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Friday, March 23, 2012

mandi fee= Glaxo India Ltd., set up an industrial unit at Aligarh for the manufacture of what is sold in the market under the brand names Glacto, Complan, Farex, Glucon D and other products generically called milk foods/weaning foods and energy beverages. It is not in dispute that the manufacturing process undertaken in the said unit produced ghee as a by- product of the said items. It is also not in dispute that with effect from 1st October, 1994, the Family Products Division of Glaxo India Ltd. was taken over by Heinz India Pvt. Ltd. who continued manufacturing the products mentioned above including ghee as a by-product of its manufacturing activity. 3. In terms of Section 17(iii) of the Act, sale of specified agricultural produce within the Mandi limits attracts levy of what is described as Mandi Fee from the person effecting the sale. The Mandi Samiti accordingly started demanding the said fee from Glaxo India Ltd., upto the year 1994 and from Heinz India Ltd., from 1994 onwards qua sales effected by the said two companies of its products including ghee. These demands were resisted by both the companies primarily on the ground that bulk of the ghee produced in their unit at Aligarh, if not the entire quantity, was sent out of the Mandi limits on stock transfer basis and that there was no sale involved in such transfers so as to attract the levy of the Mandi Fee on the same. - As a matter of fact, orders passed by the Mandi Samiti and the Mandi Parishad show that sufficient opportunity was indeed afforded to the appellants and the matter had remained pending for a number of years before those authorities. 60. Mr. Chandra contended that the appellants had been requesting the authorities to indicate as to what kind of material would satisfy them but since the authorities had failed to respond to that query the appellant had not produced the bulk of the material which was relevant and available with them. We do not think that such a procedure was legally permissible or even called for in the facts and circumstances of the case. As to what material would be sufficient to prove the case of the party who goes to the Court for relief is a matter for the party or those in charge of its legal affairs to determine. No litigant can ask for guidelines from the Court or statutory body as to the evidence which the party should adduce to substantiate its claim. The query made by the appellants as to what material if adduced would satisfy the authorities was, therefore, misplaced and a red herring to say the least. This is particularly so when the appellants were in no way handicapped on account of lack of resources or capacity to get the best of legal advice. Companies with such tremendous resources as the appellants before us cannot find a shortcut to the discharge of their obligations under the law by asking the Court or the authority concerned to indicate as to what kind of evidence would be sufficient in its opinion to entitle them to the refund of the amount paid or payable towards market fee. 61. So also, no remand ought to be made only to enable a party to produce additional material. A remand is neither mechanical nor a routine affair. If there is nothing wrong in the orders under challenge, there is no question of interference with the same. There is no reason for this Court to set the clock back and start a process which would take the parties another decade or so to come to terms with the problem. 62. In the result these appeals as also W.P. (C) No.144/2005 fail and are hereby dismissed with cost assessed at Rs.15,000/- in each case.


                                                   REPORTABLE

                         IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO.1476 OF 2006



Heinz India Pvt. Ltd. & Anr.                 ...Appellants

      Versus

State of U.P. & Ors.                               ...Respondents



(With Civil Appeal No.1478/2006, Civil  Appeal  No.1477/2006  and  W.P.  (C)
No.144/2005)





                               J U D G M E N T

T.S. THAKUR, J.

1.    These appeals by special leave  arise  out  of  an  order  dated  20th
August, 2004, passed by the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad whereby  a
batch of writ petitions challenging an order passed by the  Director,  Rajya
Krishi Utpadan Mandi Parishad, Lucknow, dated 3rd July, 1997, under  Section
32 of the Uttar Pradesh Krishi Utpadan Mandi  Adhiniyam,  1964  (hereinafter
called 'the Act'), have been dismissed. The order passed  by  the  Director,
Rajya Krishi Utpadan Mandi Parishad pertained to 19  revision  petitions  of
which 8 petitions were filed by Glaxo India Ltd. relevant to the period  1st
November, 1990 to 30th September, 1994  while  the  remaining  11  petitions
pertained to Heinz India Pvt.  Ltd.  relevant  to  the  period  between  1st
October, 1994 and 31st May, 1996.  During the pendency of the Special  Leave
Petitions, Writ Petition (C) No.144/2005 was filed under Article 32  of  the
Constitution of India,  inter  alia,  praying  for  a  writ  of  certiorari,
quashing order dated 25th September, 2004  passed  by  the  Deputy  Director
(Administration) Krishi Utpadan Mandi  Parishad,  Gomti  Nagar,  Lucknow  in
another batch of revision petitions (pertaining to the  period  between  3rd
June, 1996 and 30th April, 2004) and an assessment  order  dated  7th  July,
1998 passed by the Krishi Utpadan Mandi Samiti, Aligarh.  A  declaration  to
the effect that the goods removed from the petitioner's unit at  Aligarh  to
places outside the State of Uttar Pradesh were by way of stock transfer  and
no Mandi Fee was payable on such transfers has also  been  prayed  for.  The
facts giving rise to the appeals and the writ petition may be summarised  as
under:

2.    Glaxo India Ltd., set  up  an  industrial  unit  at  Aligarh  for  the
manufacture of what is sold in the market  under  the  brand  names  Glacto,
Complan,  Farex,  Glucon  D  and  other  products  generically  called  milk
foods/weaning foods and energy beverages. It is  not  in  dispute  that  the
manufacturing process undertaken in the said unit produced  ghee  as  a  by-
product of the said items. It is also not in dispute that with  effect  from
1st October, 1994, the Family Products Division  of  Glaxo  India  Ltd.  was
taken over  by  Heinz  India  Pvt.  Ltd.  who  continued  manufacturing  the
products  mentioned  above  including  ghee   as   a   by-product   of   its
manufacturing activity.

3.     In  terms  of  Section  17(iii)  of  the  Act,  sale   of   specified
agricultural produce within the  Mandi  limits  attracts  levy  of  what  is
described as Mandi Fee from the person effecting the sale. The Mandi  Samiti
accordingly started demanding the said fee from Glaxo India Ltd.,  upto  the
year 1994 and from Heinz India Ltd., from 1994 onwards  qua  sales  effected
by the said two companies of its  products  including  ghee.  These  demands
were resisted by both the companies primarily on the  ground  that  bulk  of
the ghee produced in their unit at Aligarh, if not the entire quantity,  was
sent out of the Mandi limits on stock transfer basis and that there  was  no
sale involved in such transfers so as to attract the levy of the  Mandi  Fee
on the same. Even so, the companies appear to have continued removing  their
goods from the Mandi limits in accordance with the  procedure  in  vogue  at
the relevant time. In Krishi Utpadan Mandi Samiti & Ors. v. Shree  Mahalaxmi
Sugar Works & Ors. (1995) Supp (3) SCC 433, decided on 2nd  February,  1995,
this Court noticed the  Explanation  to  Section  17(iii)  of  the  Act  and
observed that there was a presumption against the dealers. This  Court  held
that in view of the said presumption it is  open  to  the  Mandi  Samiti  to
raise demands against the dealers before the issue of passes. If there is  a
valid rebuttal to the presumption and it is shown that no  sale  took  place
within the notified market area the dealers will be entitled to the  passes,
otherwise not. This  Court  further  held  that  even  if  the  dealers  are
compelled to pay the market fee as demanded it shall  be  open  to  them  to
challenge the same in the manner provided under the Act.  This implied  that
if the claim of the dealers that the goods were not being  removed  pursuant
to any sale transaction was rejected and a demand for payment of  Mandi  Fee
raised, the aggrieved dealer  could  question  that  demand  in  appropriate
proceedings.

4.    It is evident from  a  reading  of  the  order  passed  by  the  Mandi
Parishad that the earlier procedure of issuing free gate passes remained  in
vogue upto February, 1995, whereafter the Mandi Samiti started issuing  gate
passes only on payment of the Mandi Fee demanded by  it.  This  change  came
about as a result of the aforementioned decision  of  this  Court  in  Shree
Mahalaxmi Sugar Works (supra). Subsequently, in Krishi Utpadan Mandi  Samiti
v. M/s Saraswati Cane Crusher & Ors. (Civil Appeal Nos. 1769-1773 of  1998),
decided on 25th March, 1998  this  Court  prescribed  the  procedure  to  be
followed in the matter of  issue  of  gate  passes,  making  of  provisional
assessment and the time frame for making a final assessment.

         "We are satisfied that the orders of this Court  afore-referred  to
         would need some  repair  work.  We  treat  the  said  order  to  be
         conceiving of a provisional assessment where after doors are opened
         for a final assessment.  We conceive that when demands  are  raised
         by the Krishi Utpadan Mandi Samiti against a trader before he could
         ask for transit of goods outside the market area, the trader  would
         be entitled to tender a valid rebuttal to  say  that  no  sale  had
         taken place within the notified area and that if the explanation is
         accepted there and then by the Mandi Samiti, no question of payment
         would arise as also of withholding the gate passes. If prima  facie
         evidence led by the trader is not accepted by the Mandi Samiti, the
         trader or the dealer can be compelled to  pay  the  market  fee  as
         demanded before issuance of gate pass.  If  the  trader  makes  the
         payment  without  demur,  the  matter  ends  and   the   assessment
         finalized.  But in case he does so and  raises  protest,  then  the
         assessment shall be taken to be provisional  in  nature  making  it
         obligatory on the trader  to  pay  the  fee  before  obtaining  the
         requisite gate  pass.   After  protest  has  been  lodged  and  the
         provisional assessment has been made, a time frame would be  needed
         to devise making the final  assessment.   We,  therefore,  conceive
         that it innately be read in the order of this Court  that  a  final
         assessment has to be made within  a  period  of  two  months  after
         provisional assessment so  that  the  entire  transaction  in  that
         respect is over enabling the aggrieved party, if any, to  challenge
         the final assessment in the manner provided under the afore Act  or
         under the general law of the  land  in  appropriate  fora.   Having
         added this concept in this manner in the two Judge  Bench  decision
         of this Court, we declare that what repair has been done  instantly
         would add to the order of the High Court and the instant corrective
         decision shall be the governing rule. The Civil Appeals would  thus
         stand disposed of.

            Since the assessment thus  far made against the traders, who are
         involved in the instant  appeals,  would  have  to  be  treated  as
         provisional awaiting final  assessment,  we  permit  the  concerned
         traders to move the respective Mandi Samiti within two months  from
         today to hear their objections and proceedings onwards be regulated
         in accordance with procedure devised hereinbefore.  Nonetheless  we
         add that should the basis of provisional assessment be knocked off,
         the Samiti would refund  the  market  fee  to  the  traders/dealers
         within two months thereafter."




5.    Suffice it to say that according to the  above  decision  the  dealers
could make a claim for the refund of the amount paid by them  on  furnishing
of proof of the fact that the goods had moved out of the mandi area  without
being subjected to a transaction of sale.

6.    What is important for the present is that Heinz made  claims  for  the
refund of the amount paid by it towards market  fee  and  furnished  to  the
Mandi Samiti material to support that claim. The material  so  produced  was
then evaluated by the Mandi Samiti who came to the conclusion that the  same
was not sufficient to rebut the statutory presumption that  the  removal  of
goods from the Mandi limits was pursuant to  a  sale  effected  within  such
limits.  The claim for refund of the amount paid by the appellant-Heinz  was
accordingly rejected by the Mandi Samiti in terms of the orders referred  to
earlier.

7.    Aggrieved by the order passed by the Mandi  Samiti  both  Glaxo  India
Ltd.  and  Heinz  India  Pvt.  Ltd.  filed  revision  petitions  before  the
Director, Mandi Parishad, invoking his jurisdiction under  Section  32  read
with Section 33 of the Act as a delegate  of  the  Mandi  Parishad.  By  his
order  dated  24th  October,  1996,  the  Director  dismissed  the  revision
petitions, aggrieved whereof the companies filed Writ Petitions  before  the
High Court of Allahabad. These Writ Petitions  were  eventually  allowed  by
the High Court in terms of an order dated 3rd April, 1997,  and  the  matter
remitted back to the Director for a  fresh  consideration  and  disposal  in
accordance with law.

8.    The Director accordingly  heard  the  revision  petition  afresh,  re-
appraised the material relied upon by the  companies  in  support  of  their
claim for refund and came to the conclusion that the claim of the  companies
for refund remained unsubstantiated and the presumption  arising  under  the
Explanation to Section 17(iii) un-rebutted. The Director observed:




      "17.....


      (3) Neither the evidences produced by  Revisionist  company  with  the
         details of information of sale has been given to C & F  Agent  with
         dates on the basis of which C & F Agent would deliver the goods  to
         the buyer after receipt  of  payment  nor  any  instance  has  been
         produced for giving required instructions to C & F Agent  regarding
         the sale of goods and nor even any evidence has been  produced.  In
         this way, the evidence produced regarding the actual mode  of  sale
         at the place of destination as to how and by whom it is being done,
         are contradictory or  are  missing.   Mandi  Samiti  gave  time  to
         revisionist for clarifying and proving this sale process  but,  the
         revisionist has not been able to produce  clear  case  and  desired
         evidence on this subject till date.


      (4) When the chain related to the sale at the place of destination  in
         accordance with aforesaid through stock transfer breaks then  while
         keeping in view the declaration given under Excise Rule 52(A)/173C,
         two possibilities appear.  First is that  the  sale  agreement  for
         deal at the place of destination and according to marketing  system
         given in letter dated  4.1.95  it  may  be,  that  the  Revisionist
         company by itself or through  its  marketing  staff  who  might  be
         visiting the place of destination give the delivery of goods to C &
         F Agent by fixing before the arrival  of  goods  at  the  place  of
         destination after receiving amount of money in  the  form  of  bank
         draft and pay order which resulted in the sale having  taken  place
         from the factory at Aligarh office because the  direct  contact  of
         buyer with revisionist took place  at  Aligarh  or  it  took  place
         through   the   employees/officers   of   revisionist's   marketing
         department at Aligarh and they were  given  the  delivery  on  that
         basis only.


         xxx xxx xxx


         xxx xxx xxx


      19. In this way by the analysis and close consideration of said  paras
         16, 17 and 18 it is concluded that under the arrangement  given  by
         Hon'ble Supreme Court in 1995 (Supp.3) S.C.C. 433 the  sale  taking
         place in the matter of M/s  Mahalaxmi  Sugar  Works,  Revisionist's
         disputed transmitted and its sale taking  place  at  the  place  of
         destination by taking stock outside the mandi area in the  form  of
         stock transfer and  the  concept  of  taking  out  the  sale  under
         explanation of 17(3)(B),  it  has  failed  to  prove  by  producing
         counter valid rebuttal of concept because  according  to  the  case
         went for revision on stock transfer and place of destination it has
         failed to tell the presence by producing the best chain of evidence
         for proving...."





9.     Writ  Petition  Nos.  2320(M/S),  2516(M/S),  2517(M/S),   2518(M/S),
2519(M/S), 250(M/S), 226(M/S) and 2527(M/S) of 1997  filed  by  Glaxo  India
Ltd., before the High Court of Allahabad challenged the correctness  of  the
above order. Heinz India Pvt. Ltd. also filed Writ Petition Nos.  2323(M/S),
2321(M/S),   2322(M/S),   2324(M/S),   2325(M/S),   2326(M/S),    2474(M/S),
2475(M/S), 2476(M/S), 2477(M/S) and 2478(M/S) of 1997 before the High  Court
challenging the same order. The High  Court,  however,  concurred  with  the
view taken by the  Mandi  Samiti  and  the  Director  of  the  Parishad  and
dismissed the writ petitions by its order dated 20th August, 2004. The  High
Court held that the material produced by the companies did not  make  out  a
case for refund for it did not rebut the presumption that ghee  produced  in
the company's unit at Aligarh was not sold from Aligarh or that  the  stocks
of ghee had been transferred outside the Mandi limit on  consignment  basis.
The High Court gave several reasons for holding that the  material  produced
by the companies in support of their claim that the so called sales were  in
fact stock transfer was either not reliable or  was  deficient.  High  Court
also held that the companies had withheld the  best  evidence  available  to
them without offering any explanation for doing so. The High Court said:

         "The long and short of the  discussions  made  above  is  that  the
         petitioners have miserably failed to rebut the presumption of  sale
         in the market area at Aligarh and therefore, the Director  and  the
         assessing  authorities  rightly  levied  the  Mandi  fee   on   the
         consignments of Ghee transported by Glaxo and its  successor  Heinz
         India Private Limited to other States. The judgments passed by  the
         Revisional Authority are not perverse so as to be  interfered  with
         by this  Court;  rather  all  the  questioned  judgments  are  well
         discussed and reasoned. In the  result,  the  petitioners  are  not
         entitled to claim any relief."




10.   The present appeals assail the above order as already mentioned.

11.   We have heard the learned counsels  of  the  parties  at  considerable
length. Three questions fall for our determination. These are:

   1. Whether the Krishi  Utpadan  Mandi  Adhiniyam  does  not  contain  the
      necessary machinery provisions for assessment  of  the  fees  and  for
      adjudication of disputes in relation thereto? If so to what effect?

   2. What precisely is the  correct  legal  standard/test  for  determining
      whether or not  the  presumption  arising  under  the  Explanation  to
      Section 17(iii) of the Act has been rebutted?

                            And

   3. Whether the orders passed by the Mandi Utpadan Samiti and that  passed
      by the Director, as delegate of the Mandi Parishad,  suffer  from  any
      legal infirmity to call for interference?

Re: Question No.1

12.   This Court has in a long line  of  decisions  rendered  from  time  to
time, emphasised the importance of machinery provisions  for  assessment  of
taxes and fees recoverable under a taxing statute. In  one  of  the  earlier
decisions on the subject a Constitution Bench of  this  Court  in  Kunnathat
Thathunni Moopil Nair etc., v. State of Kerala and Anr. (AIR  1961  SC  552)
examined the constitutional validity of the Travancore-Cochin Land  Tax  Act
(15 of 1955). While recognising what is now well-settled  principle  of  law
that taxing statute is not wholly immune from attack on the ground  that  it
infringes the equality clause in Article  14,  this  Court  found  that  the
enactment in question was violative of Article 14 of  the  Constitution  for
inequality was writ large on the Act and inherent  in  the  very  provisions
under the taxing section thereof.  Having said so, this Court  also  noticed
that the Act was silent  as  to  the  machinery  and  the  procedure  to  be
followed in making the assessment. It was left to the  Executive  to  evolve
the requisite machinery and procedure thereby making the  whole  thing  from
beginning to end purely administrative in character completely ignoring  the
legal position that the assessment of a tax  on  person  or  property  is  a
quasi-judicial exercise. Speaking for the majority Sinha, C.J. said:

         "Ordinarily, a taxing statute lays down  a  regular  machinery  for
         making assessment of the tax proposed to be imposed by the statute.
         It lays down detailed  procedure  as  to  notice  to  the  proposed
         assessee to make a return in respect of  property  proposed  to  be
         taxed, prescribes the authority and the procedure for  hearing  any
         objections to the liability for taxation or as to the extent of the
         tax proposed to  be  levied,  and  finally,  as  to  the  right  to
         challenge  the  regularity  of  assessment  made,  by  recourse  to
         proceedings in a higher Civil Court. The Act  merely  declares  the
         competence of the Government to make a provisional assessment,  and
         by virtue of s. 3 of the Madras Revenue  Recovery  Act,  1864,  the
         land-holders may be liable to pay the tax. The Act being silent  as
         to the machinery  and  procedure  to  be  followed  in  making  the
         assessment leaves it to  the  Executive  to  evolve  the  requisite
         machinery and procedure. The whole thing, from beginning to end, is
         treated  as  of  a  purely  administrative  character,   completely
         ignoring the legal position that the assessment of a tax on  person
         or property is at least of a quasi-judicial character."

                                        (emphasis supplied)




13.   In  Rai Ramkrishna and Ors. etc. v. State of Bihar (AIR 1963 SC  1667)
this Court was examining the constitutional validity of the  Bihar  Taxation
on Passengers and Goods (Carried by  Public  Service  Motor  Vehicles)  Act,
1961. Reiterating the view taken in Kunnathat Thathunni Moopil Nair  (supra)
this Court held that a  statute  is  not  beyond  the  pale  of  limitations
prescribed by Articles 14 and 19 of the Constitution and that  the  test  of
reasonableness prescribed by Article  304(b)  is  justiciable.  However,  in
cases where  the  statute  was  completely  discriminatory  or  provides  no
procedural machinery for  assessment  and  levy  of  tax  or  where  it  was
confiscatory,  the  Court  would  be  justified  in  striking  it  down   as
unconstitutional. In such cases the character of the material provisions  of
the impugned statute may be such as may justify the Court  taking  the  view
that in substance the taxing statue is a cloak adopted  by  the  legislature
for achieving its confiscatory purpose.

14.   In Raja Jagannath Baksh Singh v. State of Uttar Pradesh and Anr.  (AIR
1962 SC 1563) this Court was examining the constitutional validity  of  U.P.
Large Land Holdings Tax Act (31 of 1957).  Dealing with  the  argument  that
the  Act  did  not  make  a  specific  provision  about  the  machinery  for
assessment or recovery of tax, this Court held:

         "....if a taxing statute makes  no  specific  provision  about  the
         machinery to recover tax and the procedure to make  the  assessment
         of the tax and leaves it entirely to the executive to  devise  such
         machinery as it thinks fit  and  to  prescribe  such  procedure  as
         appears to it to be fair, an occasion may arise for the  Courts  to
         consider whether the failure to provide  for  a  machinery  and  to
         prescribe a procedure does not tend to make the imposition  of  the
         tax an unreasonable  restriction  within  the  meaning  of  Article
         19(5). An imposition of tax which in the absence  of  a  prescribed
         machinery  and  the  prescribed  procedure  would  partake  of  the
         character of a purely administrative affair can, in a proper sense,
         be challenge as contravening Article 19(1)(f)."

                                        (emphasis supplied)




15.   In The State of Andhra Pradesh and Anr. v. Nalla Raja Reddy  and  Ors.
(AIR 1967 SC 1458), this Court was examining the constitutional validity  of
Andhra Pradesh Land Revenue (Additional Assessment) and  Cess  Revision  Act
(22 of 1962) as amended by Amendment Act (23 of 1962). Noticing the  absence
of machinery provisions in the impugned enactments this Court observed:

         "...if S.6 is put aside, there is absolutely no  provision  in  the
         Act prescribing the  mode  of  assessment.  Section  3  and  4  are
         charging sections and they say in effect that a person will have to
         pay an additional assessment per acre in respect of  both  dry  and
         wet lands. They do not  lay  down  how  the  assessment  should  be
         levied. No notice has been prescribed; no opportunity is  given  to
         the person to question the assessment on  his  land.  There  is  no
         procedure for him to agitate the correctness of the  classification
         made by placing his land in a particular class  with  reference  to
         ayacut, acreage or even taram. The Act does not even  nominate  the
         appropriate officer to make the assessment to deal  with  questions
         arising in respect  of  assessments  and  does  not  prescribe  the
         procedure for assessment. The whole thing is  left  in  a  nebulous
         form. Briefly stated, under the  Act  there  is  no  procedure  for
         assessment and however grievous the blunder made there  is  no  way
         for the aggrieved party to get it corrected. This is a typical case
         where  a  taxing  statute  does  not  provide  any   machinery   of
         assessment."

                                                (emphasis supplied)



16.   The appeals filed by the State against the judgment of the High  Court
striking down the enactment were on the above basis dismissed.

17.   Reference may also be made to M/s Vishnu Dayal Mahendra Pal  and  Ors.
v. State of Uttar Pradesh and Ors. (1974) 2 SCC 306, and D.G. Gose  and  Co.
(Agents) Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Kerala and Anr. (1980) 2 SCC 410, where  this
Court held that sufficient guidance were available  from  the  preamble  and
other provisions of the Act. The members of the committee owe a duty  to  be
conversant with the same and discharge their functions  in  accordance  with
the provisions of the Act  and  the  Rules  and  that  in  cases  where  the
machinery for determining annual value has been provided in the Act and  the
Rules of the local authority, there is no reason or necessity  of  providing
same or similar provisions in the other Act or Rules.

18.   There is no gainsaying that a total absence  of  machinery  provisions
for assessment/recovery of the tax levied under an enactment, which has  the
effect of making the entire process of assessment and recovery  of  tax  and
adjudication of disputes relating thereto administrative  in  character,  is
open to challenge before a Writ Court in  appropriate  proceedings.  Whether
or not the enactment levying the tax makes a machinery provision  either  by
itself or in terms of the Rules that may be framed under it is,  however,  a
matter that would have to be examined in each case.  In our opinion,  it  is
not necessary to dilate any further on this aspect in  the  context  of  the
provisions of Uttar Pradesh Krishi  Utpadan  Mandi  Adhiniyam,  1964  having
regard to the fact that  the  question  whether  the  said  Act  provides  a
suitable machinery for assessment and recovery of the fee has been  examined
by this Court in Ram Chandra Kailash Kumar & Co. & Ors. v. State of  U.P.  &
Anr. 1980 (Supp) SCC 27. That decision arose out of a  writ  petition  filed
before the High Court of Allahabad challenging the  constitutional  validity
of the Adhiniyam.  The  High  Court  had  dismissed  the  challenge  to  the
constitutional validity of the  enactment  which  order  was  then  assailed
before this Court in an appeal by special leave. This  Court  formulated  as
many as 24 distinct points for determination based on the grounds that  were
urged in support  of  the  challenge.  One  of  the  points  that  fell  for
consideration was whether the rules framed under the  Act  provide  for  any
machinery for adjudication  of  disputes  in  addition  to  the  factum  and
quantum of liability arising as under the Act. The contention precisely  was
that neither the Act nor the rules made any provision  for  adjudication  of
disputes that would arise  on  both  these  aspects.   While  rejecting  the
submission on behalf of  the  Marketing  Committee  that  no  such  disputes
actually exist or are likely to exist which would require any  machinery  of
the Market Committee for adjudication, this Court observed:

         "xxxxxxx A machinery for adjudication of dispute is necessary to be
         provided under the rules  for  proper  functioning  of  the  market
         committees. We have already observed and  expressed  our  hope  for
         bringing into existence such machinery in one form  or  the  other.
         But it is not correct to say that in absence of such a machinery no
         market fee can be levied or collected.  If a dispute arises then in
         the first instance the market committee itself or any sub-committee
         appointed by it can give its finding which  will  be  subjected  to
         challenge in any Court of law when steps are taken for  enforcement
         of the provisions for realisation of the market fee."




19.   It is  evident  from  the  above  that  this  Court  had  specifically
rejected the contention that in the absence of any machinery under  the  Act
and the Rules no market fee could be levied or collected.   That  being  so,
it not necessary for us to either  re-examine  that  aspect  or  to  take  a
contrary view contrary at this stage.

20.    Mr.  Sudhir  Chandra,  learned  senior  counsel  appearing  for   the
appellant-company, however, contended that the hope expressed by this  Court
that a comprehensive machinery provision shall be made for  adjudication  of
disputes has been belied by the inaction of  the  respondents  for  over  30
years which calls for suitable directions and/or guidelines to the State  as
also  to  the  authorities  under  the  Act  to  make  necessary   machinery
provisions especially when serious disputes involving  substantial  sums  of
money towards market fee are arising for adjudication without there being  a
semblance of an adjudicatory mechanism or judicial approach  in  the  matter
of adjudication of such disputes. Elaborating his  submissions  Mr.  Chandra
contended that while the Market Committee examines the  question  of  refund
of the fee paid by the seller of  any  produce,  any  dispute  touching  the
correctness of any such adjudication  or  assessment  by  the  committee  is
examinable by the Board in terms of Section 32 of the Act.  Since the  Board
is a multi-member body any exercise in the nature of review or  revision  of
the order passed by  the  Committee  on  the  claim  for  refund  cannot  be
undertaken by the Board itself, the practice that is followed is  that  such
revisions are heard and decided by  the  Director  to  whom  the  revisional
powers of the Board are delegated in terms of Section 33 of the  Act.   What
according to Mr. Chandra is surprising is that even the  Director  does  not
hear the matters himself. The actual disposal of the revision is left  to  a
junior officer to whom the  Director  may  assign  the  case  for  disposal.
Hearing by any such junior  officer  who  is  neither  by  training  nor  by
qualification suited for such determination of complicated issues  regarding
the liability of the purchaser or seller  of  goods  within  a  market  area
makes  the  entire  process  of  determination  farcical.  A  machinery  for
adjudication of disputes can be said to have been provided for only  if  the
same ensures a fair and objective adjudication of the  matters  in  disputes
at the hands of the authority who is either  by  reasons  of  his  training,
experience or qualification fit to determine the controversy.   So  long  as
such a provision is absent in the scheme of  the  Act,  the  requirement  of
machinery for adjudication of disputes must be deemed to be  absent,  argued
Mr. Chandra.

21.   Section 32 of the Act empowers the Board to call for and  examine  the
proceedings of the Committee for the purpose of satisfying itself as to  the
legality or propriety of any decision or order passed by a Committee and  to
pass such orders thereon as it may deem fit including  an  order  modifying,
annulling or reversing any such decision or order of the Committee.  Dealers
aggrieved of an order of assessment or an order declining refund of the  fee
paid by them are entitled to question the correctness of any such demand  in
terms of the said provision which is in the nature  of  a  revisional  power
vested in the Board. It is common ground that the  dealers  in  the  present
case had invoked the said power of the Board under Section 32.  It  is  also
common ground that the revisions so filed have been  entertained  and  dealt
with on merits. What is unsatisfactory according to the dealers is the  fact
that the revisions have been dealt with by  an  officer  authorised  by  the
Director.  Mr. Chandra did  not  dispute  the  proposition  that  the  power
vested in the Board including that under Section 32  of  the  Act  could  be
exercised by the Director as a delegate of the Board  keeping  in  view  the
provisions of Section 33 of the Act which permits such delegation.  Sections
32 and 33 read as under:

         "32.     Powers of the [Board] to call for  the  proceedings  of  a
         Committee and pass orders thereon.  -  The  [Board]  may,  for  the
         purpose of satisfying itself as to the legality or propriety of any
         decision of, or order passed by, a Committee, at any time call  and
         examine the proceedings of the Committee, and, where it is  of  the
         opinion that the decision or  order  of  the  Committee  should  be
         modified, annulled or reversed, pass such orders thereon as it  may
         deem fit.

         33.      Delegation of powers. - The  Board  may,  by  regulations,
         delegate subject to such conditions and restrictions  and  in  such
         manner, as may be specified therein,  any  of  its  powers  to  the
         Director."




22.   What, according  to  the  learned  counsel  for  the  appellants,  was
unacceptable is the fact that the revisions could be heard and  disposed  of
even by an officer authorised by the Director.  This,  argued  Mr.  Chandra,
resulted in  dilution  of  the  sanctity  and  efficacy  of  the  revisional
exercise not because it was dehors the statute but because the  exercise  of
quasi-judicial powers were entrusted to an officer at the lower rung of  the
hierarchy.

23.   Section 2(h) defines the term 'Director' as under:

         "'Director' means an officer appointed by the State  Government  as
         Director of Mandis and includes any other officer authorised by the
         Director to perform all or any of his functions under this Act."



24.   It is manifest from a plain reading of the above that  the  expression
'Director' wherever used in the Act including Section  33  thereof  includes
an officer authorised  by  the  Director  to  perform  all  or  any  of  his
functions under the Act. Significantly enough neither before the High  Court
nor before us was  it  contended  that  the  officer  who  had  handled  and
disposed of the revision petitions  filed  by  the  dealers,  was  not  duly
authorised in terms of Section 2(h) or that the power  of  the  Board  under
Section 32 of the Act was not duly delegated to the  Director.  It  is  not,
therefore, a case of inherent lack of jurisdiction. All that the  appellants
propose is that the revisions could either be heard by the Board  itself  or
made over for disposal to a Committee of officers senior  enough  to  decide
issues of fact  and  law  involving  substantial  financial  stakes  of  the
parties.  Now it is true that the stakes involved in the  present  batch  of
cases are substantial and those called upon to satisfy  the  demands  raised
against them would like their cases to be heard by a  senior  officer  or  a
Committee of officers to be nominated by the Board. But in  the  absence  of
any data as to the number of cases that arise for consideration involving  a
challenge to the demands raised by the Market Committee and  the  nature  of
the disputes that generally fall for determination in such  cases,  it  will
not be possible for this Court to step in and direct an  alteration  in  the
mechanism that is currently in place. The  power  to  decide  the  revisions
vests with the Board who also enjoys the power to delegate that function  to
the Director. So long as there is statutory sanction  for  the  Director  to
exercise the revisional power vested in the Board, any argument that such  a
delegation is  either  impermissible  or  does  not  serve  the  purpose  of
providing a suitable machinery for adjudication of the disputes  shall  have
to be rejected. It is noteworthy that Rule 133-A of the Rules  framed  under
the Act regulates the filing and disposal of the  revision  petitions  under
Section 32 thereof.  This provision was inserted with effect from 11th  May,
2008 and empowers the Board either to decide the  revision  petition  itself
or to nominate an officer for doing so. It also provides  for  grant  of  an
opportunity of being  heard  to  the  person  concerned  and  a  time  bound
disposal of the revision. Rule 133-A is, therefore, a step in the  direction
of providing a machinery under the Act for  adjudication  of  disputes  that
may arise between dealers on the one hand and the market  committee  on  the
other. That being so, the Act is not completely bereft of  a  machinery  nor
can it be said that the observations made  by  this  Court  in  Ram  Chandra
Kailash Kumar's case (supra) have gone unheeded. All that we need to add  is
that in order to make the Board's revisional power more  effective  and  its
exercise more transparent and credible, the Board would do well to  delegate
the power of hearing and disposal of the revision petitions to a senior  and
experienced  officer  who  is  well-versed  in  dealing  with  legal  issues
concerning assessment and/or determination of the liability under  the  Act.
Beyond that it is neither necessary nor  proper  for  us  to  say  anything.
Question No.1 is answered accordingly.

Re: Question No.2

25.   Explanation to Section 17(iii) of the Act raises a presumption to  the
effect that any specified agricultural produce taken out of or  proposed  to
be taken out of a market area by or on behalf of a licensed trader has  been
sold within such area; the price of the produce so presumed to  be  sold  is
then determinable in the manner prescribed. The Explanation reads:

         Explanation.- For the purpose of clause (iii), unless the  contrary
         is proved, any specified agricultural produce taken out or proposed
         to be taken out of a market area by or  on  behalf  of  a  licensed
         trader shall be presumed to have been sold within such area and  in
         such case, the price of such produce presumed to be sold  shall  be
         deemed to be such reasonable price as may  be  ascertained  in  the
         manner prescribed."



26.   It is fairly evident that the presumption  is  rebuttable  in  nature;
for it holds good only till the contrary is not proved by the  dealer.   The
question is what is the standard of proof required to  rebut  the  statutory
presumption; and whether the Market Committee,  the  Director  or  the  High
Court applied the correct legal standard for holding  that  the  presumption
was not effectively rebutted.

27.   Relying upon the decision of this Court in Sodhi Transport Co. &  Ors.
v. State of U.P. & Ors. (1986) 2 SCC 486, Mr. Sudhir Chandra contended  that
the standard of proof applicable was that applied  in  civil  actions  which
are decided on the preponderance of probability and not the higher  standard
of  "proof  beyond  reasonable  doubt"  applied  in  criminal  cases.    The
appellants had according to the learned counsel  discharged  the  burden  of
rebutting the presumption by adducing evidence which  tended  to  show  that
the ghee manufactured by them had not been sold within the  market  area  to
attract the levy of market fee on the  price  thereof.  He  urged  that  the
produce had been removed out of the market area on transfer of  stock  basis
without any element of sale in such  transfers.   Reliance  was  in  support
placed by Mr. Chandra upon an agreement which Heinz had  executed  with  its
Clearing and Forwarding (C&F) Agent in the State  of  Rajasthan  apart  from
other material adduced before the Market Committee, in a bid to  prove  that
the stocks in question had not been sold within the market area.

28.   Appearing for the Market Committee Mr. Rakesh Dwivedi argued that  the
mere production of some evidence howsoever feeble was not  enough  to  rebut
the presumption which would continue to hold the field till  such  time  the
trader adduced evidence to prove the contrary. It was  only  "proof  to  the
contrary" that could rebut  the  presumption  and  for  doing  so  just  any
material or evidence was not  enough.   It  must,  argued  Mr.  Dwivedi,  be
evidence that  would  clearly  establish  that  there  was  indeed  no  sale
effected within the market area as presumed in  terms  of  the  Explanation.
The appellant-companies had failed to do so as before the  Market  Committee
and the Director and even before the High Court.

29.   Black's Law Dictionary 5th Edition,  1979,  defines  'Presumption'  as
under:


             "A presumption is a rule of law,  statutory  or  judicial,  by
         which finding of a basic fact gives rise to existence  of  presumed
         fact, until presumption is rebutted."



30.   The same dictionary defines 'Rebut' as under:


           "In pleading and evidence, to defeat, refute, or take  away  the
         effect of  something.  When  a  plaintiff  in  an  action  produces
         evidence which raises a presumption of the  defendant's  liability,
         and the defendant adduces evidence which shows that the presumption
         is ill-founded, he is said to "rebut it."



31.   Both in England and America, law permits raising of presumptions  both
conclusive and rebuttable. There is considerable judicial authority in  both
jurisprudential systems, dealing with the question of the standard of  proof
required to rebut a presumption whether  statutory  or  at  common  law.  In
England, the civil standard of proof is defined by Lord  Denning  in  Miller
v. Minister of Pensions [1947] 2 All ER 372, thus:

         "..........It need not reach certainty, but it must  carry  a  high
         degree of probability. Proof beyond reasonable doubt does not  mean
         proof beyond the shadow of doubt. The law would fail to protect the
         community if it admitted  fanciful  possibilities  to  deflect  the
         course of justice. If the evidence is so strong against a man as to
         leave only  a  remote  possibility  in  his  favour  which  can  be
         dismissed with the sentence "of course it is possible, but  not  in
         the least probable" the case is proved beyond reasonable doubt, but
         nothing short of that will suffice."





32.   Three years later came Bater v. Bater [1950] 2 All ER  458,  in  which
the civil standard of proof to an extent modified, was seen by some  jurists
as somewhat confusing  the  concept  so  clearly  stated  in  Miller's  case
(supra). In  Bater  (supra)  the  Court  declared  that  neither  civil  nor
criminal standard of proof was an absolute standard.  A 'civil case' may  be
proved by a preponderance of probability, explained, Denning J.,


         "......but  there  may  be  degrees  of  probability  within   that
         standard. The degree depends on the subject-matter. A civil  court,
         when considering a charge of fraud, will naturally require a higher
         degree  of  probability  than  that  which  it  would  require   if
         considering whether negligence were established. It does not  adopt
         so high a degree as a criminal court, even when it is considering a
         charge of a criminal nature, but still it does require a the degree
         of probability required should be commensurate with the occasion."





33.   Then came Hornal v. Neuberger Products Ltd. [1957] 1 Q.B.  247,  where
the Court held that in a civil action where fraud or other matter  which  is
or may be a crime is alleged against a party or against persons not  parties
to the action, the standard of proof to be applied  is  that  applicable  in
civil actions generally, namely, proof on the balance  of  probability,  and
not the higher standard of proof beyond all  reasonable  doubt  required  in
criminal matters; but there is no absolute standard of proof, and  no  great
gulf between proof in criminal and civil  matters;  for  in  all  cases  the
degree  of  probability  must  be  commensurate  with   the   occasion   and
proportionate to the subject-matter. The elements of  gravity  of  an  issue
are part of the range  of  circumstances  which  have  to  be  weighed  when
deciding as to the balance of probabilities. The law in England,  therefore,
is that degree of probability must be commensurate with the  subject-matter.
This implies that graver the charge in a civil action, higher the degree  of
proof required. A civil case may be proved by preponderance of  probability,
but the degree of probability would depend upon the nature of  the  subject-
matter.

34.   In the American system of justice, the Courts have adopted a  somewhat
different approach, though the essence, may appear to  be  the  same  as  is
accepted by the Courts in England.  In America, standard  of  proof  depends
upon the degree of confidence which the American  society  thinks  the  fact
finder  should  have  in  the  correctness  of  factual  conclusions  for  a
particular type of adjudication. [See Addington v. Texas, 441 U.S. 418,  423
(1979)]. Proof may be required by a preponderance of the evidence, by  clear
and convincing evidence or by proof that is beyond reasonable doubt.   Proof
by 'clear and convincing evidence' lies between standard  of  'preponderance
of the evidence' at one end and 'beyond a reasonable doubt'  at  the  other.
Clear and convincing evidence has been described as evidence  that  produces
in the mind of the trier of the fact an abiding conviction  that  the  truth
of the factual  contentions  is  highly  probable.  [See  32A  Corpus  Juris
Secundum Evidence ' 1624].

35.   We may at this stage refer to a few decisions of  this  Court  on  the
subject. In Izhar Ahmad Khan v. Union of India and Ors. (AIR 1962 SC  1052),
this Court was examining the provisions  of  Schedule  III  Rule  3  of  the
Citizenship Rules, 1956 which made it obligatory on the enquiring  authority
to infer the acquisition of citizenship of a foreign country from  the  fact
that the passport  of  foreign  country  has  been  obtained  by  an  Indian
citizen. The question was whether a rule about irrebuttable  presumption  is
a rule of evidence or not. The question had arisen in the context  of  rule-
making  power  of  the  Central  Government  under  Section  9(2)   of   the
Citizenship Act, 1955  according  to  which  the  Central  Government  could
prescribe rules of evidence subject to which the competent  authority  could
hold an inquiry.  The contention urged was that  instead  of  prescribing  a
rule of evidence the Central Government had by enacting Rule 3  and  raising
a  conclusive  presumption  regarding  the  acquisition  of  citizenship  of
another country, framed a  rule  of  substantive  law  and  not  a  rule  of
evidence.

36.   This Court held that while answering  any  such  question  it  is  not
correct to assume that all rules prescribing  irrebuttable  presumption  are
rules of substantive law.  Any such question, declared this  Court,  has  to
be answered after examining the rule and its impact  on  the  proof  of  the
fact in issue. Explaining the juristic basis  of  a  rebuttable  presumption
and the approach to be adopted in applying such  presumptions  to  different
situations this Court observed:

         "25. It is conceded, and we think, rightly, that a rule prescribing
         a rebuttable presumption is a rule of evidence. It is necessary  to
         analyse what the  rule  about  the  rebuttable  presumption  really
         means. A fact A which has relevance in the  proof  of  fact  B  and
         inherently has some degree of probative or persuasive value in that
         behalf may be weighed by a judicial mind after  it  is  proved  and
         before a conclusion is reached as to whether fact B  is  proved  or
         not. When the  law  of  evidence  makes  a  rule  providing  for  a
         rebuttable presumption that on proof of fact A,  fact  B  shall  be
         deemed to be proved unless the contrary is  established,  what  the
         rule purports  to  do  is  to  regulate  the  judicial  process  of
         appreciating evidence and to provide  that  the  said  appreciation
         will draw the inference from the proof of fact A that  fact  B  has
         also been proved unless  the  contrary  is  established.  In  other
         words, the rule takes away judicial discretion either to attach the
         due probative value to fact A or not and requires prima  facie  the
         due probative value to be attached in the matter of  the  inference
         as to the existence of fact B, subject,  of  course,  to  the  said
         presumption being rebutted by proof to the contrary.


         xxx           xxx              xxx
         xxx           xxx              xxx


         Thus, the rule of rebuttable presumption adds  statutory  force  to
         the natural and inherent probative value of fact A in  relation  to
         the proof of the existence of fact B and in  adding  his  statutory
         value to the probative force of fact A, the rule, it  is  conceded,
         makes a provision within the scope  and  function  of  the  law  of
         evidence. If that is so, how does it make a difference in principle
         if the rule adds conclusive strength to the probative value of  the
         said fact A in relation to the proof of the existence of fact B? In
         regard to the category of facts in respect of which an irrebuttable
         presumption is prescribed by a rule of evidence,  the  position  is
         that the inherent probative value of fact A in that behalf is  very
         great and it is very likely that when it is proved  in  a  judicial
         proceeding,  the  judicial  mind  would   normally   attach   great
         importance to it in relation to the proof of fact B. The rule steps
         in with regard to such facts and provides that  the  judicial  mind
         should attach to the said fact conclusiveness in the matter of  its
         probative value. It would be noticed that  as  in  the  case  of  a
         rebuttable  presumption,  so  in  the  case  of   an   irrebuttable
         presumption, the rule purports  to  assist  the  judicial  mind  in
         appreciating the existence of facts.  In  one  case  the  probative
         value is statutorily strengthened but yet left open to rebuttal, in
         the other case, it is statutorily strengthened  and  placed  beyond
         the pale of rebuttal. Considered from this point of view, it  seems
         rather difficult to accept the theory  that  whereas  a  rebuttable
         presumption  is  within  the  domain  of  the  law   of   evidence,
         irrebuttable presumption is outside the  domain  of  that  law  and
         forms part of the substantive law."






37.   In Harbhajan Singh v. State of Punjab & Anr.   (AIR 1966 SC 97),  this
Court was examining the nature and scope of onus of proof which  an  accused
person had to discharge in seeking protection of the Exception 9 to  Section
499 IPC.  This  Court  held  that  onus  to  prove  its  case  lies  on  the
prosecution no matter what the charge or  where  the  trial  is  held.   The
principle that prosecution must prove the guilt of the prisoner is  part  of
the common law of England  and  also  part  of  the  criminal  law  of  this
country. Having said so, the Court further declared that if an exception  is
taken by an accused person he is not required to justify his plea  beyond  a
reasonable doubt and that the degree and character  of  proof  which  he  is
expected to furnish in support of  his  plea  cannot  be  equated  with  the
degree and character of proof that is  expected  of  the  prosecution.  This
Court with approval quoted the English decision in R. v. Clark (1921 61  SCR
608), which was approved by Lord Hailsham in Sodeman v. R [1936]  2  All  ER
1138 to the following effect:


         ".............the necessity for excluding doubt  contained  in  the
         rule as to the onus upon the prosecution in criminal cases might be
         regarded as an exception  founded  upon  considerations  of  public
         policy. There can be no consideration of public policy calling  for
         similar stringency in the case of an accused person endeavouring to
         displace a rebuttable presumption."




38.   We may also refer to the decision of this  Court  in  Sodhi  Transport
Co. (supra) upon which heavy reliance was placed by learned counsel for  the
appellant in support of the plea that the standard of proof required of  the
person  against  whom  statutory  presumption  is   raised   is   a   simple
preponderance of probability and no more. In  Sodhi  Transport  Co.  (supra)
this Court was examining the provisions of Section  28-B  of  Uttar  Pradesh
Sales Tax Act, 1948 which was alleged to be ultra vires of the  Constitution
inasmuch as it permitted the authorities to raise a  rebuttable  presumption
regarding the sale of goods having taken place inside the State of  U.P.  if
the transit pass is not handed over to an officer at the check-post  or  the
barrier near the place of exit from the State. Such a  presumption  with  an
object of preventing evasion of tax, it was contended, as regards the  proof
of a set of circumstances which would make a transaction liable to  tax  was
tantamount to conferring on the authority concerned the power to levy a  tax
which the legislature could not otherwise  levy.  Repelling  the  contention
this Court held that a rebuttable presumption has  the  effect  of  shifting
the burden of proof, for the authority concerned, before levying  sales  tax
arrives at the conclusion about the exigibility of the  tax  by  a  judicial
process and only upon his satisfaction that the goods have been sold  inside
the State. In doing so, the authority no doubt  relies  upon  the  statutory
rules and presumption contained in  Section  28-B  of  the  Act.   But  such
presumption can be rebutted by the  person  against  whom  action  is  taken
under Section  28-B  when  the  person  concerned  has  the  opportunity  to
displace the presumption by leading evidence. That being  so,  provision  of
Section 28-B inasmuch as the same raises a rebuttable  presumption  did  not
suffer from any vice of unconstitutionality.  This Court observed:

         "14. A presumption is not in itself evidence but only makes a prima
         facie case for party in whose  favour  it  exists.  It  is  a  rule
         concerning evidence. It indicates the person on whom the burden  of
         proof  lies.  When  presumption  is  conclusive,  it  obviates  the
         production of any other evidence to dislodge the conclusion  to  be
         drawn on proof of certain facts. But when it is rebuttable it  only
         points out the party on whom lies the duty of  going  forward  with
         evidence on the fact presumed, and when  that  party  has  produced
         evidence fairly and reasonably tending to show that the  real  fact
         is not as presumed the purpose of presumption  is  over.  Then  the
         evidence  will  determine  the  true  nature  of  the  fact  to  be
         established. The rules of presumption are deduced from  enlightened
         human knowledge and experience and are drawn from  the  connection,
         relation and coincidence of facts, and circumstances."




39.    Mr.  Chandra,  however,  laid  considerable  emphasis  on  the  words
"tending to show that the real fact is not as presumed", to argue  that  the
test applied by this Court in rebuttable presumptions had been the  test  of
'preponderance of probability'.  We do not  think  so.  It  is  well-settled
that a decision is an authority for the point  it  decides.  It  is  equally
well-settled that the text of the decision cannot be read as if  it  were  a
statute. That apart the expression used by this Court  is  "evidence  fairly
and reasonably tending to show", which signifies that it  is  not  just  any
evidence, howsoever shaky and  nebulous  that  would  satisfy  the  test  of
preponderance  of  probability  to  rebut  the  statutory  presumption   but
evidence that can by proper and judicial application of mind be said  to  be
fairly and reasonably showing that the real fact is  not  as  presumed.   In
other words the evidence required to rebut a statutory presumption ought  to
be clear and convincing, no matter the degree of proof may not  be  as  high
as proving  the  fact  to  the  contrary  beyond  a  reasonable  doubt.  The
heightened standard of proof required to rebut a  presumption  raised  under
the statute at hand is in our view  applicable  for  two  distinct  reasons.
The first and foremost is that the presumption is raised in  relation  to  a
fiscal statute. While the amount payable is not a tax it is  nevertheless  a
statutory levy which is attracted the moment the transaction of  sale  takes
place within the market area. Goods, admittedly produced within  the  market
area and not consumed within such area are presumed to be  leaving  pursuant
to a transaction of sale unless the contrary is proved. That the  goods  are
produced within the market area is not in dispute in the instant case.  That
they left the  market  area  is  also  admitted.  In  the  ordinary  course,
therefore, the presumption would be that the goods left pursuant to  a  sale
unless the appellants are in a position to prove the contrary.

40.   The second reason for applying a higher standard of  proof  than  mere
preponderance of probability is that the nature of transaction  pursuant  to
which the goods are removed from the market area  is  within  the  exclusive
knowledge of the appellants or the persons to  whom  such  goods  are  being
dispatched. In other words, the circumstances  in  which  the  transactions,
which the statute presumes to be sales, but which the appellants  claim  are
simple transfer  of  stocks  are  within  the  exclusive  knowledge  of  the
appellants.  The  entire  evidence  relevant  to  the  transactions,   being
available only with the appellants and the true nature of  the  transactions
being within their special knowledge, there is no reason  why  the  rebuttal
evidence should not satisfy the higher standard of  proof  and  clearly  and
convincingly establish that the fact presumed is not the actual  fact.   Our
answer to Question No.2 accordingly is that the evidence intended  to  rebut
the statutory presumption under Section 17 of  the  Adhiniyam  ought  to  be
clear and convincing evidence  showing  that  what  is  presumed  under  the
provision is not the real fact.

Re: Question No.3

41.   The  Market  Committee  and  the  Director  have  recorded  concurrent
findings of fact to the effect that the petitioners had failed to  establish
that no sale of the stocks of Ghee had taken place within the  Mandi  limits
at Aligarh. The statutory presumption  that  any  transfer  of  stocks  from
within the Mandi area, was  pursuant  to  a  sale  was  thus  held  to  have
remained unrebutted.  A challenge to the  above  finding  would  necessarily
raise the question as to the scope of judicial review of such findings.   We
need to sail smooth over that aspect before examining the  validity  of  the
orders within the permissible parameters of judicial review.

42.   The power of judicial review is neither unqualified nor unlimited.  It
has its own limitations. The scope and extent of the power that is  so  very
often  invoked   has   been   the   subject-matter   of   several   judicial
pronouncements within and outside the country.  When one talks of  'judicial
review' one is instantly reminded of the  classic  and  oft  quoted  passage
from Council of Civil Service  Unions  (CCSU)  v.  Minister  for  the  Civil
Service [1984] 3 All ER 935, where Lord Diplock summed  up  the  permissible
grounds of judicial review thus:


         "Judicial Review has I think  developed  to  a  stage  today  when,
         without  reiterating  any  analysis  of  the  steps  by  which  the
         development has come about, one  can  conveniently  classify  under
         three heads the grounds on which administrative action  is  subject
         to control by judicial  review.  The  first  ground  I  would  call
         'illegality', the second 'irrationality' and the third  'procedural
         impropriety'.


         By 'illegality' as a ground for judicial review  I  mean  that  the
         decision-maker must understand correctly the law that regulates his
         decision-making power and must give effect to it. Whether he has or
         not is par excellence a justiciable question to be decided, in  the
         event of dispute,  by  those  persons,  the  judges,  by  whom  the
         judicial power of the State is exercisable.


         By 'irrationality' I mean what can by now be succinctly referred to
         as 'Wednesbury unreasonableness'. It applies to a decision which is
         so outrageous in  its  defiance  of  logic  or  of  accepted  moral
         standards that no sensible person who had applied his mind  to  the
         question to be decided could have arrived at it. Whether a decision
         falls within this category is  a  question  that  judges  by  their
         training and experience should be well equipped to answer  or  else
         there would be something badly wrong with  our  judicial  system...
         ...


         I have described the third head as 'procedural impropriety'  rather
         than failure to observe basic rules of natural justice  or  failure
         to act with procedural fairness towards  the  person  who  will  be
         affected  by  the  decision.  This  is  because  susceptibility  to
         judicial  review  under  this  head  covers  also  failure  by   an
         administrative  tribunal  to  observe  procedural  rules  that  are
         expressly laid down in the  legislative  instrument  by  which  its
         jurisdiction is conferred, even where such failure does not involve
         any denial of natural justice."





43.   The above principles have been accepted even by this Court in  a  long
line of decisions handed down from time to  time.  We  may,  however,  refer
only to some of those decisions where the development of law on the  subject
has  been  extensively  examined  and  the  principles  applicable   clearly
enunciated.  In Tata Cellular v. Union of  India  (1994)  6  SCC  651,  this
Court identified the grounds of judicial review of administrative action  in
the following words :

         "The duty of the court is to confine  itself  to  the  question  of
         legality. Its concern should be :
         1. Whether a decision-making authority exceeded its powers?
         2. Committed an error of law,
         3. committed a breach of the rules of natural justice,
         4. reached a decision  which  no  reasonable  tribunal  would  have
           reached or,
         5. abused its powers.


             Therefore, it is not for the  court  to  determine  whether  a
         particular policy or particular decision taken in the fulfilment of
         that policy is fair. It is only concerned with the manner in  which
         those decisions have been taken. The extent  of  the  duty  to  act
         fairly will vary from case to case. Shortly put, the  grounds  upon
         which an administrative action is subject to  control  by  judicial
         review can be classified as under :
              (i)      Illegality  :  This  means  the  decision-maker  must
                 understand correctly the law that regulates  his  decision-
                 making power and must give effect to it.
             (ii)      Irrationality, namely, Wednesbury unreasonableness.
             (iii)     Procedural impropriety."




44.   Reference may also be made to the decision of this Court in  State  of
Punjab v. Gurdial Singh (1980) 2 SCC 471 where Krishna Iyer, J. noticed  the
limitations of judicial review and declared that the  power  vested  in  the
Superior Courts ought to be exercised with  great  circumspection  and  that
interference may be permissible only where the exercise of the  power  seems
to have been vitiated or is otherwise  void  on  well  established  grounds.
The Court observed:


         "The court is handcuffed in this jurisdiction and cannot raise  its
         hand against  what  it  thinks  is  a  foolish  choice.  Wisdom  in
         administrative action is the property of the executive and judicial
         circumspection keeps the court lock-jawed save where the power  has
         been polluted by  oblique  ends  or  is  otherwise  void  on  well-
         established grounds. The constitutional balance cannot be upset."




45.   There is almost complete unanimity  on  the  principle  that  judicial
review is not so much concerned with the decision itself as  much  with  the
decision-making process. (See Chief  Constable  of  North  Wales  Police  v.
Evans [1982] 3 All ER 141). As a matter of  fact,  the  juristic  basis  for
such limitation on the exercise of the power  of  judicial  review  is  that
unless the restrictions on the power of the Court are observed,  the  Courts
may themselves under the guise of preventing abuse of power,  be  guilty  of
usurping that power. Justice  Frankfurter's  note  of  caution  in  Trop  v.
Dulles 356 U.S. 86 (1958) is in this regard apposite when he said:


         "All power is, in Madison's phrase,  'of  an  encroaching  nature'.
         Judicial power is not immune against this human weakness.  It  also
         must be on guard against encroaching beyond its proper bounds,  and
         not the  less  so  since  the  only  restraint  upon  it  is  self-
         restraint."


46.   That the Court dealing with the exercise of power of  judicial  review
does not substitute its judgment for that of the  legislature  or  executive
or their agents as to matters within the province of either,  and  that  the
Court does not supplant 'the feel of the expert' by its own review, is  also
fairly well-settled by the decisions of  this  Court.   In  all  such  cases
judicial examination is confined to finding  out  whether  the  findings  of
fact have a reasonable basis on  evidence  and  whether  such  findings  are
consistent with the  laws of the land.  [See Union of India v.  S.B.  Vohra,
(2004) 2 SCC 150, Shri Sitaram Sugar Co. Ltd. v. Union of  India,  (1990)  3
SCC 223, and Thansingh Nathmal  and  Ors.  v.  Supdt.  of  Taxes  and  Ors.,
Dhubri, AIR 1964 SC 1419].

47.   In Dharangadhra Chemical Works Ltd. v. State of Saurashtra  and  Ors.,
AIR 1957 SC 264,  this  Court  held  that  decision  of   a  Tribunal  on  a
question of fact which it has jurisdiction to determine is not liable to  be
questioned in proceedings under Article 226 of the  Constitution  unless  it
is shown to be totally unsupported by any evidence.


48.   To the same effect is the  view  taken  by  this  Court  in  Thansingh
Nathmal's case (supra) where this Court held that the High  Court  does  not
generally determine questions which  require  an  elaborate  examination  of
evidence to establish the right to enforce which the writ is claimed.

49.   We may while parting with the discussion on the  legal  dimensions  of
judicial review refer to the following passage from  Reid  v.  Secretary  of
State for Scotland [1999] 1 All ER 481, which succinctly sums up  the  legal
proposition that judicial review does not  allow  the  Court  of  review  to
examine the evidence with a view  to  forming  its  own  opinion  about  the
substantial merits of the case.


             "Judicial review involves a challenge to the legal validity of
         the decision. It does not allow the court of review to examine  the
         evidence with a view to forming its own view about the  substantial
         merits of the case. It may be that the tribunal whose  decision  is
         being  challenged  has  done  something  which  it  had  no  lawful
         authority to do. It may have abused or misused the authority  which
         it had. It may have departed from the procedures  which  either  by
         statute or at common law as a matter of fairness it ought  to  have
         observed. As regards the decisions itself it may  be  found  to  be
         perverse or irrational or  grossly  disproportionate  to  what  was
         required. Or the decision may be found to be erroneous  in  respect
         of a legal deficiency, as  for  example,  through  the  absence  of
         evidence, or of sufficient evidence,  to  support  it,  or  through
         account being taken of irrelevant matter, or through a failure  for
         any reason to take account of a relevant matter,  or  through  some
         misconstruction of the terms of the statutory provision  which  the
         decision maker is required to apply. But  while  the  evidence  may
         have to be explored in order to see if the decision is vitiated  by
         such legal deficiencies it is  perfectly  clear  that  in  case  of
         review, as distinct from an ordinary appeal, the court may not  set
         about forming its own preferred view of evidence."





50.   In its order dated 13th September, 1995  the  Mandi  Samiti,  Aligarh,
has upon examination of the evidence adduced before it  recorded  a  finding
that the same did not inspire confidence  for  a  variety  of  reasons.  The
Samiti has found that the appellants had failed to produce any  evidence  as
to when and where any  transaction  regarding  sale  and  purchase  of  ghee
manufactured within Mandi area was finalised. No  evidence  was  adduced  by
the appellants to show as to who had been instrumental  in  finalising  such
sale transactions out of its officers and  employees.  If  the  product  was
being sold under the directions of the officers of  the  Company  it  should
have been possible for the company to firmly establish the identity of  such
officers and furnish details as to when and where the  sale  transaction  of
different stocks of ghee sent out from the market area  was  finalised.  The
Samiti was of the view that although the appellant had  claimed  that  there
were separate C&F agreements with various agents appointed by it at  several
destinations outside the mandi area the appellant had produced only  two  of
such agreements in support of its case that such C&F agents existed  at  all
such destinations.  The Mandi Samiti noticed that 25  consignments  relevant
to the order passed by the Samiti on 13th September, 1995 were sent  out  of
the  Mandi  area  but  the  appellant-company  had  not   adduced   evidence
pertaining to all such consignments. Even in regard  to  consignments  where
such  evidence  had  been  adduced  the  Samiti  noticed  shortcomings  that
adversely affected the credibility of the  evidence.   For  instance,  there
were no Book Numbers on the sales invoice-cum-challans relied  upon  by  the
company. The evidence was in the form of loose papers, hence  not  reliable.
It was noticed that  although  payments  were  mentioned  on  the  documents
submitted, no particulars as to who made  the  payment  and  to  whom,  were
available. The Samiti also noticed that signatures  of  the  vendor  of  the
goods on the sale invoice-cum-challan were absent. It  was,  therefore,  not
clear whether the person making the sale was an individual from the  company
or one representing the C&F agent.  The Samiti found  information  furnished
by the appellant incomplete and discrepant in regard to the  sales  made  in
Jodhpur,  Jaipur  and  Indore.  The  Samiti  on  the  basis  of  the   above
observations took the view that the so called C&F  agents  were  the  actual
purchasers of the ghee from the company  and  the  C&F  agreements,  two  of
which were placed on record, were only meant  to  avoid  payment  of  market
fee.


51.   In its order dated 3rd July, 1997 the Mandi Parishad which  heard  the
revision against the above order of the Mandi Samiti did not find any  error
in the appreciation of the evidence per se to warrant a different view.   It
took the view that no evidence was produced to show as to why  a  particular
quantity of ghee was to be delivered to a particular place.   The  transport
biltis  did  not  mention  as  to  who  shall  pay  the  freight   for   the
transportation of the ghee.  This  is  because  if  the  transport  of  ghee
outside Aligarh, was a stock transfer  and  not  pursuant  to  a  sale  made
within the  market  area,  the  payment  of  freight  would  have  been  the
responsibility of the company for there is no transfer of the  ownership  in
that case to any third party. The company should have in  that  case  firmly
established that the transport charges payable in regard  to  the  transport
of the stocks of ghee out of the mandi area were paid by it and  by  no  one
else.  Keeping in view the fact that the company  is  doing  business  worth
crores of rupees and maintains regular accounts book, both in  the  ordinary
course of its business as also for tax purposes, there  was  no  reason  why
the company should have failed to establish that the transport charges  were
paid by it. The Director exercising powers of the Mandi Parishad  also  held
that there was a break in the chain of reasons in as much as the  appellants
did  not  bring  forth  the  link  evidence  giving  details  of  the   sale
transactions pursuant to which C&F agents  had  made  the  delivery  of  the
goods.


52.   The orders passed by the Mandi  Samiti  and  the  Director  exercising
powers of the Mandi Parishad thus clearly show that there was no  clear  and
convincing evidence to establish that the presumption arising under  Section
17(iii) of the Act stood rebutted and that the  actual  was  not,  what  was
presumed under the said provision.


53.   To the same effect are the findings recorded by the  Mandi  Samiti  in
its order dated 7th July, 1998 with minor variations  here  and  there.  The
Mandi  Samiti,  inter  alia,  noticed  that  while  some  of  the  transport
consignment note showed that the  same  would  be  billed  at  Bombay,  some
others showed that they would be billed at Aligarh. The  amount  of  freight
was  also  not  mentioned  nor  details  regarding  the  payment  of   these
consignments notes produced. It was not established whether the payment  was
to be made by the appellants or the recipients  of  the  goods.  Hence,  the
same were insufficient to prove that no sale  had  taken  place  inside  the
mandi area.


54.   There was also no evidence to prove that the rent of godown was  being
paid by the appellant-company  nor  was  there  any  evidence  to  show  the
procedure followed for the sale  of  the  products  at  Indore  and  Jaipur.
Twenty one of  the  invoices  made  for  Jaipur  had  no  signature  of  the
recipient of the goods nor it was clear as to who received the  payment  and
what was the mode of making of such payments. The Samiti  noted  that  these
invoices were not in book form but were in the form of loose papers and  did
not bear any book number. No evidence was, according to  the  Mandi  Samiti,
produced by the appellant regarding the decision of the company's  marketing
department in connection with the stock transfer and in connection with  the
directions given  to  the  Aligarh  office  for  transfer  of  a  particular
consignment sent to a particular destination and in a particular quantity.


55.   The Samiti also  noted  that  the  appellants  had  not  produced  any
evidence to show that the C&F agents  were  not  authorized  to  settle  the
bargain for sale of goods and were supposed to simply follow the  directions
of the company as regards the delivery of specified quantity to a  specified
party upon receipt of payment. No evidence  regarding  instructions  to  the
C&F agents was adduced before the Mandi Samiti to  prove  that  the  company
continued to exercise complete dominion over its stocks and also  the  power
to sell the goods and to receive payments kept in the  custody  of  the  C&F
agent.


56.   Suffice it to say that the Mandi  Samiti  appreciated  each  piece  of
evidence and found the same  to  be  insufficient  to  hold  that  the  sale
transactions had, in fact, taken place outside the mandi area  so  that  the
presumption arising under Section 17(iii) of the  Act  stood  rebutted.  The
Director exercising powers of the Mandi Parishad  has  in  its  order  dated
25th September, 2004 once again evaluated the evidence  and  concurred  with
the view taken by the Mandi Samiti.

57.   In the light of the legal position stated in the earlier part of  this
order, it is neither feasible for us to  embark  upon  an  exercise  of  re-
appreciating the entire material or  to  substitute  our  own  findings  for
those recorded by the Mandi Samiti  and  the  Director/Mandi  Parishad.   So
long as the finding recorded by the Mandi Samiti and the Mandi Parishad  are
not irrational or perverse, and so long as the  view  taken  by  them  is  a
reasonably possible view, this Court would not interfere.

58.   In course of arguments at the Bar, we repeatedly asked Mr. Chandra  as
to why the appellants had failed to adduce the material which would throw  a
flood of light as to the true nature of the transaction  within  or  outside
the mandi area.  Mr. Chandra's reply was that  the  material  was  available
and could be produced if so required. Some of this material which  was  with
the appellant but was not produced was sought to be introduced even  at  the
stage of hearing before us, while the rest  could,  argued  Mr.  Chandra  be
laid before the Samiti, if an opportunity to do so could be granted  to  the
appellant.

59.   We regret our inability to accede to  any  such  request.  We  do  not
think that a party who has had  ample  opportunity  before  the  authorities
below, to substantiate its claim can have the  luxury  of  either  producing
material for the first time in the Supreme Court or  ask  for  a  remand  to
enable it to do what it ought to have done at the appropriate stage. It  was
not the contention of the  appellants  that  they  were  not  given  a  fair
opportunity to prove their case before the authorities below.  As  a  matter
of fact, orders passed by the Mandi Samiti and the Mandi Parishad show  that
sufficient opportunity was indeed afforded to the appellants and the  matter
had remained pending for a number of years before those authorities.

60.   Mr. Chandra contended that the  appellants  had  been  requesting  the
authorities to indicate as to what kind of material would satisfy  them  but
since the authorities had failed to respond to that query the appellant  had
not produced the bulk of the material which was relevant and available  with
them. We do not think that such a procedure was legally permissible or  even
called for in the facts and circumstances of the case. As to  what  material
would be sufficient to prove the case of the party who  goes  to  the  Court
for relief is a matter for the  party  or  those  in  charge  of  its  legal
affairs to determine. No litigant can ask for guidelines from the  Court  or
statutory body  as  to  the  evidence  which  the  party  should  adduce  to
substantiate its claim.  The  query  made  by  the  appellants  as  to  what
material if adduced would satisfy the authorities was, therefore,  misplaced
and a red herring to say the  least.   This  is  particularly  so  when  the
appellants were in no way handicapped on account of  lack  of  resources  or
capacity to get the best of legal advice.  Companies  with  such  tremendous
resources as the  appellants  before  us  cannot  find  a  shortcut  to  the
discharge of their obligations under the law by  asking  the  Court  or  the
authority concerned to indicate  as  to  what  kind  of  evidence  would  be
sufficient in its opinion to entitle them to the refund of the  amount  paid
or payable towards market fee.

61.   So also, no remand ought to be made only to enable a party to  produce
additional material. A remand is neither mechanical nor  a  routine  affair.
If there is nothing wrong  in  the  orders  under  challenge,  there  is  no
question of interference with the same. There is no reason  for  this  Court
to set the clock back and start a  process  which  would  take  the  parties
another decade or so to come to terms with the problem.



62.   In the result these appeals as also W.P. (C) No.144/2005 fail and  are
hereby dismissed with cost assessed at Rs.15,000/- in each case.





                                ..........................................J.
                                         (T.S. THAKUR)







                                ..........................................J.
                                        (DIPAK MISRA)
New Delhi
March 23, 2012