Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GANNON DUNKERLEY & CO.,(MADRAS) LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/04/1958
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BOSE, VIVIAN
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
DAS, S.K.
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 560 1959 SCR 379
ACT:
Sales Tax-Building contracts-Tax on supply of materials in
construction works--State’s Power of taxation-" Sale of
goods ", Meaning of-Legislative practice-Nature of agreement
in building, contracts Sale of Goods Act, 1930 (III of
1930), S. 4 Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939 (Mad. IX of
1939), as amended by Madras Act XXV Of 1947, SS. 2(c)(h)(i),
Explanation 1(i), r. 4(3)-Government of India Act, 1935 (26
Geo. 5, Ch. 2), S. 107, Sch. VII, List II, Entry 48.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent company, doing business, inter alia, in the
construction of buildings, roads and other works was
assessed to sales tax by the sales tax authorities who
sought to include, the value of the materials used in the
execution of building contracts within the taxable turnover
of the respondent. The validity of the assessment was
challenged by the respondent who contended that the power of
the Madras Legislature to impose a tax on sales under Entry
48 in List II in Sch. VII of the Government of India Act,
1935, did not extend to imposing a tax on the value of
materials used in construction works, as there was no
transaction of sale in respect of those goods, and that the
provisions introduced in the Madras General Sales Tax Act,
1939, by the Madras General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1947,
authorising the imposition of such tax were ultra vires.
The Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal rejected the respondent’s
contention but, on
380
revision, the High Court took the view that the expression "
sale of goods " had the same meaning in Entry 48 which it
has in the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, that the
construction contracts of the respondent were agreements to
execute works to be paid for according to measurements at
the rates specified in the schedule thereto, and were not
contracts for sale of the materials used therein, and that
further, they were entire and indivisible and could not be
broken up into a contract for sale of materials and a
contract for payment for work done. Accordingly, it held
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that the impugned provisions introduced by the Madras
General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1947, were ultra wires
the powers of the provincial Legislature. On appeal to the
Supreme Court:
Held, (1) On the true interpretation of the expression "
sale of goods " there must be an agreement between the
parties for the sale of the very goods in which eventually
property passes.
Poppatlal Shah v. The State of Madras, [1953] S.C.R. 677 and
The State of Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd.,
II9531 S.C.R. 1069, relied on.
In a building contract, the agreement between the parties is
that the contractor should construct the building according
to the specifications contained in the agreement, and in
consideration therefor receive payment as provided therein,
and in such an agreement there is neither a contract to sell
the materials:used in the construction, nor does property
pass therein as moveables.
(2) The expression " sale of goods" was, at the time when
the Government of India Act, 1935, was enacted, a term of
wellrecognised legal import in the general law relating to
sale of goods and in the legislative practice relating to
that topic and must be interpreted in Entry 48 in List II in
Sch. VII of the Act as having the same meaning as in the
sale of Goods Act, 1930.
The Sales Tax Officeyr Pilibhit v. Messrs. Budh Prakash jai
Pyakash, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 243, relied on.
(3)In a building contract which is One, entire and
indivisible, there is no sale of goods and it is not within
the competence of the Provincial Legislature under Entry 48
in List 11 in Sch. VII of the Government of India Act,
1935, to impose a tax on the supply of the materials used in
such a contract treating it as sale.
Pandit Banaysi Das v. State of Madhya Pradesh, (1955) 6 S.T.
C. 93, Bhuramal v. State of Rajasthan, A. I. R. 1957 Raj.
104, Mohamad Khasim v. State of Alysoye, A. 1. R. 1955 MYs.
41 and Gannon Dunkeyley & Co. v. Sales Tax officer, A. I. R.
1957 Ker. 146, disapproved.
Jubilee Engineeying Co. Ltd. v. Sales Tax Offence . I. R.
1956 Hyd. 79, approved.
(4)The Madras General Sales Tax Act is a law relating not to
sale of goods but to tax on sale of goods and consequently
the
381
Madras General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1947, is not bad
under s. 107 of the Government of India Act, 1935, On the
ground that it had not been reserved for the assent of the
Governor-General.
D. Saykar ’ Bros. v. Commercial Tax Officer, A. I. R. 1957
Cal. 283, disapproved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISIDICTION: Civil Appeal No. ---210 of
1956.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 5, 1954, of
the Madras High Court in Civil Revision Petition No. 2292 of
1952, arising out of the judgment and order dated August 11,
1952, of the Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal, Madras, in T. A.
No. 863 of 1951.
1958. Jan. 22, 23, 24 ; Feb. 4, 5, 6, 7, 10, 11.
V.K T. Chari, Advocate General for the State of Madras and
R. H. Dhebar, for the appellant. The provisions of the
Constitution Act which confer legislative powers should be
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construed liberally. see Navinchandra Mafatlal v. The
commissioner of income Tax, [1955] 1 S. C. R. 829 it 833 ;
Broken Hill south Ltd. v. Commissioner of Taxation, v.
stronach (55 337 at 379); Love v. Norman Wright (Builders)
Ltd. ([1944] 1 K. B. 484); In re the Central Provinces and
Berar- Act No. XI V of 1938 ( [1939] F. C. R. 18). The
words " sale of goods " in Entry 48 have to be interpreted
in a wide sense and not in the narrow sense of the
definition of sale of goods contained in the Indian Sale of
Goods Act, 1930. See lrving’s Commonwealth Sales Tax Law
and Practice, at pp. 62, 77. The Deputy Federal
COmmissioner of Taxation v. Stronach (55 C.L.R. 305); M. R.
Hornibrook (pty. Ltd.) v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation
(62 C. L. R. 272 at 276).
Mahabir Prasad, Advocate General for the State of Bihar and
R. C. Prasad, for the State of Bihar (Intervener). The
question is whether definition in the Sales Tax Act enlarges
the concept of sale of goods as in the Sale of Goods Act.
The only requirement of a sale of goods is that there should
be transfer of property in goods for valuable consideration.
See Hudson on Building Contracts, 7th Edn., p. 386.
Building Contracts involve sale of materials.
382
S.M. Sikri, Advocate General for the State of Punjab,N. S.
Bindra and T M. Sen, for the State of Punjab (Intervener).
The words "taxes on the sale of goods" in Entry 48 mean
taxes on a transaction the effect of Which is to transfer to
a person for valuable considers tion, all the rights of an
owner in the goods. Sale of goods need not necessarily be
in pursuance of a contract. Even an auction sale is a sale
and can be subjected to sales tax. Exchange is also a sale
of goods. See Blackstone; Chalmers Sales of Goods Act, 12th
Edn., pp. 3, 172; Benjamin on Sales 8th Ed., p. 2; Halsbury,
Vol. 29, 2nd Edn., p. 5, see p. 6, footnote (c); Williston
on Sales Vol. 1, revised Ed., p. 2, 433. Sale has a wider
meaning and a prior agreement to sell goods is not necessary
to constitute sale of goods. See Great Western Railway Co.
v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue, ([1894] 1 Q. B. 507 at
512, 515, 516); Kirkness v. Johib Hudson & Co. Ltd., ([1955]
A. C. 696 at 719, 737); Nalukuya v. Director of Lands (
[1957] A. C. 325 at 332) ; Ex-parte Drake, In re Ware ((I
877) 5 Ch. D. 866 at 871); Blome Co. v. Ames ((1937) III
A.L. R. 940) though a contrary view has been taken in
Herlihy Mid-Continent Co. v. Nudelman ( (1937) 115 A.L. R.
485); Morgan v. Deputy Federal Commissioner of Land Tax, N.
S. W., ( (1912) 15 C. L. R. 661 at 665). The entries
conferring legislative power are flexible and elastic and
should be so construed as to include the extended and wider
meaning of the words used therein. Entry 48 should include
not only what was understood as sales at the time of the
enactment of the Government of India Act, 1935, but also all
that which may be regarded as sales later on. See The
Regulation and Control of Radio Communication in Canada, In
re ( [1932] A. C. 304 at 314); The King v. Brislan: Ex-parte
Williams (54 C. L. R. 262 at 273, 283); Toronto Corporation
v. Bell Telephone Company of Canada, ( [1905] A. C. 52 at
57); Attorney General v. Edison Telephone Company of London
( (1880) L.R. 6 Q. B. ]D. 244 at 254); Nevile Reid and
Company Ltd. v. The Commissioners of Inland Revenue (12 Tax
Cas. 245 at 565, 567) ; Edwards v. A. G. for Canada, [1930]
A. C. 1.24 at 127, 134); Attorney-General for
383
Alberta v. Attorney-General for Canada, ( [1947] A. C. 503
at 516, 517) ; Newcastle Breweries Ltd. v. Inland Revenue
Commissioner,,?, (96 L. J. K. B. 735); It is a fallacy to
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deduce from the proposition that because the contract is not
an agreement to sell goods but a contract of work and labour
no sale of goods takes place. A works contract is a
composite transaction which can be split up and a sale of
goods in the sense of the Sales of Goods Act can be spelt
out of it and it is permissible for the State to do so and
to tax the sale of goods. Benjamin on Sales, pp. 155, 156,
167 and 352; Seath v. Moore (11 App. Cas. 350); Reid v.
Macbeth & Gray ( [1904] A. C. 223) ; Langford Property CO.
Ltd. v. Batten ( [1951] A. C. 786 at 813).
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor General of India and T. M. Sen,
for the State of Mysore (Intervener). Sale of goods is
nothing but a transfer of property for a price, There need
not be any bargain or contract to sell-but the sale must be
voluntary. See Apple by v. Myres (L. R. 2 C. P. 651 at
658); Reeves v. Barlow (L. R. 12 Q. B. 436). The
composite transaction of a works, contract can be split up
and the sale of goods therein be taxed.
Sardar Bahadur, for the State of Kerala (Intervener)
supported the appellant.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, R. Ganapathy Iyer and G.
Gopalakrishnan, for the respondents. The powers of the
legislatures are limited and the Entries fix the bounds of
legislation. See The Queen v. Buralh (5 I. A. 178 at 193);
James v. Commonwealth of Australia, ( [1936] A. C. 578 at
613, 633); In re The Central Provinces and Berar Act XIV of
1938 ( [1939] F. C. R. 18, 36, 37). In the absence of any
positive directive in the (Constitution Act itself or a
compelling contest, Entries have to be interpreted in the
light of existing law so as to be in conformity with it. The
expression " sale of goods " was, at the time of the
enactment of the Government of India Act, 1935, a term of
well recognised legal import and it must be interpreted in
Entry 48 as having the same meaning as in the Sale of Goods
Act, 1930. See
384
L’Union St. Jacques De Montreal v. Be Lisle (L.R. 6 P. (C.
31 at 36) ; Royal Bank of Canada v. Larue ( [1928] A. C. 187
at 196); Wallace Brothers and Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income Tax, (75 I. A. 86 at 99); In re The Central Provinces
and Berar Act XI V of 1938, ( [1939] F. C. R. 18 at 53, 54)
; The State of Bombay v. F. N. Balsara, ( [1951] S. (. R.
682 at 705). The expression ’sale of goods’ has always been
understood by the Supreme Court in the sense, of the Sale of
Goods Act, 1930. See Poppatlal Shah v. The, State of
Madras, (11953] S. C. R. 677 at 683); The State of Bombay v.
The United Motors (India) Ltd., ([1953] S. C. R. 1069 at
1082, 110, 1102); State of Travancore-Cochin v. Shanmugha
Vilas Cashew Nut Factory, ([1954] S. C. R. 53 at 80); Bengal
Immunity Co., Ltd. v. The State of’ Bihar, ([1955] 2 S. C.
R. 603 at 698, 700, 704). The , matter is concluded by the
decision in The Sales Tax Officer, Pilibhit v. Mls. Budh
Prakash Jai Prakas ( [1655] 1 S. C. R. 243 at 247) where it
has been specifically held that it would be proper to inter-
pret the expression " sale of goods " in Entry 48 in the
sense in which it was raised in legislation both in England
and in India.
The definition of " sale " given in the Madras General sales
Tax Act, 1939, is in conflict with that given in the Sale of
Goods Act, 1930, and as sale of goods is a matter which
falls within Entry 10 of the (Concurrent List,, the
definition in the Madras Act would be repugnant and void
under s. 107 of the (Government of India Act, 1935. D.
Sarkar & Bros. v. Commercial Tax Officer, (A. I. R. 1957
(Cal. 283).
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A works contract cannot be disintegrated into a contract for
labour and a sale of goods. See Inland Revenue
Commissioner’s v. The Duke of Westminster, [1936] A. (1. I
it 19, 24); Bank of Chettinad Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income-Tax, Madras, (67 1. A. 394 at 400-401). A works
contract entire and indivisible; it is in no sense sale of
goods or of materials, nor is there any sale of goods or
materials " chattels within the meaning of Entry 48. In
English cases a clear (distinction has been made between
works contract and sale of goods. See Lee v. Griffin (121
E.R. 716); Robinson v.
385
Graves, ( [1935] 1 K. B. 579 at 590, 593); Love v. Norman
Wright (.Builders Ltd.) ([1944] 1 K.B. 484); Tripp v.
Armitage, (150 E. R. 1597), Clark v. Bulmer (152 E. R.
793); Appleby v. Myers (L. R. 2 C. P. 651 at 658); Seath v.
Moore (11 App. Cas. 350 at 381); Reid v. Macbeth & Gray, (
[1904] A. C. 223). See also Hudson on Building Contracts,
pp. 165, 386 and 388 Benjamin on Sales, pp. 352 to 355.
Gopal Singh, for Gurbaksh Singh and M/s. Uttam Singh Duggal
& Co. (Interveners) and B. R. L. lyengar, for the United
Engineering Co. (Intervener), supported the respondents.
V. V. Raghavan, for the appellant, replied. Legislative
history should not be pushed too far. See In re Central
Provinces and Berar Act XI V of 1938 ( [1939] F. C. R. 18 at
54); Edwards v. A. G. for Canada ( [1930) A. C. 124 at 134);
Wallace Brothers case (75 1. A. 86 at 99); Poppatlal Shah v.
The State of Madras, ( [1953] S. C. R. 677). A works
contract can be split up. Viewed from the point of view of
the contractor, he sells materials and renders service.
There is a sale of goods in the contract.
S. M. Sikri, Advocate-General for the State of Punjab
(with the permission of the Court). Grant of legislative
power has been widely interpreted. See, Continental
Illinois National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago v. Chicago
Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. (79 L. Ed. 1110 at 1124);
South Carolina v. United States, (50 L. Ed. 262 at 269).
Legislative history cannot be used to cut down the meaning
of the Entry, but only to enlarge it. Lefroys Canadian
Federal System, pp. 14, 15 and 18. There is no legislative
practice with respect to " taxes on sale of goods ".
1958. April 1. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMA AIYAR J.-This appeal arises out of proceedings
for assessment of sales tax payable by the respondents for
the year 1949-1950, and it raises a question of considerable
importance on the construction of Entry 48 in List 11 of
Sch. VII to the
49
386
Government of India Act, 1935, " Taxes on the sale of
goods."
The respondents are a private limited company registered
under the provisions of the Indian Companies Act, doing
business in the construction of buildings, roads and other
works and in the sale of sanitary wares and other sundry
goods. Before the sales tax authorities, the disputes
ranged over a number of items, but we are concerned in this
appeal with only two of them. One is with reference to a
sum of Rs. 29,51,528-7-4 representing the value of the
materials used by the respondents in the execution of their
works contracts, calculated in accordance with the statutory
provisions applicable thereto, and the other relates to a
sum of Rs. 1,98,929-0-3 being the price of foodgrains
supplied by the respondents to their workmen.
It will be convenient at this stage to refer to the
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provisions of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939 (Mad.
IX of 1939), in so far as they are relevant for the purpose
of the present appeal. Section 2(h) of the Act, as it stood
when it was enacted, defined " sale " as meaning " every
transfer of the property in goods by one person to another
in the course of trade or business for cash or for deferred
payment or other valuable consideration ". In 1947, the
Legislature of Madras enacted the Madras General Sales Tax
(Amendment) Act No. XXV of 1947 introducing several new
provisions in the Act, and it is necessary to refer to them
so far as they are relevant for the purpose of the present
appeal. Section 2(c) of the Act had defined " goods " as
meaning " all kinds of movable property other than
actionable claims, stocks and shares and securities and as
including all materials, commodities and articles", and it
was amended so as to include materials " used in the
construction, fitting out, improvement or repair of
immovable property or in the fitting out, improvement or
repair of movable property The definition of " sale " in s.
2(h) was enlarged so as to include " a transfer of property
in goods involved in the execution of a works contract". In
the definition of " turn-
387
over " in s. 2(i), the following Explanation (1)(i) was
added:
" Subject to such conditions and restrictions, if any, as
may be prescribed in this behalf-
the amount for which goods are sold shall, in relation to a
works contract, be deemed to be the amount payable to the
dealer for carrying out such contract, less such portion as
may be prescribed of such amount, representing the usual
proportion of the cost of labour to the cost of materials
used in carrying out such contract."
A new provision was inserted in s. 2(ii) defining "works
contract" as meaning "any agreement for carrying out for
cash or for deferred payment or other valuable consideration
the construction, fitting out, improvement or repair of any
building, road, bridge or other immovable property or the
fitting out, improvement or repair of any movable property
". Pursuant to the Explanation (1)(i) in s. 2(i), a new
rule, r. 4(3), was enacted that " the amount for which goods
are sold by a dealer shall, in relation to a works contract,
be deemed to be the amount payable to the dealer for
carrying out such contract less a sum not exceeding such
percentage of the amount payable as may be fixed by the
Board of Revenue, from time to time for different areas,
representing the usual proportion in such areas of the cost
of labour to the cost of materials used in carrying out such
contract, subject to the following maximum
percentages............ and then follows a scale varying
with the nature of the contracts.
It is on the authority of these provisions that the
appellant seeks to include in the turnover of the res-
pondents the sum of Rs. 29,51,528-7-4 being the value of the
materials used in the construction works as determined under
r. 4(3). The respondents contest this claim on the ground I
that the power of the Madras Legislature to impose a tax on
sales under Entry 48 in List II in Sch. VII of the
Government of India Act, does not extend to imposing a tax
on the value of materials used in works, as there is no
transaction of sale in respect of those goods, and that the
provisions
388
introduced by the Madras General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act,
1947, authorising the imposition of such tax are ultra
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vires. As regards the sum of Rs. 1,98,929-0-3, the
contention of the respondents was that they were not doing
business in the sale of foodgrains, that they had supplied
them to the workmen when they were engaged in construction
works in out of the way places, adjusting the price therefor
in the wages due to them and that the amounts so adjusted
were not liable to be included in the turnover. The Sales
Tax Appellate Tribunal rejected both these contentions, and
held that the amounts in question were liable to be included
in the taxable turnover of the respondents.
Against this decision, the respondents preferred Civil
Revision Petition No. 2292 of 1952 to the High Court of
Madras. That was heard by Satyanarayana Rao and Rajagopalan
JJ. who decided both the points in their favour. They held
that the expression "sale of goods" had the same meaning in
Entry 48 which it has in the Indian Sale of Goods Act (III
of 1930), that the construction contracts of the respondents
were agreements to execute works to be paid for according to
measurements at the rates specified in the schedule thereto,
and were not contracts for sale of the materials used there-
in, and that further, they were entire and indivisible and
could not be broken up into a contract for sale of materials
and a contract for payment for work done. In the result,
they held that the impugned provisions introduced by the
Amendment Act No. XXV of 1947, were ultra vires the powers
of the Provincial Legislature, and that the claim based on
those provisions to include Rs. 29,51,528-7-4 in the taxable
turnover of the respondents could not be maintained. As
regards the item of Rs. 1,98,929-0-3 they held that the sale
of foodgrains to the workmen was not in the course of any
business of buying or selling those goods, that there was no
profit motive behind it, that the respondents were not
dealers as defined in s. 2(d) of the Act, and that,
therefore, the amount in question was not liable to be taxed
under the Act. In the result, both the amounts were
directed to be excluded from the taxable turnover of the
respondents. Against this
389
decision, the State of Madras has preferred the present
appeal on a certificate granted by the High Court under Art.
133(1) of the constitution
Before us, the learned Advocate-General of Madras did not
press the appeal in so far as it relates to the sum of Rs.
1,98,929-0-3, and the only question, therefore, that
survives for our decision is as to whether the provisions
introduced by the Madras General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act,
1947 and set out above are ultra vires the powers of the
Provincial Legislature under Entry 48 in List II‘. As
provisions similar to those in the Madras Act now under
challenge are to be found in the sales tax laws of other
States, some of those States, Bihar, Punjab, Mysore, Kerala
and Andhra Pradesh, applied for and obtained leave to
intervene in this appeal, and we have heard learned counsel
on their behalf. Some of the contractors who are interested
in the decision of this question, Gurbax Singh, Messrs.
Uttam Singh Duggal and United Engineering Company, were also
granted leave to intervene, and learned counsel representing
them have also addressed us on the points raised.
The sole question for determination in this appeal is
whether the provisions of the Madras General Sales Tax Act
are ultra vires, in so far as they seek to impose a tax on
the supply of materials in execution of works contract
treating it as a sale of goods by the contractor, and the
answer to it must depend on the meaning to be given to the
words " sale of goods " in Entry 48 in List II of Sch. VII
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to the Government of India Act, 1935. Now, it is to be
noted that while s. 311(2) of the Act defines " goods " as
including " all materials, commodities and articles ", it
contains no definition of the expression " sale of goods ".
It was suggested that the word " materials " in the
definition of " goods " is sufficient to take in materials
used in a works contract. That is so; but the question
still remains whether there is a sale of those materials
within the meaning of that word in Entry 48. On that, there
has been sharp conflict of opinion among the several High
Courts. In Pandit Banarsi Das v. State of Madhya Pradesh
(1), a Bench of the Nagpur High Court held,
(1) [1955] 6 S.T.C. 93.
390
differing from the view taken by the Madras High Court in
the judgment now under appeal, that the provisions of the
Act imposing a tax on the value of the materials used in a
construction on the footing of a sale thereof were valid,
but that they were bad in so far as they enacted an
artificial rule for determination of that value by deducting
out of the total receipts a fixed percentage on account of
labour charges, inasmuch as the tax might, according to that
computation, conceivably fall on a portion of the labour
charges and that would be ultra vires Entry 48. A similar
decision was given by the High Court of Rajasthan in
Bhuramal v. State Of Rajasthan(1). In Mohamed Khasim v.
State of Mysore (2), the Mysore High Court has held that the
provisions of the Act imposing a tax on construction of
works are valid, and has further upheld the determination of
the value of the materials on a percentage basis under the
rules. In Gannon Dunkerley & Co. v. Sales Tax Officer (3),
the Kerala High Court has likewise affirmed the validity of
both the provisions imposing tax on construction works and
the rules providing for apportionment of value on a
percentage basis. In Jubilee Engineering Co., Ltd. v. Sales
Tax officer (1) the Hyderabad High Court has followed the
decision of the Madras High Court, and held that the taxing
provisions in the Act are ultra vires. The entire
controversy, it will be seen, hinges on the meaning of the
words ’,sale of goods " in Entry 48, and the point which we
have now to decide is as to the correct interpretation to be
put on them.
The contention of the appellant and of the States which have
intervened is that the provisions of a Constitution which
confer legislative powers should receive a liberal
construction, and that, accordingly, the expression " sale
of goods " in Entry 48 should be interpreted not in the
narrow and technical sense in which it is used in the Indian
Sale of Goods Act, 1930, but in a broad sense. We shall
briefly refer to some of the authorities cited in support of
this position. In
(1) A.I.R. 1957 Raj. 104.
(2) A.I.R. I055 MYS. 41
(3) A.I.R. 1957 Ker. 146.
(4) A.I.R. 1956 Hyd. 79.
391
British Coal Corporation v. King (1), the question was
whether s. 17 of the Canadian Statute, 22 & 24, Geo. V, c.
53, which abolished the right of appeal to the Privy Council
from any judgment or order of any court in any criminal
case, was intra vires its powers under the, Constitution Act
of 1867. In answering it in the affirmative, Viscount
Sankey L. C. observed:
" Indeed, in interpreting a constituent or organic statute
such as the Act, that construction most beneficial to the
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widest possible amplitude of its powers must be adopted.
This principle has been again clearly laid down by the
Judicial Committee in Edwards v. A. G. for Canada (2) ".
In James v. Commonwealth of Australia (3), Lord Wright
observed that a Constitution must not be construed in any
narrow and pedantic sense. In In re the Central Provinces
and Berar Act No. XIV of 1938 (4), discussing the principles
of interpretation of a constitutional provision, Sir Maurice
Gwyer C. J. observed:
" I conceive that a broad and liberal spirit should inspire
those whose duty it is to interpret it; but I do not imply
by this that they are free to stretch or pervert the
language of the enactment in the interests of any legal or
constitutional theory, or even for the purpose of supplying
omissions or of correcting supposed errors. A Federal Court
will not strengthen, but only derogate from, its position,
if it seeks to do anything but declare the law; but it may
rightly reflect that a Constitution of a Government is a
living and organic thing, which of all instruments has the
greatest claim to be construed ut res magis valeat quam
pereat."
The authority most strongly relied on for the appellant is
the decision of this Court in Navinchandra Mafatlal v. The
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City (5), in which the
question was as to the meaning of the word " income " in
Entry 54 of List 1. The contention was that in the
legislative practice of both England and India, that word
had been understood as
(1) [1935] A.C. 500, 518.
(2) [1930] A.C. 124, 136.
(3) [1936] A.C. 578, 614.
(4) [1939] F.C.R. j8,37.
(5) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 829, 833, 836.
392
not including accretion in value to capital, and that it
should therefore bear the same meaning in Entry 54. In
rejecting this contention, this Court observed that the so-
called " legislative practice was nothing but judicial
interpretation of the word ’income as appearing in the
fiscal statutes", that in " construing an entry in a List
conferring legislative powers the widest possible
construction according to their ordinary meaning must be put
upon the words used therein ", and that the cardinal rule of
interpretation was " that words should be read in their
ordinary, natural and grammatical meaning, subject to this
rider that in construing words in a constitutional enactment
conferring legislative power the most liberal construction
should be put upon the words so that the same may have
effect in their widest amplitude."
The learned Advocate-General of Madras also urged in further
support of the above conclusion that the provisions of a
Constitution Act conferring powers of taxation should be
interpreted in a wide sense, and relied on certain
observations in Morgan v. Deputy Federal Commissioner of
Land Tax, N. S. W. (1) and Broken Hill South Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Taxation (N.S. W.)(2) in support of his
contention. In Morgan v. Deputy Federal Commissioner of
Land Tax, N.S. W. (1), the question was as to the validity
of a law which had enacted that lands belonging to a company
were deemed to be held by its shareholders as joint owners
and imposed a land tax on them in respect of their share
therein. In upholding the Act, Griffith C. J. observed :
" In my opinion, the Federal Parliament in selecting
subjects of taxation is entitled to take things as it finds
them in re rum nature, irrespective of any positive laws of
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the States prescribing rules to be observed with regard to
the acquisition or devolution of formal title to property,
or the institution of judicial proceedings with respect to
it."
In Broken Hill South Ltd. v. Commissioner of Taxation, N. S.
W. (2), the observations relied on are the following:
(I) (19I2) 15 C.L.R. 661, 666. (2) (1937) 56 C.L.R. 337,
379.
393
"In any investigation of the constitutional powers of these
great Dominion legislatures, it is not proper that a court
should deny to such a legislature the right of solving
taxation problems unfettered by a priori legal categories
which often derive from the, exercise of legislative power
in the same constitutional unit."
On these authorities, the contention of the appellant is
well-founded that as the words " sale of goods " in Entry 48
occur in a Constitution Act and confer legislative powers on
the State Legislature in respect of a topic relating to
taxation, they must be interpreted not in a restricted but
broad sense. And that opens up questions as to what that
sense is, whether popular or legal, and what its connotation
is either in the one sense or the other. Learned counsel
appearing for the States and for the assessees have relied
in support of their respective contentions on the meaning
given to the word " sale " in authoritative text-books, and
they will now be referred to. According, to Blackstone, "
sale or exchange is a transmutation of property from one man
to another, in consideration of some price or recompense in
value. " This passage has, however, to be read
distributively and so read, sale would mean transfer of
property for price. That is also the definition of " sale "
in Benjamin on Sale, 1950 Edn., p. 2. In Halsbury’s Laws of
England, Second Edn., Vol. 29, p. 5, para. I, we have the
following:
" Sale is the transfer of the ownership of a thing from one
person to another for a money price. Where the
consideration for the transfer consists of other goods, or
some other valuable consideration, not being money, the
transaction is called exchange or barter; but in certain
circumstances it may be treated as one of sale.
The law relating to contracts of exchange or barter is
undeveloped, but the courts seem inclined to follow the
maxim of civil law, permutatio vicina est emptioni, and to
deal with such contracts as analogous to contracts of sale.
It is clear, however, that statutes relating to sale would
have no application to transactions by way of barter."
59
394
In Chaliner’s Sale of Goods Act, 12th Edn., it is stated at
p. 3 that " the essence of sale is the transfer of the
property in a thing from one person to another for a price
", and at p. 6 it is pointed out that " where the
consideration for the transfer...... consists of the deli-
very of goods, the contract is not a contract of sale but is
a contract of exchange or barter ". In Corpus Juris, Vol.
55, p. 36, the law is thus stated:
" Sale " in legal nomenclature, is a term of precise legal
import, both at law and in equity, and has a well defined "
legal signification, and has been said to mean, at all
times, a contract between parties to give and pass rights of
property for money, which the buyer pays or promises to pay
to the seller for the thing bought or sold. "
It is added that the word "sale" as used by the authorities
" is not a word of fixed and invariable meaning, but may be
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given a narrow. or broad meaning, according to the context.
" In Williston on Sales, 1948 Edn., " sale of goods" is
defined as " an agreement whereby the seller transfers the
property in goods to the buyer for a consideration called
the price " (p. 2). At p. 4439 the learned author observes
that " it has doubtless been generally said that the price
must be payable in money ", but expresses his opinion that
it may be any personal property. In the Concise Oxford
Dictionary, " sale " is defined as " exchange of a commodity
for money or other valuable consideration, selling ".
It will be seen from the foregoing that there is practical
unanimity of opinion as to the import of the word " sale "
in its legal sense, there being only some difference of
opinion in America as to whether price should be in money or
in money’s worth, and the dictionary meaning is also to the
same effect. Now, it is argued by Mr. Sikri, the learned
Advocate-General of Punjab, that the word " sale " is, in
its popular sense, of wider import than in its legal sense,
and that is the meaning which should be given to that word
in Entry 48, and he relies in support of this position on
the observations in Nevile Reid and Company Ltd.
395
v. The Commissioners of Inland Revenue (1). There, an
agreement was entered into on April 12, 1918, for the sale
of the trading stock in a brewery business and the
transaction was actually completed on June 24, 1918. In
between the two dates, the Finance Act, 1918, had( imposed
excess profits tax, and the question was whether the
agreement dated April 12, 1918, amounted to a sale in which
case the transaction would fall outside the operation of the
Act. The Commissioners had held that as title to the goods
passed only on June 24, 1918, the agreement dated April 12,
1918, was only an agreement to sell and not the sale which
must be held to have taken place on June 24, 1918, and was
therefore liable to be taxed. Sankey J. agreed with this
decision, but rested it on the ground that as the agreement
left some matters still to be determined and was, in certain
respects, modified later, it could not be held to be a sale
for the purpose of the Act. In the course of the judgment,
he observed that " sale " in the Finance Act should not be
construed in the light of the provisions of the Sale of
Goods Act, but must be understood in a commercial or
business sense.
Now, in its popular sense, a sale is said to take place when
the bargain is settled between the parties, though property
in the goods may not pass at that stage, as where the
contract relates to future or unascertained goods, and it is
that sense that the learned Judge would appear to have had
in his mind when he spoke of a commercial or business sense.
But apart from the fact that these observations were obiter,
this Court has consistently held that though the word " sale
" in its popular sense is not restricted to passing of
title, and has a wider connotation as meaning the
transaction of sale, and that in that sense an agreement to
sell would, as one of the essential ingredients of sale,
furnish sufficient nexus for a State to impose a tax, such
levy could, nevertheless, be made only when the transaction
is one of sale, and it would be a sale only when it has
resulted in the passing of property in the goods to the
purchaser. Vide Poppatlal Shah v. The State of Madras(2)
and The State of Bombay v.
(1) (1922) 12 Tax Cas. 545.
(2) [1953) S.C R. 677, 683.
396
The United Motors (India) Ltd. (1). It has also been held
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in The Sales Tax Officer, Pilibhit v. Messrs. Budh Prakash
Jai Prakash (2) that the sale contemplated by Entry 48 of
the Government of India Act was a transaction in which
title to the goods passes and a mere executory agreement was
not a sale within that Entry. We must accordingly hold that
the expression " sale of goods " in Entry 48 cannot be
construed in its popular sense, and that it must be
interpreted in its legal sense. What its connotation in
that sense is, must now be ascertained. For a correct
determination thereof, it is necessary to digress somewhat
into the evolution of the law relating to sale of goods.
The concept of sale, as it now obtains in our jurisprudence,
has its roots in the Roman law. Under that law, sale,
emptio venditio, is an agreement by which one person agrees
to transfer to another the exclusive possession (vacuagn
possesionem tradere) of something (merx) for consideration.
In the earlier stages of its development, the law was
unsettled whether the consideration for sale should be money
or anything valuable. By a rescript of the Emperors
Diocletian and Maximian of the year 294 A.D., it was finally
decided that it should be money, and this law is embodied in
the Institutes of Justinian, vide Title XXIII. Emptio
venditio is, it may be noted, what is known in Roman law as
a consensual contract. That is to say, the contract is
complete when the parties agree to it, even without delivery
as in contracts re or the observance of any formalities as
in contracts verbis and litteris. The common law of England
relating to sales developed very much on the lines of the
Roman law in insisting on agreement between parties and
price as essential elements of a contract of sale of goods.
In his work on " Sale ", Benjamin observes:
" Hence it follows that, to constitute a valid sale, there
must be a concurrence of the following elements, viz.,
(1) Parties competent to contract; (2) mutual assent; (3) a
thing, the absolute or general property in which is
transferred from the seller to the buyer; and
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069,1078.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 243.
397
(4)a price in money paid or promised. " (Vide 8th Edn., p.
2).
In 1893 the Sale of Goods Act, 56 & 57 Vict. c. 71 codified
the law on the subject, and s. 1 of the Act which embodied
the rules of the common law runs as follows:
I.-(I) " A contract of sale of goods is a contract whereby
the seller transfers or agrees to transfer the property in
goods to the buyer for a money consideration, called the
price. There may be a contract of sale between one part
owner and another.
(2)A contract of sale may be absolute or conditional.
(3)Where under a contract of sale the property in the goods
is transferred from the seller to the buyer the contract is
called a sale; but where the transfer of the property in the
goods is to take place at a future time or subject to some
condition thereafter to be fulfilled the contract is called
an agreement to sell.
(4)An agreement to sell becomes a sale when the time elapses
or the conditions are fulfilled subject to which the
property in the goods is to be transferred." Coming to the
Indian law on the subject, s. 77 of the Indian Contract Act,
1872, defined " sale " as " the exchange of property for a
price involving the transfer of ownership of the thing sold
from the seller to the buyer ". It was suggested that under
this section it was sufficient to constitute a sale that
there was a transfer of ownership in the thing for a price
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and that a bargain between the parties was not an essential
element. But the scheme of the Indian Contract Act is that
it enacts in ss. I to 75 provisions applicable in general
to all contracts, and then deals separately with particular
kinds of contract such as sale, guarantee, bailment, agency
and partnership, and the scheme necessarily posits that all
these transactions are based on agreements. We then come to
the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, which repealed Ch. VII
of the Indian Contract Act relating to sale of goods, and s.
4 thereof is practically in the same terms as s. I of the
English Act. Thus, according to the law both of England and
of India, in order to constitute a sale it is necessary
398
that there should be an agreement between the parties for
the purpose of transferring title to goods which of course
presupposes capacity to contract, that it must be supported
by money consideration, and that as a result of the
transaction property must actually pass in the goods.
Unless all these elements are present, there can be no sale.
Thus, if merely title to the goods passes but not as a
result of any contract between the parties, express or
implied, there is no sale. So also if the consideration for
the transfer was not money but other valuable consideration,
it may then be exchange or barter but not a sale. And if
under the contract of sale, title to the goods has not
passed, then there is an agreement to sell and not a
completed sale.
Now, it is the contention of the respondents that as the
expression " sale of goods " was at the time when the
Government of India Act was enacted, a term of well-
recognised legal import in the general law relating to sale
of goods and in the legislative practice relating to that
topic both in England and in India, it must be interpreted
in Entry 48 as having the same meaning as in the Indian Sale
of Goods Act, 1930, and a number of authorities were relied
on in support of this contention. In United States v. Wong
Kim Ark (1), it was observed:
" In this, as in other respects, it must be interpreted in
the light of the common law, the principles and history of
which were familiarly known to the framers of the
Constitution. The language of the Constitution, as has been
well said, could not be understood without reference to the
common law."
In South Carolina v. United States (2), Brewer J. observed:
"To determine the extent of the grants of power, we must,
therefore, place ourselves in the position of the men who
framed and adopted the Constitution, and inquire what they
must have understood to be the meaning and scope of those
grants. "
A more recent pronouncement is that of Taft C. J. who said:
(1) (1898) 169 U. S. 649, 654 ; 42 L. Ed. 890, 893.
(2) (1905) 199 U-S. 437; 50 L. Ed. 262, 265.
399
" The language of the Constitution cannot be interpreted
safely except by reference to the common law and to British
institutions as they were when the instrument was framed and
adopted. The statesmen and lawyers of the Convention, who
submitted it to the, ratification of the Conventions of the
thirteen states, were born and brought up in the atmosphere
of the common law, and thought and spoke in its vocabulary"
Ex-parte Grossman (1).
In answer to the above line of authorities, the appellant
relies on the following observations in Continental Illinois
National Bank and Trust Company of Chicago v. Chicago Rock
Island & Pacific Railway Company (1):
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" Whether a clause in the Constitution is to be restricted
by the rules of the English law as they existed when the
Constitution was adopted depends upon the terms or the
nature of the particular clause in question. Certainly,
these rules have no such restrictive effect in respect of
any constitutional grant of governmental power (Waring v.
Clarke (3) ), though they do, at least in some instances,
operate restrictively in respect of clauses of the
Constitution which guarantee and safeguard the fundamental
rights and liberties of the individual, the best examples of
which, perhaps, are the Sixth and Seventh Amendments, which
guarantee the right of trial by jury."
It should, however, be stated that the law is stated in
Weaver on Constitutional Law, 1946 Edn., p. 77 and Crawford
on Statutory Construction, p. 258 in the same terms as in
South Corolina v. United States (4). But it is unnecessary
to examine minutely the precise scope of this rule of
interpretation in American law, as the law on the subject
has been stated clearly and authoritatively by the Privy
Council in construing the scope of the provisions of the
British North America Act, 1867. In L’Union St. Jacques De
Montreal v. Be Lisle (5), the question was whether a law of
Quebec
(1) (1925) 267 U.S. 87; 69 L. Ed. 527, 530.
(2) (1935) 294 U.S. 648, 669 ; 79 L. Ed. 1110, 1124.
(3) (1847) 5 How. 441 ; 12 L. Ed. 226.
(4) (1905) 199 U.S. 437 ; 5o L. Ed. 262, 265.
(5) (1874) L.R. 6 P.C. 31, 36.
400
providing for relief to a society in a state of financial
embarrassment was one with respect to " bankruptcy and
insolvency ". In deciding that it should be determined on a
consideration of what was understood as included in those
words in their legal sense, Lord Selborne observed :
" The words describe in their known legal sense provisions
made by law for the administration of the estates of persons
who may become bankrupt or insolvent, according to rules and
definitions prescribed by law, including of course the
conditions in which that law is to be brought into
operation, the manner in which it is to be brought into
operation, and the effect of its operation."
On this test, it was held that the law in question was not
one relating to bankruptcy. In Royal Bank of Canada v.
Larue (1), the question was whether s. 11, sub-s. (10), of
the Bankruptcy Act of Canada under which a charge created by
a judgment on the real assets of a debtor was postponed to
an assignment made by the debtor of his properties for the
benefit of his creditors was intra vires the powers of the
Dominion Legislature, as being one in respect of " bank-
ruptcy and insolvency " within s. 91, sub-cl. (21), of the
British North America Act. Viscount Cave L. C. applying the
test laid down in L’Union St. Jacques De Montreal v. Be
Lisle (2), held that the impugned provision was one in
respect of bankruptcy.
In The Labour Relations Board of Saskatchewan v. John East
Iron Works Ltd. (3), the question arose under s. 96 of the
British North America Act, 1867, under which the Governor-
General of the Dominion had power to appoint judges of the
superior district and county courts. The Province of
Saskatchewan enacted the Trade Union Act, 1944, authorising
the Governor of the Province to constitute the Labour
Relations Board for the determination of labour disputes.
The question was whether this provision was invalid as
contravening s. 96 of the British North America Act. In
holding that it was not, Lord
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(1) [1928] A.C. 187. (2) (1874) I,.R. 6 P.C. 3I, 36.
(3)[1949] A.C. 134.
401
Simonds observed that the courts contemplated by s. 96 of
the Act were those which were generally understood to be
courts at the time when the Constitution Act was enacted,
that labour courts were then unknown, and that, therefore,
the reference to judges, and courts in s. 96 could not be
interpreted as comprehending a tribunal of the character of
the Labour Relations Board. In Halsbury’s Laws ’of England,
Vol. 11, para. 157, p. 93, the position is thus summed up:
" The existing state of English law in 1867 is relevant for
consideration in determining the meaning of the terms used
in conferring power and the extent of that power, e. g. as
to customs legislation."
Turning next to the question as to the weight to be attached
to legislative practice in interpreting words in the
Constitution, in Croft v. Dunphy (1), the question was as to
the validity of certain provisions in a Canadian statute
providing for the search of vessels beyond territorial
waters. These provisions occurred in a customs statute, and
were intended to prevent evasion of its provisions by
smugglers. In affirming the validity of these provisions,
Lord Macmillan referred to the legislative practice relating
to customs, and observed:
" When a power is conferred to legislate on a particular
topic it is important, in determining the scope of the
power, to have regard to what is ordinarily treated as
embraced within that topic in legislative practice and
particularly in the legislative practice of the State which
has conferred the power."
In Wallace Brothers and Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-
tax, Bombay City and Bombay Suburban District (2), Lord
Uthwatt observed:
" Where Parliament has conferred a power to legislate on a
particular topic it is permissible and important in
determining the scope and meaning of the power to have
regard to what is ordinarily treated as embraced within that
topic in the legislative practice of the United Kingdom.
The point of the
(1) [1933] A.C. 156, 165. (2) (1948) L.R. 75 I.A. 86, 99.
51
402
reference is emphatically not to seek a pattern to which a
due exercise of the power must conform. The object is to
ascertain the general conception involved in the words in
the enabling Act."
In In re The Central Provinces and Berar Act No. XI V of
1938 (1), in considering whether a tax on the sale of goods
was a duty of excise within the meaning of Entry 45, in List
I of Sch. VII, Sir Maurice Gwyer C. J. observed at p.
53:
" Lastly, I am entitled to look at the manner in which
Indian legislation preceding the Constitution Act had been
accustomed to provide for the collection of excise duties;
for Parliament must surely be presumed to have had Indian
legislative practice in mind and, unless the context
otherwise clearly requires, not to have conferred a
legislative power intended to be interpreted in a sense not
understood by those to whom the Act was to apply."
In The State of Bombay v. F. N. Balsara (2), in determining
the meaning of the word " intoxicating liquor " in Entry 31
of List 11 of Sch. VII to the Government of India Act,
1935, this Court referred to the legislative practice with
reference to that topic in India as throwing light on the
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true scope of the entry. (Vide pp. 704 to 706).
On the basis of the above authorities, the respondents
contend that the true interpretation to be put on the
expression " sale of goods " in Entry 48 is what it means in
the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, and what it has always
meant in the general law relating to sale of goods. It is
contended by the appellants quite rightly-that in
interpreting the words of a Constitution the legislative
practice relative thereto is not conclusive. But it is
certainly valuable and might prove determinative unless
there are good reasons for disregarding it, and in The Sales
Tax Officer, Pilibhit v. Messrs. Budh Prakash Jai Prakash
(3), it was relied on for ascertaining the meaning and true
scope of the very words which are now under consideration.
There, in deciding that an agreement to sell is not a sale
within Entry 48, this Court referred to the provisions
(1) [1939] F.C.R. 18, 37. (2) [1951] S.C.R. 682.
(3) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 243.
403
of the English Sale of Goods Act, 1893, the Indian Contract
Act, 1872, and the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, for
construing the word "sale" in that Entry and observed:
"Thus, there having existed at the time of the( enactment of
the Government of India Act; 1935, a well-defined and well-
established distinction between a sale and an agreement to
sell, it would be proper to interpret the expression " sale
of goods " in entry 48 in the sense in which it was used in
legislation both in England and India and to hold that it
authorises the imposition of a tax only when there is a
completed sale involving transfer of title."
This decision, though not decisive of the present con-
troversy, goes far to support the contention of the
respondents that the words " sale of goods " in Entry 48
must be interpreted in the sense which they bear in the
Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930.
The appellant and the intervening States resist this
conclusion on the following grounds:
(1) The provisions of the Government of India Act, read as
a whole, show that the words " sale of goods " in Entry 48
are not to be interpreted in the sense which they have in
the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930;
(2) The legislative practice relating to the topic of sales
tax does not support the narrow construction sought to be
put on the language of Entry 48;
(3) The expression " sale of goods " has in law a wider
meaning than what it bears in the Indian Sale of Goods Act,
1930, and that is the meaning which must be put on it in
Entry 48; and
(4) the language of Entry 48 should be construed liberally
so as to take in new concepts of sales tax. We shall
examine these contentions seriatim.
(1) As regards the first contention, the argument is that
in the Government of India Act, 1935, there are other
provisions which give a clear indication that the expression
" sale of goods " in Entry 48 is not to be interpreted in
the sense which it bears in the Indian Sale of Goods Act,
1930. That is an argument open
404
to the appellant, because rules of interpretation are only
aids for ascertaining the true legislative intent and must
yield to the context, where the contrary clearly appears.
Now, what are the indications contra ? Section 311(2) of the
Government of India Act defines " agricultural income " as
meaning " agricultural income as defined for the purposes of
the enactments relating to Indian income-tax ". It is said
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that if the words " sale of goods " in Entry 48 were meant
to have the same meaning as those words in the Indian Sale
of Goods Act, that would have been expressly mentioned as in
the case of definition of agricultural income, and that
therefore that is not the meaning which should be put on
them in that Entry.
In our opinion, that is not the inference to be drawn from
the absence of words linking up the meaning of the word "
sale " with what it might bear in the Indian Sale of Goods
Act. We think that the true legislative intent is that the
expression " sale of goods " in Entry 48 should bear the
precise and definite meaning it has in law, and that meaning
should not be left to fluctuate with the definition of "
sale " in laws relating to sale of goods which might be in
force for the time being. It was then said that in some of
the Entries, for example, Entries 31 and 49, List 11, the
word it sale " was used in a wider sense than in the Indian
Sale of Goods Act, 1930. Entry 31 is " Intoxicating liquors
and narcotic drugs, that is to say, the production,
manufacture, possession, transport, purchase and sale of
intoxicating liquors, opium and other narcotic drugs. ".
The argument is that " sale " in the Entry must be
interpreted as including barter, as the policy of the law
cannot be to prohibit transfers of liquor only when there is
money consideration therefor. But this argument proceeds on
a misapprehension of the principles on which the Entries are
drafted. The scheme of the drafting is that there is in the
beginning of the Entry words of general import, and they are
followed by words having reference to particular aspects
thereof. The operation of the general words, however, is
not cut down by reason of the fact that there are sub-heads
dealing with specific aspects. In
405
Manikkasundara v. R. S. Nayudu(1) occur the following
observations pertinent to the present question :
" The subsequent words and phrases are not intended to limit
the ambit of the opening general term or phrase but rather
to illustrate the scope and objects of the legislation
envisaged as comprised in the opening term or phrase."
A law therefore prohibiting any dealing in intoxicating
liquor, whether by way of sale or barter or gift, will be
intra vires the powers conferred by the opening words
without resort to the words " sale and purchase ". Entry 49
in List II. is " Cesses on the entry of goods into a local
area for consumption, use or sale therein ". It is argued
that the word " sale " here cannot be limited to transfers
for money or for even consideration. The answer to this is
that the words " for consumption, use or sale therein " are
a composite expression meaning octroi duties, and have a
precise legal connotation, and the use of the word " sale
therein " can throw no light on the meaning of that word in
Entry 48. We are of opinion that the provisions in the
Government of India Act, 1935, relied on for the appellant
are too inconclusive to support the inference that " sale "
in Entry 48 was intended to be used in a sense different
from that in the Indian Sale of Goods Act.
(2) It is next urged that, for determining the true meaning
of the expression " Taxes on the sale of goods " in Entry 48
it would not be very material, to refer to the legislative
practice relating to the law in respect of sale of goods.
It is argued that " sale of goods " and " taxes on sale of
goods " are distinct matters, each having its own incidents,
that the scope and object of legislation in respect of the
two topics are different, that while the purpose of a law
relating to sale of goods is to define the rights of parties
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to a contract, that of a law relating to tax oil sale of
goods is to bring money into the coffers of the State, and
that, accordingly, legislative practice with reference to
either topic cannot be of much assistance with reference to
the other. Now, it is trite that the object and
(1) [1946] F.C.R. 67, 84.
406
scope of the two laws are different, and if there was any
difference in the legislative practice with reference to
these two topics, we should, in deciding the question that
is now before us, refer more appropriately to that relating
to sales tax legislation rather than that relating to sale
of goods. But there was, at the time when the Government of
India Act was enacted, no law relating to sales tax either
in England or in India. The first sales tax law to be
enacted in India is the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939,
and that was in exercise of the power conferred by Entry 48.
In England, a purchase tax was introduced for the first time
only by the Finance Act No. 2 of 1940. The position,
therefore, is that Entry 48 introduces a topic of
legislation with respect to which there was no legislative
practice.
In the absence of legislative practice with reference to
sales tax in this country or in England, counsel for the
appellant and the States sought support for their contention
in the legislative practice of Australia and America
relating to that topic. In 1930, the Commonwealth Sales Tax
Act was enacted in Australia imposing a tax on retail sales.
A question ARose, Whether a contractor who supplied
materials in execution of a works contract could be taxed as
on a sale of the materials. In Sydney Hydraulic and General
Engineering Co. v. Blackwood & Son (1), the Supreme Court of
New South Wales held that the agreement between the parties
was one to do certain work and to supply certain materials
and not an agreement for sale or delivery of the goods.
Vide Irving’s Commonwealth Sales Tax Law and Practice, 1950
Edn., p. 77. In 1932, the Legislature intervened and
enacted in the Statute of 1930, a new provision, s. 3(4), in
the following terms:
" For the purpose of this Act, a person shall be deemed to
have sold goods if, in the performance of any contract (not
being a contract for the sale of goods) under which he has
received, or is entitled to receive, valuable consideration,
he supplies goods the property in which (whether as goods or
in some other form) passes, under the terms of the contract,
to some other person."
(1) 8 N.S.W.S.R.
407
After this, the question arose in M. R. Hornibrook (Pty.)
Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation(1) whether a
contractor who fabricated piles and used them in
constructing a bridge was liable to pay sales tax on the
value of the piles. The majority of the( Court held that he
was. Latham C. J. put his decision on the ground that
though there was, in fact, no sale of the piles, in law
there was one by reason of s. 3(4) of the Act. Now, the
judgment of the learned Chief Justice is really adverse to
the appellant in that it decides that under the general law
and apart from s. 3(4) there was no sale of the materials
and that it was only by reason of the deeming provision of
s. 3(4) that it became a taxable sale. The point to be
noted is that under the Australian Constitution the power to
legislate on the items mentioned in s. 51 of the Con-
stitution Act is vested Exclusively in the Commonwealth
Parliament. Item (ii) in s. 51 is " Taxation; but so as not
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to discriminate between States or parts of States ". Subject
to this condition, the power of Parliament is plenary and
absolute, and in exercise of such a power it could impose a
tax on the value of the materials used by a contractor in
his works contracts; and it could do that whether the
transaction amounts in fact to a sale or not. It is no
doubt brought under the Sales Tax Act, it being deemed to be
a sale; but that is only as a matter of convenience. In
fact, two of the learned Judges in M.’ R. Hornibrook (Pty.)
Ltd. V. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1) rested their
decision on the ground that the use of materials in the
construction was itself taxable under the Act. But under
the Government of India Act, the Provincial Legislature is
competent to enact laws in respect of the matters enumerated
in Lists II and III, and though the entries therein are to
be construed liberally and in their widest amplitude, the
law must, nevertheless, be one with respect to those
matters. A power to enact a law with respect to tax on sale
of goods under Entry 48 must, to be intra vires, be one
relating in fact to sale of goods, and accordingly, the
Provincial Legislature cannot, in the purported exercise of
its power
(1) (1939) 62 C.L.R. 272.
408
to tax sales, tax transactions which are not sales by merely
enacting that they shall be deemed to be sales.
The position in the American law appears to be the same as
in Australia. In Blome Co. v. Ames (1), the Supreme Court
of Illinois held that a sales tax was leviable on the value,
of materials used by a contractor in the construction of a
building or a fixture treating the transaction as one of
sale of those materials. But this decision Was overruled by
a later decision of the same Court in Herlihy Mid-Continent
Co. v. Nudelman wherein it was held that there was no
transfer of title to the materials used in construction work
as goods, and that the provisions of the Sales Tax Act had
accordingly no application. This is in accordance with the
Generally accepted notion of sale of goods. This, of
course, does not preclude the States in exercise of their
sovereign power from imposing tax on construction works in
respect of materials used therein. Thus, position is that
in 1935 there was no legislative practice relating to sales
tax either in England or India, and that in America and
Australia, tax on the supply of materials in construction
works was imposed but that was in exercise of the sovereign
powers of the Legislature by treating the supply as a sale.
But apart, from such legislation, the expression "sale of
goods " has been construed as having the meaning which it
has in the common law of England relating to sale of goods,
and it has been held that in that sense the use of materials
in construction works is not a sale. This rather supports
the conclusion that sale " in Entry, 48 must be construed as
having the same meaning which it has in the Indian Sale of
Goods Act, 1930.
(3) It is next contended by Mr. Sikri that though the word
" sale " has a definite sense in the Indian Sale of Goods
Act, 1930, it has a wider sense in law other than that
relating to sale of goods, and that, on the principle that
words conferring legislative powers should be construed in
their broadest amplitude, it would be proper to attribute
that sense to it in Entry
(1) (1937) 111 A.L.R. 940.
(2) (1937) 115 A.L.R. 485.
409
48.It is argued that in its wider sense the expression "
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sale of goods " means all transactions resulting in the
transfer of title to goods from one person to another, that
a, bargain between the parties was not an essential element
thereof, and that even involuntary sales, would fall within
its connotation. He relied in support of this position on
various dicta in Ex Parte Drake In re Ware (1), Great
Western Railway Co. v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue (2),
The Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Newcastle Breweries
Ltd. (3), Kirkness v. John Hudson & Co. Ld. (4) and Nalukuya
v. Director of Lands, Native Land Trust Board of Fiji (5).
In Ex Parte Drake In re Ware (1), the question was whether
an unsatisfied decree passed in an action on detinue
extinguished the title of the decree-holder to the thing
detained. In answering it in the negative, Jessel M. R.
observed:
" The judgments in Brinsmead v. Harrison and especially that
of Mr. Justice Willes, shew that the theory of the judgment
in an action of detinue is that it is a kind of involuntary
sale of the Plaintiff’s goods to the Defendant."
He went on to state that such sale took place when the value
of the goods is paid to the owner. In Great Western Railway
Co. v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue (2), an Act of
Parliament had provided for the dissolution of two companies
under a scheme of amalgamation with a third company under
which the shareholders were to be given in exchange for
their shares in the dissolved companies, in the case of one
company, stock in the third company in certain specified
proportions, and in the other, discharge of debentures on
shares already held by them in the third company. The
question was whether a copy of the Act had to be stamped ad
valorem as on conveyance on sale under the first schedule to
the Stamp Act, 1891. The contention of the company was that
there was no sale by the shareholders of their shares to it,
and
(1) (1877) 5 Ch. D. 866.(2) (1894) 1 Q.B. 507, 512, 515.
(3) (1927) 12 Tax Cas. 927.(4) [1955] A.C. 696.
(5) [1957] A.C. 325.(6) (1872) L.R. 7 C.P. 347.
52
410
that the provision in question had accordingly no
application. In rejecting this contention, Esher M. R.
observed:
" Turning to the Stamp Act, the words used are ’ a
conveyance on sale’. Does that expression mean a conveyance
where there is a definite contract of purchase and sale
preceding it ? Is that the way to construe the Stamp Act, or
does it mean a conveyance the same as if it were upon a
contract of purchase and sale ? The latter seems to me to be
the meaning of the phrase as there used.
Kay L. J. said:
" And we must remember that the Stamp Act has nothing to do
with contracts or negotiations; it stamps a conveyance upon
a sale, which is the instrument by which the property is
transferred upon a sale. "
This is a decision on the interpretation of the particular
provision of the Stamp Act, and is not relevant in
determining the meaning of sale under the general law. And,
if anything, the observations above quoted emphasise the
contrast between the concept of sale under the general law
and that which is embodied in the particular provision of
the Stamp Act.
In The Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Newcastle
Breweries Ltd.(1), the point for decision was whether
payments made by the Admiralty to the respondent company
which was carrying on business as brewers, on account of
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stocks of rum taken over by it compulsorily under the
Defence of Realm Regulations were liable to be assessed as
trade receipts to excess profits duty. The contention of
the company was that the acquisition by the Admiralty was
not a sale, that the payments made were not price of goods
sold but compensation for interference with the carrying on
of business by it, and that accordingly the amounts could
not be held to have been received in the course of trade or
business. In rejecting this contention, Viscount Cave L. C.
observed:
"If the raw rum had been voluntarily sold to other traders,
the price must clearly have come into the computation of the
Appellant’s profits, and the
(1) (1927) 12 Tax Cas. 927.
411
circumstance that the sale was compulsory and was to the
Crown makes no difference in principle. "
In Kirkness v. John Hudson & Co. Ltd. (1), the facts were
that railway wagons belonging to the respondent company were
taken over by the Transport Commission compulsorily in
exercise of the powers conferred by s. 29 of the Transport
Act, 1947, and compensation was paid therefor. The question
was whether this amount was liable to income-tax on the
footing of sale of the wagons by the company. The
contention on behalf of the Revenue was that compulsory
acquisition being treated as sale under the English law, the
taking over of the wagons and payment of compensation
therefor must also be regarded as sale for purpose of
income-tax. Lord Morton in agreeing with this contention
observed:
"........ the question whether it is a correct use of the
English language to describe as a ’sale’ a transaction from
which the element of mutual assent is missing is no doubt an
interesting one. I think, however, that this question loses
its importance for the purpose of the decision of this
appeal when it is realized that for the last 100 years
transactions by which the property of A has been transferred
to B, Oil payment of compensation to the owner but without
the consent of the owner, have been referred to many times,
in Acts of Parliament, in opinions delivered in this House,
in judgments of the Court of Appeal and the High Court of
Justice, and in textbooks as a sale ’-generally as a
compulsory sale
" The case of Newcastle Breweries Ld. v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners (2 ), referred to later, affords a striking
modern instance of the use of the word I sale’ as applied to
compulsory taking of goods ’................................
" In these circumstances, whether this use of the word
’sale’ was originally correct or incorrect, I find it
impossible to say that the only construction which can
fairly be given to the word ’ sold ’ in section 17(1) (a) of
the Income Tax Act, 1945, is to limit it to a transaction in
which the element of mutual assent is present. "
(1) [1955] A.C. 696.
(2) (1927) 96 L.J.K. B. 735.
412
But the majority of the House came to a different con-
clusion, and held that the element of bargain was essential
to constitute a sale, and to describe compulsory taking over
of property as a sale was a misuse of that word.
In Nalukuya v. Director of Lands, Native Land Trust Board of
Fiji, Intervener (1), it was held by the Privy Council that
compensation money payable on the compulsory acquisition of
land was covered by the words " the purchase money received
in respect of a sale or other disposition of native land "
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in s. 15 of the Native Land Trust Ordinance, c. 86 of 1945,
Fiji. The decision, however, proceeded on the particular
terms of the statute, and does not affect the decision in
Kirkness v. John Hudson & Co. Ltd. (2) that mutual assent is
an element of a transaction of sale.
It should be noted that the main ground on which the
decision of Lord Morton rests is that compulsory acquisition
of property had been described in the legislative practice
of Great Britain as compulsory sales. The legislative
practice of this country, however, has been different. The
Land Acquisition Act, 1894, refers to the compulsory taking
over of immovable property as acquisition. In List 11 of
the Government of India Act, this topic is described in
Entry 9 as " compulsory acquisition of land". In the
Constitution, Entry 42 in List III is " acquisition and
requisition of property ". The ratio on which the opinion of
Lord Morton is based has no place in the construction of
Entry 48, and the law as laid down by the majority is in
consonance with the view taken by this Court that bargain is
an essential element in a transaction of sale. Vide
Poppatlal Shah v. The State of Madras (3) and The State of
Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd. (4). It is
unnecessary to discuss the other English cases cited above
at any length, as the present question did not directly
arise for decision therein, and the decision in Kirkness v.
John Hudson & Co. Ld. (2) must be held to conclude the
matter.
Another contention presented from the same point
(1) [1957] A.C- 325.
(3) [1953] S.C.R. 677, 683.
(2) [1955] A.C. 696.
(4) [1953] S.C.R. 1069, 1078.
413
of view but more limited in its sweep is that urged by the
learned Solicitor-General of India, the Advocate General of
Madras and the other counsel appearing for the States, that
even in the view that an agreement between the parties was
necessary to constitute a sale, that agreement need not
relate to the goods as such, and that it would be sufficient
if there is an agreement between the parties and in the
carrying out of that agreement there is transfer of title in
movables belonging to one person to another for
consideration. It is argued that Entry 48 only requires
that there should be a sale, and that means transfer of
title in the goods, and that to attract the operation of
that Entry it is not necessary that there should also be an
agreement to sell those goods. To hold that there should be
an agreement to sell the goods as such is, it is contended,
to add to the Entry, words which are not there.
We are unable to agree with this contention. If the words "
sale of goods " have to be interpreted in their legal sense,
that sense can only be what it has in the law relating to
sale of goods. The ratio of the rule of interpretation that
words of legal import occurring in a statute should be
construed in their legal sense is that those words have, in
law, acquired a definite and precise sense, and that,
accordingly, the legislature must be taken to have intended
that they should be understood in that sense. In
interpreting an expression used in a legal sense, therefore,
we have only to ascertain the precise connotation which it
possesses in law. It has been already stated that, both
under the common law and the statute law relating to sale of
goods in England and in India, to constitute a transaction
of sale there should be an agreement, express or implied,
relating to goods to be completed by passing of title in
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those goods. It is of the essence of this concept that both
the agreement and the sale should relate to the same
subject-matter. Where the goods delivered under the
contract are not the goods contracted for, the purchaser has
got a right to reject them, or to accept them and claim
damages for breach of warranty. Under the law, therefore,
there cannot be an agreement relating to one kind of
property and
414
a sale as regards another. We are accordingly of opinion
that on the true interpretation of the expression " sale of
goods " there must be an agreement between the parties for
the sale of the very goods in which eventually property
passes. In a building contract, the agreement between the
parties is that the contractor should construct a building
according to the specifications contained in the agreement,
and in consideration therefor receive payment as provided
therein, and as will presently be shown there is in such an
agreement neither a contract to sell the materials used in
the construction, nor does property pass therein as
movables. It is therefore impossible to maintain that there
is implicit in a building contract a sale of materials as
understood in law.
(4) It was finally contended that the words of a
Constitution conferring legislative power should be
construed in such manner as to make it flexible and elastic
so as to enable that power to be exercised in respect of
matters which might be unknown at the time it was enacted
but might come into existence with the march of time and
progress in science, and that on this principle the
expression " sale of goods " in Entry 48 should include not
only what was understood as sales at the time of the
Government of India Act, 1935, but also whatever might be
regarded as sale in the times to come. The decisions in
Attorney General v. Edison Telephone Company of London (1),
Toronto Corporation v. Bell Telephone Company of Canada (2),
The Regulation and Control of Radio Communication in Canada,
In re (3) and. The King v. Brislan: Ex Parte Williams (4)
were quoted as precedents for adopting such a construction.
In Attorney General v. Edison Telephone Company of London
(1), the question was whether the Edison Telephone Company,
London, had infringed the exclusive privilege of
transmitting telegrams granted to the Postmaster General
under an Act of 1869 by installation of telephones. The
decision turned on the construction of the definition of the
word " telegraph " in the Acts of
(1) (1880) L.R. 6 Q.B.D. 244.
(2) [1905] A.C. 52.
(3) [1932] A.C. 304.
(4) (1935) 54 C.L.R. 262.
415
1863 and 1869. It was contended for the Company that
telephones were unknown at the time when those Acts were
passed and therefore could not fall within the definition of
"telegraph". The Court negatived this contention on the
ground that the language of the definition was wide enough
to include telephones. Toronto Corporation v. Bell Telephone
Company of Canada (1) is a decision on s. 92(10)(a) of the
British North America Act, 1867, under which the Dominion
Parliament had the exclusive competence to pass laws in
respect of " lines of steam or other ships, railways,
canals, telegraphs, and other works and undertakings
connecting the province with any other or others of the
provinces or extending beyond the limits of the province".
The question was whether a law incorporating a telephone
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company and conferring on it powers to enter upon streets
and highways vested in a municipal corporation was intra
vires the powers of the Dominion Parliament under the above
provision, and whether in consequence a provision in an
Ontario Act requiring the consent of the municipal
authorities for the carrying out of those operations was
ultra vires. It was held by the Privy Council that the
Parliament of Canada was competent to enact the impugned law
under s. 92(10)(a) and that, therefore, it prevailed over
the Provincial Act. This decision, however, would seem to
have been reached on the words " other works and
undertakings " in the section.
In The, Regulation and Control of Radio Communication in
Canada, In re (2), the question was whether broadcasting was
covered by the expression "telegraph and other works and
undertakings " in s. 92(10)(a) of the Constitution Act,
1867. The Privy Council answered it in the affirmative on
the grounds, firstly, that broadcasting was an " undertaking
connecting the province with other provinces and extending
beyond the limits of the province and, secondly, that it
fell within the description of telegraph ". In The King v.
Bristan: Ex Parte Williams (3), the question was whether a
law of the Commonwealth
(1) [1905] A.C. 52. (2) [1932] A.C. 304.
(3) (1935) 54 C.L.R. 262.
416
Parliament with respect to radio broadcasting was one with
respect to " Postal, telegraphic, telephonic and other like
services " under s. 51(5) of the Australian Commonwealth
Act, and it was answered in the affirmative.
The principle of these decisions is that when, after the
enactment of a legislation, new facts and situations arise
which could not have been in its contemplation, the
statutory provisions could properly be applied to them if
the words thereof are in a broad sense capable of containing
them. In that situation, " it is not ", as observed by Lord
Wright in James v. Commonwealth of Australia (1), " that the
meaning of the words changes, but the changing circumstances
illustrate and illuminate the full import of that meaning ".
The question then would be not what the framers understood
by those words, but whether those words are broad enough to
include the new facts. Clearly, this principle has no
application to the present case. Sales tax was not a
subject which came into vogue after the Government of India
Act, 1935. It was known to the framers of that statute and
they made express provision for it under Entry 48. Then it
becomes merely a question of interpreting the words, and on
the principle, already stated, that words having known legal
import should be construed in the sense which they had at
the time of the enactment, the expression " sale of goods "
must be construed in the sense which it has in the Indian
Sale of Goods Act.
A contention was also urged on behalf of the respondents
that even assuming that the expression " sale of goods " in
Entry 48 could be construed as having the wider sense sought
to be given to it by the appellant and that the provisions
of the Madras General Sales Tax Act imposing a tax on
construction contracts could be sustained as within that
entry in that sense, the impugned provisions would still be
bad under s. 107 of the Government of India Act, and the
decision in D. Sarkar & Bros. v. Commercial Tax Officer (2)
was relied on in support of this contention. Section 107,
so far as is material, runs as follows:
(1) [1936] A.C. 578, 614.
(2) A.1.R. 1957 Cal. 283.
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417
107-(1) " If any provision of a Provincial law is repugnant
to any provision of a Dominion law which the Dominion
Legislature is competent to enact or to any provision of an
existing law with respect to one of the matters enumerated
in the Concurrent Legislative List, then, subject to the
provisions of this section, the Dominion law, whether passed
before or after the Provincial law, or, as the case may be,
the existing law, shall prevail and the Provincial law
shall, to the extent of the repugnancy, be void.
(2) Where a Provincial law with respect to one of the
matters enumerated in the Concurrent Legislative List
contains any provision repugnant to the provisions of an
earlier Dominion law or an existing law with respect to that
matter, then, if the Provincial law, having been reserved
for the consideration of the Governor-General has received
the assent of the Governor-General, the Provincial law shall
in that Province prevail, but nevertheless the Dominion
Legislature may at any time enact further legislation with
respect to the same matter."
Now, the argument is that the definition of " sale given in
the Madras General Sales Tax Act is in conflict with that
given in the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, that the sale
of goods is a matter falling within Entry 10 of the
Concurrent List, and that, in consequence, as the Madras
General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1947, under which the
impugned pro-visions had been enacted, had not been reserved
for the assent of the Governor-General as provided in s. 107
(2), its provisions are bad to the extent that they are
repugnant to the definition of " sale " in the Indian Sale
of Goods Act, 1930. The short answer to this contention is
that the Madras General Sales Tax Act is a law relating not
to sale of goods, but to tax on sale of goods, and that it
is not one of the matters enumerated in the Concurrent List
or over which the Dominion Legislature is competent to enact
a law, but is a matter within the exclusive competence of
the Province under Entry 48 in List II. The only question
that can arise with reference to
53
418
such a law is whether it is within the purview of that
Entry. If it is, no question of repugnancy under s. 107
can arise. The decision in D. Sarkar & Bros. v. Commercial
Tax Officer(1) on this point cannot beaccepted as sound.
It now remains to deal with the contention pressed on us by
the States that even if the supply of materials under a
building contract cannot be regarded as a sale under the
Indian Sale of Goods Act, that contract is nevertheless a
composite agreement under which the contractor undertakes to
supply materials, contribute labour and produce the
construction, and that it is open to the State in execution
of its tax laws to split up that agreement into its
constituent parts, single out that which relates to the
supply of materials and to impose a tax thereon treating it
as a sale. It is said that this is a, power ancillary to
the exercise of the substantive power to tax sales, and
reliance is placed on the observations in The United
Province v. Atiqa Begum (2) and Navinchandra Mafatlal v. The
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City (3) at p. 836. The
respondents contend that even if the agreement between the
parties could be split up in the manner suggested for the
appellant, the resultant will not be a sale in the sense of
the Indian Sale of Goods Act, as there is in a works
contract neither an agreement to sell materials as such, nor
does property in them pass as movables.
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The nature and incidents of works contracts have been the
subject of consideration in numerous decisions of the
English courts, and there is a detailed consideration of the
points now under discussion, in so far as building
contracts, are concerned, in Hudson on Building Contracts,
7th Ed., pp. 386-389 and as regards chattels, in Benjamin on
Sale, 8th Ed., pp.’ 156-168 and 352-355. It is therefore
sufficient to refer to the more important of the cases cited
before us. In Tripp v. Armitage (4), one Bennett, a builder,
had entered into an agreement with certain trustees to build
a hotel. The agreement provided inter alia that
(1) A.I.R. 1957 Cal. 283.
(3) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 829, 833, 836.
(2) [1940] F.C.R. 110, 134.
(4) (1839) 4 M & W. 687 ; 15o E.R. 1597.
419
the articles which were to be used for the structure had to
be approved by the trustees. Subsequently, Bennett became
bankrupt, and the dispute was between his assignees in
bankruptcy, and the trustees as regards title to certain
wooden sash-frames which had been approved on behalf of the
trustees but had not yet been fitted in the building. The
trustees claimed them on the ground that property therein,
had passed to them when once they had approved the same. In
negativing this contention, Lord Abinger C. B. observed:
".. ............ this is not a contract for the sale and
purchase of goods as movable chattels; it is a contract to
make up materials, and to fix them ; and until they are
fixed, by the nature of the contract, the property will not
pass."
Parke B. observed:
"............ but in this case, there is no contract at all
with respect to these particular chattels-it is merely
parcel of a larger contract. The contract is, that the
bankrupt shall build a house; that he shall make, amongst
other things, window-frames for the house, and fix them in
the house’ subject to the approbation of a surveyor; and it
was never intended by this contract, that the articles so to
be fixed should become the property of the defendants, until
they were fixed to the freehold."
In Clark v. Bulmer (1), the plaintiff entered into a
contract with the defendant " to build an engine of 100
horse power for the sum of E. 2,500, to be completed and
fixed by the middle or end of December ". Different parts of
the engine were constructed at the plaintiff’s manufactory
and sent in parts to the defendant’s colliery where they
were fixed piecemeal and were made into an engine. The suit
was for the recovery of a sum of E. 3,000 as price for " a
main engine and other goods sold and delivered ". The
contention of the defendant was that there was no contract
of sale, and that the action should have been one for work
and labour and material used in the course of that work and
not for price of goods
(1) (1843) 11 M & W. 243; 152 E- R. 793.
420
sold and delivered. In upholding this contention, Parke B.
observed :
" The engine was not contracted for to be delivered, or
delivered, as an engine, in its complete state, and
afterwards affixed to the freehold; there was no sale of it,
as an entire chattel, and delivery in that character ; and
therefore it could not be treated as an engine sold and
delivered. Nor could the different parts of it which were
used in the construction, and from time to time fixed to the
freehold, and therefore became part of it, be deemed goods
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sold and delivered, for there was no contract for the sale
of them as moveable goods; the contract was in effect that
the plaintiff was to select materials, make them into parts
of an engine, carry them to a particular place, and put them
together, and fix part to the soil, and so convert them into
a fixed engine on the land itself, so as to pump the water
out of a mine."
In Seath v. Moore(1), the facts were similar to those in Tripp
v. Armitage (2). A firm of engineers, A. Campbell & Son,
had entered into five agreements with the appellants, T. B.
Seath and Co., who were ship-builders to supply engines,
boilers and machinery required for vessels to be built by
them. Before the completion of the contracts, A. Campbell &
Son became bankrupt, and the dispute was as regards the
title to machinery and other articles which were in the
possession of the insolvents at the time of their bankruptcy
but which had been made for the purpose of being fitted into
the ships of the appellants. It was held by the House of
Lords approving Tripp v. Armitage(2) that there had been no
sale of the machinery and parts as such, and that therefore
they vested in the assignee. For the appellant, reliance is
placed on the following observations of Lord Watson at p.
380:
The English decisions to which I have referred appear to me
to establish the principle that, where it appears to be the
intention, or in other words the agreement, of the parties
to a contract for building a, ship, that a particular stage
of its construction, the :vessel, so far as then finished,
shall be appropriated to
(1) (1886) 11 App. Cas. 35o.
(2) (1839) 4 M & W. 687; 15o E.R. 1597.
421
the contract of sale, the property of the vessel as soon as
it has reached that stage of completion will pass to the
purchaser, and subsequent additions made to the chattel thus
vested in the purchaser will, accessione, become his
property. "
It is to be noted that even in this passage the title to the
parts is held to pass not under any contract but on the
principle of accretion. The respondents rely on the
following observations at p. 381 as furnishing the true
ground of the decision
" There is another principle which appears to me to be
deducible from these authorities and to be in itself sound,
and that is, that materials provided by the builder and
portions of the fabric, whether wholly or partially
finished, although intended to be used in the execution of
the contract, cannot be regarded as appropriated to the
contract, or as ’ sold’, unless they have been affixed to or
in a reasonable sense made part of the corpus. That appears
to me to have been matter of direct decision by the Court of
Exchequer Chamber in Wood v. Bell(1). In Woods v. Russell
(2) the property of a rudder and some cordage which the
builder had bought for the ship was held to have passed in
property to the purchaser as an accessory of the vessel; but
that decision was questioned by Lord Chief Justice Jervis,
delivering the judgment of the Court in Wood v. Bell(1), who
stated the real question to be ’what is the ship, not what
is meant for the ship’, and that only the things can pass
with the ship I which have been fitted to the ship and have
once formed part of her, although afterwards removed for
convenience I assent to that rule, which appears to me to be
in accordance with the decision of the Court of Exchequer in
Tripp v Armitage (3)".
In Reid v. Macbeth & Gray (4), the facts were that a firm
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of ship-builders who had agreed to build a ship became
bankrupt. At the date of the bankruptcy, there was lying at
railway stations a quantity of iron ’and steel plates which
were intended to be fixed in the
(1) (1856) 6 E. & B. 355; 119 E.R. 669. (4) [1904] A.C.
223.
(2) (1822) 5 B. & Al. 942 ; 106 E. R. 14 36.
(3) (1839) 4 M & W. 687; 150 E.R. I597.
422
ship. The dispute was between the assignee in bankruptcy
and the shipowners as to the title to these articles. It
was held by the House of Lords following Seath v. Moore (1)
and in particular the observations of Lord Watson at p. 381
that the contract was one for the purchase of a complete
ship, and that under that contract no title to the articles
in question passed to the shipowners. The following
observations of Lord Davey are particularly appropriate to
the present question :
" There is only one contract--a contract for the purchase of
the ship. There is no contract for the sale or purchase of
these materials separatism ; and unless you can find a
contract for the sale of these chattels within the meaning
of the Sale of Goods Act, it appears to me that the sections
of that Act have no application whatever to the case."
If in a works contract there is no sale of materials as
defined in the Sale of Goods Act, and if an action is not
maintainable for the value of those materials as for price,
of goods sold and delivered, as held in the above
authorities, then even a disintegration of the building
contract cannot yield any sale such as can be taxed under
Entry 48.
The decision in Love v. Norman Wright (Builders) Ld. (2),
cited by the appellant does not really militate against this
conclusion. There, the defendants to the action had agreed
with the Secretary of State to supply blackout curtains and
curtain rails, and fix them in a number of police stations.
In their turn, the defendants had entered into a contract
with the plaintiffs that they should prepare those curtains
and rails and erect them. The question was whether the sub-
contract was one for sale of goods or for work and services.
In deciding that it was the former, Goddard L. J. observed :
" If one orders another to make and fix curtains at his
house the contract is one of sale though work and labour are
involved in the making and fixing, nor does it matter that
ultimately the property was to pass to the War Office, under
the head contract. As
(1) (1886) 11 App. Cas. 350.
(2) [1944] 1 K.B. 484, 487.
423
between the plaintiff and the defendants the former passed
the property in the goods to the defendants who passed it on
to the War Office. "
It will be seen that in this case there was no question of
an agreement to supply materials as parcel of a contract to
deliver a chattel; the goods to be supplied were the
curtains and rails which were the subject-matter of the
contract itself. Nor was there any question of title to the
goods passing as an accretion under the general law, because
the buildings where they had to be erected belonged not to
the defendants but to the Government, and therefore as
between the parties to the contract, title could pass only
under their contract.
The contention that a building contract contains within it
all the elements constituting a sale of’ the materials was
sought to be established by reference to the form of the
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action, when the claim is in quantum meruit. It was argued
that if a contractor is prevented by the other party to the
contract from completing the construction he has, as
observed by Lord Blackburn in Appleby v. Myres (1), a claim
against that party, that the form of action in such a case
is for work done and materials supplied, as appears from
Bullen & Leake’s Precedents of Pleadings, 10th Ed., at pp.
285-286, and that showed that the concept of sale of goods
was latent in a building contract. The answer to this
contention is that a claim for quantum, meruit is a claim
for damages for breach of contract, and that the value of
the materials is a factor relevant only as furnishing a
basis for assessing the amount of compensation. That is to
say, the claim is not for price of goods sold and delivered
but for damages. That is also the position under s. 65 of’
the Indian Contract Act.
Another difficulty in the way of accepting the contention of
the appellant as to splitting up a building contract is that
the property in materials used therein does not pass to the
other party to the contract as movable property. It would
so pass if that was the agreement between the parties. But
if there was no
(1) (1867) L.R. 2 C.P. 651.
424
such agreement and the contract was only to construct a
building, then the materials used therein would be come the
property of the other party to the contract only on the
theory of accretion. The position is thus stated by
Blackburn J. at pp. 659-660 in Appleby v. Myres (1):
" It is quite true that materials worked by one into the
property of another become part of that property. This is
equally true, whether it be fixed or movable property.
Bricks built into a wall become part of the house; thread
stitched into a coat which is under repair, or planks and
nails and pitch worked into a ship under repair, become a
part of the coat or the ship.
When the work to be executed is, as in the present case, a
house, the construction imbedded on the land becomes an
accretion to it on the principle quicquid plantatur solo,
solo cedit and it vests in the other party not as a result
of the contract but as the owner of the land. Vide Hudson
on Building Contracts, 7th Edn. p. 386. It is argued that
the maxim, what is annexed to the soil goes with the
soil, has not been accepted as a correct statement of
the law of this country, and reliance is placed on the
following observations in the Full Bench decision of the
Calcutta High Court in Thakoor Chunder Poramanick v.
Ramdhone Bhuttacharjee (2) :
We think it should be laid down is a general rule that, if
he who makes the improvement is not a mere trespasser, but
is in possession under any bona fide title or claim of
title, he is entitled either to remove the materials,
restoring the land to the state in which it was before the
improvement was made, or to obtain compensation for the
value of the building if it is allowed to remain for the
benefit of the owner of the soil,-the option of taking the
building, or allowing the removal of the material, remaining
with the owner of the land in those cases in which the
building, is not taken down by the builder during the
continued ance of any estate he may possess."
The statement of the law was quoted with approval
(1) (1867) L.R. 2 C.P. 651.
(2) (1866) 6W.R. 228.
425
by the Privy Council in Beni Ram v. Kundan Lall (1) and in
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Narayan Das Khettry v. Jatindranath (2). But these
decisions are concerned with rights of persons who, not
being trespassers, bona fide put up constructions on lands
belonging to others, and as to such persons the authorities
lay down that the maxim recognised in English law, quicquid
plantatur solo, solo cedit has no application, and that they
have the right to remove the superstructures, and that the
owner of the land should pay compensation if he elects to
retain them. That exception does not apply to buildings
which are constructed in execution of a works contract, and
the law with reference to them is that the title to the same
passes to the owner of the land as an accretion thereto.
Accordingly, there can be no question of title to the
materials passing as movables in favour of the other party
to the contrat. It may be, as was suggested by Mr. Sastri
for the respondents, that when the thing to be produced
under the contract is moveable property, then any material
incorporated into it might pass as a movable, and in such a
case the conclusion that no taxable sale will result from
the disintegration of the contract can be rested only on the
ground that there was no agreement to sell the materials as
such. But we are concerned here with a building contract,
and in the case of such a contract, the theory that it can
be broken up into its component parts and as regards one of
them it can be said that there is a sale must fail both on
the grounds that there is no agreement to sell materials as
such, and that property in them does not pass as movables.
To sum up, the expression " sale of goods " in Entry 48 is a
nomen juris, its essential ingredients being an agreement to
sell movables for a price and property passing therein
pursuant to that agreement. In a building contract which
is, as in the present case, one, entire and indivisible and
that is its norm, there is no sale of goods, and it is not
within the competence of the Provincial Legislature under
Entry 48 to
(1) (1899) L. R. 26 1. A. 58.
54
(2) (1927) L. R. 54 T. A. 218,
426
impose a tax on the supply of the materials used in such a
contract treating it as a sale.
This conclusion entails that none of the legislatures
constituted under the Government of India Act, 1935, was
competent in the exercise of the power conferred by s. 100
to make laws with respect to the matters enumerated in the
Lists, to impose a tax on construction contracts and that
before such a law could be enacted it would have been
necessary to have had recourse to the residual powers of the
GovernorGeneral under s. 104 of the Act. And it must be
conceded that a construction which leads to such a. result
must, if that is possible, be avoided. Vide Manikkasundara
v. R. S. Nayudu (1). It is also a fact that acting on the
view that Entry 48 authorises it, the States have enacted
laws imposing a tax on the supply of materials in works
contracts, and have been realising it, and their validity
has been affirmed by several High Courts. All these laws
were in the statute book when the Constitution came into
force, and it is to be regretted that there is nothing in it
which offers a solution to the present question. We have,
no doubt, Art. 248 and Entry 97 in List I conferring
residual power of legislation on Parliament, but clearly it
could not have been intended that the Centre should have the
power to tax with respect to works constructed in the
States. In view of the fact that the State Legislatures had
given to the expression " sale of goods " in Entry 48 a
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wider meaning than what it has in the Indian Sale of Goods
Act, that States with sovereign powers have in recent times
been enacting laws imposing tax on the use of materials in
the construction of buildings, and that such a power should
more properly be lodged with the States rather than the
Centre, the Constitution might have given an inclusive
definition of " sale " in Entry 54 so as to cover the
extended sense. But our duty is to interpret the law as we
find it, and having anxiously considered the question, we
are of opinion that there is no sale as such of materials
used in a building contract, and that the Provincial
Legislatures had no competence to impose a tax thereon under
Entry 48,
(1) [1946] F.C.R. 67. 84.
427
To avoid misconception, it must be stated that the above
conclusion has reference to works contracts, which are
entire and indivisible, as the contracts of the respondents
have been held by the learned Judges of the Court below to
be. The several forms which such kinds of contracts can
assume are set out in Hudson on Building Contracts, at p.
165. It is possible that the parties might enter into
distinct and separate contracts, one for the transfer of
materials for money consideration, and the other for payment
of remuneration for services and for work done. In such a
case, there are really two agreements, though there is a
single instrument embodying them, and the power of the State
to separate the agreement to sell, from the agreement to do
work and render service and to impose a tax thereon cannot
be questioned, and will stand untouched by the present
judgment.
In the result, the appeal fails, and is dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed.