18 January 1961
Supreme Court
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UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS Vs MAHARAJA KRISHNAGARH MILLS LTD.(IN LIQUIDATION).

Case number: Appeal (civil) 252 of 1956


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PETITIONER: UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: MAHARAJA KRISHNAGARH MILLS LTD.(IN LIQUIDATION).

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/01/1961

BENCH: SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) BENCH: SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) DAS, S.K. SARKAR, A.K. AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA MUDHOLKAR, J.R.

CITATION:  1961 AIR  683            1961 SCR  (3) 524  CITATOR INFO :  R          1964 SC 207  (10)

ACT: Cotton  Excise  Duty-Agreement  between  President  and  Raj Pramukh of Part B State-Right of Union to collect arrears of such duty Payable to the State-Constitution of India,  Arts. 277, 278.

HEADNOTE: The question for determination in the appeal was whether the Union  of India was entitled to levy and recover arrears  of excise duty on cotton cloth for the period April 1, 1949, to March  31, 1950, payable by the respondent, a cloth mill  in the  State of Rajasthan, under the Rajasthan  Excise  Duties Ordinance, 1949.  After the coming into force of the  Indian Constitution  and  the extension of the Central  Excise  and Salt Act, 1944, and the rules framed thereunder to the State of  Rajasthan by s. II of the Finance Act of 1950, the  duty in respect of cloth manufactured on and from April 1,  1950, became  payable  under  that  Act.   The  appellant   Union, however,  claimed that as a result of the agreement  entered into  on February 25, 1950, by the President of  India  with the  Rajpramukh of Rajasthan under Art. 278 and Art. 295  of the Constitution, the Union of India became entitled as from April  1, 1950, to claim and recover all arrears  of  excise duties which the State of Rajasthan was entitled to  recover from the respondent before the Central Excise and Salt  Act, 1944,  was  extended  to  Rajasthan.   Notice  having   been accordingly  served on the respondent demanding  payment  of the outstanding amount of Rs. 1,36,551-12 as payable by  it, it moved the High Court under Art. 226 of the  Constitution. On a reference by the Division Bench which heard the  matter in  the first instance, the Full Bench finding in favour  of the respondent held that Art. 277 was a complete  refutation of  the  said claim by the Union and Art. 278 and  the  said agreement were overridden by it. Held,  that the provisions of Arts. 277 and 278 of the  Con- stitution, properly construed, leave no manner of doubt that Art. 277 was in the nature of a saving provision, subject in

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terms  to the provisions of Art. 278, permitting the  States to levy a tax or duty which, after the Constitution could be levied only by the centre.  But Art. 277 had to yield  place to  any agreement in respect of such taxes and  duties  made between the Union Government and the Government of a Part  B State under Art. 278. Since there could not be the least doubt in the instant case that the agreement between the President and the  Rajpramukh of  Rajasthan  conceded to the Union the right to  levy  and collect the arrears of the cotton excise duty in  Rajasthan, the  High Court was wrong in taking a contrary view  of  the matter. 525

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 252 of 1956. Appeal  from  the judgment and decree  dated  September  29, 1953,  of the Rajasthan High Court (Jaipur Bench)  in  Civil Writ Application No. 28 of 1951. Gopal Singh and T. M. Sen, for the appellants. S.   N.  Andley, J. B. Dadachanji and P. L.  Vohra,for   the respondent. 1961.  January 19.  The Judgment of the Court was  delivered by SINHA,  C.  J.-This appeal on a certificate granted  by  the Jaipur  Bench of the High Court of Judicature for  Rajasthan that " the case involves a substantial question of law as to the  interpretation  of Arts. 277, 278, 294 and 295  of  the Constitution  of India and the case is a fit one for  appeal to  the Supreme Court under Art. 132(1) and also under  Art. 133(1)(c) of the Constitution of India" is directed  against the judgment dated September 29, 1953, of the High Court  of Judicature  for Rajasthan at Jaipur to the effect  that  the appellant, the Union of India, was not entitled to levy  and recover  arrears  of  excise duty on cotton  cloth  for  the period   April  1,  1949,  to  March  31,  1950,  from   the respondent, the Maharaja Krishnagarh Mills Ltd. The  facts of this case, which have not been in  dispute  at any  stage  of  the proceedings, may shortly  be  stated  as follows.   The  respondent  is  a  cloth  mill  located   in Krishnagarh  in District Jaipur in the State  of  Rajasthan. It  had a stock of manufactured cloth on April 1, 1949,  and also  manufactured cloth during the period, April  1,  1949, and March 31,1950.  In respect of such cloth an excise  duty became payable under the Rajasthan Excise Duties  Ordinance, 1949  (XXV of 1949), at rates set forth in the  schedule  to the  Ordinance.  The sum of Rs. 1,56,291 odd became  payable on  that account out of which only a sum of Rs.  19,739  odd was  paid to the Government of Rajasthan, thus  leaving  the sum of Rs. 1,36,551 odd outstanding against the  respondent. After  the Indian Constitution came into effect the  Central Excise and 526 Salt  Act,  1944,  and  the  rules  framed  thereunder  were extended  to the State of Rajasthan by s. 11 of the  Finance Act  of 1950.  Hence, the duty became payable in respect  of the cloth manufactured on and from April 1, 1950, under  the provisions  of  that Act.  The appellant claimed that  as  a result of the agreement between the Government of India  and the State of Rajasthan, to be noticed hereinafter in detail, and of the Constitution, the Union of India became  entitled to realise the arrears of the excise duty in respect of  the cloth  manufactured by the respondent before April 1,  1950.

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In  enforcement of that claim the Superintendent of  Central Excise, Jaipur, served a notice dated February 16, 1951,  on the  respondent demanding payment of the outstanding  amount of Rs. 1,36,551 odd.  The respondent thereupon filed a  writ petition in the High Court of Rajasthan, Jaipur, under  Art. 226 of the Constitution against (1) the Union of India,  (2) the  Central Board of Revenue, Delhi, (3) the  Collector  of Central   Excise   for  Rajasthan,  Delhi,   and   (4)   the Superintendent  of  Central  Excise,  Jaipur,  who  are  the appellants  before  us, praying for a  writ  of  prohibition against  them  prohibiting them from  imposing,  levying  or collecting any tax or duty by way of excise as also for  any appropriate direction, order or writ.  The writ petition was founded on the contentions that the notice of demand  served upon   the   respondent  as  aforesaid   was   illegal   and unauthorised  on the ground (1) that the Central  Government had no jurisdiction to levy any tax before January 26, 1950, (2)  that the Central Excise and ’Salt Act was not in  force in Rajasthan before April 1, 1950, and (3) that without  the application  of the rules framed by the  Central  Government under  s.  37 of the Central Excise and Salt Act,  1944,  to Rajasthan no duty could be imposed, levied or collected  and those  rules  were  made applicable  to  Rajasthan  only  on December 16, 1950. On behalf of the appellants, who were the respondents in the High Court, it was contended that it was got correct to  say that the rules framed under s, 37 527 of  the  Central  Excise  and  Salt  Act,  1944,  were  made applicable  to  the  State of Rajasthan  by  virtue  of  the notification  dated December 16, 1950, and it  was  asserted that those rules became applicable to the State of Rajasthan with effect from April 1, 1950, as a result of s. 11 of  the Finance Act, 1950.  It was also contended that by virtue  of s.  3  of Rajasthan Excise Duties Ordinance  (XXV  of  1949) promulgated  by His Highness the Rajpramukh of Rajasthan  on September 5, 1949, excise duty was levied on cloth and other articles produced and manufactured in Rajasthan on and after April 1, 1949, at the rates set forth in the first  schedule of  the  said  Ordinance.  It was  also  contended  that  in pursuance  of  Arts.  278 and 295 of  the  Constitution  the President  of India had entered into an agreement  with  the Rajpramukh  of Rajasthan on February 25, 1950,  whereby  the parties  agreed to accept the recommendations of the  Indian States Finance Enquiry Committee, 1948-49, contained in part I of its report, read with chapters 1, 11 and III of part II of  its  report, in so far as they applied to the  State  of Rajasthan  together  with the recommendations  contained  in Chapter  VIII of part 11 of the said report.  By  virtue  of the  said  agreement the Union of India became  entitled  to claim and recover all excise duties, whether assessed or un- assessed,  which  the  State of Rajasthan  was  entitled  to recover  from the respondent as from April 1,  1949,  before the  Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944, was extended to  the State of Rajasthan, as aforesaid. The matter was first heard by a Bench consisting of  Ranawat and  Sharma,  JJ., which, in view of the importance  of  the points  involved  in the case, referred  the  following  two points for decision by a larger Bench by its judgment  dated November 5, 1951:               "  1. Whether by virtue of Articles  278,  279               and  295 of the Constitution of India and  the               agreement  entered into between the  President               of  India and the Rajpramukh of  Rajasthan  on               the 25th of February, 1950, the Union of India

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             is  entitled  to levy and recover  arrears  of               excise   duty  on  cloth  held  in  stock   or               manufactured before the 1st of April, 1950,               68               528               in case excise duty thereon was payable to the               State of Rajasthan under the provisions of the               Rajasthan  Excise Duties Ordinance No.  25  of               1949 ?               2.    Whether    the   publication   of    the               Government  notification by which  the  Jaipur               Excise Rules were adopted under the provisions               of   the   Rajasthan  Excise   Ordinance   was               sufficient  publication within the meaning  of               s. 28 of the Rajasthan Excise Duties Ordinance               No. 25 of 1949, and whether the publication of               the aforesaid notification should be deemed to               have    been   properly    authenticated    by               authentication  of  the  publication  of   the               Ordinance.    If   not,   whether   want    of               authentication   would  have  the  effect   of               invalidating the said Excise Rules ? " The  case  was  then heard by a  Full  Bench  consisting  of Wanchoo,  C.J., Ranawat and Dave, JJ.  The judgment  of  the Court was delivered by the learned Chief Justice on November 24,  1952, in substance upholding the contentions raised  on behalf  of  the  petitioner  before  the  High  Court,   now respondent.  The High Court came to the conclusion that Art. 277  of the Constitution was a complete answer to the  claim of  the Government of India to collect the dues in  question for  any period anterior to April 1, 1950.  This  conclusion was  based  on the reasoning that  the  agreement  aforesaid between  the  Government  of India  and  the  Government  of Rajasthan was in effect overridden by Art. 277 and that  the agreement contemplated by Art. 278 was in respect of a  duty which was leviable by the Government of India.  By virtue of Art. 277 of the Constitution cotton excise duty was actually leviable  by  the State of Rajasthan up to March  31,  1950, because  Parliament  made the contrary provision  only  from April  1, 1950.  Therefore, it was further observed  by  the High  Court  that the effect of Art. 277 on Art 278  of  the Constitution  was that cotton excise duty could not be  said to  be  leviable by the Government of India so  far  as  the State  of Rajasthan was concerned up to March 31, 1950.   In view  of that conclusion it was further held that the  right to collect the arrears of excise duty in question could  not be held to have been transferred to the Union of India 529 by  virtue of the agreement aforesaid of February 25,  1950. The  first  question  referred to the Full  Bench  was  thus answered in favour of the petitioner in the High Court.  The second   question   relating   to   the   publication    and authentication  of  the Excise Rules was  also  answered  in favour  of the petitioner, now respondent.  The  High  Court held  that  the Hindi Gazette relied upon on behalf  of  the Government  did not contain any authentication of the  Rules and did not show by whose authority they had been published. This conclusion was based on the ground that the  contention raised  on behalf of the Government that the publication  in the  Gazette  and the authentication therein  did  not  only apply  to the Ordinance but covered the Rules also, was  not correct.   The  answers  given  by the  Full  Bench  to  the questions referred to it by the Division Bench were returned to  the Bench concerned and the Bench, in pursuance  of  the opinion  of  the Full Bench, ordered by its  judgment  dated

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September 29, 1953, that "a direction be issued against  the opposite party not to recover from the petitioner the amount of Rs. 1,36,551-12 as per their notice of demand of the 16th of  February, 1950.  The petitioner shall get costs of  this petition  from the respondents." The Union of India  applied for and obtained the necessary certificate, as quoted above, from the High Court of Rajasthan.  That is how the matter is before this Court. It is manifest that if the opinion of the Full Bench on  the second  question  referred  to as  to  the  publication  and authentication  of  the  Rules is  correct,  then  no  other question  will arise for determination by this  Court.   It’ the  Rules under the Rajasthan Excise Duties Ordinance,  XXV of   1949,   had   not   been   properly   promulgated   and authenticated,  then  the Ordinance by itself could  not  be sufficient for the levy and collection of the tax sought  to be  imposed.   It is, therefore, necessary for us  first  to determine  that  controversy.   At the  outset,  it  may  be mentioned that the writ petition filed by the respondent  in the  High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution  did  not allege any facts bearing on this part of the controversy. 530 Thus,  there was no foundation laid in the pleadings  for  a contention that the Rules aforesaid had not been promulgated on  a  proper  authentication.  As  already  indicated,  the petition was founded only on the lack of power in the  Union Government  to  levy  and  collect  the  excise  duty   with reference  to the provisions of the Central Excise and  Salt Act  of 1944 and the Rules framed thereunder.  There  is  no reference  to  the  provisions  of  Ordinance  XXV  of  1949 promulgated by the Rajasthan Government.  It was only in the reply  to  the writ petition made by the respondent  in  the High Court that reliance was placed upon the said  Ordinance and  the  Rules  framed  thereunder.  We  do  not  find  any pleadings,  or  any  petition by way  of  amendment  of  the pleadings, in the record of this case raising the contention that the Rules framed under the Ordinance aforesaid had  not been  promulgated  on  a proper  authentication.   The  High Court,  therefore,  on the face of the  pleadings,  was  not justified  in permitting the petitioner before it  to  raise this contention, but our decision need not be rested on  the lack  of  pleadings only.  We have  examined  the  Rajasthan Gazette,  the Hindi version of which is  entitled  Rajasthan Raj Patra published by authority of the Rajasthan Government dated   Margashirsa  Krishna  7,  Saturday,   Samvat   2006, containing  the  notification dated  Jaipur,  September  15, 1949,  the preamble of which states that Shriman  Rajpramukh had  made and promulgated the following Ordinance which  was being  published  for the information of the public  and  it purports  to have been authenticated by the  Law  Secretary, Sanyukta   Rajasthan  Sarkar.   Under  that   authentication follows the Ordinance, XXV of 1949, dated September 5, 1949. The Ordinance goes to the end of page 169 and from the  next page 170 ending with page 172 appear the Rules.  They  begin with the declaration which may be translated as follows:               "  In exercise of the powers  conferred  under               ss.  5 and 26 of the Rajasthan  Excise  Duties               Ordinance  of  1949 the  Rajasthan  Government               orders  that till new Rules are  framed  under               the said Ordinance, the Rules framed under the               Jaipur Excise Duties Act               531               of 1945 known as the Jaipur Excise Duty  Rules               of 1945 will be in force throughout the  whole               of Rajasthan with necessary modifications  and

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             for this purpose will be treated as made under               the Rajasthan Ordinance." It  would  thus appear that the authentication  by  the  Law Secretary  appearing  on the first page of  the  Gazette  as aforesaid  was intended to govern not only the Ordinance  in question  but  also  the Rules which  had  been  promulgated thereunder.  Apparently, s. 28 of the Ordinance which ran-               "  All  rules made  and  notifications  issued               under this Ordinance shall be made and  issued               by publication in the Rajasthan Gazette.   All               such  rules and notifications shall  thereupon               have effect as if enacted in this Ordinance "- was understood to authorise such a mode of promulgation  and authentication.   The  authority that promulgated  the  rule having intended the signature of the Law Secretary appearing at the beginning of the publication as an authentication  of the rules, we are of opinion that the formal requirements of s. 8 (2) of the Ordinance V of 1949 were satisfied.  Whether the   authentication  appears  in  the  beginning   of   the notification or at the end of it is not material so long  as it is clear on a reference to the publication in the Gazette that   the   matter   is  substantially   covered   by   the authentication,  whether appearing at the beginning  or  the end of the notification.  The High Court, therefore, was  in error  in coming to the conclusion that  the  authentication covered  the  Ordinance  proper  without  the  Rules  framed thereunder.   The correct conclusion from the record  as  it stands   is  that  the  authentication  covers  the   entire notification  including  both the Ordinance proper  and  the Rules framed thereunder which became parts of the Statute. In  view  of  this conclusion it becomes  necessary  now  to examine  the ratio of the decision of the High Court on  the first question referred to it, namely, the authority of  the Union  of  India  to  realise the arrears  of  the  duty  in question.  It is clear in view of our conclusion 532 that the Ordinance and the Rules framed thereunder have been properly  promulgated  in  the Official  Gazette,  that  the Government  of Rajasthan was entitled to levy  and  collect the  duty  of excise in respect of. cotton  cloth  from  the respondent.  As a matter of fact, the respondent appears  to have paid about Rs. 19,739 odd out of the duty payable by it to  that  Government.  The remaining amount  for  which  the notice  of  demand had been issued by the  official  of  the Government of India was certainly payable to the  Government of  Rajasthan.  We have, therefore, to consider whether  the Government  of India by any process of law stepped into  the shoes of the Rajasthan Government in respect of the  arrears aforesaid.   In this connection reliance was placed  on  the agreement between the President of India and the  Rajpramukh of   Rajasthan  dated  February  25,  1950.   The   relevant provisions of the agreement are these:               "  Whereas provision is made by Articles  278,               291, 295 and 306 of the Constitution of  India               for   certain  matters  to  be   governed   by               agreements between the Government of India and               the Government of a State specified in Part  B               of     the    First    Schedule     to     the               Constitution............               Now, therefore, the President of India and the               Rajpramukh of Rajasthan have entered into  the               following agreement, namely:-               The  recommendations  of  the  Indian   States               Finance Enquiry Committee, 1948-49  (hereafter               referred  to  as the Committee)  contained  in

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             Part I of its Report read with Chapters 1,  11               and III of Part 11 of its Report in so far  as               they   apply   to  the  State   of   Rajasthan               (hereafter referred to as the State)  together               with the recommendations contained in  Chapter               VIII of Part 11 of the Report, are accepted by               the  Parties hereto, subject to the  following               modifications, namely............ The  modifications  are  not material  to  this  case.   The agreement  thus incorporates as terms of the  agreement  the report of the Committee, the relevant portion of which is in these terms:- 533               "  With effect from the prescribed  date,  the               Centre will take over all ’federal’ sources of               Revenue and all ’federal’ items of expenditure               in  State together with the administration  of               the  Departments concerned.  The  Centre  must               also  take  over  all  current  out  standings               (including  pending assessments, refunds,  and               arrears),  liabilities, claims, etc., and  all               productive  and  unproductive  capital  assets               connected with these Departments.  " It  is  common  ground that  "federal  sources  of  revenue" include  the duty of excise in question.  It is  also  clear that  all outstanding dues from assessees including  pending assessments  and  arrears  have been by  the  terms  of  the agreement  made over to the Centre.  This agreement, as  the preamble itself indicates, has been made in accordance  with the  provisions  of Arts. 278 and 295 of  the  Constitution. The relevant portions of Art. 278 are as under:-               "  278. (1) Notwithstanding anything  in  this               Constitution,  the  Government of  India  may,               subject to the provisions of clause (2), enter               into  an  agreement with the Government  of  a               State  specified  in  Part  B  of  the   First               Schedule with respect to-               (a)   the  levy and collection of any  tax  or               duty  leviable by the Government of  India  in               such  State  and for the distribution  of  the               proceeds thereof otherwise than in  accordance               with the provisions of this Chapter;......               and, when an agreement is so entered into, the               provisions  of this Chapter shall in  relation               to such State have effect subject to the terms               of such agreement." It  is noteworthy that the provisions of Art.  278  override pro  tanto  other provisions of the  Constitution  including Art.  277  and  the  terms of  the  agreement  override  the provisions  of the Chapter, namely, Chapter I of  Part  XII. In this Chapter are contained Arts. 264 to 291.  Thus, on  a construction of the pro. visions of Arts. 277 and 278, it is clear  that  in  the absence of any  agreement  between  the Government of India and the Government of a State  specified in Part B, duties of customs which immediately before 534 the  commencement  of the Constitution were  being  lawfully levied  by  the Government of such a State  continue  to  be levied by that State until provision to the contrary is made by  Parliament by law, notwithstanding that such a  duty  is mentioned in the Union List.  Article 277, therefore, is  in the  nature of a saving provision permitting the  States  to levy a tax or a duty which, after the Constitution, could be levied  only by the Centre.  But Art. 277 must yield to  any agreement  made  between  the Government of  India  and  the

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Government of a State in Part B in respect of such taxes  or duties,  etc.  The pro. vision to the contrary  contemplated by Art. 277 was made by the Finance Act, XXV of 1950, s. 11, which extended the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944,  along with  other Acts to the whole of India except the  State  of Jammu  and Kashmir.  But that section has effect  only  from April  1, 1950, and therefore does not apply to the  arrears of  duty  of  excise  now  in  controversy.   The  agreement envisaged  by  Art.  278 was entered into  as  aforesaid  on February  25, 1950.  That agreement conceded to  the  Centre the  right  to levy and collect the arrears of the  duty  in question.   The  reasons  given by the High  Court  for  the conclusion that in spite of Art. 278 read with the agreement aforesaid, the Union Government was not entitled to  realise the arrears are-(1) that the agreement does not contain  any specific  provision  about  levy and  collection  of  cotton excise duty in Rajasthan, (2) that the mere approval in  the agreement  of  the principles set out in the report  is  not enough in view of Art. 277 which made a distinctly different provision from that contemplated in the report and (3)  that the agreement could be only with respect to a duty which was leviable  by the Government of India.  In our opinion,  none of these reasons aforesaid can stand in the way of the Union of  India.  Though the agreement does not in terms refer  to levy  and collection of cotton excise duty in Rajasthan,  it is clear that the agreement has to be read with the relevant portions of the report quoted above.  So read, there  cannot be the least doubt that cotton excise duty in Rajasthan,  as a " federal 535 source  of revenue," is also covered by the agreement.   Nor is it correct to say that the agreement read with the report is  not enough to override the provisions of Art. 277.   The agreement  read  with  Art. 278, as  already  indicated,  in terms, overrides the provisions of Art. 277.  The only other reason which weighed with the High Court in getting over the terms of Art. 278 cannot also hold good.  That a duty of the kind  now in controversy on the date of the agreement  after coming  into force of the Constitution is leviable  only  by the  Government  of India even in respect of  the  State  of Rajasthan  is clear beyond all doubt.  The Union List  only, namely,  entry  84 in the Seventh Schedule,  authorises  the levy  and collection of the duty in question.   Neither  the State  List,  List II, nor the Concurrent  List,  List  III, contains  any such authorisation.  It is true that Art.  277 has  saved,  for  the time being, until  Parliament  made  a provision  to  the  contrary,  the power  of  the  State  of Rajasthan  to  levy such a duty, but that is only  a  saving provision,  in terms subject to the provisions of Art.  278. Thus, the combined operation of Arts. 277 and 278 read  with the agreement vests the power of levy and collection of  the duty in the Union of India.  It is only in the absence of an agreement  like  the  one  we have in  this  case  that  the Rajasthan Government could continue to levy and collect  the duty in question.  The agreement between the two Governments completely  displaced  the operation of Art. 277  in  regard inter  alia to the levy of this duty so far as the State  of Rajasthan  is concerned.  It is clear, therefore,  that  the High  Court was in error in holding that Art,. 277  was  any answer  to the claim of the Government of India  and  should override the provisions of Art. 278 read with the agreement. On  a  proper  construction  of  these  provisions,  in  our opinion,  the result is just to the contrary.  In this  view of  the  matter, it is not necessary to consider  the  other arguments advanced on behalf of the appellants, whether Art.

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295 should prevail over Art. 277. For  the reasons aforesaid, this appeal is allowed  and  the decision of the High Court set aside.  The result 69 536 is  that  the writ petition filed by the respondent  in  the High Court stands dismissed with costs here and in the High Court.                          Appeal allowed.