07 February 1962
Supreme Court
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RAMA KRISHNA RAMANATH Vs THE JANPAD SABHA, GONDIA

Bench: SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ),SUBBARAO, K.,AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA,MUDHOLKAR, J.R.,AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
Case number: Appeal (civil) 188 of 1956


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PETITIONER: RAMA KRISHNA RAMANATH

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE JANPAD SABHA, GONDIA

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/02/1962

BENCH: AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA BENCH: AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) SUBBARAO, K. MUDHOLKAR, J.R.

CITATION:  1962 AIR 1073            1962 SCR  Supl. (3)  70  CITATOR INFO :  R          1964 SC1013  (14)  AFR        1964 SC1166  (6)  RF         1991 SC1676  (70,59)

ACT: Legislative   Power-Terminal  Tax-Imposition   by   District Council  under Provincial Statute-Constitution  Act  Placing tax  in Federal Legislative List-Saving  provision-Power  of Provincial Legislature to continue tax C.P. and Berar  Local Self  Government Act, 1920 (C. P. 4 of 1920)-C.P. and  Berar Local  Government Act, 1948 (C.P.38 of 1948).s.192-C.P.  and Berar  Local  Government (Amendment) Act, 1949 (C.P.  32  of 1949)-Government of India Act, 1045 (36 Geo. 5 Ch. 2. s. 143 (2).

HEADNOTE: Under  the C. P. and Berar Local Self Government  Act  1920, the  District  Council  of  Bhandara.  in  1925,  imposed  a terminal tax on the export of bidis and bidi leaves by  rail out  of Bhandara district.  By the Government of India  Act, 1935,  terminal tax was included in the Federal  Legislative List  but  s. 143 (2) of the Act provided that  such  a  tax which  was  being lawfully levied under a law  in  force  on January  1, 1935, may continue to be levied until  provision to  the contrary was made by the Federal  Legislature.   The District Council continued to leavy and collect the tax.  In 1948  the  C P. and Berar Local Government Act,  1948,  came into  force  which repealed the 1920 Act.  It  replaced  the District  Council,  Bhandara, with  three  janapada  Sabhas. Clause  (c)  ;of the proviso to the saving  section  s.  192 provided  that  ’all  rates, taxes and  cesses  due  to  the District  Council shall be deemed to be due to the Sabha  to whose area they pertained, 71 By  an  amending  Act of  1949  the  Provincial  Legislature replaced  cl. (b) of the proviso to s. 192 by a new cl.  (b) which,  inter alia, continued in force all taxes which  were in  force  immediately before the commencement of  the  1948 Act, this amendment was given retrospective effect from  the

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commencement of 1948 Act.  The appellant contended that  the 1948  Act  which  repealed the 1926 Act did  not  save  the terminal  tax,  and  once  the  tax  was  discontinued   the Provincial Legislature had no power left to impose it afresh and   that   the  amendment  was  accordingly   beyond   its legislative  competence_.  The respondent contended that  s. 143 (2) of the Government of India Act, 1935. vested in  the Provincial Legislature plenary power to legislate in respect of  every  tax  which  was  being  lawfully  levied  in  the province, that cl. (c) of the proviso to s. 192 of the  1948 Act  saved the tax and that the amendment was  validly  made and it saved the tax with retrospective effect from the date of the repeal of the 1920 Act. Held,  that  the terminal tax was validly continued  by  the retrospective amendment of cl. (b) to the proviso of s.  192 of  1948  Act.  Section 143 (2) of the Government  of  India Act,  1935, did not confer upon the  Provincial  Legislature any  plenary power of legislation in respect of taxes  which were  being  validly imposed.  But it did  confer  upon  the Provincial Legislature a limited legislative power to  enact a  law with reference to the tax levy so as to continue  it. The  power of the Provincial Legislature to repeal the  1920 Act which imposed the tax was co-extensive with its power to enact  such a law.  In exercise of this limited  legislative power the Provincial Legislature was competent to enact  the Amending Act of 1949. Attorney-General  for  Ontario v. Attorney-General  for  the Dominion, [1896] A.C. 348, referred to. Clause (c) of the proviso to s. 192 of the 1948 Act did  not save  the future imposition of the tax; it  merely  provided for the collection of taxes already accrued in favour of the District  Councils  by the successor Sabhas.  The  words  in this  clause "due to the District Council" referred only  to taxes  which  had accrued on the date of the repeal  of  the 1920  Act and did not include taxes which accrued later  and became  payable  subsequent to that  date.   The  subsequent amendment  of  1949  could not be take  a  into  account  in construing cl. (c) and for determining the intention of  the legislature.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals  Nos. 188 to 191 of 1956. 72 Appeals from that judgment and decree dated April 13,  1955, of the former "Nagpur High Court in Civil Suits Nos. 3, 4, 9 and 10 of 1955 (Original Nos.  M.C.C. 194, 195, 200 and  202 of 1954). M.   C. Setalvad, Attorney-General .for India. A. V. Viswanatha  Sastri,  J. V. Jakatdar and I. N’.  Shroff,  for the, appellant (in C. A., No. 188 of 56). H.   N.  Sanyal, Additional Solicitor General of India,  and G. C. Mathur, for the respondent (in C. A. No. 188 of 56). J.   V: Jakatdar and 1. N. Shroff for the appellants (in  C. As.  Nos. 189 to 191 of 56). S.   T. Desai and G. C. Mathur, for the respondent (in C. A. No. 190 of 56). G.   C.  Mathur, for the respondent (in C. As. Nos. 189  and 191 of 56). 1962.   February 7. The Judgment of the Court was  delivered by AYYANGAR, J.-Section 143(2) of the Government of India  Act, 1935 enacted.

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             "43(2).   Any  taxes, duties, cesses  or  fees               which, immediately before the commencement  of               Part  III  of this Act,  were  being  lawfully               levied    by   any   Provincial    Government,               municipality or other local authority or  body               for    the   purposes   of    the    Province,               municipality,  district  or other  local  area               under  a  law  in force on the  first  day  of January,  nin eteen hundred  and  thirty-five,               may, notwithstanding that those taxes, duties,               cesses  or fees are mentioned in  the  Federal               Legislative  List, continue to be levied  and               to  be  applied  to the  same  purposes  until               provision  to  the  contrary is  made  by  the               Federal Legislature." The precise import, significance and effect of the 73 words  "continue to be levied and to be applied to the  same purposes  until  provision to the contrary is  made  by  the Federal Legislature" is the common question which arises  in these  four  appeals  which  come before  us  by  virtue  of certificates  under Art. 132 of the Constitution granted  by the High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Nagpur. Section  51  of the Central Provinces and Berar  Local  Self Government Act, 1920 enacted :               "51. (1) Subject to the provisions of any  law               or  enactment  for the time being in  force  a               District  Council may, by a resolution  passed               by  a majority of not less than two-thirds  of               the  members  present  at  a  special  meeting               convened for the purpose, impose any tax, toll               or rate other than those specified in sections               24, 48, 49, and 50.               (2)....................................................               (3)................................................... By  virtue of the power thus conferred the District  Council of Bhandara which was "a local authority" constituted  under this  Act of 1920 imposed a tax on the export of  bidis  and bidi-leaves  by  rail  out of the  Bhandara  district  by  a resolution  dated May 14, 1925, as amended by another  dated April  18,  1926.  The tax was at the rate of  4  annas  per maund  on bidis and 2 annas per maund on bidi  leaves.   The Local Government framed rules for the collection of the  tax under  s. 79 of the Act of 1920, and the said tax was  being collected  by  this local authority on April 1,  1937,  when Part III of the Government of India Act came into force.  It is now common ground that the tax thus levied and  collected was "a terminal tax on goods carried by railway" covered  by entry  58  in the Federal, Legislative List-List  I  in  the Seventh  Schedule  to the Government of India Act  of  1935. The  result  of this tax being in  the  Federal  Legislative List, it is manifest, is that the Provincial Legislature 74 could  not  thereafter freshly impose such a tax  under  its legislative power.  By reason of the provision however of s. 143  (2)  of the Government of India  Act,  1935,  extracted earlier,  the  local  authority  continued  to  retain   the authority to  levy and collect the said tax  and  the  tax continued to be collected by the District Council even after April  1, 1937 when Part III of the Government of India  Act came into force.  While so, the Central Provinces and  Berar Local  Self  Government  Act, 1920,  was  repealed  and  was replaced by the Central Provinces and Berar Local Government Act, 1948, which came into force on June 11, 1948.  District Councils   which   were  the  units  of   local   government

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administration  under  the  Act of  1920  were  replaced  by Janpads  which comprised smaller areas and as a  result  the area  which  was  under the  jurisdiction  of  the  District Council  of Bhandara under the Local Self Government Act  of 1920, came to be constituted into three Janpads, viz., those of Gondia, Bhandara and Sakoli these being the three Tahsils comprised  in  the  district  and  the  three  Janpads  were administered by three Janpad Sabhas formed under the Act  of 1948.    There  were  provisions  in  the  later   enactment providing  for continuity in the powers to be  exercised  by the District Councils whom  the former replaced.  But  what is of relevance to the points arising in the present appeals are  those contained in a. 192 of the Act of 1948 which,  as originally enacted, ran               "On and from date on which this Act comes into               force,  the Central Provinces and Berar  Local               Self Government Act, 1920, shall be repealed :               Provided that-               (a)   all local authorities constituted  under               the said Act shall continue to function there-               under for such time till the constitution of               75               the  Sabhas as the Provincial Government  may,               by notification, specify;               (b)   all  rules and bye laws made, all  noti-               fications published, all orders issued and all               licences  and  permissions granted  under  the               said Act and in force immediately be-fore  the               commencement of this Act shall, so far as they               are  consistent  with this Act, be  deemed  to               have been respectively made, published, issued               and granted thereunder;,               (c)   all  rates, taxes and cesses due to  the               district Council or Local Board shall be deem-               ed  to be due to the Sabha to whose area  they               pertain; and               (d)   all  references made in any Act  of  the               Provincial  Legislature to the said Act  shall               be  read  as  if made to this Act  or  to  the               corresponding provision thereof." Pausing  here,  two  matters which figured  largely  in  the arguments  require to be noticed in the provisions  of  this section.   The first is that there was an express repeal  of the  Local Self Government Act of 1920 effected by the  main part of the section.  The second is that the repeal was  not absolute  and  unconditional but was modified, by  a  saving which  continued the operation of certain of the  provisions of  the repealed Act.  But the terms in which the  right  to collect the rates, taxes and cesges was continued in  favour of  the Janpad Sabhas which replaced the  District  Councils under cl. (c) was capable of being construed as not enabling the  future imposition of the rate, cess etc, by the  Janpad sabhas.   The scope and meaning of this clause which is  one of  the principal matters to be considered in these  appeals we  shall reserve for later consideration but at this  stage it  might be mentioned that the clause is certainly  capable of being understood as transferring to the Sabhas only 76 the  right to collect the rates, taxes or cesses  which  had accrued  due  to the District Councils  which  had  remained unpaid  on the date when by virtue of the first part of  192 the  Act  of 1920 stood repealed and the  District  Councils ceased  to exist.  If this were the proper meaning  of  this clause it is obvious that the Janpad Sabhas could no  longer levy  the terminal tax oil bidis and bidi-leaves  where  the

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export was effected on or after June 11, 1948, on which date by virtue of the Act of 1948, coming into force the  earlier Act of 1920, stood repealed. The Janpad Sabhas were, however, continuing the levy and the Provinoial Legislature sought to put the matter beyond doubt by  an amending Act of 1949 by which cl. (b) of the  proviso to s. 192 was replaced by a new clause reading:               ""All  rules  and bye laws  and  orders  made,               notifications and notices issued, licences and               permits  granted, taxes imposed  or  assessed,               ceases  (other than additional cesses  imposed               in  accordance  with section 49  of  the  said               Act),  fees, tolls or rates levied,  contracts               entered   into   and  suits   instituted   and               proceedings  taken under the said Act  and  in               force  immediately before the commencement  of               this Act shall continue to be in force and  in               so far as they are not inconsistent with  this               Act,  they  shall  be  deemed  to  have   been               respectively made, issued, granted, imposed or               assessed levied, entered into, instituted  and               taken under this Act until new provisions  are               made tinder the appropriate provisions of this               Act." and  by s. 39 of the Amending Act this amendment  was  given retrospective  effect  from the commencement  of  the  Local Government  Act of 1948.  It was not in dispute that if  the terms  of el. (b) as amended by the Act of 1949 had found  a place  in the Local Government Act of 1948  when  originally enacted. the levy of this tax by the Janpad Sabhas would 77 have  been valid.  It is only necessary to add that if  this tax   had  been  lawfully  levied  by  the   Janpad   Sabhas immediately before January 26, 1950, they could continue  to be    levied    after   Constitution   came    into    force nothwithstanding  the repeal of the Government of India  Act by the Constitution and notwithstanding terminal taxes being a  tax  solely leviable by the Union List in Sch.   VII)  by reason  of  the  provision  contained in  Art.  277  of  the Constitution reading:               "277.   Any  taxes.  duties,  ceases  or  fees               which, immediately before the commencement  of               this Constitution, were being lawfully  levied               by  the  Government  of any State  or  by  any               municipality or other local authority or  body               for  the purposes of the State,  municipality,               district  or  other local area  may,  notwith-               standing  that those taxes, duties, ceases  or               fees are mentioned in the Union List, continue               to  be  levied and to be applied to  the  same               purposes  until provision to the  contrary  is               made by Parliament by law." It would thus be seen that in order to sustain the claim, of the  respective  Janpad Sabhas who are  the  respondents  in these four appeals to continue to lawfully levy the terminal tax  it  should be established either that cl,  (c)  to  the proviso  to  a.  192  enabled them to  do  so  or  that  the amendment  effected to proviso (b) to a. 192 of the  Act  of 1948 was validly enacted. Before considering this question it would be of advantage if we  set  out  the facts of the cases under  appeal.   It  is sufficient to refer to the facts in Civil Appeal 188 of 1956 because,  except for the identity of the appellants and  the amounts  involved,  the  matter in  controversy  is  exactly similar, Rama Krishna Ramanath-appellant in Civil Appeal 188

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is  a  proprietary concern carrying on  business,  alia,  in manufacturing and selling bidis.  In the 78 course of that business they export bidis to various  places outside the territorial limits of the Janpad Sabha,  Gondia. The  Janpad Sabha, Gondia demanded and collected taxes  when the  export  took  place from railway  stations  within  its territorial  jurisdiction.   Between January 26,  1950,  and June  30,  1952,  the respondent  Sabha  had  collected  tax totaling  Rs. 3,818/15/3, the appellant  concern  contending that  from  the  date  of  the  coming  into  force  of  the Constitution  the imposition and collection of the  terminal tax  by the respondent Sabha was illegal, because the  right to  levy  terminal  taxes  was  vested  exclusively  in  the government of the Union under entry 89 in the First List  to the  7th Schedule to the Constitution and sought the  refund of  this  sum  of tax from the  respondent  Sabha  and  also required   that  it  should  desist  from   continuing   the imposition  and levy of this tax, and when the  request  was not  needed, served notice on the Sabha.  In consequence  of this notice though the Sabha discontinued the collection  of the   tax,   it   refused  to   refund   the   tax   already collected.Thereupon the  appellant  instituted a civil  suit inthe court of the    Civil Judge at Gondia praying for a decree for the sum of Rs. 3,818/15/3 and costs. The suit was resisted and thereafter this alongwithseveral      similar suits  including three by the appellants in the other  three appeals were all withdrawn to the High Court under Art.  228 of the Constitution for deciding the substantial question of law as to the interpretation of the Constitution and of  the Government of India Act as to whether the levy of the tax by the  respondent  Sabha was lawful or not  These  suits  were consolidated and were disposed of by a common judgment dated April 13, 1955, by which all the suits were dismissed but  a certificate was granted under Art. 132 of the  Constitution. On  the  strength of the certificate four of  the  aggrieved plaintiffs  filed appeals to the Courts and that is how  the matter is before us. 79 Before considering the submissions made to us by the learned Attorney-General for the appellant it would be convenient to state the exact factual position relating to the levy of the impugned tax : (1)The  tax being one on goods exported out of  the  local area by-rail would answer the description of a terminal  tax falling  within  the exclusive jurisdiction of  the  Central Legislature  under the Government of India.Act,  1935.   The position has continued to be the same under the distribution of  legislative  power  in  relation  to  taxes  under   the Constitution.  The result would, therefore, be that but  for the saving contained in s. 143(2) of the Government of India Act,  1935 it would not have been legally competent for  the local  authority  to  continue to levy  the  tax  after  the Government of India Act came into force ; similarly but  for Art.  277  that levy could not have  been  continued  beyond January  26, 1950.  On the facts stated earlier it would  be seen  that the right of the local authority to levy the  tax would  be ultimately dependent on the same being  authorised by s.     149(2) of the Government of India Act. (2)The,   tax  that  was  sought  to  be  levied  by   the respondent  Sabhas and which was challenged as  unauthorised and illegal was identical in the incidence as the tax  which the District Council of Bhandara lawfully levied, just prior to the commencement of Part III of the Government of  .India Act,  1935.  By incidence we mean the subjectmatter  of  the

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tax, the taxable event as well as the rate of the duty.   In other words, the tax now sought to be levied and that  which was  lawfully imposed and collected prior to April  1,  1937 were  exactly  identical  in  their  effect  and  operation. Similarly  there  was no controversy as regards  either  the identity  of the area in aid of whose  local  administration the  tax *as now sought to be collected, nor as regards  the purposes for which they 80 were  utilised as compared with what prevailed on  April  1, 1937. The  principle contention however, raised on behalf  of  the appellant  before the High Court was based upon a denial  of the identity of the authorities-three Janpad Sabhas with the District  Council, Bhandars which levied and  collected  the tax prior to April 1, 1937.  The learned Judges of the  High Court  rejected  this  contention and held  that  the  three Janpad  Sabhas  which  replaced  the  District  Council   of Bhandara  were  in  substance  identical  with  the   latter principally  for  the reason that the area  covered  by  the three  newly created Janpads was the same as that for  which the  District Council functioned and that the  purposes  for which  the  tax collected would be utilized which  are  the, criteria specified in s. 143(2)-were exactly the ’same, Just as it could not be disputed that if there were any change in the  composition of the District Council the identity  of  a local authority would not be altered for the purposes of  s. 143(2),  the mere splitting up of that local area for  being administered by a plurality of Local Government Units  would not  effect  any  change material for the  purposes  of  the continued  exigibility  of  the tax under  s.  143(2).   The learned  Attorney-General  therefore very properly  did  not press  before us this point based upon the disappearance  of the   District  Council  and  its  being  replaced  by   the respondent-Sabhas   as  any  ground  for  denying   to   the respondent-Sabhas the right to levy the tax. The only point that was urged before us in challenge of  the right of the respondent-Sabhas to continue the levy of  this terminal   tax  may  be  formulated  thus:  The   Provincial Legislature of Central Provinces & Berar in exercise of  its legislative  power  under item 13 of the  Provincial  Legis- lative List enacted the Local Government Act, 81 1948  and validly repealed the Act of 1920 under which  this tax was levied.  As part of the same legislation and  taking effect  at the same time it was open to that Legislature  to have  continued the provisions of the repealed Act of,  1920 under ,which the impugned tax was levied so as to enable the newly created Janpad Sabhas to exercise the fiscal powers of the District Councils which they replaced, thus so to  speak modifying  or  qualifying the repeal.   Such  a  continuance could be provided by a saving clause couched in  appropriate phraseology  to effectuate such an intention.  If  this  had been  done  the source of legal authority to  levy  the  tax would, even after the Act of 1948 came into force, have been the  repealed Act of 1920 which to the extent of the  saving would  be deemed to have continued in force.  But  this  was not  done.  There was, no doubt, a saving under the  proviso to  s. 192 but the saving in respect of the taxes which  was contained  in sub-cl.(c) to the proviso was confined to  the recovery  of taxes which had accrued due on the date of  the repeal but which still remained uncollected and the  purpose of  the  sub-clause was to effect a  distribution  of  those assets,  viz.,  of  the accrued arrears  among  the  several Janpad Sabhas which replaced each District Council, so  that

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when on June II, 1948, the Act of 1948 came into force,  the effect of it was that the repeal of the Act of 1920 was  for all purposes  relevant to the matter  now  in  controversy complete  and  with it the power to levy the tax  in  future stood.  extinguished,  save  only as regards  the  right  to collect  the arrears which had accrued due to  the  District Councils  before  that  date.   No  doubt,  the   Provincial Legislature effected an amendment to s. 192 in 1949 by which the  saving was extended to include the right of the  Janpad Sabhas  to  continue  to  levy the  impugned  tax  and  this amendment  was given retrospective effect as from Tune  11, 1948, but 82 this  amendment was beyond the legislative com.  petence  of the  Provincial Lagislature since in pith and  substance  it was  virtually a legislation expressly conferring  upon  the Janpad Sabhas the right to levy a terminal tax a right which they did not possess before that date and unless the  Legis- lature  was competent to enact a law in relation to  such  a tax  it  could not validly confer upon the  local  authority what  in  legal effect should be considered to  be  a  fresh right to levy the tax.  The argument was also presented in a slightly  different form by saying that on the terms  of  s. 143(2) of the Government of India Act there was a  provision only for the continuance of the tax and that when once  that continuity was broken by a valid piece’ of legislation  such as  took place in this case when the Local  Self  Government Act  1920  wes repealed without a  properly  drafted  saving clause   enabling  the  continued  levy  of  the  tax,   the discontinuity  created  thereby  could  not  thereafter   be repaired  and  the gal) filled by further  legislation  even though it purported to be with restrospective effect. Mr. Sanyal learned Additional Solicitor General who appeared for  the  respondent-Sabhas  submitted  several  answers  to sustain  the  validity of the continued imposition  of  the tax,  He  first urged that the effect of s. 143 (2)  of  the Government  of  India  Act, 1935 was in effect  to  vest  in Provincial  Legislatures  a plenary power  to  legislate  in respect  of  every tax which was being  lawfully  levied  by local  authorities  etc.  in  the  Province  prior  to   the commencement  of Part III of the Government of India Act  so "much  so that even if the amendment efrected to s.  192  by the  Local Government (Amendment) Act of 1949 be treated  as itself a fresh imposition of the tax its validity could  not bechallenged.  We must express our inability toaccept this extreme contention. Section 143    (2)   which   is   a saving clause and 83 obviously,  designed,  to  prevent  a  dislocation  of   the finances  of Local Governments and of local  authorities  by reason  of  the coming into force of the provisions  of  the Government  of India Act distributing heads of  taxation  on lines  different  from’ those which  prevailed  before  that date, cannot be construed as one conferring a plenary  power to  legislate on those topics till such time as the  Central Legislature     intervened.      Such     a     construction would’necessarily   involve  a  power  in   the   Provincial Legislature  to  enhance the rates of taxation-a  result  we must  say from which Mr. Sanyal did not shrink,  but  having regard  to the language of the section providing for a  mere continuity  and its manifest purpose this construction  must be rejected. The  next  point  urged  by Mr.  Sanyal  was  based  on  the construction  which  he  aought to  put on  cl.(c)  of  the proviso  to s. 192 of the Local Government Act of 1948.   He

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submitted  that  the words ,,due to the  District  Council" were  wide  and apt enough to include not merely  the  taxes that had accrued due on the date of the repeal of the Act of 1920  but  even the amounts which accrued later  and  became payable   subsequent  to  that  date-"Due"  he  said   meant ,,payable"  and  as  the words of the  sub-section  did  not specifically  limit the period when the cess became  payable to  some time anterior to the repeal of the Act of 1920.  it ought  to be read as including those amounts  which  accrued due  and  became  payable  even  thereafter.   We  find   it difficult to accept this submission either.  The  difficulty in  accepting it is created only in part by the use  of  the expression  "due"-  but the main hurdle in the  way  of  the respondent  is that what is saved by the sub-clause (and  is distributed  among  the  Janpad Sabbas  which  replaced  the District Councils), is specified as a cess’ rate etc. due to a  District  Council.   The  rate, cess or  duty  due  to  a District Council could obviously be only that which 84 had accured due to a District Council while that body was in existence  and with the extinction of the District  Councils by the repeal of the Act of   1920   there   could   be   no question of any further sums being due to such a body.   Mr. San-_Val  however  sought  to get  over  this  situation  by suggesting  that the words "due to a District Council"  were merely descriptive of the nature of the tax and did not pre- dicate that it was an amount due to a particular body on the date  when  it became due.  In our opinion this  is  not  an interpretation which the words could reasonably bear and  we have, therefore, no hesitation in rejecting this argument. It- was then submitted that even if the words of cl. (c)  of the proviso would not ordinarily include a saving as regards the  right  of  the Janpad Sabhas to levy  the  tax  in  the future, still we should adopt that construction as being  in consonance  with and for giving effect to the  intention  of the  legislature  which made it clear that that  was  so  by enacting the amendment to s. 192 by the Act of 1949 within a year  or  so after the Act of 1948.  We consider  that  this submission  also  deserves,  in  the  circumstances  of  the present case, to be rejected.  It is a cardinal principle of statutory construction that the intention of the legislature should be gathered from the words of the enactment.  If,  as we have held, those words are incapable of the  construction that there was a savig of the right of the Janpad Sabbas  to impose and collect the tax- apart from the right to  collect the  arrears  of tax which accured due  while  the  District Council   was  in  existence,that  construction  cannot   be modified and the legislative intent with which that  proviso was  enacted  supplemented  by  a  reference  to  what   the legislature did later.  No doubt, there is authority for the position  that  when  the meaning of the words  used  in  an enactment is ambiguos or obscure, subsequent statutes  might sometimes  be used as what has been termed "a  parliamentary exposition" of the obscure phraseology.  It is hardly 85 necessary to discuss the permissible limits of this node  of construction  for the purpose of the present  lase,  because the prime conditions for invoking that rule are absent here- there  is no obscurity or ambiguity in the words of el.  (c) and  secondly if the learned Attorney-General is right,  the Provincial Legislature had no legislative capacity to  enact the  Amending Act of 1949-and this must include  legislation either by way of explanation or exposition, and of course by positive  enactment.   If  there  is  incapacity  to   enact retrospective legislation on the matter, the position is not

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rendered   different   by  viewing   it   as   parliamentary exposition.   The validity of the amendment effected by  the Act  of  1949 must be judged independently and  on  its  own inerits  and  its  terms cannot be used as a  guide  to  the interpretation of what the legislature in enacting s. 192 of the Act 1948 intended by the words in cl. (c). The next submission was that as the Act of 1949 amended  the terms of s. 192 so as to save the power of the Janpad Sabhas to  levy  the cess with retrospective effect from  the  date when the Act of 1920 stood repealed, there was in the  eye of the law a continuity in the levy of the cese; or rate and so no hiatus or period of discontinuity existed ’such as had been  suggested  by  the learned  Attorney-General  and  the existence  of  which  was  the  entire  foundation  of   his argument.   It must, however, be mentioned that the  learned Attorney-General  was not oblivious of this feature  of  the legislation  of 1949, viz., that it purported to operate  as it were to close the gap, but his submission was that if, in fact,  the gap existed and there was factually a  period  of discontinaity,  the  legislature which had no  authority  to enact  positive legislation with reference to the  topic  in May   1949  was  incompetent  to  pass  an  enactment   with retrospective effect. In our opinion, this argument of Mr. Sanyal requires serious consideration and the answer would 86 turn on the proper construction of the terms of s. 143(2) of the  Government  of  India  Act.  The  first  matter  to  be considered  would be the source of the legislative power  to enact  the Local Government Act of 1948.  In so far  as  the constitution   of  local  authorities,   their   territorial distribution,  the endowing them with  powers,  jurisdiction and  authority  in general are  concerned,  the  legislative power therefore is to be found in entry 13 of the Provincial Legislative List II to Sch.  VII of the Government of  India Act, 1935 reading :               "Local   Government,  that  is  to  say,   the               constitution and powers of municipal  corpora-               tions,  improvement trusts,  district  boards,               mining settlement authorities and other  local               authorities  for  the purpose of  local  self-               government on village administration". It  must  however  be  observed  that  merely  because   the legislature  is  empowered under this  entry  to  constitute local   authorities   and vest  them   with   powers   and jurisdiction  it  would not follow that these  local  bodies could be vested with authority to levy any and every tax for the  purpose  of raising revenue for the purposes  of  local administration.   They could be validly authorised to  raise only those taxes which the Province could raise under and by virtue of the relevant entries in the Provincial Legislative List.  This is on the principle that the Province could  not authorise  local bodies created by it to impose taxes  which it  itself could not directly levy for the purposes  of  the Provincial  Government.  Now comes the question whether  the Provincial  Legislature  was competent, by  legislation,  to discontinue the levy of the tax by effecting a repeal of the taxing provision contained in the Local Self Government  Act of  1920.  There is no doubt that the general  principle  is that the power of a legislative body to repeal a law is  co- extensive  with its power to enact each a law, as  would  be seen from 87 the  following  passage in. the judgment by Lord  Watson  in Attorney-General  for  Ontario v. Attorney-General  for  the

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Dominion(1) :               "Neither  the  Parliament of  Canada  nor  the               provincial  legislatures  have  authority   to               repeal statutes Which they could not  directly               enact." But obviously its application in particular instances  would be controlled by express constitutional provision  modifying the same.  We have such provision in the case on hand in  s. 143(2) of the Government of India Act, 1935.  In the context the  relevant words of the sub-section could only mean  "May continue  to  be  levied if so  desired  by  the  Provincial Legislature" which is indicated by or is implicit in the use of  the  expression "May" in the clause  ’may  be  continued until  provision  to  the contrary is made  by  the  Federal Legislature."   This   would  therefore  posit   a   limited legislative  power in the Province to indicate or express  a desire  to continue or not to continue the levy.  If in  the exercise  of  this  limited power the  Province  desires  to discontinue  the  tax and effects a repeal of  the  relevant statute  the repeal would be effective.  Of course,  in  the absence  of legislation indicating a define  to  discontinue the  tax,  the effect of the provision of  the  Constitution would be to enable the continuance of the Dower to levy  the tax  but this does not alter the fact that the provision  by its  implication  confers  a limited  legislative  power  to desire or not to desire the continuance of the levy  subject to the overriding power of the Central Legislature to put an end  to  its  continuance  and it is on  the  basis  of  the existence  of this limited legislative power that the  right of  the  Provincial  Legislature  to  repeal  the   taxation provision  under the Act of 1920 could be  rested.   Suppose for   instance,   a  Provincial  Legislature   desires   the continuance of the tax but considers the rate too High and (1)[1896] A. C. 348, 366. 88 wishes  it  to be reduced and passes an enactment  for  that purpose,  it cannot be that the legislation  is  incompetent and  that  the  State  Government  must  permit  the   local authority to levy tax at the same rate as prevailed on April 1,  1937 if the latter desired the, continuance of the  tax. If such a legislation were enacted to achieve a reduction of the  rate  of  the duty,  its  legislative  competence  must obviously be traceable to the power contained in words  "may continue  to  be levied" in s. 143(2) of the  Government  of India  Act.  If we are right so far it would follow that  in the   exercise  of  this  limited  legislative   power   the Provincial Legislature would also have a right to  legislate for  the continuance of the tax provided, if of course,  the other conditions of s. 143(2) are satisfied, viz., (1)  that the  tax  was  one  which was lawfully  levied  by  a  local authority   for  the  purposes  of  a  local  area  at   the commencement  of Part III of the Government of India  Act.,. (2) that the identity of the body that collects the tax, the area  for  whose benefit the tax is to be utilised  and  the purposes for which the utilisation is to take place continue to  be the same and (3) the rate of the tax is not  enhanced nor  its  incidence  in  any  manner  altered,  so  that  it continues to be same tax.  If as we have hold earlier  there is  a limited legislative power in the Province to  enact  a law with reference to the tax levy so as to continue it, the validity of the Act of 1949 which manifested the legislative intent  to  Continue the tax without any  break,  the  legal continuity being established by the retrospective, operation of the provision, has to be upheld. The appeals therefore fail and are dismissed with  costs-one

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set of hearing fees. Appeals dismissed. 89