Judgment Case ID: 4900

Judgment:
Civil Appeal Nos. 450O and 4501 of 1984. Appeals by Special leave from the Judgment and order dated the 18th January and 18 January	 1984 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Civil Writ Nos. 33OO of 1981 aud 4757 of 1982. H.K. Puri	 M.P. Jha and Sanjeev Walia for the Appellants. S.K Bagga for the Respondent. L.N. Sinha	 A.K Panda and Ashwani Kumar for the Respon. dent The Judgment of the Court was delivered by CINNABAR REDDY J. The appellants	 who are traders engaged in the purchase and sale of agricultural produce	 appear to be a determined lot. For over a decade	 they or those similarly placed have been litigating and impeding the levy and collection of Market fee by the Market Committees constituted under the Punjab Agricultural Produce Markets Act. Sometimes they have been successful	 sometimes they have not. One of the occasions when they appeared to be successful was when this Court in Kewal Krishan Puri vs State 75 Of Punjab(l) declared that the enhancement of the fee from 2% to 3 % was illegal. The court while striking down the enhancement of the fee laid down no new principles but made certain general observations which	 we regret to say	 have been so misunderstood and misinterpreted as to lead to some confusion and public mischief. The misunderstanding and confusion have also naturally led to more litigation. Fortunately	 in Srinivsa General Trader. vs Slate of Andhra Pradesh(2) this Court has removed much of the misunderstanding	 cleared many of the cobwebs and retrieved the situation. Before we proceed to consider the question at issue in present case	 it will be fair to recall the object and purpose of the Punjab Agricultural Produce Markets Act and similar enactments in force in other States Far back in 1953	 Rajamannar	 CJ and T.L. Venkatarama Aiyar	 J	 in Kutti Keya vs The State of Madras(3) considered the provisions of the Madras Commercial Crops Markets Act 1933	 one of the fore runner of the Punjab Agricultural Produce Markets Act and other similar enactments elsewhere. The general nature of the legislation was explained by Venkatarama Aiyar	 J	 as follows: ". the Subject matter of the impugned Act is marketing and legislation on marketing is now a well recognised feature of all commercial countries The need for such a legislation arises whenever societies pass d on from the stage of self supporting economic unit	 producing only articles for its own consumption to that of a commercial community producing articles for sale in outside areas for profit. While in the former stage	 transactions would be generally settled directly between the seller and the purchaser	 the price being paid and delivery of the commodity taken at the time of the deal	 the conditions would be different when commercial crops are begun to be raised. The ultimate purchasers of these commodities would generally be persons outside the area of production	 a merchant residing in another State and even in a foreign country. "To bring about a deal between the local producers and the outside purchasers	 there emerged a class of (1) ; (2) AIR 1983 S.C	 1246. (3) AIR 1954 Mad. 76 middlemen. Even in well organised and economically advanced countries like England	 it was found that the agrIculturist producer had not facilities for disposing of the goods to his best advantage (vide the statement of Dr. Addison	 Minister for Agriculture	 quoted at page 80 of the Indian Central Banking Enquiry Committee Report	 Vol. r	 Part II). It is these conditions that have led up to the enactment of marketing laws in all countries having a large volume of trade in commercial crops The object of this legislation is to protect the producers of commercial crops from being exploited by middlemen and profiteers and to enable them to secure a fair need for their produce. The need for such legislation is even greater in India as the producers are as a class illiterate and economically dependent and unstable. This question had engaged the attention of several committees which had been constituted to report on various economic matters. Indian Cotton was a commodity greatly in demand in England and other countries and in the Central Provinces and Berar open markets for cotton were established through legislation. In 1919	 the Indian Cotton Committee observed in their report that the marketing system afforded great protection to the producers and that special legislation should be undertaken to establish such markets in every cotton growing area. The Royal Commission on Agriculture in India recorded a considerable body of evidence on the state trade in food crops and it showed the need for legislative action for safeguarding the interests of the producers (vide report dated 1928). In 1931 the Indian Central Banking Enquiry Committee considered in Chapter VII of its report the conditions with reference to marketing. It is therein pointed out that the village producer was seldom able to get a proper price because he was chronically indebted to the middlemen who advanced loans on the security of the crops to be grown and were thus in a position to dictate their own terms and that the bargains were seldom fair to the seller. "It was also observed that for want of facilities for ware housing the produce	 the grower was not in a position to wait and sell the commodities for proper price (vide 77 pages 78 and 79). In 1933 the Act now under consideration A was passed with the object of providing for "the better regulation of buying and selling of commercial crops". It must be mentioned that at that time the only products which had become commercial crops having an international market were cotton	 groundnuts and tobacco; and the definition of commercial crops as enacted originally corn prised only these three crops." . . . . . . . . . . . "Various suggestions were made for improving the market conditions (vide pp 92 and 63). In the report of the Planning Comission published in 1952	 Chapter XVII	 Vol l	 deals with agricultural marketing and after referring to the working of the regulated markets in Bombay	 Madras	 Hyderabad and Madhya Pradesh	 it throws out several suggestions for future improvements. It must be added that there has been legislation on lines similar to those of the Madras Act in several of the States in India. "It will be clear from the above survey of the market ing legislation that its object is to enable producers to get a fair price for their commodities and that it has been generally adopted in all commercial States Such laws have been held in America to be within the Police Power of the State as tending to promote general welfare (Vide 'Parker vs Brown [(1942) 87 Law ED 315 (D).] Under the Indian Constitution	 they must be upheld under article 19 (6) as reasonable and enacted in the interests of the general public." The decision of the Madras High Court in Kutti Keva vs The State was affirmed by a Constitution Bench of The Supreme Court in Arunachala Nadar vs State of Madras.(l) Subba Rao	 J. referring to the background of the Act	 observed: "There is a historical background for this Act. Market ing legislation is now a well settled feature of all commercial countries. The object of such legislation is to protect the producers of commercial crops from being exploited by the middlemen and profiteers and to enable them to secure a fair return for their produce. In Madras State	 as in other (l) AIR l959 SC 30O. 78 parts of the country	 various Commissions and Committees have been appointed to investigate the problem	 to suggest ways and means of providing a fair deal to the growers of crops particularly commercial crops	 and find a market for selling their produce at proper rates. Several Commit tees	 in their reports	 considered this question and suggested that a satisfactory system of agricultural marketing should be introduced to achieve the object of helping the agriculturists to secure a proper return for the produce grown by them." The learned Judge then referred to the report of the Royal Commission on Agriculture in India	 the report of the Expert Committee appointed by the Government of Madras	 and proceeded to observe: "With a view to provide satisfactory conditions for the growers of commercial crops to sell their produce on equal terms and at reasonable prices	 the Act was passed on 25th July	 1933. The preamble introduces the Act with the recital that it is expedient to provide for the better regulation of the buying and selling of commercial crops in the Presidency of Madras and for that purpose to establish market and make rules for their proper administration. The Act	 therefore	 was the result of a long exploratory investigation by exports in the field	 conceived and enacted to regulate the buying and selling of commercial crops by providing suitable and regulated market by eliminating middlemen and bringing face to face the produces and the buyer so that they may meet on equal terms	 thereby eradicating or at any rate reducing the scope for exploitation in dealings. Such a statute cannot be said to create unreasonable restrictions on the citizens and right to do business unless it is clearly established that the provisions are too drastic	 unnecessarily harsh and over reach the scope of the object to achieve which it is enacted." . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . " . Shortly stated	 the Act	 Rules and the Bye laws framed thereunder have a long term target of providing a net work of markets where in facilities for correct weighment are ensured	 storage accommodation is provided	 and equal 79 powers of bargaining;	 ensured	 so that the growers may t	 bring their commercial crops to the market and sell them at reasonable prices 1 11 such markets are. established	 the said provisions	 by imposing licensing restrictions	 enable The buyers and sellers to meet in licensed premises	 ensure correct weighment	 make available to them reliable market information and provide for them a simple machinery for settlement of disputes. After the markets are built or opened by the marketing committees	 within a reasonable radius from the market	 as prescribed by the Rules	 no licence is issued; thereafter all growers will have to resort to the market for vending their goods. The result of The implementation of the Act would be to eliminate	 as far as possible	 the middlemen and to give reasonable facilities for the growers of commercial crops to secure best prices for their commodities " In Immedisetti Ramkrishnaiah Sons vs State of Andhra Pradesh(l)	 the nature of the duties of a Market Committee was explained: "Another unfounded assumption of the learned counsel was that the activities of the Market Committee and the facilities provided by it were confined by the Act to the market area only. The establishment	 maintenance and improvement of the market is one of the purposes for which the Market Committee Fund might be expended under Sec. I S of the Act. The other Services such as the pro vision and maintenance of standard weights and measures	 the collection and dissemination of information regarding all matters relating to crop statistics and marketing in respect of noticed agricultural produce	 livestock and pro ducts of livestock schemes for the extension or cultural improvement of notified agricultural produce including the grant of financial aid to scheme for such extension on improvement within such area undertaken by other bodies or individuals	 propaganda for the improvement of agriculture	 livestock and products of livestock and thrift	 the promotion of grading services	 measures for the preservation of the foodgrains	 etc. are not services which are (1) AIR 1976 AP 193. 80 confined to the market area only. They area services which are required to be performed by the Market Committe and which may be rendered throughout the notified market area without being confined to the market. Further	 the facilities provided in the market are available for the use of every grower of agricultural produce and owner of live stock within the notified market area. It is too much to expect the Market Committee to provide the same facilities as are available in the market area in every nook and corner of the notified market area. It is up to the growers of agricultural produce and owners of livestock to avail themselves of the facilities afforded in the market. None can complain against the levy of licence fees on the ground that some may not avail themselves of the facilities available in the market. " Immedisetti Ramakrishnayya Sons vs State of Andhra Pradesh (supra) was approved by this Court in Sreenivasa General Traders vs State of A.P.	(1) where it was observed: "It is obviously in the interests of the producers of agricultural produce that they can get the best competitive prices in an open market and that they have not to pay the middlemen. Sale or purchase of agricultural produce in h such a market under the supervision and control of the market committee is likely to be in ready cash and there fore advantageous to the producers and the use of standard weights must eliminate the possibility of his being victimized by malpractices. Supervision of the operations in the notified market area can be more conveniently done if business is carried on in a specified area or areas intended for that purpose. The Act is an integrated one and it regulates the buying and selling of notified agricultural produce	 livestock and products of livestock from a centralized place. " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "The contention that there is no liability cast on the petitioners to pay market fee on transactions of sale and purchase of notified agricultural produce	 livestock and (1) ATR.1983 S.C. 1246. 81 product of livestock proceeds on a wrongful assumption that they can still carry on such trade from their premises in the notified market area	 but outside the market in that area. In view of the express prohibition contained in subsection (6) of Sec. 7	 the petitioners cannot carry on such trade by not resorting to the market proper. " "There is a fallacy underlying the argument that since the services are rendered by market committees Within the market proper	 there is no liability to pay a market fee on purchase or sale taking place in the notified market area but outside the market. The contention does not take note of the fact that establishment of a regulated market for the purchase or sale of notified agricultural produce	 livestock or products of live stock is itself a service rendered to persons engaged in the business of purchase or sale of such commodities. The duty of a market committee constituted under sub section (1) of sec. 4 of the Act does not end with establishing such number of markets in the notified market area under the first part of sub section (3) but also extends to the providing of such facilities in the market as the Government may from time to time by general or special order specify under the second part of sub section (3). In exercise of their powers under sec. 33 of the Act	 the State Government have framed the Andhra Pradesh (Agricultural Produce and Livestock) Markets Rules	 1969. Chapter V relates to 'Regulation of trading '. It would appear that Rules 48 to 53 are the machinery provisions for controlling the trade in notified agricultural produce	 livestock and products of livestock in a notified area while Rules 54 to 73 impose restrictions on the carrying on of all such trade in such area. It is clear from the provisions of sec. 15 of the Act that the services to be rendered by the market committee and facilities to be provided are not confined to the market proper but extend throughout the notified area. " The general scheme of the Punjab Agricultural Produce. Markets Act and the Act	 as amended and in force in Haryana	 82 are broadly on the same lines as the Madras and the Andhra Pradesh Acts and similar enactments in other States. Though we do not consider it necessary to refer to all the provisions of the Punjab and Haryana Acts	 we think it may be appropriate to mention here those provisions of the Act which enumerate some of the duties and powers of the Market Committees constituted under the Acts and the purposes for which the Marketing Development Fund and the Market Committee Fund may be expended. We may mention that while there is to be a State Agricultural Marketing Board for the entire State for performing the functions and duties assigned to the Board by the Act	 the State Government may declare specified	 notified areas as market areas for each of which there shall be a market committee. The Board is vested with powers of superintendence and control over the committees. Section 13 prescribes the duties and powers of market committees and is in the following terms: "13 Duties and powers of Committee (1) It shall be the duty of a Committee (a) to enforce the provisions of this Act and the rules and bye laws made thereunder in the notified market area and	 when so required by the Board 	 to establish a market therein providing such facilities for persons visiting it in connection with the purchase	 sale	 storage	 weighment and processing of agricultural produce concerned as the Board may from time to time direct; (b) to control and regulate the admission to the market	 to determine the conditions for the use of the market and to prosecute or confiscate the agricultural produce belonging to person trading without a valid licence; (c) to bring	 prosecute or defend or aid in bringing	 prosecuting or defending any suit	 action	 proceeding	 application or arbitration	 on behalf of the Committee or otherwise when directed by the Boards. (2) Every person licensed under sec. 10 or sec. 13 and every person exempted under sec. 6 from taking out licence	 shall on demand by the Committee or any person 83 authorised by it in this behalf furnish such information and returns	 as may be necessary for proper enforcement A of Act or the rules and bye laws made thereunder. (3) Subject to such rules as the State Government may make in this behalf	 it shall be the duty of a Committee to issue licences to brokers	 weighmen	 measurers	 surveyors	 godown keepers and other functionaries for carrying on their occupation in the notified market area in respect of . agricultural produce and to renew	 suspend or cancel such licences. (4) No broker	 weighman	 measurer	 surveyor	 godown keeper or other functionary shall	 unless duly authorised by licence	 carry on his occupation in a notified market area in respect of agricultural produce: Provided that nothing in sub sections (3) and (4) shall apply to a person carrying on the business of warehouse man who is licensed under the Punjab Warehouses Act	 l957 (Punjab Act No.2 of 1958)". Section 25 provides for the creation of a Marketing Development Fund out of which the Board has to defray its expenditure. Sections 27 provides for the creation of Market Committee Fund out of which the Committee has to defray its expenditure. The purpose for which the Marketing Development Fund may be expended are specified in sec. 26 as follows: "26 The Marketing Development Fund shall be utilised out of following purposes: (i) Better marketing of agricultural produce; (ii) Marketing of Agricultural produce on co operative lines; (iii) collection and dissemination of market rates and news; (iv) grading and standardisation of agricultural produce: (v) general improvements in the markets or their respective notified; (vi) maintenance of the office of the Board and construction and repair or its office buildings	 rest house and staff quarters; 84 (vii) giving aid to financially weak Committees in the shape of loans and grants	 (viii) payment of salary	 leave allowance	 gratuity	 corn passionate allowance	 compensation for injuries or death resulting from accidents while on duty	 medical aid	 pension or provident fund to the persons employed by the Board and leave and pension contribution to Government servants on deputation; (ix) travelling and other allowances to the employees of the Board	 its members and members of Advisory Committees; (x) propaganda	 demonstration and publicity in favour of agricultural improvements; (xi) production and betterment of agricultural produce; (xii) meeting any legal expenses incurred by the Board; (xiii) imparting education in marketing or agriculture; (xiv) construction of godowns; (xv) loans and advances to the employees; (xvi) expenses incurred in auditing the accounts of the Board; (xvii) with the previous section of the State Government	 any other purpose which is calculated to promote the general interests of the Board and the Committees (or the national or public interests); Provided that if the Board decides to give aid of more than five thousand rupees to a financially weak Committee under clause (vii)	 the prior approval of the State Government to such payment shall be obtained. The purposes for which the Market Committees Fund may be expended are specified in sec. 28 as follows: "28 Purposes for which the Market Committee Funds may be expended. Subject to the provisions of section 27 the Market Committee Funds shall be expended for the following purposes: (1) AIR 1983 SC 1246 85 (i) acquisition of sites for the market; A (ii) maintenance and improvement of the market; (iii) construction and repair of buildings which are necessary for the purposes of the market and for the health	 convenience and safety of the persons using it; (iv) provision and maintenance of the standard weights and measures: (v) pay	 leave	 allowances	 gratuities	 compassionate allowances and contributions towards leave allowances	 compensation for injuries and death resulting from accidents while on duty	 medical aid	 pension or provident fund of the persons employed by the Committee; (vi) payment of interest on loans that may be raised for purposes of the market and the provisions of a sinking fund in respect of such loans; (vii) collection and dissemination of information regarding all matters relating to crop statistics and marketing in respect of the agricultural produce concerned; (viii) providing comforts and facilities	 such as the shelter	 shade	 parking accommodation and water for the per sons	 draught cattle vehicles and pack animals link roads I coming or being brought to the market or on construction and repair of approach roads	 culverts	 bridges and other such purposes: (ix) expenses incurred in the maintenance of the offices and in auditing the accounts of the Committees	 (x) propaganda in favour of agricultural improvements and thrift: (xi) production and betterment of agricultural produce; (xii) meeting any legal expenses incurred by the Committee	 (xiii) imparting education in marketing or agriculture; (xiv) payments of travelling and other allowances to the members and employees of the committee	 as prescribed; 86 (xv) loans and advances to the employees; (xvi) expenses of and incidental to elections	 and (xvii) with the previous sanction of the Board	 any other purpose which is calculated to promote the general interest of the Committee or the notified market area (supra) (or with the previous sanction of the State Government	 any purpose calculated to promote the national or public interest)". It will be seen that sections 26 and 28 cover a vast range of topics and are so wide as to take in a multitude of direct and indirect ways of achieving the principal object of the Act	 namely	 the better regulation of the purchase	 sale	 storage and processing of agricultural produce and the establishment of markets for agricultural produce. Some of the purposes for which the funds maybe expended may on a first impression appear to be municipal or govemental functions	 but a closer scrutiny will reveal that they are clearly associated with providing better facilities for marketing of agricultural produce. In fact	 some of them may be municipal or governmental functions	 but may yet be purpose for which the funds of the marketing board and marketing committees may be usefully	 lawfully and perhaps necessarily expended. For example	 it is of fundamental importance that there should be a network of roadways if effective aid is to be given to farmers to transport and market their produce. Section 23 of the Act enables the Committee	 subject to such rules as may be made by the State Government in that behalf	 to levy on ad volorem basis	 fee on the agricultural produce bought or sold by a licensee in the notified market area at a rate not exceeding the rate mentioned in sec. 23 from time to time for every one hundred rupees. The fee which was originally 50 paise per 100 was raised to Re. l per 100 in 1969	 thereafter to Rs. 1.50 in 1973 and to Rs. 2.25 in 1974. Later the fee was raised to Rs. 3 per 100. It was this enhancement of fee to Rs. 3 per 100 that was challenged by several dealers from Punjab and Haryana in Kewal Krishan vs State of Punjab (Supra). A Constitution Bench of this Court	 after referring to the principles laid down in the leading cases of Shirur Malt	(1) Hingir Rampur Coal Co. Ltd. vs State of Orissa	(2) Corporation of Calcutta vs Liberties Cinema etc. thought that in all the (1) (2) 119621 2 SCR 537 87 circumstances of the case	 an increase of the license fee beyond Rs 2 A per 100 was not justified. The court noticed that each of the market Committees had huge surpluses and had made large donations to educational institutions and expended funds for other purposes wholly unconnected with the purpose stipulated by the Act. It appeared that the increase from Rs. Z to Rs. 3 in the year 1978 was made largely to compensate the market committees for having contributed the huge sum of Rs. One crore to the Medical College	 Faridkot. Having regard to the huge surpluses and unanthorised items of expenditures	 the court came to the conclusion	 on the facts of the case	 that the increase of fee above Rs. 2 per 100 was not justified. In the course of the discussion	 Untwalia	 J. who spoke for the Court made certain observations which when turn out of context appear to give rise to some misunderstanding. For example	 at page 1016 of AIR	 he said: . 'But generally and broadly speaking	 it must be shown with some amount of certainty	 reasonableness or preponderance of probability that quite a substantial portion of the amount of the fee realised is spent for the special benefit of its payers". This sentence should not be read in isolation. It must be read in the context of the facts of the case. In fact	 in the very sentence	 preceding the one quoted	 it was said: "It may be so intimately connected or interwoven with the services rendered to others that it may not be possible to do a complete dichotomy and analysis as to what amount of special service was rendered to the payers of the fee and what proportion went to others". That was why Sen J. in Sreenivasa General Traders vs State of Andhra Pradesh (Supra) took immense pains to explain the observations of Untwalia J. and place them in their proper setting. He observed	 very rightly indeed	 G "In the ultimate analysis	 the Court held in Kewal Krishan Puri 's case	 supra that so long as the concept of fee remains distinct and limited in contrast to tax	 such expenditure of the amounts recovered by the levy of a market fee cannot be countenanced in law. A case is an authority H 88 only for what it actually decides and not for what may logically follow from it. Every judgment must be read as applicable to the particular facts proved	 or assumed to be proved	 since the generality of the expressions which may be founded there are not intended to be expositions of the whole law but governed or qualified by the particular facts of the case in which such expressions are to be found. It would appear that there are certain observations to be found in the judgment in Kewat Krishan Puri 's case	 supra. which were really not necessary for purposes of the decision and go beyond the occasion and therefore they have no binding authority though they may have merely persuasive value. The observation made therein seeking to quantify the extent of correlation between the amount of fee collected and the cost of rendition of service	 namely: "At least a good and substantial portion of the amount collected on account of fees	 may be in the neighborhood of two thirds or three fourths must be shown with reason able certainty as being spent for rendering services in the market to the payer of fee". appears to be an obiter". obviously Untwalia	 J. did not purport to lay down any new principles and could not have intended to depart from the series of earlier case of this Court. For instance	 in H. H. Sudhundra Thirtha Swamiar vs Commissioner(l) the Court had said	 ". nor is it a postulate of a fee that it must have direct relation to the actual services rendered by the authority to individual who obtains the benefit of the service. If with a view to provide a specific service	 levy is imposed by law and expenses for maintaining the service are met out of the amounts collected there being a reasonable relation between the levy and the expenses incurred for rendering the service	 the levy would be in the nature of a fee and not in the nature of a tax. but a levy will not be regarded as a tax merely because of the absence of uniformity in its incidence	 or because of compulsion in the collection thereof	 or because some of the contributories do not obtain the same degree of service as others may". (1) [1963] Supp 2 SCR 302. 89 In Hingir Rampur Coal Co. Ltd. vs State of orissa (Supra) the A Court had said	: "If specific services are rendered to a specific area or to a specific class of persons or trade or business in any local area	 and as a condition precedent for the said services or in return for them cess is levied against the said area or the said class of persons or trade or business	 the cess is distinguishable from a tax and is described as a fee". . . . . . . . . "It is true that when the Legislature levies a fee for rendering specific services to a specified area or to a specified class of persons or trade or business	 in the last analysis such services may indirectly form part of services to the public in general. If the special service rendered is distinctly and primarily meant for the benefit of a specified class or area the fact that in benefiting the specified class or area the State as a while may ultimately and indirectly be benefited would not detract from the character of the levy as a fee. Where	 however	 the specific service is indistinguishable from public service	 and in essence is directly a part of it	 different considerations may arise. In such a case	 it is necessary to enquire what is the primary object of the levy and the essential purpose which it is intended to achieve. Its primary object and the essential purpose must be distinguished from its ultimate or incidental results or consequences. That is the true test in determining the character of the levy	 Again in H.H. Shri Swamiji vs Commissioner	 Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments Department (1) Chandracud C.J. said: "For the purpose of finding whether there is a correlationship between the services rendered to the fee payers and the fees charged to them	 it is necessary to Know the cost incurred for orgainsing and rendering the services. But matters involving consideration of such a correlation ship are not required to be proved by a mathematical formula. What has to be seen is whether there is a fair correspondence between the fee charged and the cost of (1) ; 90 services rendered to the fee payers as a class. The further and better particulars asked for by the appellants under order 6	 Rule S of the Civil Procedure Code	 would have driven the Court	 had the particulars been supplied	 to a laborious and fruitless inquiry into minute details of the Commissioner 's departmental budget. A vivisection of the amounts spent by the Commissioner 's establishment at different places and for various purposes and the ad hoc allocation by the Court of different amounts to different heads would at best have been speculative. It would have been no more possible for the High Court if the information were before us than it would be possible for us if the information were before us	 to find out what part of the expenses incurred by the Commissioners establishment at various places and what part of the salary of his staff at those places should be allocated to the functions discharged by the establishment in collection with the services rendered to the appellants. We do not therefore think that any substantial prejudice has been caused to the appellants by reasons of the non supply of the information sought by them. " On a consideration of these cases Sen J. concluded as follows in Sreenivasa General Traders vs State of Andhra Pradesh (Supra): "The traditional view that there must be actual quid pro quo for a fee has undergone a sea change in the subsequent decisions. The distinction between a tax and a fee lies primarily in the fact that a tax is levied as part of a common burden	 while a fee is for payment of a specific benefit or privilege although the special advantage is secondary to the primary motive of regulation in public interest In determining whether a levy is a fee	the true test must be whether its primary and essential purpose is to render specific services to a specified area or class; it may be of no consequence that the State may ultimately and indirectly be benefited by it. The power of any legislature to levy a fee is conditioned by the fact that it must be "by and large" 91 a quid pro quo for the services rendered. However	 correlationship between the levy and the services rendered A expected is one of general character and not of mathematical exactitude. All that is necessary is that there should be a "reasonable relationship" between the levy of the fee and the services rendered. " Referring to the catena of these cases it was observed by this Court in Municipal Corporation Delhi vs Mohd. Yasin (1): "What do we learn from these precedents ? We learn that there is no generic difference between a tax and a fee	 though broadly a tax is a compulsory exaction as part of a common burden	 without promise of any special advantages to classes of taxpayers whereas a fee is a payment for services rendered	 benefit provided or privilege conferred. Compulsion is not the hallmark of the distinction between a tax and a fee. That the money collected does not go into a separate fund but goes into the consolidated fund does not also necessarily make a levy a tax. Though a fee must have relation to the services rendered	 or the advantages conferred	 such relation need not be direct	 a mere causal relation may be enough. Further	 neither the incidence of the fee nor the service rendered need be uniform. That others besides those paying the fees are also benefited does not detract from the character of the fee. In fact the special benefit or advantage to the payers of the fees may even be secondary as compared with primary motive of regulation in the public interest. Nor is the court to assume the role of a cost accountant. It is neither necessary nor expedient to weigh too	 meticulously the cost of his service reinduced etc. not against the amount of fees collected so as to evenly balance the two. A broad correlationship is all that is necessary. Quid pro quo the strict sense is not the one and only true index of a fee; nor is it necessarily absent in tax. " Earlier on a question of interpretation it was pointed out: " A word on interpretation. Vicissitudes of time and necessitudes of history contribute to changes of philosophical attitudes	 concepts	 ideas and ideals and	 with them	 the meanings of words and phrases and the language itself. The philosophy and the language of the law are no excep (1) ; H 92 tions. Words and phrases take colour and character from the context and the times and speak differently in different contexts and times. And	 it is worthwhile remembering that words and phrases have not only a meaning but also a content	 a living content which breathes	 and so	 expands and contracts. This is particularly so where the words and phrases properly belong to other disciplines. 'Tax ' and 'fee ' are such words. 'they properly belong to the world of Public Finance but since the Constitution and the laws are also concerned with Public Finance	 these words have often been adjudicated upon in an effort to discover content. " In Sreenivasa General Traders vs State of Andhra Pradesh (supra)	 Sen	 J. had also pointed out that there was no generic difference between a tax and a fee	 that both were compulsory exactions of money by public authorities and that a levy in the nature of a fee did not cease to be of that character merely because there was an element of compulsion or coerciveness present in it nor was it a postulate of a fee that it must have direct relation to the actual service rendered by the authority to each individual	 who obtains the benefit of the service. He also drew attention to the increasing realization that the element of quid pro quo in the strict sense was not always sine quo non for fee. Nor was the element of quid pro quo necessarily absent in every tax. He further pointed out that an insistence upon a good and substantial portion of an amount collected on account of fee	 say in the neighbourhood of two thirds or three forths	 being shown with reasonable certainty as having been spent for rendering services in the market to the payer of fee	 could not be a rule of universal application	 and that it was a rule which had necessarily to be confined to the special facts of Kewal Krishan Puri 's case. Otherwise	 it would affect the validity of marketing legislations undertaken throughout the country during the past half a century. We agree with the view of Sen	 J. that the observations extracted by him from Kewol Krishan Puri 's case were not really necessary for that case and we also agree with the clarification of the observation made by Sen	 J. There is one other significant sentence in Sreenivasa General Traders vs State of A.P. (Supra) with which we must 93 express our agreement. It was said	 . with utmost respect	 these observations of the learned judge are not to be read as Euclid 's A theorems	 nor as provisions of the statute. These observations must be read in the context in which they appear. " We consider it proper to say	 as we have already said in other cases	 that judgments of courts are not to be construed as statutes. To interpret words	 phrases and provisions of a statute	 it may become necessary for judges to embark into lengthy discussions but the discussion is meant to explain and not to define. Judges interpret statutes	 they do not interpret judgments. They interpret words of statutes; their words are not to be interpreted as statutes. In London Graving Dock Co. Ltd. vs Horton (1) Lord Mac Doormat observed	 "The matter cannot	 of course	 resettled merely by treating the ip sesame verba of Willes	 J.	 as though they were part of an Act of Parliament and applying the rules of interpretation appropriate thereto. This is not to detract from the great weight to be given to the language actually used by that most distinguished judge. " D In Home office vs Dorset Yacht Co.(2) Lord Reid said	 "Lord Atkin 's speech. is not to be treated as if it was a statutory definition. It will require qualification in new circumstances. " Megarry	 J. in 1971(1) W.L.R. 1062 observed	 "one must not	 of course	 construe even a reserved judgment of even Russell L. J. as if it were an Act of Parliament. And	 in Herington vs British Railways Board. "(2) Lord Morris said: "There is always peril in treating the words of a speech or judgment as though they are words in a legislative P enactment	 and it is to be remembered that judicial utterances are made in the setting of the facts of a particular case. There are a few other observations in Rewal Krishan Puri 's case to which apply with the same force all that we have said above. It is needless to repeat the of quoted truism of Lord Halsbury that (1) at 761 (2) ; (3) [19721 2 W.L.R. 537 H 94 a case is only an authority for what it actually decides and not for what may seem to follow logically from it. We have said so much about Kewal Krishan Puri 's case because the learned counsel placed implicit reliance upon it though as we shall presently show	 we do not see how a mere declaration that the levy and collection of fee in excess of Rs.2 per hundred automatically vest in the dealer the right to get at the excess amount when in fact he did not bear the burden of it and when the moral and equitable owner of it was the consumer public to whom the burden had been passed on. Soon after judgment was pronounced in Kewal Krishan 's case	 the question arose as to what was to be done with the fee in excess of Rs.2 per 100 collected by various market committees. Were the Market Committees to be permitted to retain the excess amounts ? Were the excess amounts to be refunded to the traders from whom the amounts had been collected notwithstanding the fact that the traders themselves had already passed on the burden to the next purchasers and consumers ? In other words	 were the traders to be allowed to get a refund from the market committees and unjustly enrich themselves ? Were they to be allowed to profiteer by ill gotten gains ? or were the next purchasers or consumers to be traced and the amounts refunded to them	 which of course	 would well nigh be an impossible task in practice? If it was not possible to trace the individual consumers who had borne the burden	 was it not right that the public authority who levied and collected it should be allowed to hold and retain the amount as if it were in trust for their benefit to be used for the purposes for which the statute . desired the levy of the fee ? Some dealers	 however	 wanted the monies to be refuned to them and moved this Court. Instead	 in the circumstances	 the court in Shiv Shankar Dal Mil1s vs State of Haryana. ' '(l) gave the following directions: "I. Subject to the directions given below	 all the sums collected by the various market committees who are respondents in these various writ petitions or appeals shall be liable to be paid into the High Court of Punjab and Haryana within one week of intimation by the Registrar of the amount so liable to be paid into the court. A statement of the amounts collected in excess (1) ; 95 (1%) shall be put into this Court by the dealers with copies A to the various market committees aforesaid and furnished to the writ petitioners and appellant with 1O days from today	 and if there is any difference between the parties it shall be brought to the notice of this Court in the shape of miscellaneous petitions. On final orders	 if any passed thereon by this Court	 those amounts	 so as determined	 shall be treated as final. The Registrar of the High Court shall issue public notice and otherwise give due publicity to the fact that dealers who have not passed on the liabilities to others and others who have contributed to or paid the excess one percent covered by these writ petitions and appeals may make claims for such sums as are due to them from him Within one month or such other period as he may fix. The Registrar shall scrutinise such claims and ascertain the sums so proved. He will thereupon demand of all the market commit tees concerned payment into the Registry of such sums in regard to which proof of claims have been made. On such intimation	 the market committees shall pay into the Registry the amounts so demanded by the Registrar within one week of such intimation. The amount shall be paid together with interest at 10 per cent per annum from today up to the date of deposit with the Registrar. It shall be open to the Registrar to make such periodical claims on appropriate proof by claimants on the line stated above. V. He will devise the mechanics of processing the claims as best as he may and	 in the event of dispute	 may refer to the High Court for its decision of such disputes	 if he thinks it necessary. Otherwise	 he may dispose of the objections finally. If any further directions regarding the mechanics of the claim of refund or otherwise are found necessary from this Court	 the High Court will report about such matter to this Court and orders made thereon will bind the parties. N 96 VII. If parties eligible for repayment of amounts do not claim within one year from today the Registrar will not entertain any further claims. It will be open to such parties to pursue their remedies for recovery for any sums that may be due to therm. Each State Marketing Board will deposit within 1O days from today a sum of Rs. 5.000/ before the Registrar for the preliminary expenses of publicity and other incidentals for the implementation of the directions given above. Any unexpended amount	 at the end of one year	 will be repaid to the respective State Marketing Board. We further direct that the unclaimed amount	 if any	 shall be permitted to be used by the respective Marketing Committees for the purpose falling within the statute as interpreted by this Court in the C. A. No. 1083/77". Thereafter	 more or less in tune with the directions given by the Court in ShivShankar Dal Mills case	 the Punjab Agricultural Produce MarKets Act was amended by the introduction of sec. 23 A providing as follows: "In the Principle Act	 after Section 23	 the following section p shall be inserted namely: '23 A(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in any judgment decree or order of any Court	 it shall be lawful for a Committee to retain the fee levied and collected by it from a licensee in excess of that levied under Section 23	 if the burden of such fee was passed on by the licensee to the next purchaser of the Agricultural Produce in respect whereof such fee was levied and collected. (2) No suit or other proceedings shall be instituted	 main trained or continued in any court for the refund of whole or any part of the fee retained by a Committee under sub section (1) and no court shall enforce any decree or order directing the refund of whole or any Part of such fee. (3) If any dispute arises as to the refund of any fee retained by a Committee by virtue of sub section (1) and 97 the question is whether the burden of SUCH fee was passed on by the licensee to the next purchaser of the concerned agricultural produce	 it shall be presumed unless proved otherwise that such burden was so passed on by the licensee. If any amount of tee retainable by a Committee under sub section (1) has been refunded to any licensee	 the same shall be recoverable by the Committee in the manner indicated in sub section (2) of Section 41. The provisions of this section shall not effect the operation of Section 6 of the Punjab Agricultural Produce Markets (Amendment and Validation) Act	 1976". The primary purpose of sec. 23 A is seen on the face of it; it prevents the refund of license fee by the market committee to dealers	 who have already passed on the burden of such fee to the next purchaser of the agricultural produce and who went to unjustly enrich themselves by obtaining the refund from the market committee. section 23 A	 in truth	 recognises the Consumer public who have borne the ultimate burden as the persons who have really paid the amount and so entitled to refund of any excess fee collected and therefore directs the market committee representing their interests to retain the amount. It has to be in this form because it would	 in practice	 be a difficult and futile exercise to attempt to trace the individual purchasers and consumers who ultimately bore the burden. It is really a law returning to the public what it has taken from the public	 by enabling the Committee to utilise the amount for the performance of services required of it under the Act. Instead of allowing middlemen to profiteer by illgotten gains	 the legislature has devised a procedure to undo the wrong item that has been done by the excessive levy by allowing the Committees to retain the amount to be utilised here after for the benefit of the very persons for whose benefit the Marketing legislation was enacted. The constitutional validity of sec. 23A was questioned before the High Court of Punjab and Haryana	 but was upheld in Walati Ram Mahabir Prasad vs State of Punjab(l). The correctness of this decision is questioned before us in these two civil appeals. The submission of the learned counsel was that sec. 23 A was (1). AIR 1984 P&H 120 98 a blatant attempt to validate a levy which had been declared invalid by this court and this	 according to the learned counsel	 was not permissible. We entirely disagree with the submission that sec. 23 A is an attempt at validating on illegal levy. Section 23 A does not permit any recovery of fee @Rs. 3 per 100 in respect of any sales of agricultural produce before or after the coming into force of that provision. There is no attempt at retrospective validation of excess collection nor any attempt at providing for future collection at the rate of Rs. 3 per 100. All that sec. 23 A does is to prevent unjust enrichment by those dealers who have already passed on the burden of the fee to the next purchaser and so reimbursed themselves by also claiming a refund from the Market Committees. We have already explained the true purpose of S 23 A. It gives to the public through the market committee what it has taken from the public and is due to it. It renders into Caesar what is Caesar 'section We do not see any justification for characterising a provision like Sec. 23 A as one aimed at validating an illegal levy. The decision of this Court in A. V. Nachane and ors. vs Union of lndia(1) on which the counsel placed reliance has no application whatsoever. Section 23 A in our view	 is consistent with the spirit of Kewal Krishan and the letter of Shiva Shankar Dal Mills. Another submission of the learned counsel was that while the legislature was competent to enact a law for the levy of a fee and matters incidental and ancillary thereto it was incompetent to legislate providing for the retention by any authority of fee illegally levied. For this purpose	 reliance was placed by the learned counsel on the decision of this Court in Abdul Quadar & Co. vs Sales tax officer(a). We are afraid that this decision also is of no avail to the appellants. In orient Paper Mills Limited vs State of Orissa(3)	 a dealer had been assessed to tax and had paid the tax. Later he applied for re fund of tax which was held to be not exigible by this Court in State of Bombay vs United Motors (India) Ltd( ') . When the appeals were pending in this Court	 the orissa Legislature intervened in the matter and introduced sec. 14 A in the Principal Act providing that (1) [1982] I SCC 206. (2) ; (3) [19621 1 SCR 549 (4) [19531 SCR 1069. 99 refund could be claimed only by a person from whom the dealer has A actually realised the amount as tax. The vires of the provision was challenged in this Court	 but it was upheld on the ground that it came within the incidental power arising out of Entry 54 of List II. The matter was considered to be a question of refund and it was held that it could not be doubted that refund of the tax collected was always a matter covered by incidental and ancillary powers relating to the levy and collection of tax. The Constitution Bench held	 "By item 54 of List Il of Schedule 7 to the Constitution	 the State Legislature was indisputably competent to legislate with respect to taxes on sale or purchase of papersand paper boards. The power to legislate with respect to a tax comprehends the power to impose the tax	 to prescribe machinery for collecting the tax	 to designate the offers by whom the liability may be enforced and to prescribe the authority	 obligations and indemnity of those officers. The diverse heads of legislation in the Schedule to the Constitution demarcate the periphery of legislative competence and include all matters which are ancillary or subsidiary to the primary head. The Legislature of the orissa State was therefore competent to exercise power in respect of the subsidiary or ancillary matter of granting refund of tax improperly or illegally collected	 and the competence of the legislature in this behalf is not canvassed by counsel for the assesses. If competence to legislate for granting refund of sales tax improperly collected be granted	 is there any reason to exclude the power to declare that refund shall be claimable only by the person from whom the dealer has actually realised the amounts by way of sales tax or otherwise ? We see none. The question is one of legislative competence and there is no restriction either express or implied imposed upon the power of the Legislature in that behalf. " The present case is a case akin to orient Paper Mills case (supra). Section 23 A	 as we have seen	 disables a dealer from getting a refund of fee paid by him	 the burden of which he has already passed on to the next purchaser. As we said all that sec. 23 A does is to prevent unjust enrichment by means 100 of a refund to which the person claiming it has no moral or equitable entitlement. Abdul Quader & Co. vs Sales Tax officer (supra) on which considerable reliance was placed by the learned counsel for the appellants was an entirely different case. The dealer in that case had collected sales tax from the purchasers in connection with the sales made by him on the basis that the incidence of the tax lay on the sellers and assured the purchaser that after paying the tax to the appellant	 there would be no further liability on them. After realizing the tax	 however	 the appellant did not pay the amount realized to the Government	 but kept it in a suspense account. When the Sales Tax Department discovered this and called upon the appellant to pay the amount realized	 he refused to do so. On behalf of the Government	 reliance was placed upon sec. 11 (2) of the Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act which laid down that any amount collected by way of tax otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of the Act shall be paid over to the Government and in default of such payment	 the said amount shall be recovered from such person as if it were arrears of land revenue. The Court held that it was clear that the words "otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of this Act"	 included amounts which may have been collected by way of tax though not exigible as tax under the Act. The Court then held that the State Legislature was income tent to enact a provision like sec. 11(2) as it enabled the Government to recover an illegal levy and it could not possibly be said to be an incidental or ancillary power capable of exercise in aid of the main topic of legislation	 which was	 a tax on the sale or purchase of goods. The decision in orient Paper Mills case was distinguished on the ground that it dealt with a case of refund and not the collection of tax	 not really due as a tax under the law. In their precise words	 they said: "The matter (In orient Paper Mills case) dealt with a question of refund and it cannot be doubted that refund of the tax collected is always a matter covered by incidental and ancillary powers relating to the levy and collection of tax. We are not dealing with a case of refund in the present case. What sec. 11(2) provides is that some thing collected by way of tax	 though it is not really due as a tax under the law enacted under Entry 54 of List II must be paid to the Government. This situation in our 101 Opinion is entirely different from the situation in orient 	 A Paper Mills case. " The decision in orient Paper Mills case was expressly affirmed by a Bench of Seven Judges of this Court in R.S. Joshi vs Ajit Mills(l) and observations to the contrary Ashoka Marketing Company case(2) were expressly dissented from. We are	 therefore. satisfied that sec. 23 A of the Punjab Agricultural Produce Markets Act was within the competence of the Punjab Legislature and that it was not also otherwise invalid in any manner. The appeals are	 therefore	 dismissed with costs. M .L.A. Appeals dismissed.

Summary:
After the decision of the Supreme Court in Kewal Krishan Puri vs State of Punjab ; holding that the increase of the market fee from Rs. 2 to Rs. 3 perhundred leviable on the agricultural produce brought or sold by a licensee in the notified market area under section 23 of the Punjab Agricultural Produce Markets Act was not justified	 some dealers wanted refund of the market fee in excess of Rs. 2/ per hundred already collected by various market committees. But	 the Supreme Court held in Shiv Shankar Dal Mills vs State of Haryana ; that dealers who had not passed on the liabilities to others and others who had contributed to or paid the excess one percent were entitled to make claim for such sums as were due to them from the Concerned market committees and directed the market committees to pay the same The Court further directed that the unclaimed amounts	 if any	 shall be permitted to be used by the respective market committee for the purposes falling within the statute as interpreted by this Court in C.A. 1083 of 1977. Thereafter more or less in tune with these directions given by the Court	 the Punjab Agricultural Produce Markets Act was amended by the introduction of section 23 A It provided	 inter alia	 that not with standing anything contained in any judgment decree or order of any court	 it shall be lawful for a committee to retain the fee levied and collected by it from a licensee in excess of that leviable under section 23 if the burden of such fee passed on by the licensee to the next purchaser of the agricultural produce in respect whereof such fee was levied and collected The appellants challenged before the High Court the constitutional validity of section 23 A and the same was upheld. The appellant contended (1) that Section 23 A was a blatant attempt to validate a levy which had been declared invalid by the Supreme Court and this was not permissible (2) that while the legislature was competent to enact a law for the levy of fee and matters incidental and ancillary thereto	 it was incompetent to legislate providing for the retention by any authority of fee illegally levied. 73 Dismissing the appeals by the appellants 	. ^ HELD: (1) The general scheme of the Punjab Agriculture Produce Markets Act and the Act	 as amended and in force in Haryana	 are broadly on the same lines as the Madras and the Andhra Pradesh Acts and similar enactments in other States. Sections 13	 26 and 28 of the Act covers a vast range of topics and are so wide as take in a multitude of direct and indirect ways of achieving the principal object of the Act	 namely	 the better regulation of the purchase	 sale	 storage and processing of agricultural produce and the establishment of markets for agricultural produce. Some of the purposes for which the funds may be expended may on a first impression appear to be municipal or governmental functions	 but a closer scrutiny will reveal that they are clearly associated with providing better facilities for marketing of agricultural produce. [81H; 86C D] (2) The primary purpose of section 23 A is to prevent the refund of licence fee by the market committee to dealers	 who have already passed on the burden of such fee to the next purchaser of the agricultural produce and who want to unjustly enrich themselves by obtaining the refund from the market committee. section 23 A	 in truth recognises the consumer.public who have borne the ultimate burden as the persons who have really paid the amount and so entitled to refund of any excess fee collected and there fore direct the market committee representing their interests to retain the amount. It has to be in this form because it would	 in practice	 be a difficult and futile exercise to attempt to trace the individual purchasers and consumers who ultimately bore the burden. It is really a law returning to the public what it has taken from the public	 by enabling the Committee to utilise the amount for the performance of services required of it under the Act. Instead of allowing middlemen to profiteer by illgotton gains	 the legislature has devised a procedure to undo the wrong that has been done by the excessive levy by allowing the Committees to retain the amount to be utilised hereafter for the benefit of the very persons for whose benefit the marketing legislation was enacted. [97D G] (3) There is no substance in the argument that sec. 23 A is an attempt at validating an illegal levy. Section 23 A does not permit any recovery of fee at the rate of Rs 3 per hundred in respect of any sales of agricultural produce before or after the coming into force of that provision. There is no attempt at retrospective validation of excess collection nor any attempt at providing for future collection at the rate of Rs. 3 per hundred. All that section 23 A does is to prevent unjust enrichment by those dealers who have already passed on the burden of the fee to the next purchaser and so reimbursed themselves by also claiming a refund from the market committees. It gives to the public through the market committee what it has taken from the Public and is due to it. There is no justification for characterising a provision like section. 23.A as one aimed at validating an illegal levy. It is consistent with the spirit of Kewal Krishan case and the Letter of Shiv Shankar Dal Mills case. [98B D] Walati Ram Mahabir Prasad vs State of Punjab	 AIR 1983 P & 120 & R. section Joshi vs Ajit Mills ; approved. 74 Shiv Shankar Dal Mills vs State of Haryana ; followed. orient Paper Mills Limited vs State of Orissa ; 	 R.S. Joshi vs Ajit Mills ; relied upon. Kewal Krishan Puri vs State of Punjab ; 	 Srinivasa General Traders State of Andhra Pradesh AIR 1983 section C. 1246 Kutti Keya vs State of Madras AIR l954 Mad 621 Arunachala Nadar	 State of Madras	 AIR 1959 SC 30O	 Immedisetti Ramkrishnaiah Sons vs State of Andhra Pradesh	 AIR 1976 AP 193 Sreenivasa General Taaders vs State A. P. AIR 1983 SC 1246	 Shirur Matt ; ; Hingir Rampur Coal Co. Ltd. vs State of Orissa	 	 Corporation of Calcutta vs Liberties Cinema ; 	 H. H. Sudhundra Thirtha Swamiar vs Commissioner	 [1963] Supp. 2 SCR 302	 H. H. Shri Swamiji vs Commisssioner	 Hindu Religious and Charitable Fndowments Department [1980] I SCR 368	 Municipal Corporation Delhi vs Mohd. Yasin ; 	 Craving Dock Co. Ltd. vs Horton	 at 761	 Home office vs Dorset Yacht Co.	 [1970] 2 All E. R. 294	 Herington v British Railways Board [1972] 2 W. L R. 537	 & State OF Bombay vs United Motor. (India) Ltd.	 ; referred to. A. V Nachane and Ors. vs Union of India	 and Abdul Quadar & Co. vs Sales tax officer; 	 ; held inapplicable.