19 January 1977
Supreme Court
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SASHI PRASAD BAROOAH Vs THE AGRICULTURE INCOME-TAX OFFICER, SHILLONG,ASSAM & ORS.

Bench: KHANNA,HANS RAJ
Case number: Appeal Civil 245 of 1972


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PETITIONER: SASHI PRASAD BAROOAH

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE AGRICULTURE INCOME-TAX OFFICER, SHILLONG,ASSAM & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/01/1977

BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH

CITATION:  1977 AIR  993            1977 SCR  (2) 645  1977 SCC  (1) 867

ACT:             Assam  Agricultural Income Tax Rules, 1939 r.  23--Scope         of--Rule if ultra vires.

HEADNOTE:             Rule 23 of the Assam Agricultural Income-tax Rules, 1939         provides  that where an order apportioning the liability  to         the  tax  on the basis of partition has not been  passed  in         respect  of a Hindu undivided family hitherto.  assessed  as         undivided or joint, such family shall be deemed, to continue         to be a Hindu undivided or joint family.             The assessee was the Karta of a Hindu undivided  family,         which was assessed to agricultural income-tax in respect  of         income  derived from the manufacture and sale of  tea.   The         assessee  contended  before  the   Agricultural   Income-tax         Officer that, since there was disruption of the Hindu  undi-         vided  family, no agricultural income-tax was  payable  exen         though  agricultural  income had arisen  from  tea  estates.         This plea was rejected.  His petition under Art. 226 of  the         Constitution  impugning the validity of r. 23 had been  dis-         missed by the  High Court.             In appeal to this Court it was contended that (i)  after         the dissolution  of the family no assessment order could  be         made  under r. 23 in respect of  such disrupted Hindu  Undi-         vided family (ii) the State Government had no power to  make         a rule for the assessment of a Hindu undivided family  after         a partition took place in the family.         Dismissing the appeals,             HELD:  (1)  The language of r. 23 clearly  warrants  the         conclusion that in the absence of an order apportioning  the         liability to tax on the basis of  partition in respect of  a         Hindu  undivided  family hitherto assessed as  undivided  or         joint, such family shall ,be deemed, for the purpose of  the         Act  to continue to be a Hindu Undivided family.   No  order         apportioning  the  liability to, tax on’ the  basis  of  the         alleged  partition  having  been passed,  the  family  shall         continue be treated as a Hindu undivided family.  [651 C-F]             2(a)  The liability for tax having been created  by  the         charging section, the rule deals with the question as to who         should be the person that  should  be assessed to tax.  This         is  a matter of detail to carry out the purposes of the  and         the State Government was well within its competence to  make

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       the rule in exercise of its rule-making power.  [652 C-D]             (b)  The fact that. unlike the Income-tax Act, there  is         no  statutory provision in the Act and the matter  is  dealt         with  by the rules, would not make any material  difference.         The  rules would be as much binding as would  be   statutory         provision in t,his respect.  [652 E-F]             (c)  It is well settled that it is not  unconstitutional         for the  legislature  to leave it to the executive to deter-         mine  the details relating to the working of taxation  laws.         such  as  selection  of persons on whom the  tax  is  to  be         levied.  the rate at which it is to be charged in respect of         different classes of goods and  the like.  [652 G-H]         Pt.  Banarsi  Das v. State of Madhya Pradesh  [1959]  S.C.R.         427, followed.             Powell v. Appollo Candle Company Limited [1885] 10  A.C.         282 and  Syed Mobgreed & Co. v. The State of Madras 3 S.T.C.         367, referred to.         646

JUDGMENT:         CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 245-251/72.             From the Judgment and Order dated 21-9-1970 of the Assam         and Nagaland High Court in Civil Rules Nos. 105, 106 and 123         to 127/ 66.             A.K.  Sen,  D.N. Mukherjee and N.R.  Choudhary  for  the         Appellant.         Purshottam  Chatterjee and S.N. Choudhary for  the  respond-         ents.         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             KHANNA, J.  The short question which arises for  consid-         eration in these seven appeals filed on certificate  against         the  judgment of Assam and Nagaland High Court is the  scope         and  validity of the following part of rule 23 of the  Assam         Agricultural Income-tax Rules, 1939 (hereinafter referred to         as the rules) framed under section 50 of the Assam  Agricul-         tural  Income-tax  Act (Assam Act 9  of  1939)  (hereinafter         referred to as the Act):             "Where an order apportioning the liability to  the   tax         on the basis of partition has not been passed in respect  of         a Hindu family hitherto assessed as undivided or joint, such         family  shall  be  deemed for the purposes of  the  Act,  to         continue to be a Hindu undivided or joint family."             The  High  Court held that the facts of this  case  were         covered  by  the  above quoted rule.  The  High  Court  also         repelled the challenge to the vires o{ the rule.             The  appeals  arise out of seven petitions  filed  under         articles  226  and 227 of the Constitution of India  by  the         appellant  which  were dismissed by a common judgment.   The         matter  relates to assessment years 1946-47, 1947-48,  1948-         49, 1949-50, 1950-51, 1951-52 and 1955-56.  Each writ  peti-         tion  related  to one of these years.  We may  set  out  the         facts  relating to the assessment year 1946-47 as it is  the         common case of the parties that the decision about the  writ         petition  relating to that year would govern the other  writ         petitions also.             The  appellant Sashi Prasad Barooah was the Karta  of  a         Hindu undivided family styled as S.P. Barooah & Others.  The         family  was  governed by Dayabhaga school of Hindu  law  and         consisted  of three members.  The family owned  certain  tea         estates  and carried on the business of tea plantation.   It         was assessed under the Act in respect of its income  derived         from manufacture and sale of tea.  The case of the appellant         is  that there was a partition of the family on  January  1,

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       1945  and  as a result of that partition, some  of  the  tea         estates  fell  to the share of the appellant and  he  became         exclusive owner thereof from the date of the partition.             A  general notice dated April 3, 1946 was  published  in         the  Assam  Gazette and local newspapers in terms  o,f  sub-         section  (1) of section 19 of the Act calling  upon  persons         whose agricultural income exceeded         647         the  limits of taxable income to furnish returns within  the         specified time.  On March 24, 1947 the appellant addressed a         letter  to the Agricultural Income-tax Officer  praying  for         extension of’  time  for submission of the return.   Another         letter  dated May 10,  1947  was addressed by the  appellant         to the Agricultural  Income-tax  Officer stating that he was         trying to expedite the submission of the return. On February         15,  1951  the Agricultural Income-tax Officer  addressed  a         communication  to  the  appellant asking  him  to  file  the         return   by March 14, 1951.  The appellant by  letter  dated         March   16,   1951 informed the said officer that  he  would         meet him at Shillong.  In his letter dated July 21, 1951 the         appellant  informed   the  Agricultural  Income-tax  Officer         that  he  would file his return as  soon  as   some  matters         were  settled.  On March 25, 1955 the  appellant   addressed         another letter to the Agricultural Income-tax Officer  stat-         ing that he had not received the relevant assessment  orders         made by the Income-tax Officer (the income-tax officer under         the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922) relating to the  assessment         years  1946-47  onwards.   On July 1959  the  following  two         notices  were sent by  the  Agricultural Income-tax  Officer         to the appellant:                           "I  am  to inform you that  following  the                       dissolution   of  family  business  of   Sashi                       Prasad Barua and Others in the year 1945,  you                       are liable to furnish a Return of  agricultur-                       al  incomes including those from the  Tea  Es-                       tates under your ownership from the assessment                       year 1946-47.                           Please  also note that the  Returns  along                       with   certified copies of Central  Income-tax                       Assessment  should  reach this  office  on  or                       before  15-8-59.   In  default,  you  will  be                       liable for summary assessment."                           "Whereas  I  have reason to  believe  that                       your  total agricultural income  from  sources                       chargeable  to  agricultural income-tax in the                       year ending the 31st  March,  1947  to 1959--                       (a) has wholly escaped assessment;                       (b) I therefore propose--                       (i) to assess the said income that has escaped                       assessment.                           I  hereupon require you to deliver  to  me                       not  later than 15-8-59 or within 30  days  of                       the  receipt of this notice, a Return  in  the                       attached  form  of  your  total   agricultural                       income  during  the previous year  ending  the                       31st March, 1946  to 1958."         Accompanying  the  two  notices  sent  by  the  Agricultural         Income-tax Officer was also a notice under section 19(2) and         section  30  of the Act.  The appellant failed to  submit  a         return or to furnish certified copies of the Central assess-         ment  orders.   The Agricultural Income-tax Officer  as  per         order  dated June 22, 1961 assessed the  total  agricultural         income of the appellant  for -the  year  1946-47  to  be         648         Rs.  1,45,994.   An amount of Rs. 19,321.44 was held  to  be

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       recoverable  from  the appellant.  The  appellant  filed  an         appeal against that order but the same was dismissed by  the         Assistant  Commissioner  of  Taxes  on  December  27,  1962.         Revision filed by the appellant was dismissed by the Commis-         sioner  of  Taxes  as per order dated  September  28,  1964.         Certificate  of  public  demand showing  an  amount  of  Rs.         3,74,087,89  as due from the appellant for the seven   years         in question was then issued by the  Agricultural  Income-tax         Officer.  Proclamation for the sale of the property  of  the         appellant  was  thereafter issued for the  recovery  of  the         amount  due  from  the appellant.  The  appellant  thereupon         filed,  as mentioned earlier, seven writ petitions.   Prayer         made in the writ petitions was to quash the impugned assess-         ment orders dated June 22, 1961, the notices of demand dated         July 4, 1961 and the proclamation of sale dated December 31,         1964.             Form  one  of  the notices ,addressed  by  the  taxation         authorities  to  the appellant as well as  from  the  return         filed on  their  behalf,  it would appear that the  taxation         authorities  were  not averse  in  the  event  of  partition         among  the members of the Hindu undivided family, to  assess         the  appellant in his individual capacity in respect of  the         agricultural income arising from those tea estates which had         fallen to his share.  Such a course, it seems, was also  not         acceptable to the appellant.  His stand at the same time was         that  no  assessment  could  be made in the  name  of  Hindu         undivided  family  as  according to him the  same  had  been         disrupted  as  a result of partition.   The  appellant  thus         wanted  a  complete  imunity from  payment  of  agricultural         income-tax during the years in question even though agricul-         tural  income  had arisen from tea estates.             Although  a  number of grounds were taken  in  the  writ         petitions,  at  the hearing before the High Court  only  two         grounds were pressed on behalf of the appellant.  The  first         ground was that after the dissolution of the Hindu undivided         family, no assessment order  could  be made under the Act in         respect  of  such  disrupted Hindu  undivided  family.   The         second  submission advanced on behalf of the  appellant  was         that in case it be held that the matter was covered by  rule         23 reproduced above, in that event the said rule was   ultra         vires  the  powers of the State Government  to  frame  rules         under the Act. The High Court, as already mentioned, decided         on  both  the  points  in favour of the revenue and  against         the appellant.             In  appeal before us Mr. Sen on behalf of the  appellant         has  contended that the Hindu undivided family of which  the         appellant  was the Karta was disrupted on January  1,  1945.         It is urged,  as  was done before the High Court, that after         the  disruption  of that family, it could  not  be  assessed         under  the Act.  Rule 23 reproduced above, according to  the         learned  counsel, is not attracted in the present  case.  In         case, however, it be held that the said rule applies to  the         present case, the State Government, Mr. Sen submits, had  no         power to make such a rule.             The  above  contentions have been  controverted  by  Mr.         Chatterjee on behalf of the respondents.  The learned  coun-         sel has also emphasised the fact that in none of the  commu-         nications sent by the appellant         649         mentioned above, there was any reference to partition of the         Hindu undivided family.             After giving the matter our consideration, we are of the         opinion  that  the two contentions advanced by  Mr.  Sen  on         behalf of the appellant are not well founded.  It is  conse-         quently  not necessary for us to go into the question as  to

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       what  is  the effect of the omission  of  the  appellant  to         refer to the partition in the communications sent by him  to         the Agricultural Income-tax Officer.             It may be apposite at this stage to refer to the materi-         al  provisions, as they stood at the relevant time,  of  the         Act which provides for the imposition of tax on agricultural         income  arising from lands situated in Assam.  According  to         the  definition of "person" as given in section 2(m) of  the         Act,  person  includes an undivided or joint  Hindu  family.         Section  3 is the charging section.  According to this  sec-         tion, agricultural income-tax at the rate or rates specified         in  the  annual Assam Finance Acts subject to the provisions         of  section  6 shall be charged for each financial  year  in         accordance with, and subject to, the provisions of this  Act         on  the  total agricultural income of the previous  year  of         every individual, Hindu undivided or joint family,  company,         firm  and other association of individuals.  Section  19  of         the  Act deals with the return of income and reads as under:                           "19.   (1)  The  Agricultural   Income-tax                       Officer  shall, on or before the first day  of                       May or for the year commencing 1st April, 1939                       any  later day notified by the  Government  in                       each  year, give notice by publication in  the                       press  and otherwise in the manner  prescribed                       by  rules, requiring every person whose  agri-                       cultural income exceeds the  limit  of taxable                       income  prescribed  in section 6  to  furnish,                       within such period not being less than  thirty                       days  as  may be specified in  the  notice,  a                       return, in the prescribed  form  and  verified                       in the prescribed manner, setting forth (along                       with such other particulars as may be required                       by  the notice) his total agricultural  income                       during the previous year:                           Provided that the Agricultural  Income-tax                       Officer may in his discretion extend the  date                       for  the delivery  of  the return in the  case                       of any person or class of persons;                           (2) In the case of any person whose  total                       agricultural income is, in the opinion of  the                       Agricultural   Income-tax  Officer,  of   such                       amount  as  to render such  person  liable  to                       payment  of  agricultural income-tax  for  any                       financial  year  the  Agricultural  Income-tax                       Officer  may  serve in that financial  year  a                       notice in the prescribed form upon him requir-                       ing  him  to furnish,  within  the  prescribed                       period,  a  return in  the  prescribed  manner                       setting  forth his total  agricultural  income                       during the previous year.                           (3)  If  any person has  not  furnished  a                       return  within  the time allowed by  or  under                       sub-section (1 ), or  sub-section                       650                       (2) or, having furnished a return under either                       of  those subsections, discovers any  omission                       or  wrong statement therein, he may furnish  a                       return  or a revised return, as the  case  may                       be, at any time before the assessment is made,                       and  any return so made shall be deemed to  be                       made in    due  time under this section."         Section  20 provides for the making of an assessment  order.         Section  30 deals with income escaping assessment,  and  its         material part reads as under:                           "If for any reason any agricultural income

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                     chargeable  to  agricultural  income-tax   has                       escaped  assessment  for  any financial  year,                       or  has been assessed at too low a  rate,  the                       Agricultural  Income-tax Officer may,  at  any                       time   within three years of the end  of  that                       financial year, serve on the person liable  to                       pay  agricultural income-tax on such  agricul-                       tural  income or, in the case of a company  on                       the  prin  cipal  officer  thereof,  a  notice                       containing  all  or any  of  the  requirements                       which may be included in a notice  under  sub-                       section (2) of section 19, and may proceed  to                       assess or reassess such income, and the provi-                       sions  of  this Act shall, so far as  may  be,                       apply  accordingly  as if the  notice  were  a                       notice issued under that sub-section :"                       Section  5C) empowers the State Government  to                       make   rules.  The material part of that  sec-                       tion reads as under’:--                           "50.  (1) The Provincial  Government  may,                       subject  to previous publication,  make  rules                       for carrying out the purposes of this Act, and                       such rules may be made  for  the whole of  the                       Province or such part or parts thereof as  may                       be specified.                           (2)  In particular, and without  prejudice                       to the generality of the foregoing power, such                       rules may-                       (a)  ......                       (b)  ......                       (c)  ......                       (d)  ......                       (e)  ......                       (f)  ......                       (g)  ......                       (h)  ......                       (i)  ......                       (j)  prescribe  the manner in which  the   tax                       shall   be  payable where the  assessment   is                       made   on  the agricultural income of a  Hindu                       undivided  or joint family and a partition  of                       the.  property  of  such                       651                       family  has been effected after the  date   of                       such assessment;                       (k)  ......                       (l)  ......                       (m)  ......             We have set out above the relevant part of rule 23.  The         rule  clearly  states that where an order  apportioning  the         liability to the tax on the basis of partition has not  been         passed  in  respect  of a Hindu family hitherto assessed  as         undivided  or  joint,  such family shall be deemed  for  the         purposes of the Act, to continue to be a Hindu undivided  or         joint  family.  It would, therefore, follow  that unless  an         order apportioning the liability to the tax on the basis  of         partition  iS passed in respect of a Hindu undivided  family         which  was hitherto assessed as such undivided  family,  the         said  family shall be deemed for the purpose of the  Act  to         continue  to  be a Hindu undivided  family.   Admittedly  no         order apportioning the liability to the tax on the basis  of         the  alleged  partition has been passed in  respect  of  the         Hindu undivided family of which the appellant was the Karta.         As such, the aforesaid family shall continue to be  treated,         for  the purposes of the Act, as Hindu undivided family.  We

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       are  unable to subscribe to the submission of Mr.  Sen  that         the  above rule  would apply only in those cases  where  the         Hindu undivided  family  has already been assessed under the         Act and the only thing which remains is the recovery of  the         tax  in pursuance of the said assessment order. Such  cases,         in our view, are covered by other part of rule  23.  We are,         however, not concerned with that part.  So far as the   part         of rule 23 which has been reproduced above is concerned, its         language  is  clear and unambiguous.  The  language  clearly         warrants  the  conclusion that in the absence  of  an  order         apportioning the liability to the tax on the basis of parti-         tion  in  respect of  a  Hindu   undivided  family  hitherto         assessed as undivided or joint, such family shall  be deemed         for the purposes of the Act to continue to be a Hindu  undi-         vided family.             As regards the second contention, Mr. Sen  submits  that         the  power  which has been conferred by clause (i)  of  sub-         section  (2) of section 50 of the Act is to make rules  pre-         scribing the  manner  in which the tax shall be payable when         the  assessment  is made on agricultural income of  a  Hindu         undivided  or joint family and a  partition of the  property         of  such  family has been effected after the  date  of  such         assessment.   It  is urged that apart from that,  the  State         Government  has no power to make a rule for assessment of  a         Hindu undivided family after a partition takes place in such         family.  This contention is devoid of force as we are of the         opinion that the State Government was competent to make  the         part  of rule 23 reproduced above in exercise of the  powers         conferred  by  sub-section (1) of section 50.  According  to         that sub-section, the State Government may subject to previ-         ous publication make rules for carrying out the purposes  of         this  Act.   It has not been disputed before uS  that  there         was   previous  publication of the rules in  question.   The         question is  whether  the         652         part  of rule 23 reproduced above can be said to  have  been         made  for carrying out the purposes of the Act.  The  answer         to this question, in our opinion, should be in the  affirma-         tive.   What the rule  contemplates is that unless an  order         was  made on the basis of the alleged partition of  a  Hindu         undivided  family, such family shall be deemed for the  pur-         poses of the Act to continue to be  Hindu  undivided family.         The rule thus relates to the working of the Act.  Section  3         of the Act is the charging section and creates liability for         tax  in  respect of the total agricultural income  of  every         individual,  Hindu undivided family, firm and other associa-         tion  of   persons.  Such  a liability having  already  been         created  by the above provision, rule 23 reproduced  earlier         deals  with the question as to who should be the  person  as         defined in the Act who should be assessed in respect of  the         agricultural  income  arising from property  in  respect  of         which  Hindu  undivided family was assessed  hitherto.   The         rule  provides that such family shall continue to be  deemed         as  Hindu  undivided  family  for the purposes  of  the  Act         unless  an  order  is made on the  basis  of  the  partition         amongst  the  members of the family.  This is a  matter   of         detail  to carry out the purposes of the Act and  the  State         Government,  in our opinion, was well within its  competence         to  make the impugned rule in exercise of its  powers  under         sub-section (1) of section 50 of the Act.             There is also nothing novel in a Hindu undivided  family         being  taxed as such in spite of a claim of  its  disruption         unless an order on the basis of the partition is made by the         taxing   authorities.  Sub-. section (1) of section  171  of         the  Income-tax  Act 1961 provides that  a  Hindu  undivided

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       family hitherto assessed as undivided  shall  be deemed  for         the purposes of the Act to continue to be a Hindu  undivided         family, except where and in so far as a finding of partition         has been given under that section in respect of  the   Hindu         undivided family.  The fact that, unlike the Income-tax Act,         there is no statutory provision in the Act with which we are         concerned   and   the  matter is dealt  with  by  the  rules         framed  under the Act would  not make any  material  differ-         ence.   The rules would be as much binding as would  be  the         statutory  provision in this respect.  The only  requirement         is  that the rules  should be validly  made. in exercise  of         the  powers conferred by the Act.  So far as this aspect  is         concerned,  we  have  already held above that  the  rule  in         question was validly made as it was within the competence of         the State Government to make such rule.             The proposition is well settled that it is not unconsti-         tutional for the legislature to leave it to the executive to         determine details relating to the working of taxation  laws,         such  as the selection of persons on whom the tax is  to  be         levied the rates at which it is to be charged in respect  of         different classes of goods and the like [see Pt. Banarsi Das         v.  State  of Madhya Pradesh(1)].  In that case  this  Court         dealt with the provisions of the Central Provinces and Berar         Sales  Tax  Act, 1947.  The said Act provided for  exemption         from taxation in res-         (1) [1950] S.C.R. 427.         653         pect  of  the supply of certain material.   Power  was  also         conferred upon the State Government to amend such  exemption         by  notification.  This Court upheld the  validity  of  that         notification.             We  may  also  refer to the case of  Powell  v.  Appollo         Candle  Company Limited(1) which dealt with section  133  of         the Customs Regulation Act of 1879 of New South Wales.  That         section conferred a power on the Governor to impose. tax  on         certain articles of import. While repelling the challenge to         the  constitutional validity of  that provision,  the  Privy         Council observed:                           "It is argued that the tax in question has                       been  imposed by the Governor and not  by  the                       Legislature who alone had power to impose  it.                       But the  duties  levied  under  the  Order-in-                       Council are really levied by the authority  of                       the  Act under which the order is issued.  the                       Legislature  has not parted with  its  perfect                       control over the Governor, and has the  power,                       of  course, at any moment, of  withdrawing  or                       altering  the power which they have  entrusted                       to  him.  In these circumstances, their  Lord-                       ships are of opinion  that the judgment of the                       Supreme  Court was wrong in declaring  section                       133 of the Customs Regulations Act of ]879  to                       be beyond the power of the Legislature."             In  Syed  Mohamed & Co. v. The State of  Madras(2),  the         question was as to the vires of rules 4 and 16 framed  under         the Madras General Sales Tax Act.  Section 5(vi) of that Act         had  left  it to the rulemaking authority  to  determine  at         which  single  point in the series of  sales  by  successive         dealers  the  tax should be levied, and   pursuant  thereto,         rules  4 and 16 had provided that it was the  purchaser  who         was  liable to pay the tax in respect of sales of hides  and         skins. The validity of the rules was attacked on the  ground         that  it  was  only the legislature that  was  competent  to         decide  who  ’shall be taxed and that the  determination  of         that  question  by  the rule-making  authorities  was  altra

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       vires. The Madras High Court rejected this contention,   and         held  on a review of the authorities that the delegation  of         authority under section 5(vi) was within permissible consti-         tutional Limits.             Powell’s  case as well as the case of Syed Mohamed  were         referred  to with approval by this Court in the case of  Pt.         Banarsi  Das.  The above decisions clearly lend support  for         the conclusion arrived at by the High Court in the  judgment         under appeal that the State Government was within its compe-         tence to make rule 23 reproduced above.             We, therefore, uphold the judgment of the High Court and         dismiss the appeals with costs.  One set of fee         P.B.R.                                               Appeals         dismissed.         (1) [1885] 10 A.C. 252.         (2) 3 S.T.C. 367.         654