South India Corporation (P) Ltd. v. Secretary, Board of Revenue, Trivandrum, (SC) BS110827
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

(Large Bench)

Before:- S.K. Das, ACTG., C.J.I., K. Subba Rao, Raghubar Dayal, N. Rajagopala Ayyangar and J. R. Mudholkar, JJ.

Civil Appeals Nos. 295 to 298 of 1962. D/d. 13.8.1963.

South India Corporation (P) Ltd. - Appellant

Versus

Secretary, Board of Revenue, Trivandrum and another - Respondent

For the Appellant :- Mr. M. K. Nambiar, Senior Advocate, (M/s. J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain, Advocates of M/s. J. B. Dadachanji and Co.

For the Respondent :- Mr. V. P. Gopalan Nambiar, Advocate General, for the State of Kerala, Mr. Sardar Bahadur, Advocates.

Constitution of India, Articles 277, 278 and 372 - Travancore Cochin General Sales Tax Act - Sales Tax - Agreement between President of India and Rajpramukh of the State of Travancore-Cochin - Constitutional (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956 did not affect the validity of the agreement - Object of Article 372 is to maintain the continuity of pre-existing laws after the came into force of the Constitution - The words "Subject to the other provisions of the Constitution" should be given a reasonable interpretation - Means that if there is a conflict between pre-existing law and the provisions of Constitution, latter shall prevail - During the period covered by the agreement, State ceased to have any power to impose tax under Travancore-Cochin General Sales Tax Act, 1125, M.E.

[Paras 9 and 10]

Cases Referred :-

Union of India v. Maharaja Krishnagarh Mills Ltd., 1961-3 SCR 524.

Gannon Dunkerly and Co. v. Sales Tax Officer, Maatancherry, ILR (1957) Kerala 462.

Sagar Mall v. State, ILR (1952) 1 All 862.

Kanpur Oil Mills v. Judge (Appeals) Sales Tax Kanpur, AIR 1955 Allahabad 99.

Amalgamated Coalfields Ltd. v. Janapada Sabha, Chhindware, 1962-1 SCR 1.

Jagdish Prasad v. Saharanpur Municipality, AIR 1961 Allahabad 583.

Sheoshankar v. State Government of M. P. AIR 1951 Nagpur 58.

State v. Yash Pal, (S)AIR 1957 Punjab 91.

Binoy Bhusan v. States of Bihar AIR 1954 Patna 346.

Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Co. v. William McGlinn, (1884) 29 Law Ed 270.

Vilas v. City of Manila, (1910) 55 Law Ed 491.

JUDGMENT

Subba Rao, J. - These four companion appeals arise out of a common judgment of the High Court of Kerala dismissing the four petitions filed by the appellant seeking to quash the orders of assessment made by the Sales Tax authorities imposing sales tax in respect of "works contracts".

2. The undisputed facts may briefly be stated. The appellant is a private limited company incorporated under the Indian companies Act. The principal office of the Company is at Mattancherry. It carries on business in iron, hardware, electrical goods, timber, coir engineering contracts etc. In the course of its business, the company acted as engineering contractor for the State and Central Government departments and also for private parties. On March 17, 1959, the Sales Tax Officer, Special Circle, Ernakulam, assessed the Company to sales tax under the Travancore-Cochin General Sales Tax Act, 1125 M. E. for the assessment year 1952-53 in respect of "works contracts." The Company filed a revision petition before the 1st respondent, but it was rejected. Likewise the 2nd respondent assessed the Company to sales tax by his orders dated 7-1-1960, 4-1-1960 and 31-3-1960 for the assessment years 1956-57, 1957-58 and 1958-59 in respect of "works contracts". The appellant filed four petitions in the High Court of Kerala under Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution for quashing the said orders of assessment. The main contention advanced on behalf of the appellant-Company before the High Court was that, after the Constitution came into force the relevant Sales Tax Acts imposing sales tax on "works contracts" were unconstitutional and, therefore, void. The High court rejected the contention and dismissed the petitions with costs. Hence the appeals.

3. Before adverting to the rival contentions it would be convenient at the outset to give briefly the historical background of the sales tax legislation in Kerala.

4. Originally, Travancore and Cochin were two separate sovereign States having plenary powers of taxation. In the Cochin State, the Cochin General Sales Tax Act 15 of 1121 M. E. and in the Travancore State the Travancore General Sales Tax Act 18 of 1124 M. E. imposed tax on "works contracts." As a result of the merger of the two States, the United State of Travancore-Cochin was formed with a common Legislature. The said Legislature enacted the Travancore-Chochin General Sales Tax Act 11 of 1125 M. E. (1950), hereinafter called the Act. The said Legislature also had plenary powers of taxation and, therefore, it validly imposed sales tax on "works contracts". The Act was published in the Gazette on January 17, 1950, but Section 1(3) thereof provided that it would come into force on such date as the Government might, by notification in the Gazette, appoint. The requisite notification was issued by the Government on May 30,1950. Rules were framed under powers conferred by Section 24 of the Act prescribing the mode, interalia, for ascertaining the amounts for which goods were sold in relation to "works contracts" Rule 4 (3) provided that,

But, it is stated that the Board of Revenue did not fix the percentage for deduction from the amount payable to the dealer for carrying out a works contract. This fact was not denied in the High Court, but before us an application is made to produce the Travancore-Cochin Gazette to establish that such a percentage was fixed. The Rules also were notified on may 30. 1950. The earlier Acts of Travancore and Cochin were repealed from May 30, 1950. Till may 30, 1950, sales tax was levied on works contracts in Travancore and Cochin areas under the respective Acts and the rules framed thereunder. As from the said date the said Acts were repealed, thereafter the said tax was imposed under the Act and the rules framed thereunder. On November 1, 1956, the States Reorganisation Act of 1956 came into force and the new State of Kerala was formed thereunder . The newly formed Kerala State comprised the area covered by the Travancore-Cochin State, excepting a small part thereof, and the district of Malabar in the Madras State. Thereafter, the Kerala Legislature passed the Travancore-Cochin General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1957 (12 of 1957) amending the Act and extending its provisions to the whole State of Kerala. The new Act practically contained the provisions of the earlier Act. The said Act came into force on October 1. 1957. By the provisions of Act 12 of 1957, among other things, the tax on electric goods was enhanced from 3 n.p. to 4 n. p. in the rupee and in regard to cement, this item was freshly added and charged to sales tax at 5 n. p. in the rupee. The State of Kerala does not admit that either there was any enhancement of tax in the case of electrical goods or that any tax was imposed in regard to cement involved in a works contract. Further, the sales tax leviable under the Act was enhanced by the Kerala Surcharge on Taxes Act, 1957 (11 of 1957) and again by the Kerala surcharge on Taxes Act, 1960. We are not concerned with the latter Act, as no assessment was made under that Act in respect of any of the transactions in question.

5. The factual position may, therefore, be stated thus : The assessment for the year 1952-53 was made only under the Travancore-Chochin General Sales Tax Act (11 of 1125 M. E. ) and therefore, the subsequent alleged enhancement of the tax does not affect the assessment of that year. Assessments for the years 1956-57 1957-58 and 1958-59 were made under the Travancore-Chochin General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1957 (12 of 1957) and, therefore, the provision, if any, enhancing the rate under the Act would affect the said assessments. The enhancements made under the Kerala Act 11 of 1957 would not govern the assessment year 1956-57, but only the assessment years 1957-58 and 1958-59

6. The material contentions of Mr. Nambiar, appearing for the appellant, may be summarised thus: (1) The Travancore-Cochin Act of 1125 would not continue in force under Article 372 of the Constitution inasmuch as its provisions were inconsistent with the structure of the Constitution as well as with the provisions of Part XII thereof. (2) Article 277 of the Constitution cannot be relied upon by the respondent, as it can be availed of only : (a) if a particular tax was lawfully levied by the Government of the State immediately before the Commencement of the Constitution and is expressly mentioned in the Union List, and (b) if there is an identity between the tax imposed by the State before the Constitution and that continued by it thereafter in respect of rate, area, State and purpose. It is said that the said two conditions are not satisfied. (3) Assuming that Article 277 applied, the said provision could not be relied upon by the appellant in view of the agreement entered into between the Rajpramukh of Travancore and the Union Government under Art, 278 of the Constitution. (4) The impugned Act, in so far as it imposed tax in respect of "works contracts" would offend Article 14 of the Constitution inasmuch as it was not applied to areas other than those covered by the Travancore-Cochin States and, therefore, discriminatory in its application. And (5) in any view, in respect of the assessment year 1952-53 the non-fixation of the percentage by the Board of revenue under Rule 4(3) of the Rules made under the Act renders the said assessment illegal.

7. The learned Advocate-General of Kerala counters some of the said arguments. We shall refer to his arguments in the course of the judgment at appropriate places. It may be mentioned at this stage that the learned Advocate-General conceded that the assessment orders for the years 1956-57, 1957-58 and 1958-59 made under the Travancore-Cochin General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1957 (12 of 1957) and the Kerala surcharge on Taxes Act (11 of 1957) were bad, but prayed that the State might be given liberty to assess the appellant de novo for the said years under the Act.

8. The main contention of learned counsel for the appellant centers on the provisions of Articles 277 and 278 of the Constitution. Under Article 277, any taxes that were being lawfully levied by the Government of any State before the Constitution could be continued to be levied thereafter, notwithstanding that the said taxes were mentioned in the Union List, till Parliament made a law to the contrary. Article 278 enables the Government of India and a State Government specified in part B of the First Schedule to the Constitution to enter into an agreement with respect to levy and collection of any tax leviable by the Government of India in such State and for the distribution of the proceeds thereof and also in respect of the grant of any financial assistance by the Government of India to such State if it incurred any loss of revenue derived by it from any source. Under clause (2) thereof, such an agreement shall continue in force for a period of ten years from the commencement of the Constitution. We are not concerned here with the legal position after the expiry of the said period, and we do not propose to express our view thereon.

9. The first contention of learned counsel for the appellant is that Article 277 of the Constitution can only save the levy of a tax that was being lawfully levied by a State immediately before the commencement of the Constitution and that, as the Act came into force only after the Constitution, the levy made thereunder does not satisfy the condition laid down by the article. To appreciate this contention some relevant facts may be recapitulated. The Act was published in the Gazette on January 17, 1950, but was brought into force only on May 30, 1950, i.e., after the commencement of the Constitution. If so, it follows that the tax under the Act would not be saved, as the necessary condition that the levy should have been lawfully made before the Constitution was not satisfied.

10. On the assumption that Article 277 saved the levy of tax under the Act, the further contention of the appellant is that thee was an agreement dated February 25, 1950 between the President of India and the Rajpramukh of the State of Travancore-Cochin in the matter of the federal financial integration in the said State and that under the said agreement the Union agreed to recoup the loss in revenue incurred by the said State by reason of the Constitutional transference of the B State's power of taxation in respect of certain items to the Union List and that, thereafter, the State ceased to have the power to levy any tax in respect of the subjects so transferred. The learned Advocate-General, on the other hand, contends that Article 278(2) enables the Union and a B State to enter into an agreement only in respect of a tax leviable by the Government of India in the said State and in respect whereof a loss has been incurred by the State by reason of the fact that under the Constitution it has ceased to have the power to levy and collect the said tax, and that, as in the instant case by reasons of Article 277 the State would continue to have the power to levy the tax in respect of "works contracts" till Parliament made appropriate law, it did not incur any loss in respect of the said tax and, therefore, no valid agreement could be entered into between the State Government and the Union in respect thereof. To state it differently, Art, 278 does not come into play unless the Government of India acquires the power to levy a particular tax saved by Article 277 by Parliament making an appropriate law; for , it is said, with some force, there cannot be an agreement to recoup any loss of revenue when there is no such loss. But this question is covered by a decision of this Court in Union of India v. Maharaja Krishnagarh Mills Ltd., 1961-3 SCR 524. There, the question of determination was whether the Union of India was entitled to levy and recover arrears of excise duty on cotton cloth for the period April 1, 1949 to March 31, 1950, payable by the respondent, a cloth mill in the State of Rajasthan, under the Rajasthan Excise Duties Ordinance, 1949. By reason of Article 277 of the Constitution, the State of Rajasthan became entitled to recover the said duty notwithstanding the fact that it was transferred to the Union List. The provision to the contrary contemplated by Article 277 of the Constitution was made by Finance Act XXV of 1950, Section 11 whereof extended the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944, along with other Acts, to the whole of India except the State of Jammu and Kashmir. That section had effect only from April 1, 1950 and did not apply to arrears of duty of excise in regard to the earlier period. The Union pleaded that an agreement envisaged by Article 278 was entered into on February 25, 1950 which conceded to the Centre the right to levy and collect the arrears of duty in question. The question now raised before us, namely whether there can be a valid agreement under Article 278 of the Constitution in respect of taxes leviable by the State and not leviable by the Government of India till an appropriate law is made by Parliament arose for consideration in that case. The learned Chief Justice, speaking for the Court, came to the following conclusion, at p. 535 (of SCR).

The reasons for the conclusion are found at p. 533 (of SCR).

The learned Chief Justice proceeded to state thus p. 535 (of SCR):

This Court, therefore, held that after the coming into force of the Constitution the excise duty in question in that case was leviable only by the Government of India, though there was a saving provision in favour of the State of Rajasthan till Parliament made an appropriate law; and on that reasoning it held that the agreement under Article 278 could be made in respect of such a levy notwithstanding the temporary reservation made in favour of the State. The only difference between that case and the present one is that at the time the agreement was entered into between the Union and the State, Parliament had not made the appropriate law depriving the State of its power to levy taxes in respect of "works contracts" But that cannot make any difference in principle, for, even the earlier decision related only t o the validity of the agreement in respect of arrears leviable by the State before the appropriate law was made. The effect of the provisions in Article 278 is that to the extent covered by an agreement the power of the State Government to continue to levy taxes under Article 277 superseded.

11. The next question is whether there was any such agreement where under the State agreed to give up its right to levy the said tax as a part of the agreement entered into by it with the Union. This leads us to consider the terms of the agreement dated February 25, 1950, entered into between the President of India and the Rajpramukh of the State of Travancore-Cochin. It would be convenient to read the relevant clauses of the agreement. It reads :

It will be seen from the said agreement that it incorporated the recommendations made by the Indian State Finance Enquiry Committee with some modifications and that the Union of India agreed to recoup the State for the loss caused to it by reason of the federal financial integration in the manner described thereunder. It was not a piecemeal agreement confined to a few items, but a comprehensive one to fill up the entire revenue-gap caused to the State by reason of some of its sources of revenue having been taken away by the Union or otherwise lost to it. A perusal of the main recommendations made by the Indian States Finance Enquiry Committee and incorporated in the agreement also indicates the completeness of the arrangement. The Committee was asked to examine and report inter alia, whether, and if so, the extent to which, the process of so integrating Federal Finance in the Indian States and Union with that of the rest of India should be gradual and the manner in which it should be brought about. One of the general principles followed by the Committee was that federal financial integration in States involved not merely the taking over of all their "federal" revenues by the Centre, but also the assumption of all expenditure in States upon Departments and Service of a 'federal' Revenues and 'Federal' service departments", it was stated that with effect from the prescribed date, the Centre will take over all 'federal' sources of Revenue and all 'federal' items of expenditure in States together with the administration of the Departments concerned, and that the Centre must also take over all the current outstandings, liabilities, claims, etc. and all, productive and unproductive Capital assets connected with these departments. Dealing with the States' rights it observed:

The Committee recommended that the whole body of State legislation to 'federal' subjects should be repealed and the corresponding body of Central legislation extended proprio vigore to the States, with effect from the prescribed date, or as and when the administration of particular 'federal' subject is assumed by the Centre. In its second Interim Report, dealing with Travancore and Cochin, the following recommendation were made :

From the date of federal financial integration Rs. 230 lakhs per annum to 31st March 1955.

The agreement, read with the Report makes the following position clear : The loss arising to the State on account of the federal financial integration in the State was ascertained and a provision was made for subsidising the State by filling up the said revenue-gap. The agreement ex facie appears to be a comprehensive one. It takes into consideration the entire loss caused to the State by reason of some of its sources of revenue being transferred under the Constitution to the Union. It would be unreasonable to construe the agreement as to exclude from its operation certain taxes which the State was authorised to levy for a temporary period. As we have said, that saving was subject to an agreement and, as by the agreement effective adjustments were made to meet the loss which the State would have incurred but for the agreement, there was no longer any necessity for the continuance of the saving and, it ceased to have any force thereafter between the parties to the agreement. We are not called upon in this case to decide whether the said power revived after the expiry of ten years from the commencement of the Constitution, for all the impugned assessments fall within the said period. Nor do we find any force in the contention that as Article 278 was omitted by the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956, the agreement entered into in exercise of a power thereunder automatically came to an end and thereafter the power of the State to levy the tax came into life again. An obvious fallacy underlies this ingenious argument. The validity of an agreement depends upon the existence of power at the time it was entered into. Its duration will be limited by its terms or by the conditions imposed on the power itself. Article 278 conferred a power upon the Union and the B State to enter into an agreement which would continue in force for a period not exceeding ten years from the commencement of the Constitution. The agreement in question fell squarely within the scope of the power. That agreement, therefore, would have its full force unless the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956 in terms avoided it. The said amendment was only prospective in operation and it could not have affected the validity of the agreement. We, therefore, hold that the impugned assessment orders were not validly made by the sales tax authorities in exercise of the power saved under Article 277 of the Constitution.

12. Learned Advocate-General for the State of Kerala raises an interesting point, namely, that the impugned law, i. e., the Travancore-Cochin General Sales Tax Act of 1125 M. E. continued in force after the Constitution under the express provisions of Article 372 thereof till the said law was altered, repealed or amended by the competent authority and, therefore, even if there was an agreement between the Union and the State as aforesaid, it could not affect the power of the State to impose the tax under the said law.

13. Mr. Nambiar, on the other hand, argues that Article 372 is subject to other provisions of the Constitution and a law empowering a State to impose a tax in respect of a federal subject is inconsistent with the federal structure of the Constitution and, therefore, is bad; and, that apart, it is also inconsistent with the express provisions of Part XII of the Constitution and particularly with those of Articles 277 and 278 thereof. Article 372 reads :

The object of this article is to maintain the continuity of the pre-existing laws after the Constitution came into force till they were repealed, altered or amended by a competent authority. Without the aid of such an article there would be utter confusion in the field of law. The assumption underlying the article is that the State laws may or may not be within the legislative competence of the appropriate authority under the Constitution. The article would become ineffective and purposeless if it was held that pre-Constitution laws should be such as could be made by the appropriate authority under the Constitution. The words "subject to the other provisions of the Constitution" should, therefore, be given a reasonable interpretation, an interpretation which would carry out the intention of the makers of the Constitution and also which is in accord with the constitutional practice in such matters. The article posits the continuation of the pre-existing laws made by a competent authority notwithstanding the repeal of Article 395; and the expression "other" in the article can only apply to provisions other than those dealing with legislative competence.

14. The learned Advocate-General relied upon the following decisions for the said legal position; Gannon Dunkerly and Co. v. Sales Tax Officer, Maatancherry, ILR (1957) Kerala 462; Sagar Mall v. State, ILR (1952) 1 All 862; Kanpur Oil Mills v. Judge (Appeals) Sales Tax Kanpur, AIR 1955 Allahabad 99; Amalgamated Coalfields Ltd. v. Janapada Sabha, Chhindware, 1962-1 SCR 1 Jagdish Prasad v. Saharanpur Municipality, AIR 1961 Allahabad 583; Sheoshankar v. State Government of M. P. AIR 1951 Nagpur 58; State v. Yash Pal, (S)AIR 1957 Punjab 91 and Binoy Bhusan v. States of Bihar AIR 1954 Patna 346. It is not necessary to consider in detail the said decisions, as they either resume the said legal position or sustain it, but do not go further. They held that a law made by a competent authority before the Constitution continues to be in force after the Constitution till it is altered or modified or repealed by the appropriate authority, even though it is beyond the legislative competence of the said authority under the Constitution. We give our full assent to the view and hold that a pre-Constitution law made by a competent authority, though it has lost it legislative competency under the Constitution, shall continue in force, provided the law does not contravene the "other provisions" of the Constitution.

15. But the real question is whether the said impugned law is inconsistent with provisions of the Constitution other than those dealing with its legislative competency. The words "subject to other provisions of the Constitution" mean that if there is an irreconcilable conflict between the pre-existing law and a provision or provisions of the Constitution, the latter shall prevail to the extent of that inconsistency. An article of the Constitution by its express terms may come into conflict with a pre-Constitution law wholly or in part; the said article or articles may also by necessary implication, come into direct conflict with the pre-existing law. It may also be that the combined operation of a series of articles may bring about a situation making the existence of the pre-existing law incongruous in that situation. Whatever it may be, the inconsistency must be spelled out from the other provisions of the Constitution and cannot be built up on the supposed political philosophy underlying the Constitution. These observations are necessitated by the reliance of Mr. Nambiar on two decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States of America. In Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Co. v. William McGlinn, (1884) 29 Law Ed 270 the facts, briefly were : The Act of Kansas purported to cede to the United States exclusive jurisdiction over the Fort Leavenworth Military Reservation. In considering the question whether the previous laws continued after the said cession, the Supreme court of the United States of America made a distinction between laws of political character and municipal laws intended for the protection of private rights, but we are not concerned with that question in this case; and indeed the law of India appears to be different from that of America in that regard. But what is relied upon is the effect of cession pre-existing laws which are in conflict with the political character, institution and Constitution of the new Government. Field J., speaking for the Court observed, at p. 272 , as follows :

16. The same view was reiterated by the Supreme Court of the United States of America in a later decision in Vilas v. City of Manila, (1910) 55 Law Ed 491. We are not concerned in this case with the general principles enunciated by the law of America, but only with the express provisions of Article 372 of our Constitution. That apart, it may also be inappropriate to rely upon the legal consequences of a cession of a State under the American law for the interpretation of Article 372 of our constitution, which deals with a different situation and lays down expressly the legal position to meet the same. We would therefore, confine our attention to the express provisions of the Constitution in considering the question raised before us.

17. The relevant provisions which have a bearing on the said question are found in Part XII of the Constitution. Chapter I deals with finance; and this chapter contains a scheme of federal financial integration in the States. Though the Constitution conferred upon the Union and the States independent powers of taxation and constituted separate consolidated funds, it evolved a procedure for an equitable readjustment of the taxes collected between the Union and the States. But before the Constitution came into force the states were levying and collecting certain taxes which, under the Constitution, were allotted to the Union. The immediate exercise of the Union power of taxation in respect of such taxes would dislocate the finances of the States and introduce difficulties in the administration. To avoid this Article 277 saved the existing taxes levied by the States, though they have been transferred to the Union List by the Constitution, till Parliament made appropriate law. But the Constitution was also made applicable to Part B States. They had plenary powers of taxation. Their relationship with the paramount power differed from State to State. Further, most of the States were in a state of financial instability and required substantial help from the Union to bring them up to the standard of Part A States. There would be a serious dislocation in the administration of the said States by a sudden withdrawal of the federal sources of revenue. The provisions of Part XII of the Constitution, with the saving embodied in Article 277, may have met the situation obtaining in Part A States, but they were inadequate for Part B States. Therefore, a special provision under Article 278 was made in respect of Part B States enabling them to enter into an agreement with the Union embodying terms contrary to the other provisions of the Constitution in respect of levy and collection of taxes and the grant of any financial assistance to such State or States.

18. With this background let us now consider the following two questions raised before ns : (1) Whether Article 372 of the Constitution is subject to Article 277 thereof; and (2) whether Article 372 is subject to Article 278 thereof. Article 872 is a general provision; and Article 277 is a special provision. It is settled law that a special provision should be given effect to the extent of its scope, leaving the general provision to control cases where the special provision does not apply. The earlier discussion makes it abundantly clear that the Constitution gives a separate treatment to the subject of finance, and Article 277 saves the existing taxes etc. levied by States, if the conditions mentioned therein are complied with. While Article 372 saves all pre-Constitution valid laws, Article 277 is confined only to taxes, duties, cesses or fees lawfully levied immediately before the Constitution. Therefore, Article 372 cannot be construed in such a way as to enlarge the scope of the saving of taxes, duties, cesses or fees. To state it differently, Article 372 must be read subject to Article 277. We have already held that an agreement can be entered into between the Union and the States in terms of Article 278 abrogating or modifying the power preserved to the States under Article 277.

19. That apart, even if Article 372 continues the pre-Constitution laws of taxation, that provision is expressly made subject to the other provisions of the Constitution. The expression "subject to" conveys the idea of a provision yielding place to another provision or other provisions to which it is made subject. Further Article 278 opens out with a non-obstanate clause. The phrase "notwithstanding anything in the Constitution" is equivalent to saying that in spite of the other articles of the Constitution, or that the other articles shall not be an impediment to the operation of Article 278 While Article 372, is subject to Article 278 , Article 278 operates in it own sphere in spite of Article 372 The result is that Article 278 overrides Article 372 that is to say, notwithstanding the fact that a pre-Constitution taxation law continues in force under Article 372, the Union and the State Governments can enter into an agreement in terms of Article 278 in respect of Part B States depriving the State law of its efficacy. In one view Article 277 excludes the operation of Article 372 and in the other view, an agreement in terms of Article 278 overrides Article 372. In either view, the result is the same, namely, that at any rate during the period covered by the agreement the States ceased to have any power to impose the tax in respect of "works contracts."

20. In this view we need not express our opinion-on the other contentions raise by Mr. Nambiar.

21. In the result, the said orders of assessment are set aside and the appeals are allowed with cost here and in the High Court One set of hearing fee.

Appeals allowed.