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AI Drafter

Generate professional replies to Show Cause Notices, assessment orders, audit objections, and other legal communications using TaxTMI's AI Drafter.

Step 1 – Issue Identification & Review

The AI analyses your query, notice, order, or uploaded documents and identifies the key issues involved.

• Review the issues identified by the AI
• Add, edit, remove, or refine issues as required


Step 2 – Draft Generation

Once you approve the issues, the AI performs issue-wise legal research and prepares a structured draft response.

• Relevant statutory provisions
• Judicial precedents and Supreme Court, High Court and other citations
• Issue-wise legal analysis
• Practical arguments and supporting content
• Professionally structured draft ready for further review.

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1985 (3) TMI 301

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....g such video shows either essentially at video centres or at some hotels. In the second of the three petitions, the proprietors of various hotels, three in number, have come forth with similar grievance. In the third petition, one solitary proprietor individually has come forth with the similar complaints. That is why we have stated that common questions of law arose in these three petitions and they can be conveniently dealt with and disposed of by a joint treatment. 3. The vires of Section 6A is challenged in these petitions. Section 6A is reproduced below: 6A.(1) There shall be levied and paid to the State Government, a tax on an entertainment by video cassette recorder or video cassette player on television or videoscope calculated at the following rates, namely:  (a) in any place of entertainment other than that mentioned in Clause (b) (I) within the limits of a local area, the population of which as ascertained at the last preceding census and notified by the State Government in the official gazette after such census is more than 1,00,000, two rupees per seat in such place of entertainment;  (II) within the limits of a local area, the population of which....

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.... Clause (a) of Sub-section (1):  (i) five rupees per seat per day where the proprietor has declared that he holds not more than three entertainments per day; and  (ii) six rupees per seat per day where the proprietor has declared that he holds more than three entertainments per day.  (2) in Sub-clause (II) of Clause (a) of Sub-section (1)  (i) three rupees per seat per day where the proprietor has declared that he holds not more than three entertainments per day; and  (ii) four rupees per seat per day where the proprietor has declared that he holds more than three entertainments per day.  (e) A proprietor who has opted for payment of tax under Clause (a), may at any time but not before the expiry of a, period of twelve months, by a notice in such form as may be prescribed, addressed to the prescribed officer, revoke his option from the commencement of any month following that in which the notice is given.  (4) For the purpose of levy of tax under Sub-section (1) every proprietor shall furnish such returns to the prescribed officer in such manner or such period and before such date as may be prescribed.  (5) Save as oth....

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....ment are the common feature at any rate. The Supreme Court stated that the fact that tax was levied on the giver of the entertainment would not take it out of the ambit of entry 50 (For us, entry 62). Another argument of Mr. Vakharia that it is a tax imposed for the privilege of carrying on any trade or calling also was raised before the Supreme Court in that case and that too was negatived. We, therefore, do not elaborate this point any further, it being covered by the judgment of the Supreme Court on an almost identical matter. 5. The further challenge to Section 6A was based on the presumption that there will be three shows every day, but we find that Section 6A(2) makes it clear that the presumption that has been referred to above is subject to the proprietor informing the prescribed officer at such time and in such manner as may be prescribed that the particular number of shows are to be held. Even the words of taxation referred to in Section 6A(1) also speak of a presumption, but presumptions are always rebuttable unless they are stated to be conclusively proved or conclusively presumed. We, however, hold, though upholding the right of the State Legislature to provide for ....

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....ity is calculated on notional basis of all the seats and accommodation available in every show of every day of the month being occupied. The aggregate of all payments that has to be hypothetically made by persons seeking admission is the gross collection capacity. 16. Similar is the position in the case of video exhibition where lump sum duty is to be paid on the basis that the owner of a video exhibition conducts all the shows which he is permitted to conduct and that for those shows all the seats in the place of entertainment are occupied. In our opinion, this is not a tax on entertainment at all which the State Legislature is entitled to levy under item 62 of the State List. In order that the entertainment duty should amount to a tax on entertainment it should be levied on entertainment which is actually held and not on entertainment, which is theoretically capable of being held. Looking to the provisions which have been examined in details, it is clear to us that the said provisions do not take into account entertainment that is actually held by the owner of the touring cinema or the owner of the video exhibition. The basis on which tax can be validly levied is the fact of e....

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....cause the Supreme Court has made position clear. 8. Rule 19(ii), however, was assailed on the ground that any Police Officer who was required by a general or special order of the licensing authority would have free-access to the video cinema at odd hours. Though Clause (ii) of Rule 19 does not specifically state the purpose for which a Police Officer can be required to have free access to the video-cinema, from the very nature of things, it can be spelt out that a Police Officer could be authorised to enter the precincts of the video cinema only for the purpose of maintaining law and order. As far as Rule 13(1) is concerned, we interpret the words "in the vicinity of the cinema" to mean "in the vicinity of the video-cinema." and not any other cinema. The word "the" is a definite article and when the same cinema is referred to earlier, the subsequent reference to the cinema is the video cinema. Even Mr. Vin, the learned Govt. Pleader, fairly conceded before us that with respect to Rule 13(1), the phrase "in the vicinity of cinema" would and should mean in the vicinity of cinema and with respect to Rule 19(ii) also, he conceded that a Police Officer could be required to have acces....