Municipal Board, Hapur Vs. Raghuvendra
Kripal & Ors [1965] INSC 189 (23 September 1965)
23/09/1965 HIDAYATULLAH, M.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ) WANCHOO, K.N.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION: 1966 AIR 693 1966 SCR (1) 950
CITATOR INFO:
F 1968 SC 255 (8) RF 1968 SC1232 (26,104) RF
1970 SC 58 (5) RF 1973 SC1374 (9) RF 1974 SC1660 (33) R 1975 SC1007 (13) R 1975
SC1069 (25,26) RF 1977 SC1055 (5) RF 1990 SC 322 (5) RF 1990 SC 548 (13)
ACT:
U.P. Municipalities Act (2 of 1916), ss. 131
to 135-Sections 131 to 134 whether mandatory-Section 135(3) whether ultra
vires-Whether suffers from excessive delegation or discrimination-Whether bad
as conferring judicial functions on State Government.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant Board passed a special resolution
on September 28, 1956, imposing water-tax in Hapur and a notification by the
Uttar Pradesh Government was published in the Uttar Pradesh Gazette under s.
135(2) of the U.P. Municipalities Act (2 of 1916) notifying the resolution.
Fifteen houseowners of Hapur who received notices from the appellant Board for
the payment of the tax petitioned to the High Court under Art. 226 ,of the
Constitution and asked for a writ or order preventingthe appellant Board from
realising the tax. The main objections were (a) that the resolution of the
appellant Board framing the proposal was not published in a local paper of
Hapur published in Hindi and (b) that the rules framed for the imposition of
the tax did not accompany the resolution which was affixed on the notice board
at the office of the appellant Board in purported compliance with the
requirements for publication. The imposition was also challenged on the ground
that Arts. 14 and 19 of the Constitution were violated. A single judge of the
High Court held that the tax was illegal inasmuch as the mandatory requirements
of the Municipalities Act were not complied with by the appellant Board while
imposing the tax and that s. 135(3) of the Act (which cures all defects in the
imposition of the tax by making the notification of Government conclusive
evidence of the legality of the imposition) was ultra vires Art. 14 of the
Constitution because it created a bar against proof and left no remedy to the
tax payers thereby making a discrimination between them and other litigants. He
further held that the sub-section by making Government the sole judge of
compliance with the Act conferred judicial power on Government contrary to the
intendment of the Constitution. The appellant Board appealed under the Letters
Patent. The Divisional Bench upheld the order of the single judge. The case was
however certified as fit for appeal under Art. 133 and the Board appealed to
this Court.
The contentions raised in appeal were: (i)
s.135(3) shuts out all ,enquiry into the procedure by which a tax had been
imposed and therefore suffered from excessive delegation of legislative
function. (ii) The tax had not been validly imposed a there had been
non-observance of mandatory provisions; (iii) s. 135(3) was discriminatory; and
(iv) the sub-section was also bad because it conferred judicial functions on
the State Government.
HELD : Per Gajendragadkar, C.J.,
Hidayatullah, Shah and Sikri. JJ.-(i) The rule of conclusive evidence in
s.135(3) does not shut out all enquiry by courts. There are certain matters
which cannot be established by a notification under s.135(3). For example no
notification can issue unless there is a special resolution under s. 134. The
special resolu951 tion is a sine qua non for the notification. Again the
notification cannot authorise the imposition of a tax not included in s. 128 of
the Municipalities Act. Neither the Municipal Board nor the State Government
can exercise such power. What the section does is to put beyond question the
procedure by which the tax is imposed, that is to say the various steps taken
to impose it. A tax not authorised, can never be within the protection afforded
to the procedure for imposing taxes. Such a tax may be challenged, not with
reference to the manner of imposition but as an illegal impost. [958 A-D] (ii)
There can be no doubt that some of the provisions of ss. 131 to 134 of the Act
are mandatory. But all of them are not of the same character. In the present
case, as in Raza Buland Sugar Co. Ltd. and in Berar Swadeshi Vanaspati, the provisions
not observed were of a directory character and therefore the imposition had the
protection of S.
135(3). [958 H] Raza Buland Sugar Co. Ltd. v.
Municipal Board, Rampur.
[1965] 1 S.C.R. 970 and Berar Swadeshi
Vanaspati v.
Municipal Committe, Committee Sheogaon &
Anr. [1962] 1 S.C.R. 596, relied on.
(iii) Mandatory provisions must be fully
complied with, and directory provisions should be substantially complied with.
In either case the agency for seeing to this compliance is the State
Government. It is hardly to be expected that the State Government would not do
its duty or that it would allow breaches of the provisions to go unrectified.
In cases of minor departure from the letter
of the law especially in matters not fundamental, it is for the Government to
see whether there has been substantial or reasonable compliance. Once
Government condones the departure, the decision of the Government is rightly
made final by making the notification conclusive evidence of the compliance
with the requirements of the Act. [959 H-960 D] (iv) The power to tax belongs
to the State Legislature but is exercised by the local authority under the
control of the State Government. It is impossible for the State Legislature to
impose taxes in local areas because local conditions and needs must very. The
power must be delegated. The taxes however are predetermined and a procedure
for consulting the wishes of the people is devised. But the matter is not left
entirely in the hands of the Municipal Boards. As the State Legislature cannot
supervise the due observance of its laws by the municipal Boards power is given
to the State Government to check their actions. The proceedings for the
imposition of the tax must come to a conclusion at some stage after which it
can be said that the tax has been imposed. That stage is reached, not when the
special resolution of the Municipal Board is passed but when the notification
by Government is issued.
After the notification all enquiry must
cease. This is not a case of excessive delegation unless one starts with the
notion that the State Government may collude with the Municipal Board to
disregard deliberately the provisions for The imposition of the tax. There is
no warrant for such a supposition. The provision making the notification conclusive
evidence of the proper imposition of the tax is conceived in the best interest
of compliance of the provisions by the Board and not to facilitate their
breach.
[960 F-961 E] Excessive delegation is most
often found when the legislature does not perform all the essential legislative
functions and leaves them to some other agency. The Legislature here performs
all essential functions in the imposition of the tax. The selection of the tax
for imposition in a municipal area is by the legislative will expressed in s.
128. Neither the Municipal Board, nor the Government can go outside the list of
taxes therein included. The procedure for the imposition of the tax is also,
laid down 952 by the Legislature for the Municipal Board to follow and the
State Government is there to ensure due observance of that procedure. in view
of all this there was no excessive delegation or conferral or legislative
functions on the appellant Board or the State Government. [961 F-962 C] (v)
There are numerous statutes including the Evidence Act, in which a fact is
taken to be conclusively proved from the existence of some other fact. The law
is full of fictions and irrebuttable presumptions which also involve proof of
facts. The tax payers in the Municipality are allowed to object to the proposal
for the tax and the rules and to, have their objections considered. They cannot
be allowed to keep on agitating. Section 135(3) which only concludes objections
against the procedure followed in the imposition of the tax cannot be said to
be discriminatory and -violative of Art. 14. [962 D-H] (vi) The objection that
the impugned sub-section involves the exercise of judicial functions not open
to the legislature is wholly erroneous. The subsection only shuts out further
enquiry and makes the notification final. [962 H] Per Wanchoo, J. (dissenting)
(i) Section 135(3) bars enquiry by courts into all procedural provisions
relating to imposition of taxes and therefore it bars enquiry into any matter
covered by s. 131 to S. 135(1) of the Act. It cannot be read down as barring
enquiry only into some procedural provisions i.e. from s. 131 to s. 133 and not
into the other procedural provisions i.e. s. 134 and s. 135(1). [968 D] Section
135(3) is not a rule of evidence; it is a substantive provision which lays down
in effect that once a notification under s. 135(2) is issued it will be
conclusively presumed that the tax is in accordance with all the procedural
provisions with respect to the imposition thereof. [969 E] Ishar Ahmad Khan v.
Union of India, [1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R.
235, referred to.
The effect of s. 135(3) is that the
procedural provisions are given the go by in the matter of imposition of tax
and as soon as a notification under s. 135(2) is shown to the court, the court
is helpless, in the matter even though none of the provisions of s. 131 to s.
135(1) may have been complied with. [969 H] (ii) In the field of local taxation
relating to municipal boards and district boards and similar other bodies there
are reasons for delegating :fixation of rate to such bodies subject to proper
safeguards. This is exactly what has been done under the Act subject to the
safeguards contained in ss. 131 to s. 135(1). If those safeguards are followed
the delegation would be proper delegation and could not be challenged as ultra
vires on the ground of excessive delegation. But if the legislature after
laying down with great care safeguards as to the imposition of tax including
its rate makes a blanket provision like s. 135(3), which at one stroke does
away with all those safeguards-and this is what s. 135(3) has done in the
present case-the position that results is that there is delegation of even the
essential function of fixing the rate to the subordinate authority without any
safeguard. Such a delegation would be excessive delegation and would be ultra
vires. [972 D-F] (iii) Section 135(3) inasmuch as it makes the delegation
contained in ss. 128 to 135(2) excessive must be severed from the rest of the
sections which are otherwise a proper delegation of legislative authority and
should be struck down on the ground of excessive delegation. [973 B] 953
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 583 of 1962.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
order, dated November 23, 1959, of the Allahabad High Court in Special Appeal
No. 524 of 1958.
S. V. Gupte, Solicitor-General, Guru Dayal
Srivastava and T. Satyanarayana, for the, appellant.
B. R. L. Iyengar and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for
respondents.
Nos. 1, 2, 4, 8 & 12 to 14.
C. B. Agarwal and O. P. Rana, for Intervener
No. 1.
A. V. Rangam, for Intervener No. 2.
G. C. Kasliwal, Advocate-General, for the
State of Rajasthan and R. N. Sachthey, for Intervener No. 3.
I. N. Shroff, for Intervener No. 4.
The Judgment of GAJENDRAGADKAR, C.J.,
HIDAYATULLAH, SHAH AND SIKRI, JJ was delivered by HIDAYATULLAH, J. WANCHOO,
J.delivered a dissenting Opinion.
Hidayatullah J. The Municipal Board, Hapur
(shortly the appellant Board) passed a Special Resolution (No. 296) on
September 28, 1956 imposing water tax in Hapur from April 1, 1957 and a
notification by the Government of Uttar Pradesh was. Published in the Uttar
Pradesh Gazette under s. 135(2) of the U. P. Municipalities Act (Act 2 of 1916)
dated December 11, 1956 notifying the resolution. Fifteen house owners of Hapur
who received notices from the appellant Board for the payment of the tax
assessed in respect of their houses, petitioned to the High Court at Allahabad
under Art. 226 of the Constitution and asked for a writ or order preventing the
appellant Board from realising the tax.
Their contention was that the tax was illegal
as it was imposed in contravention of the provisions of the Municipalities Act.
The main grounds of objection were (a) that the, resolution of the appellant
Board framing the proposal was not published in a local paper of Hapur printed
in Hindi, and (b) that the rules framed for the imposition of the tax did not
accompany the resolution which was affixed on the notice board at the office of
the appellant Board in purported compliance with the requirements for
publication.
The imposition was also challenged on the
ground that Arts.
14 and 19 of the Constitution were violated954
The petition was heard by Mr. Justice James who decided all the points against
the appellant Board. He held that the tax was illegal inasmuch as the mandatory
requirements of the Municipalities Act were not complied with by the appellant
Board while imposing the tax, and that s. 135(3) of the Act (which cures all
defects in the imposition of tax by making the notification of Government
conclusive evidence of the legality of the imposition) was ultra vires Art. 14
of the Constitution because it created a bar against proof and left no remedy
to the tax payers thereby making a discrimination between them and other litigants.
He further held that the sub-section, by making Government the sole judge of
compliance with the Act conferred judicial power on Government contrary to the
intendment of the Constitution.
The appellant Board was accordingly ordered
not to collect the tax from the petitioners. The appellant Board appealed under
the Letters Patent. The Divisional Bench hearing the special appeal agreed with
Mr. Justice James. The present appeal has been filed by special leave of this
Court. Since it will be necessary to 'consider whether the appellant Board
complied with the requirements of the Municipalities Act or not and, if not, to
what extent, it is necessary to analyse the provisions in the Municipalities
Act for the imposition of a tax and then to follow that up with a narration of
the steps taken by the appellant Board.
Section 128 of the Municipalities Act confers
on the Municipalities in Uttar Pradesh the power to levy taxes and enumerates
the kinds of taxes. One such tax mentioned in cl. (x) of sub-S. (1) of the
section reads : "a water tax on the annual value of the building or land
or both". This was the tax which the Municipality had attempted to impose
in Hapur. There can be no question that the appellant Board had the competence
to impose this tax and so the first question is whether it went about the
business in the wrong way and, if it did, what is the effect. Section 129
specifies certain restrictions on the imposition of water tax. We need not
refer to them because no objection was raised that the restrictions there
prescribed had not been observed. Sections 131 to 135 lay down the procedure
for the imposition of the tax. Section 131 provides that when a Board desires
to impose a tax it shall, by special resolution, frame a proposal specifying
the tax, the person or class of persons to be made liable and the description
of the property or other taxable things or circumstances in respect of which
they are to be made liable, the amount or rate leviable from such person or
class of persons and any other matter which the State Government may require
955 by rules to be specified. The same section requires the Board to prepare a
draft of the rules which it desires the State Government to make and the Board
is required to publish the proposal, the draft rules so framed, and a notice in
the prescribed form, in the manner laid down by s.
94. That section says that every resolution
passed by a Board at a meeting, shall, as soon thereafter as may be, be
published in a local paper published in Hindi and where there is no such local
paper, in such manner as the State Government may, by general or special order,
direct. After the notice etc. are published, s. 132 enables any inhabitant of
the Municipality to, submit to the Board an objection in writing to all or any of
the proposals framed by it and the Board is required to consider the objection
so submitted and to pass order thereon by special resolution. If the Board
decides to modify its proposals or any of them it must publish the modified
proposals and (if necessary) the revised draft rules with a fresh notice, for
objections.
Any new objection so received has to be dealt
with in the same way. After the Board has finally settled the proposals, it has
to submit the proposals, the objections (if any) and the orders made in
connection therewith, to the prescribed authority. The prescribed authority
under s. 2(17) (ii) means an officer or a body corporate appointed by the State
Government in this behalf by notification in the official Gazette, and, if no
such officer or body corporate is appointed, the Commissioner. It may be stated
that the proposal we are considering was accepted by the Commissioner. Then
follows s. 133 and it gives power to the State Government or the prescribed
authority to reject, sanction or modify any proposal. When the proposals are
sought to be modified they have to be referred back to the Board for further
consideration. When the proposals are sanctioned by the State Government or the
prescribed authority s. 134 of the Act requires that the State Government,
after taking into consideration the draft rules submitted by the Board, shall
proceed to make such rules, under its powers under s. 296 of the Act, in
respect of the tax, as the Government may consider necessary. After the rules
have been made, the order of sanction and a copy of the rules are sent to the
Board and thereupon the Board by special resolution directs the imposition of
the tax with effect from a date which it specifies in the resolution.
This is stated in s. 135 which may be reproduced
here fully "135. Imposition of tax,(1) A copy of the resolution passed
under Section 134 shall be submitted to the State Government, 956 if the tax
has been sanctioned by the State Government, and to the Prescribed Authority,
in any other case.
(2) Upon receipt of the copy of the
resolution the State Government, or Prescribed Authority, as the case may be,
shall notify in the official Gazette, the imposition of the tax from the
appointed date, and the imposition of a tax shall in all cases be subject to
the condition that it has been so notified.
(3) A notification of the imposition of a tax
under sub-section (2) shall be conclusive proof that the tax has been imposed
in accordance with the provisions of this Act." The appellant Board passed
a special resolution in terms of s. 131 (1) of the Act. The publication of the
resolution was made by affixing a copy of the resolution on the notice board as
provided by a notification dated July 5, 1916 and by beat of drum in the town
of Hapur. The resolution was, however, not published in a local paper published
in Hindi as required by S. 94(3) of the Act. It is admitted that two Hindi
weeklies entitled "Janmat" and "Bharatvarsh" and one Hindi
daily entitled "Vyapar" were published at that time at Hapur. The
appellant Board did not publish the notice etc.
in these journals because, in its opinion,
none of these papers was a suitable local paper having wide circulation in the
town at the time. Notification of the 5th July, 1916 provides that, where, in a
Municilpality, there is no local paper, a copy of every resolution passed by a
Board at a meeting shall, within ten days from the date of the meeting, be
pasted up and for thirty days be kept pasted up on a notice board to be
exhibited for public information at the building in which the meetings of the
Board are ordinarily held.
Two objections against the tax found favour
with the High Court. The first objection arose from the non-observance of s.
94(3) which, as already noticed, requires that the publication of the proposal
etc. should be in a local newspaper published in Hindi. The High Court held
that there was no need to take recourse to the notification of the 5th of July
1916, because the first part of S. 94(3) could be complied with. The next objection
against the tax was that even if the special Resolution under s. 131 was
properly published, the rules which ought to accompany the Resolution were not
exhibited. The appellant Board claimed that the court was precluded from making
an enquiry by reason of s. 135(3) which made the notification conclusive
evidence that 957 the tax was imposed in accordance with the provisions of the
Municipalities Act. The respondents met this by challenging the legality of the
sub-section. They pleaded that it was discriminatory inasmuch as it did not
allow one set of litigants to prove their allegations as against the general
body of litigants and further that there was a conferral of judicial functions
on the legislature which was contrary to the separation of powers under the
Constitution. The High Court accepted these contentions also.
There can be no doubt that the language of s.
135(3) is as wide as it is peremptory. Read literally it can lead to the
conclusion that even an illegal tax cannot be questioned.
Prima facie, it appears that even if a
Municipal Board goes outside the categories of taxes mentioned in s. 128 and if
the Government is persuaded to notify the imposition, all will be well. 'This
cannot be the intent and hence not the meaning. We must, therefore, see if the
words are susceptible of another construction obvitating such a patently absurd
result.
There is at the very start the fundamental
fact that the power to tax in a State can only be exercised by the State
Legislature, the extent of the power being fixed by the Constitution. The taxes
which the State Legislatures are allowed to raise are enumerated in the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution. The State Legislature can impose all these taxes
itself but it is usual to authorise the levy of some of them by local
authorities for their own purpose.
Taxes so raised by it local authority are not
imposed by it as a legislature but as a delegate of the legislature. What is
done is binding by the authority of the legislature and the tax is valid only
if it is one of the, taxes the delegate can raise and the delegate imposes it
in accordance with the conditions laid down by the legislature.
It is thus that we find an elaborate
procedure prescribed by all the Municipal Acts. In the U.P. Municipalities Act
also, as we have seen, a Board must first pass a special Resolution framing a
proposal and the draft rules, invite objections, consider them, and then get
them approved by Government. After this approval there must be a final special
resolution imposing the tax from a particular date and the Government then
notifies the imposition of the tax.
It is the duty of Government to see that the
various steps laid down for the imposition of the tax are followed.
Before it notifies the resolution Government
satisfies itself about the requirements. The notification is made conclusive
proof that the tax is imposed in accordance with the provi958 sions of the Act.
The question arises : Is this rule of conclusive evidence such as to shut out
all enquiry by courts ? We have no hesitation in answering the question in the
negative. There are certain matters which, of course, cannot be established
conclusively by a notification under s. 135(3). For example, no notification
can issue unless there is a special resolution. The special resolution is the
sine qua non for the notification. 'The State Government cannot impose, a tax
all by itself by notifying the imposition of the tax, without a resolution by
the Board. Again, the notification cannot authorise the imposition of a tax not
included in s. 128 of the Municipalities Act. Neither a Municipal Board nor a
State Government can exercise such a power. A tax can only be said to be
imposed in accordance with the provisions of the Municipalities Act, if it is
contemplated by the Act. There is a difference between the tax and the
imposition of the tax. The former is the levy itself and the latter the method
by which the levy is imposed and collected. What the sub-section does is Lo put
beyond question the procedure by which the tax is imposed, that is to say, the
various steps taken to impose it. A tax not authorised can never be within the
protection afforded to the procedure for imposing taxes. Such a tax may be
challenged, not with reference to the manner of the imposition but as an
illegal impost.
It would thus appear that it the very start
the selection of the tax must be with reference to the delegated powers.
The Municipal Board of the State Government
cannot select a tax which the legislature has not mentioned in s. 128 of the
Municipalities Act. As the State Government cannot itself impose the tax it
must have before it, the special resolution of the Board before notifying the
imposition.
Between the special resolution selecting a
tax for imposition and the special resolution imposing it sundry procedure is
gone through and section 135(3) say-, that the notification by Government is
conclusive proof that the procedure was correctly followed.
It is argued that ss. 131 to 134 use
mandatory language and it is the intention of the Legislature to secure
obedience to its wishes and therefore it is for the courts to say whether those
provisions were followed by the Municipal Board and the State Government. There
can be no doubt that some of the provisions are mandatory. But all provisions
are not of the same character. In Raza Bunland Sugar Co.
Ltd. v. The Municipal Board, Rampur(1) ss.
131 to 134 were considered in the light of the tests (1) [1965] 1. S. C. R.
970.
959 usually applied to determine whether a
provision of law is mandatory directory. It was there pointed out that all the
sections in, spite of the language used in them were not mandatory. The
majority opinion considered that the first part of s. 131(3) requiring
publication of proposals was mandatory and the second part which required that
publication should be in the manner required by s. 94(3) was only directory. In
one of the minority opinions no such distinction was made but s. 94(3) was held
to be directory.
In the other minority opinion distinction was
made between provisions for the protection of tax payers which were stated to
be mandatory and provisions for promoting despatch, publicity and efficiency
were stated to be directory requiring substantial but not literal compliance.
In that case the notice imposing water tax in
Rampur was published in Hindi but in a news-paper published in Urdu.
The majority treating the latter part of s.
131 (3) as directory held that there was Substantial compliance. The minority
treating s. 131(3) to be mandatory upheld the tax treating s. 94(3) as
directory. One of the minority views relied upon s. 135(3) as shutting out
enquiry.
In Berar Swadeshi Vanaspati v. Municipal
Committee Sheogaon & Anr.(1) the Municipality passed a resolution tinder s.
67(1) of the C. P. & Berar Municipalities Act, 1922. Subsections (1) to (7)
incorporated provisions similar to ss.
131-135 of the U. P. Municipalities Act. An
attempt to question the tax on the ground that the procedure prescribed by s.
67 was not followed was repelled. It was observed:
"This notification therefore 'clearly is
one which directs imposition of octroi and falls within subs. (7) of s. 67 and
having been notified in the Gazette it is conclusive evidence of the tax having
been imposed in accordance with the provisions of the Act and it cannot be
challenged on the ground that all the necessary steps had not been taken."
The defect in the imposition of the tax here being of the same character as in
the two cases of this Court above cited, the imposition would have the protection
of s. 135(3) and the tax must be deemed to be imposed according to the
procedure laid down in the Act.
As observed already, some of the provisions
controlling the imposition of a tax must be fully complied with because they
are vital and therefore mandatory, and the others may be complied (1) [1962] 1
S.C.R. 596.
960 with substantially but not literally,
because, they are directory. In either case the agency for seeing to this
compliance is the State Government. It is hardly to be expected that the State
Government would not do its duty or that it would allow breaches of the
provision to go unrectified. One, can hardly imagine that ,an omission to
comply with the fundamental provisions would ever be condoned. The law reports
show that even before the ,addition of the provision making the notification
conclusive ,evidence of the proper imposition of the tax complaints brought
before the courts concerned provisions dealing with publicity or requiring
ministerial fulfillment.
Even in the two earlier cases 'which reached
this Court and also the present case, the complaint is of a breach of one of
the provisions which can only be regarded as directory.
In cases of minor departures from the letter
of the law especially in matters not fundamental, it is for the Government to
see whether there has been substantial or reasonable compliance. Once
Government condones the departure, the decision of Government is rightly made
final by making the notification conclusive evidence of the compliance with the
requirements of the Act. It is not necessary to investigate whether a complete
lack of observance of the provisions would 'be afforded the same protection. It
is most unlikely that this would ever happen and before we pronounce our
opinion we should like to see such a -case.
It was, however, contended that there has
been excessive ,delegation, inasmuch as the State Government has been given the
power to condone breaches of the Act and thus to set at naught the Act itself.
This is not a right reading of the relevant 'provisions. We have already
pointed out that the power to tax is conferred on the State Legislature but is
exercised by the local authority under the control of the State Government. The
taxes with which we are concerned are local taxes for local needs and for which
local inquiries have to be made. They are rightly left to the representatives
of the local population which would bear the tax. Such taxes must vary from
town to town, from one Board to -another, and from one commodity to another. It
is impossible for the Legislature to pass statutes for the imposition of such
taxes in local areas. The power must be delegated. Regard being had to the
democratic set-up of the municipalities which need the proceeds of the taxes
for their own administration, it is proper to leave to these municipalities the
power to impose and collect these taxes.
The taxes are, however, predetermined and a
procedure for consulting the wishes of the people is devised. But the 961
matter is not left entirely in the hands of the Municipal Boards. As the State
Legislature cannot supervise the due observance of its laws by the Municipal
Boards, power is given to the State Government to check their actions. The
imposition of the tax is left to the Municipal Boards but the duty to see that
the provisions for publicity, and obtaining the views of the persons to be
taxed are fully complied with, is laid upon the State Government. The
proceedings for the imposition of the tax, however, must come to a conclusion
at some stage after which it can be said that the tax has been imposed. That
stage is reached, not when the special resolution of the Municipal Board is
passed, but when the notification by Government is issued.
Now it is impossible to leave the matter open
so that complaints about the imposition of the tax or the breach of this rule
or that may continue to be raised. The door to objections must at some stage be
shut and the Legislature considers that, if the State Government approves of
the special resolution, all enquiry must cease. This is not a case of
-excessive delegation unless one starts with the notion that the State
Government may collude with the Municipal Board to disregard deliberately the
provisions for the imposition of the tax. There is no warrant for such a supposition.
The provision making the notification conclusive evidence of the proper
imposition of tax is conceived in the best interest of compliance of the provisions
by the Boards and not to facilitate their breach. It cannot. therefore, be said
that there is excessive delegation.
The matter may be looked at from another
point of view Excessive delegation is most often found when the Legislature
does not perform all the essential legislative functions and leaves them to
some other agency. The Legislature here performs all essential functions in the
imposition of the tax. The selection of tax for imposition in a Municipal area
is by the legislative will expressed in s. 128. Neither the Municipal Board,
nor the Government can go outside the List of taxes therein included. The
procedure for the imposition of the tax is also laid down by the Legislature
for the Municipal Board to follow and the State Government is there to ensure
due observance of that procedure. We have already shown above that it would be
impossible for the Legislature to legislate for the numerous Municipal Boards
and local authorities with a view to raising taxes for them. The provisions,
such. as they are, are the best means of achieving consultation of the local
population and close scrutiny of the actions of their representatives in
imposing the tax. The notification which issues is given finality by the voice
of the Legislature. It would, there CI/6518 962 fore, appear that in the
selection of the ox and its imposition the Legislature plays a decisive part
and also lays down the method by which the tax is to be imposed. The
Legislature does not make local enquiries, hear objections and decide
them-functions which are most inappropriate for the Legislature to perform.
This task is delegated to the appellant Board which is the representative body
of the local population on whom the tax is levied. In other words, all the
essential functions of Legislation are performed by the State Legislature and
only the minor functions necessary for the imposition of the tax and the
enquiries which must be made to ascertain local opinion are left to the
Municipal Boards. An additional check is available as Government can veto the
actions of a Board if it does not carry out the mandate of the Legislature. In
our judgment, there was no excessive delegation or a conferral of Legislative
functions on the appellant Board or the State Government.
It remains to consider two other arguments in
the case. The first is the question of discrimination which is said to arise
from the proviso which makes the notification conclusive in respect of the
procedure by which the tax is imposed. There are numerous statutes, including
the Evidence Act, in which a fact is taken to be conclusively proved from the
existence of some, other fact. The law is full of fictions and irrebuttable
presumptions which also involve proof of facts. It has never been suggested
before that when the Legislature says that enquiry into the truth or otherwise
of a fact shall stop at a given stage and the fact taken to be conclusively
proved, a question of discrimination arises. The tax payers in the Municipality
are allowed under the Municipalities Act to object to the proposal for the tax
and the rules and to have their objections considered. They cannot, of course,
be allowed to keep on agitating and a stage must come when it may be said that
the provisions of the Act have been duly observed.
That stage is reached after Government has
scrutinized the proposal. the rules, the objections and the orders and has
approved of the proposal, a special resolution is passed by the Municipal Board
and a notification is issued. It cannot be said that sub-s. (3) of s, 135 which
leads to the conclusion that the imposition of the tax is according to the
Municipalities Act is discriminatory because it only concludes objections
against the procedure followed in the imposition of the tax.
The next objection that the impugned
sub-section involves the exercise of judicial functions not open to the
Legislature, is wholly erroneous. The sub-section only shuts out further
enquiry and 963 makes the notification final. There is no exercise of a
judicial function. In our country there is no rigid separation of powers and
the legislature often frames a rule such as is incorporated in the third
sub-section of s. 135.
The Evidence Act is full of such Provisions.
In the United States of America where the separation of powers is extremely
rigid in some of the constitutions of the States it may be open to objection
that the Legislature in shutting out enquiry into the truth of a fact
encroaches upon the judicial power of the State. Such disability has never been
found to exist in our country although legislation of this type is only too
frequent The objection is, therefore without substance.
In the result we are "of opinion that
the judgment of the High Court under appeal must be set aside. We accordingly
set it aside and order the dismissal of the petition under Art,226 and 227 of
the Constitution from which the present appeal has arisen. In the circumstances
of the case there shall be no order as to costs.
Wanchoo J. I regret I am unable to agree.
This appeal by special leave from the
judgment of the Allahabad High Court raises the question of vires of s. 135(3)
of the U.P. Municipalities Act, No. 2 of 1916, (hereinafter referred to as the
Act). the facts in the case are not in dispute and may be briefly stated. The
appellant, namely, the Municipal Board Hapur, decided to impose water tax from
April 1, 1957. In consequence, steps were taken under ss. 131 to 135 of the Act
to effectuate that purpose. However, proposals and draft rules were never
published as required by s. 131(3) of the Act. All that was done was that a
notice in the form set forth in Sch. III was pasted on the notice-board and
there was some beat of drum with respect to the notice. Even so, the draft
rules were not appended to the notice which was put up on the notice-board and
in effect there was more or less no compliance with the provisions relating to
;the publication of proposals and draft rules. Eventually a notification was
issued under s. 135(2) of the Act by the relevant authority about the
imposition of the tax from April 1, 1957.
Thereafter collection of tax began. The
respondents who are residents of Hapur received notices for payment of tax.
Thereupon they filed a writ petition in the
High Court, and their main grievance was that the provisions of s. 131 relating
to publication of proposals and draft rules were not complied with and thus
they were de. proved of an opportunity to file objections as provided under s.
132 of the Act. They contended that the publication as pro964 vided in s. 131
of the Act was mandatory and as a mandatory provision of the Act was not
complied with, the imposition of the tax was invalid.
The petition was heard by a learned Single
Judge who found, as already indicated that the provisions of s. 131(3) relating
to publication had not been complied with, consequently, the residents of Hapur
had no opportunity of making objections to the proposals and draft rules.
Reliance however was placed on behalf of the
appellant on s. 135(3) of the Act, which is in these terms :"A
notification of the imposition of a tax under subsection (2) shall be
conclusive proof that the tax has been imposed in accordance with the
provisions of this Act." In reply to this, the respondents contended that
s. 135(3) was ultra vires, and this contention was accepted by the learned
Single Judge. He therefore allowed the petition and directed the appellant not
to collect water tax from the respondents until such time as the tax was
imposed in strict compliance with the provisions of the Act.
Then there was an appeal by the appellant to
a Division Bench. There also reliance was placed on s. 135(3) of the Act. 'Me
Division Bench upheld the order of the learned Single Judge, though its
approach to s. 135(3) was different. It held that s. 135(3) was not a provision
for validating anything done without complying with the provisions of the Act
and it could not protect the invalidity of a tax if it was invalid on account
of its being imposed without following the legal procedure. Then there was an
application by the appellant for a certificate to appeal to this Court, which
was refused by the High Court. The appellant thereupon got special leave and
that is how the matter has come up before this Court.
The main contention on behalf of the
appellant before this court is that s. 135(3) which lays down that the
notification under s. 135(2) would be conclusive proof that the tax had been
imposed in accordance with the provisions of the Act bars any enquiry into the
various procedural steps taken for the imposition of the tax, and the court
where such a question is raised must hold that the tax has been imposed in
accordance with the provisions of the Act.
Once the court comes to that conclusion it
would mean that it must assume that the necessary procedural steps for imposing
tax had all been properly complied with and 965 therefore there could not be
any invalidity of the tax on the ground that all steps necessary for the valid
imposition of the tax had not been taken. It is further submitted that s.
135(3) bars enquiry as to the procedural steps necessary for imposing the tax
which are contained in ss. 131 to 133 of the Act, and it is urged that what a
court can enquire is whether the special resolution as required by s. 134 has
been passed by the municipality or not.
On the other hand, learned counsel for the
respondents contends that if s. 135(3) is to be given the meaning for which the
appellant contends it will be ultra vires because then there will be an
abdication of its essential legislative functions by the legislatures with
respect to imposition of tax and therefore s. 135(3) would be bad on the ground
of excessive delegation. It is further urged on behalf of the respondents that
s. 135(3) read literally not only bars enquiry into procedural steps necessary
for the imposition of the tax, which, according to learned counsel, are
contained in ss. 131 to 135(1) but also bar-, enquiry as to whether the tax is
in accordance with ss. 128 to 130, which are substantive provisions with
respect to taxes which can be imposed by municipal boards. Learned counsel for
the respondents thus urges that s. 135(3) would give blanket power for the
imposition of any tax whether it is contained in s. 128 or not and would also
permit violating the restrictions contained in ss. 129 and 130; and if that be
so, it would be a case of complete abdication of its essential functions by the
legislature with respect to imposition of tax and a gross case of excessive
delegation.
The question that falls for consideration
therefore is about the scope of s. 135(3) and whether on a true interpretation
of that provision it can be said to amount to a case of excessive delegation
and therefore liable to be struck down on that count.
Before I come to s. 135(3) I may indicate the
scheme of municipal taxation contained in ss. 128 to 135 of the Act.
Section 128 mentions the taxes which a board
may impose subject to any general rules or special orders of the State
Government in this behalf. Section 129 lays down certain restrictions on the
imposition of water-tax and s. 130 lays down certain restrictions on the
imposition of certain other taxes. Section 130-A specifies the powers of the
State Government to require a board to impose taxes. Then comes section 131 to
135 which are obviously procedural provisions with respect to imposition of any
tax mentioned in s. 128.
That these are procedural provisions is clear
from s. 136 of the Act which lays down that the 966 procedure for abolishing a
tax or for altering a tax in respect of certain matters shall, so far as may
be, be the procedure prescribed by ss. 131 to 135 for the imposition of a tax.
The essentials of the procedure contained in ss. 131 to 135 may be briefly
summarised thus. When a board desires to impose a tax it has to pass a special
resolution framing proposals specifying the tax, the persons or class of
persons on whom the tax will be imposed, the amount or rate leviable and any
other matter referred to in s. 153 which the State Government requires by rules
to be specified. The board has also to prepare a draft of the rules which it
desires the State Government to make in that behalf. After the proposals and
draft rules have been prepared the board is required to publish them along,
with a notice in the form set forth in Sch. III: (see s. 1 3 1). On the
publication of the notice along with the proposals and draft rules any
inhabitant of the municipality has the right to submit objections in writing
and the board has to take such objections into consideration and pass orders
thereon by special resolution. If the board decides to modify its proposals, it
shall publish the modified proposals and (if necessary) revised draft rules in
the same manner as the original proposals and draft rules were published. If
any objections are received to the modified proposals they are again dealt with
by the board which has to pass orders thereon by special resolution. When the
board has finally settled its Proposals, it has to submit them, along with the
objections (if any) to the proper authority, S. (132). The proper authority may
either refuse to sanction the proposals or return them to the board for further
consideration or sanction them without modifications or with such modification
not involving, an increase of the amount to be imposed, as it deems fit;
(section 133). When the proposals have been sanctioned by the proper authority,
the State Government after taking into consideration the draft rules submitted
by the board has to make such rules in respect of the tax as for the time being
it considers necessary. When the rule.-, have been made, the order of sanction
and a copy of the rules has to be sent to the board and thereupon the board has
by special resolution to direct the imposition of the tax with effect from a
date to be specified in the resolution : (s. 134). Thereafter a copy of the
resolution passed under s. 134 is submitted to the proper authority.
Upon receipt of the copy of the resolution
the proper authority has to notify in the official gazette the imposition of
the tax from the appointed day and the imposition of a tax shall in all cases
be subject to the condition that it has been so notified.
967 It will be seen from the above procedural
provisions that the legislature has taken great care to see that the tax is
impose, after the inhabitants of a municipality have had a chance to make
representations in that behalf and after the tax has been approved at all
stages including the disposal of objections by means of special resolutions,
which require a special quorum for the meeting in which they are passed.
Further the legislature has taken care to
provide that the disposal of objections by a board even by special resolution
is not sufficient and it has required that the objections shall be sent to the
proper authority, presumably for its consideration before it sanctions the tax.
These provisions to my mind indicate the safeguards the legislature intended in
a case of this kind where the legislature itself has not indicated the rate of
tax but has merely indicated the heads of taxation and the fixation of rate of
tax and all incidental matters have been delegated to the board subject to the
supervision of the State Government. It is after all this elaborate procedure
has been gone through that a tax can be validly imposed by the delegate, namely
the board.
This brings us to s. 135(3) which has already
been set out.
The first question that arises is the
interpretation of this provision. As I have already indicated two different
submissions have been made in this connection on behalf of the parties. The
appellant submits that this section only bars enquiry by the court into the
procedural provisions contained in s. 131 to s. 133. On the other hand, the
respondents contend that this provision bars enquiry into all matters contained
in s. 128 to s. 135(1). If the words of this provision were to be literally
interpreted they lay down that the notification under s. 135(3) shall be
conclusive proof that the tax has been imposed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act. 'Me last words are very wide and it is contended on
behalf of the respondents that they would include all the provisions of the Act
and once a notification is issued under s. 135(2) the court is barred from
inquiring whether the tax is against any of the provisions of the Act. I feel
however that even though the words may be capable of such a wide
interpretation, as is being, put upon them on behalf of the respondents. it
would not be right to read them as if they provide that a notification under s.
135(2) bars enquiry even into the question whether the tax is one which could
be imposed by the board at all under s. 128. It would to my mind be proper to
read the section in a restricted sense and to hold that when it speaks of tax
being imposed "in accordance with the provisions of this Act" it
refers only to 'the procedural provisions relating to the 968 imposition of tax
by the board. The legislature by these Words could not have intended that the
board could impose any tax which was even not within the legislative competence
of the State legislature and enquiry into that aspect would also be barred.
Therefore I must reject the extreme argument on behalf of the respondents that
these words mean that the court is barred from enquiring even whether the tax
imposed is such as can be properly imposed by a board under S. 128 of the Act.
I must read down these words only to mean that they bar an enquiry as to
compliance with the procedural provisions of the Act with respect to the
imposition of a tax.
This brings me to the next question namely
whether the bar created by this provision is only with respect to s. 131 to s.
133 as urged on behalf of the appellant or goes further.
I have already indicated that the procedural
provisions for the imposition of a tax by the board are contained in ss.
131 to 135(1). It is after these procedural
provisions are compared with that a notification under S. 135(2) is issued.
I can understand s. 135(3) being restricted
in its application to procedural provisions only with respect to the imposition
of a tax; but I cannot understand how that provision can be read down further
so that it bars enquiry only into some procedural provisions i.e. from s. 131
to s. 133, and not into the other procedural provisions i.e. S. 134 and s.
135(1). I can see no way of reading s. 135(3) in the manner suggested on behalf
of the appellant. 1st therefore hold that S. 135(3) bars enquiry by courts into
all procedural provisions relating to imposition of taxes and therefore it bars
enquiry into any matter covered by S. 131 to s. 135(1) of the Act.
This brings me to another question namely,
what is the nature of the provision contained in s. 135(3) of the Act.
Is it merely a rule of evidence as urged on
behalf of the appellant or is it more than that and is a substantive provision
in itself ? This Court had occasion to consider the question whether a rule of
irrebuttable presumption was a rule of evidence or a substantive provision in
Ishar Ahmad Khan v. Union of India(1) and observed that "the proper
approach to adopt would be to consider whether fact A from the proof of which a
presumption is required to be drawn about the existence of fact B is inherently
relevant in the matter of proving fact B and has inherently any probative or
persuasive value in that behalf or not. If fact A is inherently relevant in
proving the existence of fact B and to any rational (1) [1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R. 235.
969 mind it would bear a probative or
persuasive value in the matter of proving the existence of fact B, then a rule
prescribing either a rebuttable presumption or an irrebuttable presumption in
that behalf would be a rule of evidence. On the other hand, if fact A is
inherently not relevant in proving the existence of fact B or has no probative
value in that behalf and yet a rule -is made prescribing for a rebuttable or an
irrebuttable presumption in that connection, that rule would be a rule of substantive
law and not a rule of evidence." It is on this principle that I must
consider whether s. 135(3) is merely a rule of evidence or a substantive
provision. To my mind it cannot be said from the mere fact that a notification
has been published under s. 135(2) that that fact is inherently relevant in
showing that all the procedural provisions have been complied with; nor can it
be said that that fact has inherent probative or persuasive value. There is in
my opinion no inherent connection between the publication of a notification
under s. 135(2) and the compliance with all the procedural provisions (namely,
s. 131 to s. 135(1) ) of the Act. It will all depend on whether the proper
authority has been vigilant or not in seeing that all the provisions contained
from s. 131 to s. 135(1) have been complied with.
I would therefore hold that s. 135(3) is not
a rule of evidence; it is a substantive provision which lays down in effect
that once a notification under 135(2) is issued it will be conclusively
presumed that the tax is in accordance with all the procedural provisions with
respect to the imposition thereof In other words, the effect of the substantive
provision contained in s. 135(3) really comes to this. namely, that all the
provisions from s. 1 3 1 to s. 1 3 5 (1 ) are wiped out and the notification
issued under s. 135(2) becomes the sole basis of the imposition of tax. It has
been said that there is no reason to suppose that the proper authority will not
see that the provisions of s. 131 to s. 135(1) are complied with and that there
is no reason to presume that the provision of s. 135(3) will be abused.
So far as the first aspect is concerned it is
obvious in this very case that the proper authority has not seen that the
provisions of s. 131 to s. 133 have been complied with.
As to the second I do not say that the proper
authority will abuse the provisions of s. 135(3); but that does not in my
opinion make any difference to the devastating effect of that provision on
compliance with the procedural provisions contained in s. 131 to s.-135(1) of
the Act in the matter of imposition of tax. The effect of s. 135(3) which in my
opinion is a substantive provision is that the procedural provisions are given
a complete go-by in the matter of imposition of tax and as soon as a notification
under S. 135(2) is shown to the court, the court is helpless in the matter,
even though none of the provisions of S. 131 to S. 135(1) may have been
complied with. This in my opinion is the effect of S. 135 (3), as it stands and
there is no question of presuming that the proper authority would abuse that
provision. Irrespective of the abuse or otherwise of that provision., the
effect thereof in my opinion is to wipe out all the procedural safeguards
provided in s. 131 to S. 135(1) of the Act relating to imposition of tax and to
make the tax a completely valid imposition so long as there is a notification
under S. 135(2).
On this interpretation of S. 135(3) a serious
question arises whether it is a provision which can be said to be intravires.
As I have already indicated, this is a case of delegation of power to impose
tax in so far as its rate and incidence is concerned. Generally speaking, I am
of opinion that it is the duty of a legislature when imposing a tax to specify the
rate at which the tax is imposed, for the rate of tax, again speaking
generally, is one of the essentials of the taxing power given to the
legislature. But I cannot fail to recognise that there may be situations where
the legislature may delegate to a subordinate authority the power to fix the
rate under proper safeguards. It is not necessary to specify all the situations
where this can be done. But there can be no doubt that in the matter of local
taxation like taxation by municipal boards, district boards and bodies of that
character there is pre-eminently a case for delegating the fixation of the rate
of tax to the local body, be it a municipal board or a district board or some
other board of that kind. The reason for this is that problems of different municipalities
or districts may be different and one municipality may require one kind of tax
at a particular rate at a particular time while another municipality may need
another kind of tax at another rate at some other time. Therefore, the
legislature can in the case of taxation by local bodies delegate even the
authority to fix the rate to the local body provided it has taken care to
specify the safeguards in the form of procedural provisions or such other forms
as it considers necessary in the matter of fixing the rate. So far as I know
practically all Municipal Acts provide safeguards of the nature contained in
ss. 131 to 135(1) of the Act or some other provisions which are equally
effective in the matter of controlling the fixation of rate of tax by a
delegate of the legislature.
In such a case where delegation of fixing the
rate has been made by the legislature to a subordinate body with proper
safeguards, it can-' not be said that the legislature has abdicated its
essential functions in the matter of taxing legislation by delegating the rate
971 of taxation to be determined under proper safeguards by the delegate. Nor
can such delegation be struck down as a case of excessive delegation which
means that the legislature has abdicated its essential legislative functions in
the matter of the legislation concerned. But there is ample authority for the
view that where the legislature has abdicated its essential legislative
functions and has made a delegation which may be called excessive such
excessive delegation may be struck down. I may in this. connection refer to two
decisions of this Court, namely, In re The Delhi Laws Act, 1912(1) and
Rajnarain Singh v. The Chairman, Patna Administration Committee(2). It has been
held in these cases that an essential legislative function cannot be delegated'
by the legislature. Exactly what constitutes essential function cannot be
enunciated in general terms.
But the essential legislative function
consists in the determination of the legislative policy and its formulation as
a binding rule of conduct. It cannot be said that an unlimited right of
delegation is inherent in the legislative power itself. This is not warranted
by the provisions of the Constitution and the legitimacy of delegation depends
entirely upon its being used as an ancillary measure which the legislature
considers to be necessary for the purpose of exercising its legislative powers
effectively and completely. The legislature must retain in its own hands the
essential legislative functions which consist in declaring the legislative
policy and laying down the standard which is to be enacted into a rule of law
and what can be delegated is the task of subordinate legislation which by its
very nature is ancillary to the statute which delegates the power to make it.
Provided the legislative policy is enunciated with sufficient clearness or a
standard is laid down, the courts should not interfere with the discretion that
undoubtedly rests with the legislature itself in determining the extent of
delegation necessary in a particular case.
In these two cases the question arose whether
certain laws could be applied to certain areas with such modification as the
executive authority deemed fit to make. It was held that where three executive
authority was permitted, at its discretion, to apply without modification (save
incidental change,-, such as name and place), the whole of any law already in
existence in any part of India, that would be good. Further the executive
authority could even be authorised to select future laws in a similar way and
to apply them to certain areas. But where the authorisation was to repeal laws
already in force in the area and either substitute other laws with or without
modification, this was held (1) [1951] S.C.R. 747.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 290.
972 to be excessive delegation and ultra
vires. Further where the modification in a law to be applied did not affect any
essential change in the law and alter its policy it could be modified to that
extent and applied by the executive authority under delegated authority. But
where a modification affects a radical change in the policy of the law to be
applied such an authority could not be delegated and would be ultra vires.
it is on the basis of these principles that I
have to see whether s. 135(3) can be upheld. There is no doubt that the
legislature delegated its power of imposing taxes, including the power to fix
the rate, to the municipal board by s. 128 with respect to taxes specified
therein. I have already said that generally speaking the fixation of rate of
tax is one of the essential legislative functions but there may be situations
where it may not be considered to be an essential legislative function and may
be delegated by the legislature to subordinate authorities with proper
safeguards. I have also said that in the field of local taxation relating to
municipal boards and district boards and similar other bodies there are reasons
for delegating fixation of the rate to such bodies subject to proper
safeguards. This is exactly what has been done under the Act subject to the
safeguards contained in ss. 131 to 135(1). if those safeguards are followed,
the delegation in my opinion would be a proper delegation and could not be
challenged as ultra vires on the ground of excessive delegation. But if the
legislature after laying down with great care safeguards as to the imposition
of tax including its rate maker, a blanket provision like S. 135 (3), which at
one stroke does away with all those safeguards-and this is what in my opinion
S.
135(3) has done in the present case-the
position that results after such provision is that there is delegation of even
the essential function of fixing the rate to the subordinate authority with out
any safeguard. Such a delegation would in my opinion be excessive delegation
and would be ultra vires.
The question then is whether in the present
case I should save the delegation contained in s. 128 read with the safeguards
provided in s. 131 to S. 135(1) for the imposition of various taxes mentioned
therein or uphold s. 135(3) which in one sweep does away with all the
safeguards.
In my opinion s. 135(3) is severable and the
legislature would have provided for various safeguards contained in s. 131 to
s. 135(1) when it delegated the power to impose a tax including the fixation of
rate to municipal boards. It would therefore in my opinion be right to hold
that sections 128 to 135(2) indicate proper delegation of the authority 973 of
the legislature to impose taxes specified in s. 128 and that it is sub-s. (3)
of s. 135 which should be struck down because it is the only provision which
makes the delegation excessive. I would therefore hold that s. 135(3) inasmuch
as it makes the delegation contained in ss. 128 to 135(2) excessive must be
severed from the rest of the sections which are otherwise a proper exercise of
delegation of legislative authority and should be struck down on the ground of
excessive delegation.
I would therefore dismiss the appeal with
costs and uphold the order of the High Court holding that the tax imposed by
the appellant had not been validly imposed, though on a different ground.
ORDER BY COURT In accordance with the opinion
of the majority the appeal is allowed. No order as to costs.
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