Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF KERALA AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COCHIN COAL COMPANY LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
31/10/1960
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
DAS, S.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 408 1961 SCR (2) 219
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1966 SC 376 (6)
E 1968 SC 389 (3,8,9)
RF 1986 SC1760 (22)
ACT:
Sales Tax--Explanation Sales--Sale and delivery of coal to
Steamship--Whether in the course of export--Constitution of
India, Art. 286--United States of Travancore and Cochin
General Sales Tax Act, 1125, s. 6--Notification dated
February 5, 1954.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent stocked ’bunker coal’ at Candle Island in the
State of Madras. They sold the coal to steamers calling at
the port of Cochin in the State of Travancore-Cochin and
delivered it there. The respondent was assessed to sales
tax on such sales for the year 1951-52 and 1952-53. , The
respondent contended that no sales tax could be levied on
these sales since they were either sales’ in the course of
export’ or in the course of inter-State trade exempt from
sales tax under sub-cl. (1) (b) or cl. (2) of Art. 286 of
the Constitution and in the alternative that they were
exempt from tax under a notification dated February 5, 1954,
issued by the appellant State under which sales failing
within the Explanation to Art. 286(1)(a) made during the
period 4-1-1951 to 31-3-1953 were exempted from liability to
pay tax.
Held that the sales were exempt from tax under the
Government Notification. The coal was delivered to the
actual consumer, i. e., the steamships in Travancore-Cochin
and they were at liberty to consume it :wherever they
desired, either within the State or outside the choice
depending on its convenience and necessity. The delivery
was for consumption within the State and the sales fell
within the Explanation to Aft. 286(1)(a).
Though the sales were in the course of inter-State trade
which were covered by the ban on taxation imposed by Art.
286(2) the levy was validated by the Sales Tax Validation
Act, 1956.
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M. P. V. Sundararamier & Co. v. The State of Andhra Pra-
desh, [1958] S.C.R. 1422, relied on.
The sales were not made ’in the course of export and were
not covered by the ban imposed by Art. 286(1)(b). For Art.
286(1)(b) to apply it was not sufficient that the goods
merely moved out of the territory of India, but it was
further necessary that the goods should be intended to be
transported to a destination beyond India. The concept of
’export’ in Art. 286 postulated the existence of two termini
between which the goods were intended to be transported.
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Burmah Shell Oil Storage & Distributing Co. of India Ltd. v.
The Commercial Tax Officer, C.A. 751 of 957 & C.A. 10 of
1958 (Unreported) followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 287 of 1958.
Appeal from the Judgment and Order dated the 10th September,
1956, of the former Travancore-Cochin in Original Petition
No. 191 of 1955.
Sardar Bahadur, for the Appellants.
K. P. Abraham, P. George, and M.R. Krishna Pillai, for the
Respondent.
1960. October 31. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
AYYANGAR J.-This is an appeal from the judgment of the High
Court of Travancore-Cochin on a certificate of fitness
granted by it under Art. 133(1) of the Constitution and
raises for consideration the liability of the respondent-The
Cochin Coal Company Ltd.to sales-,tax under the United State
of Travancore and Cochin General Sales Tax Act, 1125 (1950).
The following are briefly the facts which it is necessary to
state in order to appreciate the points in controversy in
the appeal. The Cochin Coal Company Ltd. which will be
referred to as the respondent-Company are, as their name
indicates, dealers in coal. The commodity, the sales of
which have given rise to the dispute in this appeal is what
is known as ’ Bunker coal’. The company have their offices
at a place called Fort Cochin which was formerly within the
State of Madras. They import and keep stocks of " bunker
coal " stacked at a place called Candle Island which at the
date relevant to these proceedings was also within the State
of Madras. Part of the activities of the respondent-company
consist in the supply of " bunker coal " from their depots
in Candle Island to steamers arriving in or calling at, the
port of Cochin (in the State of Travancore-Cochin) for the
outward voyage of the steamers from the said port. The
usual procedure by which bunker coal was thus supplied by
the respondent company was briefly
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this: Before the arrival of the steamers, the steamer
agents would enter into contracts with the respondent
company for trimming coal into the bunker of the steamer.
As soon as a steamer arrived in Cochin port, the steamer-
agents would inform the respondent-company and these agents
after securing the necessary papers from the customs and the
port authorities for the loading of the coal into the
steamer, would take these papers to the respondent-company’s
office in Fort Cochin for enabling the latter to perform
their part of the contract. The respondent-company would
thereupon send the goods ordered to the steamer through
their transport contractor. Delivery orders would be issued
to the transport contractor on the strength of which goods
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would be released from their stock in Candle Island. Coal
would then be taken to the steamer berthed in the port in
Travancore-Cochin State waters. The Chief Engineer of the
steamer would inspect the coal and when the same was to his
satisfaction as regards quality, the coal would be per-
mitted to be trimmed into the bunkers of the ships. The
price of the coal would thereafter be paid to the
respondent-company on bills drawn on the steamer-agent. The
above being the nature of the transactions conducted by the
respondent-company, sales-tax was claimed on the sales of
bunker coal by the Travancore-Cochin State. The assessment
years with which this appeal is concerned are 1951-52 and
1952-53, and the assessment therefore was completed on
February 2, 1954, by the sales-tax officer, Circle,
Mattancherry. The respondent-company’s contention that no
sales-tax could be levied on the value of the " bunker coal
" supplied, since the sale was either " in the course of
export ", or " in the course of inter-State trade " and
therefore exempted from taxation by the State under sub-cl.
(1)(b) or (2) of Art. 286 was rejected by the assessing
officer for the reason that the sales in question fell
within the Explanation to Art. 286 (1)(a) and were therefore
" inside " the State of Travancore-Cochin, since the
delivery in pursuance of the sale took place within the
State and the goods were delivered for the purpose of
consumption within
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the State and that notwithstanding that there was an inter-
State element involved in the sale, by the goods being moved
from Candle Island, the same did not affect the power of the
delivery State to levy the tax. The point urged by the
company, that the same sales had been assessed to tax in
Madras State as sales actually taking place there, was also
rejected as irrelevant The respondent-company thereafter
filed an appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner who
allowed the appeal of the company holding that the sales
were " in the course of export " within Art. 286(1)(b), and
that even if they were not such but were ’,inside" sales
falling within the Explanation to Art. 286(1)(a) of the
Constitution, still a notification by the State Government
dated February 5, 1954, exempting such sales from tax,
operated for the benefit of the assessee. Thereafter the
Deputy Commissioner of sales-tax who was the Revisional
authority took up the matter suo motu, called upon the
assessee to show cause why the appellate order should not be
set aside and the entire turnover assessed to sales-tax as
the sales had taken place inside the State only. After
hearing the assessee-company the order of the appellate
Assistant Commissioner was set aside and that of the Sales
Tax Officer restored. The respondent-company then moved the
High Court of Travancore-Cochin under Arts. 226 and 227 of
the Constitution to set aside the order in revision and the
learned Judges of the High Court ordered accordingly. They,
however, granted a certificate under Art. 133(1) of the
Constitution to enable the State Government to file an
appeal to this Court and that is how the matter is now
before us.
Though the respondent-company appear to have presented
before the High Court several lines of argument in support
of their contention that they were entitled to exemption
from sales-tax in respect of bunker coal " trimmed by them
into steamers in the waters of Travancore-Cochin, the
learned Judges rested their decision in favour of the
respondent-company on practically a single ground. Their
reasoning was briefly as follows: Following the Bengal
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Immunity case (1), the learned Judges held that, the bans
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603.
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imposed by cls. 1(a) and 2 of Art. 286 were independent and
that the sale of the coal by the respondent-company which
was in the course of inter-State trade was covered by the
ban contained in Art. 286(2) of the, Constitution
notwithstanding that the sale might satisfy the terms of the
Explanation to sub-cl. 1(a). The learned Government
Pleader, however, had submitted that if the exemption was
derived, from Art. 286(2), the, same would not assist the
assessee, since the validity of the tax was saved by the
Sales-tax Law Validation Act, 1956. The learned Judges how-
ever held that the validation Act could not avail the State
because on their construction of s. 26 of the Travancore-
Cochin General Sales Tax Act, 1125 (corresponding to s. 22
of the Madras Sales Tax Act, 1939) no tax had been levied or
was leviable on sales in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce and that the Validation Act having validated only
taxes already levied could not enable the State to levy a
tax which had not been imposed by the State’s Sales-tax Act.
There is no doubt that the transaction of sale in the
present case was in the course of inter-State trade and
would be covered by the ban on taxation imposed by Art.
286(2). But the view of the learned Judges of the High
Court regarding the construction of s. 26 of the Travancore-
Cochin General Sales Tax Act must now be held to be
incorrect in view of the decision of this Court in M. P. V.
Sundararamier & Co. v. The State of Andhra Pradesh (1). If
therefore the assessee-company could rely only on Art.
286(2) for claiming relief, it must be held to be not
available to them since the Sales Tax Validation Act, 1956,
would have
validated the levy.
Before us, however, learned Counsel for the respondent-
company urged two grounds to sustain the decree of the High
Court in its favour., The first was that as the coal trimmed
into the steam-ships were. meant to be carried outside the
territory of India, the sale was " in the course of export "
within Art. 286 (1)(b) of the Constitution and was therefore
exempt from the levy of sales-tax by the State. This
contention however has to be rejected in view of the
decision
(1) (1958) S.C.R. 1422.
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of this Court in Burmah Shell Oil Storage & Distributing
Co., of India, Ltd. v. The Commercial Tax Officer (1) in
which it was held that in the context and setting in which
the expression " export out of the territory of India "
occurs in Part XIII of the Constitution, it was not
sufficient that goods were merely moved out of the
territory’ of India but that it was further necessary that
the goods should be intended to be transported to a
destination beyond India, so that they were in the course of
" import " into some other locality outside India and
accordingly that aviation spirit sold to an aircraft for
enabling it to fly out of the country was not " exported "
out of the country. The reason was that there was no
destination at which it could be said that the spirit was
imported and that a mere movement of the goods out of the
country following a sale would not render the sale one " in
the course of export " within Art. 286 (1)(b) of the
Constitution. In other words, the concept of export in Art.
286 postulates just as the word import, the existence of two
termini as those between which the goods are intended to
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move or between which they are intended to be transported,
and not a mere movement of goods out of the country without
any intention of their being landed in specie in some fore-
ign port.
The other point urged by learned Counsel was that, in any
event, the sale fell within the Explanation to Art.
286(1)(a) inasmuch as the delivery of the coal was effected
in the State of Travancore-Cochin for the purpose of
consumption in that State. There is no doubt that the goods
having originally been located in Candle Island in Madras
State were moved out of that State by reason of the contract
of sale into the territory of Travancore-Cochin. It had
therefore an interState element which rendered the
Explanation applicable. The delivery was admittedly
effected in the State of Travanoore-Cochin as a direct
result of that sale and was trimmed into the steam-ships in
the Cochin waters. If the purpose of the delivery was
(1) C.A. 751 of 1957 & C.A. 10 of 1958 (Unreported).
225
not export as we have held earlier, it must follow that in
the circumstances of this case it was for the purpose of
consumption in the State since the delivery was to the
ultimate consumer who was to use the goods for his own
purposes and not for the purpose of re-export or with a view
to other transactions of a commercial character in the
goods. It would be noticed that the ultimate buyer-the
steam-ship company could, if it desired, consume the goods
in the sense of exhaust the goods by consumption within the
State or it could take it outside the State and consume it
there, but that was a matter of its choice, dependent on its
will and pleasure. This would not therefore detract from
the delivery to it being for consumption within the State.
Goods might be consumed either by destruction or by way of
use depending on the nature of the goods. Thus edible
articles are generally consumed in a literal sense while
other articles like clothing or furniture etc. are consumed
by being used, though they are not destroyed by such use.
If edible articles are sold and delivered to an ultimate
consumer within a State, it is delivered for the purpose of
consumption within the State, notwithstanding, that the
buyer may not choose to consume the whole of his purchase
within the State but takes part of it outside the State and
consumes it there. If, for instance, a vehicle is sold to
the actual user and the sale is not in the course of export
or with a view to further commercial transactions in it by
the purchaser by way of resale etc., the delivery to the
user is for the purpose of his consumption within the State.
The fact that such a purchaser might in the exercise of the
enjoyment of his property-by way of use or " consumption "-
drive the vehicle to other States does not detract from the
original delivery to him falling within the Explanation to
Art. 286(1)(a). In the present case, the coal having been
delivered into the ship for being consumed by it, it was
open to the master of the vessel to use the coal while the
ship was in the waters of Travancore-Cochin, or if he so
chose take it outside those limits. The position might be
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226
different if the buyer were obliged by contract or by law
not to use or consume the goods sold within the State of
delivery, i.e., where he has no choice to consume it there.
In the case on hand, part of the coal delivered could and
would certainly have been used by the ship during the period
of her stay in the harbour for loading and if such stay were
prolonged owing to unforeseen causes even the entire coal
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might have been exhausted and of course it would have to be
used till the ship left the limits of the port and the
limits of State territory. The crucial fact therefore was
that the coal was delivered to the actual consumer who was
at liberty to consume it wherever he desired-the choice
depending on his convenience and necessity.
In the circumstances, therefore, learned Counsel for the
respondent was right in his submission that the sale of the
"bunker coal" by the assessee-company fell within the
Explanation to Art. 286(1)(a). If there were nothing more
and the liability of the assessee had to be judged with
reference to the charge imposed by the Sales-tax Act of the
State, read in the light of the Constitution, the tax
liability of the respondent-company would not have been open
to doubt or dispute. But the submission of learned Counsel
was that the State Government had power to exempt sales of
any particular designated type from tax liability under s. 6
of the Sales-Tax Act, and that the Government had by a
notification dated February 5, 1954, and published in the
official Gazette, exempted sales such as by the respondent-
company in the present case from the levy of sales-tax
during the assessment years now in question. The exemption
under this notification was no doubt not referred to by the
learned Judges of the High Court but had been one of the
grounds on which the sales-tax appellate authority had set
aside the tax imposition by the Sales-tax Officer and the
point had been specifically urged in the petition filed in
the High Court under Art. 226, and the respondent cannot,
therefore, be denied the benefit of the notification if it
applied.
Section 6 of the Travancore-Cochin Sales-tax Act enacts:
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"The Government may, by notification in the Gazette, make
an exemption.................. in respect of any tax payable
under this Act :-
(i) on the sale of any specified class of goods at all
points or at any specified point or points in the series of
sales by successive dealers ; or
(ii) of any specified class of persons " in regard to the
whole or any part of their turnover".
It is not necessary to set out the rest of the section. In
the Travancore-Cochin Gazette dated February 16, 1954, the
following notification dated February 5, 1954, appeared:
" According to the interpretation given by the Supreme Court
to Art. 286(1) of the Constitution in their judgment in the
State of Bombay v. United Motors India Ltd. certain
categories of inter-State transactions come within the
taxing powers of the State Government. While the judgment
enables the Government of Travancore-Cochin to levy sales-
tax on certain categories of non-resident dealers selling
goods for delivery and consumption in Travancore. Cochin
State from the 1st April 1951, the Government have, after
due consideration, decided to levy sales-tax on such
transactions only from the 1st April 1953-the date
immediately following that on which the Supreme Court
delivered its judgment and to forego the levy prior to that
date ".
Then followed provisions detailing the interim arrangements
for submission of returns, of declarations to be filed and
the manner in which the tax should be assessed and paid.
Though the learned counsel for the appellant-State urged
that the notification could not have the statutory effect of
granting exemption, we are clearly of the opinion that this
was and must be deemed to be one issued in exercise of the
power conferred on the State Government by s. 6(1) whose
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relevant terms we have already extracted. Besides, this is
rather a curious submission to make in view of what had
transpired earlier. The appellate Assistant Commissioner
who set aside the assessment of the respondent-company
stated in his order " Even if it is considered that the sale
is for
228
consumption in this State, the company need not pay tax on
the turnover since Government have exempted from payment of
tax on the sales which took place before April 1, 1953 ".
When this appellate order was set aside by the Deputy
Commissioner acting suo motu in revision, there is no
reference made to the notification in the order and it was
not stated that it had no statutory effect. In its petition
to the High Court under Art. 226, the respondent-company
claimed the benefit of the exemption granted by the
notification dated February 5, 1954, and published in the
Gazette of February 16, 1954, relating to the assessment for
the period April 1, 1951 to April 1, 1953 and it added that
the assessment in question came within the exemption
contained in the Gazette notification. In answer to this a
counter-affidavit was filed by the sales-tax officer who
said : " The notification referred to in the petitioner’s
affidavit has no application to the case as the sales in
question did not come within their orbit ". In other words,
the objection was not that the notification was not a
statutory exercise of the power under s. 6(1) and effective
to grant an exemption to the cases covered by it, but that
the transactions of the respondent-company were not covered
by the notification. The extract we have quoted from the
notification shows that it is specially designed to afford
relief to cases of non-resident dealers engaged in inter-
State transactions which were held to be intra-State
transactions by reason of the application of the Explanation
to Art. 286(1)(a) to such sales by the decision of this
Court in the United Motors Case. As the respondent
company’s transactions in question clearly fall within the
notification by reason of their nature as well as the
assessment years concerned, the respondent-company would be
entitled to the benefit of the tax exemption conferred by
the notification.
The result is that the appeal fails and is dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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