Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ANDHRA SUGARS LTD. & ANR. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/09/1967
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
WANCHOO, K.N. (CJ)
RAMASWAMI, V.
MITTER, G.K.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 599 1968 SCR (1) 705
CITATOR INFO :
F 1969 SC 147 (9,26)
R 1969 SC 343 (9)
RF 1970 SC1912 (7)
RF 1970 SC2000 (11)
RF 1972 SC 87 (27,28,29)
RF 1974 SC1745 (4)
APR 1978 SC 449 (36,37,39,43,52)
R 1980 SC 286 (48)
MV 1985 SC 679 (27)
R 1988 SC1487 (26)
R 1989 SC2015 (8)
D 1990 SC 781 (28,74,81)
R 1990 SC 820 (15,21)
ACT:
Andhra Pradesh Sugar-cane (Regulation of Supply and Pur-
chase) Act 1961 (45 of 1961), s. 21-Validity of section-
Purchases of sugar by factories under compulsion of law-Such
transactions whether taxable under Entry 54, List II,
Seventh Schedule, Constitution of India, 1950-Section 21 of
Act 45 of 1961 whether violates Art. 14 of Constitution of
India-Whether impedes free trade, commerce and intercourse
within the meaning of Art. 301 Constitution of India.
HEADNOTE:
Under the Andhra Pradesh (Regulation of Supply and Purchase)
Act 1961 the occupier of a sugar factory had to buy
sugarcane from canegrowers in conformity with the directions
of the Cane Commissioner. Under s. 21 of the Act the State
Government had power by notification to tax purchases of
sugarcane for use, consumption or sale in a sugar factory.
The tax was leviable subject to a maximum rate per metric
tonne. The maximum rate for khandsari units was less than
that for factories; sugarcane purchased for production of
jaggery was not taxed at all. The petitioners were sugar
factories in Andhra Pradesh. They filed writ petitions
under Art. 32 of the Constitution challenging the validity
of s. 21 mainly on the ground that as the petitioners or
their agents were compelled by law to buy cane from the
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canegrowers, their purchases were not made under agreements
and were not taxable under Entry 54 List II having regard to
Gannon Dunkerley’s case. It was further urged that the tax
leviable under s. 21 was not truly a purchase tax as it was
levied with reference to weight of the goods, that it was
levied with reference to use and was therefore a use tax,
and that it was the entry of the goods into the factory that
was sought to be taxed Articles 14 and 301 of the
Constitution were also said to be contravened.
Held: (1) There has been a gradual erosion of the
laissez faire concept which prevailed in the nineteenth
century. It is now realised that in the public interest
persons exercising certain callings or having monopoly or
near monopoly Powers should sometimes be charged with the
duty to serve the public, and if necessary, to enter into
contract& The canegrowers scattered in the villages- had no
real bargaining power. In the unequal contest between the
canegrowers and the factory-owners, the law stepped in and
compelled the factory to enter into contracts of purchase of
cane offered by the canegrowers on prescribed terms and
conditions. [713 C.F.].
Under Act 45 of 1961 and the Rules framed under it, the
canegrower in the factory zone is free to make or not to
make an offer of sale of cane to the occupier of the
factory. But if he makes an offer, the occupier of the
factory is bound to accept it. The resulting agreement is
recorded in writing and is signed by the parties. The
consent of the occupier of the factory is free as defined in
s. 14 of the Indian Contract Act. The compulsion of law is
not coercion as
706
defined in s. 15 of the Act. The, agreements are
enforceable by law and are contracts of sale as defined in
s. 4 of the Indian Sale of Goods Act. The purchases of
sugarcane under the agreement can be therefore taxed by the
State Legislature under Entry 54 List II. Section 21 of the
Andhra Pradesh Sugarcane (Regulation of Supply and Purchase)
Act, 1961 is accordingly not ultra vires. [712 F-H].
State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley & Co. [1959] S.C.R. 379
and New India Sugar Mills Ltd., v. Commissioner of Sales
Tax, Bihar, [1963] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 459, distinguished and
explained.
Lane v. Cotton, 1 Ld. Raym 646:91 E.R. 17, Kirkness v. John
Hudson & Co. Ltd. [1955] A.C. 696 and Ridge Nominees v.
I.R.C. [1962] 2 W.L.R. 3, referred to.
The Indian Steel & Wire Products Ltd., v. The State of
Madras, [1968] 1 S.C.R. 479, relied on.
(ii) Purchase tax need not always be levied with reference
to price of goods or with reference to turnover. It may be
levied on the occupier of a factory by reference to the
weight of the goods purchased by him. [717 C-E].
It cannot he accepted that a purchase tax must be always
levied on goods generally and never with reference to their
use, consumption or sale. Under List II Entry 54 the State
Legislature is not bound to levy a tax on all purchases of
cane. It may levy a tax on purchases of cane required for
use, consumption or sale in a factory. The tax so levied is
not a use tax. [717 F-718 B].
McLeod v. Dilworth & Co. 322 U.S. 327: 88 L. Ed. 1305 and C.
G. Naidu & Co. v. State of Madras, A.I.R. 1953 Mad. 116,
referred to.
The tax under s. 21 is not a levy on the (entry of goods
into the factory. Cane cultivated by the factory and
entering it cannot be taxed under the section. [718 G].
Diamond Sugar Mills Ltd., and Anr. v. State of Uttar Pradesh
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and Anr., [1961] 3 S.C.R. 242, referred to.
(iii) Section 21 does not impede free trade, commerce
and intercourse and therefore does not offend Art. 301 of
the Constitution. The tax levied under s. 21 does not
discriminate against any imported cane. [719 E-720 A].
A. T. Mehtab Majid and Co. v. State of Madras, [1963]
Supp. 2 S.C.R. 435, Atiabari Tea Co’ Ltd., v. State of Assam
JUDGMENT:
(Rajasthan) Ltd., v. State-of
Rajasthan, [1963] 1 S.C.R. 491, referred to.
(iv) The differential treatment of factories producing sugar
by means of vacuum pans, khandsari units producing sugar by
the open pan process and canegrowers using cane for the
manufacture of jaggery is reasonable and has a rational
relation to the object of the Act. There is thus no
violation of Art. 14 of the Constitution. [720 G-H].
Nor does discrimination result from the exemption under s.
21(3) of factories which are new or which in the opinion of
the Government have substantially expanded. The exemption
is based on legitimate legislative policy. The question
whether the exemption should be granted to a factory and if
so for what period and the question whether a factory has
substantially expanded and if so the extent of such
expansion have to be decided with reference to the facts of
each individual case. It is not possible for the State
707
Legislature to examine the merits of individual cases and
the function was properly delegated to the State Government.
The legislature was not obliged to prescribe a more rigid
standard for the guidance of Government. [721 A-C].
&
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petitions Nos. 53, 100, 101, 105
and 106 of 1967.
Petitions under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for the
enforcement of the fundamental rights.
M. C. Setalvad, A. V. Koteswara Rao, K. Rajendra Chaudhuri
and K. R. Chaudhuri, for the petitioners (in W. P. No. 53 of
1967).
N. C. Chatterjee, A. V. Koteswara Rao, K. Rajendra Chau-
dhuri and K. R. Chaudhuri, for the petitioners (in W.P. No.
100 of 1967).
A. V. Koteswara Rao, K. Rajendra Chaudhuri and, K. R.
Chaudhuri, for the petitioners (in W.P. No.101 of 1967).
K. R. Chaudhuri and K. Rajendra Chaudhuri, for the peti-
tioners (in W.P. Nos. 105 and 106 of 1967).
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General and A. V. Rangam, for he
respondents (in W.P. No. 53 of 1967).
P. Ram Reddy and A. V. Rangam, for the, respondents (in V. Ps.
No. 100, 101, 105 and 106 of 1967).
Sachin Chaudhury, G. L. Sanghi and O. C. Mathur, for the
intervener (in W.P. No. 53 of 1967).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by--
Bachawat, J. In all these writ petitions under Art. 32 of
the the petitioners ask for an order declaring that s. 21 of
the Andhra Pradesh Sugarcane (Regulation of Supply and
Purchase) Act, 1961 (Andhra Pradesh Act No. 45 of 1961) is
unconstitutional and ultra vires and a direction prohibiting
the respondents from levying tax under S. 21 and to refund
the tax already collected. Section 21 of the Act is in these
terms:
"21(1) The Government may, by notification, levy a tax
at such rate not exceeding five rupees per metric tonne as
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may be prescribed on the purchase of cane required for use,
consumption or sale in a factory.
(2) The Government may, by notification,
remit in whole or in part such tax in respect
of cane used, or intended to be used in a
factory for any purpose specified in such
notification.
(3) The Government may, by notification,
exempt from the payment of tax under this
section--
(a) any new factory which, in the opinion of
the Government has substantially expanded, to
the extent of such expansion, for a period not
exceeding two years from the date of
completion of the expansion.
P(N)7SCI--6
708
(4) The tax payable under sub-section (1)
shall be levied and collected from the
occupier of the factory in such manner and by
such authority as may be prescribed.
(5) Arrears of tax shall carry interest at
the rate of nine per cent per annum.
(6) If the tax under this section together
with the interest, if any, due thereon, is not
paid by the occupier of a factory within the
prescribed time, it shall be recoverable from
him as an arrear of land revenue."
Section 2(1) defines a factory which means
"any premises including the precincts thereof,
wherein twenty or more workers are working or
were working on any day during the preceding
twelve months and in any part of which any
manufacturing process connected with the
production of sugar by means of vacuum pans in
being carried on or is ordinarily carried on
with the aid of mechanical power. Section
2(m) defines the occupier of a factory. B:
Ordinance No. 1 of 1967 which was replaced by
Act No. 4 on 1967, the following new sub-
section (I-A) was inserted and other
consequential amendments were made in S. 21 of
the principal Act
"(1-A) The Government may, by notification,
levy a tax at such rate, not exceeding three.
rupees and fifty paise per metric tonne, as
may be prescribed on the purchase of cane
required for use, consumption or sale in a
khandsari unit".
Also the following sub-sections (kk) and (kkk)
were inserted in s. 2 of the principal Act:
"(kk) ’khandasari sugar’ means sugar produced
by open-pan process in a khandasari unit from
sugarcane juice, or from rab or gur or both,
containing more than eighty per cent sucrose;
(kkk) ’khandasari unit’ means a unit engaged
or ordinarily engaged in the manufacture of
khandasari sugar and includes a bel;"
It may be mentioned that sales and purchases of sugarcane a
exempt from tax under the Andhra Pradesh General Sales Tax
Act, 1957. The petitioners own sugar factories as defined
in 2(1). Their agents are the occupiers of the factories as
defined in S. 2(m). They purchased cane from canegrowers
within their respective factory zones. The State Government
had issued notifications levying tax under s. 21. For the
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last several years the petitioners have paid the tax on
their purchases of sugarcane and further demands are being
made on them for payment of the tax They challenge the vires
and the , constitutionality of S. 21 of various grounds.
The principal submissions were made by M. M. C. Setalvad who
appeared in Writ Petition No. 53 of 196
709
and his arguments were adopted by counsel appearing in the
other petitions. Mr. N. C. Chatterjee who appeared in Writ
Petition No. 100 of 1967 raised a few additional
contentions.
The submission of Mr. Setalvad is that s. 21 so far as it
levies a tax on the purchases of sugarcane by or on behalf
of the petitioners from the canegrowers in their respective
factory zones is ultra vires the powers of the legislature
under Entry No. 54, List 11, Sch. VII of the Constitution
in the light of the decision in State of Madras v. Gannon
Dunkerley & Co.(1). Now, in Gannon Dunkerley’s case(1), the
actual decision was that the legislature had no power under
List II, Entry 48, Sch. VII of the Government of India Act,
1935 to impose a tax on the supply of materials under an
entire and indivisible contract for construction of
buildings. But the Court also held that the phrase "sale of
goods" in the Entry must be interpreted in the legal sense
which it had in the Indian Sale of Goods Act, that the
Provincial Legislature had no power to tax a transaction
which was not a sale of goods in that sense and that in
order to constitute a sale there must be an agreement for
sale of goods for a price and the passing of property
therein pursuant to such an agreement. Ventakarama Aiyar,
J. laid at pp. 397-398:
"Thus, according to the law both of England and of India, in
order to constitute a sale it is necessary that there should
be an agreement between the parties for the purpose of
transferring title to goods which of course presupposes
capacity to contract, that it must be supported by money
consideration, and that as a result of the transaction
property must actually pass in the goods. Unless all these
elements are present, there can be no sale."
in the light of this decision, the expression "sale of
goods" in Entry 54, List II, Sch. VII of the Constitution
must be given the ame interpretation. On a parity of
reasoning, to constitute a purchase of goods" within this
Entry, there must be an agreement for purchase of goods and
the passing of property therein pursuant to such an
agreement. The question, therefore, is whether the
purchases by or on behalf of the petitioners from the cane-
growers in their respective factory zones were made under
agreements of purchase and, sale.
It appears that the Cane Commissioner is empowered under
s.15 of Act No. 45 of 1961 to declare any area as the
factory one for the purpose of supply of cane to a factory
during a particular crushing season. Under S. 16(1), on the
declaration of the factory zone the occupier of the factory
is bound to purchase such quantity of cane grown in that
area and offered for sale to the factory
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 379.
710
as may be determined by the Cane Commissioner in accordance
with the provisions of the schedule. Section 16(2)
prohibits the the canegrowers in a factory zone from
supplying or selling cane to any factory or other person
otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of the
schedule. Section 28(2)(1) empowers the Government to make
rules providing for the form of agreement to be entered into
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under the provisions of the Act. Rule 20 of the Andhra
Pradesh Sugarcane (Regulation of Supply and Purchase) Rules,
1951 framed under the Act provides that a canegrower or a
canegrower’s co-operative society may within 14 days of the
order declaring an area as the factory zone or such extended
time as may be fixed by the Cane Commissioner, offer in Form
No. 2 to supply cane grown in that area to the occupier of
the factory and such occupier of the factory within 14 days
of the receipt of the offer shall enter into an agreement in
Form No. 3 or Form No. 4 with the canegrower or the
canegrower’s co-operative society as the case may be for the
purchase of the cane offered. Form No. 3 is the statutory
form of agreement with a canegrower. By the agreement in
Form No. 3 the occupier of the factory agrees to buy and the
canegrower agrees to sell during the crushing season certain
sugarcane crop grown in the area at the minimum price
noticed by the Government from time to time upon the terms
and conditions mentioned in the agreement. The agreement
contains an arbitration clause and is signed by or on behalf
of the occupier of the factory and the canegrower. The
agreement in Form No. 4 with a canegrower’s co-operative
society is on the same lines. All the terms and conditions
of the agreements and the mode of their performance are
fixed and regulated by the Act, the Rules and orders made
under the Act. Contravention of the provisions of the Act
or of any rule or order made under the Act is punishable
under S. 23. The minimum price of sugarcane is fixed under
the Sugarcane Control Order, 1966. The learned Attorney and
Mr. Ram Reddy attempted to argue that the occupier of the
factory has some option of not buying from the canegrower
and some freedom of bargaining about the terms and con-
ditions of the agreements. But after having read all the
relevant provisions of the Act and the Rules, they did not
pursue this point. We are satisfied that under the
provisions of Act No. 45 of 1961 And the Rules framed
thereunder, a canegrower in a factory zone is free to sell
or not to sell his sugarcane to the factory. He may consume
it or may process it into jaggery and then sell the finished
product. But if he offers to sell his cane, the occupier of
the factory is bound to enter into an agreement with him on
the prescribed terms and conditions and to buy cane pursuant
to he agreement in conformity with the instructions issued
by the Cane Commissioner. The submission of the petitioners
is that as ,hey or their agents are compelled by law to buy
cane from the
711
canegrowers their purchases are not made under agreements
and are not taxable under Entry No. 54, List 11 having
regard to Gannon Dunkerley’s case(1). This contention
requires close examination.
Under s. 4(1) of the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, a con-
tract of sale of goods is a contract whereby the seller
transfers or agrees to transfer the property in goods to the
buyer for a price. By s. 3 of this Act, the provisions of
the Indian Contract Act, 1872 apply to contracts of sale of
goods save in so far as they are inconsistent with the
express provisions of the later Act. Section 2 of the
Indian Contract Act provides that when one person signifies
to another his willingness to do or to abstain from doing
anything with a view to obtaining the assent of the other to
such act or abstinence, he is said to make a proposal. When
the person to whom the proposal is made signifies his assent
thereto, the proposal is said to be accepted. A proposal
when accepted becomes a promise. Every promise and every
set of promises forming the consideration for each other is
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an agreement. There is mutual assent to the proposal when
the proposal is accepted and in the result an agreement is
formed. Under S. 10, all agreements are contracts if they
are made by the free consent of parties competent to
contract for a lawful consideration and with a lawful object
and are not by the Act expressly declared to be void,. Sec-
tion 13 defines consent. Two or more persons are said to
consent when they agree upon the same thing in the same
sense. Section 14 defines free consent. Consent is said to
be free when it is not caused by coercion, undue influence,
fraud, misrepresentation or mistake as defined in ss. 15 to
22. Now, under Act No. 45 of 1961 and the Rules framed
under it, the canegrower in the factory zone is free to make
or not to make an offer of sale of cane to the occupier of
the factory. But if he makes an offer, the occupier of the
factory is bound to accept it. The resulting agreement is
recorded in writing and is signed by the parties. The
consent of the occupier of the factory to the agreement is
not caused by coercion, undue influence, fraud, mis-
representation or mistake. His consent is free as defined
in s. 14 of the Indian Contract Act though he is obliged by
law to enter into the agreement. The compulsion of law is
not coercion as defined in S. 15 of the Act. In spite of
the compulsion, the agreement is neither void nor voidable.
In the eye of the law, the agreement is freely made. The
parties are competent to contract The agreement is made for
a lawful consideration and with a lawful object and is not
void under any provisions of law. The agreements are
enforceable by law and are contracts of sale of sugarcane as
defined in S. 4 of the Indian Sale of Goods Act. The
purchases of sugarcane under the agreement can be taxed by
the State legislature under Entry 54, List 11.
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 379.
712
Long ago in 1702, Holt, C.J. said in Lane v. Cotton(1):
"When a man takes upon himself a public
employment, he is bound to serve the public as
far as this employment goes, or an action lies
against him for refusing."
The doctrine that one who takes up a public employment is
bound to serve the public was applied to innkeepers and
common carriers. Without lawful excuse, an innkeeper cannot
refuse to receive guests at his inn, and a common carrier
cannot refuse to accept goods offered to him for carriage.
See Halsbury’s Laws of England, 3rd Edn., Vol. 4, art. 375
and Vol. 21, art. 938. A more general application of the
doctrine was arrested by the growth of the principle of
laissez faire which had its heyday in the. midnineteenth
century. Thereafter, there has been a gradual erosion of
the laissez faire concept. It is now realised that in the
public interest, persons exercising certain callings or
having monopoly or near monopoly powers should sometimes be
charged with the duty to serve the public, and, if
necessary, to enter into contracts. Thus, S. 66 of the
Indian Railways Act, 1890 compels the railway administration
to supply the public with tickets for travelling on the
railway upon payment of the usual fare. Section 22 of the
Indian Electricity Act, 1910 compels a licensee to supply
electrical energy to every person in the area of supply on
the usual terms and conditions. Cheshire and Fifoot in
their Law of Contract, 6th Edn., p. 23 observe that for
reasons of social security the State may compel persons to
make contracts. One of the objects of Act No. 45 of 1961 is
to regulate the purchase of sugarcane by the factory owners
from the canegrowers. The canegrowers scattered in the
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villages had no real bargaining power. The factory owners
or their combines enjoyed a near monopoly of buying and
could dictate their own terms. In this unequal contest
between the canegrowers and, the factory owners, the law
stepped in and compelled the factory to enter into contracts
of purchase of cane offered by the canegrowers on prescribed
terms and conditions.
In The Indian Steel & Wire Products Ltd. v. The State of
Madras(2), the Court held that. sales of steel products
authorised by the Controller under cls. 4 and 5 of the Iron
and Steel (Control of Production and Distribution) Order,
1941 were eligible to tax under Entry 54, List 11. The
Court found that the parties had entered into contracts of
sale though in view of the Order the area of bargaining
between the buyer and the seller was greatly reduced.
Hegde, J. speaking for the Court said that as a result of
economic compulsions and changes in of the political outlook
the freedom to contract was now being confined gradually to
narrower and narrower limits. We have here a case where one
party
(1), 1 Ld. Raym. 646: 91 E.R. 17
(2) [1968] 1 S.C.R. 479.
713
to a contract of sale is compelled to enter into it on
rigidly prescribed terms and conditions and has no freedom
of bargaining. But the contract, nonetheless, is a contract
of sale.
In Kirkness v. John Hudson & Co. Ltd.,(1) the House of Lords
by a majority held that a compulsory vesting of title of the
company’s railway wagons in the British Transport Commission
under s. 29 of the Transport Act, 1947 was not a sale within
the meaning of the phrase "is sold" in S. 17 of the Income-
tax Act, 1945. Under S. 29, there was a compulsory taking
of property. The assent of the company to the taking was
not required by statute. By force of law, the property of
the company was taken without its assent. There was no
offer, no acceptance and no mutual assent and no contract
resulted. The House of Lords held that mutual assent was an
element of a transaction of sale. In Gannon Dunkerley’s
case(1), the Court approved of this principle and rejected
the argument of counsel that an involuntary transfer of
title as in Kirkness’s case(2) was a sale within the meaning
of the legislative Entry. But the Court did not say that if
one party was free to make an offer of sale and the other
party was obliged by law to accept it and to enter into an
agreement for purchase of the goods, a contract of sale did
not result. In the present case, the seller makes an offer
and the buyer accepts it. The parties then execute and sign
an agreement in writing. There is mutual assent and a valid
contract, though the assent of the buyer is given under
compulsion of statute. Mi. Setalvad relied on the
following passage in the Law of Contract by G.H. Treitel, at
p. 5: "Where the legislation leaves no choice at all to one
party, the transaction is not a contract." But the author
does not cite any authority in support of the proposition.,
He adds that even a compulsory disposition of property may
be treated as contract for the purpose of a particular
statute and cites the case of Ridge Nominees v. I.R.C.(3).
There, the Court distinguishing Kirkness’s case(3) held that
the compulsory transfer of shares of a dissenting
shareholder by a person "authorised to make the transfer on
his behalf under s. 209 of the Companies Act, 1948
corresponding to S. 395 of our Companies Act, 1956 was
having regard to the machinery created by the section a
conveyance on sale within s. 54 of the Stamp Act, 1 91. The
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Lord Justices gave separate opinions. It is worthwhile
quoting the opinion of Donovan, L. J. who said:-
"When the legislature, by section 209 of the
Companies Act, 1948, empowers the transferee
company to appoint an agent on behalf of a
dissenting shareholder for the purpose of
executing a transfer of his shares
(1) [1955] A.C. 696.
(2) [1959] S.C.R. 379.
(3) [1962] 2 W.L.R. 3.
714
against a price to be paid to the transferor
company and held in trust for the dissenting
shareholder, it is clearly ignoring his
dissent and putting him in the same position
as if he had assented. For the purpose of
considering whether this results in a sale,
one must, I think, bear that situation in
mind, and regard, the dissent of the
shareholder as overridden by an assent which
the statute imposes upon him, fictional though
this may be. Thus. in the context of section
209 the transfer becomes in law a conveyance
on sale. This conclusion, in my opinion, does
not run counter to what was said in the House
of Lords in Kirkness (Inspector of Taxes) v.
John Hudson & Co. Ltd.,(1), where, in terms of
the statute there under consideration,
property belonging to other persons was
declared to vest on a specified date in the
Transport Commission against payment of
compensation. This may be no more than a
difference of machinery, but machinery may
make the very difference between a sale and a
mere expropriation against compensation.
"Lord Simonds, I venture to think, implies as
much when he says he gets no assistance from
the cases decided under the Stamp Acts."
In M/s. New India Sugar Mills Ltd., v.
Commissioner of Sales Tax, Bihar(2), the Court
by a majority held that the supply of sugar by
a sugar factory to a Provincial Government in
obedience to the directions of the Sugar
Controller given under the Sugar and Sugar
Products Control Order, 1946 was not a sale
taxable under List II, Entry 48, Sch. VII of
the Government of India Act, 1935. Mr.
Setalvad placed strong reliance on the fol-
lowing passage in the judgment of Shah, J. at
pp. 469-470:
"A contract of sale between the parties is
therefore a pre-requisite to a sale. The
transactions of despatches of sugar by the
assessees pursuant to the directions of the
Controller were not the result of any such
contract of sale. It is common ground that
the Province of Madras intimated its
requirements of sugar to the Controller, and
the Controller called upon the manufacturing
units to supply the whole or part of the
requirement to the Province. In calling upon
the manufacturing units to supply sugar, the
Controller did not act as an agent of the
State to purchase goods: he acted in exercise
of his statutory authority. There was mani-
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festly no offer to purchase sugar by the
Province, and no acceptance of any offer by
the manufacturer. The manufacturer was under
the Control Order left no volition: he could
not decline to carry out the order; if he
(1) [1955] A.C. 696.
(2) [1963] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 459, 469.
715
did so he was liable to be punished for breach
of the order and his goods were liable to be
forefeited. The Government of the Province
and the manufacturer had no opportunity to
negotiate, and sugar was despatched pursuant
to the direction of the Controller and not in
acceptance of any offer by the Government."
Divorced from the context, this passage gives some support
to the contention that there can be no contract if the
acceptance of the offer is made under compulsion of a
direction given by a statutory authority. But the passage
must be read with the facts of the case. By cl. 3 of the
Sugar and Sugar Products Control Order, 1946, producers of
sugar were prohibited from disposing of sugar except to
persons specially authorised in that behalf by the
Controller to acquire sugar on behalf of certain
Governments. Clause 5 required every producer or dealer to
comply with the directions issued by the Controller
regarding production, sales, stocks and distribution of
sugar. Clause 6 authorised the Controller to fix the price
of sugar. Clause 7(1) authorised the Controller to allot
quotas of sugar for any Province and to issue directions to
any producer or dealer for the supply of the sugar
specifying the price, quantity and type or grade of the
sugar and the time and manner of supply. Contravention of
the directions entailed forfeiture of stocks under cl. 11 of
the Order and was punishable under r. 81(4) of the Defence
of India Rules, 1939. The admitted course of dealings
between the parties was that the Governments of the
consuming States used to intimate to the Sugar Controller
their requirement of sugar and the factory owners used to
send to him statements of their stocks of sugar. On a
consideration of the requisitions and the statements of
stock, the Controller used to make allotments. The
allotment order used to be addressed by the Controller to
the factory owner, directing him to supply sugar to the
Government in question in accordance with the latter’s
despatch instructions. A copy of the allotment order used
simultaneously to be sent to the Government concerned and
the latter then used to send to the factory detailed
despatching instructions.. In these circumstances, Kapur and
Shah, JJ. (Hidayatullah, J. dissenting) held that by giving
intimation of its requirement of sugar to the Controller and
applying for allotment of sugar, the Government of Madras
did not make any offer to the manufacturer. The direction
of the Controller to the manufacturer to supply sugar to the
Government was given in the exercise of his statutory
authority and was not the communication of any offer made by
the Government. The despatch of the goods in compliance
with the directions of the Controller was not the acceptance
by the manufacturer of any offer, nor could it be deemed to
be an offer by the manufacturer to supply goods. On the,
special facts of that case, the majority decision was that
there was no offer and acceptance and no contract resulted.
That decision should not be
716
treated as an authority for the proposition that there can
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be no contract of sale under compulsion of a statute. It
depends upon the facts of each case and the terms of the
particular statute regulating the dealings whether the
parties have entered into a contract of sale of goods.
Under Act No. 45 of 1961, a canegrower makes an offer to the
occupier of the factory directly and the latter accepts the
offer. The parties then make and sign an agreement in
writing. There is thus a direct privily of contract between
the parties. The contract is a contract of sale and pur-
chase of cane, though the buyer is obliged to give his
assent under compulsion of a statute. The State Legislature
is competent to tax purchases of canes made under such a
contract.
Mr. Setalvad submitted that there-can be no levy of a pur-
chase tax with reference to the tonnage of the cane. We
cannot accept this contention. Usually the purchase tax is
levied with reference to the price of the goods. But the
legislature is competent to levy the tax with reference to
the weight of the goods purchased.
The contention of Mr. Chatterjee that a purchase tax must be
levied with reference to the turnover only is equally devoid
of merit. Where the purchase tax is levied on a dealer, the
levy is usually with reference to his turnover, which
normally means the aggregate of the amounts of purchase
prices. But the tax need not necessarily be levied on a
dealer or by reference to his turnover. It may be levied on
the occupier of a factory by reference to the weight of the
goods purchased by him.
Mr. Chatterjee next submitted that a purchase tax must be
levied on goods generally, and there can be no purchase tax
with reference to their subsequent use, consumption or sale.
He based his argument on paragraphs 17 to 20. Chap. III,
Vol. III of the Report of the Taxation Enquiry Committee.
There, the Committee while discussing the comparative merits
of sales tax in relation to customs, excise and octroi,
pointed out that sales tax was a major source of revenue and
could be applied to the generality of goods, while customs,
excise and octroi could be applied to only a limited portion
of the industrial output of the country. The Committee did
not express any opinion on the scope of List II, Entry 54.
Under that Entry, the State legislature is not bound to levy
a tax on all purchases of cane. It may levy a tax on
purchases of cane required for use, consumption or sale in a
factory. The legislature is competent to tax and also to
exempt from payment of tax sales or purchases of goods
required for specific purposes. Other instances of special
treatment of goods required for particular purposes may be
given. Section 6 and Sch. 1, item 23 of the Bombay Sales
Tax Act, 1946 levy tax on fabrics and articles for personal
wear. Section 2(j)(a)(ii) of the C.P and Berar Sales Tax
Act, 1947 exempts sales of goods intended for use by a
registered dealer as raw materials for the manufacture of
goods.
717
Mr. Chatterjee submitted that the tax levied under s. 21 was
a use tax and referred to McLeod v. Dilworth & Co.(1) and C.
G. Naidu & Co. The State of Madras(2). He argued that the
State legislature could not levy a use tax which was
essentially different from a purchase tax. The assumption
of counsel that S. 21 levies a use tax is not well-founded.
The taxable event under S. 21 is the purchase of goods and
not the use or enjoyment of what is purchased. The
constitutional implication of a use tax in American law is
entirely irrelevant. The observation in the Madras case
that the Explanation to Art. 286(1)(a) of the Constitution
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conferred, a power on the State legislature to levy a use
tax is erroneous. The Explanation fixed the situs of
certain sales. It did not confer upon the legislature any
power to levy a use tax.
To appreciate another argument of Mr. Chatterjee, it is
necessary to refer to a few facts. It appears that
paragraph 21 of the Bill published in the Gazette on March
3, 1960 preliminary to the passing of Act No. 45 of 1961
provided for a levy of a cess on the entry of cane into the
premises of a factory for use, consumption or sale therein.
On December 13, 1960, this Court in Diamond Sugar Mills Ltd.
and Another v. The State of Uttar Pradesh and Another(3)
struck down a similar provision in the U.P. Sugarcane Cess
Act, 1956 on the ground that the State legislature was not
competent to enact it under Entry 52, List II as the
premises of a factory was not a local area within the
meaning of the Entry. Having regard to this decision,
paragraph 21 of the Bill was amended and s. 21 in its
present form was passed by the State Legislature. The Act
was published in the Gazette on December 30, 1961. Mr.
Chatterjee submitted that in this context the levy under s.
21 was really a levy on the entry of goods into a factory
for consumption, use or sale therein. We are unable to
accept this contention. As the proposed tax on the entry of
goods into a factory was unconstitutional, paragraph 21 of
the original Bill was amended and s. 21 in its present form
was enacted. The tax purchase of goods. The taxable event
is the purchase of cane for use, consumption or sale in a
factory and not the entry of cane into a factory. As the
tax is not on the entry of the cane into a factory, it is
not payable on cane cultivated by the factory and entering
the factory premises.
Mr. Setalvad submitted that s. 21 impeded free trade, com-
merce and intercourse and offended Art. 301 of the Constitu-
tion and relied on the decision in Firm A. T. Mehtab Majid &
(1) 322 U.S. 327: 88 L. Ed. 1305.
(2) A.I.R. 1953 Mad. 116, 127-128,
(3) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 242.
718
Co. v. State of Madras(1). In that case, the Court held
that r. 16(2) of the Madras General Sales Tax (Turnover and
Assessment) Rules, 1939 discriminated against imported hides
or skins which had been purchased or tanned outside the
State by levying a higher tax on them and contravened Art.
304(a) of the Constitution. At p. 442, Raghubar Dayal, J.
said:
"It is therefore now well settled that taxing
laws can be restrictions on trade, commerce
and intercourse, if they hamper the flow of
trade and if they are not what can be termed
to be compensatory taxes or regulatory
measures. Sales tax of the kind under consi-
deration here, cannot be said to be a measure
regulating any trade or a, compensatory tax
levied for the use of trading facilities.
Sales tax, which has the effect of
discriminating between goods of one State and
goods of another, may affect the free flow of
trade and it will then offend against Art. 301
and will be valid only if it comes within the
terms of Art. 304(a)."
That case decides that a sales tax which
discriminates against goods imported from
other States may impede the free flow of trade
and is then invalid unless protected by Art.
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304(a). But the tax levied under S. 21 does
not discriminate against any imported cane.
Under S. 21, the same rate of tax is levied on
purchases of all cane required for use,
consumption or sale in a factory. There is no
discrimination between cane grown in the State
and cane imported from outside. As a matter
of fact, under the Act the factory can
normally buy only cane grown in the factory
zone. A non-discriminatory tax on goods does
not offend Art. 301 unless it directly
impedes the free movement or transport of the
goods. In Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd., v. The State
of Assam and others(2). Gajendragadkar, J.
speaking for the majority said:
"We are, therefore, satisfied that in
determining the limits of the width and
amplitude of the freedom guaranteed by Art.
301 a rational and workable test to apply
would be: Does the impugned restriction ope-
rate directly or immediately on trade or its
movement?. It is the free movement of the
transport of goods from one part of the
country to the other that is intended to be
saved, and if any Act imposes any direct res-
trictions on the very movement of such goods
it attracts the provisions of Art. 301, and
its validity can be sustained only if it
satisfies the requirements of Art. 302 or Art.
304 of Part XIII."
(1) [1963] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 435.
(2) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 809, 860-861.
719
This interpretation of Art. 301 Was not dissented from in
Automobile Transport (Rajasthan) Ltd. v. State of
Rajasthan(1). Normally, a tax on sale of goods does not
directly impede the free movement or transport of goods.
Section 21 is no exception. It does not impede the free
movement or transport of goods and is not violative of Art.
301.
Mr. Setalvad next submitted that s. 21 offended Art. 14 of
the Constitution in several ways. It was argued that s. 21
read with s. 2(e) discriminated between producers of sugar
using the vacuum pan and open pan processes. Under s. 2 1,
as it stood before its amendment by Act No. 4 of 1967 tax
was levied on purchases of cane by factories producing sugar
by means of vacuum pans but purchases of cane by khandasari
units producing khandasari sugar by the open pan process
were entirely exempt from the tax. Even the amended s. 21
levies a lower rate of tax on the purchases of cane by
khandsari units. It was also argued that there was
discrimination in favour of producers of jaggery by
exempting their purchases of cane from payment of the tax.
But the affidavits filed on behalf of the respondents show
that factories producing sugar by means of vacuum pans and
khandasari units producing sugar by the open pan processes
form distinct and separate classes. The industry using the
vacuum pan process is in existence since 1932-33. No tax
was levied on this industry until 1949. In 1949 when the
industry became well established, tax was levied on it for
the first time by s. 14 of the Madras Sugar Factories
Control Act, 1949. The khandasari units carry on a small
scale industry. They are of recent origin in the State of
Andhra Pradesh. Until 1967, this industry was exempt from
the levy. When the industry came to be somewhat established
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by 1967 a smaller rate of tax was levied on it. In 1965-66,
factories adopting the vacuum pan process bought over 32
lakh tonnes of cane while the khandasari sugar units in the
State bought about 2.70 lakh tonnes of cane. The
manufacture of jaggery has no resemblance to the manufacture
of sugar by the vacuum pan or the open pan system. It is a
cottage industry wherein individual canegrowers process
their cane into jaggery and market it as a finished product.
Having regard to the affidavits, we are satisfied that the
differential treatment of the factories producing sugar by
means of vacuum pans, khandasari units producing sugar by.
the open pan process and cane growers using cane for the
manufacture of jaggery is reasonable and has a rational
relation to the object of taxation. There are marked
differences between the three classes of users of cane and
their capacity to pay the tax. The legislature could
reasonably treat the three sets of users of cane differently
for purposes of levy.
(1) [1963] 1 S.C.R. 491, 533.
702
It was next argued that the power under s. 21(3) to exempt
new factories and factories which in the opinion of the
Government have substantially expanded was discriminatory
and violative of Art. 14. We are unable to accept this
contention. The establishment of new factories and the
expansion of the existing factories need encouragement and
incentives. The exemption in favour of new and expanding
factories is based on legitimate legislative policy. The
question whether the exemption should be granted to any
factory, and if so, for what period and the question whether
any factory has substantially expanded and if so, the extent
of such expansion have to be decided with reference to the
facts of each individual case. Obviously, it is not
possible for the State legislature to examine the merits of
individual cases and the function was properly delegated to
the State Government. The legislature was not obliged to
prescribe a more rigid standard for the guidance of the
Government. We hold that S. 21 does not violate Art. 14.
The petitioner in Writ Petition No. 101 of 1967 raised the
contention that it was a new factory and that the Government
of Andhra Pradesh should have exempted it from payment of
tax under s. 21(3)(a). The contention was controverted by
the respondents. The affidavits do not give sufficient
materials on the point, nor is there any prayer in the
petition for the issue of a mandamus directing the State
Government to grant the exemption. In the circumstances, we
do not think it fit to express any opinion on the matter.
It will be open to the petitioner in Writ Petition No. 101
of 1967 to raise this contention in other proceedings.
In the result, the petitions are dismissed with costs, one
hearing fee.
G.C. Petitions dismissed.
121