07 November 1967
Supreme Court
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S.K. DUTTA, INCOME-TAX OFFICER & ORS. Vs LAWRENCE SINGH INGTY

Bench: WANCHOO, K.N. (CJ),BACHAWAT, R.S.,RAMASWAMI, V.,MITTER, G.K.,HEGDE, K.S.
Case number: Appeal (civil) 809 of 1966


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PETITIONER: S.K. DUTTA, INCOME-TAX OFFICER & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: LAWRENCE SINGH INGTY

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/11/1967

BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. WANCHOO, K.N. (CJ) BACHAWAT, R.S. RAMASWAMI, V. MITTER, G.K.

CITATION:  1968 AIR  658            1968 SCR  (2) 165  CITATOR INFO :  E          1976 SC 670  (6,12,18,19,20,23)  RF         1992 SC 999  (12)

ACT:     Income-tax  Act (11 of 1922), s. 4(3)(xxi) and   Income- tax  Act (43 of 1961), s. 10(26)--Exemption from tax--Denied to   government  servants--If  violative  of  Art.   14   of Constitution.

HEADNOTE:     Both under s. 4(3)(xxi) of the Income-tax Act, 1922  and s. 10(26) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, income of the members of  a  scheduled  tribe  included in  Art.  366(25)  of  the Constitution and residing in any area specified in Part A or Part  B of the Table appended to Paragraph 20 of  the  Sixth Schedule  of the Constitution, excepting that of  government servants,’ is exempt from income-tax.  The respondent was  a member  of such a scheduled tribe residing in such an  area, but,  as  he was a government servant, he  was  assessed  to income-tax.   He challenged the validity of the  assessments and the High Court quashed the assessments holding that  the two  sections.  to  the  extent  they  excluded   government servants from the benefit of the exemption given thereunder, were discriminatory and therefore void. In appeal to this Court.     HELD:   The  State has a wide  discretion  in  selecting persons   or  objects it will tax, but within the  range  of selection  made by it for the purpose of exemption,  namely, among  members  of  certain  scheduled  tribes  residing  in specified  areas,  the law as stated in  the  two  sections. operates unequally and the inequality cannot be justified on the basis of any valid classification.  [168H; 169B-C]     (1)   The  classification  of  trials  into   government servants  and  others cannot be justified on  the  basis  of administrative convenience viz.. that it was easy to collect taxes  from government servants, because.  their  case  does not stand on a different footing from that of the  employees in statutory corporations or well-established firms.  [169F- G]

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   (2) There is no legislative practice or history treating government  servants  as a separate class  for  purposes  of income tax.  The reason for making, in the past, persons  in the  service  of  the government of  British  India  serving outside  British India subject to Indian income-tax. is  not t,  hat their income was treated in a manner different  from that of other salaried officers in those areas, but that the Indian  Legislature  had no legislative  competence  to  tax residents  of  those  areas but had competence  to  tax  the income  of  persons in British  Indian  government  service, serving  in those areas.  Further, the notification  of  6th June  1890  under  which the income  earned  by  members  of certain  scheduled  tribes, other than those  in  government service, was exempt from income tax, and the notification of 21st  March 1922. under which income of  certain  indigenous hill men, other than those in government service. was exempt from  tax,  are not sufficient to prove  a  well-established legislative  practice. Those notifications were issued at  a time when the power of the legislature to grant or  withhold any   exemption   from   tax  was  not   subject   to    any constitutional  limitation.   Classification based  on  past legislative 166 practice and history does not mean that because in the  past the  legislature was enacting arbitrary laws it could do  so now.  [170A; 171D-F] (3) The social status and economic resources of a government servant  are  not different from that of another  holding  a similar  position in  a corporation or that of a  successful medical  practitioner,  lawyer, architect  etc.   Therefore, merely  because a tribal becomes a government servant he  is not  lifted  out of his social environment  and  assimilated into the forward sections of society.  [172A-B]     (4)  The  portions of the two sections struck  down  are severable  from  the rest of the provisions  in  which  they appear.  [172E-F]

JUDGMENT:     CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.  809  of 1966.     Appeal  by  special leave from the  judgment  and  order dated February 13, 1965 of the Assam and Nagaland High Court in Civil Rule No. 127 of 1963.     Niren  De, Solicitor-General, A.N. Kirpal,  S.P.  Netyar for R.N. Sachthey for the appellants. M.C. Setalvad and D.N. Mukherjee, for the respondent.     D.M.  Sen, Advocate-General for the State  of  Nagaland, A.R. Barthakur and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the intervener. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     Hegde, J.  The only question that arises for decision in this  appeal  is  whether the exclusion  of  the  government servants from the exemption given under s. 4(3)(xxi) of  the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 and later on under s. 10(26)  of the  Income  Tax Act, 1961 is violative of Art.  14  of  the Constitution.  For our present purpose it may be taken  that the said two provisions are similar.     The  respondent who is a government servant  serving  in the  State of Assam has been assessed to income tax for  the assessment years 1959-60, 1960-61, 1961-62 and 1962-63.   He challenged the legality of his assessments in civil rule No. 127  of 1963 on the file of the High Court of Judicature  of Assam.   The  Assam  High Court accepted  his  petition  and quashed   the  assessments  in  question  holding  that   s.

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4(3)(xxi)  of the Indian Income tax Act. 1922 as well as  s. 10(26)  of  the  Income Tax Act, 1961  to  the  extent  they excluded  government  servants  from  the  benefit  of   the exemption   given  thereunder  are  void.   The   income-tax authorities  as well as the Union of India have come  up  to this Court in appeal by special leave.     The facts of this case lie within a narrow compass.  The respondent  belongs  to  Mikir  Scheduled  Tribe  and  is  a permanent inhabitant of United Khasi-Jaintia Hills District, an  autonomous, District included in Part ’A’ of  the  Table appended to Paragraph 167 20  of the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution of India.   He is a government servant.  All these are admitted facts.       The  respondent in his petition before the High  Court averred  (in  para.  7 of the petition)  that  "in  all  the autonomous districts under Table, Part A of paragraph 26  of the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution of India, there are a large  number  of persons belonging to Scheduled  Tribe  who derive considerable income from trade, commerce and business and other sources and employments and immovable properties". In the return filed by the appellants those allegations were not denied.  Adverting to those allegations this is what was stated in the affidavit filed by Shri S.K. Dutta, Income-tax Officer (the first appellant in the appeal):                        "With  reference  to  the  statements               made in paragraph 7 of the petition I say that               the petitioner being a government servant  his               case stands on a different footing other  than               the general public  of the Scheduled Tribe."                     It may be remembered till 15-8-47, Khasi               and  Jaintia Hills were not parts  of  British               India.   They were under native  States.  They               merged  with  British India  only  after  this               country got independence.  Till their  merger,               none  of  the  Indian laws  applied  to  those               areas.   The Finance Act of 1955  incorporated               into  the Indian Income Tax  Act,1922,  s.4(3)               (xxi).  The relevant portion of s. 4(3)  reads               thus:                       4(3).  "Any income profits,  or  gains               falling within the following classes shall not               be included in the total income of the  person               receiving them."               (xxi). "Any income of a member of a  Scheduled               Tribe,  as defined in clause (25)  of  Article               366 of the Constitution, residing in any  area               specified  in  Part‘A or Part B of  the  table               appended to paragraph 20 of the Sixth Schedule               to the Constitution, provided that such member               is not in the service of Government."               Sec.  10(26)  of the income tax  Act  of  1961               which  corresponds  to  S.  4(3)(xxi)  of  the               Indian Income Tax Act, 1922, reads thus :-                       "In   the  case  of  a  member  of   a               Scheduled  Tribe as defined in clause (25)  of               Article  366 of the Constitution, residing  in               any area ’specified in Part A or Part B of the               Table  appended to paragraph 20 of  the  Sixth               Schedule  to the Constitution or in the  Union               Territories of Manipur and Tripura, who is not               in the service of Government. any income which               accrues or arises to him, (a) from any  source               in the area or Union Territories aforesaid, or               (b)   by  way  of  dividend  or  interest   on

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             securities." 168 Part of the impugned assessments were made under the  Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 and the rest, under the Income Tax Act, 1961.  If the aforementioned provisions are valid, then  the assessments in question are beyond challenge.  Therefore the only question for decision is whether the legislature had no power to exclude the government servants from the benefit of the exemptions given under the aforementioned ss.4(3)  (xxi) and 10(26).     It is seen that the income of the members of a scheduled tribe included in cl. 25 of Art. 366 of the Constitution and residing  in  my area specified in Part A or Part B  of  the Table appended to paragraph 20 of the Sixth Schedule of  the Constitution,  excepting  1hat  of  government  servants  is exempt  from  income tax.  in other  words,  the  government servant alone is excluded from the, benefit of the exemption given  under the provisions quoted above. It is agreed  that the  respondent is a member of the scheduled tribe  included in  cl. 25 of Art. 366 of the Constitution, residing  in  an area  specified in Part A of the Table appended to para.  20 of  the Sixth Schedule to the Constitution, but yet  he  had been denied the benefit of the exemption in question on  the sole ground that he is in the service of the government.  It may  be noted that exemption both under s. 4(3)(xxi) of  the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 and under s.10(26) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 was given to the members of certain  scheduled tribes.   For the purpose of the exemption in  question  the classification  was  made  on the  basis  of  persons  being members  of a particular tribe.  That being so, some of  the members of that tribe cannot be excluded from the benefit of those provisions unless they can be considered as  belonging to a well defined class for the purpose of income tax.   The respondent’s contention which has been accepted by the  High Court  is that the government servants cannot be  considered as  a separate class for the purpose of income tax.  On  the other hand it is contended on behalf of the Department  that the  classification  made is a reasonable one,  taking  into consideration administrative convenience as well as the past legislative practice and history.     It  is not in dispute that taxation laws must also  pass the  test of Art. 14. That has been laid down by this  Court in  Moopil  Nair v. State of Kerala(1). But as  observed  by this  Court  in East India Tobacco Co. v.  State  of  Andhra Pradesh(2),   in   deciding  whether  a  taxation   law   is discriminatory  or not it is necessary to bear in mind  that the  State  has a wide discretion in  selecting  persons  or objects  it  will  tax, and that a statute is  not  open  to attack  on the ground that it taxes some persons or  objects and  not  others; it is only when within the  range  of  its selection, the law operates un- (1) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 77.   (2) [1963] 1 S.C.R. 404, 409. 169 equally,  and that cannot be justified on the basis  of  any valid classification, that it would be violative of Art. 14. It  is  well  settled  that a State does  not  have  to  tax everything in order to tax something.  It is allowed to pick and  choose  districts, objects, persons, methods  and  even rates for taxation if it does so reasonably.     The  complaint in this case is that within the range  of the  selection  made  by  the  State  for  the  purpose   of exemption,  namely,  members  of  certain  scheduled  tribes residing in specified areas, the law operates unequally  and the inequality in question cannot be justified on the. basis of any valid classification.

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   There can be no distinction between the income earned by government servant and that earned by a person serving in  a company or under a private individual.  More or less similar is  the  case  in respect of the income  earned  by  persons practising one   or more of the professions.  Admittedly the income  earned  by  the  members  of  the  scheduled  tribes residing  in Khasi-Jaintia Hills. excepting in the  case  of government  servants  is  exempt from income tax  be  it  as salaried  officers, lawyers, doctors or persons other  walks of life.  Is there any legal basis for this  differentiation ?  Prima facie it appears that the government servants  have been   discriminated  against  and  the  discrimination   in question  is  writ large on the face of  the  provisions  in question.     The   learned  Solicitor-General  contended   that   the classification    in   question   can   be   justified    on administrative  grounds.   He urged  that  a  classification based on administrative convenience is a just classification in the matter of levying taxes.  According to him it is easy to  collect taxes from government servants.   Therefore,  it was   permissible  for the  legislature to  deny   them  the exemption  extended  to the other members of  their  tribes. This contention appears to be without merit.  It may be that for the purpose of taxation a classification can be made  on the basis of administrative convenience.  But we fail to see how the case of the government servants stands on a  footing different   from   that  of  the  employees   in   statutory corporations  or  even well recognised firms.   That  apart, administrative  convenience which can afford     just  basis for  classification must be a real and substantial  one.  We see   no  such  administrative  convenience.   The   learned Solicitor-General,  next contended that ’the  classification can  be justified on the basis of past legislative  practice and history.  In this connection he invited our attention to the  fact  that before this country  got  independence,  the income of the persons in the service of the government  ’but serving  outside  British India such as in  Baluchistan,  or native States was subject to tax under the Indian Income Tax laws though other persons residing in those places were  not subject to the income  tax laws in force  in British  India. The L10 Sup C1/67-12 170 reason  for the same is that the Indian legislature had  no. legislative competence to tax the residents of those  areas, but  it had competence to tax the income of the  persons  in government  service  though they might  be  serving  outside British India.     The learned Solicitor-General next invited our attention to a notification issued by the Government of India as  long back  as 6-6-1890, under which the income earned by  members of  certain scheduled tribes other than those serving  under the  government  was  exempted from  income  tax.   He  also invited our attention to Finance department Notification No. 788F  dated 21-3-1922 under which the income  of  indigenous hill  men other than persons in the service  of  government, residing  in  certain areas were exempt from  tax.   On  the basis  of those notifications, he wanted us to spell  out  a well recognised legislative practice and history under which the  government servants as a class were excluded  from  the benefit  of income tax exemption extended to  other  persons similarly situated.  In this connection, he placed  reliance on the decision of this Court in Narottam Kishore Dev  Varma and  Ors.  v. Union of India and another(1).   Therein  this Court was called upon to consider the validity of s. 87B  of

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the  Code  of Civil Procedure which prescribed that a  Ruler of  a  former  Indian  State cannot be  sued  in  any  court otherwise competent to try the suit except with the  consent of  the  Central  Government  certified  in  writing  by   a Secretary to the Government.  The validity of that provision was  challenged on the basis of Art. 14.  This Court  upheld the.  validity  of  that  provision  having  regard  to  the legislative and historical background of that provision, but at  the same time observed that considered in the  light  of basic principles of equality before law, it would be odd  to allow the section to continue prospectively for all time  to come.  After setting out the legislative background of  that provision, this Court observed:                     "The legislative background to which  we               have  referred  cannot be divorced   from  the               historical   background which is to  be  found               for  instance,  in  Art.  362.  This   Article               provides that in the exercise of the power  of               Parliament or of any legislature of any  State               to  make  laws  or  in  the  exercise  of  the               executive  power of the Union or of  a  State,               due  regard shall be had to the  guarantee  or               assurance  given  under any such  covenant  or               agreement  as is referred to in clause (1)  of               Art. 291 with respect to the personal  rights,               privileges  and  dignities of a  Ruler  of  an               Indian  State.   This  has  reference  to  the               covenants   and agreements  which   had   been               entered  into between the  Central  Government               and  the Indian Princes before all the  Indian               States were politi-               (1) [1964] 7 S.C.R. 55.               171               cally  completely  assimilated with the   rest               of  India.  The  privilege  conferred  on  the               Rulers of former Indian States has its  origin               in these agreements and covenants. One of  the               privileges is that of extra territoriality and               exemption from civil jurisdiction except  with               the  sanction of the Central  Government.   It               was  thought  that  the  privilege  which  was               claimed by foreign Rulers and Rulers of Indian               States  prior  to  the  independence  of   the               country   should  be  continued   even   after               independence  was attained and the States  had               become part of India, and that is how in 1951,               the  Civil  Procedure  Code  was  amended  and               present  sections 86, 87, 87A and 87B came  to               be enacted in the present form." In  the  background  set out above  this  Court  upheld  the validity of s. 87B of the Code of Civil Procedure.     We know of no legislative practice. or history  treating the government servants as a separate class for the  purpose of  income  tax.  The government servants’  income  has  all along been treated in the same manner as the income of other salaried  officers.  We  not know under  what  circumstances the notifications dated 5-6-1890 and 21-3-1922, referred to. earlier,  came  to be issue& But they  are  insufficient  to prove a well established legislative practice.  At the  time those notifications were issued the power of the legislature to grant or withhold any exemption from tax was not  subject to any constitutional limitation.  Hence the validity of the impugned   provisions  cannot  be  tested  from   what   our legislatures or governments did or omitted to do before  the Constitution came into force.  If that should be  considered

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as a true test then Art. 13(1) would become otiose and most, if  not all, of our constitutional  guarantees  would   lose their  content.   Sri  Setalvad  learned  counsel  for   the respondent  is justified in his comment that  classification based on past legislative practice and history does not mean that  because  in  the past  the  legislature  was  enacting arbitrary laws it could do so now.     It  was the contention of the learned  Solicitor-General that  exemption  from  income tax was given  to  members  of certain  scheduled tribes due to their economic  and  social backwardness;  it is not possible to consider  a  government servant as socially and economically backward and hence  the exemption  was  justly  denied to  him.   According  to  the Solicitor-General,  once  a  tribal  becomes  a   government servant  he  is  lifted out of his  social  environment  and assimilated  into  the forward sections of the  society  and therefore  he  needs no. more any crutch to lean  on.   This argument  appears  to  us  to  be  wholly  irrelevant.   The exemption in question was not given to individuals either on the basis of their social status or economic resources.   It was given to a class.  Hence 172 individuals  as individuals do not come into. the  picture.- We fail to see in what manner the social status and economic resources of a government servant can be different from that of  another holding a similar position in a  corporation  or that   of   a  successful  medical   practitioner.   lawyer, architect,  etc.  To over-paint the picture of a  government servant  as the embodiment of all power and  prestige  would sound  ironical  Today his position in  the society to.  put it  at the highest is no higher than, that of others who  in other walks of life have the same income.  For the.  purpose of  valid  classification  what  is  required  is  not  some imaginary  difference  but  a  reasonable  and   substantial distinction, having regard to the purpose of the law.     It    was    lastly    contended    by    the    learned Solicitor-General a contention which was not taken either in the return or before the High Court or in the appeal  memo.- that it is not possible to strike down only a portion of  s. 4(3)(xxi)  of the Indian Income Tax Act. 1922 and s.  10(26) of  the  Income Tax Act, 1961, namely, the  words  "provided that such member is not in the service of government"  found in  s. 4(3)(xxi) of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 and  the words   "who. is not in, the1 service of government"  in  s. 10(26)  of the Income Tax Act, 1961, as those words are  not severable  from  the rest of the provisions  in  which  they appear.   Further; according to him it cannot be  definitely predicated  that  the  legislature would  have  granted  the exemption  incorporated  in  those  provisions  without  the exception  made  in  the’  case  of  government.   servants. Therefore if we hold that those provisions as they stand are violative  of’  Art.   14  then  we  must  strike  down  the aforementioned  ss. 4(3)(xxi) and 10(26) in their  entirety. We  are  unable  to accept the  contention  that  the  words mentioned  above  are not severable, from the  rest  of  the provision  in which they appear. They are easily  severable. Taking  into consideration the reasons which  persuaded  the legislature  to grant the exemption in question we  have  no doubt  that it would have granted that exemption even if  it was  aware of the fact that it was beyond its competence  to exclude  the  government  servants  from  the  exemption  in question.     For the reasons mentioned above this appeal is dismissed with costs. V.P.S.

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                     Appeal dismissed. 173