are cleansed by               municipal  agency, a tax payable by the  owner               under  section  66 (1) (h)  according  to  the               following  scale on its gross  annual  letting               value." A  similar set of rules in respect of water rate came to  be promulgated  on September 28, 1949, It was provided by  Rule 1, in so far as it is material, that- "1. There shall be imposed- (1) (a)         x        x x        x               (b)   On  every building or land which has  no               private supply from municipal service pipes or               the  resident thereof does not use water  from               such  supply and which is situated within  200               yards from public water standard or a  service               pipe,  a  tax  leviable  from  the  owners  or               occupiers under section 66(l) (k) according to               the  following  scales  on  its  gross  annual               letting value : " In  1941 rules were made for assessment of conservancy  tax. The tax was to be levied on the 806 gross  annual letting value of the building.  By rule  5  it was  provided  that  on the completion  of  the  assessment, notices  shall  be  given to the  persons  affected  by  the preparation of the assessment list.  Any person affected  by the  entries  in  the list was by rule 6  entitled  to  file objections against assessment or valuation or both as  shown in  the  register  at any time within  thirty  days  of  the publication  or  service.   This  rule  also  provided   for affording a hearing to the objectors.  Rule 8 provided  that after  the objections under rule 6 had been disposed of  and all  consequential  amendments were made in  the  assessment list  it  shall be authenticated and the register  shall  be valid from the date of the authentication and shall continue to  be  valid  until the beginning  of  the  half-year  next follow.  ing  the authentication of a  new  register.   Rule 10(a) provided :

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             "Where  more than one family  having  separate               sources of income, occupy separate portions of               the same building or range of buildings,  each               of  such  portion shall be deemed  a  building               under  these rules and assessed  according  to               its  gross annual letting value as  determined               in accordance with rule 1." Clause (b) provided :               "The Committee may, at a special meeting if it               thinks fit, assess the tax on such building on               the  aggregate gross annual letting  value  of               all  the  portions instead of  assessing  each               portion separately." Clause (c) provided               "Detached building, even when occupied by  the               same  person or family, shall, where any  road               or pathway over which the public have a  right               of way, or any land belonging to any  807               other person separate them from one  another,’               be separately assessed as independent units.      Similar rules were made in respect of the assessment list for water rate. The water rate wasalso  to be  imposed as a rate on the gross annual letting     value     and provisions of rule 10 (a), (b)and  (c)  were  in  terms identical with the assessment rules framed in respect of the conservancy  tax assessment and for the sake of  brevity  we will only refer to assessment rules relating to  conservancy tax.   These rules remained in force even after the C. P.  & Berar Municipalities Act, 1922 was repealed by virtue of  s. 3  (2)  of the Act of 1948, and -applied  to  assessment  of liability to conservancy tax and water rates as if the rules were framed under the latter Act. ’Building’ is defined in the Act by s. 5 (7) as including "a house,  outhouse,  stable,  hut, shed  or  other  enclosure, whether  used  as a human dwelling or  otherwise  and  shall include  verandahs, fixed platforms, plinths,  door-steps  , walls  and  the  like."  The  definition  is  an   inclusive definition, and contains inherent indication that a part  of a  building  would  be  a  building  for  the  purposes   of imposition of liability to pay rates, and assessment of such liability.  It is manifest that under the scheme of the  Act read  with the rules, conservancy tax and water rate are  to be  levied as rates on the gross annual letting value and  a rate  can  only be levied from a person in  respect  of  the tenement  or premises occupied as an independent unit.   The assessment  rules  provide  for levy of rate  on  the  gross annual letting value of the building. and in as much as  the expression  "building’ according to the definition given  in s. 5 (7) of the Act would include a part of a building,  the Corporation  is  competent  to frame a list  in  respect  of several  tenements  occupied by different  persons  treating each tenement as a separate building for levy of tax.   That is  implicit in rule 10 (b) and also in rule 10 (c)  of  the assessment rules, 808 By  the  rules, liability to pay conservancy tax  and  water rate  is imposed in respect of a building  provided  certain conditions  specified  in the rule are fulfilled,  and  this liability   arises   whether  the  building  is   used   for residential  purposes or non-residential purposes.  Rule  10 (a)  also clearly authorises the Corppration to  levy  water rate  and  the  conservancy  tax  in  respect  of   separate tenements  occupied  by different persons as  if  each  such tenement  is a building.  In the view of the High Court  use

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of the expression ’family’ in rule 10 (a)-indicated that the rule did not apply to buildings occupied for  non-residentia purposes.  But by the rules imposing the conservancy tax and the water rate, all buildings to which are attached latrines cleansed  by  municipal agency and all buildings  which  are connected  with the water distribution system, or which  are situate  within the prescribed distance of  water  standard, are  liable  to pay the conservancy tax and the  water  rate irrespectivc of the nature of the use to which the  building is put.  It is implicit in the view of the High Court that a building  occupied for non-residential use can be  taxed  as one  unit,  even if the building is occupied by  tenants  or licencees,  carrying on their separate or individual  trades or  businesses.   But  this  view  does  not  appear  to  be supported by the scheme of the Act and rules.  If a building is  partly  occupied  for residential and  partly  for  non- residential  purposes the portions occupied for  residential purposes  would, in the view of the High Court, be  regarded as  separate           buildings and each occupant having  a seperate source of income would be liable to pay conservancy tax  and  water  rate but the  portions  occupied  for  non- residential  purposes  would  not be  regarded  as  separate buildings.  The High Court reached its conclusion that  rule 10 (a) did not apply to portions of buildings when they were occupied for non-residential purposes merely because of  the use  of  the  expression  "family’ in  the  rule.   But  the expression ’family’ has according  809 to  the context in which it occurs a  variable  connotation. It  does  not  in the setting of  the  rules  postulate  the existence  of  relationship either of blood or  by  marriage between the persons residing in the tenement. Even     a single person may be regarded as a family,and  a   master and servant would also be so regarded. The  word   ’occupy’ used in rule 10 (a) is not restricted either expressly or by anything  contained  in the context of the  rule  suggesting that the occupation is to be only for residential  purposes, and in    the absence of any such implication the rule  must be   deemed to be of general application i.e., it applies to uses non-residential as well as residential.  The expression ’family’  must  therefore take colour  from  the  expression "occupy’ used in the same rule.  In our view the  expression ‘family’  in the context in which it occurs, means  no  more than a person or a group of persons. Mr. Pathak appearing on behalf of the Corporation  submitted that  there  was a drafting error in rule 10 (a), and  as  a matter  of  interpretation the Court would be  justified  in reading  the  expression ’family’ in that  rule  as  meaning ’family or person’ -which is the expression used in rule  10 (c).   He submits that rule 10(a) and rule 10 (c) deal  with the  same subject-matter and, therefore, the Court would  be justified  in holding that the expression ’one family’  used in rule 10 (a) and the expression "person or family’ in rule 10  (c) must have the same meaning.  Prima facie,  there  is substance  in  this  contention,  but we  do  not  think  it necessary to base our decision on that ground.  In our  view the  expression  ’family’ has not a  restricted  meaning  as suggested  by the High Court, and under the  rules  imposing liability to pay conservancy tax and water rate liability is imposed  upon  every building, which expression  includes  a part   of  a  building  occupied  as  an  independent   unit irrespective of the nature of the user, The learned Attorney General appearing on 810 behalf  of the Company submitted that under the  Corporation

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Act  the  owner  and  not the occupier  is  liable  for  the conservancy  tax  and  water  rate  and  therefore  separate assessments of different units occupied by the  shop-keepers could  not  be made.  This plea was not raised in  the  High Court.   Even  apart  from  this  infirmity,  there  is   no substance in the plea.  Under s. 114 of the Act a latrine or conservancy tax payable by the occupier or the owner may  be imposed.  Similarly water rate may be imposed, when water is supplied  by the Corporation.  By the rules framed under  s. 71  of  the  C.  P. Berar  Municipality  Act  of  1922,  and continued  under  the  Act of  1948  liability  imposed  for payment  of the conservancy tax and the assessment rules  is not restricted to owners only.  By rule 4 of the  assessment rules  the Corporation is required to prepare an  assessment list  containing the names of the persons liable to pay  the tax.   The assessment rules therefore clearly indicate  that the  occupier of the premises may be rendered liable to  pay the conservancy tax and the water rate.  Section ’165 of the Act  makes all sums due from any person in respect of  taxes on  any land or building, a first charge upon the said  land or  building and upon any movable property found  within  or upon such land or building and belonging to the said person, provided   that  no  arrears  of  any  such  tax  shall   be recoverable from any occupier who is not the owner, if  such arrears  are for a period during which the occupier was  not in occupation.  It is implict in s. 165 that an occupier  of the premises may be liable to pay the tax even though he  is not  the owner.  It is also necessary to point out that  the scheme  under  which  the  shop-keepers  are  occupying  the premises  has  not been produced before this Court.   It  is admitted,  however, that the shop-keepers will be owners  of the  premises occupied by them as soon as the amounts  which they  have agreed to pay are fully paid and their  liability discharged.  ’The                             811 Company  treated  the shop-keepers as  owners  (vide  their- letter  dated September 30, 1953).  Manifestly they  have  a substantial  interest in the tenements in  their  occupation and  it  would  be difficult not to  call  them  owners  for purposes of municipal taxation.  According to the definition in  s.  5  (37)  of the Act  an  ’owner’  ""when  used  with reference  to any land or -building includes the person  for the time being receiving the rent of the land or building or of  any  part  of the land or building whether  on  his  own account or an agent or trustee for any person or society  or for  any religious or charitable purpose, or as  a  receiver who  would receive such rent if the land, building  or  part thereof  were  let to a tenant".  There is  nothing  on  the record  to show that the shop-keepers would not be  entitled to let out the premises in their occupation and if they can. they  would be regarded as owners within the meaning of  cl. (37) of s. 5. In  our  view,  therefore, the High Court was  in  error  in holding  that rule 10 (a) applied only to building  occupied for residential purposes.  The rule in our judgment  applies to   buildings  occupied  for  nonresidential  as  well   as residential  purposes,  and  to every  part  of  a  building occupied by a person or a group of persons having a separate source of income, whether the occupation is for  residential or  non-residential  purposes and such person  or  group  of persons  would be liable to pay the conservancy tax and  the water rate. The  appeal therefore is allowed and the petition  filed  by the Company and the tax payer Sitaram Upasrao dismissed with costs in this Court and the High Court.

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                     Appeal allowed,                             812