15 December 1980
Supreme Court
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INTERNATIONAL TOURIST CORPORATION ETC. ETC. Vs STATE OF HARYANA & ORS.ANDMANMOHAN VIG & ORS.v.STATE OF HAR

Bench: REDDY,O. CHINNAPPA (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 638 of 1979


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PETITIONER: INTERNATIONAL TOURIST CORPORATION ETC. ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF HARYANA & ORS.ANDMANMOHAN VIG & ORS.v.STATE OF HARY

DATE OF JUDGMENT15/12/1980

BENCH: REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J) BENCH: REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J) SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH

CITATION:  1981 AIR  774            1981 SCR  (2) 364  1981 SCC  (2) 318  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1981 SC2030  (8)  RF         1983 SC 634  (16)  R          1983 SC1005  (7,8)  F          1983 SC1019  (93)  R          1983 SC1283  (5)  R          1988 SC2062  (10)  RF         1990 SC1637  (10)  RF         1991 SC1650  (4,6)

ACT:      Haryana Passengers and Goods Taxation Act, 1952-Whether section 3(3)  interferes with  the  freedom  of  Inter-state Trade, Commerce  and Intercourse  and is therefore violative of Article 301 of the Constitution-Interpretation of Entries in the Constitution-Exclusive competence of Parliament, when can  be   claimed-Levy  of  tax  at  60%  of  fare,  whether regulatory and  compensatory in  nature-Entry 56, List II of Seventh Schedule to the Constitution, scope of.      U.P. Motor  Vehicles Taxation  Act, scope of sections 4 and 5A- Section 9 of the U.P. Motor Gadi (Malkar) Adhiniyam, 1964 is not violative of Article 14 of the Constitution.      Bihar Taxation  of Passengers  and  Goods  (Carried  by Public Service  Motor Vehicles)  Act,  1961,  section  3(6), scope of.

HEADNOTE:      Dismissing the  Appeals, S.L.Ps. and Writ Petitions the Court ^      HELD :  (1) Where the competing entries are an Entry in List II  and Entry  97 in List I the Entry in the State list must be  given a  broad and  plentiful interpretation.  In a Federal Constitution  like ours where there is a division of legislative subjects  but the  residuary power  is vested in Parliament; such  residuary power  cannot be  so expansively interpreted as  to whittle  down  the  power  of  the  State legislature. That  might  affect  and  jeopardise  the  very federal principle.  The federal  nature of  the constitution demands  that   an  interpretation  which  would  allow  the exercise of  legislative power by Parliament pursuant to the residuary  powers   vested  in   it  to  trench  upon  State legislation and  which would  thereby  destroy  or  belittle

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state  autonomy   must   be   rejected.   Before   exclusive legislative competence  can be  claimed  for  Parliament  by resort to  the residuary power, the legislative incompetence of the  State legislative must be clearly established. Entry 97 itself  is specific  that a  matter can  be brought under that entry  only if  it is not enumerated in List II or List III and  in the  case of  a tax  if it  is not  mentioned in either of those lists. [372 A-D, 373C-D]      The Haryana  Passengers and Goods Taxation Act is a law made pursuant to the power given to the State Legislature by Entry 56  of List  II. The omission of reference to National Highways in Entry 30 and Entry 89 is of signifi- 365 cance and  indicates that  the subject  of  "passengers  and goods"  carried,   on  National  Highways  is  reserved  for inclusion in  the State List. A consideration of Entries 22, 23, 24,  29, 30  and 89  of List  I and  Entry 56 of List II makes it clear that taxes on passengers and goods carried on National Highways also fall directly and squarely within and are included in Entry 56 of List II.                                            [373 D-G & 374 C]      Attorney-General for  Ontario v.  Attorney-General  for the Dominion,  1896 A.C.  348 @  360-361; A.  L.  S.  P.  L. Subrahmanyan Chettiar  v. Muttuswami  Goundan,  A.I.R.  1941 Federal Court  47 @  55 and Manikkasundara Bhattar & Ors. v. R. S.  Nayudu &  Ors., [1946]  F.C.R. 67  @ 88,  quoted with approval.      (2) The  power exercisable under Entry 56 of List II is the power  to impose  taxes  which  are  in  the  nature  of regulatory and compensatory measures. The Court is not bound by any  statement made  by or  on behalf  of  the  Executive Government on a question of the legislative intent or nature of an  enactment. What the legislature intended an enactment to be  need not  necessarily be  what the Government says it is. It  is a matter of construction, in the light of several attendant  circumstances   including  the   source  of   the legislative  power   under  the  Constitution  to  make  the particular law. [374 B-C, D-E]      Atiabari Tea  Co. Ltd. v. State of Assam & Ors., [1961] 1 S.C.R.  809; The  Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd. v. State of  Rajasthan &  Ors. [1963]  1 S.C.R.  491 and Bolani Ores Ltd.  etc. v.  State of  Orissa etc., [1975] 2 SCR 138, followed.      (3)  To   say  that  the  nature  of  a  tax  is  of  a compensatory and  regulatory nature  is not  to say that the measure  of   the  tax   should  be   proportionate  to  the expenditure incurred  on the  regulation  provided  and  the services rendered.  If the  tax were  to be proportionate to the expenditure  on regulation and service it would not be a tax but a fee. While in the case of a fee it may be possible to precisely identify and measure the benefits received from the Government  and levy  the fee  according to the benefits received and  the expenditure  incurred, in  the case  of  a regulatory and  compensatory tax it would ordinarily be well nigh  impossible   to  identify   and  measure,   with   any exactitude,  the   benefits  received  and  the  expenditure incurred and levy the tax according to the benefits received and the  expenditure incurred. What is necessary to uphold a regulatory and  compensatory  tax  is  the  existence  of  a specific, identifiable  object behind  the levy  and a nexus between the  subject and  the object  of the  levy.  If  the object behind  the levy  is identifiable  and  if  there  is sufficient nexus  between the  subject and the object of the levy, it  is not  necessary that  the money  realised by the levy should  be put  into a  separate fund  or that the levy

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should be  proportionate to the expenditure. There can be no bar  to  an  intermingling  of  the  revenue  realised  from regulatory and  compensatory taxes and from other taxes of a general nature  nor can  there be  any objection  to more or less expenditure  being incurred  on the  object behind  the compensatory and  regulatory levy  than the realisation from the levy. [374 F-H, 375 A-C]      The maintenance  of highways  other than  the  National Highways is  exclusively the  responsibility  of  the  State Government. In  view  of  the  provisions  of  the  National Highways Act,  the State Government is not altogether devoid of  responsibility   in  the   matter  of   development  and maintenance  of  a  National  Highway,  though  the  primary responsibility is that of the Union Government. 366 It is  under a  statutory obligation  to obey the directions given  by   the  Central  Government  with  respect  to  the development and  maintenance of  National Highways  and  may enter  into  an  agreement  to  share  the  expenditure.  In developing and maintaining that part of the Highway which is within  a   municipal  area   State  Government   is  surely facilitating the  flow of  passengers and  goods  along  the national highway. Apart from this, other facilities provided by  the   State  Government  along  all  highways  including national  highways   such  as   lighting,  traffic  control, amenities for  passengers,  halting  places  for  buses  and trucks are  available for  use by  everyone including  those travelling along the national highway. [376 A, C-F]      The State  Government does  confer benefits and renders service in  connection with  traffic moving  along  national highway. Therefore,  there is  sufficient nexus  between the tax and passengers and goods carried on national highways to justify the imposition. [376 G-H]      (4) It  is now settled that regulatory and compensatory taxes  are  outside  the  purview  of  Article  301  of  the Constitution. In  the instant  cases, the  tax is limited to the fare  and freight  for the  distance within the State of Haryana. Therefore,  section 3(3)  of the Haryana Passengers and Goods  Taxation Act  is not  violative of Article 301 of the Constitution. [377 A, 378 B]      Automobile  Transport  (Rajasthan)  Ltd.  v.  State  of Rajasthan, [1963]  1  S.C.R.  491  and  M/s.  Sainik  Motors Jodhpur &  Ors. v.  The State  of Rajasthan, [1962] 1 S.C.R. 517 @ 526; applied.      (5) Under  sections 4 and 5A of the Uttar Pradesh Motor Vehicles Taxation  Act, tax  is levied on the basis of their user in  the State of Uttar Pradesh and not because they are "kept" in the State of Uttar Pradesh. [378 G-H]      State of  Mysore &  Ors. v.  S. Sundaram Motors P. Ltd. A.I.R. 1980 S.C. 148, distinguished.      (6) The  levy made  on vehicles  passing through  Uttar Pradesh from  a place outside Uttar Pradesh is not violative of Article  14 of  the  Constitution.  The  tax  is  payable because of  the user  of the  roads while  the  question  of picking up  and setting down passengers and goods at wayside stations en  route is  dependant on  the conditions  of  the permit and the reciprocal agreements between the States. One has nothing to do with the other. [379 B-C]      (7) Entry  56 of  List II cannot be read in conjunction with Entry  26. The taxing power of the State Legislature in regard to  passengers and  goods carried  by roads or inland waterways is to be found in Entry 56. Therefore, such taxing power is not controlled by another Entry in List II which is unrelated to taxing power. The taxable event is the carrying of goods  and passengers  on roads  within the State thereby

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making use  of the facilities provided by the State. [379 F- G]      (8) Section  9 of the Uttar Pradesh Motor Gadi (Malkar) Adhiniyam, 1964  is not  violative  of  Article  14  of  the Constitution. The  rate of  lump-sum tax is relatable to the freight carried or the period of the journey or to both.                                                 [380 A, F-G] 367      (9)  Under  section  3(6)  of  the  Bihar  Taxation  of Passengers  and  Goods  (Carried  by  Public  Service  Motor Vehicles) Act,  1961, tax  can be levied where passengers or goods are  carried from  any place  outside the State to any place outside  the State  because the vehicle passes through the State of Bihar. A journey from a place outside the State to another  place outside  the State, but through the State, involves a journey from a place outside the State to a place inside the State and a journey from a place inside the State to a place outside the State. [380 G-H, 381 F-G]      Pritpal Singh  v. State  of U.P., (1973) U.P. Tax Cases 376, partly overruled on this question only.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION :  Civil Appeal Nos. 638, 656, 786 and 2632 of 1979.      Appeals by  Special Leave  from the  Judgment and Order dated 9-1-1979  of the  Punjab & Haryana High Court in Civil Writ Nos. 3870/77, 1564/77, 4080/77 and 3631/77.                             WITH      SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CIVIL) Nos. 8961-62/79.      From the  Judgment and  Order dated  7-10-1980  of  the Allahabad High Court in Civil Writ Petition No. Nil.                             AND      WRIT PETITION  NOS.: 183 of 1977, 3967 of 1978, 5116 to 5143, 5151-5159  of 1980,  657,  910-913,  922-23,  1039-40, 1192, 1344,  1347 of  1979, 324,  421, 451,  820, 880,  881, 1152, 1153,  1154, 1207, 1404, 1426, 1541, 1542, 1561, 1563, 1650, 1651,  1714, 1715, 1716, 1717, 1730, 1731, 1732, 1855, 1948-49, 2032-34,  2162, 2164, 2165, 2415, 2416, 2418, 2419, 2420, 2421,  2626, 2627, 2628, 2629, 2630, 2631, 2632, 2636, 2638, 2639-2640,  2641, 3015-30, 3043-3044, 3054, 3055-3056, 3456-3457, 3703,  3704, 3705-3708,  3712-3715,  3716,  3803, 3823, 4326,  4333, 4334,  4335, 4336,  4337-38, 4532,  4534, 4682, 4683,  4684, 4685,  4708, 4709-4711, 5500, 5506, 5507, 5495-5497, 5505, 5508-9, 5426, 5416-20, 5427, 5415, 5526-27, 5536, 5333, 3289, 4347, 4348, 4753, 5629-33/80, 364, 337/72, 3822, 2160, 2164, 636, 1429, 1782-83, 2163 and 2124/80.      (Under Article 32 of the Constitution).      Soli J.  Sorabji, B.  R. Kapoor and R. A. Gupta for the Appellant in CA 639/79.      Y. S. Chitale (Dr.) and Indra Makwana for the Appellant in CA 656/79.      Indra Makwana  and Sushil  Kumar Jain for the Appellant in CA 786/79. 368      P. R.  Mridul, B. R. Kapoor, Miss Renu Gupta, R. Satish Vig and  N. N.  Sharma for  the Appellant  in  CA  2632  and Petitioners in SLP Nos. 8961-8962/80.      K. G.  Bhagat, D.  Goburdhan, M.  N.  Shroff,  Miss  A. Subhashini, M.  Veerappa, S.  K. Gambhir, Gijay Hansonia, R. K. Mehta,  B. D.  Sharma, N.  Hansonia and S. Markandeya for the Respondent (State) in all the matters.      L. N.  Sinha Att.  Genl.  and  S.  Markandeya  for  the Respondent (State of Uttar Pradesh).

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    B. R.  Kapoor, Renu  Gupta, S.  R.  Srivastava,  N.  N. Sharma, U.  S. Prasad,  Mrs. M. Qamruddin, S. Markandeya and M. P. Jha for the Petitioners.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      CHINNAPPA REDDY,  J. Civil  Appeals Nos.  638, 656, 786 and 2632  of 1979  may be  dealt with first as the principal submissions were  made in  these cases.  The appellants  are transport operators  plying  stage  carriages  and  contract carriages between  Delhi and  Jammu and  other places in the State of  Jammu and Kashmir. Their carriages follow National Highways 1  and 1-A. They operate directly between Delhi and the other  terminus in  the State of Jammu and Kashmir, that is to  say, they  do not  pick up  or set down passengers or goods en route. In the course of the journey it is necessary for them  to travel  through the State of Haryana as part of National Highway  No. 1 passes through that State. The State of Haryana  levies a  tax on passengers and goods carried by motor vehicles,  which we  may  call,  for  brevity’s  sake, ’passengers and  goods tax’.  The levy  is  made  under  the provisions of  the Haryana Passengers and Goods Taxation Act 1952. Sec. 3(1) of the Act empowers the levy of a tax, to be paid to  the State  Government, at  such rates not exceeding 60% of  the value of the fare or freight as the case may be, on all passengers and goods carried by a motor vehicle other than a  private carrier.  In the  case of contract carriages and stage  carriages the  State Government  is authorised to accept  a   lump-sum  in  lieu  of  the  tax  chargeable  on passengers and goods respectively, in the manner prescribed. Sec. 3(3)  deals with  situations where  a route lies partly within and  partly outside the State of Haryana. It reads as follows :           "S. 3(3). When passengers and goods are carried by      a motor  vehicle on  a ’joint  route’, the tax shall be      payable in  respect of fare or freight for the distance      covered within  the State at the rate laid down in this      section. 369           Explanation : For the purpose of this sub-section,      ’joint route’  shall mean  a route which lies partly in      the State of Haryana and partly in some other State, or      Union Territory." The appellants  question the  vires  of  Sec.  3(3)  of  the Haryana Passengers  and Goods  Taxation Act  in so far as it permits the  levy of  tax on passengers and goods carried by their carriages plying entirely along the National Highways. The Writ Petitions filed by them in the High Court of Punjab & Haryana were dismissed, the High Court upholding the vires of Sec. 3(3). Hence these appeals.      Shri Soli  Sorabji and Dr. Chitale who appeared for the appellants submitted  that it  was incompetent for the State Legislature  to   levy  the  passengers  and  goods  tax  on passengers and  goods carried  on National  Highways. It was said :  that Parliament  alone  had  exclusive  jurisdiction under Entry  23 read  with Entry 97 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to  the Constitution  to legislate  in  respect  of National Highways,  including levy  of taxes  on  goods  and passengers carried  on National  Highways.  It  was  further argued that  Entry 56  of List II of Seventh Schedule to the Constitution which  empowered the levy of taxes on goods and passengers carried  by road  merely authorised  the levy  of taxes which  were of  regulatory  and  compensatory  nature. Consequently the taxing power of the State Legislature could only be exercised in respect of passengers and goods carried on roads maintained by the State Government and not on roads maintained by  the Union Government. Under no circumstances,

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it was  emphasised, could  it be said that the levy of a tax which was  as much  as 60%  of the  fare was  regulatory and compensatory in  its nature. It was also submitted that Sec. 3(3) of  the Haryana  Act interfered  with  the  freedom  of Inter-state  Trade,   Commerce  and   Intercourse  and  was, therefore, violative of Art. 301 of the Constitution. It was not saved  by Art.  304(b) as  its provisions  could not  be described as  reasonable restrictions  within the meaning of Art. 304(b).      The  constitutional   and  statutory  provisions  which require to  be considered  may now  be set out. Entry 23 and Entry  97   of  List  I  of  the  Seventh  Schedule  to  the Constitution are as follows :           "23. Highways  declared by  or under  law made  by      Parliament to be national highways."           "97 Any  other matter not enumerated in List II or      List III  including any  tax not mentioned in either of      those Lists." Entries 22,  24, 25,  29, 30  and 89  of List  I also  throw light, as we will presently show and they are as follows : 370           "22. Railways."           "24. Shipping  and navigation on inland waterways,      declared by Parliament by law to be national waterways,      as regards  mechanically propelled vessels; the rule of      the road on such waterways."           "25. Maritime  shipping and  navigation, including      shipping and  navigation on  tidal waters; provision of      education and  training for  the mercantile  marine and      regulation of  such education  and training provided by      State and other agencies."           "29.  Airways;   aircraft  and   air   navigation;      provision of aerodromes; regulation and organisation of      air  traffic   and   of   aerodromes;   provision   for      aeronautical education  and training  and regulation of      such education  and training  provided  by  States  and      other agencies."           "30. Carriage  of passengers and goods by railway,      sea or  air, or  by national  waterways in mechanically      propelled vessels."           "89.  Terminal   taxes  on  goods  or  passengers,      carried by  railway, sea or air, taxes on railway fares      and freights." Entry 13, Entry 56 and Entry 57 of List II are as follows :           "13.  Communications,   that  is  to  say,  roads,      bridges, ferries,  and other means of communication not      specified in  List  I;  municipal  tramways;  ropeways;      inland waterways  and traffic  thereon subject  to  the      provisions of  List I  and List III with regard to such      waterways; vehicles  other than  mechanically propelled      vehicles."           "56. Taxes on goods and passengers carried by road      or on inland waterways."           "57.  Taxes   on  vehicles,  whether  mechanically      propelled or  not, suitable for use on roads, including      tramcars subject  to the provisions of entry 35 of List      III."      The  National   Highways  Act  1956  provides  for  the declaration of  certain highways  to be  National  Highways. Sec. 2(1)  of the Act declares the Highways specified in the Schedule ’except  such parts  thereof as are situated within any municipal  area’ to be National Highways. Sec. 3 defines ’municipal area’  as meaning  "any  municipal  area  with  a population of  20,000 or  more, the control or management of which is  entrusted to  a Municipal  Committee, a  Town Area

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Committee, a  Town Committee or any other authority". Sec. 4 vests all National 371 Highways in the Union. Sec. 5 makes it the responsibility of the Central  Government "to  develop and  maintain in proper repair all  National Highways",  but  empowers  the  Central Government to  direct that  any function  in relation to the development or  maintenance of  any national  highway shall, subject to  such conditions  as may  be specified,  also  be exercisable by  the concerned  State Government.  Section  6 further empowers  the Central  Government to give directions to the Government of any State as to the carrying out in the State of  any of  the provisions  of the Act or of any rule, notification or order made thereunder. Sec. 8 authorises the Central Government  to enter  into  an  agreement  with  the Government of  any State  or with any municipal authority in relation to  the development  or maintenance of the whole or any part  of a National Highway situated within the State or within a  municipal area, and any such agreement it is said, may provide for the sharing of expenditure by the respective parties thereto.      We have  already extracted  Sec. 3(3)  of  the  Haryana Passengers and  Goods Taxation Act 1952. It is not necessary to refer to the other provisions of the Act.      The submission  of Shri  Sorabji relying  on  Union  of India v. H. S. Dhillon and Satpal & Co. etc. v. Lt. Governor of  Delhi  &  Ors.,  was  that  there  was  nothing  in  the Constitution to  prevent Parliament from combining its power to legislate  with respect  to  any  matters  enumerated  in Entries 1  to 96 of List I with its power to legislate under Entry 97  of List  I and, so, if Entries 23 and 97 were read together, the  power to  legislate with  respect to taxes on passengers and goods carried on National Highways was within the exclusive  legislative  competence  of  Parliament.  The observation in  Union of  India v. H. S. Dhillon(1) on which reliance was placed by the learned counsel was :           "However, assuming  that the  Wealth Tax  Act,  as      originally enacted,  is held  to be  legislation  under      entry 86  List I,  there is nothing in the Constitution      to prevent  Parliament from  combining its powers under      entry 86.  List I with its powers under entry 97. There      is no principle that we know of which debars Parliament      from relying on the powers under specified entries 1 to      96, List  I, and  supplement them with the powers under      entry 97  List I  and art.  248, and  for  that  matter      powers under entries in the Concurrent List." The observation  in Dhillon’s  case was quoted with approval in Satpal  & Co. etc. v. Lt. Governor of Delhi & Ors., and a criticism that 372 Dhillon’s case  was no  longer good  law in the light of His Holiness Kesavananda  Bharathi Sripadagalavaru  v. State  of Kerala,  based   on  the  commentary  of  Mr.  Seeravai  was repelled.      There is  a patent  fallacy in  the submission  of Shri Sorabji. Before  exclusive  legislative  competence  can  be claimed for Parliament by resort to the residuary power, the legislative incompetence  of the  State legislative  must be clearly established.  Entry 97  itself is  specific  that  a matter can  be brought  under that  entry only  if it is not enumerated in  List II  or List III and in the case of a tax if it  is not  mentioned in  either of  those  lists.  In  a Federal Constitution  like ours where there is a division of legislative subjects  but the  residuary power  is vested in Parliament, such  residuary power  cannot be  so expansively

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interpreted as  to whittle  down  the  power  of  the  State legislature. That  might  affect  and  jeopardize  the  very federal principle.  The federal  nature of  the constitution demands  that   an  interpretation  which  would  allow  the exercise of  legislative power by Parliament pursuant to the residuary  powers   vested  in   it  to  trench  upon  State legislation and  which would  thereby  destroy  or  belittle state autonomy  must be  rejected. In  Attorney-General  for Ontario  v.   Attorney-General  for  the  Dominion,  it  was observed by House of Lords at p. 360-361 :           "....the exercise  of  legislative  power  by  the      Parliament of  Canada, in  regard to  all  matters  not      enumerated in  s. 91,  ought to be strictly confined to      such matters as are unquestionably of Canadian interest      and importance, and ought not to trench upon provincial      legislation with  respect to  any  of  the  classes  of      subjects enumerated  in s.  92.  To  attach  any  other      construction to  the general power which, in supplement      of  its   enumerated  powers,  is  conferred  upon  the      Parliament  of   Canada  by  s.  91,  would,  in  their      Lordships’  opinion,   not  only  be  contrary  to  the      intendment of  the Act,  but would  practically destroy      the autonomy of the provinces". In A.  L. S.  P. P.  L. Subrahmanyan  Chettiar v. Muttuswami Goundan the Federal Court said at (p. 55) :           "But resort  to that  residual power should be the      very last refuge. It is only when all the categories in      the three  Lists are  absolutely exhausted that one can      think of falling back upon a nondescript." 373 Again in  Manikkasundara Bhattar  & Ors.  v. R.  S. Nayudu & Ors., the Federal Court observed (at p.88) :           "In the  Indian Constitution  Act, s. 104 has been      inserted for  the very  purpose of enabling legislation      to be  enacted in  respect of subjects omitted from the      three Lists  in the  Seventh  Schedule.  There  is  not      therefore the  same necessity  for Courts  in India  to      find that  a  subject  must  be  comprised  within  the      entries in  the Lists.  But  when  there  is  a  choice      between two  possible  constructions  of  an  entry  or      entries, one  of which will result in legislative power      being conferred  by some  entry or entries in the Lists      and the other in a finding of no existing power, but if      legislation is required that recourse must be had to s.      104,  the   first  construction  should  on  principles      analogous to those applied to the Canadian Constitution      be preferred". It is,  therefore,  but  proper  that  where  the  competing entries are  an entry in List II and entry 97 of List I, the entry in  the State list must be given a broad and plentiful interpretation.      Entry 56  of List  II refers  to  taxes  and  goods  on passengers carried  by road  or on inland waterways. It does not except  National Highways  and  National  Waterways,  so declared by  law made  pursuant to  Entry 23 and Entry 24 of List I.  While it  is to be noticed that Entries 22, 23, 24, 25 and  29 specify  Railways,  National  Highways,  National Waterways and  Maritime  Shipping,  Navigation  and  Airways respectively,  Entry   30  which   refers  to   carriage  of passengers  and  goods  specifies  Railways,  Sea,  Air  and National Waterways  only but  not National  Highways.  Again entry  89  which  refers  to  Terminal  Taxes  on  goods  or passengers specifies  Railways, Sea  or Air but not National Highways. The  omission of reference to National Highways in Entry 30  and entry 89 is of significance and indicates that

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the subject  of ’passengers  and goods’  carried on National Highways is  reserved for  inclusion in  the State  List.  A consideration of these several entries appears to us to make it clear  that taxes  on passengers  and  goods  carried  on National Highways also fall directly and squarely within and are included in entry 56 of List II.      We proceed  to  the  next  submission  of  the  learned counsel for  the appellants  that the  legislative power  to impose taxes  under entry  56 of List II was of a regulatory and compensatory nature and consequently the taxing power of the State Legislature could only be 374 exercised with  respect to  goods and  passengers carried on roads,  maintained  by  the  State  Government  and  not  on National  Highways   which  were  maintained  by  the  Union Government. In  the counter affidavit filed by Shri Rajender Singh, Taxation  Commissioner, on  behalf of  the  State  of Haryana, it was claimed that the tax was not of a regulatory and compensatory  nature but  that it  was a general revenue measure. This  position was  abandoned during  the course of argument and  Shri Bhagat  learned counsel  for the State of Haryana conceded  that the  tax  was  of  a  regulatory  and compensatory nature.  Nor, of  course, is the Court bound by any  statement  made  by  or  on  behalf  of  the  Executive Government on a question of the legislative intent or nature of an  enactment, what the legislature intended an enactment to be  need not  necessarily be  what the Government says it is. It  is a matter of construction, in the light of several attendant  circumstances   including  the   source  of   the legislative  power   under  the  Constitution  to  make  the particular law. We have held that the Haryana Passengers and Goods Taxation Act is a law made pursuant to the power given to the  State Legislature  by entry  56 of  List II.  Having regard to  Atiabari Tea  Co. Ltd., v. State of Assam & Ors., The  Automobile  Transport  (Rajasthan)  Ltd.  v.  State  of Rajasthan &  Ors., and  Bolani Ores  Ltd. etc.  v. State  of Orissa etc.,  it has  to be  held that the power exercisable under entry 56 of List II is the power to impose taxes which are in  the nature  of regulatory and compensatory measures. In the last of the cases mentioned it was said by the Court, "Entry 57  of List  II empowers  legislation in  respect  of taxes on  vehicles  .........  suitable  for  use  on  roads .......... the power exercisable under Entry 57 is the power to impose  taxes which are in the nature of compensatory and regulatory measures".  What was  said about entry 57 is true of entry 56 too. But to say that the nature of a tax is of a compensatory and  regulatory nature  is not  to say that the measure  of   the  tax   should  be   proportionate  to  the expenditure incurred  on the  regulation  provided  and  the services rendered.  If the  tax were  to be proportionate to the expenditure  on regulation and service it would not be a tax but a fee.      While in  the case  of a  fee it  may  be  possible  to precisely identify  and measure  the benefits  received from the Government  and levy  the fee  according to the benefits received and  the expenditure  incurred, in  the case  of  a regulatory and  compensatory tax it would ordinarily be well nigh  impossible   to  identify   and  measure,   with   any exactitude,  the   benefits  received  and  the  expenditure incurred and levy the tax 375 according to  the  benefits  received  and  the  expenditure incurred. What  is necessary  to  uphold  a  regulatory  and compensatory  tax   is  the   existence   of   a   specific, identifiable object  behind the levy and a nexus between the

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subject and the object of the levy. If the object behind the levy is  identifiable  and  if  there  is  sufficient  nexus between the  subject and  the object  of the levy, it is not necessary that  the money realised by the levy should be put into  a   separate  fund   or  that   the  levy   should  be proportionate to  the expenditure. There can be no bar to an inter-mingling of  the revenue  realised from regulatory and compensatory taxes  and from there taxes of a general nature nor can  there be  any objection to more or less expenditure being incurred  on the  object behind  the compensatory  and regulatory levy  than the  realisation from the levy. In the Automobile Transport  (Rajasthan) Ltd. v. State of Rajasthan & Ors., (Supra) this Court observed (at p.536-537) :           "Whether a  tax is  compensatory or  not cannot be      made to  depend on the preamble of the statute imposing      it. Nor  do we think that it would be right to say that      a tax  is  not  compensatory  because  the  precise  or      specific amount  collected  is  not  actually  used  to      providing any  facilities. ........  actual user  would      often be unknown to tradesmen and such user may at some      time be  compensatory and at others not so. It seems to      us that  a working  test for  deciding whether a tax is      compensatory or  not is  to enquire  whether the trades      people are having the use of certain facilities for the      better  conduct   of  their  business  and  paying  not      patently much  more than what is required for providing      the facilities.  It would  be impossible  to judge  the      compensatory nature  of a tax by a meticulous test, and      in the  nature of things that cannot be done. Nor do we      think that  it will  make any difference that the money      collected from  the tax is not put into a separate fund      so long as facilities for the trades people who pay the      tax are provided and the expenses incurred in providing      them are  borne by  the State out of whatever source it      may be  ..........We were  addressed at  some length on      the distinction between a tax a fee and an excise duty.      It was  also pointed  out to  us that  the taxes raised      under the  Act were  not specially  ear-marked for  the      building or  maintenance of roads. We do not think that      these considerations  necessarily determine whether the      taxes are  compensatory taxes  or not. We must consider      the substance of the matter". There cannot  be the  slightest  doubt  that  the  State  of Haryana incurs  considerable expenditure for the maintenance of roads and providing 376 facilities for  the transport of goods and passengers within the State of Haryana. The maintenance of highways other than the National  Highways is  exclusively the responsibility of the State  Government. While  the  maintenance  of  National Highways is  the responsibility  of  the  Union  Government, under Sec.  5  of  the  National  Highways  Act,  that  very provision empowers the Central Government to direct that any function in relation to the development and maintenance of a National Highway  shall also be exercisable by the concerned State  Government.  Sec.  6  further  empowers  the  Central Government to  give directions to the State Government as to the carrying  out of  the provisions  of the  Act and Sec. 8 authorises the Central Government to enter into an agreement with the State Government in relation to the development and maintenance of  the whole  or part  of  a  National  Highway situated within  the State  including a  provision  for  the sharing of  expenditure. Therefore,  the State Government is not altogether  devoid of  responsibility in  the matter  of development and  maintenance of  a national  highway, though

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the primary  responsibility is that of the Union Government. It is  under a  statutory obligation  to obey the directions given  by   the  Central  Government  with  respect  to  the development and  maintenance of  national highways  and  may enter into  an agreement to share the expenditure. That part of the  highway which is within a municipal area is excluded from the definition of a national highway and therefore, the responsibility for  the development  and maintenance of that part of the highway is certainly on the State Government and the Municipal Committee concerned. Since the development and maintenance of  that part  of the  highway which is within a municipal area  is equally  important for the smooth flow of passengers and goods along the national highway it has to be said that in developing and maintaining the highway which is within a  municipal area,  the State  Government  is  surely facilitating the  flow of  passengers and  goods  along  the national highway. Apart from this, other facilities provided by  the   State  Government  along  all  highways  including national  highways,   such  as  lighting,  traffic  control, amenities for  passengers,  halting  places  for  buses  and trucks are  available for  use by  everyone including  those travelling along the national highways. It cannot therefore, be said  that the  State Government  confers no benefits and renders no  service in  connection with traffic moving along national highways  and is, therefore, not entitled to levy a compensatory and  regulatory tax  on  passengers  and  goods carried on national highways. We are satisfied that there is sufficient nexus  between the  tax and  passengers and goods carried on national highways to justify the imposition.      The last of the submissions was that the levy of tax on passengers and  goods passing  through the  State of Haryana from a place outside 377 the State  to a  place outside the State interfered with the freedom of  trade, commerce  and intercourse  throughout the territory of  India and  so Sec. 3(3) of the Haryana Act was violative of  Art. 301 of the Constitution. We are unable to accept  this   submission.  It  is  now  well  settled  that regulatory and compensatory taxes are outside the purview of Art.  301  of  the  Constitution.  In  Automobile  Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd.  v. State  of Rajasthan & Ors., (Supra) the question arose  whether the provision of the Rajasthan Motor Vehicles Taxation  which authorised  the levy of tax even on stage carriages  which ran  for the  most part  on  a  route within the  State of  Ajmer  but  had  necessarily  to  pass through a small strip of territory in the State of Rajasthan could be  said to  contravene Art.  301 of the Constitution. The Court,  by  a  majority,  upheld  the  validity  of  the Rajasthan Statutory provision and observed :           "Regulatory   measures    or   measures   imposing      compensatory taxes for the use of trading facilities do      not  come   within  the  purview  of  the  restrictions      contemplated by  Art. 301  and such  measures need  not      comply with  the requirements  of the  proviso to  Art.      304(b) of the Constitution". The identical question was considered in M/s. Sainik Motors, Jodhpur & Ors. v. The State of Rajasthan, in connection with a similar  provision in  the Rajasthan  Passengers and Goods Taxation Act  which provided that where passengers and goods were carried  by motor  vehicle from  any place  outside the State to any place within the State or from any place within the State  to any  place outside the State, tax was leviable on the  fare or  freight at  a  rate  proportionate  to  the distance covered  in the  State when compared with the total distance of the journey. The Constitution Bench of the Court

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holding that  there was no violation of Art. 301, observed : (at p. 526)           "We are also of opinion that no inter-State trade,      commerce or  intercourse is  affected. The  tax is  for      purposes of  State, and falls upon passengers and goods      carried by  motor vehicles  within the State. No doubt,      it falls  upon passengers  and goods  proceeding to  or      from an extra-State point but it is limited only to the      fare and  freight proportionate to the route within the      State. For  this purpose,  there is an elaborate scheme      in R.  8-A to  avoid a charge of tax on that portion of      the route  which lies  outside the State. There is thus      no tax  on fares  and freights  attributable to  routes      outside the  State except  in  one  instance  which  is      contemplated by  the proviso  to sub-s. (3) of s. 3 and      to which reference will be made 378      separately. In  our opinion,  the levy of tax cannot be      said to offend Arts. 301 and 304 of the Constitution". As in  the case of M/s. Sainik Motors, Jodhpur & Ors. v. The State of  Rajasthan, (supra) in the cases before us also the tax is  limited to  the fare  and freight  for the  distance within the  State of  Haryana. We,  therefore, hold  that S. 3(3) of the Haryana Passengers and Goods Taxation Act is not violative of  Art. 301  of the  Constitution. As a result of our discussion  Civil Appeals Nos. 638, 656, 786 and 2632 of 1979 are dismissed with costs.      In the remaining cases, apart from the principal points which we  have discussed  above some  other points also were raised which  we shall  now proceed  to consider. One of the submissions of Shri Mridul who appeared in the Special Leave Petitions was  that Sections  4 and  5A of the Uttar Pradesh Motor  Vehicles   Taxation  Act  stipulated  two  cumulative taxable events  both of which had to be satisfied before tax could be  levied on  a vehicle plying under a permit granted by an  authority having  jurisdiction outside Uttar Pradesh. The two  taxable events  according to  Shri Mridul  were (1) user within the territories of Uttar Pradesh and (2) user in any public  place in  Uttar Pradesh.  The argument  was that since the vehicles did not pick up or set down passengers or goods at  any place  within the State of Uttar Pradesh there was no  user as  contemplated  by  Sections  4  and  5A  and therefore, the  taxable events had not taken place. Reliance was placed  by the  learned counsel on our decision in State of Mysore  & Ors.  v. S.  Sundaram Motors  P. Ltd. We do not think that  the case  relied on  by Shri  Mridul is  of  any assistance to  him. The  question there  was whether a motor vehicle passing through the territory of the State of Mysore and making short halts for rest, food etc. during transit on the way  from Bombay  to its destination in Tamil Nadu was a motor vehicle  ’kept’ in  the State  of Mysore.  Our  answer depended on  the meaning  to be  given to  the word  ’kept’, since under  the Mysore  Motor Vehicles  Taxation Act  motor vehicles had  to be ’kept in the State of Mysore’ if tax was to be  levied. We held that the vehicles which merely passed through the  State of  Mysore were not "kept in the State of Mysore". The  language of  Sections 4  and 5A  of the  Uttar Pradesh Motor  Vehicles Taxation  Act is  entirely different from the  language of  the Mysore Act. The Uttar Pradesh tax is levied  on the vehicles on the basis of their user in the State of  U.P. and  not because they are ’kept’ in the State of Uttar  Pradesh. There  is no  force in this submission of Shri Mridul. 379      Shri Mridul’s  second submission was that the levy made

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on vehicles  passing through  Uttar  Pradesh  from  a  place outside, to  a place  outside Uttar Pradesh was violative of Art. 14  since these vehicles were not allowed to pick up or set down  passengers or  goods at  any  place  within  Uttar Pradesh,  unlike   vehicles  holding   permits  granted   by authorities having  jurisdiction within  Uttar Pradesh which were  permitted   to  pick   up  and  set  down  passengers, notwithstanding the fact that the tax payable by all of them was the  same. Thus  it was said unequals were treated alike for the  purpose of  payment of tax. We see no force in this submission. The  tax is  payable because  of the user of the roads while  the question  of picking  up and  setting  down passengers  and  goods  at  wayside  stations  en  route  is dependant on the conditions of the permit and the reciprocal agreements between  the States.  The one  has nothing  to do with the  other and  we are  unable to  see any violation of Art. 14.      Shri Kapoor  appearing for  the petitioners  in a large majority of  Writ Petitions  raised a number of contentions. One of the submissions was that entry 56 of List pursuant to which the  various passengers  and Goods  Taxation Acts were made should  not be  read in  isolation but  should be  read alongside other  entries in  List II particularly along with entry 26  which was  "trade and  commerce within  the  State subject to  the provisions  of entry  33 of  List III". Shri Kapoor also suggested that entry 23 of List I should be read with entry  42 of  List I  which was: "Inter-state trade and commerce". The submission of Shri Kapoor was that if entries 26 and  56 of  List II  were read together and if entries 23 and 42  were similarly  read together  separately, it  would atone become  clear that the power to levy tax on passengers and goods  under entry  56 was  to be confined to passengers and goods carried within the State. We do not agree with the submission. There  is no  justification for reading entry 56 of List II in conjunction with entry 26. The taxing power of the State  legislature in  regard to  passengers  and  goods carried by  roads or  on inland  waterways is to be found in entry 56  and there  is no  warrant for  holding  that  such taxing power is controlled by another entry in List II which is unrelated  to taxing power. Shri Kapoor suggested that no taxable event  occurred within  the State  when  goods  were merely transported through the State in the course of inter- state trade  and commerce.  The obvious  answer is  that the taxable event  is the  carrying of  goods and  passengers on roads within  the State thereby making use of the facilities provided by the State.      One of  the submissions  of Shri Kapoor was that Sec. 9 of the  Uttar Pradesh  Motor Gadi  (Mal-Kar) Adhiniyam  1964 which 380 provided for the payment of a lump-sum in lieu of the amount of tax  that might  be payable  was hit  by Art.  14 of  the Constitution. He relied on a full bench decision of the High Court of Himachal Pradesh in M/s. Gainda Mal Charanji Lal v. The State  of Himachal  Pradesh & Ors. That was a case where the Act  provided for  the payment of a flat lump-sum of Rs. 1500/- per annum in lieu of tax, irrespective of the freight carried or  the period during which the vehicle was operated within the State. The lump-sum levy was held to be violative of Art. 14. We are not concerned with such a situation under the Uttar Pradesh Motor Gadi Mal-Kar Adhiniyam. Under Sec. 9 of the  Uttar Pradesh  Adhiniyam  the  State  Government  is empowered to  accept a lump-sum in lieu of the amount of tax that may be payable for such period as may be agreed upon by the operator. Rule 5 of the Uttar Pradesh Motor Gadi Mal-Kar

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Rules 1964  provides that  the lump-sum in lieu of tax shall be determined  in accordance with the rates specified in the third schedule.  The  second  item  of  the  third  schedule prescribes the  rate  of  lump-sum  tax  for  ’public  goods vehicles’, the permits in respect of which have been granted by a  Regional or  State Transport  authority of  the  State including vehicles  of other  States authorised to ply under counter-signatures granted  by a Regional or State Transport Authority of  the State  for any  of the  Hill roads, as Rs. 3.50 per  month per  quintal of authorised carrying capacity of the vehicles in respect of agricultural produce, minerals and petroleum  goods, and  Rs. 5.60 per month per quintal of the authorised  carrying capacity of the vehicle in the case of other  goods. The third item of third schedule deals with goods vehicles  of other  States  authorised  to  ply  under temporary permits  granted by  a Regional or State Transport authority of  another State  for an inter-state route partly lying in  the State  for a period not exceeding 15 days. The lump-sum to paid in the case of public goods vehicles is Rs. 4 per  day for the number of days covered by the journeys to be performed  within the  State in  respect of  agricultural produce, minerals  and petroleum  goods and Rs. 6.40 per day in respect  of other goods. The rate of lump-sum tax is thus seen to be relatable to the freight carried or the period of the journey or to both. There is no violation of Art. 14.      In the  Bihar cases Shri Kapoor learned counsel for the petitioners raised  the contention that on the terms of Sec. 3(6) of  the Bihar Taxation of Passengers and Goods (Carried by Public  Service Motor  Vehicles) Act  1961,  no  tax  was leviable on  passengers or goods carried by a public vehicle from any  place outside  the State  of Bihar  to  any  place outside the State merely because the vehicle happened 381 to pass  through Bihar in the course of its journey. S. 3(6) reads as  follows:           "Where passengers or goods are carried by a public      service motor  vehicle from any place outside the State      to any place within the State, or from any place within      the State to any place outside the State, the tax shall      be payable  in respect  of the  distance covered within      the State at the rate provided in sub-section (1) ..." The learned  counsel contrasted the language of Sec. 3(6) of the Bihar  Act with  the language of the Explanation to Sec. 3(1) of  the Uttar  Pradesh Motor  Gadi (Mal-Kar) Adhiniyam, 1964, which is as follows:           "Explanation I-Where goods are carried by a public      goods vehicle-           (a)  from any place outside the State to any place                outside the State; or           (b)  from any  place within the State to any place                outside the State; or           (c)  from any place outside the State to any place                within the  State; an amount bearing the same                proportion ....................... ". The  omission   of  a   clause  similar  to  clause  (a)  of Explanation I  to Sec.  3(1) of the Uttar Pradesh Motor Gadi (Mal-Kar) Adhiniyam, 1964, according to the learned counsel, made it  clear that tax was not leviable where passengers or goods were  carried from  any place outside the State to any place outside  the State  merely because  the vehicle passed through the  State of  Bihar. Reliance  was  placed  by  the learned counsel on a decision of the Allahabad High Court in Pritpal Singh  v. State  of U.P.  We do  not agree  with the submission. A  journey from  a place  outside the  State  to another place  outside the  State, but  through  the  State,

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involves a journey from a place outside the State to a place inside the  State and  a journey  from a  place inside,  the State to  a place  outside the State. Clauses (b) and (c) of Explanation  I  to  Sec.  3(1)  of  the  Uttar  Pradesh  Act together,  cover,   of  their   own  force,   the  situation contemplated by clause (a) also. Clause (a) however, appears to have  been added  by way  of caution  and because  of the decision of the Allahabad High Court in the case on 382 which the  learned counsel  relied. The Allahabad High Court was  dealing  with  a  provision  which  at  that  time  was analogous to  the present  Bihar provision.  We do not agree with the  view expressed by the Allahabad High Court in that case on this question only.      Based on  our judgment  in State  of Mysore  & Ors.  V. Sundaram Motors  P. Ltd.  (supra), it  was argued in some of the cases that where the motor vehicle merely passed through the State,  no taxable  event occurred  and  therefore,  tax could not  be levied.  In the Motor Vehicle Taxation Acts of several  States  the  charging  section  generally  runs  as follows :  "There shall be levied and collected on all motor vehicles used or kept for use in the State a tax at the rate fixed by  the State Governments........... ". In these cases the taxable  event is ’keeping for use’ and alternately user within the  State. Once the motor vehicle is used within the State the taxable event occurs and the tax is attracted. The decision in  State of  Mysore &  Ors. v.  Sundaram Motors P. Ltd., (supra)  has no  application to  such cases as already pointed out by us while dealing with a similar submission of Shri Mridul in the Uttar Pradesh cases.      In  some  States,  the  Motor  Vehicles  Taxation  Acts provide for  payment of  tax in  the event  only of vehicles being "kept  for use  in the State" and provide for no other alternative taxable  event. In  such cases  the principle of our decision in State of Mysore & Ors. v. Sundaram Motors P. Ltd., (supra)  may  be  attracted.  It  will  depend  on  an interpretation of  the provisions  of the relevant statutes. But we  do not propose to say anything more about such cases as we  cannot give  any relief,  even if  we agree  with the petitioners,  in   applications  under   Art.  32   of   the Constitution.      In  the   other  cases  from  the  States  of  Gujarat, Maharashtra, West Bengal, Punjab, Haryana, Karnataka, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh,  Rajathan,  Orissa,  no  other  points  were raised but  the relevant  provisions of  the Motor, Vehicles Taxation Acts  and the Taxation on Passengers and Goods Acts in force  in the  several States  were brought to our notice and similar  submissions as those discussed by us were made. In the result all the Civil Appeals, Special Leave Petitions and Writ  Petitions are dismissed with costs. In some of the Writ Petitions  proper Court fee has not been paid. However, we are not dismissing the Writ Petitions on that ground.      The Order  of the  Court in  W.P. No.  5845 of 1980 was delivered on 13th January, 1981 by      CHINNAPPA  REDDY,  J.  This  Writ  Petition  is  really covered by  the judgment  pronounced by  us on  December 15, 1980, in M/s. Inter- 383 national Tourist  Corporation etc.  etc.  v.  The  State  of Haryana &  Ors. Shri S. N. Kacker, learned counsel, however, urged that  there was  no material before us in that case to justify a  conclusion that the State Government incurred any expenditure in  connection with  the  National  Highways  to justify imposition of a tax of a compensatory and regulatory nature. He  invited our  attention  to  the  budget  of  the

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Haryana Government  to show that no expenditure was incurred in   connection    with   the   development,   construction, improvement and  maintenance of  National  Highways  in  the State of  Haryana. There  is no substance in the submission. We  have   pointed  out  in  our  judgment  that  the  State Government incurs  expenditure in  connection with  National Highways  not   by  directly   constructing  or  maintaining National Highways but by facilitating the transport of goods and passengers  along the National Highways in various other ways  such  as  lighting,  traffic  control,  amenities  for passengers, halting places for buses and trucks etc. etc.           And not by eastern windows only,                When daylight comes, comes in the light;           In front the sun climbs slow, how slowly !                But westward, look, the land is bright !      The petition is therefore, dismissed. S.R.                          Appeals & Petitions dismissed. 384