July 3, 2024
Constitutional LawDU LLBSemester 3

Jindal Stainless Ltd.& Anr v. State of Haryana &Ors (2017) 12 SCC 1(T.S. Thakur, A.K. Sikri, S.A. Bobde, Shiva Kirti Singh, N.V. Ramana)

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LB-301-Constitutional Law-I |2022

By majority the Court answers the reference in the following terms:
1. Taxes simpliciter are not within the contemplation of Part XIII of the Constitution of India. The word ‘Free’ used in Article 301 does not mean “free from taxation”.
2. Only such taxes as are discriminatory in nature are prohibited by Article 304(a). It follows that levy of a non-discriminatory tax would not constitute an infraction of Article 301.
3. Clauses (a) and (b) of Article 304 have to be read disjunctively.
4. A levy that violates 304(a) cannot be saved even if the procedure under Article 304(b) or the proviso there under is satisfied.
5. The compensatory tax theory evolved in Automobile Transport case and subsequently modified in Jindal’s case has no juristic basis and is therefore rejected.
6. Decisions of this Court in Atiabari, Automobile Transport and Jindal cases (supra) and all other judgments that follow these pronouncements are to the extent of such reliance
over ruled.
7. A tax on entry of goods into a local area for use, sale or consumption therein is permissible although similar goods are not produced within the taxing state.
8. Article 304 (a) frowns upon discrimination (of a hostile nature in the protectionist sense) and not on mere differentiation. Therefore, incentives, set-offs etc. Granted to a specified class of dealers for a limited period of time in a non-hostile fashion with a view to developing economically backward areas would not violate Article 304(a). The question whether the levies in the present case indeed satisfy this test is left to be determined by the regularbenches hearing the matters.
9. States are well within their right to design their fiscal legislations to ensure that the tax burden on goods imported from other States and goods produced within the State fall equally. Such measures if taken would not contravene Article 304(a) of the Constitution. The question whether the levies in the present case indeed satisfy this test is left to be determined by the regular benches hearing the matters.
10. The questions whether the entire State can be notified as a local area and whether entry tax can be levied on goods entering the landmass of India from another country are left open to be determined in appropriate proceedings.

T.S. THAKUR, CJI (for himself and A.K. Sikri and A.M. Khanwilkar, JJ.)

1. These appeals bring to fore for our determination vexed questions touching the interpretation of Articles 301 to 307 comprising Part XIII of the Constitution which have been the subject matter of several Constitution Bench decisions of this Court, all but one, decided by majority. The questions assume in a great measure considerable public importance notonly because the same deal with the powers of the State legislatures to levy taxes but also because any pronouncement of this Court is bound to impact the federal character of our polity and the Centre-State relationship in legislative and fiscal matters. There is no

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gainsaying that it is the importance of the questions that lies at the bottom of the present reference to a larger Bench made in the following circumstances.
2. In exercise of their legislative powers under Entry 52 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution several States in the country, at least 14 of whom are parties to these proceedings, have enacted laws that provide for levy of a tax on the “entry of goods into local areas comprising the States”. The constitutional validity of these levies was questioned in different High Courts by assesses/dealers aggrieved of the same, inter alia, on the ground that the same were violative of the constitutionally recognised right to free trade commerce and intercourse guaranteed under Article 301 of the Constitution of India. The levies were also assailed on the ground that the same were discriminatory and, therefore, violative of Article 304(a) of the Constitution of India. Absence of Presidential sanction in terms of Article 304(b) of the Constitution of India was also set-up as a ground of challenge to the levies imposed by the respective State legislatures. Writ Petition (Civil) No. 8700 of 2000 filed before the High Court of Punjab and Haryana was one such petition that assailed the constitutional validity of the Haryana Local Development Act, 2000. Relying upon the decisions of this Court in Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd. v. State of Assam &Ors. (AIR 1961 SC 232); Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd. etc. v. State of Rajasthan &Ors. (AIR 1962 SC 1406); M/s. Bhagatram Rajeev Kumar v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, M.P. and Ors. (1995 Supp [1] SCC 673 ); and State of Bihar and Ors. v. Bihar Chamber of Commerce and Ors. (1996) 9 SCC 136, a Division Bench of the High Court of Punjab and Haryana dismissed the said petition and connected matters on the ground that the levy was compensatory in character hence outside the purview of Article 301.

3. The correctness of the said order was assailed before this Court in Jindal Stripe Ltd. and Anr. v. State of Haryana and Ors. (2003) 8 SCC 60. A two-Judge Bench of this Court, however, referred the matter to a larger Bench as it noticed an apparent conflict between the pronouncements of this Court in Atiabari (supra) and Automobile Transport (supra) cases on the one hand and Bhagatram (supra) and Bihar Chamber of Commerce (supra) on the other. The Court after noticing the development of law on the subject observed:

“25. To sum up: the pre-1995 decisions held that an exaction to reimburse/recompense the State the cost of an existing facility made available to the traders or the cost of a specific facility planned to be provided to the traders is compensatory tax and that it is implicit in sucha levy that it must, more or less, be commensurate with the cost of the service or facility. The decisions emphasized that the imposition of tax must be with the definite purpose of meeting the expenses on account of providing or adding to the trading facilities either immediately or in future provided the quantum of tax sought to be generated is based on a reasonable relation to the actual or projected expenditure on the cost of the service or facility.

26. The decisions in Bhagatram and Bihar Chamber of Commerce now say that even if the purpose of imposition of the tax is not merely to confer a special advantage on the traders but to benefit the public in general including the traders, that levy can still be considered to be compensatory. According to this view, an indirect or incidental benefit to traders by reason of stepping up the developmental activities in various local areas of the State can be legitimately brought within the concept of compensatory tax, the nexus between the tax known as compensatory tax and the trading facilities not being necessarily either direct or specific.

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27. Since the concept of compensatory tax has been judicially evolved as an exception to the provisions of Article 301 and as the parameters of this judicial concept are blurred, particularly by reason of the decisions in Bhagatram and Bihar Chamber of Commerce we are of the view that the interpretation of Article 301 vis-à-vis compensatory tax should be authoritatively laid down with certitude by the Constitution Bench under Article 145(3).

28. In the circumstances let all these matters be placed before the Hon’ble the Chief Justice for appropriate directions.”
4. The matters were, pursuant to the above, placed before a Constitution Bench of this Court in Jindal Stainless Ltd. (2) and Anr. v. State of Haryana and Ors., (2006) 7 SCC 241 which resolved the conflict noticed in the reference order by holding that the working test propounded by seven Judges in Automobile Transport case (supra) was incompatible with thetest of ‘some connection’ enunciated by the three Judge Bench in Bhagatram’s case (supra). The Court held that the test of ‘some connection’ as propounded in Bhagatram’s case (supra) had no application to the concept of compensatory tax. The Court, accordingly, overruled the decisions rendered in Bhagatram and Bihar Chamber of Commerce cases and held that the doctrine of ‘direct and immediate effect’ of the impugned law on trade and commerce under Article 301 as propounded in Atiabari (supra) and the working test enunciated in Automobile Transport (supra) cases for deciding whether a tax is compensatory

or not will continue to apply. The Court observed:
“53. We reiterate that the doctrine of “direct and immediate effect” of the impugned law on trade and commerce under Article 301 as propounded in Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd. v. State of Assam and the working test enunciated in Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd. v. State of Rajasthan for deciding whether a tax is compensatory or not vide para 19 of the Report (AIR),will continue to apply and the test of “some connection” indicated in para 8 (of SCC) of the judgment in BhagatramRajeevkumar v. CST and followed in State of Bihar v. Bihar Chamberof Commerce is, in our opinion, not good law. Accordingly, the constitutional validity of various local enactments which are the subject-matters of pending appeals, special leave petitions and writ petitions will now be listed for being disposed of in the light of this judgment.”
5. Thematterswere,intermsoftheabovedirection,listedbeforeatwo-Judgebenchforhearing of the appeals in the light of the above pronouncement of the Constitution Bench. Thetwo-Judge Bench, however, noticed that although the basic issue in the appeals revolved around the concept of compensatory tax, the High Courts had not examined the same as they had considered themselves bound by the view taken in Bhagatram and Bihar Chamber of Commerce cases (supra). The Court further found that in the absence of relevant data before the High Courts, the issue whether the levies were compensatory could not have been considered and accordingly referred the matter back to the High Courts to decide the said aspect. The appeals were, in the meantime, adjourned to await the finding from the High Courts on the question whether the levies were indeed compensatory in nature having regard to the decisions of this Court in Atiabari and Automobile Transport cases (supra).
6. The matters were accordingly taken up by the High Courts, after the remand, who came to the conclusion that the impugned levies were neither compensatory in character nor was the procedure stipulated by Article 304(b) and the proviso to the same followed. The levies were on that basis held to be in violation of Article 301 being an impediment to free trade,

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commerce and intercourse and accordingly struck down. The High Courts of Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Kerala and Tamil Nadu struck down the levies imposed by their respective States also on the ground that they were discriminatory in nature hence violative of Article 304(a) of the Constitution.

7. All these judgments and orders of the High Courts, passed after the remand, then, came to be challenged by the States concerned in the appeals filed against the same. These appeals initially came-up before a two-Judge Bench of this Court comprising Justice Arijit Pasayat and Justice S.H. Kapadia. Their Lordships referred the same to a Constitution Bench for an authoritative pronouncement on as many as ten questions formulated in the reference order (Jaiprakash Associates Limited v. State of Madhya Pradesh and Ors. (2009) 7 SCC 339). The Court noticed the arguments advanced on behalf of the assessees that entry taxes were, in essence and in the classical sense, in the nature of ‘a fee’ and not ‘a tax’. It also noted the contention that all the cases on which the parties had placed reliance related to entry tax in the context of tax on vehicles in contradiction to taxes on entry of goods. The Court was of the view that while the Constitution Bench in Jindal Stainless Ltd. (2) (supra) had dealt with some aspects of the matter, certain other important constitutional issues remained to be examined especially because a conceptually and contextually different approach may be required vis-à-vis “transport cases” on the one hand and cases of “entry tax on goods” on the other. The matter was accordingly placed before a five-Judge Bench of this Court (Jindal Stainless Limited and Anr. v. State of Haryana and Ors. (2010) 4 SCC 595) who briefly referred to the decisions in Atiabari, Automobile Transport cases (supra) and Keshav Mills Co. Ltd. v. CIT (AIR 1965 SC 1636) and a few others and referred the matters to a larger Bench for reconsideration of the judgment of this Court in Atiabari and Automobile Transport (supra). The Court noted that the correctness of the view taken in the said two cases had been doubted as early as in the year 1975 in G.K. Krishnan v. State of Tamil Nadu (1975) 1 SCC 375. The reference order briefly set out some of the questions that required consideration by a larger Bench.

9. At the hearing before us learned counsel for the parties agreed after a day -long exploratory exercise that the questions that fall for determination by this Court could be re-framed as under: 1. Can the levy of a non-discriminatory tax per se constitute infraction of Article 301 of the Constitution of India?

2. If answer to question No. 1 is in the affirmative, can a tax which is compensatory in nature also fall foul of Article 301 of the Constitution of India?
3. What are the tests for determining whether the tax or levy is compensatory in nature?
4. Is the Entry Tax levied by the States in the present batch of cases violative of Article 301 of the Constitution and in particular have the impugned State enactmentsrelating to

entry tax to be tested with reference to both Articles 304(a) and 304(b) of the Constitution for determining their validity?
10. Wehaveheardlearnedcounselforthepartiesatconsiderablelengthontheabovequestions which we shall now take up for discussion ad-seriatim.

Re: Question No. 1
11. Power of the State legislatures to levy taxes is subject to the limitations of Article 304(a) of the Constitution appearing in Part XIII thereof, which part regulates trade, commerce and

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intercourse within the territory of India and comprises Articles 301 to 307. The provisions of these Articles have been the subject matter of a series of decisions of this Court including several Constitution Bench decisions to some of which we shall presently refer. The language employed in the provisions and the non-obstante clauses with which the same start have all the same given rise to several contentious issues for determination by this Court over the past five decades or so. The fact that the present batch of cases had to be referred to a Nine-Judge Bench to once again examine the very same issues as have been debated and determined in the previous judgments of this Court only shows that the task of interpreting the provisions is by no means easy and has in fact become more and more difficult on account of the pronouncements of this Court taking different views not many of which have been unanimous. The marked difference in the approach adopted by learned counsel for the parties in these appeals is also a measure of the complexities of issues that fall for determination. This is specially so because the prevailing legal position in terms of the judgment of this Court in Atiabari and Automobile cases (supra) holding that fiscal measures that are compensatory fall beyond the mischief of Article 301 has been questioned by both sides. Mr. Harish Salve who led the forensic exercise followed by M/s.ArvindDatar, Laxmi Kumaran, Ravindra Shrivastava, N. V enkataraman and others vehemently argued that the “Compensatory Tax Theory” propounded by the Seven Judges Bench of this Court in Automobile case (supra) had no legal basis or constitutional sanction and was neither acceptable nor workable. That is particularly so because the State legislatures had taken umbrage under the “Compensatory Tax Theory” and declared the fiscal levies imposed by them to be compensatory in character and claimed the same to be outside the mischief of Article 301 and consequently immune from any challenge on the ground that these taxes and levies were unreasonable restrictions on the right to free trade and commerce. The States who have enacted the laws providing for levy of taxes on the entry of goods into a local area within the meaning of Entry 52 of List II have, on the other hand similarly contended that the Compensatory Tax Theory is bereft of any legal basis and that the decision in Atiabari and Automobile cases (supra) need to be revisited to restore and protect the sovereign power of legislation of the States and the Federal character of our polity.The present reference to a larger Bench is in that backdrop expected to give a quietus to this raging legal controversy of considerable complexity, though given theperseverance of the litigants and the ingenuity of the bar a quietus is only apious hope which has and may even in future elude us.

66. With the Compensatory Tax Theory no longer found acceptable, we are left with only two competing view points, one expressed by Gajendragadkar, J. and the other by B.P. Sinha, CJ. Which one is the correct view is the critical question that falls for our determination having regard to the Constitutional scheme and the language employed in Articles 301 to 307 to which we must now turn for a closer look.

Article 301 is as under:
“301. Freedom of trade, commerce and intercourse. –
Subject to the other provisions of this Part, trade, commerce and intercourse throughout the territory of India shall be free”
A plain reading of the above would show that freedom of trade, commerce and intercourse is by no means absolute, the same being subject to the other provisions of Part XIII of the Constitution. Amongst those provisions are Articles 302, 303 and 304 which have a direct

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bearing on the nature and the extent of restrictions subject to which only is the right to freedom of trade, commerce and intercourse referred to in Article 301 exercisable. Article 302reads thus: “302. Power of Parliament to impose restrictions
on trade, commerce and intercourse. — Parliament may by law impose such restrictions onthe freedom of trade, commerce or intercourse between one State and another or within any part of the territory of India as may be required in the public interest.”

67. The above leaves no manner of doubt that Parliament is empowered to impose such restrictions on the freedom of trade, commerce and intercourse between one State and another or within any part of the territory of India as may be required in public interest. Reading Articles 301 and 302 together, it is evident, that freedom of trade, commerce and intercourseis subject to restrictions which Parliament may by law impose in public interest. The absolute character of the freedom of trade, commerce and intercourse is thus lost by reason of Article 302 itself empowering Parliament to impose such restrictions as it may consider necessary in public interest. Article 303, in turn, places restrictions on the legislative powers of theParliament and of the States, when it says :

“303. Restrictions on the legislative powers of the Union and of the States with regard to trade and commerce. — (1) Notwithstanding anything in article 302, neither Parliament nor the Legislature of a State shall have power to make any law giving, or authorising the giving of, any preference to one State over another, or making, or authorising the making of, any discrimination between one State and another, by virtue of any entry relating to trade and commerce in any of the Lists in the Seventh Schedule.

(2) Nothing in clause (1) shall prevent Parliament from making any law giving, or authorising the giving of, any preference or making, or authorising the making of, any discrimination if it is declared by such law that it is necessary to do so for the purpose of dealing with a situation arising from scarcity of goods in any part of the territory of India.”

68. A careful reading of the above would show that notwithstanding the power vested in the Parliament under Article 302, it shall not make any law giving, or authorising the giving of any preference to one State over another, or making, or authorising the making of, any discrimination between one State and another, by virtue of any entry relating to trade and commerce in any of the Lists in the Seventh Schedule. From Clause (2) of Article 303 (supra) it is manifest that the restriction on the power vested in Parliament in terms of Clause (1) of Article 303 shall not extend to Parliament making any law with a view to giving or authorising the giving of, any preference or making, or authorising the making of, any discrimination if it is declared by such law that it is necessary to do so for the purpose of dealing with a situation arising out of scarcity. A conjoint reading of Clauses (1) and (2) of Article 303 would thus make it clear that while Parliament/ Legislature of a State shall have no power to make a law imposing restriction on trade, commerce and intercourse, by giving or authorizing the giving of any preference to one State over the other, such limitation on the legislative power of Parliament shall not extend to giving of any preference or making or authorizing any discrimination if it is declared by law that a situation has arisen out of scarcity of goods that makes it necessary to do so. In other words, while the Parliament may impose restrictions in public interest under Article 302, the restriction so imposed shall not be in the nature of giving preference or discrimination between one State or the other except when the

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law declares that scarcity of goods in any part of India necessitates such preference or discrimination.
69. That brings us to Article 304 of the Constitution which too like Articles 302 and 303 deals with restrictions on the freedom of trade, commerce and intercourse. It reads:

“304. Restrictions on trade, commerce and intercourse among States. —Notwithstanding anything in Article 301 or Article 303, the Legislature of a State may by law— (a) impose on goods imported from other States or the Union territories any tax to which similar goods manufactured or produced in that State are subject, so, however, as not to discriminate between goods so imported and goods so manufactured or produced; and (b) impose such reasonable restrictions on the freedom of trade, commerce or intercourse with or within that State as may be required in the public interest: Provided that no Bill or amendment for the purposes of clause (b) shall be introduced or moved in the Legislature of a State without the previous sanction of the President.”
The Article starts with a “non-obstante” clause which has been the subject matter of forensic debates in several cases. We do not for the present propose to address the effect of the non- obstante clause at this stage or the interplay between the expression “subject to” appearing in Article 301 and the non-obstante clause in Article 304. We shall turn to that aspect a little later. What we wish to examine is whether Article 304(a) treats taxes as a restriction so that any such levy may fall foul of Article 301. The answer to that question, we say without any hesitation is in the negative. Article 304(a) far from treating taxes as a restriction per se, specifically recognises the State legislature’s power to impose the same on goods imported from other States or Union Territories. The expression “the legislature of a State may by law impose on goods imported from other States (or Union Territories) any tax” are much too clear and specific to be capable of any equivocation or confusion. It is true that the source of power available to the State legislature to levy a tax is found in Articles 245 and 246 of the Constitution but, the availability of such power for taxing goods imported from other States or Union Territories is clearly recognised by Article 304 (a). The expression ‘may by law impose’ is certainly not a restriction on the power to tax. That does not, however, mean that the power to tax goods imported from other States or Union Territories is unqualified or unrestricted. There are, in our opinion, two restrictions on that power. The words “to which similar goods manufactured or produced in that State are subject” impose the first restriction on the power of the State legislature to levy any such tax. These words would imply that a tax on import of goods from other States will be justified only if similar goods manufactured or produced in the State are also taxed. The second restriction comes from the expression “so, however, as not to discriminate between goods so imported and goods so manufactured or produced”. The State legislature cannot in the matter of levying taxes discriminate between goods imported from other States and those manufactured or produced within the State levying such a tax. The net effect of Article 304 (a) therefore is that while levy of taxes on goods imported from others State and Union territories is clearly recognised as Constitutionally permissible, the exercise of such power is subject to the two restrictive conditions referred to above. That does not however detract from the proposition that levy of taxes on goods imported from other States is constitutionally permissible so long as the State legislatures abide by the limitations placed on the exercise of that power. To put it differently,

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levy of taxes on import of goods from other States is not by itself an impediment under the scheme of Part XIII or Article 301 appearing therein.
70. That brings us to the question whether Clauses (a) and (b) have to be read conjunctively. In our opinion Clauses (a) and (b) of Article 304 deal with two distinct subjects and must, therefore, be understood to be independent of each other. While Clause (a) deals entirely with imposition of taxes on goods imported from other States, Clause (b) deals with imposition of reasonable restriction in public interest. It is trite that levy of a tax in terms of Article 304(a) may or may not be accompanied by the imposition of any restriction whether reasonable or unreasonable. There is, in our opinion, no rationale in the contention that the legislature of a State cannot levy a tax without imposing one or more reasonable restrictions or that a law that is simply imposing restrictions in terms of Clause (b) to Article 304 must be accompanied by the levy of a tax on the import of goods. The use of the word ‘and’ between clauses (a) and (b) does not admit of an interpretation that may impose an obligation upon the legislature to necessarily impose a tax and a restriction together. The law may simply impose a tax without any restriction reasonable or otherwise or it may simply impose a reasonable restriction in public interest without imposing any tax whatsoever. It may also levy a tax and impose such reasonable restriction as may be considered necessary in public interest. All the three situations are fully covered and permissible under Article 304 in view of the phraseology usedtherein. The word ‘and’ can mean ‘or’ as well as ‘and’ depending upon the context in which the law enacted by the legislature uses the same. Suffice it to say that levy of taxes do not constitute a restriction under Part XIII except in cases where the same are discriminatory in nature. Once Article 304 (a) is understood in that fashion, Clause (b) dealing with reasonable restrictions must necessarily apply to restrictions other than those by way of taxes. It follows that for levy of taxes prior Presidential sanction in terms of the proviso under Article 304(b) will be wholly unnecessary. This view is reinforced on the plain language of

proviso to Article 304(b), which is limited to law relating to reasonable restrictions referred to in clause (b).
72. The sum total of what we have said above regarding Articles 301, 302, 303 & 304 may be summarized as under:

1. Freedom of trade, commerce and intercourse in terms of Article 301 is not absolute but is subject to the Provisions of Part XIII.
2. Article 302 which appears in Part XIII empowers the Parliament to impose restrictions on trade, commerce and intercourse in public interest.

3. The restrictions which Parliament may impose in terms of Article 302 cannot however give any preference to one State over another by virtue of any entry relating to trade and commerce in any of the lists in the Seventh Schedule.
4. The restriction that the Parliament may impose in terms of Article 302 may extend to giving of preference or permitting discrimination between one State over another only if Parliament by law declares that a situation arising out of scarcity of goods warrants such discrimination or preference.

5. Article 304(a) recognizes the availability of the power to impose taxes on goods imported from other States, the legislative power to do so being found in Articles 245 and 246 of the Constitution.

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6. Such power to levy taxes is however subject to the condition that similar goods manufactured or produced in the State levying the tax are also subjected to tax and that there is no discrimination on that account between goods so imported and goods so manufactured or produced.

7. The limitation on the power to levy taxes is entirely covered by Clause (a) of Article 304 which exhausts the universe in so far as the State legislature’s power to levy of taxes is concerned.
8. Resultantly a discriminatory tax on the import of goods from other States alone will work as an impediment on free trade, commerce and intercourse within the meaning of Article 301. 9. Reasonable restrictions in public interest referred to in Clause (b) of Article 304 do not comprehend levy of taxes as a restriction especially when taxes are presumed to be both reasonable and in public interest.

79. We may now turn to yet another contextual feature that has a bearing on the true and correct interpretation of Part XIII namely the sovereign character of the power to tax availableto the State legislature. It is now fairly well settled that the Constitutionally vested power to levy tax can be regulated or controlled only by specific Constitutional limitations, if any. Applying the above principle to the case at hand, we do not see any specific limitation on the State’s power to levy taxes on the import of goods from other States except the one referred toin Article 304(a) of the Constitution. That limitation we have sufficiently explained is confined to levy of discriminatory taxes within the comprehension of Article 304(a). So long as taxes are non- discriminatory and, therefore, consistent with Article 304(a),

there is no limitation leave alone any express limitation on the States’ legislative power to levy any tax on the import of goods from another State. The power to levy a tax in terms of Articles 245 and 246 read with Entry 52 of list II not being in dispute in the cases at hand, the absence of any specific limitation forbidding the exercise of such power whether for the sake of free trade, commerce and intercourse or otherwise simply means that the State legislatures are free to levy taxes that are non-discriminatory in nature.

We may at this stage deal with yet another contention urged on behalf of the assesses who argued that while Article 304(a) forbids discriminatory fiscal legislation in respect of goods coming from another state there was no provision which prevented the States from levying discriminatory taxes within its territorial limits. The argument was that the absence of any provision against discriminatory taxation within a State must be understood to mean that taxes would generally be restrictions and unless the States take recourse to Article 304(b) they cannot levy such taxes upon trade and commerce within their territorial limits. The argument is, in our view, more in despair than substantial. It is true that Part XIII does not in terms forbid the levy of discriminatory taxes on goods produced within the States but the fact that there is no such prohibition does not necessarily mean that if such discriminatory taxationdoes indeed take place the same is constitutionally permissible. Whether or not there is hostilediscrimination between goods from one part of the State and those from another part is a matter which will have to be judged on a case to case basis and on the touchstone of Article

14. Having said that we need to remind ourselves that Part XIII of the Constitution was aimed at addressing the mischief arising from fiscal and other barriers which the princely
states had imposed and which gravely impeded free trade and commerce. The Constituent Assembly Debates show that framers of the Constitution were concerned with the removal of

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such barriers. Discrimination intra-State in terms of levy of taxes was never considered to be a challenge for presumably the Constituent Assembly never considered the same to be a real possibility necessitating a specific provision prohibiting levy of discriminatory intra-State taxes.

126. In the light of what we have said above, we answer Question No.1 in the negative and declare that a non-discriminatory tax does not per se constitute a restriction on the right to free trade, commerce and intercourse guaranteed under Article 301. Decisions taking a contrary view in Atiabari’s case (supra) followed by a series of later decisions shall, therefore, stand overruled including the decision in Automobile Transport (supra) declaring

that taxes generally are restrictions on the freedom of trade, commerce and intercourse but such of them as are compensatory in nature do not offend Article 301. Resultantly decisionsof his Court in Jindal Stainless Limited(2) and anr. v. State of Haryana and ors. (2006) 7 SCC 241 shall also stand overruled.

Re. Question No.2
In view of our answer to Question No.1, Question No.2 does not arise for consideration.
128. Re. Question No.3
In the light of what we have said in Question Nos. 1 and 2, this question also does not survive for consideration.
129. Re. Question No.4
This question touching the constitutional validity of the impugned State enactments can be split into two parts. The first part which can be briefly dealt with at the outset is whether the constitutional validity of the impugned legislations has to be tested by reference to both Articles 304(a) and 304(b) as contended by learned counsel for the assessees or only by reference to Article 304(a) as argued by the States. In the light of what we have said while dealing with question No.1 we have no hesitation in holding that Article 304(b) does not deal with taxes as restrictions. At the risk of repetition, we may say that restrictions referred to in Article 304(b) are non-fiscal in nature. Constitutional validity of any taxing statute has, therefore, to be tested only on the anvil of Article 304(a) and if the law is found to be non- discriminatory, it can be declared to be constitutionally valid without the legislation having to go through the test or the process envisaged by Article 304(b). Should, however, the statute fail the test of non-discrimination under Article 304(a) it must be struck down for the same cannot be sustained even if it had gone through the process stipulated by Article 304(b). That is because what is constitutionally impermissible in terms of Article 304(a) cannot be validated and sanctioned through the medium of Article 304(b). Suffice it to say that a fiscal statute shall be open to challenge only under Article 304(a) of the Constitution without being subjected to the test of Article 304(b) either in terms of the existence of public interest or reasonableness of the levy.
130. That brings us to the second part of question No.4 viz. whether the impugned State enactments violate Article 304(a) of the Constitution. That aspect will necessarily involve a careful reading of the impugned enactments and a proper appreciation of the scheme underlying the same. While we have at some length heard learned counsel for the parties on that aspect, we do not propose to deal with all the dimensions of that challenge based on Article 304(a) except two of them that were argued at great length by learned counsel for the parties. The first of these two dimensions touches upon the State’s power to promote

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industrial development by granting incentives including those in the nature of exemptions or reduced rates of levy on goods locally produced or manufactured. On behalf of the assesses it was contended that grant of exemptions and incentives in favour of locally manufactured/produced goods is also one form of insidious discrimination which was impermissible in terms of article 304(a) for such exemptions and incentives had the effect of putting goods from another State at a disadvantage. Relying upon a decision of two-Judge Bench of this Court in Shree Mahavir Oil Mills and Anr. v. State of Jammu and Kashmir and Ors. (1996) 2 SCC 39 it was argued that exemptions in favour of locally produced goods from payment of taxes was constitutionally impermissible and offensive to article 304(a). That was a case where the State Government had totally exempted goods manufactured by small scale industries within the State from payment of sales tax even when the sales tax payable by other industries including manufacturers of goods in adjoining States was in the range of 8%. This exemption was questioned by manufacturers of edible oils from other States on the groundthat the same was discriminatory and violative of Articles 301 and 304 of the Constitution.

131. This Court held that the exemption given to manufacturers of edible oil was total and unconditional, while producers of edible oil from industries in adjoining states had to pay sales tax @ 8%. Grant of exemption to local oil producing units thereby put the former at a disadvantage. Having said that, the Court exercised its powers under Article 142 of the Constitution and struck down the exemption by moulding the reliefs to suit the exigencies of the situation. The Court no doubt noticed a three-Judge Bench decision in Video Electronics vs. State of Punjab (1990) 3 SCC 87 in which notifications issued by the States of U.P and Punjab providing for exemptions to new units established in certain areas for a prescribed period of 3 to 7 years were assailed as discriminatory. The challenge to the exemption was in that case also based on the alleged violation of Articles 301 and 304. This Court however upheld the notifications in question on the ground that the same related to a specific class of industrial units and the benefit under the same was admissible for a limited period of time only. The Court observed that if an overwhelmingly large number of local manufacturerswere subject to sales tax, it could not be said that the local manufactures were favored as a class against outsiders.

Adverting to the decision in Video Electronics (supra) this Court in Mahavir (supra) held the same to be distinguishable on the ground that the Punjab and U.P notifications were qualitatively different from the one issued by the Government of Jammu and Kashmir in as much as while the former benefitted only specified units and limited the benefit to a specified period, the latter was not subject to any such limitations. This declared the Court resulted in discrimination vis-a-vis. outside goods. What is important is that in Video Electronics (supra) this Court recognized the difference between differentiation and discrimination and held that every differentiation is not discrimination. This Court noted that the word discrimination was not used in Article 14 as it has been used in Article 16, Article 303 and Article 304 (a). The use of the word in 304 (a) observed this Court involved an element of “intentional and unfavorable bias”. So long as there was no such bias evident from the measure adopted by thestate, mere grant of exemption or incentives aimed at supporting local industries in their growth, development and progress did not constitute discrimination.

134. Seen in the above context the decision in Mahabir Oil’s case is indeed distinguishable in as much as the manufactures of edible oil were exempted totally and unconditionally while

Jindal Stainless Ltd.&Anr v. State of Haryana &Ors 379

other manufacturers from outside the State were not so exempted. Whether or not the impugned enactments in the present batch of cases satisfy the tests referred to above and elaborated in Video Electronics case is a matter on which we do not propose to express any opinion for that aspect is best left open to be considered by the regular benches hearing these matters after the reference is disposed off.
141. we are inclined to accept the submission made on behalf of the State that so long as the intention behind the grant of exemption/adjustment/credit is to equalize the fall of the fiscal burden on the goods from within the State and those from outside the State such exemption or set off will not amount to hostile discrimination offensive to Article 304(a). Having said that, we leave open for examination by the regular benches hearing the matters whether theimpugned enactment achieve the object of such equalization or lead to a situation that exposesgoods from outside the state to suffer any disadvantage vis-a-vis those produced or manufactured in the taxing State.
142. Wemust,whileparting,mentionthatlearnedcounselforthepartieshadattemptedtoraise certain other issues like whether the entire State can be treated as a local area and whether entry tax can be levied on goods imported from outside the country. We do not, however, consider it necessary in the present reference to address all those issues which are hereby left open to be decided by the regular bench hearing the matter.
143. With that observation the reference is answered. The Registry shall now place the matters before regular benches for an expeditious disposal of the same in the light of what hasbeen observed by us above.

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