Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M. K KANDASWAMI ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/07/1975
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
GUPTA, A.C.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 1871 1976 SCR (1) 38
1975 SCC (4) 745
CITATOR INFO :
R 1979 SC1475 (30)
D 1981 SC1055 (13)
R 1981 SC1206 (12)
R 1988 SC1487 (46)
D 1990 SC 781 (3,5,21,22,23,31,34,81)
ACT:
Interpretation of Statutes-Provision susceptible of two
constructions-Construction defeating purpose of provision,
if can be resorted to.
Tamilnadu General Sales-tax Act 1959 Section 7-A(1)-
interpretation-Sale or purchase of certain goods generally
taxable under the Act-Act prescribing circumstances when
no tax be attracted- Provisions of section charging such
goods to tax, if workable.
HEADNOTE:
Section 7-A(1 ) of Tamilnadu General Sales-tax Act,
1959, provides that every dealer who in the course of his
business purchases from registered dealer or from any other
person, any goods (the sale or purchase of’ which is liable
to tax under this Act) in circumstances in which no tax is
payable under section 3, 4 or 5, as the case may be, and
either, (a) consumes such goods in the manufacture of other
goods for sale or otherwise; or (b) disposes of such goods
in any manner other than by way of sale in the State. Or
(c) despatches them to a place outside the state except as a
direct result of sale or purchase in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce shall pay tax on the turnover
relating to the purchase aforesaid at the rate mentioned in
s. 3, 4 or 5 as the case may be whatever be the quantum of
such turnover in a year: The proviso to this sub-section
exempts dealer (other than a casual trader or agent of a
non resident dealer), if his turnover for a year is less
than Rs. 25,000/-.
All the respondents are dealers against whom either
pre-assessment proceedings have been initiated or
assessments have been made under s. 7-A of the Act on the
purchase turnover of goods like arecanuts, Gingelly seeds,
butter turmeric and grams and castor seeds. All the
respondents filed writ petitions under Art. 226 of the
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constitution in the High court of Madras challenging the
validity of the pre-assessment proceedings assessments and
the demand notices. The High court allowed the writ
petitions and quashed the impugned proceedings and
assessments. The State has preferred this appeal on the
basis of the certificate granted by the High Court under
Art. 133(1)(c) of the Constitution
It was contended for the appellant that the High Court
was wrong in taking the view that the expression "goods the
sale or purchase of which is liable to tax under this Act"
and the phrase "purchases.. in circumstances in which no tax
is payable under section 3, 4 or 5" are a contradiction in
terms and therefore, s. 7-A(1) being far from clear as to
its intention, the Joint-commercial Tax officer was not
justified in involving this section.
Accepting the contention and allowing the appeal,
^
HELD: (1) Section 7-A at once a charging as well as a
remedial provision. its main object is to plug leakage and
prevent evasion of tax. In interpreting such a provision, a
construction which would defeat its purpose and, in effect,
obliterate it from the statute book, should be eschewed. If
more than one construction is possible, that which preserves
its workability and efficacy is to be preferred to the one
which would render it otiose or sterile. [46F-G]
(ii) The scheme of the Act involves three inter-related
but distinct concepts namely, taxable person’, ’taxable
goods’ and ’taxable event’. All the three must be satisfied
before a person can be saddled with liability under the Act.
The ingredients of-section 7-A(1) are: (1) The person who
purchases the goods is a dealer: (2) The purchase is made by
him in the course of his business; (3) Such purchase is
either from "a registered dealer or from any other person;
(4) The goods purchased are goods the sale or purchase of
39
which is liable to tax under this Act." (5) Such purchase is
"in circumstances in which no tax is payable under s. 3, 4
or 5 as the case may be", and (6) The dealer either. (a)
consumes such goods in the manufacture of other goods for
sale or otherwise or (b) despatches all such goods in any
manner other than by way of sale in the State or (c)
despatches them to place outside the State except as a
direct result of sale or purchase in the course of inter
state trade or commerce. Section 7-h can be involved only if
all these ingredients are cumulatively satisfied [43F; 42G-
H; 43A-B]
(iii) Ingredients (4) and (5) are not mutually
exclusive and the existence of one does not necessarily
negate the other. Both can co-exist and in harmony.
Ingredient (4) would be satisfied if it is shown that the
particular goods were ’taxable goods’ i.e.., the goods the
sale or purchase of which is generally taxable under the
Act. Notwithstanding the goods being ’taxable goods’ there
may be circumstances in a given case, by reason of which the
particular sale or purchase does not attract tax under 9. 3,
4 or S. Section 7-A provides for such a situation and makes
the purchase of such goods taxable in the hands of the
purchasing dealer on his purchase turnover if any of the
conditions (a), (b) and (c) of sub-section (1) of s. 7-A is
satisfied. [44G-H]
(iv) The goods in question are ’taxable goods. The
sales of arecanuts, Gingelly Seeds, turmeric and gram were
not liable to tax in the hands of the sellers as they were
agriculturists and the goods were the produce of the crops
raised by them. Similarly , butter was purchased by the
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assessee concerned directly from the house holders whose
sales are not liable to tax under the Act. Caster-seeds are
said to have been purchased by the assessee concerned from
unregistered dealers under bought notes If this is a fact,
then such sales may not be liable to tax under the Act. In
all these cases, the purchases have been made by the dealers
of goods, the sale or purchase of which is generally liable
to tax under the act, but because of the circumstances
prescribed under the Act no tax was suffered in respect or
the sale of these goods by the sellers. If it is a tact that
the Gingelly seeds and Castor seeds were crushed into oil
and the butter was converted into ghee by the purchasers
dealers concerned. the condition in clause (a) of section 7-
A(1) would be satisfied and s. 7-A would be attracted. If in
the case of arecanuts, turmeric and gram, the purchasers
dealers transported these goods outside the State for sale
on consignment basis, their case would also be covered by
clause (b) or (c) of s. 7-A(1) and such dealers would be
liable to tax on the purchase-turnover of these goods.
[46B-F]
Ganesh Prasad Dixit v. Commissioner of Sales-tax [1969]
3 S.C.R. 490, applied
Malaba. Fruit Products Company Bharananganam
Kottayam and ors. v The Sales Tax officer Palci and ors.
30 S.T.C. 537, Yusuf Shabeer and ors. v. State of Kerala
and ors. 32 S.T.C. 359, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos 1040
to 1072 of 1973.
From the Judgment and order dated the 23rd April, 1971
of the Madras High Court in W.Ps. Nos. 585, 860, 861, 864.
3349,, 4149/1970 and 508, 577, 578, 605-609, 629, 694-
697.797,838,884, 894-897, 902, 909, 934-936, 1015 & 1049 of
1971.
5 . Govind Swaminathan, A. V. Rangam, A. Subhashini,
K. Venkataswami and N.S. Sivam, for the appellant.
Ashok Sen, Y. S. Chitlay, C. Natarajan and S.
Gopalakrishnan, for respondents (In C.As. Nos.1043,1046-
1048,1062-1064,1068-1070, 1049-1050, 1054, 1057-1058, 1061,
1067, 1055, 1065 & 1059/75).
40
T. A. Ramachandran, for the respondents in C.As. 1060-
1061 & 1066/73
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKARIA, J.-These appeals by the State of Tamil Nadu
on a certificate granted by the High Court under Art. 133(1)
(c) of the Constitution raise a question as to the
interpretation and scope of s. 7-A of the Madras General
Sales-tax Act, 1959 (hereinafter called, the Madras Act).
All the respondents are dealers against whom either
pre-assessment proceedings have been initiated or
assessments have been made under s. 7-A of the Act on the
purchase turnover of certain goods.
The assessee-respondents in Civil Appeals Nos. 1040,
1041, 1042 and 1044 of 1973 are said to have purchased
arecanuts from agriculturists, and thereafter transported
those goods outside the State for sale on consignment basis.
The twenty assessees in Civil Appeals Nos. 1046-48,
1054-1057, 1059-1060, 1061 to 1066, 1068 to 1072 of 1973 are
alleged to have purchased Gingelly seeds from
agriculturists. Gingelly seeds so purchased were crushed
into oil by them.
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The four respondents in Civil Appeals Nos. 1045, 1050,
1058 and 1067 of 1973 are alleged to have purchased butter
from householders and then converted it into Ghee.
The three assessees in Civil Appeals Nos. 1051, 1052
and 1053 of 1973 purchased turmeric and grams from
agriculturists and then transported those goods outside the
State for sale on consignment basis.
The assessees in Civil Appeal No 1043 of 1973 are
alleged to have purchased castor seeds from (unregistered)
dealers on bought notes and thereafter crushed them into
oil.
It will be convenient to take tile last mentioned case
as a model. Therein, the Joint Commercial Tax officer, Leigh
Bazar, and Gugai Division, Salem issued a notice dated 11-2-
1970 to the assessee in these terms:
"You are liable to pay purchase tax under s. 7-A
of the ’TNGST Act 1959, on the purchase price of the
Castor Seeds purchased and which was consumed in the
manufacture of other goods for sales or disposed of
otherwise. ’
The turnover of such purchases made from 27-11-
1969 II lo 31-1-1970 amounts to Rs. 3,303.323.67 and
the tax due works out to Rs. 9,099,69.
41
You are hereby requested to pay the amount as
stated above within 10 days of the receipt of this
notice."
This was followed by a Memorandum dated 5-3-1970 in
which it was inter alia stated:
"Admittedly you have purchased the castor seeds
through your own bought notes from registered dealers
whose transactions are not verifiable. As per section
10 the burden of proof that any dealer or any of his
transactions is not liable to tax under this Act shall
lie on such dealer. Therefore, the purchases effected
by you have suffered tax already, should be proved by
you."
All the aforesaid dealers (hereafter referred to as the
assesses filed writ petitions under Art. 226 of the
Constitution in the High Court of Madras challenging the
validity of the pre-assessment proceedings/assessments and
the demand notices. The High Court accepted the contention
of the assesses that "the circumstances contemplated by that
provision (s. 7-A) did not include the possibility or
impossibility of verifiability of the transactions with the
dealers from whom the petitioner had purchased," and further
observed:
" ... that if the purpose of Section 7-A is as
obviously it is, to check evasion, the phraseology has
fallen short of achieving that purpose. Section 7-A
could have detailed the circumstances in which the tax
liability under Section 7-A would arise. But, instead,
the circumstances have been related by the section to
sales or purchases which are liable to tax under the
Act, but for some reason no tax is payable in respect
of them. It appears to be a contradiction in terms, and
we are unable to visualise the circumstances except
what we have noticed above in which Section 7-A could
be applied. In fact, we are unable to visualise the
circumstances in which the two-fold requirement of the
sale being liable to tax but for some reason no tax is
payable under Sections 3, 4 or 5 can arise, except in
cases of exemption. Even there the difficulty arises
whether one can say that the sale which is exempted is
liable to tax, and then assume that because of
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exemption, the tax is not payable. To our minds the
language of Sec. 7-A is far from clear as to its
intention, and we think that the Joint Commercial Tax
officer was not Justified in invoking Section 7-A."
With regard to the purchases of butter, the learned
Judges said:
"We fail to see how this could be done under
Section 7-A. Butter is taxable to multi-point talc and
is levied on the sales. That being the case, we do not
understand how purchase tax can also be levied at the
purchase point of the sales which were also the subject
matter of charge. If the purchases were made from
householders or other persons who
42
are not dealers, even so, inasmuch as the transactions
were not liable to tax at all under the Act, on that
ground, Section 7-A could not be invoked."
On the above reasoning, the High Court by a common
judgment dated 28-5-1971, allowed all the writ petitions
and quashed the impugned proceedings and assessments. Hence
these appeals by the State.
Section 7-A was inserted by the Tamil Nadu Amendment
Act 2 of 1970 with effect from 27-11-1969. At the relevant
time the material part of s. 7-A read as under:
"(1) Every dealer who in the course of his
business purchases from a registered dealer or from any
other person, any goods (the sale or purchase of which
is liable to tax under this Act) in circumstances in
which no tax is payable under "section 3, 4 or 5, as
the case may be, and either,-
(a) consumes such goods in the manufacture of
other goods for sale or otherwise; or
(b) disposes of such goods in any manner other
than by way of sale in the State; or
(c) despatches them to i place outside the State
except as a direct result of sale or purchase
in the course of inter-State, trade or
commerce
shall pay tax on the turnover relating to the purchase
aforesaid at the rate mentioned, in section 3, 4 or 5 as the
case may be whatever be the quantum of such turnover in a
year:
Provided that a dealer (other than a casual trader
or agent of a non-resident dealer) purchasing goods the
sale of which is liable to tax under sub-section (1) of
section 3 shall-not be liable to pay tax under this
sub-section, if his total turnover for a year is less
than twenty five thousand rupees.
(2) . .
(3) . .
On analysis, Sub-section (1) breaks up into these
ingredients:
(1) The person who purchases the goods is a dealer;
(2) The purchase is made by him in the course of his
business;
(3) Such purchase is either from "a registered dealer
or from any other person". -
(4) The goods purchased are "goods the sale or
purchase of which is. liable to tax: under this
Act."
43
(5) Such purchase is "in circumstances in which no tax
is payable under section 3, 4 or 5 as the case may
be", and
(6) The dealer either
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(a) consumes such goods in the manufacture of
other goods for sale or otherwise or
(b) despatches all such goods in any manner other
than by way of sale in the State or
(c) despatches them to a place outside the State
except as a direct result of sale or purchase
in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce.
Section 7-A(1) can be invoked if the above ingredients
are cumulatively satisfied. The Proviso to the sub-section
exempts a dealer (other than a casual trader or agent of a
non-resident dealer), if his turnover for a year is less
than Rs. 25,000/- (which by a subsequent amendment was
raised to Rs. 50,000/-).
The assesses prima facie fall within the definition of
’dealer’ in Section 2(g) which includes not only a person
who carries on the business of "selling, supplying or
distributing" goods but also the one who carries on the
business of "buying" only. Difficulty in interpretation has
been experienced only with regard to that part of the sub-
section which relates to ingredients (4) and (5). The High
Court has taken the view that the expression "goods the sale
or purchase of which is liable to tax under this Act" and
the phrase "purchase in circumstances in which no tax is
payable under section 3, 4 or 5, "are" a contradiction in
terms".
We are unable to accept this interpretation which would
render Section 7-A (1) wholly nugatory. With due respect, it
seems to us that in arriving at this erroneous
interpretation, the learned Judges mixed up concept of goods
liable to tax with the transactions liable to tax under the
Act. The scheme of the Act involves three interrelated but
distinct concepts which may conveniently be described as
’taxable person’, ’taxable goods’ and ’taxable event’. All
the three must be satisfied before a person can be saddled
with liability under that’ Act.. Nevertheless, the
distinction between them, is overlooked. may lead to serious
error in the construction and application of the Act.
’Goods’ Is defined in s. 2(j) as:
"all kinds of movable property (other than
newspapers, actionable claims, stocks and shares and
securities) and includes all materials. commodities,
and articles (including those to be used in the fitting
out, improvement or repair of movable property); and
all growing crops, grass or things attached to, or
forming part of the land which are agreed to be severed
before sale or under the contract of sale".
"Taxable person’ is a ’dealer’ as defined in s. 2(g).
"Taxable event’ is the sale or purchase of ‘goods’ effected
during the accounting
44
period although the tax liability is enforced only after
quantification is effected by assessment proceedings.
’Sale’ is defined in s. 2(n) as .
"every transfer of the property in goods by one
person to another in the course of business for cash or
for deferred payment or other valuable consideration,
but does not include a mortgage hypothecation, charge
or pledge."
Section 3(2) which is the main charging provision,
enjoins that in the case of goods mentioned in the First
Schedule, the tax under this Act shall be payable by a
dealer, at the rate and only at the point specified therein
on the turnover in each year relating to such goods whatever
be the quantum of turnover in that year
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The focal point in the expression, "goods the sale or
purchase of which is liable to tax under the Act," is the
character and class of goods in relation to their
exigibility. In a way this expression contains a definition
of ’taxable goods’, that is, goods mentioned in the First
Schedule of the Act, the sale or purchase of which is liable
to tax at the rate and at the point specified in the
schedule. The words, "the sale or purchase of which is
liable to tax under the Act" qualify the term "goods", and
exclude by necessary implication goods the sale or purchase
of which is totally exempted from tax at all points, under
s. 8 or s 17(1) of the Act. The goods so exempted-not being
taxable goods"-cannot be brought to charge under s. 7-A.
The words "under the Act" will evidently include a
charge created by s. 7-A, also. It is to be noted that s. 7-
A is not subject to s. 35 it is by itself a charging
provision. Section 7-A brings to tax goods the sale of which
would normally have been, taxed at some point in the State,
subsequent to their purchase by the dealer if those goods
are not available for taxation, owing to the act of the
dealer in (a) consuming them in the manufacture of other
goods for sale or other- wise, or (b) despatching them in
any manner other than by way of sale in the State, or (c)
despatching them to a place outside the State except as a
direct result of sale or purchase in the course of inter
State trade or commerce.
Ingredients (4) and (5) are not mutually exclusive and
the existence of one does not necessarily negate the other.
Both can co-exist and in harmony. Ingredient (4) would be
satisfied if it is shown that. the particular goods were
’taxable goods; i.e., the goods the sale or purchase of
which is generally taxable under the Act. Notwithstanding
the goods being ’taxable goods’, there may be circumstances
in a given case, by reason of which the particular sale or
purchase does not attract tax under s. 3, 4 or 5. Section 7-
A provides for such a situation and makes the purchase of
such goods taxable in, the hands of the purchasing dealer on
his purchase turnover if any of the conditions (a), (b) and
(c) of sub-section (1) of s. 7-A is satisfied.
45
The meaning and scope of the phrase "purchases .
circumstances in which no tax is payable under Section 3, 4
or S" and its co-existence with ingredient (4) can be best
understood by applying it to the cases in hand.
In all the forty appeals under consideration, the goods
in question. namely, arecanuts, Gingelly Seeds, turmeric,
grams, castor-seeds and butter are "goods, the sale or
purchase of which is generally taxable under the Act." That
is to say, they are ’taxable goods’. The sales of arecanuts,
Gingelly seeds, turmeric and gram were not liable to tax in
the hands of the sellers as they were agriculturists and the
goods were the produce of the crops raised by them.
Similarly, butter was purchased by the assesses concerned
directly from the house-holders whose sales are not liable
to tax under he Act. Caster-seeds are said ’ to have been
purchased by the assessee concerned from unregistered
dealers under bought-notes. If this is a fact, then such
sales may not be liable to tax under the Act
Thus in all these cases, the purchases have been made
by the dealer, of "goods, the sale or purchase of which is
generally liable to tax under the Act", but because of the
circumstances aforesaid no tax was suffered in respect of
the sale of these goods by the sellers. If it is a fact that
the Gingelly seeds (vide, Civil Appeals Nos. 1046 to 1048,
1054 to 1057, 1059 to 1069/1973) an‘d Caster-seeds (vide
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Civil Appeal 1043/73) were crushed into oil and the butter
(vide Civil Appeals Nos. 1049, 1050, 1059, 1067/73) was
converted into Ghee by the purchasers-dealers concerned, the
condition in clause (a) of sub-section (1) of s. 7-A would
be satisfied and s. 7-A would be attracted. If in the case
of arecanuts (vide Civil Appeals Nos. 1040 to 1044/73),
turmeric and gram (vide Civil Appeals Nos. 1051 to 153/73),
the purchasing dealers transported these goods outside the
State for sale on consignment basis, their case would also
be covered by clause (b) or (c) of s. 7-A (1) and such
dealers would be liable to tax on the purchase-turnover of
these goods.
It may be remembered that s. 7-A is at once a charging
as well as a remedial provision. Its main object is to plug
leakage and prevent evasion of tax. In interpreting such a
provision, a construction which would defeat its purpose
and, in effect, obliterate it from the statute book, should
be eschewed. If more than one construction is possible, that
which preserves its workability and efficacy is to be
preferred to the one which would render it otiose or
sterile. The view taken by the High Court is repugnant to
this cardinal canon of interpretation.
In Ganesh Prasad Dixit v. Commissioner of Sales-tax(1)
s. 7 of the Madhya Pradesh General sales Tax Act, 1959 (for
short, Madhya Pradesh Act) was under challenge. That section
was as follows:
"Every dealer who in the course of his business
purchases any taxable goods, in circumstances in which
no tax under section 6 is payable on the sale price of
such goods and
46
either consumes such goods in the manufacture of other
goods for sale or otherwise or disposes of such goods
in any manner other than by way of sale in the State or
despatches them to a place outside the State except as
a direct result of sale or purchase in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce, shall be liable to pay
tax on the purchase price of such goods at the same
rate at which it would have been leviable on the sale
price of such goods under section 6:
Provided................."
The assessee therein was a firm of building contractors
and was registered as a dealer under the Madhya Pradesh Act.
The firm were purchasing building materials which were
taxable under the Act and were using them in the course of
their business. The Sales-tax officer served a notice upon
them to snow cause why ’best-judgment assessment’ should not
be made against them. The assesses did not offer any
explanation. The Sales-tax officer assessed the turnover in
respect of the sales as ’nil’ and assessed the firm to
purchase tax under s. 7 on the purchase turnover one of the
questions that fell for decision was, whether in the facts
and circumstances of the case the applicant was a dealer
during the assessment period under the Act and the
imposition of purchase tax on him under s. 7 of the Act was
in order. Answering the question in the affirmative, this
Court observed:
"The phraseology used in that section is somewhat
involved, but the meaning of the section is fairly
plain. Where no sales tax is payable under s. 6 on the
sale price of the goods, purchase tax is payable by the
dealer who buys taxable goods in the course of his
business, and (1) either consumes such goods in the
manufacture of other goods for sale, or (2) consumes
such goods otherwise; or (3) disposes of such goods in
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any manner other than by way of sale in the State; or
(2) despatches them to a place outside the State except
as a direct result of sale or purchase in the course of
inter State trade or commerce. The assesses are
registered as dealers and they have purchased building
materials in the course of their business. the building
materials are taxable under the Act, and the appellants
have consumed the materials otherwise than in the
manufacture of goods for sale and for a profit motive.
On the plain words of s. 7 the purchase price is
taxable.
The impugned s. 7-A is based on s 7 of the Madhya
Pradesh Act Although the language of these two provisions is
not completely identical yet their substance and object are
the same. Instead of the longish phrase, "the goods, the
sale or purchase of which is liable to tax under this Act"
employed in s. 7-A of the Madras Act, s. 7 of the Madhya
Pradesh Act conveys the very connotation by using the
convenient, terse expression, "taxable goods". The ratio
decidendi of Ganesh Prasad (supra) is therefore, an apposite
guide for construing s. 7-A. Unfortunately, that decision.
it seems. was not brought to the notice of the learned
Judges of the High Court.
47
Section 5-A of the Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963
(for short, the Kerala Act) which is identical with the
impugned provision, runs thus:
"5A. "Levy of purchase tax-
(1) Every dealer who ill the course of his business
purchases from a registered dealer or from ally
other per son any goods, the sale or purchase of
which is liable lo tax under this Act, in
circumstances in which no tax is payable under
section S, and either-
(a) consumes such goods in the manufacture of
other goods for sale or otherwise; or
(b) disposes of such goods in any manner other
than by way of sale in the State; or
(c) despatches them to any place Outside the
State except as a direct result of sale or
purchase in the course of inter-State trade
or commerce.’
The validity of s. 5-A was challenged by a writ
petition before a learned Judge (Subramaniam Poti J.) of
the Kerala High Court in Malabar Fruit Products Company,
Bharananganam Kottayam and or . v The Sales Tax officer ,
Palai and ors.(1) It was contended, inter alia:
(1) The object sought to be achieved by the
introduction of s. 5-A of the Act had not
been accomplished because the section is
vague
(2) Assuming that the section is clear enough and
can be treated as a charging section, the
section imposes tax not on the sale or
purchase of goods but on its use or
consumption;
(3) That the Sate Legislature had no competency
to impose tax on the use and consumption of
goods and so section is ineffective:
Holding that s. 5-A was valid and intra vires the State
Legislature, the learned Judge explained the scheme of the
section, thus:
"Though normally a sale by a registered dealer or
by a dealer attracts tax, there may be circumstances
under which the seller may not be liable as, for
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example, when his turn over is below the specified
minimum. In such cases the "goods" are liable to be
taxed, but the sales take place in circumstances in
which no tax is payable at the point at which tax is
levied under the Act. If the goods are not available in
the State for subsequent taxation by reason of one or
other of the circumstances mentioned in. clauses (a),
(b) and (c) of section 5A(1) of the Act then the
purchaser is sought to be made liable under section
5A".
48
"Another instance I can conceive of is a case of a
dealer selling agricultural or horticultural produce
grown by him or grown in any land in which he has
interest, whether as owners usufructuary mortgagee,
tenant or otherwise. From the definition of ’turnover ’
in section 2(xxvii) of the Act it is evident that the
proceeds of such sale would be excluded from the
turnover of a person who sells goods produced by him by
manufacture agriculture, horticulture or otherwise,
though merely by such sales he satisfies the definition
of a "dealer" in the Act. Thus, such a person selling,
such produce is t treated as a dealer within the
meaning of the Act and the sales are of goods which are
taxable under the Act but when he sells these goods, it
is not part of his turnover. Therefore, it is a case of
a dealer selling goods liable to tax under the Act in
circumstances in which no tax is payable under the Act.
In such a case, the purchaser is sought to be taxed
under section 5A provided the conditions are satisfied.
The case of growers selling goods to persons to whom
section SA thus applies is covered by this example."
The judgment of the learned judge was affirmed in
appeal by a Division Bench of the same High Court (vide,
Yusuf Shabeer and ors. v. State of Kerala and ors.(1) The
Bench expressly dissented from the view taken by the Madras
High Court in the judgment now under appeal.
In our opinion, the Kerala High Court has correctly
construed s. 5A of the Kerala Act which is in pari materia
with the impugned s. 7A of the Madras Act. "Goods the sale
or purchase of which is liable to tax under this Act in s.
7A(1)" means ’taxable goods’, that is, the kind of goods,
the sale of which by a particular person or dealer may not
be taxable in the hands of seller but the purchase of the
same by a dealer in the course of his business may
subsequently become taxable. We have pointed out and it
needs to be emphasised again that Section 7A itself is a
charging section. It creates a liability against a dealer on
his purchase turnover with regard to goods, the sale or
purchase of which though generally liable to tax under the
Act, have not due to the circumstances of particular sales,
suffered tax under Section 3, 4 or 5, and which after the
purchase, have been dealt by him in any of the modes
indicated in clauses (a),(b) and (c) of Section 7-A (1) .
For the foregoing reasons, we allow these appeals, set
aside the judgment of the High Court and dismiss to writ
petitions. In the circumstances, we would leave the parties
to bear their own costs. All the cases will now go back to
the taxing authority concerned for such further
investigation, proceedings or action as may be necessary in
the particular case, in accordance with law as clarified
above.
V.M.K. Appeals allowed.
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