Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
P. C. CHERIYAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BARFI DEVI
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/10/1979
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1980 AIR 86 1980 SCR (1) 961
1980 SCC (2) 461
ACT:
Transfer of Property Act 1882 (4 of 1882) S. 106-Lease
of Premises for carrying on business of retreading of tyres-
Whether lease for ’manufacturing purposes’ within S. 106.
Words and Phrases-’Manufacturing purposes’-Meaning of-
Transfer of Property Act 1882, S. 106.
HEADNOTE:
The plaintiff (respondent) let out the accommodation in
dispute at a rent of Rs. 850/- per annum to the defendant
(appellant) who was doing the business of retreading of
tyres in the said premises. The defendant defaulted in
payment of rent, and the plaintiff sent one month’s notice
terminating the tenancy. Thereafter, the plaintiff
instituted a suit for recovery of arrears of rent and
ejectment against the defendant.
The suit was contested, on the ground that the premises
in dispute had been let out for manufacturing purposes and
in view of s. 106, Transfer of Property Act, the lease could
be terminated by the landlady only by six months notice
expiring with the end of the year of tenancy and since the
plaintiff had served only 30 days’ notice, the same was
invalid and ineffective to terminate the tenancy.
The Trial Court and the First Appellate Court
concurrently decreed the suit for arrears of rent as well as
for ejectment which was confirmed by the High Court. All the
Courts below held that the retreading of tyres, is not a
’manufacturing purpose’ and, therefore, 30 days’ notice
given by the plaintiff to the defendant for terminating his
tenancy was valid.
In the defendant’s appeal to this Court on the question
whether a lease of a premises for carrying on the business
of retreading of tyres is a lease for ’manufacturing
purposes’ within the contemplation of s. 186 Transfer of
Property Act.
^
HELD : 1. The Courts below were right in holding that
the lease in the present case was not for ’manufacturing
purposes,’ and the tenancy had been rightly terminated by
thirty days’ notice. [966 H]
2. The expression manufacturing purposes’ has not been
defined in the Transfer of Property Act. It has therefore,
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to be construed in its popular sense. ’Manufacture’ implies
a change but every change is not manufacture. Something more
is necessary. There must be transformation. a new and
different article must emerge having a distinctive name,
character or use. [964 A-B]
3. The broad test for determining whether a process is
a manufacturing process, is whether it brings out a complete
transformation for the old components,
962
so as to produce a commercially different article or
commodity. This question is largely one of fact. [966 F]
As a result of retreading, an old tyre does not become
a different entity, nor acquires a new identity. The
retreading process does not cause the old tyre to lose its
original character, nor brings into being a commercially
distinct or different entity. The old tyre retains its basic
structure, original character and identity, as a tyre,
although retreading improves its performance and
serviceability. Retreading of old tyres is just like
resoling of old shoes. Just as resoling of old shoes does
not produce a commercially different entity, so from
retreading no new or distinct article emerges. [966 E-G]
4. Definitions of ’manufacture’ given in other
enactments, such as, in the Factories Act or the Excise Act
should not be blindly applied while interpreting the
expression ’manufacturing purposes’ in s. 106 of the
Transfer of Property Act, because in some other enactments
such as the Excise Act, the term ’manufacture’ has been
given an extended meaning by including in it repairs, also.
[967 A-B]
South Bihar Sugar Mills v. Union of India, [1968] 3 SCR
21. referred to.
Federal Commissioner of Taxation v. Jack Zinader
Proprietary Ltd., (1948- 49) 78 C.L.R. 336; distinguished.
Allenbury Engineers Ltd. v. Ramakrishna Dalmia and
Ors., [1973] 2 S.C.R. 257; applied.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1722 of
1969.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 11-12-1968 of the Allahabad High Court in Second
Appeal No. 969/67.
M. M. Abdul Khader, R. Satis, Vijay K. Pandita and E.
C. Agarwala for the Appellant.
Jitendra Sharma and V. P. Chaudhary for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKARIA, J.-Whether a lease of a premises for carrying
on the business of retreading of tyres is a lease for
"manufacturing purposes" within the contemplation of Section
106, Transfer of Property Act, is the only question that
falls for consideration in this appeal by special leave
directed against a judgment, dated December 11, 1968, of the
High Court of Allahabad. The question arises in these
circumstances:.
The plaintiff-respondent let out the accommodation in
dispute at a rent of Rs. 850/- per annum to the defendant
who was doing the business of retreading of tyres in the
said premises. The defendant defaulted in payment of rent.
The plaintiff, therefore, sent one
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month’s notice to the defendant terminating his tenancy.
Thereafter, the plaintiff instituted a suit for recovery of
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arrears of rent and ejectment against the defendant.
The suit was resisted, inter alia, on the ground that
the premises in dispute had been let out to him for
manufacturing purposes and in view of Section 106, Transfer
of Property Act, therefore, the lease cold be terminated by
the landlady only by six months’ notice expiring with the
end of the year of tenancy, and since the plaintiff had
served only 30 days’ notice, the same was invalid and
ineffective to terminate the tenancy.
The trial Court and the First Appellate Court
concurrently decreed the suit for arrears of rent as well
as for ejectment.
The only ground urged before the First Appellate Court
and the High Court was that the tenancy being for
manufacturing purpose, could not be terminated by one
month’s notice. All the courts below negatived this
contention and have concurrently held that the retreading of
tyres, is not a manufacturing purpose and, therefore, 30
days’ notice given by the plaintiff to the defendant for
terminating his tenancy, was valid.
Mr. Khader, learned counsel for the defendant-
appellant, contends that the process of retreading old
tyres, involves the use of sophisticated machinery and
results in bringing into being a distinct commercial
commodity. It is argued that the essential test of a
manufacturing process is that it must bring about a change
in the character, quality or user of the old material
processed so as to produce a distinct marketable article,
but it is not necessary that the old material should
completely lose its identity. It is urged that the High
Court was in error in taking the view that from the process
of retreading old tyres a commercially different article
does not emerge. In support of the proposition that a
process by which a useless article becomes useful and its
character or use is changed is a manufacturing process,
counsel has cited Commissioner of Sales Tax, U.P. v. Dr.
Sukh Deo; Allenburry Engineers Pvt. Ltd. v. Ramakrishna
Dalamia & Ors.; State of Maharashtra v. The Central
Provinces Manganese Ore Co. Ltd.; North Bengal Stores Ltd.
v. Member, Board of Revenue, Bengal; and an Australian case;
Federal Commissioner of Taxation v. Jack Zinader Proprietary
Ltd.
964
The expression "manufacturing purposes" has not been
defined in the Transfer of Property Act. It has therefore,
to be construed in its popular sense. According to the
Permanent Edition of Words and Phrases, Vol. 26,
’manufacture’ implies a change but every change is not
manufacture and yet every change in an article is the result
of treatment, labour and manipulation. But something more is
necessary and there must be transformation; a new and
different article must emerge having a distinctive name,
character or use. This construction of the expression
"manufacture" received the imprimatur of this Court in South
Bihar Sugar Mills v. Union of India. But the case directly
in point is Allenburry Engineers Ltd. v. Ramakrishna
Dalamia, ibid; wherein the question for consideration before
this Court was whether the lease in favour of Allenbury
Engineers was for "manufacturing purposes" within the
meaning of Section 106, Transfer of Property Act. On the
facts of that case, answering the question in the negative,
this Court held that even though the lessees were
manufacturing some spare, parts for repairing or
reconditioning vehicles, yet the dominant purpose of the
lease was one of the storage and resale of the vehicles
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after repairing and reconditioning them; and that
manufacturing of spare parts was merely incidental to the
main purpose of repairing or reconditioning the vehicles for
disposal.
Since the instant case is covered by the ratio of
Allenbury Engineers, it is not necessary to discuss all the
cases cited by Mr. Khader. Nevertheless, it will be proper
to notice briefly one case, namely, Federal Commissioner of
Taxation v. Jack Zinader Proprietary Ltd, ibid; on which the
counsel has staked a good deal in his argument.
In Jack Zinader (ibid), a furrier company received from
customers fur garments which had become too badly worn and
damaged to be repaired, and, after removing the defective
parts, remodelled, for those customers respectively by
various processes, what was left into modern styles of
coats, fur capes, fur collars, fur coats and stoles having
regard to the extent, shape and nature of the available
materials. The materials used by the company in remodelling
were, except about five per cent of the linings, confined to
those available from the customer’s garment. If new linings
were required the customer supplied them. The question for
decision before the High Court of Australia was whether fur
coats, stoles, capes and collars formed by remodelling fur
garments are for the purposes of the Sales Tax Assessment
Act (No. 1), 1930-1942, goods "manufactured sold". The Court
by a majority consisting of Dixon and Williams JJ. (Web J.
dissenting) answered
965
this question in the affirmative. Dixon J. in his leading
judgment (at p. 343), after quoting with approval the dictum
of Darling J. in McNicol v. Pinch, that "the essence of
making or of manufacturing is that what is made shall be a
different thing from that out of which it is made",
observed:
"The first and, it may be thought, the decisive
question in the case, is therefore whether the garments
which result from the process of remodelling are
different things, that is are different goods, from the
garments that the customer hands over. This perhaps is
rather a question of fact than of law........... The
Commissioner distinguishes between repair and
remodelling and does not claim sales tax in respect of
repair even although it may mean some change in, for
example, the length of the garment. We are told that an
old or worn fur coat is remodelled into a modern style
of coat, that a fur necklet is remodelled into a stole
and a fur necklet or fur stole is remodelled into a
cape. A full length fur coat may be converted into a
saunter’ or the somewhat similar ’swagger’ coats which
are considerably shorter but full and often flared at
the bottom. But the conversion may be to a jacket,
which is coatee, which is less than waist length and
fits more closely and usually is not fastened in
front............."
"On the side of the taxpayer it is contended that
these procedures do not change the identity of the
garment but only some of its characteristics. The
customer hands in a fur garment and takes away a fur
garment. It is altered and renovated but it is still a
fur garment; it is her fur garment; it is the fur
garment she brought to the furriers. On the side of the
Commissioner it is said that a different fur garment
has been brought into existence. The old fur garment
has been used only to provide the materials or some of
them from which the new fur garment has been made. It
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is a thing of a different description both commercially
and from the point of view of the wearer. It is a
different entity and has a new identity. Goods have
therefore been produced.
"On the whole, the Commissioner’s view appears to
be the more correct. The work of the furrier is to use
skins to form garments. Fashion, commercial usage and
his cus-
966
tomer’s tastes combine to distinguish the various
descriptions of garment he makes and to compel the
recognization of them as separate categories of goods.
When he takes skins made up into the description of fur
garment and produces another, he cannot be treated as
having altered an existing thing without producing a
new one. He has made a different article."
Williams J., agreed with Dixon J., that the question at
issue was one of fact and degree and that the process
concerned involved manufacture of goods into different goods
from their second-hand components. The learned Judge
rejected the argument on behalf of the taxpayers that the
work could be described as a mere repair or modification of
the goods which did not affect their original character,
with the observation that "once the work done causes the
goods to lose this character they become ’goods’ within the
meaning of the Act."
It will be seen that Jack Zinader’s case bears no
analogy with the present case. The facts of that case were
materially different. There, from the serviceable components
taken out from old garments the furrier by his skill and
labour made garments of different design and description
both commercially and from the point of view of the wearer.
But in the instant case, by retreading an old tyre does not
become a different entity, nor acquires a new identity. The
retreading process does not cause the old tyre to lose its
original character. The broad test for determining whether a
process is a manufacturing process, is whether it brings out
a complete transformation for the old components so as to
produce a commercially different article or commodity. This
question as rightly emphasised by the learned Judge in Jack
Zinader, is largely one of fact. In the case before us, all
the courts below have concurrently answered this question in
the negative. In our opinion, this finding of the courts
below is unassailable. The retreading of old tyres does not
bring into being a commercially distinct or different
entity. The old tyre retains its original character, or
identity as a tyre. Retreading does not completely transform
it into another commercial article, although it improve its
performance and serviceability as a tyre. Retreading of old
tyres is just like resoling of old shoes. Just as resoling
of old shoes, does not produce a commercially different
entity having a different identity, so from retreading no
new or distinct article emerges. The old tyre retains its
basic structure and identity. The courts below were
therefore, right in holding that the lease in the present
case was not for manufacturing purposes, and the tenancy had
been rightly terminated by thirty days notice.
967
Before parting with this judgment, we may sound a note
of caution, that definitions of "manufacture" given in other
enactments, such as, in the Factories Act or the Excise Act
should not be blindly applied while interpreting the
expression "manufacturing purposes" in Section 106, of the
Transfer of Property Act. In some enactments, for instance
in the Excise Act, the term "manufacture" has been given an
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extended meaning by including in it "repairs", also.
For the foregoing reasons, the appeal fails and is
dismissed with costs.
N.V.K. Appeal dismissed.
968