07 May 1981
Supreme Court
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STATE OF PUNJAB AND ORS. Vs AJUDHIA NATH AND ANR.

Bench: KOSHAL,A.D.
Case number: Appeal Civil 1665 of 1980


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PETITIONER: STATE OF PUNJAB AND ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: AJUDHIA NATH AND ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT07/05/1981

BENCH: KOSHAL, A.D. BENCH: KOSHAL, A.D. DESAI, D.A. MISRA, R.B. (J)

CITATION:  1981 AIR 1374            1981 SCR  (3) 686  1981 SCC  (3) 251  CITATOR INFO :  APL        1983 SC1207  (14)

ACT:      Punjab Excise  Act and  Rules made thereunder-Principle of natural  justice of  giving opportunity  to be heard does not come  into play when the demand is merely for payment of a sum becoming due under the conditions of the licence.      Constitution of  India, 1950,  Entry 51  of List  II of Schedule VII  read with section 31 of the Punjab Excise Act- Still-head duty  is neither  a duty  of excise  nor  can  be regarded as a tax of any kind whatsoever.

HEADNOTE:      Condition 8  of the  licence to  run  liquor  vends  in various parts  of Punjab  during the  financial year 1965-66 laid down:  (i) the  licensee  shall  lift  each  month  the proportionate quota  for the  month fixed  for his  vends or deposit  still-head   duty  realisable   thereof  (ii)   Any deficiency in  the amount of still-head duty realisable from the lifting of the full proportionate quota due to the short lifting of  the quota  by the licensee or non-deposit of the still-head duty  may be realised from the amount of security deposited by  the licensee  at the time of grant of licence; (iii) the  resultant deficiency  in the  amount of  security shall be made good by the licensee within seven days of such adjustment  and   (iv)  if   there  is   short  lifting   of proportionate quota  or short  deposit  of  still-head  duty continues for  two consecutive  months or the licensee fails to make  up the  deficiency in the amount of security within the prescribed  period of  seven days,  his licence  may  be cancelled in addition to the recovery of still-head duty.      Respondent Ajudhia  Nath who  was granted the necessary licences under  the relevant provisions of the Punjab Excise Act and  the Rules framed thereunder, was unable to lift the minimum quota  of country  liquor and also failed to deposit the still-head  duty  which  became  payable  by  him  under condition No.  8. On  an application  made by  him  claiming relief in  the matter  of payment  of sums  which had fallen due, such  relief was  granted to  him in part by the Excise and Taxation  Commissioner, Punjab,  on the  ground that the liquor trade was badly affected by reason of the movement of

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population in  the border  area of  Punjab on account of the hostilities which  broke out  between India  and Pakistan in the month  of September  1965. Not satisfied with the relief so granted  Ajudhia Nath  filed two  petitions under Article 226 of  the Constitution before the High Court of Punjab and Haryana claiming,  inter alia,  that still-head  duty was an excise duty  which could  be levied  only on  manufacture of goods and  which he  was not  liable to pay by reason of the admitted fact  he was  not a manufacturer of Liquor and that he was  not given  the opportunity  of being  heard  in  the matter covered  by the  applications  claiming  relief.  The petitions  were  allowed  and  the  Letters  Patent  Appeals preferred by  the State were dismissed. Hence the appeals by special leave. 687      Allowing the appeals, the Court ^      HELD: 1.  The demand  for the  short-fall in still-head duty was  based on  the terms  of a  binding contract and it sought to  enforce the  liabilities arising  out of mutually agreed conditions  of auction.  Such a  demand could  not be equated with  a notice  requiring the  liquor vendor to show cause why  his licence  should not be cancelled. Although an opportunity of  being heard  has to  be given  to  a  liquor vendor when  his licence is sought to be cancelled, the same principle of  natural justice  does not  come into play when the demand is merely for payment of a sum becoming due under the conditions  subject to  which the  licence was  granted. [691 G-H, 692A, E-F]      Har Shankar  and others  v. The  Dy. Excise  & Taxation Commissioner and others [1973] 3 SCR 254; Shyam Lal v. State of Punjab,  AIR 1976  SC 2045;  State of Punjab v. Mulkh Raj and Co.,  AIR 1977 SC 1550 and The State of Punjab v. Balbir Singh and others, AIR 1977 SC 1717, followed.      2: 1.  A combined  reading of  Entry 51  of List  II of Schedule VII  to the Constitution of India and section 31 of the Punjab Excise Act no doubt makes it clear that a duty of excise on  alcoholic liquors  meant  for  human  consumption cannot be  recovered from  a person  unless any  one of  the three clauses  of section 31 covers his business activities. [693 C-D, 694A]      2: 2.  Still-head duty  is not a duty of excise in view of the  dicta laid  down by  the Supreme Court to the effect that the  short fall  in still-head  duty represents nothing but sums  recoverable from  the licensees  under a  contract which was entered into by them with their eyes open and that they cannot be allowed to have the best of both the words by exploiting the  contract so  long as  it suits  them and  by repudiating it  if and  when  it  does  not  work  to  their advantage. [694 B-C]      Har Shankar  and others  v. The  Dy. Excise  & Taxation Commissioner and  others, [1973]  3 SCR 254; State of Punjab v. Balbir Singh and others, AIR 1977 SC 1717, applied.      2: 3.  Condition No.  8 of the licence does not involve the imposition  of a duty of excise but makes provision only for recovery  of sums  becoming due  under a  contract.  The licensees are  not connected  in any  manner whatsoever with the  manufacture   of  alcoholic   liquor  and   there  was, therefore, no question at all of levying a duty of excise on their operations  which were  confined merely to the sale of liquor  manufactured   by  others   and  which,   therefore, commenced  only   after  the   process  of  manufacture  was completely over. [696 E-G]      M/s. Bhajan  Lal Saran  Singh &  Co. v. State of Punjab and others,  1967 Current  Law Journal  (Punjab and Haryana)

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460; State  of M.P.  v. Firm  Goppulal, [1976]  2 SCR  1041; Excise Commissioner, U.P., Allahabad and others v. Ram Kumar and others, [1976] 3 SCC 540, distinguished.      3: 1.  On the facts of this case still-head duty cannot be regarded as a tax of some other kind nor can the question whether it does amount to such a tax 688 (for levying  which the State lacks authority) be allowed to be raised since it was never raised at any earlier stage and its consideration is bound to work prejudice to the cause of the appellants. Further there is no impediment in the way of the  demand   being  regarded   as  the  enforcement  of  an obligation arising  under the  contracts which the licensees had entered into and exploited so long as the same worked to their advantage  and which were fully permissible under sub- section (3)  of section 34 of the Punjab Excise Act. [696 H, 697 A-B]      3: 2.  Clause (b)  of sub-section  (3) of section 34 of the Punjab  Excise Act  allows impositions  of conditions on grant of  the licences  in addition  to the  payment of  the licence fees  which is  a  matter  covered  by  clause  (a). Condition No.  8 is,  therefore, fully enforceable and there is no reason why still-head duty should be regarded as a tax of any kind whatsoever. [697 D-E]

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1665 and 1666 of 1970.      From the  order dated the 25th July, 1968 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in LPA Nos. 230 & 240 of 1968.      M.S. Dhillon for the Appellant in both the appeals.      Tirath Singh  Munjral, G.K.  Arora,  S.S.  Munjral  and Gautam Bannerjee for the Respondents in both the appeals.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      KOSHAL J.  By this  judgment we  shall dispose of Civil Appeals Nos. 1665 and 1666 of 1970 in which common questions of law have arisen for determination by this Court.      2. The  facts leading to the two appeals are undisputed and may be briefly stated thus. Licences to run liquor vends in various parts of Punjab during the financial year 1965-66 were sold  by public  auction shortly  before the 1st April, 1965. Auctions  were held  at  numerous  places  subject  to identical conditions  which were  supplied to the bidders in writing. Condition  No. 8 which is material for our purposes is reproduced below:           "That the  licensee  shall  lift  each  month  the      proportionate quota  for the  month fixed  for his vend      (s) or  deposit still-head  duty realisable thereon. In      the event of any deficiency in the amount of still-head      duty  realisable   from  the   lifting  of   the   full      proportionate quota  due to  the short  lifting of  the      quota by  the licensee  or non-deposit of the amount of      the  still-head   duty,  the  said  deficiency  may  be      realised from the amount of security deposited by 689      him at  the time  of grant  of licence.  The  resulting      deficiency in the amount of security shall be made good      by the  licensee within  7 days  of such adjustment. In      case the  short lifting of proportionate quota or short      deposit  of   still-head   duty   continues   for   two      consecutive months or the licensee fails to make up the      deficiency  in   the  amount  of  security  within  the      prescribed  period  of  7  days,  his  licence  may  be

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    cancelled in  addition to the recovery of deficiency in      still-head duty."      Ajudhia Nath who figures as respondent No. 1 in each of the two  appeals and  who carries  on  business  of  selling country liquor  either in  his own  name or  in the name and style of  M/s. Ajudhia  Nath Bal  Mukand (a business concern arrayed as  respondent No.  2 in  Civil Appeal  No. 1665  of 1970) was  the highest bidder for the auctions pertaining to 5 villages situated in the district of Amritsar and a couple of villages  in Ferozepur district. Accordingly the auctions were sanctioned  in  his  favour  and  he  was  granted  the necessary licences  under the  relevant  provisions  of  the Punjab Excise  Act (hereinafter  referred to as the Act) and the rules framed thereunder.      The licensee  started his  liquour selling  business in the said seven villages on the 1st April, 1965. By the close of the  financial year  1965-66, however,  he was  unable to lift the  minimum quota of country liquor and also failed to deposit the  still-head duty  which became  payable  by  him under condition  No. 8 above extracted. He made applications claiming relief  in the  matter of payment of sums which had fallen due and such relief was granted to him in part by the Excise &  Taxation Commissioner,  Punjab, on the ground that sales of  country liquor  had  been  adversely  affected  by reason of  the movement of population in the border areas of Punjab on account of the hostilities which broke out between India and  Pakistan in  the month  of  September  1965.  Not satisfied with  the relief  so granted Ajudhianath filed two petitions under  article 226  of the  Constitution of  India before the  High Court of Punjab and Haryana claiming, inter alia, that still-head duty was an excise duty which could be levied only  on manufacture  of goods  and which  he was not liable to pay by reason of the admitted fact that he was not a manufacturer  of liquor.  A grouse was also made by him of the fact  that the  applications claiming  relief  had  been decided without  affording to  him an  opportunity of  being heard. One  of those petitions (Civil Writ Petition No. 2034 of 1966) related to 690 vends functioning in the two villages of Ferozepur District, while the  other (Civil  Writ Petition  Nos  2035  of  1966) covered the  5 vends  located in  the 5 villages of Amritsar District. The petitions were allowed by a single order dated the 9th  May, 1967  passed by  D.K. Mahajan, J., on the sole ground that a similar petition (Civil Writ Petition No. 2021 of 1966)  had been  allowed by Gurdev Singh, J., on the 27th March, 1966.  The proceedings  for the recovery of the short fall in the deposit of still-head duty by Ajudhia Nath which had been  initiated by the State of Punjab and its concerned officers (appellants  Nos. 1  to 4  in each  of the  appeals before  us)   were  quashed  and  the  Excise  and  Taxation Commissioner, Punjab  (appellant No.  2 in both the appeals) was directed  to dispose  of the  "cases" of the respondents "in accordance with law after hearing the petitioners". D.K. Mahajan, J.,  adopted all the reasons on which Gurdev Singh, J., had based his order above mentioned.      Letters Patent Appeals preferred by the 4 appellants to the  Division   Bench  of  the  High  Court  were  summarily dismissed by  Mehar Singh and Tuli, JJ., for the reason that a Letters  Patent Appeal  against  the  judgment  of  Gurdev Singh, J., above mentioned had met the same fate.      It is against the judgment of the Division Bench (which is dated  the 29th  August, 1969)  that each  of the appeals before us has been filed.      3. Mr.  Dhillon, learned counsel for the appellants had

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drawn our  attention to  The State of Punjab v. Balbir Singh and Others, which reversed the judgment of Gurdev Singh, J., mentioned above and has contended that the very basis of the impugned judgment has consequently fallen to the ground. The contention is correct. As pointed out in Balbir Singh’s case (supra) the  judgment of  Gurdev Singh,  J., in  Civil  Writ Petition No. 2021 of 1966 had proceeded merely on the ground that the  petitioner-firm therein  had  not  been  given  an opportunity of  being heard in relation to the demand notice issued to  it for  payment of  the still-head  duty  on  the entire minimum  quantity  of  liquor  which  that  firm  was required to  lift under  the licence.  In differing with the view 691 expressed by  Gurdev Singh,  J., this Court made a reference to the  following observations  of Chandrachud,  J., (as  he then was)  in Har  Shanker and  Others v.  The Dy.  Excise & Taxation Commissioner and Others which was followed in Shyam Lal v. State of Punjab           "The  announcement  of  conditions  governing  the      auctions was in the nature of an invitation to an offer      to those  who were  interested in  the sale  of country      liquor. The bids given in the auctions were offers made      by  prospective   vendors  to   the   Government.   The      Government’s  acceptance   of  those   bids   was   the      acceptance of  willing  offers  made  to  it.  On  such      acceptance, the  contract between  the bidders  and the      Government became  concluded and  a  binding  agreement      came  into   existence  between  them.  The  successful      bidders were then granted licences evidencing the terms      of contract  between them  and  the  Government,  under      which  they   became  entitled   to  sell  liquor.  The      licensees  exploited  the  respective  licences  for  a      portion of  the period of their currency, presumably in      expectation of  a profit. Commercial considerations may      have revealed  an error  of  judgment  in  the  initial      assessment of  profitability of  the adventure but that      is a normal incident of the trading transactions. Those      who contract  with open eyes must accept the burdens of      the contract along with its benefits. The powers of the      Financial Commissioner  to  grant  liquor  licences  by      auction and  to collect licence fees through the medium      of auctions  cannot by  writ petitions be questioned by      those who,  had their  venture  succeeded,  would  have      relied upon  those very  powers to found a legal claim.      Reciprocal  rights   and  obligations  arising  out  of      contract do  not depend  for their  enforceability upon      whether a  contracting party  finds it prudent to abide      by the  terms of  the  contract.  By  such  a  test  no      contract could ever have a binding force." and concluded  that the  demand for the short-fall in still- head duty  was based  on the  term of a binding contract and that it  sought to  enforce the  liabilities arising  out of mutually agreed conditions of auction. Such a demand, in the opinion of this 692 Court, could  not be  equated with  a notice  requiring  the liquor vendor  to show  cause why  his licence should not be cancelled. In  making this  distinction this  Court  further relied upon  State of Punjab v. Mulkh Raj and Co. wherein it was observed:-           "It was also held there that a cancellation of the      licence under  section 36  of the  Punjab  Excise  Act,      1914, had  to take  place  quasi-judicially  after  due      service of the notice on the licensee to show cause why

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    it should not be cancelled. Although, the merits of the      last mentioned  proposition need  not be examined by us      as it  rests on  a  sound  footing,  yet,  we  find  it      difficult to uphold the order that the demand for a sum      of Rs.  36,636. On account of short-fall should also be      quashed on  account of  non-compliance  with  rules  of      natural  justice   in   cancelling   the   licence   in      proceedings under  section 36 of the Act. We think that      the two  liabilities were erroneously considered by the      High    Court     to     be     inextricably     linked      up.....................................      We do  not think  that, even if the respondent ought to      have  been   given  a  hearing  before  cancelling  the      licence, this  would dispense  with  his  liability  to      deposit the  amount of  balance of  the licence  fee or      invalidate the notice of demand for it."      Thus, the  proposition  is  by  now  well-settled  that although an  opportunity of being heard has to be given to a liquor vendor  when his  licence is  sought to be cancelled, the same  principle of  natural justice  does not  come into play when the demand is merely for payment of a sum becoming due under  the conditions  subject to  which the licence was granted, and  this proposition  fully covers  these appeals. The demands for payment of the amount of the still head duty which had  become due  under the  contracts accepted  by the respondents and  had remained  unpaid were  demands  arising under condition  No. 8  above extracted  and had, therefore, resulted from  the terms  of those contracts. No question of affording to  the respondents any opportunity of being heard thus arises and the impugned judgment, is, therefore, liable to be reversed. 693      4.  Faced  with  the  above  situation,  Shri  Munjral, learned counsel  for the  respondents, raised  the following two contentions:      (a)  Still-head duty  is a  duty of  excise which could           only be levied on a manufacturer and not on a mere           vendor of goods manufactured by others.      (b)  If the  still-head duty mentioned in condition No.           8 above  extracted cannot be regarded as a duty of           excise, it  nevertheless amounts  to a tax of some           other kind  for  levying  which  the  State  lacks           authority.      5. Reliance in connection with contention (a) is placed on Entry  51 of  List II forming part of Schedule VII to the Constitution of India and on section 31 of the Punjab Excise Act. The relevant portions of these provisions state:      Entry 51           "Duties  of   Excise  on   the   following   goods      manufactured   or    produced   in    the   State   and      countervailing duties  at the  same or  lower rates  on      similar goods  manufactured or  produced  elsewhere  in      India :-           (a)  alcoholic liquors for human consumption;.....      Section 31           "An excise  duty or  a countervailing duty, as the      case may  be, at  such  rate  or  rates  as  the  State      Government  shall   direct,  may   be  imposed,  either      generally or  for any  specified  local  area,  on  any      excisable article-           (a)  imported,   exported    or   transported   in                accordance with the provisions of section 16;                or           (b)  manufactured or  cultivated under any licence                granted under section 20; or

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         (c)  manufactured in  any distillery  established,                or any  distillery or  brewery licenced under                section 21;... 694      These provisions leave no room for doubt that a duty of excise on  alcoholic liquors  meant  for  human  consumption cannot be recovered from the respondents because none of the 3 clauses  of section  31 covers  their business activities. But then  the first  part of  contention (a) that still-head duty is  a duty  of excise cannot be accepted in view of the dicta in Har Shankar and others v. The Dy. Excise & Taxation Commissioner and  others (supra)  and The State of Punjab v. Balbir Singh  and others  (supra) to  the  effect  that  the short-fall in  still-head duty  represents nothing  but sums recoverable by  the appellants under the terms of a contract which was  entered into  by the  respondents with their eyes open and  that the latter cannot be allowed to have the best of both  the worlds by exploiting the contract so long as it suits them  and by  repudiating it  if and  when it does not work to their advantage.      6. Shri  Munjral has  vehemently contended  that still- head duty  is only  another name for excise duty inasmuch as it is  nothing more  or less  than a  duty leviable  on  the manufacture of  alcoholic liquor.  For this  proposition  he places reliance  on a  Division Bench  judgment of  the High Court of  Punjab &  Haryana in M/s. Bhajan Lal Saran Singh & Co. v.  The State  of Punjab and others the approval of that judgment by  this Court  in Civil Appeals Nos. 1042 and 1043 of 1968  decided on  21st  August,  1972,  State  of  Madhya Pradesh v. Firm Gappulal etc. and Excise Commissioner, U.P., Allahabad  and   others  v.  Ram  Kumar  and  others.  These authorities, however,  are of  no help  to him  because,  in every one  of them,  the still-head duty which was mentioned in the  condition corresponding  to condition  No. 8  in the present case  was either  expressly stated  to be  an excise duty or was assumed to be a duty of that character. In fact, in the  case of  M/s. Bhajan Lal Saran Singh it was conceded on behalf of the State before the High Court that still-head duty was  an excise  duty and  that is why the nature of the charge as  excise duty was taken for granted before the High Court as  well as  in this  Court. No  question  was  either raised or  decided as to whether it could at all be regarded as an  excise duty.  However, in  later cases,  namely,  Har Shankar and others v. The Dy. Excise & Taxation Commissioner and others,  (supra) and The State of Punjab v. Balbir Singh and  others   (supra)  the   demand  for   still-head   duty recoverable  under  condition  No.  8  above  extracted  was specifically 695 held to  be a demand for money which had become due under an obligation created  by terms of the contract. It is too late in the day, therefore, for Shri Munjral to contend that such a demand  should be  considered as one covering excise duty. He, however,  relies on the following passage in Har Shankar and others  v. The  Dy. Excise  & Taxation  Commissioner and others (supra):           "The second  decision on which the appellants laid      stress was  rendered by  the High  Court of  Punjab and      Haryana in  Jage Ram v. State of Haryana (C.W. No. 1376      of 1961  decided on  March 12,  1968). The  argument is      that this  decision is based on the earlier decision of      the High  Court in  Bhajan Lal v. State of Punjab (C.W.      No. 538  of 1966 decided on February 6, 1967), that the      decision in  Bhajan Lal’s  case was confirmed in appeal      by this  Court (C.A. Nos. 1042 and 1043 of 1968 decided

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    on  August   21,  1972),  that  there  is  no  material      difference between  the rules and the procedure adopted      in the  instant cases  and those which were struck down      in Bhajan  Lal’s case  and therefore, the rules and the      procedure followed  herein must also be struck down for      the  same   reasons.  This   argument   overlooks   the      significant difference between the rules struck down in      Bhajan Lal’s  case and  in  Jage  Ram’s  case  and  the      amended Rules  now in force. Under the old Rule 36 (23-      A) still-head  duty which  was admittedly in the nature      of excise-duty  was payable  by the  licencee  even  on      quota not  lifted by  him. The Rule and Condition No. 8      founded on  it were  therefore struck  down  in  Bhajan      Lal’s case  as being  beyond the  scope of  entry 51 of      List II,  the taxable  event under  the  impugned  Rule      being the sale and not the manufacturer of liquor. Rule      36 was  amended on  March 31, 1967 in order to meet the      Judgment in  Bhajan Lal’s case but the High Court found      in Jage  Ram’s case  that even  under the amended Rule,      still-head duty  which was in the nature of excise duty      was payable  on unlifted  quota of liquor. The position      obtaining under  the Rules as amended on March 22, 1968      which are  relevant for  our purposes  is in  principle      different as  the still-head  duty is  now only  0.  64      paise as against Rs. 17.60 per litre which was in force      under the  old Rules  and excise  duty as  such  is  no      longer  payable   on  unlifted   quota.  The  principle      governing the decisions in Bhajan Lal’s 696      case and  Jage Ram’s  case cannot, therefore, apply any      longer".      (Emphasis supplied)      Special stress  has been  laid by  Shri Munjral  on the underlined portion  of the passage above extracted and it is contended by him that the judgments in the cases of Jage Ram and Bhajan  Lal were  neither disapproved nor dissented from but were  merely distinguished  in Har  Shankar’s case, that while pointing  out the  distinction this  Court took it for granted that in those earlier cases the charge of still-head duty amounted  to an excise duty and that condition No. 8 as obtaining in  the present  case  being  identical  with  the corresponding condition in those cases, it must be held that Har Shankar’s  case is an authority for the proposition that the said  condition No.  8 seeks  to levy nothing but excise duty in  the form  of still-head  duty. A careful perusal of the passage  cited (which  appears at  first sight  to  lend colour to the contention) leaves no room for doubt, however, that in  deciding Har  Shankar’s case  this  Court  was  not called upon to adjudicate on the Constitutional propriety of condition No. 8 above extracted, nor with the question as to the nature  of the  levy covered by that condition. All that the Court  said was  that the corresponding condition in Har Shankar’s case was a very different condition which could in no manner  be construed  to levy an excise duty. Besides, it was pointed  out in the passage above quoted that the still- head duty mentioned in the relevant condition in the earlier cases (which  was  indentical  with  condition  No.  8)  was admittedly a  duty of excise-a fact to which we have already adverted while holding that condition No. 8 does not involve the imposition  of a  duty of  exercise but  makes provision only for  recovery of sums becoming due under a contract. We may also point out that the respondents are not connected in any manner  whatsoever with  the  manufacture  of  alcoholic liquor and  there was,  therefore, no  question  at  all  of levying a  duty of  excise on  their operations  which  were

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confined merely to the sale of liquor manufactured by others and which,  therefore, commenced  only after  the process of manufacture was  completely over.  For all these reasons, we repel the contention under examination.      7. Contention  (b) is  also without  substance and need not detain  us long.  For one  thing, it was never raised at any earlier  stage and  its consideration  is bound  to work prejudice to  the cause  of  the  appellants.  Secondly,  as already pointed out above, there 697 is no  impediment in the way of the demand being regarded as the enforcement of an obligation arising under the contracts which the respondents had entered into and exploited so long as the  same worked  to their advantage and which were fully permissible under  sub-section (3)  of  section  34  of  the Punjab Excise Act. That sub-section states :-      "(3) Every licence,  permit or  pass granted under this           Act shall be granted-           (a)  on payment of such fees, if any,           (b)  subject to  such  restrictions  and  on  such                conditions,           (c)  in such form and containing such particulars,           (d)  for such period,           as the Financial Commissioner may direct".      According to  Shri Munjral  the payment of licence fees is provided  for in  the conditions  of auction  apart  from condition  No.  8  and,  therefore,  the  latter  cannot  be regarded as providing for anything but the levy of a duty of excise or  of some other kind. The argument is fallacious in view of  the language  of clause (b) of the sub-section just above reproduced.  That  clause  allows  the  imposition  of conditions on  the grant  of a  licence, in  addition to the payment of  the licence  fees which  is a  matter covered by clause (a). Condition No. 8 is, therefore, fully enforceable and there  is  no  reason  why  still-head  duty  should  be regarded as a tax of any kind whatsoever.      8.  For  the  reasons  stated,  both  the  appeals  are accepted  and   the  impugned   judgment.  which  cannot  be sustained, is  reversed so  that both  the  petitions  under article 226  of the  Constitution  of  India  filed  by  the respondents before  the High  Court and  accepted by  it are dismissed. However,  we leave  the parties to bear their own costs. V.D.K.                                      Appeals allowed. 698