21 February 1967
Supreme Court
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NEW MANEK CHOWK SPINNING AND WEAVINGMILLS CO. LTD. AND O Vs MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF THE CITY OFAHMEDABAD AND ORS.

Bench: RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ),SHAH, J.C.,SHELAT, J.M.,BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA,MITTER, G.K.
Case number: Writ Petition (Civil) 133 of 1966


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PETITIONER: NEW MANEK CHOWK SPINNING AND WEAVINGMILLS CO.  LTD.  AND ORS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF THE CITY OFAHMEDABAD AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 21/02/1967

BENCH: MITTER, G.K. BENCH: MITTER, G.K. RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ) SHAH, J.C. SHELAT, J.M. BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA

CITATION:  1967 AIR 1801            1967 SCR  (2) 679  CITATOR INFO :  F          1967 SC1916  (3)  R          1969 SC 378  (5)  F          1970 SC1133  (13)  F          1970 SC1292  (2,3)  F          1972 SC 828  (23,26)  R          1972 SC 845  (30)  F          1975 SC1234  (2,3,6,9,10)  F          1980 SC1789  (36)  R          1983 SC 762  (14,16)  D          1988 SC 322  (1)  R          1990 SC  85  (22)

ACT: Bombay  Provincial Municipal Corporation Act (49  of  1949)- Levy of proper tax on textile factories at flat rate per 100 sq.  ft.  of floor areass-Method whether  permissible  under Act-Whether  violative  of Constitution of India,  Art.  14- Machinery  specified by Commissioner to be included  in  the term  ’land’ for the purpose of taxation-Rules 7(2) and  (3) giving  power  to  Commissioner to  specify  such  machinery without giving guidance-Rules whether suffer from  excessive delegation.

HEADNOTE: The  petitioners  were certain textile mills  of  Ahmedabad. They filed writ petitions under Art. 32 of the  Constitution against  assessment to proper tax by the Corporation of  the City  of  Ahmedabad  under  the  provisions  of  the  Bombay Provincial  Municipal Corporation Act, 1949.  The  following contentions  fell  for  consideration : (i)  The  method  of adopting  a flat rate for a floor area for  determining  the annual  value  adopted by the Corporation  was  against  the provisions  of  the Act, as well as against  all  recognised principles  of valuation for the purpose of rating;  it  was also  violative  of Art. 14; (ii) Rules 7(2)  and  (3)  made under  the  Act gave unguided power to the  Commissioner  to specify  machinery to be treated as part of the  ’land’  for the  purpose  of  taxation and therefore  were  bad  due  to excessive  delegation.  They also fell beyond the  ambit  of

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Entry 49 of List 11 of the Seventh Schedule. HELD  : (i) The method of levy of tax on the basis of  floor area  was  against the provisions of the Act and  the  Rules made  thereunder.   The latter clearly laid  down  that  the rateable  value  of  the property  must  be  assessed  after determining  the  rack rent or the annual  rental  value  in respect  of  each premises which is to be  computed  on  the basis  of  the  annual rent for  which  the  property  might reasonably be expected to let from year to year.  It did not lie  in  the  mouth  of the municipality  to  say  that  the irregularity was open to correction. [693 G-H; 694 A-B;  684 G-H] (ii) It had not been established that condition prerequisite for  determination of annual value of textile  factories  at Ahmedabad on the basis of the rental value per foot super of floor  area  existed at the relevant time, nor had  it  been shown that the so-called contractor’s method was adopted  by the Municipal authorities of Ahmedabad.  The method was also not  one  which is generally recognised  by  authorities  on rating. [693E] (iii)     Applied  indiscriminately-as it appeared  to  have been done in the present case-the method of taxation on  the basis of floor area was sure to give rise to inequalities as there  had  been  no  classification  of  factories  on  any rational basis.  Further there did not seem to be any  basis for diving the factories and the buildings thereof under two general  classes as buildings for processing  and  buildings for non-processing purposes Article 14 was therefore clearly violated. [693 F-G] 680 Lokmanya  Mills v. The Barsi Borough Municipality, [1962]  1 S.C.R. 306, relied on. Bhuvaneswariah v. State, A.I.R. 1950 Mys. 170 and N. Kunhali Haji v.   State of Kerala, A.I.R. 1966 Ker. 14, referred to. (iv) Rules 7(2) and (3) were invalid on account of excessive delegation of powers by the Legislature.  Under these  rules the  specification  of  the classes  of  machinery  for  the purpose  of  taxation is done by the Commissioner  with  the approval of the Corporation irrespective of the question  as to where they are to be found.  It therefore depends on  the arbitrary  will of the Commissioner as to what machinery  he would  specify and what he would not.  Moreover, he  is  the only  person  who can examine this question as there  is  no right of appeal. [701 D-F] (v)  Entry  49  in  List II of  the  Seventh  Schedule  only permitted  levy  of tax on land and buildings.  It  did  not permit the levy of tax on machinery contained in or  situate on the building even though the machinery was there for  the use  of  the building for a particular purpose.   Rule  7(2) which levied such a tax was therefore beyond the legislative competence of the State. [701 A-C] In re.  The Central Provinces and Berar Act No. XIV of 1938, [1939] F.C.R. 18, Diamond Sugar Mills Ltd. & Anr,. v.  State of  Uttar Pradesh & Anr. [1961] 3 S.C.R. 242, Ralla  Ram  v. The  Province of East Punjab, [1948] F.C.R. 207, R.  v.  St. Nicholas,  Gloucester, [1783] I.T.R. 723, Kirby  v.  Hunslet Union [1906] A.C. 43 and Smith v. Willesden Union, [1919] 89 L.J.K.B. 137, considered.

JUDGMENT: ORIGINAL  JURISDICTION: Writ Petitions Nos. 133, 156 &  157, 159-171, 178, 184, 206-210 and 234 of 1966. Writ  Petitions under Art. 32 of the Constitution  of  India

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for enforcement of fundamental rights. S.   T.  Desai,  K. M. Desai, and Ravinder Narain,  for  the petitioners (in all the petitions). M.   C. Setalvad, Purshottam Trikamdas, Vithal Bhai B. Patel and L N. Shroff, for respondents Nos.  1 and 2 (in W.P.  No. 133 of 1966. Purshottam  Trikamdas Vithalbhai B. Patel and L  N.  Shroff, correspondents Nos.  1 and 2 (in W. Ps.  Nos. 156 and 206 of 1966). Vithalbhai B. Patel and I.N. Shroff, for respondents 1  Nos. 1  and 2 (in W.P. Nos. 157, 159-171, 178, 184,  207-210  and 234 of 1966. B.   Sen and R. H. Dhebar, for respondent No. 3 (in all  the petitions). The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Mitter,  J. This is a group of Writ Petitions under Art.  32 of   the  Constitution  challenging  the  validity  of   the assessment   book  relating  to  special  Property   section prepared  and published by the Municipal Corporation of  the City of Ahmedabad by which the  681 Municipality seeks to impose or has imposed property tax  on properties  described  as Special  Properties  like  textile mills, factories, buildings of the universities, etc. on the basis  of a flat rate per 100 sq. ft. of the floor  area  of the  property  situate within the municipal  limits  of  the city.   In Writ Petitions Nos. 133, 156-157,  159-171,  178, 184  and 234 of 1966, the challenge relates to the  validity of the assessment book relating to the year 1966-67; in Writ Petitions  No. 206 and 210 of 1966 the challenge relates  to the  years 1964-65 and 1965-66 while in W.P. Nos.  207,  208 and 209 of 1966 the challenge relates only to the year 1965- 66.  The difference lies in this So, far as the  assessments for  the  year  1966-67 are concerned,  there  has  been  no authentication of the assessment book after the disposal  of all  complaints  relating to the entries made in  the  book, while the challenge relating to the years 1964-65 and  1965- 66  is  made  at a stage after such  authentication  and  in respect  of which attachments of property belonging  to  the assessees  have  already been levied.  In W. P. No.  234  of 1966 filed in October 1966, the issue of a distress  warrant and  the  levy of attachment are also  challenged.   Several textile mills in the city of Ahmedabad are before this Court in these petitions and they have a common complaint  against the assessments. To  appreciate the points raised in these petitions,  it  is necessary  to  take  a  bird’s  eye  view  of  the  relevant provisions  of the Bombay Provincial Municipal  Corporations Act (LIX of 1949) under which the assessments were purported to  be made.  Section 127(1) of the Act makes it  obligatory on the Corporation of the City of Ahmedabad to impose, among other  taxes,  a property tax.  Sub-s. (3)  of  the  section provides  that municipal taxes shall be assessed and  levied in  accordance with the provisions of the Act and the  rules and sub-s. (4) lays down that nothing in this section  shall authorise  the  imposition  of  any  tax  which  the   State Legislature  has no power to impose in the State  under  the Constitution;  (it is needless to add that the Act has  been amended  after the Constitution came into  force).   Section 128  empowers  the  Corporation to recover the  tax  by  the processes laid down in the section in the manner  prescribed by  rules.  These are inter alia (1) by presenting  a  bill; (2) by serving a written notice of demand; (3) by  distraint and sale of the defaulter’s movable property; and (4) by the attachment  and  sale of a defaulter’s  immovable  property.

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Section 129 lays down that for the purposes of sub-s. (1) of s.  127  property taxes shall comprise the  taxes  mentioned which  shall,  subject to the  exceptions,  limitations  and conditions provided, be levied on buildings and lands in the city.  One of these mentioned in cl. (c) is a general tax of not less than 12 per cent of their rateable value which  may be levied, if the Corporation so determines, on a  graduated scale.   A building has been defined in s. 2 sub-s. (5)  and land  in  S. 2 sub-s. (30).  ’Land’  under  this  definition includes land which is being built upon or is built upon  or covered 682 with  water, benefits to arise out of land, things  attached to the earth or permanently fastened to anything attached to the  earth and rights created by legislative enactment  over any  street.  Under s. 2 (49) ’property tax’ means a tax  on buildings  and  lands in the city.   Section  2(53)  defines ’rack  rent’ as the amount of the annual rent for which  the premises  with  reference to which the term  is  used  might reasonably  be  expected  to  let  from  year  to  year   as ascertained for the purpose of fixing the rateable value  of such premises and under s. 2(54) ’rateable value’ means  the value  of any building or land fixed in accordance with  the provisions  of  the  Act and the rules for  the  purpose  of assessment to property taxes.  Under s. 453 the rules in the Schedule as amended from time to time shall be deemed to  be part  of  the Act.  The relevant taxation rules  are  to  be found in Chapter VIII of the rules.  Rule 7(1) provides that               "In  order  to fix the rateable value  of  any               building or land assessable to a property  tax               there shall be deducted from the amount of the               annual  rent for which such land  or  building               might reasonably be expected to let from  year               to  year  a sum equal to ten per cent  of  the               said annual rent, and the said deduction shall               be in lieu of all allowances for repairs or on               any other account whatever." Under r. 7(2) all plant and machinery contained’ or  situate in or upon any building or land and belonging to any of  the classes specified from time to time by public notice by  the Commissioner, with the approval of the Corporation, shall be deemed to form part of such building or land for the purpose of  fixing the rateable value thereof under sub-r. (1)  but, save as aforesaid, no account shall be taken of the value of any plant or machinery contained or situated in or upon  any such building or land.  Rule 7(3) runs:               "A  statement setting out clearly the  classes               of plant and machinery specified from time  to               time  by the Commissioner under  sub-rule  (2)               and  describing  in  detail  what  plant   and               machinery  falls within each such class  shall               be  prepared  by the  Commissioner  under  the               directions of the Standing Committee and shall               be open to inspection at all reasonable  hours               by   members  of  the  public  at  the   chief               municipal office."               Rule 9 provides inter alia:               "The  Commissioner  shall keep a book,  to  be               called  "the assessment-book", in which  shall               be entered every official year-               (a)   a list of all buildings and lands in the               city.  distinguishing each either by  name  or               number  as he shall think fit, and  containing               such  particulars  regarding the  location  or               nature  of  each as will, in his  opinion,  be

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             sufficient for identification;                683               (b)   the rateable value of each such building               and  land  determined in accordance  with  the               provisions of this Act and the rules;               (c)   the name of the person primarily  liable               for the payment of the property taxes, if any,               leviable on each such building or land;               (d)   if  any  such building or  land  is  not               liable to be assessed to the general tax,  the               reason of such non-liability;               (e)   when the rates of the property-taxes  to               be  levied for the year have been daily  fixed               by  the  Corporation and the period  fixed  by               public notice, as hereinafter provided, or the               receipt  of complaints against the  amount  of               rateable  value entered in any portion of  the               assessment  book has expired, and in the  case               of any such entry which is complained against,               when  such complaint has been disposed  of  in               accordance  with  the  provisions  hereinafter               contained,  the amount at which each  building               or  land  entered  in  such  portion  of   the               assessment  book  is assessed to each  of  the               property-taxes, if any, leviable thereon; Rule  10 provides for preparation of ward. assessment  books for  each of the wards into which the city is for  the  time being  divided  for  the purpose of election  and  the  ward assessment   books   and  their   respective   parts   shall collectively constitute the assessment book.  Under r. 13(1) when  the entries required by cls. (a), (b), (c) and (d)  of rule  9 have been completed, as far as practicable,  in  any ward  assessment  book, the Commissioner shall  give  public notice  thereof and of the place where the  ward  assessment book  or a copy of it may be inspected.  Under r. 15(i)  the Commissioner must, at the time and in the manner  prescribed in  r. 13, give public notice of a day, not being less  than 15  days from the publication of such notice, on  or  before which  complaints against the amount of any  rateable  value entered in the ward assessment book will be received in  hit office.  Rule 16 provides for the time and manner of  filing complaints  against valuation.  Rule 17 lays down  that  the Commissioner  must  give notice to each complainant  of  the time  and  place when his complaint  will  be  investigated. Rule 18 prescribes for the investigation and disposal of the complaint  in  the  presence  of  the  complainant  by   the Commissioner.   Under r. 19(1) when all such complaints,  if any,  have been disposed of and the entries required by  cl. (e) of r. 9 have been completed in the ward assessment  book the said book shall be authenticated by the Commissioner who shall 684 certify  under  his signature that except in the  cases,  if any, in which amendments have been made as shown therein, no valid objection had been made to the rateable value  entered in  the said book.  Under sub-r. (2) of the said  rule,  the ward  assessment  book  shall  thereupon,  subject  to  such alterations as may be made under the provisions of r. 20, be accepted  as  conclusive  evidence of  the  amount  of  each property tax leviable on each building and land in the  ward in the official year to which the book relates.  Rule  21(1) lays  down that it shall not be necessary to prepare  a  new assessment book every official year and that subject to  the provisions  of  sub-r. (2) the Commissioner  may  adopt  the entries  in  the  last  preceding  year’s  book  with   such

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alterations  as he thinks fit, as the entries for  each  new year.  Under sub-r. (2) a new assessment book has to be pre- pared at least once in every four years. The writ petition of which the papers were placed in  detail before  the  Court is No. 133 of 1966 preferred by  the  New Manek Chowk Spinning and Weaving Mills Ltd.  The respondents are: (1) the Municipal Corporation of the City of Ahmedabad, (2)  the Deputy Municipal Commissioner of the same city  and (3)  the  State  of Gujarat.  The  challenge  in  this  case relates to the validity of the assessment book for the  year 1966-67.  The complaint is that respondent No. 1 by the said book imposed property tax on the petitioner on the basis  of a  flat  rate  per  100 sq. ft. of the  floor  area  of  the petitioners’  property as also of all other  textile  mills, factories,  university  buildings  etc. under r.  9  of  the Taxation  Rules.   Annexure  ’A’ to  the  petition  gives  a synopsis  of the entries relating to the year of  assessment 1966-67.   It is divided into three parts, the  first  being headed  ’buildings’,  the second ’additional land’  and  the third  ’machinery’.   So far as ’buildings’  are  concerned, there  are  three columns, the first being the area  of  the building  in square feet, the second monthly rental per  100 sq.  ft. and the third the annual rental.  The  building  is again  divided into two classes, one for processing and  the other non-processing.  The monthly rental for the processing part of the building is taken at Rs. 6-10-0 per 100 sq.  ft. while  that for the non-processing portion is Rs. 5-4-0  per 100  sq.  ft.   With  regard to  the  additional  land,  the valuation is on the basis of the market rate per sq. ft.  of land  and as regards machinery the valuation is taken to  be effective value of which the annual rental at 71 % is  taken as  the  annual value.  The petitioner’s complaint  is  that while  under  the provisions of the Act and the  rules  made thereunder  it  was  clear that the rateable  value  of  the property must be arrived at after determining the rack  rent or the annual rental value in respect of each premises which is to be computed on the basis of the annual rent for  which the  property might reasonably be expected to let from  year to year, the municipal corporation of Ahmedabad had  adopted the  method  of determining the annual rent on a  flat  rate method according to the floor area,  685 irrespective of the locality, quality, age and nature of the property  which  was  not a recognised method  and  was  not permissible in law.  According to the petition, a formula on the  flat rate method of a fixed amount per 100 sq. ft.  for arriving  at  the rental was not only  against  the  express provisions  of the Act but was also against  the  recognised concepts  of  valuation in the Law of  Rating.   The  method adopted  by respondent No. 1 in this case was arbitrary  and repugnant to the petitioner’s right guaranteed under Art. 14 of’ the Constitution.  It was said that the buildings of the textile mills. were situate in different localities some  of which  were  in  the  heart of the  city  and  some  on  its outskirts.  There was no uniformity in the floor area of the mills  concerned  nor was the age of the  buildings  in  all cases the same.  It was further complained that buildings in respect  of the properties covered by the  special  property section  included  textile  mills taxed on  the  fixed  rate method whereas. buildings other than those of textile  mills were  taxed  on  the basis of annual  rent  for  which  such premises were reasonably expected to let from year to  year. A  further  complaint  was made that respondent  No.  1  had assessed the property tax apart from buildings and lands  on the plant and machinery of the petitioner.  It was submitted

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that  the imposition of property tax on plant and  machinery was beyond the legislative competence of the State.   Sub-r. (3)  of  r.  7 was challenged  as  giving  the  Commissioner arbitrary and unguided power to set out the classes of plant and machinery and to describe what plant and machinery  fell within  each  such class. for the purpose of  assessment  of property   tax.   Moreover,  such  classification   by   the Commissioner  was  made final and binding and no  right  was given  to any person affected thereby to object to the  same nor  was  any right of appeal against such decision  of  the Commissioner  provided.   A  complaint was  also  made  that respondent No. 1 had not prepared any ward assessment  books for the year 1966-67.  It is the petitioner’s case that  the figures  in  the assessment book for the year  1966-67  were adopted from those of the previous year 1965-66, under r. 21 of the Taxation Rules.  It was submitted that such  adoption was  invalid and improper inasmuch as the  assessment  books for  the  previous years were bad in  law.   The  assessment books  for the previous years were also bad in law  inasmuch as  the  same were authenticated under r. 19 by  the  Deputy Municipal  Commissioner  and  not  by  the  Commissioner  as contemplated  in  the said rule.  The  complaints  were  not considered  by the Municipal Commissioner him self.  It  was said  that the action of the Deputy  Municipal  Commissioner under  a  purported  delegation  of  power  by  order  dated November  20, 1964 was invalid as a quasi-judicial  function could not be delegated.  In this connection, reference  was. made to s. 49(i) of the Act.  It was further contended  that even in the year 1966-67 the power of conducting proceedings under  rr.13,. 15, 16, 17, 18 and 19 of the  Taxation  Rules had been deputed by the Municipal Commissioner in favour  of the Deputy Municipal 686 Commissioner  and  as  such  deputation  was  bad  in   law. Finally,  the  petition  proceeded on  the  basis  that  the imposition  of  property  tax on the  flat  rate  method  on textile  mills  as under the special  property  section  was ultra  vires  the  Act and the rules made  therein  and  was violative  of  the  fundamental  rights  of  the  petitioner guaranteed under Arts. 14, 31(i) and 19 of the  Constitution and  the procedure adopted in preparing the assessment  book was  ultra wires the procedure laid down by the Act and  the rules.  The grounds of challenge are formulated in paragraph 35  of  the  petition.   Among the prayers  are  a  writ  of mandamus  or any similar writ directing respondent No. 1  to forbear  from  taking  any  steps  for  the  imposition  and realisation of the property tax pursuant to the  preparation of the assessment book for the year 1966-67 relating to  the Special  Property  section; a writ of  certiorari  or  other similar writ to quash the assessment book for the said year; a writ of prohibition or other order restraining  respondent No.  2, the Deputy Municipal Commissioner from acting  under deputation under s. 49 (1) and. other reliefs. The points raised in the counter affidavit are as  follows:- (1) The tax being based on the amount of rent for which  the property  is or may be let from year to year, such rent  has got  to  be  ascertained  from  either  the  actual  or  the hypothetical rent for which the property along with all  the equipment  like  plant and machinery and amenities  that  it contains,  is or may be let and such annual rent  where  the property is let as a factory equipped as a factory would  be the rent that it would fetch as a factory and not as a  bare building. (2) Rule 7(2) only gives power to the  Corporation to include such plant and machinery as it may determine from time to time taking into consideration various factors  like

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the  situation of the city, its facilities for transport  to other  parts  of  the State and  the  country,  whether  the industry is well established or is just being developed etc. (3) Although under r. 9(b) the amount of the rateable  value of the property in the previous year is to be entered, it is open to the Corporation to take any fresh circumstances into consideration  before  adopting the entry from  the  earlier year.   Entry in col. (b) is neither the imposition  of  the tax  nor  the final amount on the basis whereof the  tax  is leviable.   It  is  in  the nature  of  a  proposal  by  the Corporation and is subject to objection by the assessee  and the  tax  becomes leviable after the  objections  have  been disposed  of  and the amount is entered in column  (e).  (4) After  the  tax  has become leviable under  the  Rules,  the assessee  is entitled, if he so desires, to file  an  appeal under  s. 406 against either the rateable value or  the  tax fixed  or charged under the Act.  The Court of Small  Causes can hear and determine the appeal.  Under s. 4 10 there is a provision  for a reference to the District Court and s.  411 provides for an appeal to it.  The High Court would have the power  of revision of the order of the District  Judge.  (5) The fixing of the rateable value on  687 floor  area  basis  is  in  accordance  with  the   accepted principles  and  methods in the Law of Rating.   In  various cities it is common to let out premises on the basis of  the floor area.  The computation of rateable value by this means depends  on  the estimate of the annual, rent at  which  the property  may  be reasonably expected to let  from  year  to year.   The  situation  of  the building,  The  age  of  the building,  the  material  used  for  the  building  are  not relevant for, if the mill containing all plant and machinery and  other  equipment  is let, it is let as  a  factory  for carrying  on  a business of manufacture  of  textiles.   The grievance of the petitioner is open to redress under s.  406 and the other sections mentioned. (6) It is not incumbent on respondent No. 1 to maintain any ward assessment books,  and (7)  under  s.  49(1) the power  to  dispose  of  complaints against the fixing of rateable value was duty deputed to the Deputy Commissioner and there was nothing illegal about it. The points formulated by Mr. S. T. Desai are as follows:-(1) The  method  of adopting a flat rate for a  floor  area  for determining  the  annual  value  adopted  by  the  Municipal Corporation of Ahmedabad was against the express  provisions of  the  Act. (2) The method was also in  violation  of  all recognised  concepts  and principles of  valuation  for  the purpose of rating. (3) The imposition of tax on a flat  rate method  was  violative of Art. 14 of the  Constitution.  (4) Rule  7(2) and r. 7(3) were ultra vires the Constitution  as beyond  the legislative competence and entry 49 of List  11. (5)  The  delegation of powers of the  Commissioner  to  the Deputy  Commissioner was. bad as it involved the  delegation of  quasi-judicial  power, and (6) Rule 7(3)  suffered  from excessive  delegation and was violative of’ Art. 14  of  the Constitution. The  first, second and third points may be  taken  together. In  the  forefront  of his argument Mr. Desai  relied  on  a decision  of this Court in The Lokmanya Mills v.  The  Barsi Borough  Municipality.(1) There the common question  in  the appeals  related to the validity of r. 2C framed  under  the Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act, 1925.  Under s. 73 of the Act the  Municipality was entitled to levy a rate on  lands  and buildings.  In 1947 new rules were made after obtaining  the approval  of  the Government of Bombay for  the  purpose  of enhancing  the assessment of lands and buildings within  the

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area  of  the  Municipality.   Rule  2C  of  the  new  rules provided that:               "As  regards  Mills, factories  and  buildings               relating  thereto,  the annual  letting  value               shall  be fixed at Rs. 40/per 100 square  feet               or part thereof for every floor, ground  floor               or cellar and the tax shall be assessed on the               said  annual  letting value, at  the  ordinary               rate. (1) [1962] 1 S.C.R. 306. 688 The  Municipality prepared an assessment list under the  new scheme  of  taxation in respect of factories  and  buildings relating  thereto and issued notices of demand calling  upon the  appellants to pay house tax and water tax so  assessed. The  question  before this ,Court was whether  rule  2C  was ultra vires.  This Court examined the provisions of the  Act under which the rate could be levied on lands and buildings’ assessed  on the valuation thereof based on  annual  letting value.  It was said:               "If  the rate is to be levied on the basis  of               capital  value, the building to be taxed  must               be valued according to some recognised  method               of  valuation: if the rate is to be levied  on               the  basis  of the annual letting  value,  the               building  must be valued at the annual  rental               which a hypothetical tenant may pay in respect               of  the  building.  The  Municipality  ignored               both  the methods of valuation and  adopted  a               method   not  sanctioned  by  the   Act.    By               prescribing valuation computed on the area  of               the  factory  building, the  Municipality  not               only  fixed  arbitrarily  the  annual  letting               value  which  bore no relation to  the  rental               which   a  tenant  may  reasonably  pay,   but               rendered the statutory right of the  tax-payer               to  challenge  the  valuation  illusory.    An               assessment  list prepared under s. 78,  before               it  is  authenticated and finalised,  must  be               published  and the taxpayers must be given  an               opportunity  to object to the  valuation.   By               the assessment list in which the valuation  is               not  based  upon  the  capital  value  of  the               building or the rental which the building  may               fetch,  but on the floor area,  the  objection               which the tax-payers may raise is in substance               restricted   to  the  area  and  not  to   the               valuation." It was further observed that if the Municipality had adopted any of the recognised methods of valuation for assessing the annual  letting  value,  the  tax  would  not  be  open   to challenge.  The Court further noted:               "In  any  event, there is no evidence  on  the               record  of  this case that the  factories  and               "buildings    relating   thereto"   such    as               warehouses,  godowns  and shops of  the  Mills               situate  in the compound of the mills, may  be               separately let at the uniform rate  prescribed               by  the  Municipality.  The vice of  the  rule               lies  in an assumed uniformity of  return  per               square  foot  which  structures  of  different               classes which are in their nature not similar,               may reasonably fetch if let out to tenants and               in  the virtual deprivation to the  rate-payer               of  his  statutory  right  to  object  to  the

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             valuation." It  may  be interesting to note that an Act  was  passed  to validate  the said imposition.  On a Writ Petition No.  1476 of 1966 the Bombay High Court held the Validating Act to  be ultra vires.  The  689 contention  put  forward before the Bombay  High  Court  was inter alia that the levy of a tax on buildings and lands  on the  basis  of  floor area  was  necessarily  arbitrary  and capricious  in that the valuation of buildings and lands  so arrived at could have no relation to their actual value, for the  value of buildings depended, among other  things,  upon location,  age, mode of construction, material used etc.   A uniform  rate  on buildings and lands  of  widely  differing values  was  clearly  discriminatory  because  of  lack   of classification leading to inequality.  It was further argued that  there was violation of Art. 14 in that the  owners  of mills  and factories were discriminated against as  compared to  the owners of other buildings and lands.  These  grounds were upheld by the Bombay High Court. Reference  was made by Mr. Desai to decisions of other  High Courts wherein similar observations were made.  In Bhuvanes- wariah  v. State(1), the Mysore Buildings Tax Act, 1963  and Schedule 11 thereto were challenged before the High Court of Mysore.  It was pointed out that under the scheme of the Act a  cow-shed  and an ultra modern cinema house  in  the  best locality would be charged with the same amount of tax if the extent  of floorage of both were the same.  The  High  Court held   that   the  Act  suffered  from  lack   of   rational classification because:               "The floorage basis is not only  unscientific,               it is something arbitrary and mechanical.   It               does   not  conform  to  any  of   the   known               principles of taxation.  In the very nature of               things, under that basis the incidence of  tax               must fall unevenly on things similar." N.   Kunhali  Haji  v. State of Kerala(2) was a  case  where under  the Kerala Buildings Tax Act, 1961 (19 of  1961)  tax was  sought to be imposed not on the basis of letting  value but  on the floor area of buildings.  It was held  that  the lack  of classification had resulted in inequality with  the result  that  the  provisions of the Act  were  held  to  be invalid.   Relying on the above decisions, Mr. Desai  argued that  the  method adopted by the  Municipal  Corporation  of Abmedabad was against all known principles of rating and was violative of Art. 14 of the Constitution.  He submitted that there  were a number of textile mills situated in  different parts  of the city some of which were old and some  were  of fairly recent origin.  Their method of construction was  not the same, some being more permanent in the nature of  things than  others.  Apart from the question of the  valuation  of plant and machinery, Mr. Desai argued, it was impossible  to suggest  that  a hypothetical tenant would be  agreeable  to take on rent the building of a mill which was well-built and of  recent  origin as another which was fairly old  and  not constructed  with  the  same kind of  material.   Mr.  Desai further  argued that the situation of the mill  was  another factor which any tenant would (1) A.I.R. 1965 Mysore page 170. (2) A.I.R. 1966 Kerala 14. 690 take into consideration and even if the buildings of the two mills  were otherwise similar, a tenant would not  agree  to pay  for one situated on the outskirts of the city the  same rent as he would be willing to pay for the one in the  heart

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of  it.   In these circumstances, he argued  it  was  wholly unreasonable to think that a tenant would be willing to  pay Rs. 6-10-0 per 100 sq.  R. of the floor area whether it  was in the heart of the city or in the outskirts of it,  whether the  building was old or whether it was new and  whether  it was well constructed or ill-constructed. Mr. Setalvad tried to argue that such a method of  valuation was not unknown and in any event a person who wanted to take on rent a textile factory would only be concerned with  what profits  he could make out of it and that it did not  matter to him as to where it was situate, in the city, whether  the building  was old or whether it was new. or whether  it  was constructed  properly  with  first class  material  or  not. According  to Mr. Setalvad, the tenant would only go by  the use  to  which  the building could be put.  So  far  as  the methods of valuation are concerned, we may refer to  certain well known n textbook,, on the subject.  Halsbury in Vol. 32 (page 76, Art. 106-Third Edition) points out:               "Except   in  the  case  of   public   utility               undertakings which, in the absence of  special               circumstances,  must  as a matter  of  law  be               valued on the profits basis, there is no  rule               of  law  as to the method of valuation  to  be               adopted for rating." This  does  not however mean that it is  open  to  municipal authorities  to  fix upon any scale and say that  they  will adopt  it.   They must show, if challenged, that  the  scale adopted  by  them allows the fixing of an annual  value  and provides a basis for determination of the same as that which a  hypothetical  tenant  might be expected to  pay  for  the building.   All  the textbooks lay down certain  methods  of valuation.  As Halsbury points out at page 77, Art. 108:               "In  the absence of rental evidence of  value,               the  accounts,  receipts  or  profits  of  the               occupier of the hereditament may be  relevant.               The  profits themselves are not  rateable  but               they  may serve to indicate the rent at  which               the hereditament might reasonably be  expected               to  let,  particularly whether profit  is  the               motive  of the hypothetical tenant  in  taking               the hereditament, or where, the trade can only               be carried on upon that hereditament."               In Article 109, the learned author points out               "Where neither actual rents nor the profits of               trade afford evidence of annual rental  value,               a  percentage of the cost of  construction  of               structural value of the hereditament, or of  a               suitable  hereditament, is sometimes taken  as               evidence."  691 This  is referred to loosely as "the  contractor’s  method". The value taken is sometimes called the "effective"  capital value,  that  is to say, the capital value  leaving  out  of account   expenditure  on  unnecessary   ornamentation,   or accommodation surplus to requirements and after allowing, if necessary,  for age and obsolescence.  The percentage to  be applied  to capital value is that prevailing in the  market, and  not necessarily that at which the actual  occupier  can borrow  or  obtain money.  Mr. Setalvad placed  reliance  on Faraday  on  Rating (5th Edition) where the  learned  author gives  four  recognised methods of arriving  at  the  annual value of a hereditament at page 24 of the book, these being-               1.  The  "competitive or  comparative  method"               i.e.  by finding out rents actually  paid  for               the hereditament in question and/or others  of

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             a  similar kind, adjusting them to bring  into               line  with the statutory conditions, and  thus               arriving  directly  at  an  estimate  of   the               rent..........               2.    The  "profits basis," or calculation  by               reference  to receipts and expenditure,  which               is  now  required  to be  applied  to  certain               public utility undertakings, and may  properly               be applied to any other hereditament on  which               a   business  is  carried  on   which   enjoys               privileges     in    the    nature    of     a               monopoly............               3.    The  "contractor’s method," by which  it               is assumed, in the absence of any other better               way  of estimating the rent, that  the  tenant               would  arrive at it by finding-the figure  for               which  a  contractor would  provide  him  with               premises  neither more nor less  suitable  for               his purpose, and the rate of interest on  that               cost which the contractor would charge him  as               rent.               4.    The  "unit method" by which schools  may               be valued at so much a place, hospitals at  so               much a bed, or certain industrial premises  at               so much a furnace, or other unit of output.               Mr.  Setalvad  laid  particular  stress  on  a               passage at page 164 reading :               "Modern  factories  are  frequently  found  in               groups  due to Town Planning or in some  cases               because  Trading Estates have been  developed.               Under these conditions it is often possible to               arrive  at the rental value per foot super  of               floor area by applying the contractor’s  basis               to  typical  factories or  because  there  are               sufficient  rents or by a combination  of  the               two methods." This  is  followed  by  an  illustration  of  a  bakery  and warehouse which goes to show that different portions of  the building  which were of different nature were  measured  and valued differently and then M2Sup.CI/67-15 692 on  the  valuation of the total the floor  area  method  was adopted  for  the  purpose of  similar  buildings.   As  the learned author-himself.-points out at page 1 5:               "The floor area method of valuation is usually               used’ where there are numerous factories in an               area  mostly  similar and used  for  the  same               trade.  In  the North  mills,  are  frequently                             valued on this method." The  learned  author also stresses that great care  must  be taken in applying the price per square foot which will  vary according  to the character of the factory or  mill.   Lower down in the same page, the learned author points out that  a factory  put  up years ago may contain machinery  which  has become  old  fashioned  and modern  machines  for  the  same purpose might occupy far more or less space, and  therefore, require larger or smaller buildings, and probably reduce the wages  bill  and effect other economies whilst at  the  same time giving more output than the old cumbersome undertaking. According to the author, the value of the old factory,  from a rental point of view, would be less than that of a new one with  the  same  power  of production,  since  it  would  be impossible to find a tenant who would give the same rent for both  concerns in as much as he could obviously  operate  in

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the new buildings more economically than in the old one. There  is  nothing  in the counter affidavit  to  show  that conditions in the City of Ahmedabad with regard to  textiles mills are such, as would make the method laid down at p. 164 of  Faraday’s.  book  applicable.  The  affidavit  does  not purport  to show that the factories were: constructed at  or about the same time or in groups or were so similar in their operation that their rental value could be determined at per foot super of floor area applying the contractor’s There  is nothing, to show that any textile factory was, valued on the contractor’s  basis  and that from the figures of  valuation go worked out, the rental value per foot super of floor area wag  determined On, the other hand, the  affidavit  suggests that  because  ’in various cities it was common to  let  out premises  on  the  basis  ,of  floor  area,  the   municipal authorities  of  Ahmedabad had resorted to this  method  for fixing  the rateable value.  We can take-judicial notice  of the-fact that sometimes godowns or buildings constructed for office purposes are let out on the basis of floor area  but- even  then, the rate would vary according to the  nature  of the  building and according to the site of the  building  in the city.  It would also depend upon the age of the building and the amenities provided therein.  It would be  impossible to  say  that  in the City of Ahmedabad a  tenant  would  be willing  to  pay  at  the same  rate  of  rent  for  factory accommodation,  no matter where the building was situate  or when it was put up or how it was constructed. 693 Our  attention was also drawn to other well known  books  on Rating  like Ryde on Rating, Bean and Lockwood on Rating  an Graham Eyre on Rating.  Incidentally, we may refer to Witton Booth on Valuations for Rating (Fourth Edition) at page  125 wherein the learned author states               "Reductions  of  floor  areas  to  units,   as               Already  described,  are necessary  to  effect               reliable  comparisons,  but  it  is  merely  a               mechanical process used in preparing  material               for the valuation, the actual valuation  being               the   decision   and   application   of    the               appropriate  rate or rental value per unit  of               area.  This may be exactly to a standard, and,               indeed, it probably will be to the majority of               properties where these are so nearly alike  in               character   as  to  be  regarded  for   rating               purposes  as identical. Where, however,  rates               or rental values per unit of area ale  applied               indiscriminately, without discernment- on  the               wholesale, as it were-inequalities are certain               to  arise,  and these give rise to  the  whole               method  being  caustically  Preferred  to   as               "valuations by the foot-rule." The above comment is sufficient to show that this method can only  be  applied Where the majority of  properties  are  so nearly  Alike in character as to be regarded  identical  for rating  purposes.   There   is  no  such  statement  in  the affidavit. We are therefore not satisfied that conditions  prerequisite for  determination of annual value of textiles factories  in Ahmedabad  on  the basis of rental value per foot  super  of floor  area  existed at the relevant time nor has.  it  been shown  to  us that- the. so-called  contractor’s  basis  was adopted  by  the municipal authorities. of  Ahmedabad.   The method  is  not. also one which is  generally  recognise  by authorities  on  rating.   Applied  indiscriminately  as  it appears  to have been done in this case-it is sure  to  give

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rise to, inequalities,: as there has been no  classification of the factories on any rational basis.  Further, there does not seem to be any basis for dividing the factories and  the buildings    thereof   under   two   general   classes    as buildings.used    for   processing   and    buildings    for Reprocessing. purposes.  What was said by this Court in  The Lokmanya Mills’ case(1) applies with equal force to what has been done here and- we must hold that the  municipality  did not observe the  law and failed in its duty to determine the rateable value of each building and land, comprised in  each of  the textile factories in terms of r. 9(b) of the-  rules under the Bombay Provincial Municipal Corporations Act, 1949 so  tar  as  the assessment book for  the  year  1966-67  is concerned. Mr.  Setalvad  argued  that at that stage there  is  only  a proposal and even if the municipality had acted  arbitrarily it was open to the (1)  [1962] 1 S. C. R. 306. 694 assessees   to  take  objection  thereto  and  have   proper valuations  made and the assessment book prepared  properly. We  cannot accept this argument.  If the municipality  fails in  its initial duty to act in terms of r. 9(b) it does  not lie  in  its  mouth to say that  any  irregularity,  however patent on the face of it, is open to correction.   Moreover, the  methods  of  correction  in  this  regard  are   really illusory.    The  Small  Causes  Court  cannot  decide   the applicability  of Art. 14 of the Constitution and  according to  the judgment of the Bombay High Court in  Balkrishna  v. Poona Municipal Corporation(1) (by which the District  Judge would be bound).               "......   the words used in s. 406(1)  of  the               Act,. do not cover the vires of the tax or the               legality  of  the tax which is  sought  to  be               levied."               Earlier,  the learned Judges had  pointed  out               after noting ss, 406 to 413 that :               "the  decision  of Judge  aforesaid  upon  any               appeal  against  any such value or tax  if  no               appeal  is made therefrom under s. 411 and  if               such  appeal  is  made  the  decision  of  the               District Court in such appeal shall be final." From  this  it  follows that it would  be  useless  for  the assessee  to  take objections or file  appeals  against  the decisions on rateable value to the authorities prescribed by the  Act  if  he was challenging the  determination  of  the rateable  value  as  being  violative  of  Art.  14  of  the Constitution.  It is no answer to such a charge to say  that the  rateable  value  could be determined  properly  by  the municipal  authorities  acting under the Act and  the  rules thereunder when they do not resort to any of the well known- methods  of  valuation and cannot  justify  their  arbitrary method.  With  regard to the writ petitions questioning  the  annual values appearing in the assessment books for the years 1964- 65 and 1965-66 which,were similarly prepared, a point of res judicata  was taken in that some of these mills  which  have filed  writ petitions before this court had  challenged  the assessment  book  in Writ petitions under Art.  226  of  the Constitution before the Gujarat High Court and our attention was drawn to the judgment of the Gujarat High Court in  W.P. No.  1365 of 1965 decided by that court very recently.   The decision in that case cannot operate as res judicata for the simple  reason that the learned Judges pointed out  at  page 141  of the transcript of the judgment made over to us  that

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there were not sufficient averments with regard to the  plea of   discrimination  and  violation  of  Art.  14  and   the submission based on these grounds was therefore rejected and not gone into.  To quote from the judgment:               "In  the absence of any specific  averment  to               the  aforesaid effect, it is quite clear  that               the aforesaid plea cannot be               (1)   65 D. L. R. 119.               6 9 5               said   to   have   been   properly    pleaded.               Therefore,  we reject that submission on  that               ground." Moreover,  it  appears to us that the right of appeal  in  a case  where the rateable value is challenged on- the  ground of Art. 14 is hardly of any use to the assessee.  As already noted,  s. 128 of the Act shows that a municipal tax may  be recovered  by  presenting  a bill or by  serving  a  written notice   of  demand  or  by  attachment  and  sale  of   the defaulter’s immovable property etc.  As the Commissioner  is not  likely  to  pay  heed  to  any  complaint  against  the determination of any rateable value based on Art. 14 of  the Constitution,  he  is bound to authenticate  the  assessment book  under r. 19 and can under r. 39 cause to be  presented to the assessee a bill for the amount of the tax due.  Under r. 41 he can serve upon the person liable for the payment of the tax a notice of demand in form if the amount of-the  tax has  not  been paid into the municipal office  or  deposited with him as required by sub-s. (2) of s. 406 within 15  days from the service of the bill.  Rule 42(1) lAys down that  if the  person  to whom the notice of demand  has  been  served under  r. 41 does not within 15 days from the  said  service pay  the  sum  demanded or show sufficient  cause  for  non- payment of the same to the satisfaction of the  Commissioner and if no appeal is preferred against the said tax, such sum with costs of recovery may be levied under a warrant in form to  be  issued by the Commissioner by distress and  sale  of movable property of the defaulter or the attachment and sale of immovable property of the defaulter etc.  Section  406(1) provides for appeals against any rateable value or tax fixed or  charged  under the Act.  Section 406(2)  provides  inter alia as follows:-               "No such appeal shall be heard unless-               (a)   it is brought within fifteen days  after               the accrual of the cause of complaint;               (b)   in  the  case  of an  appeal  against  a               rateable value a complaint has previously been               made  to  the Commissioner as  provided  under               this Act and such complaint has been  disposed               of;               (e)   in the case of an appeal against a  tax,               or  in  the case of an appeal made  against  a               rateable value after; a bill for any  property               tax  assessed  upon such value has  been  pre-               sented  to the appellant, the  amount  claimed               from  the appellant has been deposited by  him               with the Commissioner." The net result of all this is that unless the assessee  pays the  amount of tax demanded, his appeal cannot be  heard  so that  if he questions the rateable value or the levy of  the tax, he must in any event, deposit the amount demanded.   In effect,  the  Act  and  the appeal rules  do  not  make  any provision for relief to an assessee 696 who complains that the assessment book has been prepared  in violation  of  the law.  This may be illustrated  from  what

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happened in the case of the Ahmedabad Laxmi Cotton Mills Co. Ltd.  who have preferred Writ Petition No. 207 of 1966.   In this case, the municipality prepared the assessment book for the year 1965-66 adopting the figure from the previous  year under.  21.   The Mills finally-complained on July  3,  1965 raising  various objections regarding the  jurisdiction  and the validity of the imposition of property tax on the  floor area  method.  These were over-ruled and the assessment  was finalised  by  an  order  dated  September  15,  1965.    On September 17, 1965 the municipality issued a bill in respect of  the  assessment.   The  Mills  filed  a  tax  appeal  on September  27, 1965.  On October 7, 1965 a notice of  demand under  r.  4  1 (1) of the Taxation Rules was  made  on  the Mills.  A Writ Petition was filed in the Gujarat High  Court being Special Civil Application No. 1155 of 1965 on  October 16, 1965.  This petition along with various other  petitions filed  by  other  textile mills was dismissed  by  a  common judgment in Application No. 1365 of 1966 on May 5, 1966.  On May  7, 1966 the municipality issued an order of  attachment under  r. 45(1) of the rules.  The Mills filed another  Writ Petition in the Gujarat High Court against the issue of  the order  of  attachment, but this was dismissed in  limine  on July  18,  1966.  It may be noted that the Mills  in  common with other Mills had preferred an application for grant of a certificate  under  Arts. 132 and 133  of  the  Constitution against  the dismissal of the Writ Petition on May  5,  1966 and such certificate was granted on June 20, 1966. Mr. Desai’s next challenge was directed against sub-rr.  (2) and  (3)  of  r.  7. According to him,  it  was  beyond  the legislative  competence of the State to levy a property  tax on plant and machinery The relevant entry in List II of  the 7th  Schedule  is  item  49,  namely,  ’Taxes  on  land  and buildings’.   The corresponding entry in List 11  under  the Government   of  India  Act,  1935  was  taxes  on   "lands, buildings,  hearths and windows." Mr. Desai  contended  that the  legislature  was  not competent by  the  definition  of ’land’ in s. 2(3) of the Act to include plant and  machinery even  if  they  were attached to the  earth  or  permanently fastened  to  anything  attached to the  earth.   Mr.  Desai argued  that  it  may be that the definition  of  ’land"  in certain  Acts  embraces  plant and machinery  but  when  the legislature rates to impose a tax on plant and machinery  in the  garb of land it travels beyond its powers.   He  argued that  apart from the definition in certain Acts and  deeming provisions contained therein, plant and machinery can  never be  said  to form part of the land or included  in  land  or building.   Counsel  conceded that  entries  in  legislative lists  were certainly to be construed very widely  but  even then  no  artificial meaning or arbitrary extension  of  the meaning of the words in an entry could be allowed. In   this  connection,  our  attention  was  drawn  to   the observations 697 of  Gwyer, C.J. in re.  The Central Provinces and Berar  Act No. XIV of 1938(1) that               "....a broad and liberal spirit should inspire               those,. whose duty it is to interpret it, but.               I  do not imply by this that they are free  to               stretch   or  pervert  the  language  of   the               enactment  in  the interests of any  legal  or               constitutional theory, or even for the purpose               of   supplying  omissions  or  of   correcting               supposed errors." In  Diamond  Sugar Mills Ltd. & Anr. v. The State  of  Uttar Pradesh  &  Anr.(2) the question was, whether entry  52  of,

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List  11  of  the’ Seventh Schedule  which  empowered  State Legislatures to make ii law relating to "taxes on the  entry of  goods  Into a local area for consumption,  use  or  sale therein,," sanctioned the passing of the U.P. Sugarcane Cess Act,  1960 authorising the State Government to impose ,a  on the  entry of sugarcane in the premises of a factory for   I consumption or sale therein.  It Was contended by the appel- lant  that the premises of a factory was not a "local  area" within  the  meaning  of the said Entry.   The  majority  of Judges  in  that case held the impugned  legislation  to  be beyond the competence-of the State Legislature and observed:               "In  considering  the  meaning  of  the  words               "local  area" in entry 52 we have, on the  one               hand  to bear in mind the salutary  rule  that               the words conferring the right of  legislation               should be interpreted liberally and the powers               conferred   should   be   given   the   widest               amplitude;:  on  the other hand,  we  have  to               guard ourselves against extending the  meaning               of   the   words   beyond   their   reasonable               connotation,  in  an anxiety to  preserve  the               power of the legislature." In  this  case, counsel argued the language was  clear.  and unambiguous  and therefore it was not open to resort to  any artificial  definition.   He also  referred  to  Legislative Practice in India on this point and contended that the  same was  against  giving an extended meaning to  the  expression ’land  and buildings’ so as to include plant and  machinery. In  re.   The  Central Provinces and Berar Act  No.  XIV  of 1938(3),  the question was whether a tax on retail sales  of ’motor spirit and lubricants was ultra vires the  Provincial Legislature  being  a duty of excise within the  meaning  of entry No. 45 in List 1 of the 7th Schedule to the Government of India Act, 1935 and not within entry No’ 48 of List 11 of that   Schedule.   There  Gwyer,  C.  J.  referred  to   the legislative practice preceding the Constitution Act and said at.p. 53               "Lastly,  I am entitled to look at the  manner               in  which  Indian  Legislation  preceding  the               Constitution Act had               (1)    [1939]   F.   C.   R.   18    at    37.               (2) [1961] 3 S. C.R.- 242.@ 248.               (3)   [1939] F. C. R. 18.               698               been accustomed to provide for the  collection               of excise duties;............ In all the  Acts               by  which  these  duties were  imposed  it  is               provided (and substantially by the same words)               that   the   duty  is  to  be  paid   by   the               manufacturer or producer, and on the issue  of               the  excisable  article  from  the  place   of               manufacture or production."               In the same case, Sulaiman, J. observed:               "Our  attention  has  not been  drawn  to  any               provincial enactment, which might have imposed               any  excise duty on the retail sale  of  motor               spirit  and lubricants, or for that matter  on               the retail sale of any other goods." That courts can look into the legislative practice was again adverted  to in Ralla Ram v. The Province of East  Punjab(1) where  the  question related to the vires of  a  Punjab  Act taxing  the  owner of buildings and lands  on  their  annual value.  There the contention was that the tax was really one on  income  and  as  such  beyond  the  competence  of   the Provincial  Legislature.  The Court referred to the  Central

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Provinces and Berar Act’s case and examined the  legislative practice in India.  Mr. Desai referred us to a large  number of  Municipal Acts passed by different Provincial and  State Legislatures  in  India both before and after 1935  to  show that  plant and machinery were expressly excluded  from  the purview  of such taxes.  We may refer to a few only of  them which are : Punjab Municipal Act, 1911, s. 3(1); The  Madras Act IV of 1884 s. 65(2); Madras District Municipalities Act, 1920  s. 82(2) proviso (b); The Patna Municipal  Corporation Act,  1951,  s. 130(3); The Bombay  District  Municipalities Act,  1911, s’ 3(11); The Bombay Municipal Boroughs  Act  s. 3(1);  The  Bombay  Municipal  Corporations  Act,  1988,  s. 154(2);  The  Calcutta Municipal Act, 1899, s.  151  proviso (2);  North  West Province and Oudh Municipal Act,  S.  3(1) proviso; The Central Provinces Municipalities Act of 1903 s. 36   proviso;   and   The  Central   Provinces   and   Berar Municipalities Act, 1922 s. 73 proviso.  Mr. Desai also drew our attention to the English Rating and Valuation Act, 1925. Therein s. 2(1) gives the power to levy a consolidated  rate and  sub-s. (3) states that the rate shall be at  a  uniform amount, per pound on the rateable value of each hereditament in that area.  Section 24(1) of that Act provides that plant and machinery in or on the hereditament as belongs to any of the classes specified in the Third Schedule to the Act shall be deemed to be a part of the hereditament. This  according  to  Mr. Desai went to  show  that  even  in England plants and machinery were not considered part of the hereditament and were made so by a sort of fiction.  It  was argued that (1)  (19481) F.C.R. 207.  699 by  a  deeming  provision  the meaning  of  a  word  may  be extended, but when the language was clear, no such extension by way of interpretation was possible. Our attention was also drawn to a number of sections in  the Bombay  Act  of 1949 which on the face of it, went  to  show that land in those sections was clearly not meant to include the plant and machinery situate therein. On  this question, Mr. Setalvad relied on the principles  of rating  of plant and machinery in England.  We have  already noted the provisions of the Rating and Valuation Act,  1925. It is pointed out in Ryde on Rating (Eleventh Edition) at p. 399 :               "From  towards  the  end  of  the   eighteenth               century  to  the  passing of  the  Rating  and               Valuation   Act,   1925,   there   has    been               controversy  as to the inclusion in  valuation               of  machinery and plant, and as to the  extent               to   which  (if  machinery  and   plant   were               included)  the valuation was to  be  affected.               The  series  of judicial authorities  on  this               subject  extends  from  R.  v.  St.  Nicholas,               Gloucester,  decided  in 1783(1) to  Kirby  v.               Hunslet  Union  (2)  and  Smith  v.  Willesden               Union(3),  decided  in  1906  and  1919.   The               effect  of the decision of the House of  Lords               in Kirby v. Hunslet Union(2) was to sweep away               the principles- on which a discrimination  had               previously  been  made between  machinery  and               plant which was to be "taken into account"  in               valuation,  and  that which  was  not-such  as               physical  annexation to the  hereditament,  or               legal  annexation in the sense that the  thing               in  question  would  pass  to  the  tenant  at               landlord’s  fixtures on a demise....... ;  and

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             practically to direct the rating authority  to               value the hereditament equipped with Machinery               and plant as it appears to the eye.11               The  matter  is thus put in  Witton  Booth  on               Valuations  for Rating (Fourth Edition) at  p.               575 :               "The rateability of plant and machinery  under               the law which applied universally before 1925,               and  which  still  applies  to   hereditaments               valued  by  reference to the  profits  ’earned               therein depends on legal decisions on what  is               comprehended   by  the  term  "land".    These               decisions were based on principles  applicable               to fixtures generally, of which rateable plant               and machinery were one kind." It  will therefore be noticed that the rateability of  plant and  machinery  depended  on judicial decisions  as  to  the meaning of the (1) [1783] I.T.R. 723. (3) [1919] 89 L.J.K.B. 137. (2) [1906] A.C. 43. 700 word "land".  There is no reason why we should accept  those decisions  as  to what was comprehended by the  term  "land" when  we  find  in our statutes plant  and  machinery  being excluded therefrom. In Kirby v. Hunslet Union (1) Lord Halsbury expressed;  him- self thus at p. 49                "......decline  myself to enter into  what  I               may  call  the original equities  which  might               have guided this matter.  It is, enough for me               that a long series of decisions, for certainly               half  a  century, have  established  the  bald               proposition, which is all I am insisting upon,               namely’.  that although the machinery may  not               be part of the freehold, it yet is to be taken               into  account,  and in saying that, I  do  not               want to muffle it in a phrase, but what I mean               by that is, that to increase the amount of the               rate which is exacted from the tenant you  may               enter  into that question and form a  judgment               upon  it, although, as a matter of  fact,  the               machinery  may  hot be attached to  the  free-               hold." There,  the Act in question was Parochial Assessment.   Act, 1836  under  which  the  assessment  of  hereditaments   was regulated  on the principle that the rateable value was  the rent   which  might  be  expected  to  be  given   for   the hereditament  alone.   The  contention  on  behalf  of   the appellant  before  the  House of Lords  was  that  machinery affixed  to the soil so as to become a part of the  freehold must  be taken into account in assessing the rateable  value but no other machinery.  Delivering judgment, Lord  Halsbury pointed out that :               "The  overseer  had  a  comparatively   simple               problem  to  solve, although it  is  difficult               enough  sometimes;  he sees  the  place  being               conducted as a brewery, or an iron foundry, or               what not., he looks at the premises, he  looks               at  the  furniture  which  is  necessary   for               carrying  on  the  business as  a  brewery  or               foundry; he does not in his own mind  analyze,               and to my mind he ought ’not to analyze,  what               would be likely to be the initial arrangements               between  the intended brewer and the owner  of

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             the  freehold, to see who should provide  this               or  that engine, or what not, but he looks  at               the  premises as they are, as they  are  being               occupied,  and as they are being used, and  he               says  to himself, "Well, looking at the  whole               of the place, such and such is the rent  which               would  probably be paid by a tenant from  year               to year for such an establishment as this." (1)  [1906] A.C. 43  701 .rm60   The  problem  in  our case is not quite.  the  same.   The hypothetical tenant would certainly take, into Consideration the machinery in the building if he was going to rent it for the  purpose  of  running a textile  factory.   But  if  the State  Legislature had power to levy a tax only on land  and buildings,  we  do not see how the same could be  levied  on machinery  contained  in  or situate on  the  building  even though the machinery was there for the use of the building for a particular purpose. It therefore appears to us that r. 7(2) of the rules  framed under  the  Bombay Act of 1949 was  beyond  the  legislative competence of the State.  The rule also suffers from another defect,  namely, that it does not lay down any principle  on which  machinery is to be specified by public notice by  the Commissioner to be deemed to form part of such building  for the  purpose  of fixing the, rateable value.  To  this,  Mr. Setalvad  argued  that  if the building  was  equipped  with machinery  for  the  purpose  of  running  a  textile  mill, whatever  machinery  was  there for  the  purpose  would  be valued.   According to him, the question would be, which  of the  machinery would help in the enjoyment of  the  property and  thereby add to its rateable value.  Unfortunately,  the specification  of the classes is done from time to  time  by the  Commissioner  with  the  approval  of  the  Corporation irrespective  of  the question as to where they  are  to  be found.   It therefore depends on the arbitrary will  of  the Commissioner as to what machinery he would specify and  what he  would  not.   Moreover, he is the only  person  who  can examine this question.  There is no right of appeal from any specification made under sub-r. (3) of r. 7 except that  the Commissioner is to act under the directions of the  Standing Committee.  Rule 7(2) shows that all plant and machinery may not  be taken into account for the purpose of valuation  and any  such  plant or machinery which is not included  in  the classification may escape rateability however much they  may be prized by the tenant who takes the premises on rent.   It seems  to  us,  therefore,  that  r.  7(2)  is  beyond   the legislative  competence of the State Legislature and  sub-r. (3)  of r. 7 is also invalid on account of  excessive  dele- gation of powers by the Legislature. In  view  of the above, it is not necessary to go  into  the question  as  to whether the Deputy  Municipal  Commissioner could exercise quasi-judicial powers of the Commissioner  as regards  the  determination of the rateable value  under  s. 49(1) of the Act and we express no opinion thereon. In  the  result,  the  petitions are  allowed.   A  writ  of mandamus  will issue in each case directing  the  respondent No.  1, Municipality, to treat the relevant entries  in  the assessment  book for the years 1964-65. 1965-66 and  1966-67 relating to special property 702 section  questioned  in  these  petitions  as  invalid   and cancelled;  and directing respondent No. 1 to prepare  fresh assessment lists for the said years relating to the  textile

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mills  and  other properties dealt within the  said  special property section.  The petitioners are entitled to costs  of these applications.  One set of hearing fee. G.C.                  Petitions allowed. 703