Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5781 of 1999
PETITIONER:
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH AND ANR. ETC.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ANR. ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/02/2003
BENCH:
SYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI & K..G. BALAKRISHNAN
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
2003 (1) SCR 785
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI, J. The State of Uttar Pradesh and the Sales Tax
Officer (referred to in this judgment as, ’the State’) are in appeal
against the common judgment of a Division Bench of the High Court of
Judicature at Allahabad in Writ Petition No.l 15 of 1995 Union of India and
Anr. v. Slate of U.P. and Am: and batch dated September 1, 1998.
The State, being of the opinion that the second respondent (The Manager,
Department of Telecommunications, of the first respondent hereinafter
collectively referred to as the ’DoT’) failed to file return of the
turnover of the rentals collected from the subscribers for ’the transfer of
right to use’ the telephone system during the year 1988, under the
provisions of the Uttar Pradesh Trade Tax Act. 1948 (for short, ’the U.P.
Act’), called upon the ’DoT to file return therefor. However, no return was
filed by the DoT. The State assessed the tax payable by the DoT in exercise
of the power conferred under sub-section (3) of Section 7 of the U.P. Act.
The DoT challenged the validity of the orders of assessment in the writ
petitions before the High Court on various grounds. The State pleaded
justification for passing the order of assessment in view of the extended
definition of the expression ’Tax on the sale or purchase of goods’ in
clause 29-A of Article 366 of the Constitution of India and the relevant
provisions of the U.P. Act. The High Court, by the impugned judgment and
order, allowed the writ petitions taking the view that (i) the DoT (Union
of India) is not a ’dealer’ within the meaning
[Reported in [1999] 114 STC 288]
By the Constitution (Forty-sixth Amendment) Act.1982] of the Act; (ii)
Section 3-F of the Act applies to work contracts only and not to the rental
charges collected by the DoT; (iii) there is no legislative competence in
the State to levy Trade Tax in view of the fact that the Parliament
authorised imposition of service tax under the Finance Act, 1994 on the use
of the telephone service by the subscribers; (iv) Article 285(1) of the
Constitution of India prohibits the State from imposing any tax on the
property of the Union of India; and (v) in providing telephone service
through the DoT, Union of India is discharging its sovereign function which
cannot be subjected to trade tax.
Mr. Sunil Gupta, the learned senior counsel appearing for the appellants-
State, assailed the validity of the reasoning and conclusions of the High
Court on all the points, referred to above.
Mr. Mukul Rohtagi, the learned Additional Solicitor General, appearing for
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the respondents-DoT, conceded in our view rightly, that he would not be
supporting the judgment of the High Court on the grounds (iv) and (v)
mentioned above. But he contended, rather vehemently, that the DoT would
not fall within the definition of ’dealer’ under the U.P. Act and that the
activity of providing telephone service would not answer the definition of
’the transfer of right to use the goods’ and, therefore, the High Court
rightly quashed the impugned orders of assessment.
Mr. Joseph Vellapally, the learned senior counsel appearing for the
intervenor contended that the contract of the subscribers with the DoT for
installation of telephone was an indivisible contract for providing service
which cannot be split into two separate contracts - one for transfer of the
right to use any goods and the other for the service provided. He
elaborated the contention by pointing out that under the Indian Telegraph
Act, 1885 and the Rules made thereunder, no agreement can be spelt out to
transfer the right to use any goods by the DoT to the subscriber. In any
event, submitted the learned senior counsel, supply of goods, if any, was
incidental to the performance of the contract of service. Relying on the
decision of this Court in The State of Punjab v. M/s Associated Hotels of
India Ltd. [1972] I SCC 472 he argued that such composite contracts are
indivisible as the parties never contracted to sell/supply any goods; such
incidental sale/supply, being merely concomitant of the performance of the
service contracted for, would equally apply to a telephone service contract
which incidentally involved supply of instrument. He further contended that
in providing telephone service, it could not be said that the right to use
the whole system of the telephone exchange was transferred as the
possession and control of the whole system was being shared by all the
subscribers and it remained in the possession and under the control of the
DoT.
The short but question of substantial importance arises for consideration:
can rentals collected by the DoT from the subscribers of telephone in the
State, be assessed to tax under the U.P. Act?
There can be. no dispute that Entry 54 of List II of the 7th Schedule to
the Constitution of India authorises a State to impose tax on the sale or
purchase of goods other than newspapers, subject of course, to the
provisions only of Entry 92-A of List I which deals with taxes on sale or
purchase of goods where such sale or purchase takes place in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce. However, levy of tax on the sale or purchase
of newspapers is not within the legislative competence of either the State
or the Union. The expression ’Tax on the sale or purchase of goods’ is
given extended meaning by inserting clause 29-A in Article 366 of the
Constitution, which, to the extent relevant, reads as under :
"29 A. ’Tax on the sale or purchase of goods’ includes -(a) to (c) xxx
xxx xxx
(d) a tax on the transfer of the right to use any goods for any purpose
(whether or not for a specified period) for cash, deferred payment or other
valuable consideration;
(e) to (f) xxx xxx
xxx"
After insertion of the aforementioned clause in regard to tax on the sale
or purchase of goods, the State Acts, including the U.P. Act, were amended
to fall in line with the above definition.
The charging section in the U.P. Act is Section 3, which, insofar as it is
relevant for our purposes, is quoted here under :
"Section 3 - Liability to tax under the Act - (1) Subject to the provisions
of this Act, every dealer shall for each assessment year, pay a tax at the
rates provided by or under Section 3-A or Section 3-D on his turnover of
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sales or purchases or both, as the case may be. which shall be determined
in such manner as may be prescribed."
The liability under Section 3 is on every dealer, for each assessment year,
to pay a tax at the rates provided by or under various sections of the U.P.
Act. Here, it would be useful to refer to Section 3-F which, inter alia,
prescribes rate of tax on ’transfer of the right to use any goods’:
"3-F. Tax on the right to use any goods or goods involved in the execution
of works contract - (Notwithstanding anything contained in Section 3-A or
Section 3-AAA or Section 3-D but subject to the provisions of Sections 14
and 15 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956, every dealer shall, for each
assessment year, pay a tax on the net turnover of -
(a) transfer of the right to use any goods for any purpose (whether or
not for a specified period) for cash, deferred payment or other valuable
consideration; or
(b) transfer of property in goods (whether as goods or in some other
form) involved in the execution of a works contract,
at such rate not exceeding [twenty per cent] as the State Government may,
by notification, declare and different rates may be declared for different
goods or different classes of dealers.
(2) For the purposes of determining the net turnover referred to in sub-
section (1), the following amounts shall be deducted from the total amount
received or receivable by a dealer in respect of a -
(a) transfer referred to in clause (a) of sub-section (1) whether such
transfer was agreed to during that assessment year or earlier. -
(i) to (iii) xxx xxx xxx
(b) xxx xxx
xxx"
A perusal of the provision, extracted above, shows that sub-section (1) of
Section 3F commences with a non-obstante clause, excludes the operation of
Section 3A, Section 3-AAA and Section 3-D but is subject to the provisions
of Sections 14 and 15 of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. It imposes on
every dealer, for each assessment year, the liability to pay a tax inter
alia, on the net turnover of transfer of ’the right to use any goods’, for
any purpose, whether or not for a specified period, for cash, deferred
payment or other valuable consideration at such rate, as may be prescribed
by the State
Substituted by U.P Act No 31 of 1985 w.e.f. 139 1985 Government. The
prescribed rate cannot exceed twenty five per cent but the State Government
may, by notification, declare different rates for different goods or
different classes of dealers. The net turnover in respect of a transfer
referred to in clause (a) of sub-section (1), has to be determined after
making deductions enumerated in sub-section (2) read with Rule 44C of the
Tax Rules, Unfortunately, the High Court failed to notice Section 3F in its
entirety and erred in confining it only to "goods involved in the execution
of works contract’.
For understanding the true import of the aforementioned provisions, it
would be appropriate to notice the definitions of the terms ’business’,
’dealer’, ’goods’, and ’sale’ defined in clauses (aa), (c), (d) and (h)
respectively, of Section 2 of the U.P. Act, which read as under:
"(aa)’business’. in relation to business of buying or selling goods,
includes -
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(i) xxx xxx
xxx
(ii) the execution of any works contract or the transfer of the right to
use any goods for any purpose (whether or not for a specified period.
(iii) xxx xxx
x.xx
but does not include any activity in the nature of mere service or
profession which does not involve the purchase or sale of goods."
(c) ’dealer’ means any person who carries on in Uttar Pradesh (whether
regularly or otherwise) the business of buying, selling, supplying or
distributing goods directly or indirectly, for cash or deferred payment or
for commission, remuneration or other valuable consideration and includes -
(i) to (iii) xxx xxx
xxx
(iv) a Government which, whether in the course’ of business or otherwise
buys, sells, supplies or- distributes goods, directly or otherwise for cash
or for deferred payment or for commission, remuneration or other valuable
consideration;
(v) every person who acts within the State, as an agent of a dealer
residing outside the State, and buys, sells, supplies or distributes goods
in the State or acts on behalf of such dealer as -
(a) a mercantile agent as defined in the Sale of Goods Act, 1930; or
(b) an agent for handling of goods or documents of title relating to
goods; or
(c) an agent for the collection or the payment of the sale price of
goods or as a guarantor for such collection or such payment;
(vi) a firm or a company or other body corporate, the principal office or
headquarters whereof is outside the State having a branch or office in the
State, in respect of purchases or sales, supplies or distribution of goods
through such branch or office.
(vii) xxx xxx
xxx
(viii)every person who carries on business of transfer of the right to use
any goods for any purpose (whether or not for a specified period) for cash,
deferred payment or other valuable consideration.
Provided xxx xxx"
"(d) ’goods’ means every kind or class of movable property and includes all
material commodities and articles involved in the execution of a works
contract, and growing crops, grass, trees and things attached to or
fastened to anything permanently attached to the earth which under the
contract of sale are agreed to be severed but does not include actionable
claims, stocks, shares, securities or postal stationery sold by the Postal
Department."
"(h) ’sale’ with its grammatical variations and cognate expressions, means
any transfer of property in goods (otherwise than by way of a mortgage,
hypothecation, charge or pledge) for cash or deferred payment or other
valuable consideration, and include -
(i) to (iii) xxx xxx
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xxx
(iv) a transfer of the right to use any goods for any purpose (whether or
not for a specified period) for cash, deferred payment or other valuable
consideration:"
Inasmuch as under Section 3 read with Section 3F of the U.P. Act the
liability to pay tax, inter alia, on ’the transfer of the right to use any
goods’ at the specified rate is on a dealer, as defined in Section 2(c)
thereof, extracted above, we shall examine the scope of the definition to
ascertain - is the DoT a dealer?
The word ’dealer’ means a person who (whether regularly or otherwise)
carries on the business in U.P. and includes, inter alia, a government
[sub-clause (iv)] which (whether in the course of business or otherwise)
undertakes buying, selling, supplying or distributing goods directly or
indirectly for cash or deferred payment or for commission, remuneration or
other valuable consideration. Now it becomes necessary to look into the
definition of ’buy’ and ’sell’. The word ’buy’ is not defined. It is an
antonym of ’sell’ and has to be construed accordingly in the light of the
definition of ’sale’ in clause (h), quoted above, It is an inclusive
definition. It means any transfer of property in goods and includes among
other transactions, a transfer of the right to use any goods for any
purpose (whether or not for a specified period) for cash, deferred payment
or other valuable consideration. It is thus clear that in regard to a
transfer of the right to use any goods both a person and a government will
be within the ambit of the definition of ’dealer’ subject to the following
distinction: A person to be a ’dealer’ should carry on the business of
buying selling etc., whether regularly or otherwise, but a government which
buys, sells etc. (whether in the course of business or otherwise) will be a
’dealer’ for purposes of the U.P. Act. Inasmuch as the definition of ’sale’
includes any transfer of property in the goods and a transfer of the right
to use any goods for any purpose, the DoT which engages in transfer of
right to use any goods will be a ’dealer’ within the meaning of sub-clause
(iv) of clause (c) of Section 2 of the U.P. Act.
In M/s. Vrajlal Manilal and Co and Anr. v. State of M.P. and Anr., [1986]
Supp. SCC 201, this Court considered the meaning of Explanation II to
Section 2 (d) of the Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1959, which was
similar in terms to sub-clause (iv) of clause (c) of Section 2 of the U.P.
Act and held: "The language of Explanation II shows that its purpose is to
create a legal fiction, and that while under the main clause, for a person
to be a dealer, he must carry on the business of buying, selling, supplying
or distributing goods, even if the Central Government or a State Government
or any of their departments or offices does not carry on such business, if
it buys, sells, supplies or distributes goods, it is to be deemed to be a
dealer for the purposes of the M.P. Sales Tax Act, that is. for the
purposes of the levy and collection of tax under M.P. Sales Tax Act. After
the amendment of clause (d) by the 1971 Act, it is irrelevant for the
purposes of the levy of tax under the M.P. Sales Tax Act whether the
Central Government or a State Government or any of their departments or
offices have bought or sold goods in the course of business."
While so, by U.P. Act 31 of 1995, sub-clauses (vii) and (viii) which deal
with ’person’ were inserted in clause (c) of Section 2 with effect from
September 3, 1985. Sub-Clause (vii) incorporates business of transfer of
property in goods involved in the execution of a work contract and sub-
clause (viii) incorporates business of transfer of the right to use any
goods for any purpose.
In the present discussion, we are concerned with the effect of insertion of
sub-clause (viii) in clause (c) of Section 2 on the aforementioned
conclusion that the DoT is a ’dealer falling in sub-clause (iv) of the said
clause. It was contended by the learned Additional Solicitor General that
in sub-clause (iv) about ’a government,’ it was not specifically provided
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as was done in sub-clause (viii) in regard to a person, that he must be
carrying on the business of a transfer of the right to use any goods for
any purpose; in the absence of those words in clause (iv), the DoT, even if
it transferred a right to use any goods for any purpose for rentals, would
not fall within the meaning of the term ’dealer’. He urged that every
section, every clause and every word in a legislation should be given some
meaning; it could not be presumed that the legislature carried out the
exercise in futility in adding sub-clause (viii) to Section 2(c). The
intention of the legislature, it was submitted, in adding sub-clause (viii)
to Section 2(c) was only to make it clear that ’a government’ would not be
a ’dealer’ in regard to the extended meaning of ’sale’ which included the
transfer of a right to use any goods but only in regard to sale of goods in
its traditional meaning. Mr. Gupta countered that contention by inviting
our attention to the Statement of Objects and Reasons of U.P. Act 31 of
1995 that the sub-clauses (vii) and (viii) were added in the definition of
the term ’dealer’ to remove difficulties in the assessment of tax in the
transaction relating to transfer of a right to use any goods. The
legislature, submitted the learned counsel, earlier amended the definition
of ’sale’ in Section 2(h) leaving the definition of ’dealer’ static but
later is was thought that ex abundanti cautela the definition of ’dealer’
might also be amended like the definition of ’sale’ and by U.P. Act No. 31
of 1995 a new package of amendments was introduced relating to the transfer
of a right to use any goods by adding sub-clause (viii) to clause (c) of
Section 2. He argued that addition of sub-clause (viii) in the definition
of ’dealer’ did not mean that prior to 1995, in various Ordinances and the
U.P. Act, having regard to the extended definition of ’sale’, did not
include a person or a government ’transferring the right to use any goods’
within the meaning of ’dealer’. It was emphasised that if ’the DoT’,
whether in the course of business or otherwise, transferred a right to use
any goods, it was covered by the definition of ’dealer’ even before the
1995 amendment inserted sub-clause (viii) in clause (c) of Section 2 and
that position continued even thereafter.
We are afraid, we cannot accede to the contentions of the learned
Additional Solicitor General. After insertion of clause 29-A in Article 366
of the Constitution and consequential amendments of the term ’sale’ in the
U.P. Act, if ’sale’ is construed in the sense it was understood before the
said amendments, it will be a clear negation of the constitutional and
statutory provisions, therefore, such a contention cannot be accepted. We
have already held above that before insertion of sub-clause (viii) in
Section 2(c) of the U.P. Act, the activity of a transfer of the right to
use any goods for any purpose (whether or not for a specified period) for
cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration, fell within the
meaning of ’sale’ in clause (h) so the DoT while so doing could not but be
a ’dealer’ within the meaning of Section 2(c) of the U.P. Act. If that was
the position before the enactment of U.P. Act 31 of 1 995 which inserted,
inter alia, sub-clause (viii), then unless a contrary intention appears
from the amended provisions, in our view, the pre-amendment position shall
continue. Had the intention of the legislature been to change that position
and exclude ’a government’ from the definition of ’dealer’ in regard to a
transfer of the right to use the goods, it would have said so specifically.
It follows that in view of the extended meaning of sale of goods, the DoT
would continue to be within the ambit of a ’dealer’ under the U.P. Act even
in regard to transfer of a right to use any goods after insertion of sub-
clause (viii) in clause (c) of Section 2 by U.P. Act 31 of 1995. We are,
therefore, unable to uphold the reasoning of the High Court that in view of
amendment of Section 2(c) in 1995, adding sub-clause (viii). sub-clauses
(vi) had to be interpreted differently so as to exclude the DoT from the
meaning of ’dealer’ and also the contention of the learned Additional
Solicitor General. In our view, insertion of sub-clauses (vi) and (vii) in
clause (c) of Section 2 was, as submitted by Mr. Gupta, by way of abundant
caution. This is not an unusual feature of the legislation. As long back as
in 1865 in The Wakefield Local Board of Health v. The West Riding and
Grimsby Railway Company, LR (1865) QB 84, Cockburn, C.J. held:
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"I am opinion that the objection raised by the respondents was untenable. I
think the words inserted at the end of the definition in the interpretation
clause, section 3 of the 8 Vict.c.20, were interested, as Mr. Cleasby
argues, from excess of caution, in the apprehension that justices, if not
warned of what the law is, might act although inserted; and the legislature
thought that, if they did not actually include what would be virtually
implied, it might be assumed that it was excluded."
In Re: Sir Stuart Samuel. (1913) Appeal Cases 514, the Privy Council
observed:
"It is desirable to notice an argument derived from s.4 of 41 Geo.3,c.52,
passed in 1801. This section disqualifies for a seat in the Parliament of
the United Kingdom any one who makes a contract with a Commissioner of His
Majesty’s Treasury in Ireland or with any other person whomsoever for or on
account of the public service in Ireland. This was surplusage (such is the
argument) if the Act of 1782 had already made such contracts, irrespective
of place, a ground of disqualification for the British Parliament, since
all persons disqualified for the British Parliament were by s.l of the Act
of 1801 already disabled from sitting in the Parliament of the United
Kingdom, at all events for British constituencies. There are several
answers to this contention. It is not a conclusive argument as to the
construction of an earlier Act to say that unless it be construed in a
particular way a later enactment would be surplusage. The later Act may
have been designed, ex abundante cautela, to remove possible doubts."
To the same effects are the views expressed by this Court in Raj Bahadur
Kanwar Raj Nath and Ors. v. Pramod C. Bhatt Custodian of Evacuee Property,
[1955] 2 SCR 977:
"The operative portion of the section which confers power on the Custodian
to cancel a lease is unqualified and absolute and could not be abridged by
reference to the non-obstante clause which was only inserted ex abundanti
cautela with a view to repel a possible contention that the section does
not by implication repeal statutes conferring rights on lessees."
And in Bhikoba Shankar Dhumal (dead) by Lrs. and Ors. v. Mohan Lal Punchand
Tathed and Ors., [1982] 1 SCC 680. This Court held :
"It appears to us that the said paragraph was introduced by way of abundant
caution to get over the possible objection raised on the basis of the
decision in the case of Dadarao v. Slate of Maharashtra, AIR (1970) Bom.
144. The said paragraph is merely declaratory of what the true legal
position had always been even from the commencement of the Act. The
introduction of an express provision to the above effect does not have the
effect of altering the true legal position as explained by us above even
without the aid of such express provision. This becomes further clear from
the observations found in the decision of this Court in Raghunath Laxman
Wani v. State of Maharashtra, [1971] 3 SCC 391."
It may be that the same amount of precaution was not taken by the
legislature in defining ’dealer’ with respect to ’ a government, in sub-
clause (iv) as was done regarding ’a person’ by inserting sub-clauses (vii)
and (viii) in clause (c) of Section 2; but that, in our view, in the light
of the above discussion, would hardly make any difference in construing the
provisions of sub-clause (iv) of clause (c) in Section 2 of the U.P. Act.
Before taking up the other contentions we may conveniently dispose of a
short point - ambit of the definition of the term ’goods’ - quoted above.
It is defined in very wide terms so as to bring in both tangible and
intangible objects. It takes in its fold every kind or class of movables,
including all material commodities and articles involved in the execution
of a works contract and growing crops, grass, trees and things attached to
or fastened to anything permanently attached to the earth which under the
contract of sale are agreed to be severed but excluding actionable claims,
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stocks, shares, securities or postal stationery sold by the Postal
Department. According to the DoT, what is being supplied as service is a
telephone connection with an instrument which is connected with permanent
telephone lines laid up to the subscriber’s place where the telephone
system is installed and the same is connected with the exchange. Telephone
instruments and other movables, including wiring, cable etc., are
undoubtedly goods. However, the position of telephone exchange was not
without demur on the ground that they were housed in immovable properties.
That objection need not detain us because intangible object, like
electricity which is generated in projects and transmitted through sub-
stations, housed in buildings, has been held to be goods. In Commissioner
of Sales Tax, Madhya Pradesh, Indore v. Madhya Pradesh Electricity Board,
Jabalpur, [1969] I SCC 200, a Bench of three learned Judges of this Court
took the view that the electricity falls within the meaning of ’goods’
under the Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1959. That view was
affirmed in a recent judgment of a Constitution Bench of this Court in
State of A.P. etc. v. National Thermal Power Corpn. Ltd. and Ors. etc.,
[2002] 5 SCC 203 holding that electricity though an intangible object is
[good] covered by Entry 54 of List II of Schedule VII to the Constitution
as also Section 2(d) of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. The Supreme Court
Wisconsin (U.S.A.) in Mckinley Telephone Company v. Cumberlant Telephone
Company, [152 Wis. 359; 140 N.W. 38; 1913 Wise. Lexis 77] held the view
that the furnishing of telephone service might be classed as the supplying
of a commodity constituting a subject of commerce. We, therefore, have no
hesitation in holding that telephone connection and all other accessories
which give access to the telephone exchange with or without instruments are
’goods’ within the meaning of Section 2(d) of the U.P. Act.
The next question, that generated lengthy debates, is : Does the supply of
telephone connection involve a transfer of the right to use any goods or
amount to providing a service?
We have noticed above that the liability to pay tax under the U.P. Act is
on every dealer on his turnover of sales of purchases; it is also concluded
that telephone connection along with all accessories falls within the
meaning of ’goods’; we have also opined that the definition of ’sale’ in
clause (h) of Section 2 is an inclusive definition and includes a transfer
of the right to use any goods for any purpose.
It is necessary to notice here certain provisions governing supply of
telephone connection provided by the DoT which alone has exclusive
privilege and control. We have perused ’the General Rules Governing the
Provision of Telephone Connections, Telex Connections and Accessories,
Etc.’ (for short, ’the general rules’). Rule 3 of the general rules says
that all telephone connections and other similar services provided or
authorised by the department shall, unless governed by a separate contract,
be subject to the conditions set forth in the Indian Telegraph Rules. It
further says that the Divisional Engineer shall install and, subject to
observance of the Indian Telegraph Rules or the specific Hiring Contract by
the subscriber, maintain in good working order the equipment and apparatus
provided by the department and when necessary, substitute a different
apparatus in accordance with departmental instructions issued from time to
time. The Indian Telegraph Act, 1885 (for short, ’the ITA 1885’) defines
’telegraph’ to mean, any appliance, instrument, material or apparatus used
or capable of use for transmission or reception of signs, signals writing
images and sounds or intelligence of any nature by wire, visual or other
electro-magnetic emissions, Radio waves or Herzian waves, galvanic,
electric or magnetic means. Telegraph line’ defined in Section 3(4) of the
ITA 1885, means a wire or wires used for the purpose of a telegraph, with
any casing, coating, tube or pipe enclosing the same, and any appliances
and apparatus connected therewith for the purpose of fixing or insulating
the same. In The Senior Electric Inspector and Ors. v. Laxmi Narayan Chopra
and Ors., [1962] 3 SCR 146, a Bench of three learned Judges held that
’Telegraph line, is comprehensive enough and means a wire or wires used for
the purpose of an appliance or apparatus for receiving telegraphic or other
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communications by means of electricity, and it need not be a continuous
physical channel from the point of transmission to the point of reception.
A wireless transmitter transmits sound as electro-magnetic waves and the
said waves are detected by the aerial and fed into the receiving apparatus
by wires. So the wires of the aerial as well as of the apparatus are used
for the purpose of the apparatus receiving communications. Thus, the
receiving apparatus employs ’telegraph lines’ within the meaning of Section
3(4) of the ITA 1885 Section 4 of the ITA 1885 declares that the Central
Government shall have the exclusive privilege of establishing, maintaining
and working telegraphs. In State of Bihar v. Mangal Sao, [1963] I SCR 148.
this Court was inclined to approve that Section 4 applied to telephone. The
same view is reiterated in Delhi Science Forum and Ors. etc. v. Union of
India and Anr. etc., [1996] 2 SCC 405. Under Section 7 of the ITA 1885, the
Central Government is empowered to make rules consistent with the Act for
the conduct of all or any telegraphs, established, maintained or worked by
the Government or by persons licensed under this Act. Clause (e) thereof
provides that the rules may also be framed in regard to the conditions and
restrictions, subject to which any telegraph line, appliance or apparatus
for telegraphic communication shall be established, maintained, worked,
repaired, transferred, shifted, withdrawn or disconnected. Sections 20 and
21 make unauthorised use of telegraph an offence.
The Indian Telegraph Rules. 1951 (for short, ’the Rules’) were framed in
exercise of the power under Section 7 of the ITA 1885. Rules in Part-V
thereof deal with telephones. Under the Rules, the subscribers are required
to take care of the telephone apparatus and in the event of the apparatus,
in the premises of the subscribers, being damaged or lost, they are obliged
to pay the cost of replacing and repairing. Rule 413 says that all services
will be subject to the said Rules. Rule 411 gives classification of the
connections under various Heads. Rule 412 provides for supply and
maintenance of equipment by the Divisional Engineer, Telegraph. The Rules
also provide for disconnection of service in certain conditions. Rule 434
prescribes charges for various services, like installation and additional
facilities, reconnection, transfer, shifting, etc. For ’Measured Rate
System’ bi-monthly rentals have to be paid by the subscriber at the
prescribed rate as also the fees. Different rate is provided for ’Flat Rate
System’. The Rules, referred to above, show complete control of the DoT in
regard to all matters connected with the installation of the telephone by
providing apparatus and matters connected therewith including the charges
payable by the subscribers for the service provided. Rule 437 says that the
rental for a period shall be payable before the commencement of that
period. Rule 438 defined the term ’Rental periods’ - Monthly, bi-monthly
and annual rental periods shall commence from the first of a month or from
such other day as the Telegraph Authority may fix: rentals for broken
periods of a month shall be charged proportionately. Though calls whether
local, STD or ISD are charged separately, rentals give allowance for
certain number of free calls.
The case of the State is that in supplying instruments, accompaniments and
the telephone connection to a subscriber, the DoT which is having exclusive
privilege, is transferring the right to use those goods. The DoT maintains
that it is providing a service which does not involve transfer of a right
to use any goods and that by the Finance Act, 1997, the Parliament has
imposed service tax, as such the State cannot levy any tax under the U.P.
Act. The State, however, did not dispute that providing a telephone to a
subscriber was a service, but what was pressed was that in providing
service, ’transfer of the right to use the instrument, appliance and the
whole exchange system was involved’. Now, it is clear that when the DoT
provides a telephone to a subscriber, it installs instrument, accessories
and gives necessary connection which enables him to access the whole system
to avail of the service by making out-going calls and receiving incoming
calls whether local, STD or ISD and that is compendiously termed as
’service’.
The question whether a given activity is one of sale or service is a vexed
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question. The terminology employed to describe an activity as sale or
service is not conclusive in itself. By calling sale as service or vice-
versa, the substance of the transaction will not get altered. The question
has to be determined by discerning the substance of the transaction in the
context of the contract between the parties or in a case of statutory
contract in the light of the relevant provisions of the Act and the Rules.
If an activity or activities are comprehensively termed as ’service’ but
they answer the description of ’sale’ within the meaning of a Statute, they
can nonetheless be regarded sale for the purpose of that Statute. In other
words, it is possible, an activity may be service for purposes of one Act
and sale for purposes of another Act. It may also be that in a given case,
on the facts of that case, a particular activity can be treated as
’service’ but in a different fact situation the same could be sale under
the same Statute. In M/s. Northern India Caterers (India) Ltd. v. it.
Governor of Delhi, [1980] 2 SCC 167 the question that fell for
consideration of the Constitution Bench of this Court was, whether the
service of meals to casual visitors in the restaurant was taxable as a
’sale’, (i) when the charges were lump sum per meal or (ii) when they were
calculated per dish? It was held that in both the above situations it would
be ’service’. On an application filed to review the said judgment while
dismissing the review petition it was observed that the judgment had rested
on the factual foundation and must be understood in that light. Rejecting
the contention that the respondent therein as well as the States were
apprehensive that the judgment would be invoked by the restaurant-owners in
cases where there was a sale of food and title in the food passes to the
customers, as one which could not be reasonably entertained, it was held:
"Indeed, we have no hesitation in saying that where food is supplied in an
eating-house or restaurant, and it is established upon the facts that the
substance of the transactions, evidenced by its dominant object, is a sale
of food and the rendering of services is merely incidental, the transaction
would undoubtedly be exigible to sales tax."
The learned Additional Solicitor General in support of his contention
submitted that the DoT was providing service so it is not liable to tax
under the U.P. Act and invited our attention to the second part of the
definition of the word ’business’ in clause (aa) of Section 2. The
definition is extracted above. The word ’business’ is defined in relation
to business of buying or selling goods. The definition is in two parts. The
first part includes among others transfer of the right to use any goods for
any purpose (whether or not for a specified period). The second part which
excludes any activity in the nature of mere service not involving purchase
or sale of goods reads, "but does not include any activity in the nature of
mere service or profession which does not involve the purchase or sale of
goods." "It was argued that any activity in the nature of mere service or
profession is excluded from the definition of the term ’business’ and as
the DoT is providing service, the same cannot be subjected to tax. In our
view, the contention though attractive, is devoid of any substance. There
are more answers than one to this contention. The first is that the
definition of a ’dealer’ takes in ’a Government’, when it sells, supplies,
etc. whether in the course of business or otherwise. Therefore, it is not
necessary that the activity of sale, etc. by the DoT should be in the
course of business. Even assuming that the supply of the telephone to a
subscriber, being, a service, falls outside the meaning of the term
’business’, the DoT would nonetheless be liable to pay tax under the U.P.
Act as a ’dealer’ for the simple reason of transferring the right to use
the telephone instrument/apparatus and the whole system as that falls
within the extended meaning of ’sale’ under clause (h) of Section 2 of the
U.P. Act. And the second is, only such service is excluded from the
definition of the term ’business’ which does not involve the purchase or
sale of goods. In the instant case, it cannot be legitimately disputed that
the service involves installation of instrument and access to the exchange
and telephone system as a whole which has been found to fall within the
meaning of the term ’sale’. Therefore, the second part of the definition of
the term business is of no help to the DoT.
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It was then urged that in providing telephone service by the DoT,
installation of instrument/apparatus and appliances is insignificant and in
many cases subscribers themselves have their own instruments; the more
important part is access to the area exchange and the whole system
connected thereto without which the installation is of no consequence and
the same remains under the possession and full control of the DoT so there
was no transfer of the right to use any goods so as to attract liability
under the U.P. Act. We are not persuaded to accept this submission. It is
true that under the Rules, referred to above, as service, a number is
allotted, an instrument/ apparatus and other appliances are installed at
the premises of a subscriber and the same are connected with the area
exchange to enable him to have access to the whole system, to dial and to
receive calls. In our view, it makes no difference whether any subscriber
replaces instruments of the DoT with his own instrument because the most
important thing is the connection of the subscriber’s telephone number with
the area exchange and that was provided by the DoT. Insofar as the
contention of giving possession or control of the whole system of Exchange
is concerned, which is said to comprise mostly of immovable property, it
needs to be borne in mind that handing over of the possession is not sine
qua non completing the transfer of the right to use any goods. It was so
held by a Constitution Bench of this Court in 20th Century Finance
Corporation Ltd. and Am: v. Stale of Maharasahtra, [2000] 6 SCC 12. A
’transfer of the right to use any goods’ will be complete according to the
law laid down by the majority in that case, on completion of the contract
to transfer of the right to use the goods. The contention that the area
telephone exchanges and other systems would remain under the control of the
DoT, are irrelevant to complete such a transfer. Even otherwise, after
installation of the instrument and other appliances, once the DoT connects
the telephone line of the assigned number of the subscriber to the area
exchange, access to other telephones is established. There cannot be denial
of the fact that giving such an access would complete the transfer of the
right to use the goods. However, reliance is placed on the decision of the
High Court of Andhra Pradesh in Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Ltd. v. Commercial
Tax Officer, [1990] 77 STC 182 which was affirmed by this Court in State of
Andhra Pradesh and Am. v. Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Ltd., [2002] 126 STC 114.
It is unnecessary to deal with these cases in any detail; suffice it to
say, in that case there was a finding of fact that the transaction did not
involve transfer of the right to use the machinery in favour of contractors
and that determined the issue.
It may be mentioned that during the relevant period (1988) no service tax
was enforced. It was in 1994 that service tax was levied for the first time
as per Chapter V of the Finance Act, 1994. Section 66 thereof created
charge of service tax in regard to taxable services. ’Service tax’ is
defined in clause (34) of Section 65 to mean tax chargeable under the
provisions of that Chapter. ’Taxable service’ is defined (under sub-clause
(b) of clause 41 of Section 65) to mean any service provided to. inter
alia, a subscriber by the telegraph authority in relation to a telephone
connection. No provision of the U.P. Act or the said Finance Act, 1994 or
the Constitution of India is brought to our notice to hold that rentals
collected by the DoT from the subscriber cannot be subjected to tax as is
done under the U.P. Act. Merely because service tax is imposed by the
Parliament under the said Finance Act in respect of telephone connection to
a subscriber, is no ground to hold that the.State cannot levy tax under the
U.P. Act.
For the aforementioned reasons, we hold that providing telephone service by
the DoT which comprises of allotment of number, installation of an
instrument/apparatus and other appliances at the premises of a subscriber,
which are connected with a telephone line to the area exchange to enable
him to have access to the whole system, to dial and to receive calls, in
effect, falls within the meaning of the extended definition of ’sale’, viz.
within the meaning of ’the transfer of the right to use any goods’ and the
fact that it is described as service under the ITA 1885 and the Rules made
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thereunder or under the Finance Act. 1994 would not militate against the
same being a ’sale’ within the meaning of the U.P. Act.
The contention that remains to be considered is that in a contract
providing telephone by the DoT the service and sale - transfer of the right
to use the goods - are so inter-twined that the rentals cannot be
attributed to one or the other part and, therefore, such a composite
contract cannot be dissected so as to attribute one part of the rentals to
service and the other part to the transfer of the right to use the goods
and accordingly assess that part of rentals to tax. Reliance was placed on
a decision of this Court in Northern India Caterers, (supra) and it was
added that it had resulted in insertion of sub-clause (f) in clause 29-A of
Article 366 of the Constitution; the argument proceeded that as there was
no such provision to tax service in sub-clause (d) of clause 29-A, no tax
could be levied by the State. We shall deal with this argument with the
contentions of Mr. Joseph Vellapally, learned senior counsel appearing for
the intervenors. He focussed on the fact that the instrument could be used
only when access to the whole system is provided by the DoT and argued that
when the contract was a composite contract involving service and the
transfer of the right to use any goods, in the absence of any provision in
the Constitution enabling the State to levy tax for service separately, no
tax could be levied and collected under the U.P. Act. Mr. Sunil Gupta
submitted that in a case of composite contract, the dominant object test
will have to be applied.
The following three situations were adverted to in the submissions:
(1) where the service is the main object of the contract and the supply
of other things are merely incidental to enable the enjoyment of the
service itself;
(2) where the service is incidental and the real contract is to sell the
goods; and
(3) where both the service as well as the sale of goods are equally
prominent and they have been clubbed in one contract.
Whether a given contract falls under one or the other category is
essentially a question of fact to be determined on the terms of the
contract between the parties or, in case of a statutory contract, the rules
governing such a contract.
Whereas in the case of a composite contract falling under the first
category, where the service is the dominant object of the contract, the
supply of goods is incidental to the enjoyment of the service; for example,
in a hotel, where a room is hired, the supply of ornamental objects in the
room, like chandelier, scenery, decoration pieces in the room or items,
like linen, soap, shampoo etc. are incidental to make the service more
useful, effective and attractive. In such a case, it is not possible to
separate service from the supply of goods. This principle was laid down by
this Court in State of Himachal Pradesh v. Associated Hotels of India Ltd.,
(1972) 29 STC 474 SC and affirmed in Northern India Caterers, (supra).
The insertion of clause 29-A in Article 366 of the Constitution of India
did not altogether obliterate the distinction between sale and service,
except in a case falling under sub-clause (f) thereof which enables levy of
tax on the supply, by way of or as part of any service or in any other
manner whatsoever, of goods, being food or any other article for human
consumption or any drink (whether or not intoxicating), where such supply
or service, is for cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration.
In such a case, the transfer, delivery or supply of any goods shall be
deemed to be a ’sale’ of those goods by the person making the transfer,
delivery or supply and a purchase of those goods by the person to whom such
transfer, delivery or supply is made. In other respects the distinction
between sale and service for imposing tax is maintained.
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In regard to sale of goods where the service is incidental, the principle
of non-separatability will apply in the absence of a specific valid
statutory provision; for example, in a restaurant/hotel, where food or
other articles are sold, the supply of service like providing cutlery
washing liquid, towels, music, etc., is merely incidental and it would not
be permissible to treat such service as a transfer of right to use the
goods for the purpose of taxation under the relevant Sales Tax Act. Where,
however, the supply of service as well as supply of goods are prominent
objectives and they have been clubbed together under a composite contract
it would be possible to treat them separately; for example, where in a
holiday package, transportation, boarding and lodging are separately
treated, it would be possible to assess them separately, though covered
under the same contract.
In British Railway’s Board v. Customs and Excise Commissioners, [Simon’s
Tax Cases, 1977 (page 221)] the question before the Court of Appeal was :
whether the supply of a student identity card constituted the supply of
service of a description which qualified for zero-rating. In that case, the
British Railways Board provided special facilities for rail travel by
Students. A student could purchase an identity card for pound 1.50 to
enable him to obtain rail ticket at reduced rates. It was held that sale of
identity card and the subsequent sale to the card-holder of a ticket for a
particular journey at a reduced price could not be treated as separate and
isolated transactions and, therefore, pound 1.50 paid for the identity card
was properly to be regarded as a part payment in advance for the supply of
transport service.
British Airways Plc v. Customs and Excise Commissioners [Simon Tax Case.
[1990] page 643; is a case wherein in the flights operated by the British
Airways to transport passengers by air, food was served to the passengers,
the price was the same whether or not a passenger availed the facility of
food. The Court of Appeal observed that the question was : whether British
Airways had made one supply or two supplies. It was held that in flights
catering was part of and integral to the supply of transportation and,
accordingly, British Airways had made only one supply, that of air
transportation.
To the same effect is the view in Customs and Excise Commissioners v.
British Telecommunications Plc [Simon Tax Cases, [1999] (page 758). In that
case British Telecommunications purchased new cars for its fleet of
vehicles. The question that arose was : whether the sale of cars and their
transportation to the agreed delivery point comprised two distinct
supplies. The Tribunal found that the two are different and distinct
services. The Court of Appeal held that the supply of the service of
delivery was physically and economically distinct from the supply of the
car. On appeal, the House of Lords held:
"In order to identify the supply it was necessary to consider whether the
delivery was ancillary or incidental to the supply of the car or was a
distinct supply. The fact that separate charges were identified in a
contract or on an invoice did not on a consideration of all the
circumstances necessarily prevent the various supplies from constituting
one composite transaction nor did it prevent one supply from being
ancillary to another supply which for value added tax (VAT) purpose was the
dominant supply. Although each supply in a composite transaction might be
an independent separate supply, the essential features of a transaction
might show that one supply was ancillary to another and that it was the
latter that for VAT purposes was to be treated as the supply. In the
instant case it was artificial to split the various parts of the
transaction into different supplies for VAT purposes. What British
Telecommunications wanted was a delivered car; the delivery was incidental
or ancillary to the supply of the car and it was only on or after delivery
that property in the car passed. Accordingly, if the transaction was looked
at as a matter of commercial reality, there was one contract for a
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delivered car and one supply for VAT purposes."
Having given our anxious consideration to the submissions made in regard to
the composite contract of service of goods and the classification, above
referred, we are of the view that they will not apply to the present case.
Here the service of telephone connection cannot be artificially split into
various categories - supply of instruments and accompaniment on the one
hand and supply of telegraphic line/connection on the other, to name the
former as ’sale’ and the latter as ’service’ . The analogy of composite
contract will apply where ’sale’ and ’service’ are to different independent
objects.
Inasmuch as we have found that the DoT is a ’dealer’ as defined in Section
2(c) of the U.P. Act and it collects rentals for the supply of transfer of
use of telephone connection, which is compendiously called ’service’ and
that the supply of telephone satisfies the requirements of a transfer of
the right to use the goods within the meaning of ’sale’ in Section 2(h); it
also receives consideration, therefore, the requirements of charging
Section 3 read with Section 3 F are satisfied. The jugdments and orders
under challenge in these appeals are, therefore, set aside.
In Union of India and Ors. v. Secretary, Revenue Department (CTll),
Government of Andhra Pradesh and Ors., (1999) 113 STC 203, the High Court
of Andhra Pradesh took the view that the rentals are not subject to sales
tax within the meaning of provisions of the Andhra Pradesh General Sales
Tax Act, 1957. This judgment and the judgment under appeal was followed by
the High Court of Punjab & Haryana in Union of India and Anr. v. State of
Haryana and Anr., [2001] 123 STC 539 to hold that the rentals collected by
the DoT cannot be equated with sale of goods or deemed sale of goods by way
of transfer of the right to use goods within the meaning of the Haryana
General Sales Tax Act, 1973. For the aforementioned reasons we overrule
those judgments. We must, however, consider the last submission that the
impugned demands relate to not only rentals but also to various other
charges and, therefore, for working out the correct demand, the cases have
to go back to the assessing officer for raising fresh demand. We find
considerable force in that submission. We set aside the demand in question
and direct the DoT (the respondent) to file the ’Returns’ within three
months from today. The Assessing Authority shall make order of assessment
and raise fresh demand in accordance with law.
The appeals are accordingly allowed with costs.