Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF ASSAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
REMESH CHANDRA DEY AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/04/1961
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 107 1962 SCR (1) 986
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1979 SC1475 (30)
ACT:
Sales Tax-Law Providing for exclusion of sales of goods pur-
chased for resale-Amendment confining such sales to those in
the State-Whether amendment offends law prohibiting levy of
tax on inter-State sales-Assam Sales Tax Act, 1947 (Assam 17
of 1947), as amended by Assam Act 4 of 1951, ss. 3(1)A(iii),
15-Assam Sales Tax Rules, r. 80-Constitution of India, Art.
286(2).
HEADNOTE:
Section 15 of the Assam Sales Tax Act, 1947, as originally
enacted, provided that in calculating the net turnover of a
registered dealer for tax purposes, all sales made to
another registered dealer of goods specified in the latter’s
certificate of registration were to be excluded from the
gross turnover, if the goods were brought for resale. In
1951, the section was amended by the addition of the words
"in the State" after the word " resale", as a result of
which the exclusion was confined only to sales of goods for
resale in the State. Rule 80 was framed to give effect to
the amendment. The petitioner, a registered dealer in
Assam, and whose business consisted mainly of buying tea in
Assam and selling it either in Assam or in Calcutta, chal-
lenged the legality of the amendment on the ground that the
result of the amendment was that tax could be levied on
interState sales and that, therefore, it contravened Art.
286(2) of the Constitution of India.
Held: (1) that a sale of goods to a dealer within the State
who purchased them for the purpose of selling them to
dealers outside the State, and who, in fact, so sold them,
would not make it a sale in the course of inter-State trade
as the two sales were distinct and separate. The first sale
was an intra-State sale and a tax imposed thereon did not
offend Art. 286(2) of the Constitution.
Endupuri Narasimham v. State of Orissa, [1962] 1 S.C.R. 314,
followed.
(2) that s. 15 of the Assam Sales Tax Act, 1947, and Rule 80
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framed under that Act were not ultra vires Art. 286(2) of
the Constitution. The object of s. 15 of the Act was to
avoid taxation at multiple points and the amendment to that
section in 1951 or Rule 80 did not enable the levy of tax on
sales in the course of inter-State trade twice. Such sales
were expressly saved from tax by the operation of Art.
286(2) and S. 3(1)(A)(iii) of the Act. Once those sales
were outside the charging section there was no need to re-
enact that prohibition in s. 15 which was a machinery
section and would stand cut down by the limitation placed by
the charging section and the Constitution.
987
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 167 of 1960.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated July 16, 1956 of
the Assam High Court at Gauhati in Civil Rule No. 128 of
1954.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and Naunit Lal, for the appellant.
The Respondents did not appear.
1961. April 14. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-This appeal has been filed by the State of
Assam against a judgment of the High Court of Assam dated
July 16, 1956. By the judgment under appeal, the High Court
held that s. 15 of the Assam Sales Tax Act, 1947, and Rule
80 framed under the Act were ultra vires, being a breach of
Art. 286(2) of the Constitution. The High Court granted a
certificate under Art. 132(1) of the Constitution.
R. C. Dey, the answering respondent, is a wholesale dealer
in tea, and has been in business since 1949. He registered
himself as a dealer under the Assam Sales Tax Act on January
14, 1950. His business consists mainly of buying tea in
Assam and selling it either in Assam or in Calcutta. In
respect of tea sold in Calcutta, R. C. Dey consigns the tea
to himself after purchasing it in Assam. This tea is then
approved by prospective purchasers, to whom the documents of
title are endorsed on receipt of the price.
In 1951, the Assam Sales Tax Act was amended by the Assam
Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1951 (4 of 1951). Section 15 of
the Act before the amendment provided that in calculating
the net turnover of a registered dealer for tax purposes all
sales made to another registered dealer of goods specified
in the latter’s certificate of registration were to be
excluded from the gross turnover, if the goods were bought
for resale. By the amendment in 1951, the section was
amended by the addition of the words "in the State" after
the word "resale". Thus, in calculating the net turnover of
a registered dealer, the goods intended
988
for resale in the State could alone be excluded from the
gross turnover. This amendment was followed by amendment of
the Rules. Rule 80 was enacted to provide as follows:
"80. (1) A dealer who wishes to deduct from
his gross turnover the amount of sales on the
ground that he is entitled to make such
deductions under clause (b) of sub-section (1)
of section 15 shall, on demand produce in
respect of such sales the copy of the relevant
cash memo or bill according as the sale is a
cash sale or a sale on credit, and a true
declaration in writing by the purchasing
dealer or by such responsible person duly
authorised by the purchasing dealer in this
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behalf that the goods in question are
specified in the certificate of registration
of such dealer.
(2) For purposes of this rule, the declaration
shall be in the following form:-
I/We hereby declare that I/We have purchased
the goods herein mentioned for the purposes
for use in the manufacture of goods for sale
in the State, or for use in the execution of a
contract in the State or for resale in the
State, and further declare that these goods
have been specified in/our certificate of
registration bearing No in the District of
R. C. Dey filed a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution, challenging the amendment and the Rule, and
contended that they offended against Art. 286(2) and Part
XIII of the Constitution, and were thus ultra vires. He
also submitted that the amendment and the Rules were void as
offending Art. 19 (1)(g). The last submission was given up
in the High Court, and the objection about Part XIII of the
Constitution, which was decided against him, must be taken
to have been abandoned, because none appeared on his behalf
to urge this point. We need not refer to Art. 19 or Part
XIII of the Constitution. The High Court upheld his
contention about Art. 286(2). In the High Court, separate
judgments were delivered by the learned Chief Justice and
Ram Labhaya, J. They both agreed that s. 15, as amended, and
the Rule were ultra vires Art. 286(2). The reasons given
989
by the learned Judges were different. According to the
Chief Justice, the amendment and the Rule had the effect of
taxing sales in the course of inter-State trade or commerce
and were, therefore, illegal. Ram Labhaya, J., held that
the sale to R. C. Dey and the sale by him in Calcutta were
separate sales, and that the first sale was not in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce, and was taxable.
He, however, held that though by s. 3, which is the charging
section, sales in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce were excluded from the ambit of the Act, this
section remained only "a pious declaration", because its
effect was not incorporated in the machinery section,
namely, s. 15. According to the learned Judge, what was
taxable under the Act was the net turnover of a registered
dealer. The machinery section showed how the net turnover
was to be ascertained, and it provided that to arrive at the
net turnover, certain deductions could be made from the
gross turnover. In the original section, anything which was
sold for resale was so excluded; but by the amendment, the
exclusion was only in respect of the sale of goods for
resale in the State. According to the learned Judge, if
sales which did not lead to resale in the State were not
excluded from the gross turnover, then the not turnover
would comprehend such sales and, therefore, there was a
taxation of sale of goods in the course of inter-State trade
or commerce. Putting it briefly, while the learned Chief
Justice felt that the, amendment and the Rule directly
affected inter-State trade or commerce, Ram Labhaya, J.,
held that they affected inter-State trade or commerce
indirectly, inasmuch as sales outside the State were not
excluded from the gross turnover.
We shall take up these two points separately. III so far as
the decision of the Chief Justice is concerned, the point
has been before this Court in another case. In Endupuri
Narasimham & Son v. State of Orissa and others (1), a
similar question had arisen in connection with the Orissa
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Sales Tax Act, 1947. In dealing with transactions such as
these, this Court pointed out that only sales which affected
inter-
(1) [1962] 1 S.C.R. 314.
990
State trade or commerce directly and were an integral part
thereof, were saved under Art. 286(2). On that Occasion,
reference was made to all the authorities of this Court
which had discussed the question from the angle of Art.
286(1) of the Constitution, and it was pointed out that the
same reasoning applied also to Art. 286(2). It was observed
in the case as follows:
"The argument on behalf of the petitioner is
that, as the goods were purchased for the
purpose of being sold to dealers outside the
State, and they were, in fact, so sold, the
purchases were in the course of inter-State
trade, and the levy of tax thereon was within
the prohibition enacted by Art. 286(2). We do
not agree with this contention. The
transactions of sales which have been taxed
were wholly inside the State of Orissa. They
were sales by persons in the State of Orissa
to persons within the State of Orissa of goods
which were in Orissa. The fact that the
purchaser sold those very goods to dealers
outside the State is not relevant, as those
sales are distinct and separate from the sales
on which the taxes in question have been im.
posed. The present levy is not on the sales
by the petitioner to persons outside the
State, but on the purchases by him inside the
State. The former sales are in the course of
inter-State trade, and are not taxable under
Art. 286(2), but the latter are purely
intrastate sales, and tax imposed thereon does
not offend Art. 286(2)."
These observations are entirely applicable in the context of
the facts, as are to be found in this appeal. Indeed, all
that is necessary to apply the above passage to the facts of
this case is to substitute "Assam" in the place of "Orissa".
In our opinion, this point must be held to be concluded
against the respondent.
That leaves over for consideration the reasons given by Ram
Labhaya, J., in his concurring judgment. Section 3 of the
Act which created a liability to tax, was amended by Act 4
of 1951 by the introduction of sub-
s. (1)A in that section. That sub-section reads as follows:
"(1)A. Nothing in sub-section (1) shall,
except in cases covered by the first proviso
to sub-section (12) of section 2 of this Act,
be deemed to
991
render any dealer liable to tax on the sale of
goods where such sale takes place:-
(i) outside the State of Assam;
(ii) in the course of the import of the goods
into, or export of the goods out of, the
territory of India;
or
(iii) in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce except in so far as Parliament may by
law otherwise provide."
The introduction of sub-s. (1)A did no more than repeat in
the Act the prohibition contained in Art. 286. The first
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two clauses of this sub-section reiterate the prohibition
contained in Art. 286(1), and the third clause reiterates
the prohibition contained in Art. 286(2) of the
Constitution. The first proviso to s. 2(12), which is
referred to in sub-s. (1)A, enacts the Explanation to cl.
(1) of Art. 286.
Now, it is quite clear that from the operation of the
charging section sales of a particular character are kept
out. This provision saves from taxation all those
transactions which, if they were taxed, would have fallen
within the ban of Art. 286. The effect of this saving is to
make such transactions immune from taxation, and no further
amendment of the law in the machinery section was necessary.
What s. 15 does, is to grant an additional exemption in
respect of sales in which the goods, though sold to a
registered dealer, are meant for resale in the State,
itself. It is quite easy to see that unless this exemption
was granted, it was possible that there would have been
sales-tax at more than one point, namely, at the point at
which the first registered dealer sold to the second regis-
tered dealer and again, when the second registered dealer
sold in his turn. To avoid taxation at multiple points on
transactions of sale of the same goods within the State, it
was provided that the tax shall be paid only on the last
sale and not on the previous sales, so long as the previous
sales were from registered dealers to registered dealers in
respect of goods mentioned in the registration certificate
of the latter and provided the goods were for resale in the
State. When the charging section itself excluded taxation
of sales in the course of inter-State trade
992
or commerce, it was hardly necessary to look for a
repetition of the same exemption in the machinery section.
It is an error to think that because the machinery section,
namely, s. 15, does not repeat the exemption given by the
charging section, the turnover of a dealer would necessarily
include the sales in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce. Even if the net turnover did, so include such
sales, the dealer would, under sub-s. (1)A of s. 3, be able
to claim that those transactions were not taxable, because
they fell within the ban of Art. 286(2) as well as s. 3(1)A
(iii) of the Act. What has already been excluded by the
operation of the Constitution and the Act cannot become
taxable, because the net turnover has to be calculated in a
particular manner. From that net turnover, such sales must
be excluded by the operation of Art. 286(2) and s. 3(1)A of
the Act. In our opinion, the ban of Art. 286(2), which is
again reenacted by s. 3(1)A, makes it incumbent that the
sales falling within those previsions should be excluded
from the net turnover.
Reference was made to sub-s. (2) of s. 3, and it was said
that sub-s. (2) stated that every dealer to whom sub-s. (1)
did not apply, shall be liable to be taxed under this Act,
and that there was no mention of subs. (1)A there. No
doubt, sub-s. (2) does not mention sub-s. (1)A; but sub-s.
(1)A is not rendered ineffective by the omission. Sub-
section (1)A speaks of its own force, and has to be given
effect to, along with the remaining sub-sections of s. 3.
Sub-section (1)A has the added support of Art. 286, and the
Constitution must prevail. Thus, both Art. 286 and sub-s.
(1)A of s. 3 are there to save from taxation all sales in
the course of inter-State trade or commerce, and there is no
need to look further into the Act to see whether they are
exempted once again or not.
In our opinion, the appeal must succeed. The decision of
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the High Court under appeal is set aside, and the petition
is ordered to be dismissed with costs here and in the High
Court.
Appeal allowed.
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