Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, DELHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MESSRS. P. M. RATHOD & CO.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/05/1959
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 1394 1960 SCR (1) 401
ACT:
Income-tax-Place of accrual or receipt of Profits-Goods sold
by a trader in a Part B State to customers in Part A or C
States Goods sent by Value Payable Post or by rail-Post
office, whether agent of seller or bailee of goods-Railway
receipt sent to bankers to be delivered to customers against
Payment-Concessional rate of taxation applicable to Part B
States-Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930 (3 Of 1930), S. 25(1)-
Indian Contract Act, 1872 (9 of 1872), S. 148.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents were manufacturers of perfumery and hair
oils at Ratlam in Madhya Bharat which at the relevant time
was a Part B State. They sent out agents who canvassed
orders. The goods ordered were sent to the customers from
Ratlam either through the post office by Value Payable Post
or they were sent from there by rail and the railway
receipts in favour of self were sent through a bank with the
direction that they (railway receipts) were to be handed
over against payment of the enclosed demand draft.’ The
price when received by the bank was sent by means of a
demand draft to the respondents at Ratlam who bad it cashed
and credited to their account at Bombay. The respondents
were assessed to income-tax, in respect of profits from such
sales of goods to customers in Part A and C States, for the
assessment year 1950-51, at the rate or rates applicable to
income, profits or gains arising or accruing in Part A
States on the footing that the sales were effected in Part A
and C States and the payments were also received there. The
respondents claimed that the prices realised constituted
receipts in Ratlam
51
402
and that therefore they. were liable to be assessed only at
the concessional rates applicable to Part B States. The
Appellate Tribunal held that the price of goods sent by
Value Payable Post was received at Ratlam and that in
respect of the price received by bank drafts which had been
realised through the bank at Bombay, the amount must be
treated as having been received in a Part A State. At the
instance of the Commissioner of Income-tax and the
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respondents, the Tribunal referred two questions to the High
Court: (1) Whether the bank drafts payable in Part A or C
States but received at Ratlam and encashed through the
assessee’s bankers at Bombay constituted receipts in Part A
State? (2) Whether the receipt of sale proceeds at Ratlam
(which included the assessee’s profits) in respect of goods
sent by the assessee to customers in Part A or C States by
V.P.P. amounted to receipts of income, profits or gains at
Ratlam in a Part B State? The High Court having answered
both the questions in favour of the respondents, the Com-
missioner of Income-tax preferred an appeal to the Supreme
Court :-
Held: (1) When a question referred to the Court is not
properly framed, it is open to the Court to reframe the
question which arises on a proper appreciation of the facts
of the Case.
Narain Swadeshi Weaving Mills v. The Commissioner of
Excess Profits Tax, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 925, followed.
The proper question that arose on the facts of the present
case was held to be: " Whether on the facts and
circumstances of this case the payment received from a buyer
by a banker in Part A or C States against delivery of
railway receipts for goods sent by the seller is payment in
these States or in Ratlam which was a Part B State."
(2) Where goods are sent by rail and the railway receipts
in, favour of self are sent to a banker to be delivered to
the buyer against payment of the price, the appropriation to
the contract is only conditional and the performance is
completed only when the monies are paid and the railway
receipts delivered.
Accordingly, where, as in the present case, the payment.
was received by a banker from a buyer in a Part A or C State
against delivery of a railway receipt in favour of self for
goods sent by the respondents, the contract must be taken to
have been per-. formed in Part A or C States and the income
arising out of these transactions must be held to have been
received there.
(3) The principles governing the despatch of articles by
Value Payable Post system are:-
(i) that the post office is an agent of the seller for
the recovery of price against delivery of goods;
Mothi Rungaya Chetty V. The Secretary of State for India,
(1904) I.L.R. 28 Mad. 213, approved.
(ii) that the seller retains control over the goods
right up to the time goods are delivered to the buyer
against payment and
403
the contract falls under s. 25(1) of the Indian Sale of
Goods Act, 1930;
Mirabita v. Imperial Ottomon Bank, (1878) 3 Ex. D. 164
and The Parchim, [1918] A.C. 57, referred to.
(iii) that even if the post office were considered to be
a bailee of goods for transmission to the buyer, the
contract would fall under s. 25 of the Indian Sale of Goods
Act and the appropriation is conditional and until the
condition is fulfilled the property in the goods does not
pass; and,
(iv) that it is the duty of the bailee to dispose of
the goods in accordance with the directions of the bailor
which in this case was to deliver the goods against payment.
Hence the bailee received the price at the place of delivery
of goods and did so on behalf of the bailor.
Consequently, in the present case, in respect of goods sent
by Value Payable Post to a Part A or C State the price was
received there and not at Ratlam.
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Commissioner of Income-tax v. Ogale Glass Works Ltd., [1955]
1 S.C.R. 185 and The Badische Anilin Und Soda Fabrik v. The
Basle Chemical Works, [1898] A.C. 200, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION :Civil Appeal No. 373 of
1957.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated September 20,
1955, of the former Madhya Bharat High Court at Indore in
Civil Misc. Case No. 40 of 1954. ,
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, K. N.
Rajagopal Sastri, R. H. Dhebar and D. Gupta, for the
appellant.
S. S. Shukla, for the respondent.
1959. May 20. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
KAPUR J.-This appeal on a certificate by the High Court is
brought against the judgment of the High Court of Madhya
Bharat in a Reference by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal
under s. 66(1) of the Income-tax Act. The appellant is the
Commissioner of Income-tax and the respondents are a firm of
manufacturers of perfumery and hair oils at Ratlam in Madhya
Bharat and their goods are sold throughout India. At the
relevant time Madhya Bharat was a Part B State and the sole
question for determination is where were the income, profits
and gains,
404
received or were deemed to be received and on that would
depend the rate at which the respondents would be liable to
be assessed because of the concessional rates applicable to
Part B States.
The facts lie in a short compass. The respondents, a
registered firm, were assessed for the assessment year 1950-
51, at the rate or rates applicable to income, profits and
gains arising or accruing in Part A States. The course of
their business was this: they sent out agents to various
parts of India. They canvassed orders and sometimes took
advance payments in full or in part and after deducting
their expenses, remitted the balance to the respondents at
Ratlam through Bank drafts etc. The goods ordered were sent
to the customers either by V. P. P. or by rail. In the
latter case the Railway Receipts in favour of self were sent
through a Bank deliverable against payment of the Demand
Draft drawn upon the buyers and sent with the Railway
Receipts. This price when received by the Bank was sent by
the Bank by means of Bank Draft to the respondents at Ratlam
who sent them for being cashed and credited to their account
at Bombay.
The Income-tax Officer held that the major quantity of
goods was supplied to the customers in what was Part A & C
States either by V. P. P. or by rail, the Railway Receipts
being in favour of the respondents and payment was received
as stated above.
The assessees’ banker was the Bank of India Ltd., Bombay,
and the sale proceeds were, according to the Income-tax
Officer, mainly realised through this Bank. He held that
the sales were effected in Part A & C States and the
payments were also received there. He therefore made the
assessment on an estimated profit of Rs. 1,60,340 on sales
of Rs. 5,09,424 without allowing any rebate on account of
concessional rates applicable to Part B States. On appeal
the Appellate Asstt. Commissioner reduced the estimated
profit by Rs. 20,000. The Income-tax Appellate Tribunal on
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further appeal reduced the total income from Part A & C
States to Rs. 2,85,376. It found that the income received
through the Post Office, i.e., by V.P.P.
405
was Rs. 1,23,710 and that received in respect of goods sent
by rail and realized by the Bank drafts was Rs. 2,85,376
making a total of Rs. 4,21,955. It also held that the
advances received with orders were income, profits and gains
received at Ratlam and not in Part A & C States and
similarly the price of goods sent by V. P. P. was also money
received at Ratlam. In regard to the price received by Bank
drafts it held that they were received at Ratlam but were
sent to the assessee’s banker in Bombay for being cashed and
therefore they must be taken to have been received in a Part
A State. This amount was Rs. 2,85,376. The Tribunal after
referring to the decision of the Bombay High Court in
Kirloskar Bros. Ltd. v. The Commissioner of Income-tax(1)
said :-
" The facts, however, in this case are
entirely different. It appears from the
printed advice sent by the assessee to its
bankers in every case that the bankers are to
hand over the goods against ’payment of t
he
enclosed demand draft’. It is not a case
where the assessee gives unconditional
discharge on the receipt of either a cheque or
a bank draft. We agree with the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner that sale proceeds to
the extent of Rs. 2,85,376 were received at
Bombay."
Both the assessees and the Commissioner applied for a
reference -to the High Court under s. 66(1) of the Income-
tax Act and following two questions were referred :-
Q.1 "Whether the receipt of sale proceeds at
Ratlam (which included the assessee’s profits)
in respect of goods sent by the assessee to
customers in Part A or C States by V. P. P.
amounted to receipts of income, profits or
gains at Ratlam in Part B States?"
Q. 2. " Whether the bank drafts payable in
Part A or C States but received at Ratlam and
encashed through the assessee’s bankers at
Bombay constituted receipts in Part A State ?"
The High Court answered both these questions in favour of
the assessees but gave a certificate and the
(1) [1952] 21 I.T.R. 82.
406
appeal is therefore brought by the Commissioner of Income-
tax.
Apart from the sales which were deemed to have taken place
in Ratlam itself the goods were, as stated above, supplied
to the customers in one of the following two ways. The goods
were either sent from Ratlam through the post office by V.
P. P. or they were sent from there by rail and the Railway
Receipts in favour of self were sent through a Bank with the
direction that the goods were to be handed over against
’payment of the enclosed demand draft’.
We Shall first deal with that part in which the goods were
sent by post under the V. P. P. system. The purpose of this
system is given in Rule 133 of the Post Offices guide as
under:-
" The V. P. P. system is designed to meet the
requirements of persons who wish to pay for
articles sent to them at the time of the
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receipt of the articles or of the bill or
railway receipt relating to them and also to
meet the requirements of the traders and
others who wish to recover through the agency
of the post office, the value of articles
supplied by them. "
In the case of delivery of goods by V. P. P. it is im-
material whether the buyer directs the goods to be sent by
V. P. P. or the seller does so on his own accord because the
goods handed over to the Post Office by the seller can only
be delivered to the buyer against payment and this payment
is received for and on behalf of the seller. The buyer does
not pay till the goods are received by him and once he has
paid -the price it is the Post Office that is responsible
for payment of the money received by it to the seller. The
buyer has no longer any responsibility in regard to it.
Therefore a payment to the Post Office is payment to the
seller and at the place where the goods are delivered and
payment is made. Further before the goods are delivered to
the buyer the seller has under the V. P. P. Rules the power
to direct the Post Office to make the delivery to the
addressee free or to deliver against a sum different from
that originally specified. This would negative the Post
Office being an agent of the buyer. This shows that
407
whatever be the jural relationship between the seller and
the post office in respect of carriage of goods sent by the
seller under the V. P. P. system it becomes an agent of the
seller for the recovery of the price and if it fails to
recover the price and delivers the goods it is liable in
damages to the seller: Mothi Rungaya Chetty v. The
Secretary of State for India (1).
Under the V. P. P. system the seller retains control over
the goods right up to the time the goods are delivered to
the buyer against payment of price and therefore the
contract would fall under s. 25 of the Indian Sale of Goods
Act which provides:-
Section 25(1). " Where there is a contract
for the sale of specific goods or where goods
are subsequently appropriated to the contract,
the seller may, by the terms of the contract
or appropriation, reserve the right of
disposal of the goods until certain conditions
are fulfilled. In such case, notwithstanding
the delivery of the goods to a buyer, or to a
carrier or other bailee for the purpose of
transmission to the buyer, the property in the
goods does not pass to the buyer until the
conditions imposed by the seller are
fulfilled."
The principle then is this that if the seller when sending
the articles which he intends to deliver under the contract
does so, with the direction that the articles are not to be
delivered to the purchaser till the payment of price, the
appropriation is not absolute but conditional and until the
price is paid the property in the goods does not pass to the
purchaser. Mirabita v. Imperial Ottomon Bank (2 ) at pp.
172-173 (Cotton, L.J.). See also The Parchim (3 ) at pp.
170-171 (Per Lord Parker). And the goods pass at the place
where the price is paid, i.e., which in the present case was
in an A or C State. Thus the price was received by the
seller in A or C State.
But it was submitted on behalf of the respondents that to
the present case the judgment of this Court in Commissioner
of Income-tax v. Ogale Glass Works Ltd.(4) applies. There
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the assessee was a company which was
(1) (1904) I.L.R. 28 Mad. 213, (2) (1878) 3 Ex. D.
164.
(3) [1918] A. C. 1157. (4) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 185.
408
carrying on business in an Indian State (outside British
India) and its liability to Indian Income-tax depended upon
its receipt of money within British India. The assessee had
to be paid for goods supplied to the Government of India and
at his request the Government of India agreed to make
payments by cheques which were drawn in Delhi on a Bombay
Bank and were posted in Delhi and received by the assessee
in the Indian State. It was held that the Post Office was
the agent of the assessee. The principle of that case has
no application to the facts of the present case. That case
did not deal with sale of goods or receipt of price against
delivery of goods or the place where the price of goods is
received by the seller. Reference was also made by the
respondents’ counsel to a judgment of the House of Lords in
The Badische Anilin Und Soda Fabrik v. The Basle Chemical
Works (1). In that case a trader in England ordered goods
from a manufacturer in Switzerland to be sent by post to
England. The manufacturer addressed the goods to a
forwarding agent who in turn addressed them to the trader in
England and delivered them to the Swiss Post Office by whom
they were forwarded to England. The goods were such that
they invaded an invention protected by an English patent.
It was held that the contract of sale was completed by
delivery to the post office in Switzerland and as the post
office was the agent of the buyer and not of the vendor the
vendor could not be said to have contravened the invention
within the ambit of the patent and that the patentee had no
right of action against the vendor for an infringement of
the patent. In that case also there was no question of the
Swiss manufacturer keeping control over the goods till the
price was paid nor of any conditional delivery to the post
office as in the present case and besides that was not a
case dealing with the passing of the ownership in goods or
the appropriation of goods to the contract of sale by
delivery to a carrier.
The argument raised by counsel for respondents was that
the respondents delivered the goods to the Post Office at
the instance of the buyer and that the Post
(1) [1898] A.C. 200.
409
Office acted merely as a bailee for the purpose of
transmission to the buyer. But even as such bailee it
cannot act against the instructions of the bailor and
deliver the goods to the buyer without receiving their price
and when he does recover he recovers it on behalf of the
bailor. Even a bailment for transmission would fall under
s. 25 of the Sale of Goods Act and there is only a
conditional appropriation and until the condition imposed is
fulfilled the goods do not pass. Under s. 148 of the Indian
Contract Act a bailment ’ is delivery of goods by one
person to another upon a contract that they shall, when the
purpose is accomplished be returned or otherwise disposed of
according to the directions of the person delivering them.
A bailee’s duty therefore is to deal with the goods
according to the directions of the bailor and if the
direction in the present case was that the goods were to be
delivered to the buyer on payment then the bailee would
receive the price on behalf of the seller at the place where
the goods were delivered to the buyer.
Thus the principle governing a despatch of articles by V. P.
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P. is that the appropriation is conditional and goods only
pass when the condition is fulfilled, i.e., the price is
paid against delivery. The Post Office is an agent for the
seller and receives the price from the buyer at the place of
delivery for transmission to the seller. The income in the
present case was therefore received in Part A or Part C
States and not in Ratlam. In our opinion, the answer to the
first question should have been in favour of the
Commissioner. It should have been held that the income in
respect of goods sent by V. P. P. was received in Part A and
C States and not in a Part B State.
The next question is unfortunately not properly framed and
therefore it is necessary to reframe it as was done in
Narain Swadeshi Weaving Mills v. The Commissioner of Excess
Profits Tax (1). The proper question that arises on the
facts is: " Whether on the facts and circumstances of this
case the payment received from a buyer by a banker in Part A
or C
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 952.
52
410
States against delivery of Railway Receipt for goods sent by
the seller is payment in these States or in Ratlam which was
a Part B State ". We have already set out the course of
business in regard to the second mode of supply of goods,
i.e., goods were sent by rail and the Railway Receipts in
favour of self were sent through a Bank with the direction
that they were to be delivered against payment of demand
drafts drawn and sent along with the Railway Receipts. Now
in this case as in the case of goods sent by V. P. P. the
Railway Receipts in favour of self could not be delivered to
the buyer till the money was paid and although the goods had
been handed over to a common carrier the appropriation to
the contract was only conditional and the performance was
completed only when the monies were paid and the Railway
Receipts delivered. These contracts also must be taken to
have been performed in Part A or C States and the price paid
to the Bank as agent of the seller at the place of payment
and delivery of Railway Receipts. The income, profits and
gains were therefore received in these States and not at
Ratlam. This question should also have been answered in
favour of the Commissioner and the income, profits and gains
arising out of these transactions must be held to have been
received by respondents in Part A or C States.
In both the cases the respondents would not be entitled to a
concessional rate of taxation applicable to Part B States.
The appeal is therefore allowed. The respondents will pay
the costs of the appellant of this Court and of the High
Court.
Appeal allowed.
411