Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 147
PETITIONER:
THE BENGAL IMMUNITY COMPANY LIMITED
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BIHAR AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/12/1954
BENCH:
ACT:
Constitution of India-Arts. 141, 226, 286(1), (2) and (3)-
Art. 286(1)(a) read with the Explanation-Construction of-
Whether controlled by Art. 286(2)-Situs of a sale or
purchase determined by general law or created by fiction in
the Explanation-Whether relevant for ascertaining inter-
State character of such sale or purchase Appellant company
registered in Calcutta-Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1947 (Bihar Act
XIX of 1947)-S. 13-Whether appellant company liable to Sales
Tax-Where goods delivered in the State of Bihar as a direct
result of sale for purposes of consumption there-Art. 226-
Petition thereunder-Maintainability of-Supreme Court whether
competent to modify or review its prior decisions-Art. 141-
Meaning of-Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1947, s. 33-Taxing sales or
purchases taking place in the course of inter-State trade-
Vilidity of-Act whether wholly ultra vires and void.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company, having its registered office in
Calcutta and its factory and laboratory in the District of
24-Parganas in West Bengal, carried on the business of
manufacturing and selling sera, vaccines, biological
products and medicines. It was registered as a dealer under
the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act: Its products having
extensive sales throughout India and abroad were despatched
from Calcutta against orders accepted by the appellant
company in Calcutta. It had no agent or manager in Bihar
nor any office or laboratory in that State. A notice under
s. 13(5) of the Bihar Sales Tax Act, 194,7 was issued by the
Bihar Sales Tax authorities calling upon the appellant
company to apply for registration and to submit returns
showing its turn over for a period between the 26th of Janu-
ary, 1950 and 30th September 1951. The appellant company
denied its liability on the grounds inter alia that it was
not resident in Bihar, it carried on no business there and
none of its sales took place in Bihar. It characterized the
notice ’ under s. 13(5) as ultra vires and illegal and
called upon the Sales Tax authorities to cancel it forth-,
with. The Bihar Sales Tax authorities maintained that all
sales in West Bengal or in any other State under which goods
had been delivered in the State of Bihar as a direct. result
of the sale for the purposes of consumption in that State
were liable to Bihar Sales Tax. Ultimately the appellant
company presented before the High Court ,at Patna a petition
under Art. 226 of the Constitution claiming the reliefs
mentioned above. The High Court dismissed the. petition
holding that it was not maintainable. On appeal under a
certificate
77
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 147
604
under Art. 132(1) of the Constitution:-
Held, (per curiam) (i) that the High Court was not right in
holding that the petition under Art. 226 was misconceived.
In so holding the High Court overlooked the fact that the
petitioners’ contention was that the Act, in so far as it
purported to tax a non-resident in respect of inter-State
sales or purchases of goods was ultra vires the
Constitution. There are various provisions in the Act
laying down certain conditions, which dealers must comply
with or submit to. They constituted restrictions on the
fundamental right guaranteed to every citizen of India by
Art. 19(1)(g) of the Constitution and these onerous
conditions could not be justified as reasonable restrictions
within the meaning of clause (6) of Art. 19 and further the
remedy under the Act cannot be said to be adequate and was
indeed useless if the Act providing for such remedy was
itself ultra vires and void:
(ii)that there is nothing in the Constitution which prevents
the Supreme Court from departing from a previous decision of
its own if the court is satisfied of its error and its
baneful effect on the general interests of the public.
Held, per S. R. DAS, ACTING C. J., VIVIAN BOSE, BHAGWATI and
JAFER IMAM JJ. (JAGANNADHADAS, VENKATARAMA AYYAR and B. P.
SINHA JJ., dissenting) that the present is a fib case for
reviewing the previous majority decision of the Supreme
Court in The State of Bombay v. The United Motors (India)
Ltd. ([1953] S.C.R. 1069), in view of several circumstances
relating to the case.
Held, per S. R. DAS, ACTING 0. J., VIVIAN BOSE, BHAGWATI and
JAFER. IMAM JJ. (JAGANNADHADAS, VENKATARAMA AYYAR and B.P.
SINHA JJ., dissenting). The operative provisions of the
several parts of Art. 286, namely clause (1)(a), clause
(1)(b), clause (2) and clause (3) are intended to deal with
different topics and, one cannot be projected or read into
another and therefore the Explanation in clause (1) (a)
cannot be legitimately extended to clause (2) either as an
exception or as a proviso thereto or read as curtailing or
limiting the ambit of clause (2).
The sales or purchases made by the appellant company which
were sought to be taxed by the State of Bihar actually took
place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce.
Parliament not having by law otherwise provided, no State
law could, therefore, tax these sales or purchases, that is
to say, Bihar could not tax by reason of clause (2) although
they fell within the Explanation and other States could not
tax by reason of both clause (1)(a) read with the Explana-
tion and clause (2).
What is an inter-State sale or purchase continues to be so
irrespective of the State where the sale is to be located
either under the general law when it is finally determined
what the general law is or by the fiction created by the
Explanation. The situs of a sale or purchase is wholly
irrelevant as regards its inter-State character.
605
Until Parliament by law made in exercise of the powers
vested in it by clause (2) of Art. 286 provides otherwise,
no State can impose or authorise the imposition of any tax
on sales or purchases of goods when such sales or purchases
take place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce
and the majority decision in The State of Bombay v. The
United Motors (India)Ltd.. ([1953] S.C.R. 1069) in so far as
it decides to the contrary cannot be accepted as well
founded on principle or authority.
In view of the above interpretation upon Art. 286 the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 147
charging section of the Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1947 read with
the relevant definitions cannot operate to tax inter-State
sales or purchases and as Parliament has not otherwise
provided, the Act, in so far as it purports to tax sales or
purchases that take place in the course of interState trade
or commerce, is unconstitutional, illegal and void.
The Act imposes tax on subjects divisible in their nature
but does not exclude in express terms subjects exempted by
the Constitution. In such a situation the Act need not be
declared wholly ultra vires and void for it is feasible to
separate taxes levied on authorised subjects from those
levied on exempted subjects and to exclude the latter in the
assessment of the tax.
Held (per JAGANNADHADAS, VENKATARAMA AYYAR and B. P. SINHA
JJ.). The scheme of Art. 286(1)(a) is, that it fixes the
situs of the sales with a view to avoid multiple taxation
and for that purpose it divides them into two categories-
inside sales and outside sales and enacts that a State
cannot tax an outside sale. When in the same context the
Explanation declares that a sale in the course of inter-
State trade must be deemed to have taken place in the State
in which the goods are delivered for consumption, its
purpose is clearly to take it out of inter-State trade and
stamp it with the character of an intrastate sale.
Whether regard is had to the object of the enactment or its
language, the Explanation must be held to authorise the
imposition of tax by the delivery State.
Article 286(2) applies to sales in the course of inter-State
trade. The sales which fall within the Explanation are
intrastate sales. The grounds covered by this two
provisions are distinct and separate. Each has operation
within its own sphere, and there is no conflict between
them.
According to the view expressed by Bose J. in The State of
Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd. ([1953] S.C.R.
1069) and by Das J. in State of Travancore-Cochin v.
Shanmugha Vilas Cashew Nut Factory ([1954] S.C.R. 53)
Article 286(2) controls the Explanation. This cannot be
sustained on the language of the enactment. The Explanation
is not expressed to be subject to Art. 286(2). Nor does the
latter contain the words "notwithstanding anything contained
in the Explanation to Art. 286(1)(a)". These are simple and
familiar expressions used by the legislature when it intends
that a particular provision in the Statute should be subject
to or override
606
another. Nor is there anything in the language of the
explanation providing that its operation is not to be in
praesenti but contingent on Parliamentary legislation under
Art. 286(2). To construe, therefore, Art. 286(2) as
controlling the Explanation, one must import into-the
Statute words which are not there and thereby cut down the
operation of the Explanation which on its terms is of equal
authority and potency with Art. 286(2).
The impugned Act in so far as it authorises the imposition
of tax on sales falling within the Explanation to Art.
286(1)(a) is neither ultra vires the powers of the State
Legislature nor bad on the ground that it is extra-
territorial in its operation.
Per JAGANNADHADAS J. The only reasonable construction of
Art. 286(1)(a) taken with the Explanation is that this
provision while intended to prohibit taxation by States on
outside sales was also meant to demarcate the boundary
between inside sales and out., side sales and to assimilate
one particular category of outside sales into the field of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 147
inside sales and to make it available for taxation by the
consuming State.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 159 of 1953.
Appeal under Article 132(1) of the Constitution of India
from the Judgment and Order dated the 4th December 1952 of
the High Court of Judicature at Patna in Misc. Judicial
Case No. 241 of 1952:
N. C. Chatterji (V. S. Sawhney, S. N. Mukerji and B. B.
Biswas, with him) for the appellant company. The High Court
was wrong in holding that there was no warrant for issuing a
writ under article 226 of the Constitution on the facts of
the case. Although no actual assessment was made by the
Sales Tax authorities the issue of notice by them
constituted a sufficient threat which the High Court had
jurisdiction to quash by means of a writ under article 226
of the Constitution: see Himmatlal Harilal Mehta v. The
State of Madhya Pradesh ([1954] S.C.R. 1122), The State ’of
Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd. ([1953] S.C.R.
1069), Mohammad Yasin v. The Town Area ’Committee.,
Jalalabad ([1952] S.C.R. 572), The King v. -Commissioners
for the General Purposes of the Income-Tax for Kensington
([1914] 3 K.B. 429), General Commissioners for the purposes
of Income Tax.for Kensington v. Aramayo ([1916] 1 A.C. 215),
Madan Gapal Kabra v. The Union of India ([1951] I.T.R. 214),
Sales
607
Tax Officer, Pilibhit v. Messrs Budh Prakash Jai Prakash
([1955] 1 S.C.R. 423), Commissioner of Police, Bombay v.
Gordhandas Bhanji ([1952] S. C. R. 135). Article 286(2)
which is in Part XII of the Constitution is meant to
implement the supremacy of Parliament with regard to inter-
State trade or commerce. That Article puts an embargo on
the power of the State Legislature to levy any tax with
respect to interState trade or commerce. Only when the
embargo is lifted by appropriate Parliamentary Legislation
that the State Legislature can levy any tax on sales or
purchases in the course of inter-State trade or commerce.
Article 286 puts a fetter on the State Legislatures and the
Explanation to article 286(1) (a) does not confer any power
on any State Legislature to levy any tax. The Explanation
is meant to explain only clause (1) (a) of article 286, that
is, what is an outside sale or purchase. It does not remove
fetter and it does not convert any inter-State sale or
purchase into an intrastate transaction. See the judgment
of Bose J. in The State of Bombay v. The United Motors
(India) Ltd. ([1953] S.C.R. 1069) and that of Das J. in The
State of Travancore-Cochin v. Shanmugha Vilas Cashew Nut
Factory ([1954] S.C.]V. 53). The construction of the
Explanation by the learned Judges of the High Court is not
correct. They were wrong in assuming that if article 286(2)
is construed in a full and unqualified sense, the Explana-
tion to article 286 (1) (a) would become nugatory and of no
effect. They also erred in holding that the Explanation
expressly confers legislative power, and that the
Explanation is in the nature of an exception which excludes
a particular class from a larger class. The High Court
erred in holding that the Explanation created a nexus for
conferring jurisdiction on the State Legislature. Test of
territorial nexus is no longer applicable after the coming
into force of the Constitution. See The State of Bombay v.
The United Motors (India) Ltd. ([1953] -S.C.R. 1069).
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 147
On a proper reading of all the sections of the Bihar Sales
Tax Act, 1947 the idea seems to be that the intention was
only to tax the dealers within the
608
State of Bihar, as some of the provisions of the Act would
be incapable of enforcement outside the State. Consequently
the appellant which has no office or agent within the
State could not be taxed. See ss. 1, 2(c), 2(g), 4, 10,
14-A, 17, 26(a) (c) (b) & (k), of the Act. Bihar
Legislature has no power to authorise imposition of tax on
outside dealers. The legislative competence of a State
Legislature is derived from Article 246 read with the Lists.
Under article 245(2) Parliament is given power to enact
legislation with respect to extra-territorial operation.
State Legislature has no such power. The combined effect of
article 246(3) read with item 54 of List 11 is that the
State Legislature is competent only to make law imposing tax
on sale or purchase of goods for the whole or any part of
that State. Under article 245 of the Constitution power is
limited within the boundary of the State. Taxable event
must happen in that State. See Swifte v. Attorney-General
for Ireland ([1912] A.C. 276), Commercial Cable Company v.
Attorney-General for Newfoundland ([1912] A. C. 820) and
MacLeod v. Attorney-General for New South Wales ([1891]
A.C. 455). High Court failed to appreciate the true effect
of the judgment in Wallace Brother sand Co., Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Bombay City and Bombay Suburban
District ([1948] 75 I.A. 87). The Australian case cited by
the High Court viz.) O. Gilpin Limited v. Commissioner for
Road Transport and Tramways (New South Wales) ([1935] 52
C.L.R. 189) has been overruled in Hugher and Vales
Proprietary, Ltd. v. State of-New South Wales ([1954] 3 All.
E.R. 607).
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General of India (B. Sen and P.
K. Bose, with him), for the State of West Bengal
(Intervener). Bihar Sales Tax Act has to be read as a whole
and on a correct reading of the Act it clearly appears that
the Act is intended to apply only to dealers in Bihar. Bihar
cannot tax the sale because it takes place in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce and the State is barred from
taxing such sales by reason of clause (2) of article 286.
The question is whether the majority view in the case of
State
609
of Bombay v. United Motors (India) Ltd. ([1953] S.C.R. 1069)
is correct. Article 245 read with Entry 54 in List 11 gives
the Legislative power whereas article 286 imposes
restrictions on such Legislative power of a State. There
are four restrictions placed by that article- the first by
clause (1) (a), the second by clause (1)(b), the third by
clause (2.) and the fourth by clause (3). Basis of article
286(2) is to ensure freedom of movement throughout the
country which principle is to be found in article 301.
Article 286(2) gives authority to the Parliament to watch
over the principles underlying article 301 and to see what
restrictions are necessary. In determining the ambit of
clause (2) it is not permissible to apply the Explanation.
If you do so then logically you must also apply it to clause
If the majority decision in state of Bombay v. United
Motorola (India) Ltd ([1953] S.C.R 1069 ) id right on the
interpretation of clause(2) then that clause (2) then that
clause becomes absolutely meaningless.
The Supreme Court can overrule its previous decision if it
is satisfied that the decision was erroneous: London Street
Tramways Company v. London County Council ([1898] A. C.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 147
375), In re Transferred Civil Servants (Ireland)
Compensation ([1929] A.C. 242), The Tramways case (No. 1)
(18 C. L. R. 54), Smith v. All wright (321 U.S. 649; 88
L. Ed. 987) and Vinayak v. Moreshwar (I.L.R. [1944] Nag.
342).
Even if the ban imposed by clause (2) of article 286 did not
apply, Bihar is not competent to tax on a reading of article
246(3), Entry 54, List II and article 289(1)(a). The word
sale in Entry 54 means passing of property in the sense of
the Sale of Goods Act, S. 4. See Sales Tax Officer, Pilibhit
v. Messrs Budh Prakash Jai Prakash ([1955] 1 S.C.R. p. 243).
On a true construction of the Explanation to article 286(1)
(a) Bihar is competent to levy a purchase tax and not a
sales tax in respect of transactions entered into by dealers
residing outside. The Explanation cannot be read as extra-
territorial. It must be read as consistent with article
245. Although the Federal
610
Legislature had. extra-territorial power under the
Government of India Act, 1935 the Provincial Legislature did
not have such power. The position is the same under the
Constitution: The, Governor-General in Council v. The
Raleigh Investment Co., Ltd. ([1944] F.C,R. 229) and In re
S. Mohan Kumaramangalam (A.I.R. 1951 Mad. 583). So far,
nexus theory has been applied to extra-territoriality as
between two independent States. Decision of the Supreme
Court in Poppatlal Shah’s case is applicable to component
parts of the same State; Poppatlal Shah v. The State of
Madras (1953] S.C.R. 677), The State of Bombay v. The United
Motors (India) Ltd. ([1953] S.C.R. 1069, 1078) and The
Governor-General in Council v. The Raleigh Investment Co.
Ltd. ([1944] F.C.R. 229). It is doubtful if nexus theory is
applicable to this kind of legislation. In any event the"
nexus theory is not applicable under the Constitution of
India. If machinery for enforcement of the Act has extra-
territorial operation and is linked up with the charging
section the whole scheme of taxation is bad due to the
provisions of article 245. In any event the machinery
is bad.
M.C. Setalvad, Attorney-General of India (Rajeswari Prasad
and S. P. Varma,, with him) for Tata Iron and Steel Co.
Ltd., (Intervener) supported the appellant.
T.N. Subramanya Aiyar (T. V. R. Tatachari, with him) for M.
A. Kuriakose (Intervener) adopted the arguments of the
Attorney-General and referred to V. O. Vakkan v. The
Government of the Province of Madras ([1952] 2 M.L.J. 353),
Poppatlal Shah v. State of Madras (A.I.R. 1953 Mad.91)
Tobacco Manufacturers (India) Ltd., Monghyr. The State of
Bihar (A I.R. 1950 Pat.’450), The State of Bihar v. Bengal
Chemical and Pharmaceutical Works Ltd. (A.I.R. 1954 Pat.
14), Maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes, 10th Edn., p.
148 and Craies on Statute Law, 5th Edn,, p. 174.
Lal Narain Sinha (B.K.P. Sinha and B.C. Prasad, with
him) for the respondent (State of Bihar).
611
Article 246(3) read with Entry 54 of List II is by itself
enough to grant legislative competence to the making of laws
imposing tax on sales of inter-State character having a real
and sufficient territorial connection with the taxing State.
Delivery of goods within the State where such delivery takes
place in performance of the contract of sale is by itself
real and sufficient territorial connection. The position
was the same under section 100 of the Government of India
Act, 1935 read with Entry 48 of List II. A legislation on
the basis of a real and sufficient connection is not invalid
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 147
on the ground of extra-territorial operation. The Governor-
General in Council v. The Raleigh Investment Co., Ltd. (1944
F.C.R. 229), Wallace Brothers and Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner
of Income-Tax, Bombay City and Bombay Suburban District
([1948] 75 I.A. 86), Broken Hill South Limited (Public
Officer) v. The Commissioner of Taxation (New South Wales)
(56 C.L.R. 337), Commissioners of Taxation v. Kirk (1900
A.C. 588) and In re S. Mohan Kumaramangalam (A.I.R. 1951
Mad. 583, 588). So far as conception of sale is concerned
it comprises of several elements. The situs of the sale is
where the various ingredients of the sale take place.
Article 286(1) (a) does not govern the whole of interState
trade or commerce. It does not apply to a case where goods
are delivered in the purchasing State for purposes other
than consumption. Article 286 (1) (a) has no application to
cases where the Explanation itself does not apply. If a
Bengal dealer sells to a Bihar purchaser and delivery takes
place in Bihar and if the purpose is consumption then the
Explanation applies and Bihar alone can tax. If the purpose
is not consumption the Explanation does not apply, the
matter is set at large, and States will be entitled to tax
on ’ the nexus theory. The ban imposed by clause (2) of
article 286 does not apply to cases covered by article
286(1) (a). The class of sales falling under the purview of
Article 286(1) (a) form a special class of inter-State sales
which on general principles of interpretation cannot be
affected by the general provisions of clause (2). Article
286(1) (a) and article 286(2) are exactly on the same topic
and they
78
612
are to achieve the same purpose, i.e., elimination of
multiple taxation on a single sale. The device employed in
article 286(1) (a) read with the Explanation is to convert
inter-State sale into an intra-state sale and thereby to
localise a sale and to take away the taxing power of other
States. Article 286(1) (a) and article 286(2) are
complimentary to each other and they have to be interpreted
harmoniously so that each of them can operate within its own
field. Whilst article 286(2) comprises all classes of
inter-State trade, article 286(1) (a) deals with a special
class. If article 286(2) applies to cases covered by
article 286 (1) (a) and the Explanation then it will result
in discrimination against local trade in favour of inter-
state trade and this will be inconsistent with the pro-
visions of Part XIII of the Constitution. The purpose of
article 286 being to eliminate - multiple taxation and
article 286(1) (a) having achieved that purpose in regard to
a class of sales falling within it, it is no longer
necessary for that purpose to apply article 286(2) to the
aforesaid class. The Constitution itself has divided inter-
State sales into two categories. In regard to one class it
has itself provided as to which State will tax the sale and
under what conditions. In regard to the other class the
Constitution itself has imposed a ban in general terms and
granted Parliament power in general to relax that ban to
such extent as Parliament thinks fit. The sale though of an
interState character has been converted into an intrastate
sale by reason of the legal fiction. If power of taxation
is given all ancillary powers are included in that very
power.
V.K. T. Chari, Advocate-General of Madras (K. Veerasami,
with him) for the State of Madras (Intervener). A State is
sovereign within the limits of the subject matter of List II
as well as within its geographical area. The test of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 147
legislative competence both as regards the subject matter
and the geographical limits is the same whether it is the
Parliament or the State Legislature. As to the subject
matter the rule that applies is that of "pith and substance"
and incidental invasion of the other Lists is permitted.
As
613
to area, the test is the territorial connection or nexus as
the limiting factor. The connection must be relevant and
real and if the connection is real then any impact on
persons, things, acts or events, outside the State is
permissible and valid. The word ’extra-territoriality is
used in the sense of legislation with respect to conduct of
citizens when they are outside the country. [Reference was
made to Charter Act of 1833, s. 43, Government of India Act,
1915, s. 65(1) (a), Hodge v. The Queen (9 A.C. 117), the
Commissioner of Stamp Duties (New South Wales) v. Miller and
another (48 C.L.R. 618), The Australasian Scale Company
Limited v. The Commissioner of Taxes (Queens Land) (53
C.L.R. 534), Broken Hill South Limited v. The Commissioner
of Taxation (New South Wales) (56 C. L. R. 337) ]. Under the
Government of India Act, 1935 the requirement of levying
sales tax was that the goods belonging to the seller must be
located within the Province and that those goods should have
been made the subject matter of a sale transaction. To
establish territorial connection for sale transaction the
sine qua non is that the goods belonging to the seller must
be located within the Province and that the goods should be
made the subject matter of a sale transaction. The Explana-
tion to article 286 (1) (a) is a deliberate reversal of the
pre-existing position.
T.L. Shevde, Advocate-General of Madhya Pradesh and M.
Adhikari (I. N. Shroff, with them) for the State of Madhya
Pradesh (Intervener). Whereas the legislative power of all,
States under article 246(3) read with Entry 54 List II to
tax all outside transactions of sale or purchase has been
curtailed or restricted by clause I (a) and also by clause
(2) of article 286 the said legislative power of the
delivery State is fully saved by the Explanation of clause I
(a) and is not subject to the provisions of clause (2).
Every delivery State is competent to tax extra-territorially
-within the ambit of - the Explanation and is not fettered
by clause (2). Clause (2) puts a ban on all inter-State
transactions except those covered by the Explanation. The
contention that the Explanation does not come into effect
until the ban under
614
clause (2) is lifted by Parliament is incorrect and
untenable and moreover such a contention directly
contravenes the provisions of article 394 of the Con-
stitution. The operation of the Explanation excludes the
operation of clause (2) and vice versa. Sales Tax is in
fact and substance only a purchase tax paid on one and the
same transaction. Intention was to put an end to the evil
of multiple taxation.
S.M. Sikri, Advocate-General of Punjab (Jindra Lal and P. G.
Gokhale, with him) for the state of Punjab (Intervener).
Article 286(1) (a) like article 286(2) deals with only sales
or purchases which take place during the course of inter-
State trade or commerce, i.e., trade or commerce in which
more than one State have interest. The words ’inter-State
trade or commerce’ have to be given the widest possible
meaning. The Explanation has the effect of divesting a
transaction of its inter-State character. Commonwealth of
Australia v. Bank of New South Wales (1950 A.C. 235 and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 147
Bank of N. S. fV. v. The Commonwealth (76 C. L. R. 1).
Assuming that the Supreme Court has jurisdiction to overrule
its own decision there is no reason for doing so. See
Denning on The Changing Law, 1935 Edn., p. 5.
Nittoor Sreenivasa Rao, Advocate-General of Mysore, (R.
Ganapathy Iyer and P. G. Gokhale, with him) for the State of
Mysore, K. S. Hajela, Advocate-General of Rajasthan (P. G.
Gokhale, with him) for the State of Rajasthan, Lachman
Das.Kaushal, Advocate-General of Pepsu (P. G. Gokhale, with
him) for the State of Pepsu, K. B. Asthana and C. P. Lal,
for the State of Uttar Pradesh, P. A. Mehta and P. G.
Gokhale, for the State of Orissa and T. R.Balakrishnan and
Sardar Bahadur Saharya, for the State of Travancore-Cochin
(Interveners), supported the respondent.
N. C. Chatterji replied.
1955. September 6. The judgment of S. R. Das, Acting Chief
Justice, Bose and Jafer Imam JJ. was delivered by S. R. Das
Acting Chief Justice. Bhagwati, Jagannadhadas, Venkatarama
Ayyar and B. P. Sinha JJ, delivered separate judgments,
615
DAS ACTG. C.J.-This appeal, filed under a certificate of
fitness granted by the High Court of Patna, is directed
against the judgment of that High Court pronounced on the
4th December 1952 whereby it dismissed the application made
by the appellant company under article 226 of the
Constitution praying for ,an appropriate writ or order
quashing "the proceedings issued by the opposite parties for
the purpose of levying and realising a tax which is not
lawfully leviable on the petitioners" and for other
ancillary reliefs.
The relevant facts appearing from the petition filed in
support of the appellant company’s aforesaid application are
as follows: The appellant company is an incorporated company
carrying on the business of manufacturing and selling
various sera, vaccines, biological Products and medicines.
Its registered head office is at Calcutta and its laboratory
and factory are at Baranagar in the district of 24-Perganas
in West Bengal. It is registered as a dealer under the
Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act and its registered number is
S. L. 683A. Its products have extensive sales throughout
the Union of India and abroad. The goods are dispatched
from Calcutta by rail, steamer ,or air against orders
accepted by the appellant company in Calcutta. The
appellant company has neither any agent or manager in Bihar
nor any office, godown or laboratory in that State. On the
24th October 1951 the Assistant Superintendent of Commercial
Taxes, Bihar wrote a letter to the appellant company which
concluded as follows:-
"Necessary action may therefore be taken to get your firm
registered under the Bihar Sales Tax Act. Steps may kindly
be taken to deposit Bihar Sales Tax dues in any Bihar
Treasury at an early date under intimation to this
Department".
On the 18th December, 1951 a notice was issued by the
Superintendent, Commercial Taxes, Central Circle Bihar,
Patna calling upon the appellant company (i) to apply for
registration and (ii) to submit returns showing its
turnover for the period commencing from the 26th January,
1950 and ending with the 30th
616
September, 1951. This notice was issued under section 13(5)
of the Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1947 (hereinafter called the
Act) read with rule 28. It was drawn up according to Form
No. 8 prescribed by the rules and was headed "Notice of
hearing under section 13(5)". The reason for issuing this
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 147
notice, as recited therein, was that on information which
had come to his possession the Superintendent was satisfied
that the appellant company was liable to pay tax but had
nevertheless wilfully failed to apply for registration under
the Act. Thereafter there was some correspondence between
the appellant company and the Bihar Sales Tax authorities to
which it is not necessary to refer in detail. Suffice it to
say that while the appellant company denied its liability on
the ground, inter alia, that it was not resident in Bihar,
it carried on no business there, none of its sales took
place in Bihar and that it did not collect any sales tax
from any person of that State, the Bihar Sales Tax
authorities maintained that under section 33, which was
substantially based on article 286 of the Constitution and
was inserted in the Act by the President’s Adaptation Order
promulgated on the 4th April, 1951, all sales in West Bengal
or any other State under which the goods had been delivered
in the State of Bihar as a direct result of the sale for the
purpose of consumption in that State were liable to Bihar
Sales Tax. Eventually on the 29th May, 1952 the Assistant
Superintendent of Sales Tax, Bihar called upon the appellant
company to comply with the notice by the 14th June, 1952 and
threatened that, in default of compliance, he would proceed
to take steps for assessment to the best of his judgment.
The appellant company by its letter dated the 7th June, 1952
characterised the notice under section 13 (5) as ultra
vires and entirely illegal and called upon the
Superintendent to forthwith rescind and cancel the same.
On the 10th June, 1952 the appellant company presented
before the High Court at Patna a petition under article 226
claiming the reliefs herein before mentioned. The
respondents did not file any affidavit in opposition
controverting any of the alle-
617
gations of facts made in the petition and it must)
accordingly, be taken that those facts are admitted as
correct by the respondents. The High Court dismissed the
petition on the 4th December, 1952 but on the next day
issued a certificate, under article 132(1) of the
Constitution, that the case involved a substantial question
of law as to the interpretation of the Constitution. Hence
the present appeal.
In view of the importance of the issues involved in this
appeal the States of Madras, Uttar Pradesh) Madhya Pradesh,
West Bengal, Orissa, Punjab, Pepsu, Mysore, Travancore-
Cochin and Rajasthan applied for.and obtained leave to
intervene in this appeal. Similar leave was applied for by
and was granted to Tata Iron and Steel Company Ltd., and one
M. K. Kuriakose. The State of West Bengal, Tata Iron &
Steel Company Ltd., and M. K. Kuriakose have supported the
appellant company while the rest of the interveners have
opposed the appeal.
Before the High Court the question of maintainability of
the. petition was raised by the respondents as a preliminary
objection and it was answered in their favour by the High
Court. In its judgment the High Court noticed that facts
bad not been investigated nor had the liability of the
appellant company been determined and that in fact no order
of assessment had been made. It pointed out that it was not
a case for the Sales Tax Officer usurping a jurisdiction not
vested in him by law or acting in excess of his jurisdiction
or acting mala fide. The High Court took the view that the
Act undoubtedly conferred jurisdiction on the Sales Tax
Officer to investigate the question of liability of a dealer
to Sales Tax under the Act and accordingly he was acting
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 147
well within his jurisdiction in issuing the impugned notice.
If on assessment the Sales Tax Officer erroneously holds the
appellant liable to any tax, the Act provides for rectifying
that error by appeal or revision under sections 24 and 25 of
the Act. According to the High Court such a decision,
however erroneous, will, nevertheless, be a decision within
the ambit of his jurisdiction and the High Court cannot
interfere with it by
618
a writ of prohibition or certiorari to quash. The High
Court accordingly held that the petition was not
maintainable and was liable to be dismissed.
We are unable to agree with the above conclusion. In
reaching that conclusion the High Court appears to have
overlooked the fact that the main contention of the
appellant company, as set forth in its petition, is that the
Act, in so far as it purports to tax a nonresident dealer in
respect of an inter-State sale or purchase of goods, is
ultra vires the Constitution and wholly illegal. In the
impugned Act there are various provisions laying down
conditions which dealers must comply with or submit to,
namely, to give only a few instances, compulsory
registration of dealers (Section 10), filing of returns
(Section 12), attendance and production of evidence in
support of the return (Section 13), production, inspection
and seizure of books of account or documents and search of
premises (Section 17). Section 26 prescribes penalties for
contravention of the provisions of the Act. These and other
like provisions in the Act undoubtedly constitute
restrictions on the fundamental right to carry on business
which is guaranteed to every citizen of India by article
19(1)(g) of the Constitution. If, as contended, the Act is
ultra vires the Constitution and consequently void these
onerous conditions can never be justified as reasonable
restrictions within the meaning of clause (6) of that
article as this Court held in the case of Mohammad Yasin v.
The Town Area Committee Jalalabad(1). The same view was
also expressed in the State of Bombay v. The United Motors
(India) Ltd.(2), and again only recently in Himmatlal
Harilal Mehta v. The State of Madhya. Pradesh(3).
It is urged that the appellant being a company is not a
citizen and cannot, therefore, claim any fundamental right
under article 19 which is available only to citizens and,
therefore, the decisions of this Court referred to above
have no application. While it is noteworthy that the second
case mentioned above
(1) [1952] 3 S.C.R. 572.
(2) [1953] 4 S.G.R. 1069, 1077.
(3) [1951] 5 S.C.R. 1122, 1127.
619
was concerned with the rights of a company, it is,
nevertheless, unnecessary, for the purposes of this appeal,
to decide whether a juristic person like a company is a
citizen as defined in Part II of the Constitution and as
such entitled to the benefits of Article 19. Nor is it
necessary to consider whether there has been any infraction
of the right to equal protection of the laws guaranteed by
article 14 in that being a juristic person it cannot claim
any of the rights under article 19 which only citizens can
do. It is also true that article 31 which protects citizens
and non-citizens alike cannot be availed of as it deals with
deprivation of property otherwise than by way of levying or
collecting taxes as held by this Court in Ramjilal v.
Income-Tax Officer, Mohindargarh(1) and that, therefore, the
Act does not constitute an infringement of the fundamental
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 147
right to property under that article. It is, however, clear
from article 265 that no tax can be levied or collected
except by authority of law which must mean a good and valid
law. The contention of the appellant company is that the
Act which authorises the assessment, levying and collection
of sales tax on inter-State trade contravenes and
constitutes an infringement of article 286 and is,
therefore, ultra vires, void-and unenforceable. If,
therefore, this contention be well founded, the remedy by
way of a writ must, on principle and authority, be available
to the party aggrieved.
It has been argued that the application was premature, for
there has, so far, been no investigation or finding on facts
and no assessment under section 13 of the Act. The
appellant company, contending, as it does., that the Act is
ultra vires and void,- should have ignored the notice served
on it and should not have rushed into Court at this stage.
This line of argument appears to us to be utterly untenable.
In the first place, it ignores the plain fact that this
notice, calling upon the appellant company to forthwith get
itself registered as a dealer, and to submit a return and to
deposit the tax in a treasury in Bihar, places
(1) (1951] 2 S.C.R. 127.
79
620
upon it considerable hardship, harassment and liability
which, if the Act is void under article 265 read with
article 286 constitute, in present , an encroachment on and
an infringement of its right which entitles it to
immediately appeal to the appropriate Court for redress. In
the next place, as was said by this Court in Commissioner of
Police, Bombay v. Gordhandas Bhanji(1), when an order or
notice emanates from the State Government or any of its res-
ponsible officers directing a person to do something, then,
although the order or notice may eventually transpire to be
ultra vires and bad in law, it is obviously one which prima
facie compels obedience as a matter of prudence and
precaution. It is, therefore, not reasonable to expect the
person served with such an order or notice to ignore it on
the ground that it is illegal, for he can only do so at his
own risk and peril. This Court has said in the last
mentioned case that a person placed in such a situation has
the right to be told definitely by the proper legal
authority exactly where he stands and what he may or may not
do.
Another plea advanced by the respondent State is that the
appellant company is not entitled to take proceedings
praying for the issue of prerogative writs under article 226
as it has adequate alternative remedy under the impugned Act
by way of appeal or revision. The answer to this plea is
short and simple. The remedy under the Act cannot be said
to be adequate and is, indeed, nugatory or useless if the
Act which provides for such remedy is itself ultra vires and
void and the principle relied upon can, therefore, have no
application where a party comes to Court with an allegation
that his right has been or is being threatened to be
infringed by a law which is ultra vires the powers of the
legislature which enacted it and as such void and prays for
appropriate relief under article 226. As said by this Court
in Himmatlal Harilal Mehta v. The State of Madhya Pradesh
(supra) this-plea of the, State stands negatived by the
decision of this Court in The State of -Bombay v. The United
Motors
(1) [1952] 3 S.C.R. 135, 148,149.
621
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 147
(India) Ltd. (supra). We are, therefore,Of the opinion, for
reasons stated above, that the High Court *as not right in
holding that the petition under article 226 was misconceived
or was not maintainable. It will, therefore, have to be
examined and decided on merits.
Coming, then, to the merits of the petition, the principal
question is whether the tax threatened to be levied on the
sales made by the appellant company and implemented by
delivery in the circumstances and manner mentioned in its
petition is leviable by the State of Bihar. The legal-
capacity of the State of Bihar to tax these sales is
questioned on the following grounds, namely:-
(A) that the sales sought to be taxed having taken place in
the course of inter-State trade or commerce and Parliament
not having by law provided otherwise, all States are
debarred from imposing tax on such sales by reason of
article 286(2);
(B) that even if the ban under article 286(2) did not
apply, the State of Bihar is not competent to impose tax on
such sales on a correct reading of article 246(3) read with
Entry 54 of List II in the Seventh Schedule and article
286(1);
(C) that the Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1947 can have no extra-
territorial operation and cannot, therefore, impose tax on
such sales by a non-resident seller-
(D) that on a true construction of the Act itself, it does
not apply to the sales sought to be taxed.
Re (A): The main controversy in this appeal has centered
round this ground. It raises a question of construction of
article 286 of the Constitution. In the judgment under
appeal the High Court took the view that sales or purchases
in the course of inter-State trade or commerce referred to
in article 286 (2) must be construed so as to exclude the
particular ’Class of sales or purchases described in the
Explanation to clause (a) of article 286 (1) and that,
therefore, the provisions of the Bihar Sales Tax Act , 1947,
in so far as they purported to impose tax on such sales,
were not in conflict with article 286 (2) as so construed.
After this decision of the Patna High Court the question
came up for consideration before a Constitution
Bench of this Court in The State of Bombay v. The United
Motors (India) Ltd. (supra). the majority of that Bench held
that article 286(1)(a), read with the Explanation thereto
and construed in the light of articles 301 and 304,
prohibited the taxation of sales or purchases involving
inter-State elements by all States except the State in which
the goods were actually delivered for the purpose of
consumption therein and that clause (2) of article 286 did
not affect the power of the State in which delivery of the
goods was so made to tax the sales or purchases of the kind
mentioned in the Explanation, the effect of which was to
convert such inter-State transactions into intrastate
transactions and to take them out of the operation of clause
(2) of that article. It is quite clear that if this
majority view is to prevail this ground urged by learned
counsel for the appellant company and strongly supported by
the learned Attorney-General appearing for the interveners,
the State of West Bengal and Tata Iron and Steel Company
Ltd., and by learned counsel for M. K. Kuriakose must fail.
It has, accordingly, been pressed upon us that we are not
bound by the majority decision in that appeal from Bombay
and that it is still open to us to examine and ascertain for
ourselves the true meaning, import and scope of the article
in question. Learned counsel for some of the interveners
question our authority to go behind the majority decision.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 147
It is, therefore, necessary at this stage to determine this
preliminary question before entering upon a detailed
discussion on the question of construction of article 286.
In England, the Court of Appeal has imposed upon its power
of review of earlier precedents a limitation, subject to
certain exceptions. The limitation thus accepted is that it
is bound to follow its own decisions and those of courts of
Co-ordinate jurisdiction, and the "full" Court is in the
same position in this respect as a division Court consisting
of three members. The only exceptions to this rule are: (1)
the Court is entitled and bound to decide which of the two
conflicting decisions of its own it will follow; (2) the
Court is bound to refuse to follow a decision of
623
its own which, though not expressly overruled, cannot, in
its opinion stand with a decision of the House of Lords; and
(3) the Court is not bound to follow a decision of its own,
if it is satisfied that the decision was given per incuriam,
e.g., where a Statute or a rule having statutory effect
which would have affected the decision was not brought to
the attention of the earlier Court. [See Young v. Bristol
Aeroplane Co. Ltd. (1) which, on appeal to the House of
Lords, was approved by Viscount Simon in L.R. 1946 A.C. 163
at p.. 169]. A decision of the House of Lords upon a
question of law is conclusive and binds the House in
subsequent case. An erroneous decision of the House of
Lords can be set right only by an Act of Parliament. [See
Street Tramways v. London County Council(2)]. This limita-
tion was repeated by Lord Wright in Radcliffe v. Ribble
Motor Services Ltd.(3).
The High Court in Australia, which is the highest Court in
that Commonwealth, has not adopted such a rigid rule. In
the Tramways case(3) the rule was thus laid down by
Griffith, C.J. at p. 58:
"In my opinion, it is impossible to maintain an abstract
proposition that Court is either legally or technically
bound by previous decisions. Indeed, it may, in a proper
case, be its duty to disregard them. But the rule should be
applied with great caution, and -- only when. the previous
decision is manifestly wrong, as, for instance, if it
proceeded upon the mistaken assumption of the continuance of
a repealed or expired Statute, or is contrary to a decision
of another Court which this Court is bound to follow; not, I
think, upon a mere suggestion that some or all of the mem-
bers of the later Court might arrive at a different con-
clusion if the matter was res integra. Otherwise there
would be grave danger of want of continuity in the
interpretation of law".
In the same case Barton, J. in the concluding paragraph of
his judgment at p. 69 expressed himself thus:
"In conclusion, I would say that I never thought
(1) L.R. 1944 X.B 718 C.A.
(3) 1939 A.C. 215, 245.
(2) 1898 A.C. 375.
(4) [1914] 18 C.L.R,. 54.
624
that it was not open to this Court to review its previous
decisions upon good cause. The question is not whether the
Court can do so, but whether it will, baying due regard to
the need for continuity and consistency in the judicial
decision. Changes in the number of appointed Justices can,
I take it, never of themselves furnish a reason for review.
That the prior decision was that of little more than half
their number might be urged with greater fairness, but it
cannot be urged against Whybrow’s case which was decided by
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 147
,the whole Court then in existence save the Justice who as
President’ of the Arbitration Court, was a party respondent
to the order nisi. But the Court can always listen to
argument as to whether it ought to review a particular
decision, and the strongest reason for an overruling is that
a decision is manifestly wrong and its continuance is
injurious to the public interest".
It is interesting to note that in that case all the Judges
agreed that the decision in Whybrow’s case was to be treated
as open to review (Per Griffith, C. J. at p. 58) although in
the end, after reviewing the position afresh in the light of
new arguments advanced before it, the Court came to the same
conclusion. Amalgamated Society of Engineers v. Adelaide
Steamship Co.(1) may also be referred to as an instance
where the High Court of Australia departed from its previous
decision.
In the United States of America there have been a
considerable number of cases in which the Supreme Court has
explicitly and avowedly overruled its prior decisions but
there have been more instances in which the doctrines
declared in prior cases have been in part evaded or
’modified without explicit repudiation. (Willoughby-
Constitution of the United States, 2nd Edn., Vol. 1, pp. 74-
75). In State of Washington v. Dawson & Co.(2), Brandies,
J. in his dissenting judgment said:
"The doctrine Of stare decision should not deter us from
overruling that case and those which follow it,
(1) [1920] 28 C.L.R. 129.
(2) 264 U.S. 646; 68 L.Ed. 219.
625
The decisions are recent ones. They have not been
acquiesced in. They have not created a rule of property
around which vested interests have clustered. They affect
solely matters of a transitory nature. On the other hand,
they affect seriously the lives of men, women and children,
and the general welfare. Stare decisis is ordinarily a wise
rule of action. But it is not a universal, inexorable
command. The instances in which the Courts have disregarded
its admonition are many".
In a foot-note to this judgment the learned Judge set out a
large number of instances where the earlier decisions had
been overruled. In another dissenting judgment in David
Burnet v. Coronado Oil & Gas Company(1) the same learned
Judge, after quoting a passage from the judgment of Mr.
Justice Lurton in Hertz v. Woodman(2) proceeded to say:
"Stare decisis is usually the wise policy, because in most
matters it is more important that the applicable rule of law
be settled right. Compare National Bank v. Whitney, 103
U.S. 99; 26 L.Ed. 443-444. This is commonly true even where
the error is a matter of serious concern, provided
correction can be bad by, legislation. But in cases
involving the Federal Constitution, where correction through
legislative action is practically impossible, this Court has
often overruled its earlier decisions. The Court bows to
the lessons of experience and the force of better reasoning
recognising that the process of trial and error, so fruitful
in the physical sciences, is appropriate also in the
judicial function".
In his separate but concurring judgment in Mark Graves v.-
People of the State of New York(3) Frankfurter, J. observed:
"Judicial exegesis is unavoidable with reference to an act
like our Constitution, drawn in many particulars with
purposed vagueness so as to leave room for the unfolding
future. But the ultimate touchstone of constitutionality is
the Constitution itself and not
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 147
(1) 285 U.S. 393; 76 L.Ed. 815.
(2) 218 U.S. 205, 212; 51 L.Ed. 1001, 1005.
(3) 306 U.S. 466; 83 L. Ed. 927.
626
what we have said about it".
In this case two previous - decisions were expressly
overruled and two more were impliedly overruled.
We now come to the Privy Council which, prior to the
commencement of our Constitution, was the highest Court of
Appeal to hear appeals from the Indian High Courts. In a
case about Compensation to Civil Servants(1), in repelling
the contention that the Board was bound in law, and without
examination, to follow an earlier decision whether they
considered it right or wrong the Marquess of Reading said:
"Their Lordships are unable to hold that this proposition
stated in such an extreme form is established. It may well
be said that the Board would hesitate long before disturbing
a solemn decision by a previous Board which raised an
identical or even ,a similar issue for determination;’but
for the proposition that the Board is, in all circumstances,
bound to ’follow a previous decision, as it were, blindfold,
they are unable to discover any adequate authority. In
other words, no inflexible rule, which falls in all
circumstances to be applied has been laid down".
In the Attorney-General of Ontario v. The Canada Temperance
Federation(,) Viscount Simon stated the practice of the
Board in the following terms:
"Their Lordships do not doubt that in tendering humble
advice to His Majesty, they are not absolutely bound by
previous decisions of the Board, as is the House of Lords by
its own judgments. In ecclesiastical appeals, for instance
on more than one occasion the Board has tendered advice
contrary to that given in a previous case, which further
historical research has shown to have been wrong. But on
constitutional questions it must be seldom indeed that the
Board would depart from a previous decision which it may be
assumed will have been acted upon both by Governments and
subjects".
Finally, in Phanindra Chandra Neogy v. The, King(3) Lord
Simonds said at p. 88:
(1) L.R. 1929 A.C. 242; A.I.R. 1929 P.C. 84, 87.
(2) [1946] 50 C.W.N 535; A.I.R 1946 P.O. 88.
(3) L.R. 76 I.A. 10; 1939 Dom. L.R. 87 (P.C).
627
"Their Lordships then have before them a decision upon facts
which in no material respect differ from those of the
present case. Even so, it is, as they recognise, competent
for them humbly to tender advice to His Majesty inconsistent
with a previous decision,, though it can only be in most
exceptional circumstances. that such a course should be
taken................ Recognising the possibility, they have
beard full argument and, having done so, see no reason to
doubt the validity of the reasoning or the correctness of
the conclusion in Gill’s case, and they do not think it
necessary to repeat what was said there".
In considering the applicability of the principles laid down
in the decisions here in before mentioned, it should be
borne in mind that the English decisions may well have been
influenced by considerations which can no longer apply to
the circumstances prevailing in India. The error, if any,
of the Court of Appeal in England, may be corrected by the
House of Lords or eventually by Parliament by a simple
majority. The mistakes, if any, made by the High Court of
Australia, if not corrected by itself in a subsequent case,
could be set right by the Privy Council when appeals were
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 147
taken there or by the appropriate legislative authority. An
error made by the House of Lords or the Privy Council can
easily be rectified by Parliament by a simple majority by an
amending statute. But in a country governed by a federal
constitution, such as the United States of America and the
Union of India are, it is by no means easy to amend the
Constitution if an erroneous interpretation is put upon it
by this Court. (See article 368 of our Constitution). An
erroneous interpretation of the Constitution’ may quite
conceivably be perpetuated or may at any rate remain
unrectified for a considerable time to the great detriment
to public well being. The considerations adverted to in the
decisions of the Supreme Court of America quoted above are,
therefore, apposite and apply in full force in determining
whether a previous decision of this Court should or should
not be disregarded or overruled. There is nothing in our
Constitution which
80
628
prevents us from departing from a previous decision if we
are convinced of its error and its baneful effect on the
general interests of the public. Article 141 which lays
down that the law declared by this Court shall be binding on
all Courts within the territory of India quite obviously
refers to Courts other than this Court. The corresponding
provision of the Government of India Act, 1935 also makes it
clear that the Courts contemplated are the Subordinate
Courts.
There are several circumstances relating to the majority
decision of the Court in The State of Bombay v. The United
Motors (India) Ltd. (supra) to which reference must be made.
That appeal was heard immediately before the hearing of the
appeal reported as The State of Travancore-Cochin v.
Shanmugha Vilas Cashew Nut Factory(1) commenced. The two
appeals were, as a matter of fact, heard one after the other
and judgments were reserved in both of them. The
constitution of the Benches was, however, different. In the
first appeal one of the Judges of that Bench expressly
differed from the majority decision and another learned
Judge did not accept the majority decision on many points.
In the second appeal one Judge of the Bench, who was not a
party to the first appeal, differed from the majority
decision in the first appeal. The result, therefore, was
that the majority decision was definitely differed from by
two Judges. Bhagwati J. has now in the judgment he has
written in the present appeal which we have had the
advantage of reading reconsidered the matter and on further
reflection he thinks that the majority decision on the
present issue was erroneous and he now agrees substantially
with the view of article 286(1)(a),read with the Explanation
and article 286(2) which was expressed in the two minority
judgments referred to above and which is adopted in the
judgment now being delivered in the present appeal. If
Bhagwati J. had then expressed the views he is now doing,
then the majority in the Bombay appeal would have been 3 to
2 and if we add the opinion of the dissenting Judge in the
-Travancore-Cochin appeal then judicial opinion would
(1) [1954] 5 S.C.R. 53.
629
have been divided 3 to 3. In this juxtaposition it is
difficult to give the majority decision in the Bombay appeal
that amount of sanctity and reverence which is usually
attributed to an unretracted majority decision of this
Court.
The majority decision does not merely determine the rights
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 147
of the two contending parties to the Bombay appeal. Its
effect is far reaching as it affects the rights of all
consuming public. It authorises the imposition and levying
of a tax by the State on an interpretation of a
constitutional provision which appears to us to be
unsupportable. To follow that interpretation will result in
perpetuating what, with humility we say, is an error and in
perpetuating a tax burden imposed on the people which,
according to our considered opinion, is manifestly and
wholly an authorised. It is not an ordinary pronouncement
declaring the rights of two private individuals inter se.
It involves an adjudication on the taxing power of the
States as against the consuming public generally. If the
decision is erroneous, as indeed we conceive it to be, we
owe it to that public to protect them against the illegal
tax burdens which the States are seeking to impose on the
strength of that erroneous recent decision.
The third circumstance is that there appears to be some
vagueness, if not inconsistency, in the majority judgment
itself. At p. 1084 of the authorised report the majority
judgment says:
"The expression ’for the purpose of consumption in that
State’ must, in our opinion, be understood as having
reference not merely to the individual importer or purchaser
but as contemplating distribution eventually to consumers in
general within the State. Thus all buyers within the State
of delivery from out-of-State sellers, except those buying
for re-export out of the State., would be within the scope
of the Explanation and liable to be taxed by the State on
their inter-State transactions".
This passage seems to suggest that it is only the buyers
falling within the Explanation who are liable to be taxed by
what has been called in the discussion
630
before us as the delivery State. According to this passage,
read by itself, the out-of-State sellers are not considered
liable to be taxed on the sales. The whole trend of the
rest of the majority judgment and the actual decision
therein run counter to this conclusion, for the out-of-State
sellers were, by reason of the Explanation, subjected to the
taxing power of the delivery State. Indeed, Bihar is
claiming to tax the appellant company, an out-of-the-State
seller, by virtue of the majority decision and all other
States intervening and supporting Bihar read the judgment in
that way and none of them accepts the quoted passage as
containing the actual ratio deciding of the majority
judgment. This confusion, we consider, is also a cogent
reason for re-examining that decision.
Reference is made to the doctrine of finality of judicial
decisions and it is pressed upon us that we should not
reverse our previous decision except in cases where a
material provision of law has been overlooked or where the
decision has proceeded upon @the mistaken assumption of the
continuance of a repealed or expired statute and that we
should not differ from a previous decision merely because a
contrary view appears to us to be preferable. It is need-
less for us to say that we should not lightly dissent from a
previous pronouncement of this Court. Our ;power of review,
which undoubtedly exists, must be exercised with due care
and caution and only for advancing the public well being in
the light of the surrounding circumstances of each case
brought to our notice but we do not consider it right to
confine our power within rigidly fixed limits as suggested
before us If on a re-examination of the question we come to
the conclusion, as indeed we have, that the previous
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 147
majority decision was plainly erroneous then it will be our
duty to say so and not to perpetuate our mistake even when
one learned Judge who was party to the previous decision
considers it incorrect on further reflection. We should do
so all the more readily as our decision is on a
constitutional question and our erroneous decision has
imposed illegal tax burden on the consuming public and has
631
otherwise given rise to public inconvenience or hardship,
for it is by no means easy to amend the Constitution.
Sometimes frivolous attempts may be made to question our
previous decisions but if the reasons on which our decisions
are founded are sound they will by themselves be sufficient
safeguard against such frivolous attempts. Further, the
doctrine of stare decisis has hardly any application to an
isolated and stray decision of the Court very recently made
and not followed by a series of decisions based thereon.
The problem before us does not involve overruling a series
of decisions but only involves the question as to whether we
should approve or disapprove, follow or overrule, a very
recent previous decision as a precedent. In any case, the
doctrine of stare decisis is not an inflexible rule of law
and cannot be permitted to perpetuate our errors to the
detriment to the general welfare of the public or a
considerable section thereof
It is pointed out that all the States are realising sales
tax in respect of sales or purchases of goods where the
goods are actually delivered for consumption within their
respective boundaries on the faith of our previous decision
and a reversal of that decision will upset the economy of
the States and will indeed render them liable to refund
moneys already collected by them as taxes. This
circumstance, it is pressed upon us, should alone deter us
from differing from the previous decision. We are not
impressed by this argument. It has not yet been decided by
this Court that moneys paid under a mutual mistake of law
induced by a wrong judicial interpretation of a statute or
the Constitution must necessarily be refundable as money had
and received. If, as contended, moneys so paid are in law
refundable the States cannot complain any more than a
private individual in similar circumstances could do.
Finally, if the State economy is upset the appeal must be to
Parliament which under article 286(2) itself has ample power
to make suitable legislation.
The impugned decision is a recent one. The judicial opinion
was divided, if not evenly balanced. One of
632
the four Judges who formed the majority has revised his
opinion as stated above. The decision on the point noted
above seems to be somewhat inconsistent and is, at any rate,
not quite clear. It has encouraged the imposition of tax
burdens on the consuming public on an interpretation of the
Constitution which appears to us to be plainly erroneous.
It has given rise to considerable inconvenience and hardship
to business people who have not acquiesced in it by any
means. To rectify the error by the legislative process is
difficult, for a constitutional amendment requires a
specified majority which may not always be available and if
it involves an amendment of the legislative lists it will
require the consent of a requisite number of the States
which, in this instance, cannot reasonably be expected. In
the premises, we think that it is precisely a case where, in
the public interests, the meaning, scope and effect of
article 286 should be re-examined afresh in the light of the
fresh arguments now advanced before us and the experience we
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 147
have since acquired. In our judgment the majority decision
in The State of Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd.
(supra) is, in the circumstances alluded to, open to review
and we are entitled to re-examine article 286 in order to
ascertain its true meaning, scope and effect so far as it is
necessary for the purposes of this appeal and we proceed
on this basis.
It is a sound rule of construction of a statute firmly
established in England as far back as 1584 when Heydon’s
case(1) was decided that-
".................... for the sure and true interpretation
of all Statutes in general (be they penal or beneficial,
restrictive or enlarging of the common law) four things are
to be discerned and considered:-
1st. What was the common law before the making of the Act.,
2nd. What was the mischief and defect for which the common
law did not provide.,
3rd. What remedy the Parliament hath resolved and appointed
to cure the disease of the Commonwealth., and
(1) 3 Co. Rep. 7a; 76 ElR. 637,
633
4th. The true reason of the remedy; and then the office of
all the judges is always to make such construction as shall
suppress the mischief, and advance the remedy, and to
suppress subtle inventions and evasions for continuance of
the mischief, and pro privato commodo, and to add force and
life to the cure and remedy, according to the true intent of
the makers of the Act, pro bono publico".
In In re Mayfair Property Company(1) Lindley, M.R. in 1898
found the rule "as necessary now as it was when Lord Coke
reported Heydon’s case". In Eastman Photographic Material
Company v. Comptroller General of Patents, Designs and Trade
Marks(2) Earl of Halsbury re-affirmed the rule as follows:
"My Lords,, it appears to me that to construe the Statute in
question, it is not only legitimate but highly convenient to
refer both to the former Act and to the ascertained evils to
which the former Act had given rise, and to the later Act
which provided the remedy’ These three being compared I
cannot doubt the conclusion".
It appears to us that this rule is equally applicable to the
construction of article 286 of our Constitution. In order
to properly interpret the provisions of that article it is,
therefore, necessary to consider how the matter stood
immediately before the Constitution came into force, what
the mischief was for which the old law did not provide and
the remedy which has been provided by the Constitution to
cure that mischief.
The position with respect to taxation on sales or purchases
of goods that prevailed in the country had better be stated
in the language of Patanjali Sastri, C. J. who delivered
the majority judgment in the State of Bombay v. The United
Motors (India) Ltd. (supra). After expressing the view,
based on the authority of the Walk" Brothers’ Case(3) that
in the case of sales tax, it was not necessary that the sale
should take place within the territorial limits of the State
in the sense that all the ingredients of a sale, like the
agree-
(1) L R. [1898] 2 Ch. 28, 35. (2) L.R [1898] A.C. 671, 576.
(3) 1948 F.C.R. 1.
634
ment to sell, the passing of title, delivery of the goods,
etc., should have a territorial connection with the State
and that, broadly speaking, local activities of buying and
selling carried on in the State in relation to local goods
would be a sufficient basis to sustain the taxing power of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 147
the State, provided of course that such activities
ultimately resulted in a concluded sale to be taxed, the
learned Chief Justice proceeded to say:-
"In exercise of the legislative power conferred upon them in
substantially similar terms by the Government of India Act,
1935, the Provincial Legislatures enacted Sales Tax laws for
their respective Provinces, acting on the principle of
territorial nexus referred to above; that is to say, they
picked out one or more of the ingredients constituting a
sale and made them the basis of their sales tax legislation.
Assam and Bengal made, among other things, the actual
existence of the goods in the Province at the time of the
contract of sale the test of taxability. In Bihar the
production or manufacture of the goods in the Province was
made an additional ground. A net of the widest range
perhaps was laid in the Central Provinces and Berar where it
was sufficient if the goods were actually "found" in the
Province at any time after the Contract of Sale or Purchase
in respect thereof was made. Whether the territorial nexus
put forward as the basis of the taxing power in each case
would be sustained as sufficient was a matter of doubt not
having been tested in a Court of law. And such claims to
taxing power led to multiple taxation of the same
transaction by Provinces and cumulation of the burden
falling ultimately on the consuming public. This situation
posed to the Constitution makers the problem of restricting
the taxing power on sales or purchases involving inter-State
elements, and alleviating the tax burden on the consumer.
At the same time they were evidently anxious to maintain the
State power of imposing non-discriminatory taxes on goods
imported from other States, while upholding the economic
unity of India by providing for the freedom of inter-State
trade and commerce.
635
In their attempt to harmonise and achieve these somewhat
conflicting objectives, they enacted articles 286, 301 and
304".
Leaving out, for the moment, the question as to whether
articles 301 and 304 have any bearing on the question of
construction of article 286, as to which we entertain a
contrary opinion, the above passage quite adequately depicts
the picture of chaos and confusion that was brought about in
inter-State trade or commerce by indiscriminate exercise of
taxing power by the different Provincial Legislatures
founded on the theory of territorial nexus between the
respective Provinces and the sales or purchases sought to be
taxed. It was to cure this mischief of multiple taxation
and to preserve the free flow of inter-State trade or
commerce in the Union of India regarded as one economic unit
without any provincial barrier that the Constitution makers
adopted article 286 in the Constitution which runs as
follows--
"286. (1) No law of a State shall impose, or authorise the
imposition of, a tax on the sale or purchase of goods where
such sale or purchase takes place
(a) outside the State; or
(b) in the course of the import of the goods into, or
export of the goods out of, the territory of India.
Explanation. -For the purposes of sub-clause (a), a sale or
purchase shall be deemed to have taken place in the State in
which the goods have actually been delivered as a direct
result of such sale or purchase for the purpose of
consumption in that State, notwithstanding the fact that
2under the general law relating to sale of goods the
property in the goods has by reason of such sale or purchase
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 147
passed in another State.
(2) Except in so far as Parliament may by law otherwise
provide, no law of a State shall impose, or authorise the
imposition of, a tax on the sale or purchase of any goods
where such sale or purchase -takes place in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce:
Provided that the President may by order direct
81
636
that any tax on the sale or purchase of goods which was
being lawfully levied by the Government of any St-ate
immediately before the commencement of this Constitution
shall, notwithstanding that the imposition of such tax is
contrary to the provisions of this clause, continue to be
levied until the thirty-first day of March, 1951.
(3)No law made by the Legislature of a State imposing, or
authorising the imposition of, a tax. on the sale or
purchase of any such goods as have been declared by
Parliament by law to be essential for the life of the
community shall have effect unless it has been reserved for
the consideration of the President and has received his
assent".
Article 286 is in Part XII of the Constitution which deals
with "Finance, Property, Contracts and Suits". it is one of
the several articles which are grouped under the heading
"Miscellaneous Financial Provisions" in Chapter I of that
Part. It is to be noted that it has not found a place in
Part XI, Chapter I whereof deals with "Legislative
Relations" including "Distribution of Legislative Powers"
between Parliament and the Legislatures of States. The
marginal note to article 286 is "Restrictions.as to
imposition of tax on the sale or purchase of goods", which,
unlike the marginal notes in Acts of the British Parliament,
is part of the Constitution as passed by the Constituent
Assembly, prima facie, furnishes some clue as to the meaning
and purpose of the article. Apart from the marginal note,
the very language of that article makes it abundantly clear
that its object is to place restrictions on the legislative
power of the States with respect to the imposition of taxes
on the -sales or purchases of goods. It will be recalled
that section 100(3) of the Government of India Act, 1935
read with Entry 48 of List 11, of the Seventh Schedule to
that Act gave power to the Provincial Legislatures to make
laws with respect to "Taxes on sale of goods and on
advertisements". Pursuant to the legislative power thus
conferred on them the Provincial Legislatures enacted Sales
Tax Acts for their respective Provinces. Although in most
of those Acts
637
’Sale" was, first defined a,% meaning transfer of the
property in the goods, so as to make the passing of the
property within the Province the principal basis, for the
imposition of the tax, yet by means of Explanations to that
definition, those Acts gave extended meanings to that word
and thereby enlarged the scope of their operation. The
imposition of tax on the sales or purchases of goods on the
basis of a very slight territorial connection or nexus
resulted in what has been graphically described by Patanjali
Sastri, C.J. in the passage quoted above from the majority
judgment in the Bombay appeal. This imposition of multiple
taxes on one and the same transaction of sale or purchase
was certainly calculated to hamper and discourage free flow
of trade within India regarded as one economic unit. This
undesirable state of affair is had to be put right.
Therefore, while the Constitution makers by article 246(3)
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 147
read with Entry 54 in List 11 of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution conferred power on the Legislatures of Part A
and Part B States to make law with respect to "Taxes on the
sale or purchase of goods other than newspapers" they at the
same time by article 286 clamped on that legislative power
several fetters. Broadly speaking, the fetters thus placed
on the taxing power of the States are that no law of a State
shall impose or authorise the imposition of a tax on the
sale or purchase of goods where such sale or purchase takes
place, (a) outside the State or (b) in the course of import
or export or (c) except in so far as Parliament otherwise
provides, in the course of inter-State trade or commerce and
lastly (d) that no law made by the Legislature of a State
imposing or authorising the imposition of a tax on the sale
or purchase of any such goods as have been declared by
Parliament by law to be essential for the life of the
community shall have effect unless it has been reserved for
the consideration of the President and has received his
assent. It should be noted that these are four separate and
independent restrictions placed upon the legislative compe-
tency of the States to make a law with respect to matters
enumerated in Entry 54 of List II. In order
638
to make the ban effective and to leave no loophole the
Constitution makers have considered the different aspects of
sales or purchases of goods and placed checks on the
legislative power of the States at different angles. Thus
in clause (1) (a) of article 286 the question of the situs
of a sale or purchase engaged their attention and they
forged a fetter on the basis of such situs to cure the
mischief of multiple taxation by the States on the basis of
the nexus- theory. In clause (1) (b) they considered sales
or purchases from the point of view of our foreign trade and
placed a ban on the States’ taxing power in order to make
our foreign trade free from any interference by the States
by way of a tax impost. In clause (2) they looked at sales
or purchases in their inter-State character and imposed
another ban in the interest of the freedom of internal
trade. Finally, in clause (3) the Constitution makers’
attention was riveted on the character and quality of the
goods themselves and they placed a fourth restriction on the
States’ power of imposing. tax on sales or purchases of
goods declared to be essential for the life of the
community. These several bans may overlap in some cases but
in their respective scope and operation they are separate
and independent. They deal with different phases of a sale
or purchase but, nevertheless, they are distinct and one has
nothing to do with and is not dependent on the other or
others. The States’ legislative power ,with respect to a
sale or purchase may be bit by one or more of these bans.
Thus, take the case of a sale of goods declared by
Parliament as essential by a seller in West Bengal to a
purchaser in Bihar in which goods are actually delivered as
a direct result of such sale for consumption in the State of
Bihar. A law made by West Bengal without the assent of the
president taxing this sale will be unconstitutional because
(1) it will offend article 286(1)(a) as the sale has taken
place outside the territory by virtue of the Explanation to
clause (1)(a), (2) it will also offend article 286(2) as the
sale has taken place in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce. and (3) such law will also be contrary to article
286(3) as the goods are
639
essential commodities and the President’s assent to the law
was not obtained as required by clause (3) of article 286.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 147
This appears to us to be the general scheme of that article.
We come now to the particular bans. Although the
Legislatures of the States were empowered by article 246(3)
read with Entry 54 of List II to make a law with respect to
taxes on sales or purchases of goods, the different State
Legislatures, as already mentioned, considered themselves
free to make a law imposing tax on sales or purchases of
goods provided they bad some territorial nexus with such
sales or purchases, e.g., that one or other of the
ingredients or events which go to make up a sale or purchase
was found to exist or had happened within their respective
territories. Whether they were right or wrong in. so acting
is a question which has not been finally decided by the
Courts but the fact is that they did so. This resulted in
multiple taxation which manifestly prejudiced the interests
of the ultimate consumers and also hampered the free flow of
inter-State trade or commerce. So the Constitution makers
had to cure that mischief. The first thing that they did
was to take away the States’ taxing power with respect to
sales or purchases which took place outside their respective
territories. This they did by clause (1)(a). If the matter
had been left there, the solution would have been imperfect,
for then the question as to which sale or purchase takes
place outside a State would yet have remained open. So the
Constitution makers had to explain what an outside sale was
and this they did by the Explanation set forth in clause
(1). The language employed in framing the Explanation, how-
ever, has given scope for argument to counsel and presented
considerable difficulties to the Court in ascertaining its
purpose and intendment. If the Explanation simply said "For
the purposes of subclause (a), a sale or purchase shall be
deemed to have taken place outside a State when the goods
have actually been delivered for the purpose of consumption
in another State, notwithstanding the fact, etc., etc.))
then none of the difficulties would have arisen
540
at all. But’ why, it is asked did the Constitution makers
seek to explain what was an outside sale or purchase by
saying that a sale or purchase was to be deemed to take
place inside the particular State mentioned in the
Explanation? Was the purpose of the Explanation only to
explain what was an outside sale or purchase or was it also
its purpose to allot or assign a particular class of sales
or purchases of the. kind mentioned therein to a particular
State so as to put the question of situs of the sales or
purchases of that description beyond the pale of
controversy? These are questions which arise and are raised
because of the somewhat involved language of the
Explanation. Four different views as to the true meaning
and effect of the Explanation have been suggested for our
consideration and arguments have been advanced for and
against the correctness of each of them. In the view we
have taken, it is not necessary for us to express any final
opinion in the matter. We propose accordingly to note the
possible views and record very briefly the criticisms
relating to each of those views and the suggested answers to
such criticisms.
One view which has been called the strict view is this. In
clause (1) (a) the Constitution makers have placed a ban on
the taxing power of the States with respect to sales or
purchases which take place outside the State. If the matter
had been left there the ban would have been imperfect, for
the argument would have still remained as to where a
particular sale or purchase took place. Does a sale or
purchase take place at the place where the contract of sale
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 147
is made, or where the property in the goods passes or where
the goods are delivered? These questions are answered by
the Explanation. That Explanation is "for the purposes of
sub-clause (a)" i.e., for the purpose of explaining which
sale or purchase is to be regarded as having taken place
outside a State. By saying that a particular sale or
purchase is to be deemed to take place in a particular State
the Explanation only indicates that such sale or purchase
has taken place outside all other States, The Explanation is
neither an
641
Exception nor a Proviso but only explains what is an outside
sale-referred to in sub-clause (a). This it does by
creating a fiction. That fiction is only for the purposes
of sub-clause (a) and cannot be extended to any other
purpose. It should be limited to its avowed purpose. To
say that this Explanation confers legislative power on what
for the sake of brevity has been called the delivery State
is to use it for a collateral purpose which is not
permissible. Further, it is utterly illogical and untenable
to say that article 286 which was introduced in the
Constitution to place restrictions on the legislative powers
of the States, by aside wind,, as it were, gave enlarged
legislative powers to the State of delivery by an
explanation sandwiched between two restrictions. This
construction runs counter to the entire scheme of the
article and the explanation and one may see no justification
for imputing such indirect and oblique purpose to this
article. Had the Constitution makers so desired they could
have done so in a more direct and straight-forward way. To
hold that the Explanation has, besides its declared purpose,
another hidden purpose of conferring or enlarging
legislative power is to build up a fanciful argument merely
on the unfelicitous and involved language used in the
Explanation although it is distinctly not the purpose of the
Explanation and although it does not purport substantively
and proprio vigore, to confer any legislative power on any
State. Its only purpose is to explain what an outside sale
is so that, by one stroke, as it were, it takes away the
taxing power, in respect of sales or purchases of the kind
referred to in the Explanation, of all States other than the
State where such sales or purchases are, by the Explanation,
to be deemed to have taken place. This view of the
Explanation was taken in the dissenting judgment in the case
of the State of Travancore-Cochin v. Shanmugha Vilas Cashew
Nut Factory (supra). The view that the Explanation is only
for the purposes of sub-clause (a) of clause (1) and cannot
be carried over to clause (2) was also taken in the
dissenting judgment in the State of Bombay v. The United
Motors (India) Ltd. (supra) at p. 1103.
642
The criticism that has been leveled against this strict view
of the Explanation is that it will not entirely eliminate
the claims of the States to tax sales or purchases on the
basis of the nexus theory. Suppose, it is said, Parliament
lifts the ban placed on inter-State trade or commerce by
clause (2), all States will, in that situation, claim the
right to tax sales or purchases if any one of the
ingredients or events making up the sale is to be found to
exist or to have happened in that State. It has been
suggested in reply to this criticism that this apprehension
is not at all well-founded. When Parliament will lift the
ban imposed by clause (2), the Explanation will continue to
operate, so that inter-State sales or purchases falling
within it will still be deemed to have taken place in the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 147
delivery State and, therefore, outside all other States none
of which latter States will, by reason of the ban imposed by
clause (1) (a), be entitled to tax such sale. The ban under
clause (2) being lifted the delivery ’State will become free
to tax such sales or purchases in exercise of the taxing
power conferred on it by article 246(3) read with Entry 54
in List II. Then, it is asked, what will happen to those
sales or purchases which do not fall within the Explanation?
After Parliament lifts the ban under clause (2) which State
will tax sales or purchases in which goods are actually
delivered in a particular State, not for consumption in that
State but, say, for re-export to another State for consump-
tion? One of the suggested answers was that those sales or
purchases were not likely to be numerous, for ordinarily a
dealer would not actually get the goods imported into a
State only for re-exporting the same to another State for
consumption in the last mentioned State but would find it
more convenient and economical to arrange for the delivery
of the goods straight to the last mentioned State. A
further suggestion was that it might well be that when
Parliament would by law lift the ban of clause (2) it would,
by the same law, provide which of the States would tax such
inter-State sales or purchases which were not covered by the
Explanation and on what basis.
643
This suggested answer, in its turn, raises a question as to
the scope and ambit of the legislative power conferred on
Parliament by clause (2). The opening words of clause (2),
namely, "Except in so far as Parliament may by law otherwise
provide" clearly indicate that the lifting of the ban may be
total or partial, that is to say, Parliament may lift the
ban wholly and unconditionally or it may lift it to such
extent as it may think fit to do and on such terms as it
pleases. It is to be remembered that under Entry 42 of List
I Parliament alone may make law with respect to inter-State
trade or commerce. It is, therefore, conceded that in
exercise of its legislative powers under that entry read
with article 286(2) Parliament may make a law permitting the
States to tax interState sales or purchases of certain
commodities only. It is also not questioned that Parliament
may, by way of regulating inter-State trade or commerce, fix
a ceiling rate of tax on sales or purchases of goods which
the law made by the States under Entry 54 of List II, may
not exceed. Can Parliament also override the Explanation?
If not, cannot Parliament at least provide which of the
States may tax inter-State sales or purchases of goods which
do not fall within the Explanation? These are some of the
questions which may arise as and when Parliament will choose
to make a law in exercise of the powers conferred on it and
it will then be time enough to discuss and decide those
questions. It is not for the Courts to advise Parliament in
advance as to the scope of its legislative competency under
clause (2) and, therefore, -we only note those questions and
leave them here.
The second view as to the meaning and effect of the
Explanation is that it once for all-fixes the situs of a
sale or purchase so that one knows when such a sale or
purchase is outside a State and when it is inside a State.
To put it differently, States are told when a sale or
purchase is inside a particular State and, therefore, the
States are also told when a sale or purchase is outside a
State. In short the Explanation not only explains what is
an outside sale or purchase but also actually fixes the
situs of a sale or
82
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 27 of 147
644
purchase in a particular State. This view of the
Explanation was taken in the majority decision in the State
of Bombay v. The United Motor8 (India) Ltd. (supra). The
majority decision quite clearly concedes that the
Explanation does not, by itself, confer any legislative
power on any State, not even the delivery State, with
respect to sales or purchases of the kind mentioned therein
but as it fixes the situs of such sales or purchases in the
delivery State that State is left free to tax them in
exercise of its legislative powers under article 246 (3)
read with Entry 54 of List 11. The criticism offered
against this view is, first of all, that it uses the
Explanation for a purpose which is beyond that of sub-clause
(a). This view turns the fiction created expressly for sub-
clause (a) into a reality fixing the location of such sales
and purchases for all purposes. In the next place this view
ignores the existence of clause (2) which imposes a
different ban on the legislative power of all States
including the delivery State also, so that as long as
Parliament does not lift the ban no State, not even the
delivery State, may tax sales or purchases which take place
in the course of inter-State trade or commerce, even though
they may fall within the Explanation. The further objection
is that this view also does not completely eliminate the
confusion arising from the nexus theory. Suppose Parliament
lifts the ban under clause (2), which State will tax sales
or purchases which do not come within the Explanation? The
same answer was suggested as was done in reply to similar
objections to the first view. That, as we have said, will
call for decision if and when Parliament exercises its
legislative powers under clause (2).
The third view, which was adumbrated and discussed in the
separate judgment of Bhagwati, J. in the case of The State
of Bombay v. The United Motor8 (India) Ltd. (supra) is that
the Explanation concerns itself with notionally fixing the
situs of sales or purchases in the delivery State only but
in no way affects the taxing power of the State in which,
under the general law relating to the sale of goods, the
property in the goods has passed. The result of this view
is
645
said to be that the State in which the sales or purchases
are to be deemed to have taken place may tax them but the
State in which, under the general law relating to the sale
of goods, the property in the goods has passed may also tax
them if and when Parliament lifts the ban of clause (2).
This view, it is said, is open to all the criticisms to
which the second view is subject and in addition to that a
further objection has been suggested against this view,
namely, that it will perpetuate double, if not multiple,
taxation on one and the same transaction of sale or purchase
at least after Parliament lifts the ban.
A fourth view has also been suggested before us as a
possible view although it was not put forward on the
previous occasion. It is founded on the non-obstante clause
in the Explanation. It is said that clause (1) (a) and the
Explanation concern themselves with only two States, namely
the title State, i.e., the State in which, under the general
law, title to the goods passes to the purchaser and the
delivery State, i.e., the State in which goods are actually
delivered as a direct result of the sale or purchase for
consumption in that State. The purpose of the Explanation
is said to be to demarcate the taxing power of only these
two States by taking out the sales or purchases of the kind
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 28 of 147
mentioned therein from the sphere of the taxing power of the
title State and subjecting them to the taxing power of the
delivery State. In the juxtaposition of those two States
clause (1) (a) read with the Explanation provides that the
title State cannot tax because such sales or purchases are,
by the fiction, made to take place outside its territory and
that the delivery State can tax because the sales or
purchases in question are, by the fiction, made to take
place inside its territory. In short, the result of clause
(1) (a) read with the Explanation, according to this view,
is that the State which cannot tax such sales or purchases
on the ground that they have taken place outside its terri-
tory is only that State in which the property in the goods
has passed. The criticism is immediately put forward.that
if clause (1) (a) and the Explanation are limited in their
operation only to the two States men-
646
tioned above then the other States which also claimed to tax
on the strength of the nexus theory, e.g the State where the
contract was made, or the State where the goods were
produced or manufactured or were found, will be outside the
ban and the mischief of multiple taxation which the
Constitution makers were out to curb will continue to be
rampant and unabated. This view is also subjected to some
of the other criticisms mentioned in connection with the
other views of the Explanation.
As we have already stated, we do not desire, on this
occasion, to express any opinion on the validity claimed for
or the infirmities imputed to any of these several views,
for, in our opinion, it is not necessary to do so for
disposing of this appeal. Whichever view is taken of the
explanation it should be limited to the purpose the
Constitution makers bad in view when they incorporated it in
clause (1). It is quite obvious that it created a legal
fiction. Legal fictions are created only for some definite
purpose. Here the avowed purpose of the Explanation is to
explain what an outside sale referred to in sub-clause (a)
is. The judicial decisions referred to in the dissenting
judgment in The State of Travancore-Cochin v. Shanmugha
Vilas Cashew Nut Factory (supra) at pp. 81 and 82 and the
case of East End Dwellings Co. Ltd. v. Finsbury Borough
Council(1) clearly indicate that a legal fiction is to be
limited to the purpose for which it was created and should
not be extended beyond that legitimate field. It should
further be remembered that the dominant, if not the sole,
purpose of article 286 is to place restrictions on the
legislative powers of the States, subject to certain
conditions in some cases and with that end in view article
286 imposes several bans on the taxing power of the States
in relation to sales or purchases viewed from different
angles and according to their different aspects. In some
cases the ban is absolute as, for example, with regard to
outside sales covered by clause (1) (a) read with the
Explanation, or with regard to imports and exports covered
by clause (1)(b) and in some cases it is con-
(1) L.R. 1952 A.0. 109,132,
647
ditional, e.g., in the cases of inter-State sales or pur-
chases under clause (2) which is, in terms, made subject to
the proviso thereto and also to the power of Parliament to
lift the ban. Again, in some cases the bans may overlap but
nevertheless, they are distinct and independent of each
other. The operative provisions of the several parts of
article 286, namely, clause (1) (a), clause (1)(b), clause
(2) and clause (3) are manifestly intended to deal with
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 29 of 147
different topics and,, therefore., one cannot be projected
or read into another. On a careful and anxious
consideration of the matter in the light of the fresh
arguments advanced and discussion,s held on the present
occasion we are definitely of the opinion that the
Explanation in clause (1) (a) cannot be legitimately
extended to clause (2) either as an exception or as a
proviso thereto or read as curtailing or limiting the ambit
of clause (2). Indeed, in The State of Bombay v. The United
Motors (India) Ltd. (supra) at pp. 1083-1084 and again at p.
1086 the majority judgment also accepted the position that
the Explanation was not an exception or proviso either to
clause (1) (a) or to clause (2). If, therefore, the
Explanation cannot be read into clause (2) because of the
express language of the Explanation and also because of the
difference in the subject-matter of the operative provisions
of the two clauses, then it must follow that, except in so
far as Parliament may by law provide otherwise, no State law
can impose or authorise the imposition of any tax on sales
or purchases when such sales or purchases take place in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce and irrespective of
whether such sales or purchases do or do not fall within the
Explanation. It is not necessary, for the purposes of this
appeal, to enter upon a discussion as to what is exactly
meant by inter-State trade or commerce or by the phrase "in
the course of", for it is common ground that the sales or
purchases made by the appellant company which are sought to
be taxed by the State of Bihar actually took place in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce. Parliament not
having by law otherwise provided, no State law can,
therefore, tax these sales , or purchases, that is
648
to say, Bihar cannot tax by reason of clause (2) although
they fall within the’ Explanation and other States cannot
tax by reason of both clause (1) (a) read with the
Explanation and clause (2). This conclusion leads us now to
consider the arguments by which the respondent State and the
intervening States which support the respondent State seek
to get over this position.
In the forefront is placed the argument that found favour
with the majority of the Bench which decided the case of The
State of Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd. (supra).
That argument is to be found in the majority judgment at pp.
1085-1086. Shortly put, the majority opinion was that the
operation of clause (2) stood excluded as a result of the
legal fiction enacted in the Explanation. In their view the
effect of the Explanation in regard to inter-State dealings
was to invest what, in truth, was an inter-State transaction
with an intrastate character in relation to the State of
delivery and clause (2) could, therefore, have no
application. They recognised that the legal fiction was to
operate "for the purposes of subclause (a) of clause (1)"
and that that meant merely that the Explanation was designed
to explain the meaning of the expression "outside the State"
in clause (1) (a). They, nevertheless, came to the conclu-
sion that when once it was determined with the aid of the
fictional test that a particular sale or purchase had taken
place within the taxing State, it followed as a corollary,
that the transaction lost its inter-State character and fell
outside the purview of clause (2), not because the fiction
created by the Explanation was used for the purpose of
clause (2), but because such sale or purchase became, in the
eye of the law, a purely local transaction. In his own
inimitable language the learned Chief Justice, who wrote and
delivered the majority judgment, concluded the discussion on
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 30 of 147
this point by saying that the statutory fiction completely
masked the inter-State character of the sale or purchase
which, as a collateral result of such masking, fell outside
the scope of clause (2). In spite of the great respect we
always entertain for the
649
opinions of the then learned Chief Justice and the other
learned Judges who constituted the majority we are unable to
accept the aforesaid arguments or the conclusions as correct
for the reasons we now proceed to state.
The situs of an intangible concept like a sale can only be
fixed nationally by the application of artificial rules
invented either by Judges as part of the judgemade law of
the land, or by some legislative authority. But as far as
we know, no fixed rule of universal application has yet been
definitely and finally evolved for determining this for all
purposes. There are many conflicting theories: One, which
is more popular and frequently put forward and is referred
to and may, indeed, be urged to have been adopted by the
Constitution in the non-obstante clause of the Explanation,
favours the place where the property in the goods passes,
another which is said to be the American view and which was
adopted in G. Govindarajulu Naidu & Co. v. The State of
Madras(1) fixes upon the place where the contract is
concluded, a third which prevails in the continental
countries of Europe prefers the place where the goods sold
are actually delivered, a fourth points to the place where
the essential ingredients which go to make up a sale are
most densely grouped. In this situation if the Explanation
were not there and the ban under clause (2) were to be
raised unconditionally it would become necessary for the
Courts to reach a conclusion and choose between these
conflicting views. Article 286(1)(a), it should be noted,
does not say that inside sale may be taxed. It only says
that no outside sale shall be taxed. Now if a State claims
that the sale is inside because part of its ingredients lies
within its boundaries, by the same logic it is also an
outside sale because the remaining parts are outside its
territories and if it is an outside sale it cannot be taxed
whether or not it can be deemed to be inside for some
particular purpose. The prohibition of article 286(1) (a)
is against taxing an outside sale and if the sale is outside
even partially it may well be argued that no State
legislature can
(1) A.I.R. 1953 Mad. 116.
650
override the Constitution by deeming it to be an inside
sale. Therefore, if the last of the aforesaid theories were
to be adopted, then either no State would be able to tax, or
all having the requisite nexus would be able to do so. But
this in our opinion, is the very mischief which the
Constitution makers wished to avoid and that, as we
understand the majority judgment in the Bombay case, was
their view also. So that view can be placed on one side.
On any one of the other views the situs would have to be
fixed artificially in one place and then one would have to
apply the logic of the majority decision and hold that as
soon as the situs is determined to be in one place by
judicial fiction, i.e., a fiction enunciated by judicial
decision, the interState character of the transaction must
cease. The majority hold that this is the result when the
situs is placed in only one State, namely, the delivery
State, because of the fiction which the Explanation creates.
The same result would have to follow logically if the situs
were to be established by judicial fiction instead of by a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 31 of 147
constitutional one. The reasoning of the majority, pushed
to its logical conclusion, will inevitably lead us to hold
that all inter-State transactions must eventually be
converted into intrastate transactions and, therefore,
become amenable to the taxing power of the State within
whose territories they are, by the constitutional or
judicial fiction, to be deemed to take place. In this view
there will remain no inter-State transaction on which clause
(2) may possibly operate. The argument which leads to this
astounding conclusion has only to be stated to be rejected.
The truth is that what is an interState sale or purchase
continues to be so irrespective of the State where the sale
is to be located either under the general law when it is
finally determined what the general law is,or by the fiction
created, by the Explanation. The situs of a sale or
purchase is wholly irrelevant as regards its inter-State
character. We find no cogent reason in support of the
argument that a fiction created for certain definitely
expressed purposes, namely, the purposes of clause (1) (a)
can legitimately be used for the entirely foreign and
651
collateral purpose of destroying the inter-State character
of the transaction and converting it into an intraState sale
or purchase. Such metamorphosis appears to us to be beyond
the purpose and purview of clause (1)(a) and the Explanation
thereto. When we apply a fiction all we do is to assume
that the situation created by the fiction is true.
Therefore, the same consequences must flow from the fiction
as would have flown had the facts supposed to be true been
the actual facts from the start. Now, even when the situs
of a sale or purchase is in fact inside a State, with no
essential ingredient taking place outside, nevertheless, if
it takes place in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce, it will be hit by clause (2). If the sales or
purchases are in the course of inter-State trade or commerce
the stream of inter-State trade or commerce will catch up in
its vortex all such sales or purchases which take place in
its course wherever the situs of the sales or purchases may
be. All that the Explanation does is to shift the situs
from point A in the stream to point X also in the stream.
It does not lift the sales or purchases out of the stream in
those cases where they form part of the stream. The shift-
ing of the situs of a sale or purchase from its actual situs
under the general law to a fictional situs under the
Explanation takes the sale or purchase out of the taxing
power of all States other than the State where the situs is
fictionally fixed. That is all that clause (1) (a) and the
Explanation do. Whether the delivery State will be entitled
to tax such a sale or purchase will depend on the other
provisions of the Constitution. The assignment of a
fictional situs to a sale or purchase has no bearing or
effect on the other aspects of the sale or purchase, e.g.,
its inter-State character or its export or import character
which are entirely different topics. This fixing of a situs
for a sale or purchase in any particular State either under
the general law or under the fiction does not conclude the
matter. It has yet to be ascertained whether that sale or
purchase which by virtue of the Explanation has taken place
in the delivery State was made in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce. For this
83
652
purpose the Explanation can have no relevancy or application
at all.
Another argument adumbrated in the majority judgment in The
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 32 of 147
State of Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd. (supra) at
p. 1081 and at pp. 1086-1087 and elaborated before us is
that just as the freedom of trade referred to in article 301
has been made to give way to the States’ power of imposing
nondiscriminatory taxes by article 304 so must article
286(2) be regarded as subject to the States’ taxing power,
for the protection of article 286(2) could not have been
intended to be larger. This argument was refuted by the
dissenting judgment in that Bombay case (supra) at pp. 1102-
1103 and p. 1127 and also by the dissenting judgment in The
State of Travancore Cochin v. Shanmugha Vilas Cashew Nut
Factory (supra) at p. 89. Nothing that we have heard on the
present occasion induces us to depart from the views
expressed on this subject in those dissenting judgments.
It is next urged that the Explanation in effect operates as
an exception or a proviso to clause (2). This view runs
directly counter to the express language of the Explanation
itself. So the argument is formulated in a slightly
different way. It is said that clause (2) contains the
enunciation of the general rule and the Explanation
embodies a particular or special rule. According to a
cardinal rule of construction the particular or special rule
must control or cut down the general rule. This view was
adopted by the High Court in the judgment under appeal and
also found favour with one of the Judges in the Bombay
case (supra). It appears to us that this argument overlooks
the basic fact that clause (1) (a) to which is appended the
Explanation and clause (2) deal with different topics
altogether. The Explanation is concerned with explaining
what is an outside sale or purchase by fixing a fictional
situs. It cannot be read as a provision independent of
clause (1) (a). It does not, by itself and in terms, confer
any legislative power on any State. It is true that the
Explanation may apply to fix the Situs Of many inter-State
transactions but that is only for ascertaining, for the
653
purposes of clause (1) (a), whether it has taken place in
side or outside a particular State. The inter-State aspect
of the sales or purchases is not within the purview of
clause (1) (a) which looks at sales or purchases from the
point of view of their location only. Clause (2), on the
other hand, takes note of the inter-’ State character of
sales or purchases which is an entirely different topic.
The two provisions do not relate to the same subject and,
therefore, it is not possible to hold that one is the
enunciation of a general rule and the other the enunciation
of a particular or special rule on one and the same subject.
The principle of construction relied upon cannot, in our
opinion, be called in aid in construing clause (2) and the
Explanation of clause (1)(a). If the Explanation cuts down
clause (2), it must also, on a parity of reasoning, cut down
clause (3) which, as will hereinafter be explained more
fully, could not possibly have been intended by the
Constitution makers. It must also cut down clause (1) (b)
dealing with import and export; but to hold that would run
counter to the decision in State of Travancore-Cochin and
others v. The Bombay Co. Ltd. (1). In our opinion to use
the Explanation to cut down the operation of clause (2) or
clause (3) will be to use it for a purpose other than its
legitimate and avowed purpose.
The same argument is put in a slightly different way and in
a more attractive form. It is said that we must construe
article 286 as a whole and give meaning to every part of it.
Sales or purchases which fall within the Explanation to
clause (1) (a) clearly partake of the character of inter-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 33 of 147
State transactions. Therefore, if we construe clause (2) of
article 286 literally and strictly then the whole of clause
(1) (a) and the Explanation will be redundant and useless
and will have no immediate operation and will remain a dead
letter, at any rate, until Parliament, in exercise of its
powers under clause (2), lifts the ban. We must, it is
urged, make an attempt to avoid such a result and adopt such
a construction as will not only give effect to each part of
the article but also make each part
(1) [1952] 8 S.C li. 1112.
654
applicable in presenti. That, it is pointed out, can well
be done if clause (2) is interpreted in a restricted manner.
The argument runs-give full and immediate effect to the
Explanation and then leave clause
(2) to govern or operate on cases which do not fall within
the Explanation. In effect this argument means that we must
treat all transactions of sales or purchases falling within,
the Explanation as outside clause (2). Shorn of its thin
veneer of disguise this argument is nothing more than the
argument that the Explanation, in effect, operates as an
exception ,to clause (2) and all the criticisms applicable
to that construction will apply mutatis mutandis to the
argument in the present form. Apart from that there are
obvious fallacies which render the argument utterly
unacceptable. We now proceed to deal with these fallacies
seriatim.
(i)In the first place, the mere circumstance that a
provision in the Constitution will, on a proper con-
struction, take effect on the happening of a future event
can, by itself, be no ground for not giving effect to the
plain language of that provision. Take the very next
provision in article 286 itself, namely, clause (3). It
has no present application and its usefulness will ensue
only when Parliament by law declares certain goods to be
essential for the life of the community. The fact that the
Explanation, in so far as it relates to inter-State sales,
may not have an immediate operation until Parliament lifts
the ban under clause (2) need not unnecessarily oppress us
or lead us to adopt a forced construction only to give the
whole of it an immediate and present operation.
(ii)In the second place, it is not correct to say that
the Explanation, construed as suggested above, can have no
immediate operation at all. It certainly has immediate
operation to render sales and purchases which fall within
the explanation to be outside sales and purchases so as
immediately to take away the taxing power of all States
other than the delivery State with respect to them. Further
cases may arise in which purchases or sales which are
outside clause (2) may, nevertheless, fall within and be
immediately
655
governed by the Explanation. We do not wish to express any
opinion on hypothetical cases but the following illustration
will show that on a given view of the law the Explanation
would be called into play despite the fact that clause (2)
was not attracted. Take, for instance, a case where both
the seller and the buyer reside and carry on business in
Gurgaon in the State of Punjab. Let us say that the seller
has a godown in the State of Delhi where his goods are
stored and that the buyer has also a retail shop at
Connaught Circus also in the State of Delhi. The buyer and
the seller enter into a contract at Gurgaon for the sale of
certain goods and a term of the contract is that the goods
contracted to be sold will be actually delivered from the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 34 of 147
seller’s godown to the buyer’s retail shop, both in the
State of Delhi, for consumption in the State of Delhi.
Pursuant to this contract made in Gurgaon in the State of
Punjab, the buyer pays the full price of the goods at
Gurgaon and the seller hands over to the buyer also at
Gurgaon a delivery order addressed to the seller’s godown-
keeper in Delhi to deliver the goods to the buyer’s retail
shop. As a direct result of this sale the seller’s godown-
keeper, on the presentation of this delivery order, actually
delivers the goods to the buyer’s retail shop at Connaught
Circus for consumption in the State of Delhi. On one view
of the law, the situs of such a sale would be Gurgaon. We
need not decide that it is, because that type of case is not
before us and there may be other views to consider, but it
is certainly a possible view. It is also possible to hold
that this is not inter-State trade or commerce, because
there is no movement of goods across a State boundary.
Again, we need not decide that because that also may be
controversial. But given these two postulates the
transaction would fall squarely within the Explanation and
yet it would not come within clause (2) for there is no
movement of the goods across the border of any State and
both the seller and the buyer are in the same place.
Surely, the Explanation will, in presenti, govern such cases
irrespective of whether Parliament has lifted the ban under
clause
656
(2). If these postulates are accepted then by virtue of
clause (1) (a) read with the Explanation the State of Delhi
alone will be entitled to impose a tax on such a sale or
purchase and the State of Punjab will be precluded from
doing so by reason of the fictional situs assigned to such a
sale or purchase by the Explanation, although the contract
was made, price was paid and symbolical or constructive
delivery of the goods by the handing over of the delivery
order took place in Gurgaon in the State of Punjab.
(iii)It is not correct to say that clause (1) (a) read with
the Explanation is wholly useless. It may well be argued
that there was scope for the operation of clause (1)(a) and
the Explanation as and when the President exercised the
powers vested in him by the Proviso to clause (2). It will
be noticed that under that proviso the President’s order was
to take effect "notwithstanding that the imposition of such
tax is contrary to the provisions of this clause". This non
obstante clause does not, in terms, supersede clause (1) at
all and, therefore, prima -facie, the President’s order was
subject to the prohibition of clause (1)(a) read with the
Explanation. It is, however, pointed out that the proviso
says that any tax which was being lawfully levied by the
States immediately before the commencement of the
Constitution will continue to be levied until the date
therein specified. It is said that before the Constitution
sales tax was levied by the different States on the basis of
the nexus theory irrespective of the situs of the sales or
purchases and, therefore, this very proviso clearly
indicates that the intention of the Constitution makers was
that all taxes imposed on the basis of the nexus theory must
continue irrespective of the provisions of the Explanation
which fictionally fixes the situs of the sales or purchases
in the delivery State. The argument is not without some
force but cannot prevail. It is true that the different
States used to levy sales tax on the basis of slight nexus
but the legality of them had not, at the date of the
Constitution, been tested in a Court of law. Therefore, the
proviso authorised the President by order to continue only
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 35 of 147
such of them as were
657
being "lawfully" levied and consequently there is no reason
to think that the President’s order was intended to continue
all sales taxes previously levied irrespective of their
legality. In the next place, there is nothing to be
surprised at if the President’s order was made to operate
subject to the prohibition of clause (1) (a) read with the
Explanation. Finally, to accede to this argument must mean
that we must read into the proviso something which is not
there. To give effect to this argument we shall have to
alter the non obstante clause towards the end of the proviso
and substitute the words "of the foregoing clauses" for the
words "of this clause". However, we need not rest our
decision on this point. It will certainly operate as soon
as Parliament, in exercise of the power vested in it by
clause (2), lifts the ban imposed on the States. Upon the
lifting of the ban by Parliament those inter-State sales or
purchases which fall within the Explanation will, by virtue
of it, be deemed to take place within the deli-very State
and such sales or purchases being, as a result of such
fiction, outside all other States none of them will be
entitled to tax such sales or purchases. Whether the
delivery State will be entitled to make a law imposing tax
on such sales or purchases in exercise of the legislative
powers vested in it by article 246 (3) read with Entry 54 in
List II or whether Parliament, while lifting the ban, may
also by the same law authorise the delivery State to do so
or what is the extent of the authority vested in Parliament
by the opening words of clause (2) are questions which will
arise for consideration only after the ban under clause (2)
is lifted and we need not in advance express any opinion on
a future problem.
(iv) If we accept the argument that we are to give full
effect to clause (1) (a) and the Explanation and let it
operate immediately on all transactions which come within
their terms and leave clause (2) to govern only those cases
which are outside clause (1) (a) read with the Explanation
then, on a parity of reasoning, we shall have to give effect
to clause (1) (a) and the Explanation and leave clause (1)
(b) and ’also clause (3) to govern only those cases which do
not
658
fall within clause (1)(a) read with the Explanation. To
illustrate this point, take clause (3). Suppose under clause
(3) Parliament by law declares certain goods, say wheat, to
be essential for the life of the community. Suppose there
is a sale of such essential goods by a seller in the State
of Delhi to a buyer in Gurgaon in the State of Punjab in
which as a direct result of such sale the ’goods are
delivered in Gurgaon in Punjab for consumption in that
State. According to the argument we have to give full
effect first to clause (1) (a) and the Explanation and
accordingly we must hold that the transaction is wholly
covered by the Explanation and, therefore, Punjab will be
entitled to tax it and clause (3) must be left to govern
only cases other than those which fall within the
Explanation. If the argument were sound it must follow that
the State of Punjab will be perfectly justified in saying
that for the purpose of making a law imposing a tax on such
sales or purchases its law need not be reserved for the
assent of the President at all. It may well say that the
restrictive requirements of reserving the bill for the
President’s assent and of obtaining such assent before the
law may take effect apply only to a law which imposes tax on
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 36 of 147
sales or purchases which are outside the Explanation. In
other words, the State of Punjab, in our illustration, will
be entitled to say that clause (3) governs only those cases
of sales or purchases of essential goods which do not come
within the description mentioned in the Explanation, namely,
for instance, only those sales or purchases in which es-
sential goods are delivered in a State not for consumption
in that State but for re-export to another State. This will
rob clause (3) of practically the best part of its content
and, therefore, of its usefulness and defeat the very
purpose the Constitution makers obviously had of
safeguarding sales or purchases of essential commodities by
imposing the restriction requiring the reservation of the
bill for the President’s assent and the obtaining of such
assent. When a famine is raging in say Punjab, and sales
and purchases are made of wheat which is declared as
essential
659
to the life of the community and as a direct result of such
sale wheat is delivered in the Punjab for consumption there
the State of Punjab may, according to the reasoning
underlying the argument, put up the price of these essential
goods by imposing a sales tax by making a law to that effect
and ignoring the safeguards prescribed by clause (3). An
argument which leads us to a result so utterly absurd and
untenable in reason cannot for a moment be countenanced.
No less than five reasons have been suggested in support of
the argument that a restricted construction should be placed
on clause (2) of article 286. It will be convenient to deal
with them at this stage one by one.
(a) In the first place, it is urged that clause (2) should
be construed in a restricted way because the class of sales
falling within article 286(1) (a) forms a special class of
inter-State sales and they cannot be affected by the general
provisions of article 286(2). This argument totally
overlooks the real scheme of article 286. It fails to note
that by this article the Constitution makers were imposing
restrictions on the taxing power of the States with respect
to sales or purchases in their different aspects viewed from
entirely different angles which we have heretofore already
explained. The subject-matters of the different parts of
article 286 are, therefore, different and distinct and the
principle of interpretation, namely, the special provision
cutting down the general provision cannot be properly
invoked.
(b)The second reason urged is that if article 286(2)applies
to the class of sales or purchases falling within article
286(1)(a) then it will result in discrimination against
local trade and in favour of interState trade and this will
be inconsistent with the provisions of Part XIII of the
Constitution. It is said that when a Bihar dealer sells
certain goods to a Bihar purchaser the former is obliged to
pay sales tax which he passes on to the Bihar purchaser but
when the Bihar purchaser directly imports into Bihar similar
goods from say a West Bengal dealer for consump-
84
660
tion in Bihar that transaction will not the liable to Bihar
Sales Tax as it will be an inter-State transaction. This,
it is said, will prejudice the Bihar seller for all Bihar
purchasers will then be driven to purchasing goods from out-
of-State sellers and local producers will suffer a set back.
The argument is that as a literal construction of clause (2)
will result in such discrimination against local trade, the
cardinal rule of interpretation, namely, reading the written
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 37 of 147
provision literally and giving to the words their ordinary
natural meaning should give way to a restricted con-
struction. This argument overlooks several basic things.
If there is any real hardship of the kind referred to, there
is Parliament which is expressly invested with the power of
lifting the ban under clause (2) either wholly or to the
extent it thinks fit to do. Why should the Court be called
upon to discard the cardinal rule of interpretation for
mitigating a hardship, which after all may be entirely
fanciful, when the Constitution itself has expressly
provided for another authority more competent to evaluate
the correct position to do the needful? This argument also
fails to take into account the benefit which the consuming
public derives from the free flow of goods from one State to
another resulting in lower prices. Further, the argument
overlooks the fact that the so-called hardship, if any, is
brought about, not really by reason of the liberal
construction of clause (2) but by reason of the State of
Bihar imposing a sales tax on an intrastate transaction.
The State of Bihar is not obliged to levy a sales tax on -
sales or purchases of goods in respect of which there is
competition between out-of-State producers, manufacturers
and dealers and the Bihar producers, manufacturers and
’dealers and, indeed, if it intends to encourage its local
manufacturers or producers it should not do so. It will not
do for the State of Bihar to say that it must levy a sales
tax on intrastate sales or purchases which it is not obliged
to do and at the same time that it must protect the Bihar
dealers or producers, and enable them to compete with
outside dealers or producers and, therefore, ask us to
construe the
661
Constitution in an unnatural way so as to enable it to have
the best of both worlds. It is immediately retorted that
the welfare State must have sufficient revenue to run
itself, that if it is to forego sales tax its economy will
be totally upset. This harrowing picture of economic
collapse of the States has been pressed upon this Court on
this as on the previous occasion and it evidently oppressed
the minds of the Judges who were parties to the majority
decision. It is, therefore, necessary to examine the matter
a little more closely. Ordinarily, inter-State trade or
commerce is done between a dealer in one State and a dealer
in another State. The dealer in the consuming State in his
turn sells the goods in retail to actual *consumers. There
can be no objection to insisting upon all inside dealers
getting them selves registered and submitting returns
showing goods imported and sold by them and bringing their
annual turnovers to tax which they will pass on to the
actual consumers. Call it a purchase tax vis-a-vis the
earlier transaction under which the goods were delivered in
Bihar for consumption in that State or call it a sales tax
vis-a-vis the subsequent local sales by the Bihar dealer to
actual consumers in Bihar, the State will get the full
revenue on these local sales or purchases from the local
sellers. There can be no doubt that sales or purchases of
this kind to or from one dealer to another dealer actually
form the bulk of inter-State trade or commerce. To take
them out of clause (2) will be to make the protection of
inter-State trade or commerce wholly illusory and to rob
clause (2) of the best part of its content and utility.
Ordinarily individual local consumers buy goods in the local
market and do not generally bring goods for their personal
consumption from outside dealers. It is only in exceptional
cases that a local consumer will be energetic enough to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 38 of 147
bring goods from outside the State for his consumption and
their number will be small. It is only those stray
individual consumers who are energetic enough to get goods
direct from a dealer in another State and may be willing to
pay freight, etc., and undertake the risk of loss or damage
who may evade
662
the tax. The difficulty in tracing such stray actual local
consumers cannot be any cogent reason for adopting the
unnatural construction sought to be put upon clause (2) of
article 286. If big Bihar purchasers, e.g., Tata Iron &
Steel Co. Ltd., who are very heavy consumers of coal, prefer
to get their supply of coal from Ranigunge coal fields in
West Bengal for consumption in their large factories at
Tatanagar in Bihar to getting their supplies from the Jharia
coal fields in Bihar and thereby evade sales tax to the
detriment of the revenues of the State of Bihar, then again
there is Parliament to mitigate such hardship by making
suitable laws in exercise of its power under article 286(21.
Such supposed hardship is, in our view, no ground for
putting a forced and unnatural interpretation upon article
286.
(c) The third reason in support of a restricted
construction of article 286(2) is thus formulated: The
purpose of article 286 being to eliminate multiple taxation
and article 286(1) (a) having already achieved that purpose
with regard to the class falling within the Explanation, it
was no longer necessary for that purpose to apply article
286(2) to that class. This reasoning appears to us to be
untenable. It overlooks the patent fact that the different
parts of the article look upon sales and purchases from
different perspectives and place different bans on the
taxing power of the States at different angles. The
circumstance that the bans may in given cases overlap is no
justification for concluding that the subject-matter of the
different provisions is the same. This line of reasoning
assumes that the only purpose of article 286 is to eliminate
multiple taxation. The purposes of the different parts of
the article have to be ascertained from the language of the
article itself read in the light of the contemporary history
of the legislative activities of the different States with
respect to taxes on sales or purchases of goods and the
chaos and confusion that arose and the havoc that ensued as
a result of those activities. There was multiple taxation
which imposed a heavy burden on the consumers and which was
also calculated to impede and hinder the free flow of inter-
663
State trade or commerce. The Constitution makers.,
therefore, imposed several bans on the taxing power of the
States with respect to sales or purchases, namely, first on
the basis of their situs, secondly and thirdly on the basis
of the character of the transactions, e.g., foreign trade or
inter-State trade and fourthly on the basis of the nature or
quality of the goods sold or purchased, i.e., whether they
have been declared to be essential to the life of the
community. As regards inter-State trade or commerce the
clear intention of the Constitution makers was to place an
absolute ban for the time being, subject to the proviso, and
to give some time to Parliament to study the situation and
to evaluate the result of the ban and to lift the ban to
such extent as it thought fit in the interest of the general
public and that of interState trade or commerce. If the
matter is approached in this way it becomes abundantly clear
that this part of the argument we are now considering
proceeds on a wrong assumption of the purpose of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 39 of 147
Constitution.
(d)A restricted construction of article 286(2) is said to be
necessary and called for because the Constitution itself has
divided inter-State sales or purchases into two categories
and in regard to one class it has itself provided both as to
which State will tax them and under what condition and in
regard to the other class the Constitution has imposed a ban
in general terms and granted power to Parliament in general
terms to relax such ban as Parliament thinks fit. This is
clearly begging the question and does not require any
elaborate refutation.
(e)Another string to the bow is that because of the legal
fiction created by the Explanation the inter-State sales
or purchases were converted into intraState transactions.
This, it will be recalled, was the reasoning adopted in the
majority decision in The State of Bombay v. The United
Motors (India) Ltd. (supra). We are unable to accept this
argument for the reasons given above which Deed not be
repeated here.
It is said that the picture of harassment and inconvenience
to the traders referred to in the dissenting
664
judgments is more imaginary than real. It is pointed out
that it is only big traders who will have sales of their
goods in all the States in the Union of India. Those big
traders maintain a large staff of clerks and accountants and
there can be no difficulty if they are obliged to file
returns in each State where they sell their goods. This
argument overlooks the practical effects of the different
sales tax laws enacted by different States. All big traders
will have to get themselves registered in each State, study
the Sales Tax Acts of each State, conform to the
requirements of all State laws which are by no means uniform
and, finally, may be simultaneously called upon to produce
their books of account in support of their returns before
the officers of each State. Anybody who has any practical
experience of the working of the sales tax laws of the
different States knows how long books are detained by the
officers of each State during assessment proceedings. There
are different stages of these proceedings, original,
appellate and revisional and there will be as many
proceedings under each heading as there are States where the
goods are sold. The harassment to traders is quite obvious
and needs no exaggeration. On the other hand - if any risk
to the economy of the States ensues from the construction of
article 286 which commends itself to us, the appeal must be
to Parliament which can by law made under the opening words
of clause (2) mitigate that risk.
For all the foregoing reasons we are definitely of opinion
that, until Parliament by law made in exercise of the powers
vested in it by clause (2) provides otherwise, no State can
impose or authorise the imposition of any tax on sales or
purchases of goods when such sales or purchases take place
in the course of inter-State trade or commerce and the ma-
jority decision in The State of Bombay v. The United Motor8
(India) Ltd. (supra) in so far as it decides to the contrary
cannot be accepted as well founded on principle or
authority.
In the view we have taken on question (A) it is not
necessary for us, on this occasion, to discuss the other
questions (B), (C) or (D). All that remains to
665
be seen is whether as a result of our finding on question
(A) the Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1947 is ultra vires and void in
its entirety or it is only bad in so far as it seeks to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 40 of 147
impose a sales tax on out-of-State sellers in respect of
inter-State sales or purchases. This will depend on whether
the objectionable parts of the Act are severable from the
rest of its provisions. It will be necessary here to refer
to a few provisions of the Act.
The long title of the Act is "An Act to provide for the levy
of a tax on sales of goods in Bihar". The preamble recites
that "It is necessary to make an addition to the revenues of
Bihar and for that purpose to impose a tax on the sale of
goods in Bihar". The Act extends to the whole of the State
of Bihar. "Dealer" was originally defined in section 2(c) as
meaning:
"any person who sells or supplies any goods in Bihar whether
for commission, remuneration or otherwise and includes any
firm or a Hindu joint family and any society, club or
association which sells or supplies goods to its members" ’
By the Bihar Finance Act, 1950 the words "in Bihar" were
omitted from this definition. Clause (g) of the same
section defines sale. That definition has undergone various
changes from time to time. The period we are concerned with
in this appeal is from 26th January 1950 to the 30th
September 1951. Between 1st October 1948 and 31st March
1951 which covers the earlier part of the relevant period
the clause stood as follows:-
"Sale" means., with all its grammatical variations and
cognate expressions, any transfer of property in goods for
cash or deferred payment or other valuable consideration,
including a transfer of property in goods involved in the
execution of contract but does not include a mortgage,
hypothecation, charge or pledge:
Provided that a transfer of goods on hire-purchase or other
installment system of payment shall, notwithstanding the
fact that the seller retains a title
666
to any goods as security for payment of the price, be deemed
to be a sale:
Provided further that notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930 (III) of
1930), the sale of any goods--
(i)which are actually in Bihar at the time when, in respect
thereof, the contract of sale as defined in section 4 of
that Act is made, or
(ii)which are produced or manufactured in Bihar by the
producer or manufacturer thereof, shall, wherever the
delivery or contract of sale is made, be deemed for the
purposes of this Act to have taken place in Bihar:
Provided further that the sale of goods in respect of a
forward contract, whether goods under such contract are
actually delivered or not, shall be deemed to have taken
place on the date originally agreed upon for delivery".
This definition was amended and between the 1st April 1951
and the 31st March 1952 which covers the latter part of the
relevant period it read as follows:
" sale" means,, with all its grammatical variations and
cognate expressions, any transfer of property in goods for
cash or deferred payment or other valuable consideration,
including a transfer of property in goods involved in the
execution of contract but does not include a mortgage,
hypothecation, charge or pledge:
Provided that a transfer of goods on hire purchase or other
installment system of payment shall, notwithstanding the
fact that the seller retains a title to any goods as
security for payment of the price, be deemed to be a sale:
Provided further that the sale of goods in respect of a
forward contract, whether goods under such contract are
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 41 of 147
actually delivered or not, shall be deemed to have taken
place on the date originally agreed upon for delivery-
Explanation.-The sale of any goods actually delivered in
Bihar as a direct result of such sale for the purpose of
consumption in Bihar shall be deemed for the purpose of this
Act to have taken place in
667
Bihar., notwithstanding the fact that under the general law
relating to sale of goods, the property in the goods has, by
reason of such sale, passed in another State".
It will be noted that the Explanation which is sub-
stantially a reproduction of the Explanation to article
286(1) (a) was introduced for the first time by this
amendment.
"Turn over" is defined in section 2(1). The charging
section is section 4 which provides, amongst other things,
that subject to -the provisions of sections 5, 6, 7 and 8
and with effect from the commencement of the Act every
dealer whose gross turn over during the year immediately
preceding the date of such commencement on sales which have
taken place both in and outside Bihar exceeds Rs. 10,000
shall be liable to pay tax under this Act on sales which
have taken place in Bihar and from the date of such
commencement. It will be noticed that although the long
title and the preamble refer to the sale of goods in Bihar
the words "in Bihar" were deleted from the definition of the
word "sale" in section 2(g). There are various provisions
for working out the scheme of the Act to which no detailed
reference need be made. It may, however, be pointed out
that a new section was inserted by the Adaptation of Laws
(Third Amendment) Order, 1951 which substantially reproduced
the provisions of article 286(1) and (2). Although,
therefore, the charging section read with the definition of
"dealer" and "sale" may be wide enough to cover inter-State
sales, the new section 33 makes all those provisions subject
to its provisions which are nothing but a reproduction of
the corresponding provisions of article 286. In view of the
interpretation we have put upon article 286 it must follow
that the charging section of the Act read with the relevant
definitions cannot operate to tax inter-State sales or
purchases and it must be held that as Parliament has not
otherwise provided, the Act, in so far as it purports to tax
sales or purchases that take place in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce, is unconstitutional, illegal and
void. This being the position the question arises
85
668
whether the Act is bad ?In toto or is bad only in so far as
it offends the provisions of article 286 as construed above.
It appears to us that the Act imposes tax on subjects
divisible in their nature but does not exclude in express
terms subjects exempted by the Constitution. In such a
situation the Act need not be declared wholly ultra vires
and void, for it is feasible to separate taxes levied on
authorised subjects from those levied on exempted subjects
and to exclude the latter in the assessment of the tax. In
these circumstances it is difficult to say that the scheme
of taxing interState sales forms such an integral part of
the entire scheme of taxation on sales or purchases of goods
as to be inextricably interwoven with it. There is no
reason to presume that had the Bihar Legislature known that
the provisions of the Act might be held bad in so far as
they imposed or authorised the imposition of a tax on inter-
State trade or commerce even though Parliament had not by
law provided otherwise it would, nevertheless, not have
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 42 of 147
passed the rest of the Act.
The result, therefore, is that this appeal must be allowed
and we issue an order directing that, until Parliament by
law provides otherwise, the State of Bihar do forbear and
abstain from imposing sales tax on out-of-State dealers in
respect of sales or purchases that have taken place in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce even though the
goods have been delivered as a direct result of such sales
or purchases for consumption in Bihar. The State must pay
the costs of the appellant in this -Court and in the Court
below. The interveners must bear and pay their own costs.
BHAGWATI J.-I agree with the reasoning and the conclusions
reached in the judgment just delivered by my Brother S.R.
Das. In so I far however as I was a party to the judgment
in The State, of Bombay and Another v. The United Motor8
(India) Ltd. and Others(1) it is but proper that I should
record my reasons for doing so.
(1) [1953] S.C.R 1069.
669
The Appellant is a company incorporated under the Indian
Companies Act having its registered office at No. 153,
Dharamtala Street, Calcutta and laboratory and factory at
Baranagar in the District of 24 Parganas in West Bengal and
carrying on business of manufacturing and selling various
sera, vaccines, biological products and medicines, etc., in
Calcutta. The Appellant has extensive sales of its products
throughout the whole of the Union of India and the goods are
despatched by the Appellant from Calcutta by rail, steamer
or air against orders accepted at Calcutta and all sales
take place within the State of West Bengal. The Appellant
has no offices, agents, managers, godowns or laboratories in
the State of Bihar. It is not a resident of Bihar nor has a
place of business in Bihar and does not enter into any
transaction of sale within the State of Bihar.
On the 24th October 1951 the Assistant Superintendent of
Commercial Taxes, headquarters Patna, wrote to the Appellant
to get itself registered under the Bihar Sales Tax Act and
to take necessary steps to deposit the Bihar Sales Tax dues
in any Bihar treasury at an early date, contending that all
sales in West Bengal in which the goods had been delivered
in the State of Bihar as a direct result of the sale for the
purpose of consumption in Bihar were leviable to Bihar Sales
Tax with effect from the 26th January 1950. The Appellant
denied the right of the State of Bihar to tax the sales
effected in West Bengal and by his letter dated the 18th
December 1951 the Superintendent of Commercial Taxes,
Central Circle, Bihar sent a notice under section 13(5) of
the Bihar Sales Tax Act to the Appellant calling upon it to
apply for registration and to submit the return, showing its
turn-over for the period from the 26th January 1950 to the
30th September 1951.
Correspondence thereafter ensued in which both the parties
made futile attempts to convince each other of the legality
of the stand taken by it. The Appellant asserted that it
was not liable to assessment under the Bihar Sales Tax Act
and denied the authority of the State of Bihar to levy sales
tax upon
670
the Appellant. The Assistant Superintendent of Commercial
Taxes, Central Circle, Bihar, ultimately by his letter dated
the 28th May 1952 rejected the contention of the Appellant
and asked it to comply with the notice under section 13(5)
of the Bihar Sales Tax Act failing which he threatened to
proceed to take steps for assessment to the best of his
judgment. The Appellant thereupon by its letter dated the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 43 of 147
7th June 1952 called upon the Superintendent of Commercial
Taxes, Central Circle, Bihar to forthwith rescind and cancel
the notice issued under section 13(5) of the Bihar Sales Tax
Act as the said notice was ultra vires of the Constitution
and also the Bihar Sales Tax Act and was entirely illegal
and inoperative.
As the aforesaid demand was not complied with the Appellant
filed in the High Court of Judicature at Patna a petition
under article 226 of the Constitution asking for appropriate
reliefs by way of issue of a writ of mandamus, certiorari
and prohibition and any other appropriate writs or orders
quashing the proceedings issued for the purpose of levying
and realising a tax which was not lawfully leviable on the
Appellant and asking the Appellant to file a return and
register itself as a dealer. The State of Bihar, Respondent
1, The Superintendent of Commercial Taxes, Central Circle,
Patna, Respondent 2 and Assistant Superintendent of
Commercial Taxes, Central Circle, Bihar, Respondent 3 were
the opposite parties to the petition. They did not file any
affidavit in reply. The facts alleged by the Appellant were
not denied but arguments on questions of law arising out of
the petition were addressed by the Government Pleader
appearing for them before the High Court. The High Court
held:
(1) That the Respondent 3 was acting within his
jurisdiction in issuing the notice under section 13(5) and
holding that the applicant was liable to pay the tax, that
if he made an assessment under section 13 (5) the Act
provided a right of appeal whereby any error of law might be
corrected by the Appellate authorities prescribed under the
Act, that sections 24 and 25 of the Act furnished a complete
and effec-
671
tive machinery for appeal and revision against assessments
made under the Act and that there was therefore no warrant
for issuing a writ under article 226 of the Constitution;
(2) That the phrase "sale or purchase in the, course of
inter-State trade or commerce" in article 286 (2) must be
construed so as to exclude the particular class of sales or
purchases described in the explanation to article 296(1) and
that therefore the amended clauses (c) and (g) of section 2
and section 33 of the Bihar Sales Tax Act were not in
conflict with article 286(2);
(3) That the Bihar Sales Tax Act was in pith and substance
not a law with respect to sale of goods but a law imposing
tax on the sale of goods and the legislation fell entirely
within Item 54 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution, viz., taxes on the sale or purchase of goods
other than newspapers and that the Act could not therefore
be said to be invalid under article 254;
(4) That the Bihar Sales Tax Act had been enacted for the
purpose of imposing tax on the sale of goods and not for
regulating inter-State or intrastate trade and commerce and
that therefore the Act did not contravene in any way article
304; and
(5) That the Act was also not invalid on the ground that it
was extra-territorial in operation, that the jurisdiction to
tax existed not only in regard to persons or property but
also as regards the business done within the State, that it
was not necessary for the purposes of jurisdiction that the
entire transaction of sale should have taken place within
the territories, that on the other hand the fact that the
goods ,were delivered in Bihar for consumption constituted
sufficient nexus or territorial connection which conferred
jurisdiction upon the Bihar legislature to impose the tax
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 44 of 147
and that the explanation to article 286(1)(a) expressly
conferred upon the State power to tax sales or purchases of
goods which were actually delivered for consumption inside
the State.
The High Court therefore dismissed. the petition with costs.
672
The Appellant applied for leave to appeal to this Court and
the High Court granted the requisite certificate under
article 132(1) of the Constitution.
At the hearing of the appeal before us the State of West
Bengal, Tata Iron & Steel Company, Calcutta, the State of
Madras, the State of Mysore, the State of Uttar Pradesh, the
State of Orissa, the State of Pepsu, the State of Rajasthan,
the State of Madhya Pradesh, the State of Travancore-Cochin,
the State of East Punjab and one M. K. Kuriakose applied for
and were granted leave to intervene and counsel for the
Interveners appeared before us and urged their respective
points of view.
The first question as regards the maintainability of a
petition for writ under article 226 on the facts disclosed
in the petition can be disposed of very shortly in the words
of Mahajan, C. J. in Himmatlal Harilal Mehta v. The State of
Madhya Pradesh & Others(1) where he repelled a similar
contention urged by the Advocate-General of the State of
Madhya Pradesh:-
"The learned Advocate-General of the State........ however
contended that on the principle enunciated by the Privy
Council in Raleigh Investment Co. v. The
Governor-General-in-Council(2), jurisdiction to question
assessment otherwise than by use of the machinery expressly
provided by the Act, was inconsistent with the statutory
obligation to pay, arising by virtue of the assessment and
that the liability to pay the sales tax under the Act is a
special liability created by the Act itself which at the
same time gives a special and particular remedy which ought
to be resorted to, and therefore the remedy by a writ ought
not to be allowed to be used for evading the provisions of
the Act, especially a fiscal Act............................
In our opinion the contentions raised by the learned
Advocate-General are not well founded. It is plain that the
State evinced an intention that it could certainly proceed
to apply the penal provisions of the Act against the
appellant if it failed- to make the return or to meet the
demand
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 1122, 1126.
(2) 74 I.A. 50
673
and in order to escape from such serious consequences
threatened without authority of law, and infringing
fundamental rights, relief by way of a writ of mandamus was
clearly the appropriate relief In Mohd. Yasin v. The Town
Area Committee(1), it was held by this Court that a licence
fee on a bussiness not only takes away the property of the
licensee but also operates as a restriction on his
fundamental right to carry on his business and therefore if
the imposition of a licence fee is without authority of law
it can be challenged by way of an application under article
32, a fortiori also under article 226. These observations
have apposite application to the circumstances of the
present case. Explanation 11 to section 2(g) of the Act
having been declared ultra vires, any imposition of sales
tax on the appellant in Madhya Pradesh is without the
authority of law, and that being so a threat by the State by
using the coercive machinery of the Impugned Act to realize
it from the appellant is a sufficient infringement of his
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 45 of 147
fundamental right under article 19(1) (g) and it was clearly
entitled to relief under article 226 of the Constitution.
The contention that because remedy under the impugned Act
was available to the appellant it was disentitled to relief
under article 226 stands negatived by the decision of this
Court in The State of Bombay v. The United Motors (India)
Ltd.(2), above referred to. There it was held that the
principle that a court will not issue a prerogative writ
when an adequate alternative remedy was available could not
apply where a party came to the court with an allegation
that his fundamental right had been infringed and sought
relief under article 226. Moreover, the remedy provided by
the Act is of an onerous and burdensome character. Before
the appellant can avail of it he has to deposit the whole
amount of the tax. Such a provision can hardly be described
as an adequate alternative remedy".
This sufficiently disposes of that contention and I am of
the opinion that the High Court was in error when it held
that there was no warrant for issuing a writ
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 572.
(2) [1953] B.C.R. 1069,
674
under article 226 of the Constitution on the facts disclosed
in the appellant’s petition.
On the merits Shri N. C. Chatteriee appearing for the
appellant urged:-
(1)That article 286 put a fetter on State Legislature and
the explanation did not confer any power on any State
Legislature to levy any taxes but was meant to explain only
clause 1(a), i.e."what was an outside sale or purchase and
that it did not remove -any restrictions or fetters and did
not convert any inter-State sale or purchase into an
intrastate or local or domestic transaction;
(2)That article 286(2) in Part XII was meant to implement
the supremacy of Parliament with regard to inter-State trade
or commerce and it put an embargo on the power of State
Legislature to levy any tax on sale or purchase with respect
to interState trade or commerce and that it was only when
the embargo was lifted by appropriate Parliamentary
legislation that State Legislature could levy any tax on
sales or purchases in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce; and
(3)That legislative competence of a State Legislature was
derived from article 246 read with the lists of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution, that under article 245(2) only
Parliament was given the power to enact legislation with
extra-territorial operation and the State Legislatures had
no such power, and that the combined effect of article
246(3) and article 245 read with Item 54 of List II was that
the State Legislature was only competent to make laws
imposing tax on sale or purchase of goods for the whole or
part of that State.
The determination of these questions involves a construction
of the provisions of article 286(1) and (2) of the
Constitution and their true scope and effect. These
provisions read as follows:-
"Article 286. (1) No law of a State shall impose, or
authorise the imposition of, a tax on the sale or purchase
of goods where such sale or purchase takes place-
(a) outside the State; or
675
(b) in the course of the import of the goods into, or
export of the goods out of, the territory of India.
Explanation.-For the purposes of sub-clause (a), a sale or
purchase shall be deemed to have taken place in the State in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 46 of 147
which the goods have actually been delivered as a direct
result of such sale or purchase for the purpose of
consumption in that State, not withstanding the fact that
under the general law relating to sale of goods the property
in the goods has by reason of such sale or purchase passed
in another State.
(2) Except in so far as Parliament may by law otherwise
provide, no law of a State shall impose, or authorise the
imposition of, a tax on the sale or purchase of any goods
where such sale or purchase takes place in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce:
Provided that the President may by order direct that any tax
on the sale or purchase of goods which was being lawfully
levied by the Government of any State immediately before the
commencement of this Constitution shall. notwithstanding
that the imposition of such tax is contrary to the
provisions of this clause., continue to be levied until the
thirty-first day of March, 1951".
They are enacted in Part XII of the Constitution which
relates to finance, property, contracts and suits and fall
under the caption of ’Miscellaneous Financial Provisions’.
Their main purpose is to lay down the restrictions on State
Legislatures to enact laws imposing or authorising the
imposition of tax on the sale or purchase of goods. Article
286(1) lays down such restrictions where such sale or
purchase takes place-(a) outside the State, or (b) in the
course of the import of the goods into, or export of the
goods out of, the territory of India. Article 286(2) lays
down such restrictions where such sale or purchase takes
place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce.
Article 286(1) is hedged in with the explanation and article
286(2) is hedged in with the exception "in so far as
Parliament may by law otherwise provide" and the proviso
under which the President might direct that any tax which
was being lawfully
86
676
levied by the Government of any State immediately before the
commencement of the Constitution may, notwithstanding the
provisions of article 286(2), continue to be levied until
the 31st March 1951. Except for these special dispensations
the restrictions laid down by article 286(1) and (2) prevail
and the true scope and extent of these restrictions would
have to be culled out of the terms in which these
provisions, are couched.
These provisions came to be considered by this Court in two
cases, (1) The, State of Bombay and Another ’v. The.
United Motors (India) Ltd. and others(1) and (2) State of
Travancore-Cochin and Others v. Shanmugha Vilas Cashew Nut
Factory and Others(2). The first of these cases was
concerned with the constitutionality of the Bombay Sales Tax
Act XXIV of 1952. The High Court of Bombay had declared the
Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1952 ultra vires the State Legislature
and had issued a writ in the nature of mandamus against the
State of Bombay and the Collector of Sales Tax, Bombay,
directing them to forbear and desist from enforcing the
provisions of the said Act against the respondents. The
main ground of attack in the High Court had been that the
Act purported to tax sales and purchases of goods regardless
of restrictions imposed on the State legislative power by
article 286 of the Constitution and in that connection the
provisions of article 286(1) and (2) came to be considered
by this Court.The majority judgment of this Court delivered
by Patanjali Sastri, C. J. with which Mukherjea, J. and
Ghulam Hasan, J. concurred held that article 286 (1) (a) of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 47 of 147
the Constitution read with the explanation thereto and con-
strued in the light of articles 301 and 304 prohibits the
taxation of sales or purchases involving interState elements
by all States except the State in which the goods are
delivered for the purpose of consumption therein. The
latter State is left free to tax such sales or purchases,
and it derives this power not by virtue of article 28611)
but under article 246(3) read with Entry 54 of List II. The
majority judgment
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069. (2) [1954] S.C.R. 53.
677
differed from the view which was taken by me that the
Explanation does not deprive the State in which the property
in the goods passed of this taxing power and that
consequently both the State in which the property in the
goods passes and the State in which the goods are delivered
for consumption. have the power to tax and characterised it
as not correct. The majority judgment also held that clause
(2) of article 286 does not affect the power of the State in
which the delivery of goods is made to tax inter-State sales
or purchases of the kind mentioned in the Explanation to
clause (1). The effect of the Explanation is that such
transactions are saved from the ban imposed by article
286(2). Bose, J. and myself agreed that article 286(2)
could not be construed in the light of article 304(1) as the
two articles dealt with different matters. Bose, J. however
held that the basic idea underlying article 286 is to
prohibit taxation in the case of inter-State trade and
commerce until the ban under clause (2) of the said article
is lifted by Parliament and always in the case of imports
and exports. When the ban is lifted, the Explanation to
clause (1) of article 286 comes into play to determine the
situs of the sale. This Explanation does not govern clause
(2) of article 286 and as it can only apply to transactions
which in truth and in fact take place in the course of
inter-State trade and commerce, there is no need to call it
in aid until the ban is removed. The majority judgment as
well as Bose, J. recognised that the provisions of article
286(1) and (2) had been enacted in order to prevent multiple
taxation which used to be levied by the States before the
commencement of the Constitution having resort to the nexus
theory. They however did not discard that theory altogether
and’ were of the opinion that it was sufficient to invest
the State Legislature with jurisdiction to impose a tax on
sale or purchase of goods, if any of the essential
ingredients of sale had taken place within its territory.
The did not accept the transfer of ownership in the goods or
the passing of property therein as the sole criterion
determining the situs of the sale and thus investing the
State within
678
whose territories the sale had thus taken place as the only
State entitled to impose the tax on sale or purchase of
goods. I however held that under the general law relating
to sale of goods a sale must be regarded as having taken
place in the State in which the property in the goods sold
has passed to the purchaser, and that State is entitled to
tax the sale or purchase as having taken place inside the
State. The Explanation to article 286(1) does not take away
the right which the State in which the property in the goods
passed has to tax the sale or purchase but only deems such
purchase or sale, by a legal fiction, to have taken place in
the State in which the delivery of the goods has been made
for consumption therein so as to enable the latter State
also, to tax the sale or purchase in question. The
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 48 of 147
Explanation only lifts the ban imposed by clause (1) (a) on
taxation of sales or purchases which take place outside the
State, to the extent of the transactions mentioned in the
Explanation to enable the delivery State also to tax them.
I also held that the general provision enacted in article
286(2) against the imposition of tax on the sale or purchase
of goods in the course of inter-State trade or commerce
should give way to the special provision which is enacted in
the Explanation to article 286(1) (a) enabling the delivery
State to tax such sale or purchase in the limited class of
oases covered by the Explanation, the transactions covered
by the Explanation being thus lifted out of the category of
transactions in the course of inter-State trade or commerce
and assimilated to transactions of sale or purchase which
take place inside the State and thus invested with the
character of an intrastate sale or purchase so far as the
delivery State is concerned. There was thus a divergence
between the learned Judges as regards the true scope and
effect of the Explanation to article 286(1) (a) read with
article 286(2) and even though the same conclusion was
reached by the majority Judges and myself we reached the
same on different grounds. The interpretation put on
article 286(1)(a) read with the Explanation thereto there-
fore was that the delivery State is left free to tax such,
679
sales or purchases as fall within the terms of the Ex-
planation and article 286(2) does not affect the power of
such a State to tax inter-State trade or commerce of the
kind mentioned in the Explanation. The Explanation saves
such transactions from the ban imposed by article 286(2).
It may be noted that though there was a consensus of opinion
that article 286(1) was designed to avoid the multiple
taxation of a sale or purchase by various States having
resort to the nexus theory there was divergence of opinion
as regards the real purpose of the Explanation as also the
construction of the non-obstante clause and the true concept
of consumption as embodied therein. According to the
majority view the Explanation explained what is an outside
sale by defining what is an inside sale. Bose, J. was of
the opinion that the purpose of the Explanation is to
explain what is not outside the State and therefore what is
inside. I was of the view that what is otherwise a sale or
purchase which takes place outside the State is deemed to
have taken place inside the delivery State and the only
purpose of the Explanation is to introduce a legal fiction
whereby the delivery State is also entitled to tax the
transaction of sale or purchase along with the State in
which the transfer of ownership has taken place or the pro-
perty in the goods has passed. The non-obstante clause also
was differently interpreted. I took the the view that the
non-obstante clause is incorporated in the Explanation to
state what according to the Constitution makers is the basic
idea of fixing the situs or the location of the sale or
purchase in the place where the transfer of ownership takes
place or the property in the goods passes and to indicate
that notwithstanding that fact a sale or purchase which
falls within the category mentioned in the Explanation is
nevertheless to be deemed to have taken place inside the
delivery State. The majority judgment stated that the non-
obstante clause is inserted in the Explanation simply with a
view to make it clear beyond all possible doubt that it is,
immaterial where the property in the goods passes as it
might otherwise
680
be regarded as indicative of the place of sale. Bose, J.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 49 of 147
stated that the object of the Explanation is to fix the
location of a sale or purchase by means of a fiction, but he
disagreed with the view expressed by me that the non-
obstante clause enunciates the general law on this point.
He stated that there was no general law which fixed the
situs of a sale, not even the Sale of Goods Act, that what
the general law does is to determine the place where the
property passes in the absence of a special agreement, but
the place where the property passes is not necessarily the
place where the sale takes place, nor has that ever been
regarded as the determining factor. As regards the concept
of consumption the majority were of the view that it should
be understood as having reference not merely to the
individual importer or purchaser but as contemplating
distribution eventually to consumers in general within the
State. Bose, J. construed that word to mean the usual use
made of an article for the purposes of trade and commerce.
I adopted the Dictionary meaning of the term and held that
the Explanation covers only those cases where as a direct
result of the sale or purchase goods are delivered for
consumption in the delivery State by the consumer and it is
only that limited class of transactions which are covered by
the Explanation and which are liable to tax by the delivery
State. I did not accept the contention that the words "for
the purpose of consumption" must be accepted in a
comprehensive sense as having reference to immediate as well
as ultimate consumption within the State and excluding only
resales out of the State.
In regard to article 286(2) all the Judges were agreed that
transactions of sale or purchase in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce are within the restriction and no
State can tax such transactions, except in the two excepted
cases, viz., (1) except in so far as Parliament may by law
otherwise provide and (2) provided that the President may by
order direct that any tax on sale or purchase of goods which
was being levied by the Government of any State immediately
before the commencement of the Constitu-
681
tion shall continue to be levied until the 31st March 195 1.
The Explanation to article 286 (1) (a) though it is
specifically stated to be for the purposes of subclause (a)
was construed by me as an exception or proviso to article
286(2), thus enabling the delivery State to tax the
transactions of sale or purchase taking place in the course
of inter-State trade or commerce. The majority Judges
differed from this view and held that the Explanation
converts the interState transaction into an intra-State one
and therefore there is no scope at all for the operation of
article 286(2) in cases covered by the Explanation. Bose,
J. was of the view that the article 286(2) bans the delivery
State also from taxing such transactions, because if the
transactions were in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce the Explanation merely shifts the point from A to B
but this shifting is of no consequence at all, because both
the points are caught in the vortex of inter-State trade and
commerce. It is only when the Parliament otherwise provides
or the President gives the directions within the meaning of
the proviso that this ban is lifted and the Explanation is
there to settle a matter of considerable controversy
regarding the situs of a sale. The argument that on this
construction being put on the Explanation to article 286(1)
and on article 286(2) the Explanation would become nugatory
though accepted by me was rejected by Bose, J. by pointing
out that once the Parliament by law otherwise provided or
the President by order gave the direction within the meaning
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 50 of 147
of the proviso the Explanation would come into operation and
would determine the situs of the sale thus enabling the
appropriate State to impose a tax on such transaction of
sale or purchase.
The second case concerned itself with the construction of
article 286(1) (b) in connection with the Sales Tax levied
by the State of Travancore-Cochin upon certain dealers in
cashew nuts within its territory under the provisions of the
Travancore-Cochin General Sales Tax Act, 1124 M.E. (Act No.
XVIII of 1124 M.E.) and the question for the consideration
of the Court was whether certain sales and purchases could
682
be said to be in the course of the import of the goods into
or the export of the goods out of the territory of India.
The High Court had put a very wide construction on the words
of article 286(1)(b) and held that the clause is not
restricted to the point of time at which goods are imported
into or exported from India and the series of transactions
which necessarily precede export or succeed import of goods
will come within the purview of this clause. There was a
divergence of opinion between Patanjali Sastri, C.J., Muk-
herjea, J., Bose, J. and Ghulam Hasan, J. on the one side
and S.R. Das, J. on the other so far as the construction of
the words "in the course of" was concerned. But apart from
this construction of article 286(1) (b) S.R. Das, J. who was
not a party to the earlier decision hereinbefore referred to
put on record his views on the construction of article
286(1)(a), the Explanation thereto and article 286(2)
expressing his disagreement with the interpretation which
the majority judgment in that case bad put up on the same.
He agreed that the Provincial Legislatures purporting to act
under Entry 48 in List II of the Seventh Schedule to the
Government of India Act, 1935, bad enacted the Sales Tax
Acts imposing tax on sales or purchases of goods on the
basis of one or more of the ingredients of sale having some
connection with the Province and that this practice had
resulted in the imposition of multiple taxes on a single
transaction of sale or purchase thereby raising the price of
the commodity concerned to the serious detriment to the
consumer, that this evil had to be curbed and that is what
has been done by clause (1)(a) of article 286. He however
was of the opinion that in imposing the ban that no law of a
State shall impose or authorise the imposition of a tax on
the sale or purchase where such sale or purchase takes place
outside the State, the Constitution proceeds on the footing
that a sale or purchase has a location or situs. He further
held that the non-obstante clause in the Explanation also
clearly implies that the framers of the Constitution adopted
the view that a sale or purchase has a situs and further
that it ordinarily takes place at the place
683
where the property in the goods passes. In effect,
therefore, the Constitution, by this Explanation to clause
(1) (a), acknowledges that under the general law the sale or
purchase of the kind therein mentioned may not really take
place in the delivery State, but nevertheless requires it to
be treated as if it did. That is to say, the Explanation
creates a legal fiction. So far he agreed with me, but he
differed from me in holding that the only effect of this
assignment of a fictional location to a,particular kind of
sale or purchase in a particular State is to attract the ban
of clause (1) (a) and to take away the taxing power of all
other States in relation to such a sale or purchase even
though the other ingredients which go towards the making up
of a sale or purchase are to be found within these States or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 51 of 147
even if under the general law the property in the goods
passes in any of those States. The purpose of the
Explanation ends there and cannot be stretched or extended
beyond that purpose. He therefore held that the effect of
clause (1) (a) read in the light of the Explanation is not
to permit both States, viz., the State where the property
passes under the general law as well as the State in which,
by force. of the Explanation, the sale or purchase is deemed
to take place, to tax such sale or purchase, because in that
event it will stultify the very purpose of that clause and
it will fail to prevent the imposition of multiple taxes
which it is obviously designed to prevent. In his opinion
clause (1)(a) in terms only takes away the taxing power of
all States with respect to a sale or purchase which, by
reason of the fiction introduced by the Explanation, is to
be deemed to take place outside their respective territories
and the purpose of the Explanation is only to explain the
scope of clause (1) (a) The Explanation is neither an
exception nor a proviso. It is not its purpose nor does it
purport, substantively and proprio vigore, to confer any
power on any State, not even on the delivery State, to
impose any tax. Whether the delivery State can tax the sale
or purchase of the kind mentioned in the Explanation will
depend on other provisions of the Constitution. Neither
clause (1) (a) nor
87
684
the Explanation has any bearing on that question.
So far as the -purpose and design of clause (2) are
concerned he was of the opinion that clause (2) places yet
another ban on the taxing power of the State under Entry 54
read with article 246(3), in addition to the ban imposed by
clause (1) (a). A sale or purchase contemplated by the
Explanation to clause (1) (a) undoubtedly partakes of the
nature of a sale or purchase made in the course of inter-
State trade and, therefore, no State, whether it is the
State in which the property in the goods passes under the
general law or the State where the goods are delivered as
mentioned in the Explanation, can impose a tax on such sale
or purchase, unless and until Parliament lifts this ban. He
differed from the view taken by me that the Explanation to
article 286(1) (a) must be regarded not only as having
authorised the delivery State to impose the tax on the sale
or purchase covered by the Explanation, but having also
exempted it from the ban imposed by clause (2). He also
differed from the majority view that what was an inter-State
transaction within the ban of article 286 (2) is converted
into an intrastate or local or domestic transaction by
virtue of the Explanation to article 286(1) (a). He saw no
warrant for the argument that the fiction embodied in the
Explanation for this definitely expressed purpose, can be
legitimately used for the entirely foreign purpose of
destroying the inter-State character of the transaction and
converting it into an intrastate sale or purchase for all
purposes. Such metamorphosis is completely beyond the
purpose and purview of clause (1) (a) and the Explanation
thereto.
After expressing himself as above, he made the following
observations which are very apposite to the appeal before
us:-
"To accede to this argument will mean that the Sales Tax
officer of the delivery State will have jurisdiction to call
upon dealers outside that State to submit returns of their
turn over in respect of goods delivered by them to dealers
in that State under transactions of sale made by them with
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 52 of 147
dealers within that State. Thus a dealer in, say, Pepsu who
685
delivers goods to a dealer in, say, Travancore-Cochin will
become subject to the jurisdiction of the last mentioned
State and will have to file returns of their turn over and
support the same by producing their books of account there.
I cannot imagine that our Constitution makers intended to
produce this anomalous result. On the contrary, it appears
to me that they enacted clauses (1) (a) and (2) for the very
purpose of preventing this anomaly. I repeat that it is not
permissible, on principle or on authority, to extend the
fiction of the Explanation beyond its immediate and avowed
purpose which I have explained above. In my judgment, until
Parliament otherwise provides, all sales or purchases which
take place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce
are, by clause (2) of article 286, made immune from taxation
by the law of any State, irrespective of the place where the
sales or purchases way take place, either under the general
law or by virtue of the fiction introduced by the
Explanation to clause (1)(a). If a particular inter-State
sale or purchase takes place outside a State, either under
the general law or by virtue of the fiction created by the
Explanation, it is exempted from taxation by the law of that
State both under clause (1) (a) and clause (2). If such
inter-State sale or purchase takes place within a particular
State, either under the general law or by reason of the
Explanation, it is still exempt from taxation even by the
law of that State under clause (2), just as a sale or
purchase which takes place within a State, either under the
general law or by reason of the Explanation, cannot be taxed
by the law of that State if such sale or purchase takes
place in the course of import or export within the meaning
of clause (1) (b) ".
It may be observed that the contentions urged before us by
the Appellant are in conformity with the above observations
of S.R. Das, J.
Normally speaking the construction put by the majority
judgment on the article 286(1), the Explanation thereto and
article 286(2) of the Constitution in the Bombay Sales Tax
appeal would be the law bind-
686
ing on all parties and in the judgment just referred to in
the Travancore-Cochin Sales Tax Appeal S. R. Das, ’J.
rightly expressed that decision to be binding on him so long
as it stands. The Appellant has however sought to urge
before us that that decision was erroneous and has attempted
to persuade us to reconsider the same and put a construction
on article 286(1)(a), the Explanation thereto and article
286(2) which is different from that adopted by the majority
Judges in the Bombay Sales Tax Appeal.
The question therefore arises whether we are en,titled to
reconsider that decision.
The House of Lords in England has always considered itself
bound by its previous decisions. These decisions, as
distinguished from the opinions which are delivered by the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council as advice to the
Crown, are pronounced in the form of judgments and are
binding on the House as precedents. The question whether
the House bad the power to reconsider the previous decisions
of its own and if it thought the decisions wrong to overrule
,or depart from them in subsequent cases was considered in
Street Tramways v. London County Council(1). Earl of
Halsbury, L.C. who delivered the judgment of the House
observed at page 379:-
"A decision of this House once given upon a point of law is
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 53 of 147
conclusive upon this House afterwards, and that it is
impossible to raise that question again as if it was res
integra and could be reargued, and so the House be asked to
reverse its own decision. That is a principle which has
been, I believe, without any real decision to the contrary,
established now for some centuries, and I am therefore of
opinion that in this case it is not competent for us to
rehear and for counsel to reargue a question which has been
recently decided".
The reason of the rule was thus stated at page 380-"
"Of course I do not deny that cases of individual hardship
may arise, and there may be a current of opinion in the
profession that such and such a judgment was erroneous; but-
what is that occasional
(1) [1896] Appeal Cases 375,
687
interference with what is perhaps abstract justice as
compared with the inconvenience-the disastrous in-
convenience-of having each question subject to being
reargued and the dealings of mankind rendered c ,doubtful by
reason of different decisions, so that in truth and in fact
there would be no real final Court of T, Appeal? My Lords,
"interest rei publicae." that there should be "finis litium"
at some time, and there could be no "finis litium" if it
were possible to suggest in each case that it might be
reargued, because it is "not an ordinary case," whatever
they may mean". and the conclusion was thus recorded at page
381:-
"Under these circumstances it appears to me that your
Lordships would do well to act upon that which has been
universally assumed in the profession, so far as I know, to
be the principle, namely, that a decision of this House upon
a question of law is conclusive, and that nothing but an Act
of Parliament can set right that which is alleged to be
wrong in a judgment of this House".
The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council on the other
hand has held that it is free to differ from its own
decisions or from those of the House of Lords. The power of
the Privy Council to reconsider its own decisions was
discussed in In re Compensation to Civil Servants(1). In
that case an earlier decision of the Board in Wigg v.
Attorney-General of the Irish Free State(2) was attempted to
be reviewed and after discussing the case-law on the point
the Board came to the conclusion that the Privy Council is
not bound in law and without examination to follow the
decision in a prior appeal whether they considered it to be
right or wrong although the Privy Council would hesitate
long before disturbing a solemn decision by a previous
Board, which raised an identical or even a similar issue for
determination. While laying down this principle the Board
discussed the earlier cases and in particular the case of
Ridsdale v. Clifton(3) which was followed in Tooth v.
Power(4) and Read v. Bishop of Lincoln(5) and the
proposition was thus laid
(1) A.I.B. 1929 P.C. 84. (2) 1928 P.C. 239.
(3) (1877] 2 P.D. 276. (4) [1891] A.C. 284.
(5)[18921 A.C. 644.
688
down in the last mentioned case:-
"In the present case their Lordships cannot but adopt the
view expressed in Ridsdale v. Clifton(1) as to the effect of
previous decisions. Whilst fully sensible of the weight to
be attached to such decisions, their Lordships are at the
same time bound to examine the reasons upon which the
decisions rest, and to give effect to their own view of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 54 of 147
law".
The same principle was reiterated by the Privy Council in
Attorney-General of Ontario and Others V. Canada Temperance
Federation and Others(2). The Board was there concerned
with the consideration of a constitutional question. An
earlier decision of the Board in Russell V. Reg(3) had
upheld the validity of the impugned statute. That decision
bad stood unreversed for 63 years and had moreover received
express approval of the Board in subsequent cases between
1883 and 1937. It was contended that the case had been
wrongly decided and ought to be overruled and their
Lordships repelled that contention:-
"Their Lordships do not doubt that in tendering humble
advice to His Majesty they are not absolutely bound by
previous decisions of the Board, as is the House of Lords by
its own judgments. In ecclesiastical appeals, for instance,
on more than one occasion, the Board has tendered advice
contrary to that given in a previous case, which further
historical research has shown to have been wrong. But on
constitutional questions it must be seldom indeed that the
Board would depart from a previous decision which it may be
assumed will have been acted upon both by governments and
subjects, In the present case the decision now sought to be
overruled has stood for over sixty years; the Act has been
put into operation for varying periods in many places in the
Dominion; under its provisions businesses must have been
closed, fines and imprisonments for breaches of the Act have
been imposed and suffered. Time and again the occasion has
arisen when the Board could have overruled the decision had
it thought it wrong. Accordingly, in
(1) [18T7] 2 P.D. 276. (2) A.I.R. 1946 P.C. 88.
(3) [1862] 7 A.C. 829,
689
the opinion of their Lordships, the decision must be
regarded as firmly embedded in the constitutional law of
Canada and it is impossible now to depart from it".
It is therefore settled law so far as England is concerned
that their Lordships of the Privy Council do’ not consider
themselves bound in law and without examination to follow
their decision in a prior appeal whether they consider it to
be right or wrong but feel themselves bound to examine the
reasons upon which the decisions rest and to give effect to
their own view of the law. We here are the highest Court of
the land and would derive considerable assistance from the
practice of the Privy Council set out above.
The High Court of Australia is the highest Court of Appeal
in the Commonwealth and concerns itself ,inter alia with
deciding constitutional questions. The question whether it
is bound by its previous decisions came up for consideration
in the Tramways Case (No. 1)(1) and the High Court held that
it was not bound by its previous decision but would only
review a previous decision when that decision was manifestly
wrong. Griffith, C.J. in this connection made the following
observations at page 58:-
"In my opinion it is impossible to maintain as an abstract
proposition that the Court is ’either legally or technically
bound by previous decisions. Indeed, it may in a proper
case be its duty to disregard them. But the rule should be
applied with great caution, and only when the previous
decision is manifestly wrong........ Otherwise there would
be grave danger of a want of continuity in the
interpretation of the law".
Barton, J. observed at page 69:-
"In conclusion, I would say that have never thought that it
was not open to this Court to review its previous decisions
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 55 of 147
upon good cause. The question is not whether the Court can
do so, but whether it will, having due regard to the need
for continuity and consistency in judicial decisions.
Changes in the number of appointed Justices can, I take it,
never of
(1) 18 C.L.R. 51.
690
themselves furnish a reason for review. That the prior
decision was that of little more than half their number
might be urged with greater fairness, but it cannot be urged
against an earlier case........ But the Court can always
listen to argument as to whether it ought to review a
particular decision, and the strongest reason for an
overruling is that a decision is manifestly wrong, and its
maintenance is injurious to the public interest".
Powers, J. at page 86 referred to an earlier decision given
by him in the case of The Australian Agricultural Co. v.
Federated Engine-Drivers and Firemen’s Association of
Australasia(1):-
"I am at all times prepared to consider the review of any
decision of this Court, by a Full Bench called to consider
that question, and to reverse any decision if it is shown to
be clearly wrong, subject to the well known considerations
to be applied to the particular case in question at the
time, according to the well known judicial policy of
British, Australian -and American Courts, and I think of all
Courts of Appeal in English-speaking communities"-except the
House of Lords "I decline even to consider a question of
reversing a decision of this Court casually, or even
seriously, raised by counsel, not clearly urgent, and not
raised before as full a bench as is available. If we do not
show some respect to our own Court’s decisions, no counsel
will feel safe in advising the public, and it will create
uncertainty and confusion......... ’Under those
circumstances I think it would have to be shown that the
decision was clearly wrong, and, as it has been followed by
this Court in other cases, that it would be in the interests
of the public to reverse it".
This question came for consideration again by the High Court
of Australia in The Amalgamated Society of Engineers v. The
Adelaide Steamship Company Limited and Others(2) and the
majority judgment stated at p. 142:-
"It is therefore, in the circumstances, the manifest duty of
this Court to turn its earnest attention
(1) 17 C.TA.R. 261, 292.
(2) 28 C.L.R. 129.
691
to the provisions of the Constitution itself. That
instrument is the political compact of the whole of the
people of Australia, enacted into binding law by the
Imperial Parliament, and it is the chief and special duty of
this Court faithfully to expound and give effect to it
according to its own terms, finding the intention from the
words of the compact, and upholding it throughout precisely
as framed. In doing this, we follow, not merely previous
instances in this Court and other Courts in Australia, but
also the precedent of the Privy Council in Read v. Bishop of
Lincoln(1), where the Lord Chancellor., speaking for the
Judicial Committee in relation to reviewing its own prior
decisions, said: "Whilst fully sensible of the weight to be
attached to such decisions, their Lordships are at the same
time bound to examine the reasons upon which the decisions
rest, and to give effect to their own view of the law". The
ground upon which the Privy Council came to that conclusion
we refer to, but need not repeat, adding, however, that as
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 56 of 147
the Commonwealth and State Parliaments and Executives are
themselves bound by the declarations of this Court as to
their powers inter se, our responsibility is so much the
greater to give the true effect to the relevant consti-
tutional provisions. In doing this, to use the language of
Lord Macnaughten in Vacher & Sons Ltd. v. London Society of
Compositors(2), "a judicial tribunal has nothing to do with
the policy of any Act which it may be called upon to
interpret. That may be a matter for private judgment. The
duty of the Court, and its only duty, is to expound the
language of the Act in accordance with the settled rules of
construction". "
Higgins, J. at page 160 added:-
"But the decision is now directly impugned by the claimant;
and it is our duty to reconsider the subject, and to obey
the Constitution and the Act rather than any decision of
this Court, if the decision be shown to have been mistaken".
The High Court of Australia has therefore considered itself
free to review its own decisions just as much
(1) [1892] A.C. 644.
(2) [1913] A.C. 107, 118.
88
692
as the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, examine the
reasons upon which the decisions rest and to give effect to
its own views of the law, in other words to reconsider the
subject and to obey the Constitution and the Act rather than
any decision of the Court if the decision be shown to have
been mistaken.
Our Constitution has drawn freely inter alia upon the
Constitution of the United States and it would be helpful to
consider what is the position in the United States in regard
to the re-consideration of its previous decisions by the
Supreme Court. There have been numerous decisions of the
Supreme Court in which the Court has departed from the
doctrine of stare decision and has either refused to follow
or overruled its previous decisions.
In Hertz v. Woodman(1) Mr. Justice Lurton observed:-
"The rule of stare decision, though one tending to
consistency and uniformity of decision, is not inflexible.
Whether it shall be followed or departed from is a question
entirely within the discretion of the court, which again is
called upon to consider a question once decided".
Mr. Justice Brandies while delivering his dissenting opinion
in Washington v. Dawson & Co. (2) thus expressed himself
with regard to the propriety upon the part of the Supreme
Court of departing from its earlier doctrines if it has come
to consider those doctrines as erroneous:-
"The doctrine of stare decisis should not deter us from@
overruling that case and those which follow it. The
decisions are recent ones. They have not been acquiesced
in. They have not created a rule of property around which
vested interests have clustered. They affect solely matters
of a transitory nature. On the other hand, they affect
seriously the lives of men, women, and children, and the
general welfare. Stare decisis is ordinarily a wise rule of
action. But it is not a universal, inexorable command. The
instances
(1) 218 U.S. 205.
(2) 264 U.S. 219.
693
in which the court has disregarded its admonition are many".
The same learned Judge in a dissenting opinion in David
Burnet v. Coronado Oil & Gas Company(1) reiterated the same
position in the manner following:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 57 of 147
"Stare decisis is not, like the rule of res judicata, a
universal, inexorable command"
After quoting the passage from the judgment of Mr. Justice
Lurton in Hertz v. Woodman(1) above cited the learned Judge
proceeded:-
"Stare decisis is usually the wise policy, because in most
matters it is more important that the applicable rule of law
be settled than that it be settled
right............................ This is commonly true even
where the error is a matter of serious concern, provided
correction can be had by legislation. But in cases in-
volving the Federal Constitution, where correction through
legislative action is practically impossible, this Court has
often overruled its earlier decisions. The Court bows to
the lessons of experience and the force of better reasoning,
recognizing that the process of trial and error, so fruitful
in the physical sciences, is appropriate also in the
judicial function.................... Recently, it overruled
several leading cases, when it concluded that the States
should not have been permitted to exercise powers of
taxation which it ’had theretofore repeatedly sanctioned.
In cases involving the Federal Constitution the position of
this Court unlike that of the highest court of England,
where the policy Of stare decisis was formulated and is
strictly applied to all classes of cases. Parliament is
free to correct any judicial error; and the remedy may be
promptly invoked".
It will be instructive at this juncture to note the
following passages to be found in foot-note 3 at p. 825 in
the report of this case(3):
"Compare Taney, Ch. J. in Passenger Cases, 7 How. 283, 470;
12 L. Ed., 702, 780: After such opinions judicially
delivered, I had supposed that question to be settled, so
far as any question upon the construction of the
Constitution ought to be regarded
(1) 285 T.T.S. 393.
(2) 218 U.S. 205.
(3) 76 L. Ed. 815,
694
as closed by the decision of this Court. I do not, however
object to the revision of it, and am quite willing that it
be regarded hereafter as the law of this court, that its
opinion upon the construction of the Constitution is always
open to discussion when it is supposed to have been founded
in error, and that its judicial authority should hereafter
depend altogether on the force of the reasoning by which it
is supported".
Compare Field, J. in Barden v. Northern P.R. Co.(1):
"It is more important that the court should be right upon
later and more elaborate consideration of the cases than
consistent with previous declarations. Those doctrines only
will eventually stand which bear the strictest examination
and the test of experience " .
In Mark Graves v. People of the State of New York(") Mr.
Justice Frankfurter stated:-
"But the-ultimate touchstone of constitutionality is the
Constitution itself and not what we have said about it".
The same principle was reiterated in Smith v. All
wright(3):-
"In reaching this conclusion we are not unmindful of the
desirability of continuity of decision in constitutional
questions. However, when convinced of former error, this
Court has never felt constrained to follow precedent. In
constitutional questions, where correction depends upon
amendment and not upon legislative action this Court
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 58 of 147
throughout its history has freely exercised its power to re-
examine the basis of its constitutional decisions. This;-
has long been accepted practice, and this practice has
continued to this day".
and in United States of America v. South-Eastern
Underwriters Association (1) in the dissenting judgment of
Stone, C.J. at p. 579:-
"This Court has never committed itself to any rule or policy
that it will not "bow to the lessons of experience and the
force of better reasoning" by overruling a mistaken
precedent.................... This is
(1) 154 U.S. 288, 322.
(3) 321 U.S. 649
(2) 306 U.S. 466,491.
(4) 322 U.S. 533
695
especially the case when the meaning of the Constitution is
at issue and a mistaken construction is one which cannot be
corrected by legislative action. To give blind adherence to
a rule or policy that no decision of this Court is to be
overruled would be itself to overrule many decisions of the
Court which do not accept that view. But the rule of stare
decisis embodies a wise policy because it is often more im-
portant that a rule of law be settled than that it be
settled right. This is especially so, where as here, Con-
gress is not without regulatory power........ The question
then is not whether an earlier decision should ever be
overruled, but whether a particular decision ought to be.
And before overruling a precedent in any case it is the duty
of the Court to make certain that more harm will not be done
in rejecting than in retaining a rule of even dubious
validity".
The position has been thus summarised by Willoughby on the
Constitution of the United States-Vol. I-Second Edition-at
p. 74:-
"There are indeed good reasons why the doctrine Of stare
decisis should not be so rigidly applied to the
constitutional as to other laws. In cases of purely private
import, the chief desideratum is that the law remain
certain, and, therefore, where a rule has been judicially
declared and private rights created thereunder, the courts
will not., except in the clearest cases of error, depart
from the doctrine of stare decisis When, however, public
interests are involved, and especially when the question is
one of constitutional construction, the matter is otherwise.
An error in the construction of a statute may easily be
corrected by a legislative act, but a Constitution and
particularly the Federal Constitution, may be changed only
with great difficulty. Hence an error in its interpretation
may for all practical purposes be corrected only by the
court’s repudiating or modifying its former decision".
These then are the principles which should guide us in
determining whether,we should reconsider the earlier
decisions of this Court.- We are here not merely concerned
with legislative enactments which it would
696
be within the competence of either the Union Legislature or
the State Legislatures. to enact if our earlier decisions
were erroneous. We are concerned with the construction of
the Provisions of the Constitution which it will be almost
impossible- to amend. The House of Lords considered itself
bound by its previous decisions, because it felt that the
Act of Parliament could set right an erroneous decision of
the House by enacting appropriate legislation. But the High
Court of Australia as well as the Supreme Court of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 59 of 147
United States felt themselves free to reconsider their
earlier decisions because of the practical impossibility of
correcting the erroneous decisions through legislative
action. They considered it their bounden duty to construe
the constitutional provisions and be guided the provisions
of the Constitution itself and not what had been their
earlier decisions on the questions of its construction. The
only safeguard which they put on the exercise of such power"
of reconsideration was that the earlier decision should be
manifestly wrong or erroneous. We here also are concerned
with the construction of the provisions of the Constitution
which cannot be amended so easily and if we come to the
conclusion that the earlier decision was manifestly Wrong or
erroneous and that public interest demanded that the same
should be reconsidered we should not have the slightest
hesitation in doing so. We therefore approach the
consideration of the earlier decision of this Court in the
Bombay Sales Tax Appeal bearing in mind the principles above
enunciated.
It will be necessary at the outset to take stock of the
situation as it obtained before the enactment of article 286
of the Constitution. The Government of India Act, 1935
contained provisions in regard to the distribution of
legislative powers between the Dominion and the Provincial
Legislatures in sections 99 and 100. The Dominion
Legislature was competent to make laws including laws
having extra-territorial operation for the whole or -any
part of the Dominion and the Provincial Legislatures were
competent to make laws for the Provinces for any part
thereof,
697
The legislative heads in respect of which the laws could be
made by the respective Legislatures were enumerated in the
lists of the Seventh Schedule to the Act and the.
demarcation between the powers of the Dominion Legislature
and the Provincial Legislatures in that behalf was to be
found in section 100. Entry 48 in List II of the said
Schedule gave the power to the Provincial Legislatures in
respect of "taxes on the sale of goods and on
advertisements". Even though the entry mentioned taxes on
sale of goods that head was construed to mean in reality a
power to tax the transaction and the power to tax the
transaction carried with it the power to tax either party
thereto. The expression "taxes on sale" was therefore con-
strued to include also a tax on purchases of goods, as the
transaction resulted in change of ownership from one person
to another and was from its very nature a bilateral
transaction with a seller on the one hand and the purchaser
on the other. (Vide V. M. S. Md. & Co. v. State of
Madras(1)), The same distribution of legislative powers
obtained when the Constitution came to be enacted and
article 245 provided that Parliament may make laws for the
whole or any part of the territory of India, and the
Legislature of a State may make laws for the whole or any
part of the State. Exclusive power to make laws with
respect to the legislative heads enumerated in the Union
List (List I) and the State List (List II) of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution was given to Parliament and the
State Legislature,-,respectively by article 246. Entry 54
of the State List gave the exclusive power to the State
Legislatures with respect to taxes on the sale or purchase
of goods other than newspapers. What was implicit in the
phraseology of Entry 48 of List II of the Seventh Schedule
to the Government of India Act was thus made explicit by the
phraseology adoptted in Entry 54 of the State :List in the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 60 of 147
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution.
Prima facie laws enacted by State Legislatures would have
operation within the territories of the States. Primarily
legislation of a country is territorial
(1) A.1 R. 1958 Madras 105,
698
and the general rule is "extra territorium jus dicenti
impunne non paretur". The laws of a nation apply to all its
subjects and to all things and acts within its territories.
(See Maxwell on the Interpretation of Statutes-10th Edn.
page 144). Craies’ on Statute Law-5th Edn. at p. 174
contains the following citation from the speech of Lord
Cranworth in Jefferys v. Boosey(1)
"Prima facie the Legislature of this country must be taken
to make laws for its own subjects exclusively".
The same principle has been applied also to sales tax and it
is stated in American Jurisprudence-Vol. 47, p. 202 Para. 5
under the caption "Territorial Jurisdiction" that:-
"The general rule that a State may not tax persons, property
or interests which are not within its territorial
jurisdiction is applicable to sales taxes".
It would therefore appear that when the State Legislatures
enacted laws in respect of taxes on sales or purchases of
goods they would only have operation within the territories
of the States and the sales or purchases of goods even
though they are not specified in the relative entry to be
"within the territories" of the States would Prima facie be
such as take place within the respective territories of the
States.
This power to tax the sales or purchases of goods would
again have to be construed with reference to the connotation
of the term "sale" as it was understood in the legislative
practice of the country at the time when the power was
conferred. As was observed by Their Lordships of the Privy
Council in Croft v. Dunphy(2):-
"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".
The expression "Sale of goods" in Entry 48 in List
(1) [1854] 4 H.L.C. 815, 955.
(2) [1933] A.C. 156, 165.
699
11 of the Seventh Schedule to the Government of India Act,
1935 came to be construed by this Court in Sales Tax Officer
v. Budh Prakash Jai prakash(1) in relation to an attempt by
the State of Uttar Pradesh to tax forward contracts of sale
and this Court held:-
"There having existed at the time of the enactment of the
Government of India Act, 1935, a welldefined 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".
The expression "sale of goods" was construed in the light of
the definition thereof to be found in section 4 of the
Indian Sale of Goods Act (Act III of 1930) as also the
corresponding provision of the English Sale of Goods Act and
the relevant passage from Halsbury’s Laws of England, Vol.
15, Para 13 quoted therein. Section 4 of the Indian Sale of
Goods Act runs as follows:-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 61 of 147
"(1) 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 price. There may be a contract of sale
between one part-owner and another.
(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".
The corresponding provision in section I of the English Sale
of Goods Act is as follows:-
"(1) A contract of sale of goods is a contract
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 243.
89
700
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.
(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".
This being the legislative practice in India as well as in
England at the time when the power to tax sales or purchases
of goods was conferred on the State Legislatures the scope
of that power would have been ordinarily determined by the
definition of the sale of goods to be found in these-
respective Sales of Goods Acts and the State Legislatures
would have had the power to tax sales or purchases of goods
in which the property in the goods passed within the
respective territories of the States. This was not a power
to tax a seller or a purchaser in personam. It was a power
to tax the sale or purchase of goods which took place within
the territories of the State and was to be exercised in
those cases where the property in the goods which were the
subject matter of the sale or purchase passed within the
territories of the State.
This position however was not acceptable to the various
States which wanted to enlarge the scope of their power to
tax sales or purchases of goods. There was therefore an
attempt made to analyse the concept of sale into its various
ingredients and to fasten upon any one of the ingredients as
conferring upon them the power to tax the sale or purchase
of goods by having resort to the theory of territorial
connection or nexus. As was observed by Bose, J. in The
State of Bombay and
701
Another v. The United Motors (India) Ltd. & Others(1) at p.
1101:-
"The difficulty is apparent when one begins to split a sale
into its component parts and analyse them. When this is
done, a sale is found to consist of a number of ingredients
which can be said to be, essential in the sense that if any
one of them is missing there is no sale. The following are
some of them: (1) the existence of goods which form the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 62 of 147
subject matter of the sale, (2) the bargain or contract
which, when executed, will result in the passing of the pro-
perty in the goods for a price, (3) the payment, or promise
of payment, of a price, (4) the passing of the title".
Having analysed the concept of the sale thus into its
essential ingredients the only essential condition which was
considered necessary to be satisfied was the completion of
the transaction of sale wheresoever it may take place and
the taxable event was taken to be any one of these essential
ingredients provided it took place within the territories of
the State,. Reliance was placed for this purpose on the
decision of the Federal Court in In re The Central Provinces
and Berar Sales of Motor Spirit and Lubricants Taxation Act,
1938 (O. P. & Berar Act No. XIV of 1938)(2) where Their
Lordships observed that:-
"Tax on sale of goods must necessarily be a tax imposed at
the time of the sale of goods and must exclude other forms
of transfer like mortgages, leases, etc."
Similar observations were also to be found in the Province
of Madras v. Boddu Paidanna & Sons(3) where it was stated
that a tax on the sale of goods is a tax levied on the
occasion of the sale of goods and the liability to tax
arises on the occasion of the sale. The sale was therefore
taken to be the concrete event which gave rise to the power
of the State to tax the sale of goods but was taken as not
necessarily taking place within the territories of the
taxing State, the only thing considered essential for the
purpose being the
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069. (2) [1989] F.C.R. 18, 86, 87,
(3) [1942] F.C.R. 90, 101.
702
territorial connection or nexus between the taxing State and
one or more of the necessary ingredients of sale analysed as
above. The territorial connection or nexus theory was
sought to be supported by reference to certain decisions of
the High Court of Australia, e.g., The Wanganui Rangitikey
Electric Power Board v. The Australian Mutual Provident
Society(1) where Dixon, J. observed:-
"So long as the statute selected some fact or circumstance
which provided some relation or connection with New South
Wales, and adopted this as the ground of its interference,
the validity of an enactment reducing interest would not be
open to challenge".
and the dissenting judgment of Rich, J. in Broken Hill South
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Taxation (N.S. W.)(2) which stated
that:-
"I do not deny that once any connection with New South Wales
appears the legislature of that State may make that
connection the occasion or subject of the imposition of a
liability. But the connection with New South Wales must be
a real one and the liability sought to be imposed must be
pertinent to that connection".
These observations of the learned Judges of the High Court
of Australia were referred to with approval by our Federal
Court in Governor-General-in-Council v. Raleigh Investment
Co. Ltd.(3). It was an income-tax case and the dispute
related to the claim of the Indian Government to levy
income-tax and super tax on the dividends paid to the
assessee company (which was a joint stock company
incorporated under the English Companies Act having its
registered offices in the Isle of Man and its main offices
in England) by nine sterling companies, the bulk of whose
shares were held by the assessee company. These sterling
companies were registered under the English Companies Act
and were controlled in London where the Boards of Directors
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 63 of 147
sat, the share registers were situate and dividends were
declared. They however carried on the business
(1) (19341 50 C.L.R. 581, 600.
(2) [1937] 56 C.L.R. 331, 361.
(8) A.I.R. 1944 F.C. 51 s.c. 1944 F.C.R. 229
703
of manufacturing and selling tobacco and cigarettes in India
and the business in India where all profits were made was
managed by the local boards which were constituted by the
Boards in London. The financial policies of these companies
were controlled by the London Boards and in all important
matters of business the London Boards were consulted and all
the general meetings of the Companies were held in England.
The dividends of these Companies were also declared by them
in England and paid by them in England to the assessee
company in England. It was however held that the source of
the dividends paid to the assessee company by the sterling
companies was British Indian and when the attempt was to tax
income and not the corpus and the question to be considered
was the ’source’ of that income it was legitimate to take
into account the place where the business from which the
income was derived was in fact carried on and not to treat
the situs of the shares in the eyes of the law as concluding
the matter. The Court was therefore of the opinion that the
source of the dividends paid to the assessee company by the
sterling companies was British Indian and that in making
them liable to income-tax on that basis the Indian
Legislature was not giving its law any extra-territorial
operation. Spens, C. J. who delivered the judgment of the
Court further quoted with approval the following passage
from the judgment of Evatt, J. in Trustees, Executors &
Agency Co. Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation(1) at p.
236:-
"The Constitution requires that it must be possible to
predicate of every valid law that it is for the peace, order
and good government of the Dominion with respect to a
granted subject, e.g., customs, taxation, external affairs.
In such cases, the presence of non-territorial elements in
the challenged law has to be considered upon a slightly
different footing and those affirming its validity have to
show not only that the Dominion has some real concern or
interest in the matter, thing or circumstance dealt with by
the legislation, but that the concern or interest is of such
(1) [1933] 49 C.L.R. 220.
704
a nature that the challenged law is truly one with respect
to an enumerated subject-matter".
Two more decisions of the Federal Court reiterating the same
principle may be noted in this context: Wallace Bros. & Co.
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City(1) and A. H.
Wadia v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay(2). In the
former case the Court held that where the Imperial
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 general conception as,to the scope of the legislative
practice in the United Kingdom with regard to income-tax is
that given a sufficient territorial connection between the
person sought to be charged and the country seeking to tax
him, income-tax may properly extend to that person in
respect of his foreign income. That general conception,
both on a consideration of the British legislation and as a
matter of construction of the Government of India Act, 1935,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 64 of 147
finds a place in the phrase "taxes on income" as used in
that Act and the principle of sufficient territorial
connection is implicit in the power conferred by the Act of
1935. The derivation from British India of the major por-
tion of its income for a year gives to a company as respects
that year a territorial connection sufficient to justify the
company being treated as at home in British India for all
purposes relating to taxation on its income for that year
from whatever source it may be derived, and if it is so at
home in British India it is a person properly subject to the
jurisdiction of the Central Indian legislature. In the
latter case the Court held that a law imposing a tax’ cannot
be impugned on the ground that it is extra-territorial if
there is a connection between the person who is subjected to
the tax and the country which imposes that tax. The
connection must however be a real one and the liability
sought to be imposed must be pertinent to that connection;
but, if these conditions are satis-
(1) [1948] F.C.R. 1.
(2) [1948] F.C.R. 121,
705
fled it is of no importance on the question of validity that
the liability imposed is, or may be, disproportionate to the
territorial connection. Kania, C. J. also observed at p.
141:-
"As mentioned above, the aspect of it affecting persons who
are beyond the jurisdiction of the municipal courts cannot
be considered sufficient for the Court to hold it ultra
vires. The municipal courts are bound to enforce the law.
Whether after obtaining the opinion or decree the same is
enforceable against the other side or not, is not a matter
for the Court’s consideration. The Court has only to see
that the legislation is within the ambit of the powers of
the Legislature".
Having resort therefore to the territorial Connection or the
nexus theory enunciated in the cases above noted and
analysing the concept of sale into its necessary ingredients
as above the various State Legislatures enacted laws in
respect of taxes on sales or ’purchases of goods spreading
their net as wide as they could having regard to the
situation obtaining in their respective territories. A
transaction of sale or purchase of goods thus came to be
taxed by more States than one even though really there was
only one transaction of sale or purchase of goods as between
the seller and the purchaser. The consumer was the last
person who ever counted in the scramble for taxes on sales
or purchases of goods and even the free flow of inter-State
trade and commerce was affected. The state of affairs was
thus graphically described by Patanjali Sastri, C. J. in his
judgment in Bombay Sales Tax Appeal(1) at p. 1079:-
"In exercise of the legislative power conferred upon them in
substantially similar terms by the Government of India Act,
1935, the Provincial Legislatures enacted sales-tax laws for
their respective Provinces, acting on the principle of
territorial nexus referred to above; that is to say, they
picked out one or more of the ingredients constituting a
sale and made them the basis of their sales-tax legislation.
Assam and Bengal made among other things the actual
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069.
706
existence of the goods in the Province at the time of the
contract of sale the test of taxability. In Bihar the
production or manufacture of the goods in the Province was
made an additional ground. A net of the widest range
perhaps was laid in Central Provinces and Berar where it was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 65 of 147
sufficient if the goods were actually ’found’ in the
Province at any time after the contract of sale or purchase
in respect thereof was made. Whether the territorial nexus
put forward as the basis of the taxing power in each case
would be sustained as sufficient was a matter of doubt not
having been tested in a court of law. And such claims to
taxing power led to multiple taxation of the same
transaction by different Provinces and cumulation of the
burden falling ultimately on the consuming public. This
situation posed to the Constitution makers the problem of
restricting the taxing power on sales or purchases involving
inter-State elements, and alleviating the tax burden on the
consumer".
Apart from the States resorting to the territorial
connection or nexus theory in the manner aforesaid the
courts also appeared to lend their support to the theory and
the High Court of Madras in particular in two decisions,
Poppatlal Shah v. State of Madras(1) and C. G. Naidu & Co.
v. State of Madras(2), gave its imprimatur to this theory.
In the former case the expression "sale of goods" was
understood in its popular sense as distinct from its legal
sense and it was held that the sales tax could be levied if
the transaction substantially took place within the State
notwithstanding that the property did not pass within the
State. In the latter case it was held that the power of the
State to impose taxes was not conditioned on the subject-
matter being wholly within its jurisdiction and the exercise
of the power was valid if there was sufficient territorial
connection with reference to the subject-matter. After
discussing the American case law on the subject the Court
came to the conclusion that in respect of inter-State sales
the State in which the contract was concluded was the
(1) A.I.R. 1953 Madras 91.
(2) A.I.R. 1953 Madras 117.
707
only State which had the power to impose a tax. This Court
also in the majority judgment in the Bombay Sales Tax
Appeal(1) while summarising the position as it obtained
before the enactment of the Constitution incidentally
expressed its opinion in this behalf at p. 1078 as under:-
"As pointed out by the Privy Council in the Wallace Brothers
case(2) in dealing with the competency of the Indian
Legislature to impose tax on the income arising abroad to a
non-resident foreign company, the constitutional validity of
the relevant statutory provisions did not turn on the
possession by the legislature of extra-territorial powers
but on the existence of a sufficient territorial connection
between the taxing State and what it seeks to tax. In the
case of sales-tax it is not necessary that the sale or
purchase should take place within the territorial limits of
the State in the sense that all the ingredients of a sale
like the agreement to sell, the passing of title, delivery
of the goods, etc., should have a territorial connection
with the State. Broadly speaking, local activities of
buying or selling carried on in the State in relation to
local goods would be a sufficient basis to sustain the
taxing power of the State, provided of course, such
activities ultimately resulted in a concluded sale or
purchase to be taxed".
In another case decided immediately thereafter Poppatlal
Shah v. The State of Madras(3) this Court understood this
expression of opinion in the majority judgment as laying
down the principle of territorial connection or nexus:-
"It admits of no dispute that a Provincial Legislature could
not pass a taxation statute which would be binding on any
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 66 of 147
other part of India outside the limits of the Province, but
it would be quite competent to enact a legislation imposing
taxes on transactions concluded outside the Province,
provided that there was sufficient and a real territorial
nexus between such transactions and the taxing Province.
This principle, which is based upon the decision of the
Judicial Committee in Wallace Brothers & Company v.
(1) [1953] B.C.R. 1069. (2) [1948] F.C.R. 1. (3) [1953]
S.C.R. 677,
90
708
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay(1) has been held by this
court to be applicable to sale tax legislation, in its
recent decision in the Bombay Sales Tax Act case(2) and its
propriety is beyond question. As a matter of fact, the
legislative practice in regard to sale tax laws adopted by
the Provincial Legislatures prior to the coming into force
of the Constitution has been to authorise imposition of
taxes on sales and purchases which were related in some
manner with the taxing Province by reason of some of the
ingredients of the transaction having taken place within the
Province or by reason of the production or location of goods
within it at the time when the transaction took place".
It may be observed that in the Bombay Sales Tax Appeal the
question of the territorial connection or nexus was not
directly in dispute and in Poppatlal’s case(3) referred to
above it was taken as decided by this Court in the Bombay
Sales Tax Appeal that the theory of territorial connection
or nexus was applicable to sales tax legislation. It is a
moot point whether this theory of territorial connection or
nexus which has been mainly applied in income-tax cases is
also applicable to sales tax legislation, the spheres of an
income-tax legislation and sales tax legislation being quite
distinct. Whereas in the case of income-tax legislation the
tax is levied either on a person who is within the territory
by exercising jurisdiction over him in personam or upon
income which has accrued or arisen to him or is deemed to
have accrued or arisen to him or has been derived by him
from sources within the territory and it is therefore
germane to enquire whether any part of such income has
accrued or arisen or has been derived from a source within
the territory, in the case of sales-tax legislation it is
the sale or purchase of goods which is the subject-matter of
taxation and it cannot be predicated that the sale or
purchase takes place at one or more places where the
necessary ingredients of sale happen to be located. The
theory of territorial connection or nexus was not put to the
test at any time prior to the enactment of
(1) [1948] F.C.R. 1.
(2)[1953] S.C.R. 1069.
(3) [1953] S.C R. 677.
709
the Constitution and it is not necessary also for us to give
a definite pronouncement on the subject. Suffice it to say
that there was this evil which was rampant in the pre-
Constitution period by reason of the various States
fastening upon one or more ingredients of the sale and
arrogating to themselves the power to tax sales or purchases
of goods by reason of the territorial connection or nexus
which they claimed to have with one or more of the
ingredients of the sale provided however that a sale or
purchase ultimately did take place either within their
territories or anywhere else. It was this evil amongst
others which was sought to be remedied by the Constitution-
makers when they came to enact article 286 of the Constitu-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 67 of 147
tion.
The Constitution-makers enacted several provisions in Part
XIII relating to trade, commerce and intercourse within the
territory of India with an eye towards India as an economic
unit and enacted in article 301 that trade, commerce and
intercourse throughout the territory of India shall be free
and by article 302 they empowered the Parliament to impose
such restrictions on the, freedom of trade, commerce and
intercourse between one State and another or within any part
of the territory of India as may be required in the public
interest. Broad based on this conception of freedom of
trade, commerce and intercourse throughout the territory of
India and also with a view inter alia to relieve the
consumer of the burden of multiple taxation which he was
subjected to by the various State Legislatures by having
resort to the territorial connection or nexus theory as
aforesaid the Constitution-makers in article 286 enacted
restrictions on the power of the State Legislatures in
regard to the imposition of tax on the sale or purchase of
goods and these restrictions were fourfold: -
(1) State Legislatures were restrained from imposing a tax
on the sale or purchase of goods where such sale or purchase
took place outside the State;
(2) The State Legislatures were restrained from imposing a
tax on the sale or purchase of goods where such sale or
purchase took place in the course of, the
710
import of the goods into or export of the goods out of the
territory of India;
(3) The State Legislatures were restrained from imposing a
tax on the sale or purchase of any goods where such sale or
purchase took place in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce except in so far as the Parliament might by law
otherwise provide;
and (4) The State Legislatures were restrained from imposing
a tax on the sale or purchase of any such goods as had been
declared by Parliament by law as essential for the life of
the community unless such law had been reserved for the
consideration of the President and had received his assent.
These were the four restrictions which were put upon the
powers of the State Legislatures to impose a tax on the
sales or purchases of goods and were imposed with different
objectives in view.
The first restriction was devised to achieve the objective
of relieving the consumer of the burden of multiple taxation
and put it out of the power of a State to tax the sale or
purchase of goods where such sale or purchase took place
outside the State. The Sale of Goods Act contained several
provisions which determined when a sale or purchase took
place or in other words when the property in the goods sold
passed from the seller to the purchaser. But it was silent
in regard to the place where the sale or purchase took
place. There was no rule of law enacted therein which
determined the situs or location of such sale or purchase
and resort was therefore had to the general law of the land
for the purpose. The territorial connection or nexus theory
had an eye over the various ingredients of a sale or
purchase and if anyone or more of these ingredients fixed
the situs or the location of the sale it would mean that a
sale had more situses or locations than one. This state of
affairs could not be allowed to continue any further having,
regard to the interests of the consumer and it was therefore
thought necessary, when the State Legislatures were
restrained from imposing a tax on sale or purchase of goods
where such sale or purchase took place outside the State,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 68 of 147
also to determine when
711
such sale or purchase could be said to take place outside
the State. It was for this purpose that the Explanation to
article 286(1) (a) was enacted and it was enacted for the
express purpose therein mentioned, viz., "for the purposes
of sub-clause (a)". The Explanation was thus enacted for
the express purpose of determining what sales or purchases
could be said to have taken place outside the State and the
basic idea which was adopted therein was that under the
general law relating to Sale of Goods property in the goods
would by reason of such sale or purchase pass in a
particular State which would therefore be the situs or
location of such sale or purchase. But notwithstanding that
fact the sale or purchase was deemed to have taken place in
the State in which the goods have actually been delivered as
a direct result of such sale or purchase for the purposes of
consumption in that State. The antithesis appears to have
been between the State in which the property in the goods
has by reason of such sale or purchase passed and the State
in which the goods have actually been delivered as a direct
result of such sale or purchase for the purpose of
consumption in that State and in the competition between
-these two States the Explanation provided that the sale or
purchase in those circumstances shall be deemed to have
taken place in the State in which the goods have actually
been delivered as a direct result of such sale or purchase
for the purpose of consumption therein. This Explanation
was interpreted in various ways, one view being that It
defined an outside sale and went no further and that the
situs of the sale was determined for the limited purpose of
telling the State what it could not tax by telling it that
in the cases covered by the Explanation in spite of the
property in the goods having passed within its territories
it was an outside sale qua that State. The other view was
that besides fixing the situs of sale in this manner it
also. defined what was a sale or purchase which shall be
deemed to have taken place in the delivery State and thus
fulfilled a double function of investing only the delivery
State with the power to tax such sale or pur-
712
chase to the’ exclusion of all other States qua whom the
sale or purchase was deemed to be an outside sale. The
third view was that the Explanation was concerned with
fixing the situs of sale in respect of the delivery State
only and did not affect the power of the State in which the
property in the goods had passed to tax such sale or
purchase which it enjoyed by reason of the fact that the
property in the goods had passed within its territories. A
fourth possible view was that the only State which could not
tax such sale or purchase on the ground that the sale was
outside the State was the State in which the property in the
goods had passed leaving open to the other States to tax
such sales or purchases by having resort to the power which
they possessed under article 246(3) and Entry 54 of List 11
of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. Whatever be
the correct view to take of this Explanation one fact
remained that article 286 (1) (a) and the Explanation
thereto were enacted with the one and only motive to relieve
the consumer of the burden of multiple taxation to which he
was subjected by having resort to the territorial connection
or nexus theory and to replace the nexus theory by what may
be described as the situs theory fixing the situs or the
location of the sale or purchase and putting a restriction
on the taxing power of the States qua which it could be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 69 of 147
predicated that such sale or purchase took place outside the
State, thus leaving only one State in which the goods have
been actually delivered as a direct result of such sale or
purchase for the purpose of consumption therein "free to tax
the sale or purchase having resort to the powers vested in
the State Legislature by article 246(3) and Entry 54 of List
II of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution.
If therefore the situs or location of the sale was laid down
as the criterion of the taxing power of the State the non-
obstante clause contained in the Explanation gave the clue
as to what was in mind of the Constitution-makers when they
substituted the situa theory in place of the nexus theory
which theretofore prevailed. They took cognisance of the
general law
713
relating to the sale of goods under which the property in
the goods passed by reason of such sale or purchase. The
conception of the transfer of ownership of the goods by the
seller to the purchaser was thus accepted by them as
determining the situs or location of the sale or purchase
and this conception had its roots in the relevant provisions
of the Sale of Goods Acts both in India and in England and
in spite of the fact that those provisions did not in terms
say where the sale took place or the transfer of ownership
came about or the property in the goods passed by reason of
such sale or purchase, the general law relating to sale of
goods was taken in the Explananation to fix the situs or
location of such sale or purchase within the territories of
a particular State and that event could only take place in
one State and not in more States than one. There could be
only one situs or location of the sale or purchase and if
that were so the State in whose territories such sale or
purchase took place or in which the property in the goods
passed by reason of such sale or purchase was the State
which could claim the power to tax such sale or purchase by
reason of its having taken place within its territory. It
would therefore appear that the Constitution-makers had in
enacting the Explanation the one and only motive of
negativing the territorial connection or nexus theory and
replacing it by the situs theory and fixing the situs or
location of the sale or purchase within the State in which
the property in the goods passed by reason of such sale or
purchase. While doing so they also created a legal fiction
whereby in the competition between what may be called the
title State and the delivery State the delivery State was
given the power to impose a tax on sale or purchase of goods
where the goods had actually been delivered as a direct
result of such sale or purchase for the purpose of
consumption in that State. If the object to be achieved was
the relief of the consumer from the burden of multiple
taxation that object could only be achieved by subjecting
him to taxation at the instance of one State only and not by
more States than one and to that extent the view
714
that both the title State and the delivery State would be
entitled to impose the tax on the sale or purchase falling
within the Explanation was clearly erroneous, the only State
which would be in a position to tax the sale or purchase in
question being the State in which the goods had been
actually delivered as a direct result of such sale or
purchase for the purpose of consumption therein.
The second restriction on the taxing power of the State
Legislatures was devised to safeguard the import and export
trade of the country and embraced transactions of sale or
purchase of goods where such sales or purchases took place
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 70 of 147
in the course of the import of the goods into or export of
the goods out of the territory of India, vide article 286(1)
(b). It is significant to observe that the Explanation to
article 286(1)(a) was definitely put for the purposes of
subclause (a) and it had therefore no application to the
cases which were covered by article 286(1) (b). This
concept was quite distinct from the concept which was dealt
within article286(1)(a). The sales or purchases were looked
at from different view-points and the particular aspect
which was dealt with in article 286(1)(b) was the import-
export aspect of the transactions of sales or purchases.
That aspect was separately dealt with even though for the
sake of economy of words the provisions in regard thereto
were incorporated in article 286(1). They had nothing in
common with the provision contained in article 286 (1) (a).
The third restriction was devised to protect interState
trade or commerce and covered transactions of sale or
purchase of any goods where such sale or purchase took place
in the course of inter-State trade or commerce except in so
far as Parliament might by law otherwise provide. This was
still another viewpoint and this restriction was put with a
view to safeguard the freedom of trade, commerce and inter-
course throughout the territory of India. The imposition of
this restriction meant that the States would be deprived of
a large part of their income which they used to derive from
taxing sales or purchases falling
716
within this category before the commencement of the
Constitution. A proviso was therefore enacted that the
President may by order direct that any tax on the sale or
purchase of goods which was being lawfully levied by the
Government of any State immediately before the commencement
of the Constitution shall, notwithstanding that the
imposition of such tax is contrary to the provisions of
article 286(2), continue to be levied until the thirty-first
day of March, 1951. This proviso enabled the State Govern-
ments to levy the taxes which they used to levy before the
commencement of the Constitution up to the 31st March 1951
within which period they were expected to adjust their
economies and replenish their treasuries by having resort to
their legitimate powers of taxation. By the 31st March 1951
the States could also make representations to the Centre and
induce the Parliament to otherwise provide by appropriate
legislation within the meaning of article 286(2) and
autborise them to impose taxes on the sale or purchase of
any goods where such sales or purchases took place in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce. But until that ban
was lifted by appropriate legislation by the Parliament the
by imposed under article 286(2) was absolute and no
transaction of sale or purchase of goods where such sale or
purchase took place in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce could ever be made the subject-matter of taxation
at the instance of a State Legislature. The Explanation to
article 286(1) (a) being expressly for the purpose of sub-
clause (a), i.e., for the purpose of determining what
transaction of sale or purchase was outside the State or
inside the State as above stated could not be read into
article 286(2) nor could it be read as an exception or
proviso to article 286(2). Reading it as such exception or
proviso would be contrary to the express terms of the
Explanation and would also stultify the purpose of the
enactment of article 286 (2) thus taking a large slice out
of the transactions falling within that category. The rule
as to the exclusion of the general provision by a special
provision would also not apply for the simple reason that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 71 of 147
91
716
the object of article 286(1)(a) and the Explanation thereto
is quite distinct from the object of article 286(2) and the
objects being quite different these provisions do not cover.
the same subject-matter and therefore there would be no
occasion for the application of that rule of construction.
To this extent the view taken by me in the Bombay Sales Tax
Appeal(1) that the Explanation to article 286(1)(a) was an
exception or proviso to article 286(2) was clearly
erroneous.
The last restriction on the taxing powers of the State
Legislatures was devised to maintain the supply of essential
commodities and related to the imposition of a tax on the
sale or purchase of any goods as have been declared by
Parliament by law to be essential for the life of the
community unless such law has been reserved for the
consideration of the President and has received his assent.
This restriction also though of another nature was a
restriction put on the power of the State Legislatures to
tax such transactions of sale or purchase and was absolute
in terms having nothing whatever to do with the restrictions
put in the earlier clauses of article 286. These transac-
tions comprised a distinct category by themselves and were
not affected by the restrictions put in the earlier clauses
of the article. It may be noted that the transactions
covered by article 286(1) (a), article 286(2) and article
286(3) though looked at from different view-points-may
overlap. A transaction which is covered by article 286(1)
(a) may also be covered by article 286(2) and both these
sets of transactions may be covered by article 286(3). Such
overlapping would not necessarily mean that the provisions
of one particular clause have to be read as fastening upon
the transactions falling within the category comprised
therein and treating them as lifted out of the ban sought to
be imposed by the other clauses of the article. Each ban
has got to be effective and imposed on the transactions
falling within its ambit and even though the transaction may
be saved out of the ban imposed in one particular clause it
may just as
(1) [1958] S.C.R 1069.
717
well fall within the ban imposed in another clause and thus
be excluded from the taxing power of the State Legislatures.
It cannot therefore be urged that the Explanation to article
286(1)(a) lifts the transaction out of the ban imposed by
article 286(2) or by article 286(3) and leaves such
transaction of sale or purchase as is covered by the
Explanation free to be taxed by the delivery State in spite
of the same being of an inter-State character or being in
regard to goods declared by Parliament by law to be
essential for the life of the community.
The whole scheme of article 286 is that four, different
restrictions are put on the taxing power of the State
Legislatures in regard to the sales or purchases of goods
and each one of these restrictions has got to be considered
separately by itself and it is only those transactions of
sale or purchase which do not fall within any of those
categories that can be taxed by the State Legislatures by
having resort to their powers under article 246(3) and Entry
54 of List 11 of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution.
The learned Government Advocate for Bihar however urged five
distinct reasons why article 286(2) cannot apply to the
transactions of sale or purchase covered by article 286(1)
(a) and the Explanation thereto and they were:-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 72 of 147
(1) The class of sales falling under article 286(1) (a)
form a special class of inter-State sales which on general
principles ought not to be affected by the general
provisions of article 286(2);
(2) If article 286(2) applies to the class of sales covered
by article 286(1)(a) and the Explanation thereto it would
result in discrimination against local trade in favour of
inter-State trade and it will be inconsistent with the
provisions of Part XIII of the Constitution;
(3) The purpose of article 286 being to eliminate multiple
taxation and article 286(1) (a) having already achieved that
purpose with regard to the class of sales falling within it
it was no longer necessary for that purpose to apply article
286(2) to that class of sales;
718
(4) The Constitution itself has divided inter-State sales
into two categories and in relation to one class it has
itself provided which State will tax and under what
conditions and in relation to the other class the
Constitution itself has imposed a ban in general terms and
granted Parliament power in general terms again to relax
that ban as and when Parliament thinks fit;
and (5) By a legal fiction, the inter-State sale is
converted into an intrastate sale.
We shall deal with these reasons seriatim.
As to reason (1): it was submitted that the transactions of
sale covered by article 286(1) (a) and the Explanation
thereto and the transactions of sale covered by article
286(2) were of the same category and both these provisions
dealt with the same topic. That being so, article 286(2)
contained a general provision whereas article 286(1) (a) and
the Explanation thereto contained a special provision having
reference to the transactions of sale or purchase falling
within that category, with the result that the rule of
harmonious construction applied and the special provision
was to be read as an exception to the general provision.
This argument found favour with the High Court below as well
as myself in the Bombay Sales Tax Appeal(1). This rule of
harmonious construction no doubt would apply if the topics
covered by both these provisions were the same, and the
subject matters dealt with in both these provisions were
identical. There is this difference however between the two
provisions, viz., that the transactions covered by both do
not fall within the same category and a transaction of sale
which is looked at from the point of view of its being an
outside or an inside sale may just as well be a sale in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce. In article
286(1)(a) the transaction is looked at from the point of
view of its situs or location and in article 286(2) it is
looked at from the point of view of its being in the course
of inter-State trade or commerce and the two approaches are
quite distinct one from the other. That being so it cannot
(1) (1953) B.C.R. 1059.
719
be said that the topics which are dealt with by both these
provisions are the same or that the subjectmatters thereof
are identical. The ban which is, imposed by article
286(1)(a) and the rule of harmonious construction and the
exception of the special provisions from the general one as
indicated above would’ have no application in the matter of
the construction of both these provisions.
As to reason (2): there is no question of discrimination
against local trade in favour of inter-State trade if
article 286(2) applied to the class of sales covered by
article 286(1) (a) and the Explanation thereto. The local
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 73 of 147
trade would certainly be liable to the levy of intra-State
sales tax which could be avoided if a transaction takes
place in the course of interState trade or commerce. For
the working of the Union as an economic unit and for the
free flow of trade, commerce and intercourse throughout the
territory of India it is necessary that no fetter should be
placed on the course of inter-State trade or commerce. The
consumers within a State who would resort to transactions of
purchase across the border with a view to avoid the payment
of the intrastate sales tax would be comparatively few and
could in conceivable cases be caught within the net by
imposing a tax on goods of a non-discriminatory nature
within the meaning of article 304(a). This reason is
therefore no deterrent to our holding that the ban under
article 286(2) is absolute and unaffected by article 286(1)
(a) and the Explanation thereto.
As to reason (3): it postulates that the only purpose of the
enactment of article 286 (1) (a) and the Explanation thereto
is to eliminate multiple taxation. If that was the only
purpose of the article it might conceivably be argued that
once that purpose is achieved in regard to the particular
set of transactions which are covered by article 286(1)(a)
and the Explanation there to there is no further need of
putting any ban under article286(2). As has been already
observed before, the purposes of the enactment of article
286 were manifold and they were achieved by enacting the
four distinct provisions in the manner indicated
720
above and the restrictions which were put on the powers of
the State Legislatures to tax transactions of sale or
purchase were mutually exclusive even though the
transactions might so far as their nature and character be
concerned overlap in certain events. Even though therefore
a transaction fell within the ban of article 286(1)(a) it
could nonetheless be subjected to the ban which was imposed
by article 286(2) and it could be taxed only if it survived
this scrutiny also, which could be done if the Parliament by
law otherwise provided as set out in article 286(2).
As to reason (4): it assumes that the Constitution itself
has divided transactions of sale or purchase in the course
of inter-State trade and commerce into two distinct
categories, one falling within article 286 (1) (a) and the
Explanation thereto and the other falling within article
286(2). There is no warrant for holding that transactions
in the course of inter-State trade or commerce are divided
into such distinct categories for the purpose of the
imposition of the ban. The transaction of sale or purchase
would be one but it is subject to the imposition of distinct
bans having regard to the view-point from which it is being
looked at. If it is looked at from the view-point of its
being an outside or an inside sale it may be caught within
the ban of article 286(1) (a). If it is looked at from the
view-point of its being a transaction in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce it may be caught within the
ban imposed by article 286(2). These bans are mutually
exclusive and may have to be applied to the same transaction
of sale or purchase, one ban not necessarily excluding the
other.
As to reason (5): the argument totally ignores the purpose
and efficacy of a legal fiction. A legal fiction pre-
supposes the correctness of the state of facts on which it
is based and all the consequences which flow from that state
of facts have got to be worked out to their logical extent.
But due regard must be had in this behalf to the purpose for
which the legal fiction has been created. If the purpose of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 74 of 147
this legal fiction contained in the Explanation to article
286(1)(a) is solely for the purpose of sub-clause (a) as
expressly
721
stated it would not be legitimate to travel beyond the scope
of that purpose and read into the provision any other
purpose howsoever attractive it may be. The legal fiction
which was created here was only for the purpose of
determining whether a particular sale was an outside sale or
one which could be deemed to have’ taken place inside the
State and that was the only scope of the provision. It
would be an illegitimate extension of the purpose of the
legal fiction to say that it was also created for the
purpose of converting the inter-State character of the
transaction into an intrastate one. This type of conversion
could not have been in the contemplation of the Constitution
makers and is contrary to the express purpose for -Which the
legal fiction was created as set out in the Explanation to
article 286(1)(a).
All these reasons therefore taken individually or
collectively are not sufficient to negative the position
that the transactions covered by article 286(1) (a) and the
Explanation thereto are not excluded from the operation of
article 286(2) and that the ban under article 286(2) also
applies to the same.
It was also urged that this-construction put upon article
286(1)(a) and the Explanation thereto and article 286(2
would render the Explanation nugatory and that the
Constitution makers at the very commencement of the
Constitution would not have given the power by one hand and
taken it away by the other and that therefore the
Explanation to article 286(1) (a) should be read as an
exception or a proviso to article 286(2). This argument no
doubt found favour with me in the Bombay Sales Tax Appeal(1)
and also with the High Court below. If due regard however
is had to the purpose of the enactment of article 286 as a
whole and also to the various considerations which have been
set out herein above it is clear that this argument is
untenable. The transactions of sale and purchase covered by
the Explanation to article 286(1) (a) are not necessarily
co-extensive or conterminous with the transactions of sale
or purchase covered by article 286(2). There are
transactions which would be covered by the
(1) (1953] S.C.R. 1069.
722
Explanation to article 286 (1) (a) without their being
transactions of sale or purchase in the course of interState
trade or commerce and which therefore would without anything
more be covered by the Explanation and would be the subject-
matter of taxation by the delivery State by the appropriate
exercise of its power of taxation. There is also a further
fact to be noted and it is that even though the transactions
covered by both these provisions may be conceivably co-
extensive or conterminous with each other, the Explanation
to article 286(1)(a) would come into operation the moment
the ban of article 286(2) was lifted by an otherwise
provision enacted by Parliament and it was certainly lifted
up to the 31st March 1951 by the President directing the
continuance of the operation of the sales tax laws which
previously existed in the various States. It could not
therefore be stated that the construction put upon article
286(1)(a) and the Explanation thereto and article 286(2) as
above would render the Explanation nugatory. if the States
thought that the operation of the ban under article 286(2)
prevented them from taxing transactions of sale or purchase
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 75 of 147
which take place in the course of inter-State trade and
commerce and which are also covered by the Explanation to
article 286 (1) (a) it was open to them to adopt proper
measures for lifting the ban under article 286(2) and making
themselves free to tax the transactions of sale or purchase
covered by the Explanation. Parliament would in that event
consider the proposals made by the respective States in
their proper perspective having regard to the provisions of
the Constitution in regard to the freedom of trade, commerce
and intercourse throughout the territory of India, the con-
venience or inconvenience of the public and the needs of the
respective States and lift the ban in the manner and to the
extent it thought fit.
The majority judgment in the Bombay Sales Tax Appeal has
been construed by the various States as giving them an
authority to impose a tax on the transactions of sale or
purchase covered by the Explanation to article 286(1) (a)
and authorising them to
723
impose such tax on the seller even though he may be residing
outside their territories. The non-resident businessmen
therefore who entered into transactions of sales of goods
where as a direct result of such sales the goods are
actually delivered for the purpose of consumption in a
particular State have been sought to be subjected to the
levy of sales tax at the instance of these States with great
inconvenience and harassment to themselves, and the warrant
for their action in this behalf is stated by these States to
be the majority judgment of this Court. The various States
however in the scramble for taxes have been oblivious to the
fact that a transaction of sale or purchase is not a
unilateral transaction but a bilateral one and when it is
looked at from the point of view of a sale or purchase it is
one transaction which has two facets. From the point of
view of a seller it is a sale transaction and from the point
of view of a purchaser it is a purchase transaction. When
therefore the transaction is one on which a tax on sale or
purchase can be levied it does not necessarily mean that
only a sales tax can be levied and not a purchase tax. The
inside dealer may therefore be taxed on his purchases or if
be sells in retail to actual consumers in the State be may
be taxed on the sales. If the inside dealer is himself the
consumer then there will be no difficulty in assessing him
for his books will show how much he has imported from other
States and how much he has consumed. In any case, the
convenience or inconvenience of collecting a sales tax or a
purchase tax is not a relevant consideration when one is
considering the validity or otherwise of such a tax, as was
observed by Kania, C. J. in the case of A. Lt. Wadia v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay(1) at p. 141. In the
very judgment of the majority in the Bombay Sales Tax
Appeal(2) there is a passage at p. 1084 which indicates that
all buyers within the delivery State except those buying for
re-export out of the State would be within the scope of the
Explanation and liable to be taxed by the State on such
transactions and it would be an unwarranted assumption on
(1) [1948] F.C.R. 121. (2) [1908] B.C.R. 1069,
92
724
the part of anyone who read that judgment to say that the
delivery State was entitled to levy a tax on the sale or
purchase of goods falling within the Explanation to article
286(1) (a) on the seller alone. The seller would be outside
the territories of the taxing State and would primarily not
be liable to the jurisdiction of the Sales Tax Act enacted
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 76 of 147
by the taxing State. It would be by adopting the theory of
the territorial connection or nexus as it was being done
prior to the enactment of the Constitution that the taxing
State would seek to reach the non-resident businessmen
outside its territories and if regard be had to the fact
that the taxation is either in personam or in relation to
the transaction of sale or purchase which takes place within
its territory there is no warrant at all for taxing the
outside businessmen on the transactions of sale or purchase
covered by the Explanation to article 286(1 ) (a). All the
provisions contained in the Bihar Sales Tax Act with regard
to the registration ’of the outside dealer, the maintenance
of the books of account, submission of returns by him to the
Sales Tax authorities of the State of Bihar, the production
and inspection of books of account before the Sales Tax
authorities, the search of the premises of the outside
dealer by them and the imposition of penalties on him by
reason of his noncompliance with the various provisions
contained in the Act amongst others are unwarranted and
illegitimate exercise of the powers incidental to the power
of taxing sales or purchases conferred upon the State of
Bihar by article 246(3) and the Entry-54 in List 11 of the
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution and do not affect non-
resident businessmen who are outside the territories of the
State of Bihar.
The majority judgment in the Bombay Sales Tax Appeal(1) did
not say that the delivery State was entitled to tax the
sellers in the transactions of sale or purchase covered by
the Explanation to article 286(1) (a). The question whether
the seller or the purchaser would be subject to the levy of
a tax on the transaction of sale or purchase at the instance
of the delivery
(1) [1953] S.G.A. 1069.
725
State was not before the Court -and the observations
contained in the majority judgment were made with reference
to a pure question of the interpretation of article 286(1)
(a) and the Explanation thereto. As a matter of fact the
passage above-quoted from the judgment(1) at p. 1084 would
go to show that they contemplated the purchasers being
amenable to tax at the instance of the delivery State in the
case of transactions covered by the Explanation to article
286(1) (a). Even though it is not strictly relevant to
consider the consequences of a particular position in law
when construing a statutory provision it is nonetheless
necessary to visualise those consequences when one tries to
probe into the mind of the legislators and see whether they
could have ever contemplated such consequences. If the
construction sought to be put upon the Explanation to
article 286(1) (a) and the majority judgment in relation-
thereto by the State Legislatures were accepted, all outside
dealers wheresoever they may be located or residing or
carrying on their business all over the Union would be
amenable to the levy of sales tax at the instance of the
delivery State and one dealer in a particular State who had
a very large business and was entering into transactions of
sale with consumers in outside States all over the Union
would be amenable to the jurisdiction of several States in
the matter of his transactions of sale of his goods. There
are as many as 21 Sales Tax Acts to be found in the Manual
of Sales Tax Acts and if a dealer in one State was going to
be held amenable to the levy of sales tax at the instance of
all the other States it would mean that he would have to
ascertain from the purchaser in each of the transactions of
sale which he enters into the State to which the purchaser
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 77 of 147
be. longs, whether the purchaser is purchasing the goods for
the purpose of consumption within that State, to get himself
registered as a dealer in that State, to maintain his books
of account with a view to produce them and subject them to
inspection by the Sales Tax authorities in that State, to
submit returns of the sales tax recovered by him from the
purchasers
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069,
726
in that State before the Sales tax authorities of that State
and make himself liable for the non-observance of the
various requirements of the Sales Tax Act enacted by that
State. The task of fulfilling the requirements qua one
State would be formidable enough. But when one visualises
that the dealer who enters into such transactions of sale
with the various customers may be subjected to this process
at the instance of each and every State within whose
territory the purchaser may happen to be importing the goods
as a direct result of such sale for actual consumption
within the territories of that State, one can easily
understand what untold harassment and inconvenience the
dealer would have to suffer from. It will be easy to
understand that if those were the circumstances attendant
upon his business the dealer may as well close down his
business rather than submit to all this harassment at the
hands of the various States. The free flow of trade,
commerce and intercourse throughout the territory of India
will be thoroughly choked up and we are quite sure that
neither the Constitution makers nor the majority judgment in
the Bombay Sales Tax Appeal would ever have contemplated
these consequences. It is legitimate therefore to hold that
no such thing could ever have been ,contemplated by them and
nothing would have been farthest from their minds than such
a position. The seller in such cases would certainly not be
amenable to the levy of a sales tax at the instance of the
delivery State and no law passed by the delivery State in
regard to a levy of sales tax would have any operation
against the non-resident businessman who enters into a
transaction of sale where as a direct result of such sale
the goods are actually delivered for consumption within the
taxing State.
If however the majority judgment be construed to have said
that the seller could be subjected to the levy of a sales
tax at the instance of the delivery State in the case of
transactions covered by the Explanation to article 286(1)
(a) I am of the opinion that it was clearly erroneous and
public interests demand that the same should be reversed,
727
After further and fuller consideration of the matter in the
light of the very elaborate arguments which have been
addressed before us by the learned Counsel for the
Appellants and the Respondents and also the Interveners, I
feel that the conclusion reached in the Bombay Sales Tax
Appeal(2) needs to be revised and I am of the opinion that
article 286(2) puts an absolute restriction on the taxing
power of the States where transactions of sale or purchase
take place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce
unless and until the ban is lifted by Parliament within the
terms thereof and until such ban is lifted no delivery State
within the meaning of the Explanation to article 286(1) (a)
much less the other States are in a position to impose a tax
on transactions of sale or purchase covered by the
Explanation.
The appeal should therefore be allowed and a direction
should issue against the State of Bihar to refrain from
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 78 of 147
taxing the sales or purchases of goods which take place in
the course of inter-State trade or commerce even though the
goods as a direct result of such sale or purchase are
actually delivered in Bihar for consumption in that State
until Parliament otherwise provides within the meaning of
that expression in article 286(2). The Appellant should get
its costs throughout from the State of Bihar, the rest of
the parties appearing before us to bear and pay their
respective costs of this appeal.
JAGANNADHADAS J.-The, first, and to my mind, the most
important, point that requires careful consideration in this
case is whether, and if so within what limits,, this Court
will observe the rule as to the binding character of a
judicial precedent with reference to its own prior decisions
Admittedly the question that has been raised in this case as
to the construction of article 286 of the Constitution is
one that is directly covered by a recent -decision of this
Court in the State of Bombay v. The United Motors (India)
Ltd.(1). The rule as to the binding character of judicial
precedents is one which is normally accepted
(1) (1958) S.C.B. 1069.
728
by all the Courts which function on the pattern of the
British Judicial system. This rule, in its very strict
form., is observed by the English Courts. (Vide Young v.
Bristol Aeroplane Co., Ltd. (1) and Williams v. Glasbrook
Brothers Ltd.(1)). The House of Lords has ruled, after
careful consideration, in its judgment in the case in London
Street Tramways Co., Ltd, v. London County Council(3) that
the House is bound to follow its own previous decisions and
will not allow any question settled thereby to be reopened
and argued again nor can the House be asked to reverse its
own prior decision. Such reversal, if needed, is one that
has to be brought about by parliamentary legislation. The
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council has,however, not
adopted this extremely rigorous view but has felt itself
free, in appropriate cases, to reconsider its prior
decisions. (Vide In Be. Transferred Civil Servants (Ireland)
Compensation(4)). The same is the case with the Supreme
Court of the United States of America. (See Willough by on
the Constitution of the United States, Vol. I, page 74).
Our Constitution which has made detailed provision about
various matters- relating to the Supreme Court including a
matter relating to its practice, such as, whether there can
be a dissenting judgment (see article 145(5)) has not, in
terms, made any provision in this behalf. Article 141, no
doubt, provides that "the law declared by the Supreme Court
shall be binding on all Courts within the territory of
India". It has been urged before us that the phrase "all
Courts" is comprehensive enough to include the Supreme
Court. It is, pointed out, that since every decision
declares the law, a later decision declaring the law in a
contrary sense, would in effect, be the exercise of
legislative function which must be taken to have been
impliedly prohibited. While these arguments are not without
force, it is reasonably clear, in the context of article
141, that the phrase "all Courts" must refer to Courts other
than the Supreme Court. In the absence, therefore, of any
clear provision in the
(1) [1944] K.B. 718.
(3) [1898] A.C. 376.
(2) (1947] 2 All E.R. 884.
(4) [1929] A.C. 242,
729
Constitution and in view of the fact that this Court has
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 79 of 147
historically succeeded to the preexisting Federal Court and
the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council., we cannot deny
to this Court, the competence to reconsider its prior
decisions.
But, it does not follow that such power can be exercised
without restriction or limitation or that a prior decision
can be reversed on the ground that, on later consideration,
the Court disagrees with the prior decision and thinks it
erroneous. The necessity for certainty and continuity in
the declaration of law by the highest courts in the country
is recognised on all hands. That necessity is all the
greater, and not the less, by reason of the Constitution
itself having formally provided that the decisions of this
Court are declaratory of the law. The rule as to the
binding character of a judicial precedent is based on a
juristic principle of universal application. The reason for
its adoption is ’’the disastrous inconvenience of subjecting
each question decided by a previous judgment to reargument,
thereby rendering the dealings of mankind doubtful by
different decisions; so that in truth and in fact there
would be no real final court of appeal" (See ,London Street
Tramways Co., Ltd. v. The London County Council(1) at page
380). It is, therefore, necessary to consider within what
limits the competency of this Court to reconsider its prior
decisions may well be exercised. For this purpose the
actual practice of other comparable Courts as affording
guidance requires close examination.
The practice of the Supreme Court of America is indicated in
the following passage from Willoughby on the Constitution of
the United States of America, Vol. I, page 74.-
"ln cases of purely private import, the chief desideratum is
that the law remain certain, and, therefore, where a rule
has been judicially declared and private rights created
thereunder, the courts will not, except in the clearest
cases of error, depart from the doctrine of stare decisis.
When, however, public interests are involved, and especially
when the ques-
(1) [1898] A.C. 375.
730
tion is one of constitutional construction, the matter is
otherwise. An error in the construction of a statute may
easily be corrected by a legislative act, but a Constitution
and particularly the Federal Constitution, may be changed
only with great difficulty. Hence an error in its
interpretation may for all practical purposes be corrected
only by the Court’s repudiating or modifying its former
decision".
It would appear, therefore, that the power of recon-
sideration of a prior decision is somewhat freely exercised
by the Supreme Court of America in Constitutional cases.
The reason for such free exercise, or to the same extent,
does not exist under our Constitution. To appreciate this,
it is necessary to compare the provisions in the two
Constitutions for amendment of the Constitution. The
machinery for amendment of the Constitution of the United
States is provided in Article V thereof and is as follows:
"The Congress, whenever two thirds of both houses shall deem
it necessary, shall propose amendments to this Constitution,
or, on the application of two thirds of the several States,
shall call a convention for proposing amendments, which, in
either case, shall be valid to all intents and purposes, as
part of this Constitution, when ratified by the legislatures
of three fourths of the several States, or by conventions in
three fourths thereof, as the one or the other mode of
ratification may be proposed by the Congress".
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 80 of 147
Under article 368 of our Constitution, the normal procedure
provided for amendment, except in respect of specified
matters to be presently enumerated, is as follows:
"An amendment of this Constitution may be initiated by the
introduction of a Bill for the purpose in either house of
Parliament, and when the Bill is passed in each House by a
majority of the total membership of that House and by a
majority of not less than two-thirds of the members of that
House present and voting, it shall be presented to the
President for his assent and upon such assent being given to
the Bill, the Constitution shall stand amended in
accordance6 with the terms of the Bill".
731
In respect, however, of a limited number of matters
specified in the Constitution, an additional step is
required, namely, that "before the Bill making provision for
such amendment is presented to the President for assent, the
amendment shall also require to be ratified by the
Legislatures of not less than one half of the States
specified in Parts A and B of the First Schedule by
resolutions to that effect passed by those Legislatures".
Now the special matters where amendment is conditional on
this additional requirement relate to the election of
President (articles 54 and 55), extent of the executive
power of the Union (article 73), extent of the executive
power of a State (article 162), provisions relating to the
Union Judiciary (Supreme Court) (Chapter IV of Part V), and
to the High Courts of the various States, in Parts A and B
(Chapter V of Part VI) and in Part C (article 241), and the
relations between the Union and the States (Chapter I of
Part XI), as also the distribution of the legislative powers
and the various lists in the Seventh Schedule, the
representation of the States in Parliament, and the
provision in the Constitution relating to the machinery for
amendment of the Constitution. Thus, it will be seen,
excepting in respect of a few basic matters-of which it may
be noticed article 286 is not one-the normal machinery for
the procedure of amendment is the same as that for the
passing of any statute by Parliament except that a specified
majority in each of the Houses is essential, the securing of
which would be difficult or easy according to the strength
of the Government at the time in each of the Houses. The
requirement of special majority as a condition for the
passing of legislation in respect of certain specified items
of business is not altogether an unknown feature. However
that may be, it is quite clear that while the amendment of
the Constitution does not depend upon the ordinary majority
rule under which Parliament conducts its business, the
machinery therefor is by invoking the very same Parliament
and not anything so difficult, cumbrous and dilatory as that
envisaged in article V of the American Constitution. Even
as regards the
93
732
few specified matters for which an additional requirement of
ratification by State Legislatures is provided for, our
machinery for amendment is clearly much easier and less
cumbersome. It does not appear to me., therefore, right-to
rely upon the American practice -as a safe guide to
determine our practice on the question as to the binding
character of a judicial precedent. Neither, are we bound to
adopt the very rigid rule which the House of Lords has
formulated for its own practice. The problem of
interpreting a written Constitution does not generally arise
before it.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 81 of 147
The only other comparable courts whose practice has been
brought to our notice, through citation of cases, are the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council and the High Court
of Australia. As this is the first case in this Court
wherein this question arises, it is desirable to consider
that practice carefully for our guidance, though it is not
necessary to lay down any absolutely rigid or inelastic
formula. It is worthwhile at this stage to notice what,
according to the Constitution of Australia., is the
machinery for the alteration of their Constitution. This is
to be gathered from section 128 of the Commonwealth Act of
1900 which -broadly speaking-shows that what is required
there is an absolute majority in each of the Houses and the
approval of each State to be obtained by a referendum to the
electors of each State. This is definitely much more
difficult, cumbersome and dilatory than what obtains in our
Constitution. Therefore, there can be no reason for our
adopting a less rigid standard than that adopted by the High
Court of Commonwealth of Australia, nor is there any reason
for our adopting a standard less rigid than that of the
Judicial Committee of the Privy.Council, who while feeling
themselves free not to follow the very strict rule of the
House of Lords, were under no constitutional limitations in
this behalf.
The practice of the Judicial Committee as to the limits
within which they generally exercise the freedom to
reconsider their prior decisions can be gathered from the
cases in In Re. Transferred Civil Servants
733
(Ireland-) Compensation(1); Attorney-General for Ontario v.
Canada Temperance Federation(3); and Phanindra Chandra Neogy
v. The King(3). The matter was discussed elaborately and
various prior decisions of the Privy Council were considered
and the conclusion was summed up as follows in In Be.
Transferred Civil Servants (Ireland) Compensation(1):
"There is no inherent incompetency in ordering rehearing of
a case already decided by the Board, even when a question of
a right of property is involved but such an indulgence will
be granted in very exceptional circumstances only. It is of
the nature of an extraordinarium remedium".
After the above formulation of their practice, the Privy
Council in this case permitted itself to reconsider the
previous decision in Wigg’s case(4), on two grounds. (1) The
case came up before them on a reference under section 4 of
the Judicial Committee Act of 1933, and that reference would
have been futile if it did not necessarily involve such
reconsideration. (2) The reference itself was granted on
account of an alleged material mistake of fact, into which
the previous Board of the Judicial Committee bad fallen. On
such reconsideration the previous decision was affirmed. In
Attorney-General for Ontario v. Canada Temperance
Federation(2) the Judicial Committee expressed itself as
follows at page 206:
"The appellants’ first contention is that Russell’s case(5)
was wrongly decided and ought to be overruled. Their
Lordships do not doubt that in tendering humble advice to
His Majesty they are not absolutely bound by previous
decisions of the Board, as is the House of Lords by its own
judgments. In ecclesiastical appeals, for instance, on more
than one occasion, the Board has tendered advice contrary to
that given in a previous case, which further historical
research has shown to have been wrong. But on
constitutional questions it Must be seldom indeed that the
Board would depart from a previous decision which it may be
(1) [1929] A..C. 242.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 82 of 147
(3) 76 I.A. 10.
(2) [1946] A.C. 198.
(5) 7 A. C. 829.
(4) [1927] A.C. 674.
734
assumed will have been acted on both by Governments and
subjects".
In this case the Privy Council was invited to reconsider the
correctness of the law laid down by them in Russell v. The
Queen(1) but they declined to do so on two grounds, viz.,
(1) on constitutional questions the Board seldom departs
from its previous decisions, and (2) the prior decision
stood unchallenged for over 60 years.
In Phanindra Chandra Neogy v. The King(2) the Privy Council
stated that it is only "in the most exceptional cases" that
they would tender advice to His Majesty inconsistent with a
previous decision and reaffirmed the decision in Gill’s
case(3).
Three cases of the High Court of Australia out of those
brought to our notice are instructive. In the Tramways
case(3) the position was expressed in the following terms.
Griffith, C. J. observed as follows:
"In my opinion it is impossible to maintain as an abstract p
imposion that the Court is either legally or technically
bound by previous decisions. Indeed, it may, in a proper
case, be its duty to disregard them. But the rule should be
applied with great caution, and only when the previous
decision is manifestly wrong, as, for instance, if it
proceeded upon the mistaken assumption of the continuance of
a repealed or expired statute, or is contrary to a decision
of another Court which this Court is bound to follow; not, I
think upon a mere suggestion that some or all of the members
of the later Court might arrive at a different conclusion if
the matter were res integra. Otherwise there would be grave
danger of want of continuity in the interpretation of the
law".
Justice Barton observed as follows:
"I have never thought that it was not open to this Court to
review its previous decisions upon good cause. The question
is not whether the Court can do so, but whether it will,
having due regard to the need for continuity and consistency
in judicial decisions. Changes in the number of appointed
Justices can, I
(1) 7 A.C. 829. 2) 76 I.A.110.
(3) 76 I.A. 41. (4) la C. L. B. 54,
735
take it, never of themselves furnish a reason for re-
view............. But the Court can always listen to argu-
ment as to whether it ought to review a particular decision,
and the strongest reason for an overruling is that a
decision is manifestly wrong, and its maintenance is
injurious to the public interest".
Having so laid down the rule of practice for their Court,
the learned Judges, on account of the special circumstances
in that case, unanimously agreed to reconsider the prior
decision and on such reconsideration affirmed it. In so
reaffirming the prior decision, one of the learned Judges,
Justice Powers, stated his grounds to the following effect:
"In Whybrow’s case(1), the Court consisted of all the
Justices of this Court who could sit on the application.
The case was very fully argued. Both parties and two of the
States were represented by counsel. The judgments were
considered judgments delivered more than two weeks after the
preliminary objection was taken.............. Under the
circumstances I have no hesitation in following the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 83 of 147
judgment".
The same learned Judge at another portion of his judgment
stated as follows:
"If we do not show some respect to our own Court’s
decisions, no counsel will feel safe in advising the public,
and it will create uncertainty and confusion".
The principles so laid down have been reiterated in a recent
case of the High Court of Australia in Perpetual Executors
and Trustees Association of Australia Ltd. v. Federal
Commissioner of Taxation in the following terms:
"The Court is not bound by its previous decisions so as
absolutely to preclude reconsideration of a principle
approved and applied in a prior case, but, as was stated in
Cain v. Malone(3), the exceptions to the rule are exceptions
which should be allowed only with great caution and in clear
cases"
Then the above quotation from the judgment of Justice Barton
in the Tramways Ca8e(4) was repeated
(1) 11 C.L.R. 1. k$) 66 C.L.R. 10,
(2) 77 C.L.B. 493.
(4) 18 O.L.R. 54.
736
and the principle indicated therein was reaffirmed. In this
case the Court was asked to overrule their prior decision in
Trustees Executors and Agency Co. Ltd. v. Federal
Commissioner of Taxation(1). The learned Judges declined to
reconsider it with the following observations:
"The decisions of a superior Court have a double aspect.
They determine the controversy between the parties, and in
deciding the case they may include a statement of principle
which it is the duty of that Court and of all subordinate
courts to apply in cases to which that principle is
relevant. Continuity and coherence in the law demand that,
particularly in this Court, which is the highest court of
appeal in Australia, the principle of stare decision should
be applied, save in very exceptional cases".
The criterion, viz., that of manifest error plus injury to
public interest by maintenance of previous decision laid
down in the above cases as being the ground on which a
reconsideration can be granted was reiterated by Justice
Williams in his judgment in Attorney-General for N.S.W. v.
Perpetual Trustee Co. Ltd(2). In this case the High Court
was asked to reconsider the correctness of the majority
decision in a prior case) viz., that in Commonwealth v.
Quince(3). On reconsideration the Judges by a majority
affirmed the prior decision. One of the learned Judges,
Justice Dixon, considered the matter on its merits
elaborately and came to the conclusion that if the matter
were to be considered afresh he should prefer a view con-
trary to that which had been expressed in the prior decision
but concurred with the majority view with the following
observations:
"There appears to me to be no ground for reconsidering the
decision in Quince case(3) unless it be a sufficient ground
simply that the opposite conclusion is to be preferred. It
is evident that the decision was reached only after a very
full examination of the question. It cannot be said that
any compelling consideration or important authority was
overlooked or that the decision conflicts with well
established principle or fails
(1) 69 C.L.R. 270,
(2) 85 C.L.R. 237.
(3) 68 C.L.R. 227,
737
to go with a definite stream of authority. It is a recent
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 84 of 147
and well considered decision upon what is evidently a highly
disputable question.
I do not think that we should reconsider the correctness of
that decision. The proper course judicially is to follow
and apply that decision".
This is a strong case of the year 1951-1952 indicating, the
most recent practice of that Court, and the above passage
aptly summarises almost the very considerations applicable
to the present case.
A consideration of these cases shows that while the highest
courts other than the House of Lords have reserved to
themselves theoretically the competency to reconsider the
correctness of a prior decision, they have also carefully
confined the actual exercise of that power within very
narrow limits. In a number of cases in which they did
permit themselves to reconsider, they have ultimately
declined to overrule the prior decision notwithstanding that
another view might well have been taken. The only instances
brought to our notice where, on a reconsideration, a
previous decision was not followed, are two. One is the
Amalgamated Societal of Engineers v. The Adelaide Steamship
Co. Ltd.(1). ’that was a case where the question which arose
was a very important one as to the power of State
Legislature to encroach on the field of the Commonwealth
Legislature by virtue of a rule of construction laid down in
an earlier case, viz., Rail-way Servants’ case(2). The
learned Judges were of the opinion that that was a question
of far reaching public importance and that the prior
decision being manifestly wrong and opposed to the rules Of
Construction laid down by the Privy Council in a number of
cases, should be reconsidered and overruled. It would be
seen that in this case the Court acted upon the limitations
which they have laid down in the course of their decisions,
that reconsideration and overruling of a prior decision is
to be confined to cases where the prior decision is
manifestly wrong and its maintenance
(1) 28 C.L.R 129.
(2) 4 C.L.R. 488.
738
is productive of great public mischief. The second is the
case in Gideon Nkambule v. The King(1), where the Privy
Council declined to follow its prior decision in Tumahole’s
case(2). In this case, the Privy Council, while it
reaffirmed the proposition that a prior decision upon a
given set of facts ought not to be reopened without the
greatest hesitation, explained why they, in fact, differed
from the previous one in the following passage:
"From a perusal of the judgment in Tumahole’s case(2), it is
apparent that the history of the adoption and promulgation
of the various statutes and proclamations dealing with the
effect of the evidence of accomplices in South Africa was
only partially put before the Board, and much material which
has now been ascertained was not presented to their Lord-
ships on that occasion. The present case, therefore, is one
in which fresh facts have been adduced which were not under
consideration when Tumahole’s case was decided, and
accordingly it is one in which, in their Lordships’ view,
they are justified in reconsidering the foundations on which
that case was determined".
This was a case where the question arose as to the
applicability of the English rule of law relating to ac-
complice evidence as laid down in Rex v. Baskerville(3),
viz., that a particular portion of the rule which lays down
that the evidence of one accomplice cannot be corroborated
by that of another. What was under consideration of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 85 of 147
Privy Council was whether a prior decision of the Judicial
Committee, construing a particular section of the relevant
statute applicable in that case in consonance with the above
rule, was correct. It will be noticed that the overruling
of the prior decision in this case was based on the fact
that important and relevant material was not placed before
the Judicial Committee in the earliar case. These cases
emphasise under what exceptional circumstances a prior
decision of the highest and final court in a country is
treated as not binding on itself.
(1) [1950] A.C,. 379. (2) [1949] A.C. 258.
(3)[1916] 2 K.B. 658.
Now what are the grounds in the present case to justify a
reconsideration of the prior decision ’ At this stage, I
cannot help noticing that the argument before us-as it
appears to me has taken a somewhat unusual course. I should
have thought that when the decision in a case so recent as
that in the United Motors case(2) given after full
consideration, is sought to be challenged, the first
question to have been considered was whether or not there
were circumstances to justify a reconsideration. It is only
after the Court came at least to a prima facie conclusion on
that preliminary matter that a reargument on the merits of
that decision should have been permitted. What has
happened, however, is that the correctness of the prior
decision was straightaway canvassed be. fore us and the
question as to the competency or the desirability of such
reconsideration occupied a later and subordinate part in the
arguments. I must confess to the feeling that this all
important question has accordingly suffered for want of due
consideration thereof at the stage of arguments before us.
Now., let us see what are the facts relating to the prior
decision. The decision was given on the 30th March, 1953.
The case itself was heard for 12 working days, i.e., from
the 9th February, to the 25th February, 1953. The Union of
India and as many as eight States were permitted to
intervene and their arguments were also heard. A perusal of
the judgments then given shows that every possible aspect
had been fully presented and considered. The decision was
that of a majority as against that of one dissenting Judge.
One of the learned Judges in the majority, though concurring
on the main point, was prepared to go further on one point
than what the majority held (though, as appears now, he is
prepared to go back on his concurrence). It is true that in
a later decision in State of Travancore-Cochin v. Shanmugha
Vilas Cashew Nut Factory(2), another Judge of this Court
expressed a view in disagreement with the view of the
majority in this case. But that was a decision given on the
8th May, 1953, more than a month after the judgment in the
prior
(1) [1958] B.C.B. 1069.
(2) [1954] S.C.R.53
94
740
case had been delivered and had become binding. The
question that directly arose for consideration in the later
case was not the one that had come in for consideration in
the earlier case. However this may be, it may also be
noticed that in a later decision of this Court in Himmatlal
Harilal Mehta v. The State of Madhya Pradesh(1) the law as
laid down in the earlier decision in the United Motors
case(2), was reiterated and it was stated that the
correctness of the view could no longer be questioned. (See
page 1126). In view of the above facts, it appears to me
prima facie, that there was no reason for reconsideration
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 86 of 147
except the fact that a different view had been taken by two
of the learned Judges of this Court and except the chance of
a differently constituted majority emerging on rehearing.
This, however, is sought to be justified on various grounds.
It is said that the prior decision does not merely determine
the rights of the two contending parties to that case but
has far reaching effects on the rights of the consuming
public and that it involves the adjudication of the taxing
power of the States as against the consuming public in
general. It is, therefore, said that, if that decision is
erroneous, it is our duty not to perpetuate the error. It
appears to me, with respect, that this is begging the
question. There is no absolute standard by which the
erroneous character of a previous decision can be as-
certained. What a previous decision has determined, must be
presumed to be right unless it can be pronounced to be
perverse or manifestly wrong. It is, therefore, a strong
thing to characterise a previous decision as erroneous
where, even on reconsideration, no unanimity is reached and
the previous view is supported by a substantial minority.
Nor, can the mere fact of one of the prior learned Judges
having gone back on his views be any criterion to determine
which out of his two views is erroneous. As regards the
suggestion of tax burden on the consuming public, it is
relevant to notice that the burden, if any, which arises
under the prior decision can only be by legis-
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 1122.
(2) [1953] S.C.R. 1069.
741
lative action of the very State in which the consuming
public are residents. The removal of the burden, if called
for,, is a matter which, under the Constitution, can be
brought about by democratic process which is available to
the consuming public, through its representatives in the
State Legislature. It appears to me that that is not a
matter for our consideration. I may be permitted to add
that in the course of the arguments there has been no
serious grievance made about the alleged burden on the
consuming public. But there has been a good deal of
emphasis on the harassment to the business community, i.e.,
to the out-of-State dealers, from whom the tax is primarily
collected and passed on, under the law, to the consumer. We
are not, however, concerned with any question arising from
such alleged hardship. The hardship such as it is, is one
that may have to be obviated by the adoption of a common and
agreed machinery by all the States for the assessment (as
distinguished from levy) and collection of the tax from out-
of-State dealers, or if necessary, by the passing of the
requisite legislation enabling this to be done. But that
hardship, if any, can afford no reason for reversing the
prior decision which, as will be shown later, has construed
article 286 consistently with the entire scheme of the
Constitution. That decision enables the consuming State to
derive an elastic source of revenue from its own residents
to make it available for the expanding needs of the State in
the discharge of the responsibilities allotted to it under
the Constitution. It is not for this Court now to choose
between the alleged hardship of the business community and
the interests of the consuming State and treat the former as
a ground for reconsideration.
It is next suggested that there is some vagueness, if not
inconsistency, in the prior majority judgment which
justifies reconsideration. It is said, with reference to a
particular passage quoted from the judgment, that it is only
buyers falling within the Explanation who were contemplated
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 87 of 147
as liable and not the out-of-State dealers, but that the
whole trend of the rest of the judgment and the actual,
decision runs
742
counter to this. With -very great respect, it is hardly
fair to read the decision as being in any way vague or
inconsistent with itself by extracting one single passage.
The passage relied on is at page 1084 and appears, in the
context where the question was being considered, as to
whether the phrase "actual delivery for consumption" has
reference to "delivery to the actual consumer-purchaser" or
delivery also to Cc& purchaser for eventual distribution to
the consumers in the State". The view indicated in the ex-
tracted passage was that delivery to a purchaser for
eventual distribution to the consumer in the State was also
"actual delivery for consumption" and hence the designation
of purchaser as liable to tax in that passage. That the
extracted passage was not meant to indicate that only such
purchaser was taxable and not the seller is quite clear from
the various passages in the immediately succeeding paragraph
at pages 1084 and 1085 where "taxation of sales or purchases
involving inter-State elements by the State in which the
goods are delivered for consumption in the sense
explained.above" is repeatedly referred to. All that can,
if at all, be said is that the decision has not, in terms,
indicated the choice between the seller or the purchaser as
regards taxability but has indicated either of them as
taxable.
It has next been said that the impugned decision is a recent
one and that "judicial opinion was divided, if not evenly
balanced". It is no doubt true that the prior decision is
only two years old. But that is not by itself a ground for
reconsideration. On the other hand, I should have thought
that the very fact of its being recent should militate
against reconsideration. The real test to my mind, as
indicated by Justice Dixon in Attorney-General for N.S.W. v.
Perpetual Trustee Co. Ltd.(1) is whether it was a fully
considered judgment and whether any fresh material has been
brought to the notice of the Court. In considering the
question whether a decision is open to reconsideration on
account of its being recent, it is of importance to observe
that our decisions become
(1) 85 C.L.R. 237,
743
declarations of law under article 141 and must be treated
normally as final from the very moment they are pronounced.
The finality of the decisions of this Court, which is the
court of last resort, will be greatly weakened and much
mischief done if we treat our own judgments, even though
recent, as open to reconsideration.
It has next been suggested that rectification of the error,
if any, in the view taken by the previous decision, is
difficult and that this could be brought about only by the
amendment of the legislative lists necessitating the consent
of the requisite number of States. With respect, I am
unable to appreciate this. The points of difference in the
two opposing views ultimately boil down to this. (1) Does
the Explanation to article 286(1) (a) taken with the
relevant legislative entry enable the consuming State to tax
fictional inside sales? (2) If so, does article 286(2)
override this taxing power? If the right construction of
article 286(2) is not what has been accepted by the majority
in the prior decision, what all was required to correct that
error would be to amend article 286(2) so as to make it
clear that it overrides article 286(1)(a) taken with the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 88 of 147
Explanation by the insertion therein of some appropriate
phrase like "notwithstanding Explanation to article
286(1)(a)". The responsibility for any such amendment, if
called for, should be left to the Parliament who, as recent
experience has shown, is quite capable of bringing about
constitutional amendments when it felt the clear necessity
for it.
The proper course for this Court, therefore, is to adopt the
attitude of Justice Dixon in the case in Attorney-General
for N.S. W. v. The Perpetual Trustee Co. Ltd.(1) wherein
notwithstanding that he came to a contrary conclusion, he
declined to disturb the prior decision. The case for not
disturbing the prior decision is all the stronger, where, as
happens in the present case, no unanimous opinion could be
reached in favour of overruling the prior decision.
Notwithstanding my opinion that there is no ground for
reconsideration of the prior decision of this Court
(1) 85 C.L.R. 237,
744
in the United Motors case(1), I propose, out of respect for
my learned brothers, who are prepared to take the opposite
view, to give my reasons why, on a fresh consideration of
the question involved, I am clearly in agreement with the
decision of the majority in the said case. Having had the
benefit of reading the judgments of my learned brothers,
Justice S. R. Das and Justice Venkatarama Ayyar, I propose
to confine myself mainly to the consideration of the con-
struction of article 286.
There can be no doubt that article 286 taken as a whole has
to be read in the context of the power vested in the States
for levying taxes on the sales or purchases of goods (other
than newspapers) under Entry 54 of List 11 of the Seventh
Schedule taken with article 246(3). Entry 54 does not, in
terms, say that the sales or purchases of goods contemplated
thereby as taxable are to be sales or purchases "within the
State". In this respect it is in contrast with Entry 26
which vests in the State the power to legislate in respect
of trade and commerce "within the State". The apparently
wide language of Entry 54 is in recognition of the theory
that in substance a tax on sale or purchase of goods is a
tax on the goods with reference to the event of sale or
purchase thereof. (See the United Motors case(1).Article 286
appears in Part XII of the Constitution relating to finance,
property, contracts and suits and is in Chapter I thereof
relating to finance. This is mainly concerned with the
problem of allocation of finances between the Centre and the
States in order to enable each to carry on the respective
governmental functions allotted to it under the
Constitution. Keeping this context in view as also the
avowed purpose of the article as indicated by the marginal
note, it may be taken that article 286 was intended to
indicate clearly the ambit of the taxing power of the State
on sales or purchases of goods and to limit it to a
demarcated field. To determine the exact scope of this
ambit and of the limitations, it is relevant to consider
what was the sales-tax law in operation just prior to the
new Constitution,
(1) [1963] S.C.R. 1069.
745
A careful land thorough examination of the Provincial Sales-
tax Acts at the time discloses the. following. There were
sales tax laws in operation in all the then nine Provinces,
which subsequently became Part A States under the
Constitution, as also in one Native State of -Mysore. The
pattern of the sales-tax laws in every one of the ten units
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 89 of 147
had the following common features (with minor additions and
variations). Under the charging section in each of these
Acts, tax was levied as against a "dealer" whose turnover of
sales (or purchases) exceeded a particular amount. A C
’dealer" was defined as a person carrying -on the business
of selling or supplying goods in the Province. "Sale" was
defined as meaning transfer of property in goods in the
course of trade for valuable consideration. In addition,
each one of these Sales-tax Acts had an Explanation to the
definition of the word "sale" to the effect that,
notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the Indian Sale
of Goods Act, a sale or purchase of goods "which were
actually in the Province" at the time when the contract of
sale or purchase is made, shall be deemed to have taken
place in the Province, wherever the ’contract for sale or
purchase may have been made. This was, broadly speaking,
the common pattern of every one of the sales-tax laws just
prior to the ’Constitution, subject to some further
additions to the definition of sale by a few of the States,
which will be presently noticed. This pattern indicates,
that apart from the purely internal sales-in respect of
which the power of taxation by the States was undoubted-the
States claimed the power to tax sales with an outside
element in the following two cases: (1) Where the transfer
of ownership in the goods was within the State (assumed to
be so) according to the Indian Sale of Goods Act. (2) Where
the goods which are the subject-matter of the sale are
actually in the Province at the time when the contract of
sale is made, i.e., at the crucial moment of transfer of
ownership. If I may express this in another way, these
Sales-tax Acts purported to tax sales as being within the
State, with reference to (1) situs (as assumed) under the
Sale of Goods Act, and
746
(2)situs (as probably assumed to be) under the general law.
It is possible that this general law was so assumed with
reference to the dictum of Lord Loreburn in Badische Anilin
Und Soda Fabrik v. Hickson(1) which suggests that the situs
Of the goods at the time of appropriation of the goods to a
particular sale is the situs of the sale. Whether the un-
derlying assumptions as regards both these criteria were
right or wrong is not material at this stage. While this
was the general pattern, four of the States claimed the
taxing power with reference to some additional criteria.
Madras and Mysore had an additional Explanation as follows:
"In case the contract was for the sale or purchase of future
goods by description, then, if the goods are actually
produced in the Province at any time, after the contract of
sale or purchase in respect thereof was made, the sale or
purchase shall be deemed to have taken place in the
Province, wherever the contract of sale or purchase might
have been made, notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
the Indian Sale of Goods Act".
Bihar and United Provinces had the following additional
Explanation. (Taken from the U. P. Act).
"Notwithstanding anything in the Indian Sale of Goods Act,
the sale of any goods which are produced or manufactured in
the Province by the producer or manufacturer thereof, shall,
wherever the delivery or contract of sale is made, be deemed
for the purposes of the Act to have taken place in the
Province".
Both these additions refer to future goods. Madras and
Mysore apparently treated such future goods as having been
appropriated to the sale the moment they were "actually
produced in the Province". The Bihar and U.P. addition was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 90 of 147
more or less the same and is limited to the case of sale by
the very manufacturer or/producer. The above additions are
in effect the same as category No. 2 of the general pattern
as applied to future goods. The underlying assumption
appears to be that future goods which are contracted to be
sold get appropriated thereto on their coming
(1) [1906] A.G. 419.
747
into existence and that thus a taxable sale emerges.
Besides the above mentioned variations from the general
pattern, Bihar and Uttar Pradesh had further additions to
the definition of sale relating to forward contracts which
virtually amounted to treating "agreement to sell" itself as
being the taxable event. This, it may be seen, had nothing
to do with the nexus theory of taxation of sales and has
been pronounced invalid by this Court in The Sales Tax
Officer, Pilibhit v. Messrs Budh Prakash Jai Prakash(1).
From the above broad summary it will be seen that the
Provinces were deriving sales-tax revenues not only in
respect of purely internal sales, but also in respect of
sales with an outside element. But in the generality o such
sales, the tax was leviable at either or both of the above
mentioned two points, i. e., (1) transfer of ownership
within the State, (2) actual existence of goods within the
State at the moment of such transfer. The ultimate consumer
in respect of ,such sales would normally be not a person
within the taxing State. Hence having, regard to the
structure of the sales-tax and the universally accepted
machinery there for which brings about the passing on, of
the incidence thereof, to the ultimate consumer, this must
have been felt to be inequitable. It appears to me that in
the adjustments called for on the passing of the
Constitution it was this feature of the pre-existing sales-
tax law which called for being remedied by the imposition of
a ban on taxation of sales with an outside element. But
that very consideration would equally indicate the
permissibility of taxing an outside sale where the ultimate
burden of it could be passed on to the resident of the very
taxing State. This could be done by making the consuming
State the taxing State. This, in my opinion, was the
background with reference to which article 286 was
incorporated in the Constitution,
The Constitution wanted to put a ban on taxation of sales
with an outside element on account of the inequity of making
the residents of other States
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 243.
95
748
contribute towards the resources of the selling State. But
in doing so it could not have intended to confine the
resources of the State under this head to the come
paratively small field of purely internal sales. Having
regard to the expanding needs of a social welfare State and
the limited taxing powers allocated to it, the Constitution
could not have meant to limit an elastic source of taxation
payable by its own consumers to the very small field of
purely internal sales,. it, therefore, selected and took out
one category of sale with an outside element from the field
of restriction, by adopting the device of a fictional inside
sale and left that category taxable so that the incidence
thereof may be the same as that of a purely internal sale.
This, to my mind, is the reason for the positive approach in
the Explanation by a deeming provision as to an inside sale.
It is on account of this common feature, as to the incidence
of taxation, that the fictional inside sale indicated in the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 91 of 147
Explanation was assimilated to a purely internal or intra-
State sale. It appears to me not very reasonable to assume
that the Explanation to article 286(1) (a) was required in
order merely to determine what an outside sale is. If the
Constitution intended nothing more than to ban taxation on
outside sales, it might well have contented itself with
declaring such a ban. I do not think that the Courts would
then have found any serious difficulty in construing
"outside sale" to mean, a sale with a substantial outside
element, or in the alternative, as a sale in which the
ownership has passed outside the State in the assumed sense
of the Sale of Goods Act. It was quite unnecessary and
indeed out of the way to define an outside sale as the
implied negative of a fictional inside sale. Nor can the
purpose of the Explanation be readily assumed to be to
obviate the supposed chaotic condition arising out of the
adoption of the nexus theory in the Sales-tax Acts. This
could have been sufficiently and effectively provided for-as
in fact it was done-by the ban imposed under article 286(2).
It has been suggested that the Explanation covers some
outside ,sales which do not fall within article 286(2) and
that
749
therefore the Explanation was necessary. But the
possibility of a few ingenuously illustrated cases like the
Gurgaon-Delhi illustration put forward in the course of
arguments-as falling outside the ambit of article 286(2) and
within the scope of article 286(1) (a) taken with the
Explanation, would not have been any adequate reason for the
Constitution involving itself in two such provisions, mostly
overlapping in effect. It appears to ’me, therefore, that
the reasons for having these two provisions were distinct
and different. Article 286 (1) (a) with the Explanation was
meant to prevent taxation whose ultimate incidence would
fall on residents of outside States. Article 286 (2) was
meant to prevent the taxing structure of the States being
availed so as unduly to hamper the freedom of inter-State
trade and commerce which, for the first time, the
Constitution declared by article 301. In this context it
also became necessary to provide that the foreign trade of
the country should not be affected at all by the sales-tax
structure of the States, while at the same time indicating
that the internal trade could be permitted to bear a limited
burden of taxation. It is in reconciliation of these
various ideas that article 286(1) and 12) were drafted.
Judged in this light the following is the only reasonable
construction of article 286(1)(a) taken with the
Explanation. This provision, while intended to prohibit
taxation by States on outside sales was also meant to
demarcate the boundary between inside sales and outside
sales and to assimilate one particular category of outside
sales into the field of inside sales and to make it
available for taxation by the consuming State. The
underlying aim of this demarcation was to obviate the
inequity of one State levying a tax whose ultimate incidence
was on the residents of another State but to provide instead
an elastic source of taxation which in its effect was to be
against its own residents. The field of export trade is
completely marked off as not being available for the
operation of sales-tax by article 286 (1) (b). Then the ban
on sales in the course of inter-State trade and commerce is
declared, This ban, which was for a
750
totally different purpose cannot be so construed as to
nullify the positive results intended and brought about by
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 92 of 147
article 286(1) (a) read with the Explanation. To such a
situation the principle of harmonious construction would
apply as enunciated by Lord Herschell in John Carter
Colquhoun v. Henry Brooks(1) at page 506 in the following
terms:
"It is beyond dispute that we are entitled and indeed bound
when construing the terms of any provision found in a
statute to consider any other parts of the Act which throw
light upon the intention of the legislature and which may
serve to shew that the particular provision ought not to be
construed as it would be if considered alone and apart from
the rest of the Act".
If, as my learned brother, Justice Venkatarama Aiyar, is
inclined to think, a sale cannot be said to have occurred in
the course of inter-State trade and commerce if the sale
follows the completion of the inter. State transportation
of goods, as for instance, would be the case when a hawking
pedlar brings goods across a State boundary and vends it
from door to door in another State, then clearly the fiction
which brings about the notional inside sale would by itself
be sufficient to take such a sale out of the category " of
the course of inter-State trade and commerce". Because, in
such a situation, while the transportation of goods across
State boundaries remains as a fact, the sale itself is
deemed to be inside the consuming State, the very purpose of
the fiction being to shift the situs of the sale for the
purpose of taxability. It is) I think, in this sense that
in the earlier decision, the learned then Chief Justice laid
down that by virtue of the Explanation this particular
category of inter-State sale became an intrastate sale, of
course, not for all purposes, but for the limited purposes
for which the Explanation was inserted I viz., the purpose
of demarcating the taxable field from the non-taxable field.
Looked at either on the ground of harmonious construction or
on the ground that the notional inside sale brought about by
the Explanation ceased,
(1) [1889] 14 A.C. 493, 506,
751
by that very fiction, to be part of the course of interState
trade and commerce for taxation purposes, the only proper
construction of article 286(2) would be that it cannot
override article 286 (1) (a) taken with the Explanation.
Having indicated the’ broad lines on which I have, on
independent consideration of the construction of articles
286(1) and (2), arrived at the same construction as that
adopted in the United Motors case(1), it is unnecessary for
me to deal with all the various aspects raised before us in
the course of the arguments, except to express my general
agreement with a good deal of the reasoning of my learned
brother, Justice Venkatarama Aiyar, on this part of the
case. It is, however, necessary to refer to a few matters
referred to in the contrary view.
The contrary opinion adopted by my learned brothers is based
almost entirely on the view that article 286 is inspired by
the anxiety of the Constitution to prevent the mischief of
multiple taxation, which arose from the operation of the
preexisting sales-tax laws. It is said that this result was
achieved by covering all loopholes from various angles,
articles 286(1)(a), 286(1)(b), 286(2) and 286(3) being said
to be the four plugging points. With respect, I can only
think that this is the outcome of an overdrawn picture as to
the chaos said to have been created by the earlier pre-
Constitution sales-tax laws. As already pointed out, the
common feature of all the previous ten Sales-Tax Acts, was
to bring about limited multiple taxation in respect of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 93 of 147
outside sales at two points, viz., (1) transfer of
ownership within the taxing State, and (2) the actual
presence of goods in the taxing State at the point of time
when the transfer of ownership takes place in another State.
It must be mentioned that none of the Sales-Tax Acts took
the mere presence of goods in the State as enabling it to
levy the tax. What was taken as enabling taxation was the
existence of goods within the State at the crucial point of
time, viz., the point at which the ownership became
transferred wherever it may be. Once this is appreciated,
it is difficult to agree with the assumption that
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1069.
752
under the pre-existing law, the taxation might get
multiplied in the course of the transit of goods under sale
through a, number of States, if the goods happened to remain
in, the successive States for some time. In none except one
of the States would the goods be in actual existence -at the
single crucial point of time of transfer of ownership.
Hence, I am clear in my mind that the previous legislation
would not have normally involved taxation of the same sale
with an outside element, at more than two points. (Whether
even this would not get limited by the fact that a "dealer"
is defined in all the then Acts as "within the Province"
would be a matter for consideration). Four of the then
provincial units had, as, already stated, an additional
criterion for taxation. But, so far as Madras and Mysore
were concerned that criterion which relates to future goods
cannot be cumulative with criterion two. So Car as U.P. and
Bihar are concerned which authorised the manufacturing State
as such to levy the tax, it appears to me that if it is
borne in mind that this is limited to the sale by the very
manufacturer, this.was also not likely to operate as a
cumulative point. Even otherwise these additional criteria
might, if at all, have given rise to taxation at a third
point, when the sale transaction had to be put through via
these particular States. But even so there is no
justification for the impression of chaotic conditions
resulting therefrom which has been assumed. There is no
evidence before us that prior to the Constitution there was
in fact multiple taxation of sales in operation, at any rate
at more than the two points as explained by me above. Hence
in the light of the detailed scrutiny of the provisions in
the various Sales-Tax Acts which were in force prior to the
Constitution) I cannot help feeling that the mischief of
multiple taxation which might if at all have existed in a
limited measure as pointed out above, has been overstated.
No doubt, the future prevention of such multiple taxation by
invoking the nexus theory recognised by the Privy Council in
Wallace’s case(1) may well be one of the result of article
286,
(1) [1948] F.C.R. 1.
753
But I am unable to think that the main purpose underlying
each and every one of the provisions of article 286 was to
prevent the continuance of preexisting chaotic conditions of
multiple taxation by virtue of the nexus theory. I cannot
help feeling that a wholly wrong impression of the pre-
existing state of law in this respect has been created by
overlooking that the existence of goods in a particular
State has been taken as a taxing point only if that
existence was at the crucial moment of transfer of
ownership. (A statement showing the definition of " sale"
under each of the Sales-Tax Acts in operation just prior to
the Constitution is appended-as Appendix I-for reference).
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 94 of 147
I On the construction of article 286, reference has also
been made in the dissenting view to sub-article (3) of
article 286 which runs as follows:
"No law made by the Legislature of a State imposing, or
authorising the imposition of, a tax on the sale or purchase
of any such goods as have been declared by Parliament by law
to be essential for the life of the community shall have
effect unless it has been reserved for the consideration of
the President and has received his assent".
With great respect, I am unable to see its bearing on the
question at issue. It is a totally different kind of
restriction from what sub-articles (1) and (2) bring about.
While sub-articles (1) and (2) impose certain bans on
taxation what sub-article (3) does is not to impose a ban at
all but to impose a fetter in respect of taxation on sales
of essential goods declared as such by the Parliament by
requiring that before such a taxation-law can have any
effect, it should be reserved for the consideration of the
President and receive his assent. In this respect it is in
line with what would happen if any other State legislation
passed by that Legislature is presented to the Governor for
his assent and be reserves the same for the consideration of
the President. The only difference is that while in the
latter the reservation for the President is optional, in the
case of such essential goods the reservation is compulsory.
Subject to
754
this, even essential goods continue to be, in theory and by
Constitution, taxable (by the States themselves) in respect
of sales thereof. I am, therefore, unable to see the
bearing of this provision on the construction of the other
two provisions which bring about a total or contingent ban
of taxation in respect of the sales to which they have
reference.
There is one other matter which has been stressed or implied
in the dissenting view and it is this. The assumption is
that even a single point tax on a sale arising in the course
of inter-State trade would be a burden on the freedom of
inter-State trade and commerce guaranteed under the
Constitution by article 301 which runs as follows:
"Subject to the other provisions of this Part, trade,
commerce and intercourse throughout the territory of India
shall be free".
Now it is not disputed that a tax on a purely internal sale
which occurs as a result of the transportation of goods from
a manufacturing centre within the State to a purchasing
market within the same State is clearly Permissible and not
hit by anything in the Constitution. If a sale in that kind
of trade can bear the tax and is not a burden on the freedom
of trade, it is difficult to see why a single point tax on
the same kind of sale where a State boundary intervenes bet-
ween the manufacturing centre and the consuming centre need
be treated as a burden, especially where that tax is
ultimately to come out of the residents of the very State by
which such sale is taxable. Freedom of trade and commerce
applies as much within a State as outside it. It appears to
me again, with great respect, that there is no warrant for
treating such a tax as in any way contrary either to the
letter or the spirit of the freedom of trade, commerce and
intercourse provided under article 301.
For all the above reasons’, I am quite clear in my mind that
the view taken in the prior decision, viz., that the
consuming State has the present power to tax a fictional
inside sale which falls within the scope of the Explanation
and that the said power is not affected by article 286(2)
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 95 of 147
and that article 286(2)
755
cannot be construed as overriding article 286 (1) (a) read
with the Explanation, is correct and that there is no reason
to depart from that decision.
The real difficulty, if any, that arises from this view is
as regards what has been called the extraterrestrial
operation of the tax which such a view may involve. In the
conclusion reached by my learned brothers who are prepared
to uphold the dissenting, view taken in the prior decision
that question does not arise for consideration and has, been
left untouched. I do not, therefore, feel called upon to go
into it or to commit myself to any particular view on this
somewhat difficult, question. I am doubtful whether, as
between the component States of a Union of the kind, which
India is under the Constitution, there can be any question
of extra-territoriality. in the sense of the doctrine that
one nation does not act in aid of the revenue laws of
another (and foreign) nation. It is true that a defined
geographical part of India constitutes the territory of each
unit called the State and that the governance of that unit
is committed to that State. But it appears to me that on
that account, the territory of one State is not a foreign
territory in respect of another State, when freedom of
movement and a number of other common fundamental rights are
guaranteed. On the other hand, I think it permissible to
suggest that where the various States owe their existence to
the same Constitution and are subject to its common
operation, any taxing power vested in an individual State
must carry with it the incidental implication of
enforceability, if need be, in any other State within the
Union when the very nature of that tax,, as contemplated by
the Constitution involves it. In this context article 261
(1), which enjoins that full faith and credit shall be given
throughout the territory of India to public acts, records
and judicial proceedings of the Union and of every State,
may well be relied upon to justify such a view. I am aware
that this has been generally taken as applicable to judicial
and legislative proceedings. But- the language of the
article is capable of wider application. I do not, however,
wish to go into the,
96
756
matter further because even if in the course of the
administration of sales-tax, of the kind permissible, in the
view of article 286 which the prior decision has accepted,
there emerges the element of extra-territorial operation of
such a tax, that by itself can be no reason for negativing
the construction of articles 286(1) and (2) above indicated.
In this context it is necessary to bear in mind the
following clear dictum of the Privy Council in British
Columbia Electric Railway Co., Ltd. v. The King(1):
"A legislature which passes a law having extraterritorial
operation may find that what it has enacted cannot be
directly enforced, but the Act is not invalid on that
account, and the courts of its country must enforce the law
with the machinery available to them".
The question, therefore, of extra-territoriality is not
germane for construction of article 286.
At the present stage we are not concerned with the
enforcement of the levy of the assessed tax but with the
assessment of the tax. All that we are concerned with is
the validity of the steps so far taken by the assessment
authorities and particularly of the notice dated the 29th
May, 1952, which intimates that on non-compliance before the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 96 of 147
14th June, 1952, proceedings for assessment on the basis of
"best judgment" will be made. That step, to my mind, is
perfectly valid as appears from the following. In Whitney
v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue (1), the House of Lords
by a majority held that where a tax was leviable on a non-
resident, a requisition served upon him by post to file a
return and to produce accounts was valid so as to entitle
the taxing authority to make an assessment on the basis of
best judgment on non-compliance with the requisition. The
following passage from Lord Wrenbury’s speech at page 56 is
instructive:
"There is a second question in the case-namely, whether the
appellant has been duly brought within the machinery for
assessment provided by the Act. This turns upon section 7.
There was sent to the appellant by post addressed to him in
the United
(1)[1946]A.C.527,542.
(2) [1926] A.C. 87.
757
States a notice under section 7, sub-section 2, requiring
him to make a return. It is contended that there ’was no
right to post him such a notice so addressed. The case, it
is contended, is similar to the case of service of a writ
out of the jurisdiction. I do not agree. It is similar
rather to the service of a notice of dishonour of a bill or
of a notice to quit or of a notice requiring payment of
calls upon shares as a preliminary to forfeiture in default
of payment. It is not a step in judicial proceeding but a
step which will create inter-partes a state of things in
which judicial proceedings can subsequently be taken in
default of compliance".
It may be that some or all of the provisions in the Bihar
Act which contemplate enforcement out of State or create
penalties for non-compliance out of State may require closer
examination when the validity thereof is directly
challenged. It may also be that the harassment consequent
on such outside operation may require to be remedied either
by agreed co-ordination between the States or by appropriate
legislation, if need be. These, however, are not relevant
considerations for us on the question we have now to deal
with.
I am accordingly clear in my opinion that this appeal should
be dismissed with costs.
APPENDIX-1.
STATEMENT SHOWING THE DEFINITION OF "SALE" UNDER EACH OF THE
SALES-TAX ACTS IN OPERATION JUST PRIOR TO THE COMMENCEMENT
OF THE CONSTITUTION.
(Vide Page 753).
MADRAS SALES-TAX ACT, 1939.
"Sale" (with all its grammatical variations and cognate
expressions) means 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, (and includes also a transfer of property in
goods involved in the execu-
758
tion of a works contract, but does not include a mortgage,
hypothecation, charge or pledge;)
(Explanation 1: A transfer of goods on the hirepurchase or
other instalment system of payment shall, notwithstanding
the fact that the seller retains the title in the goods as
security for payment of the price, be deemed to be a sale.)
Explanation 2: Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, the sale or purchase of
any goods shall be deemed, for the purposes of this Act, to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 97 of 147
have taken place in this Province, wherever the contract of
sale or purchase might have been made-
(a)if the goods were actually in this Province at the time
when the contract of sale or purchase in respect thereof was
made, or
(b)in case the contract was for the sale or purchase of
future goods by description, then, if the goods are actually
produced in this Province at any time after the contract of
sale or purchase in respect thereof was made.
BENGAL FINANCE (SALES-TAX) ACT, 1941.
"Sale" means any transfer of property in goods for cash or
deferred payment or other valuable consideration ration....
Explanation 2: Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, the sale of any goods
which are actually in West Bengal at the time when the
contract of sale (as defined in that Act) in respect thereof
is made, shall, wherever the said contract of sale is made,
be deemed for the purposes of this Act to have taken place
in West Bengal.
BOMBAY SALES-TAX ACT, 1946.
"Sale" means any transfer of property in goods for cash or
deferred payment or other valuable consideration...........
759
Explanation 2: Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
the Indian Sale of Goods Set, 1930, the sale of any goods
which are actually in the Province of Bombay at the time
when the contract for sale (as defined in that Act) is made
in respect thereof, shall, wherever the said contract of
sale is made, be deemed for the purposes of this Act to have
taken place in the Province of Bombay.
ASSAM SALES-TAX ACT, 1947.
"Sale" means any transfer of property in goods by any person
for cash or deferred payment or other valuable consideration
Explanation: Notwitbstanding anything to the contrary in
the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, the sale of any goods
which are actually in the Province at the time when the
contract of sale (as defined in that Act) in respect thereof
is made, shall, irrespective of the place where the said
contract is made, be deemed for the purposes of this Act to
have taken place in the Province.
BIHAR SALES-TAX ACT, 1947.
"sale" means * any transfer of property in goods for
cash or deferred payment or other valuable consideration....
Provided further that notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, the sale of
any goods-
(i) which are actually in Bihar at the time when, in
respect thereof, the cntract of sale as defined in section 4
of that Act is made, or
(ii) which are produced or manufactured in Bihar by the
producer or manufacturer thereof, shall, wherever the
delivery of contract of sale is made, be deemed for the
purposes of this Act to have taken place in Bihar;
Provided further that the sale of goods in respect of a
forward contract, whether goods under such con-
760
tract are actually delivered or not, shall be deemed to have
taken place on the date originally agreed upon for delivery.
CENTRAL PROVINCES AND BERAR SALES-TAX ACT, 1947.
"Sale means any transfer of property in goods for cash or
deferred payment or other valuable consideration
Explanation 2: Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 98 of 147
the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, the sale of any goods
which are actually in the Central Provinces and Berar at the
time when the contract of sale as defined in that Act in
respect thereof is made, shall wherever the said contract of
sale is made, be deemed for the purpose of this Act to have
taken place in the Central Provinces and Berar.
ORISSA SALES-TAX ACT, 1947.
"Sale" means any transfer of property in goods for cash or
deferred payment or other valuable consideration...........
Provided further that notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, the sale of
any goods which are actually in Orissa at the time when, in
respect thereof, the contract of sale as defined in section
4 of that Act is made, shall, wherever the said contract of
sale is made, be deemed for the purpose of this Act to have
taken place in Orissa.
MYSORE SALES-TAX ACT, 1948.
"Sale" means every transfer of the property in goods by one
person to another in the course of trade or business for
cash or deferred payment or other valuable consideration....
*
761
the Sale of Goods Act, 1932, the sale or purchase of any
goods shall be deemed, for the purposes of this Act, to have
taken place in Mysore, wherever the contract of sale might
have been made;
(a) if the goods were actually in Mysore at the time when
the contract of sale or purchase in respect there of was
made, or
(b)in case the contract was for the sale or purchase of
future goods by description, then, if the goods are
actually produced in Mysore at any time after the contract
of sale or purchase in respect thereof was made.
EAST PUNJAB GENERAL SALES-TAX ACT, 1948.
"Sale" means any transfer of property in goods for cash or
deferred payment or other valuable consideration.........
Explanation 2: Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, the sale of any goods
which are actually in East Punjab at the time when the
contract of sale (as defined in that Act) in respect thereof
is made, shall, wherever the said contract of sale is made,
be deemed for the purposes of this Act to -have taken place
in East Punjab.
UNITED PROVINCES SALES-TAX ACT, 1948.
"Sale" means any transfer of property in goods for cash or
deferred payment or other valuable consideration
Explanation II: Notwithstanding anything in the Indian Sale
of Goods Act, 1930, or any other law for the time being in
force, the sale of any goods-
(i) which are actually in the United Provinces at the time
when in respect thereof, the contract of sale as defined in
section 4 of that Act is made, or
(ii)which are produced or manufactured in the United
Provinces by the producer or manufacturer
762
thereof, shall, wherever the delivery or conttact of sale is
made, be deemed for the purposes of this Act to have taken
place in the United Provinces.
Explanation 111. Where goods under a forward contract are
not actually delivered, the sale in respect of such contract
shall be deemed to have been completed on the date
originally agreed upon for delivery.
Note: The omitted portions in the definitions other than
those in the Madras Act are to the same effect as those
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 99 of 147
shown within brackets in the Madras definition.
VENKATARAMA AYYAR J.-The appellant is a Company registered
under the Indian Companies Act carrying on business in the
manufacture and sale of sera, biological products and
medicines. Its registered office is at No. 153, Dharamtalla
Street, Calcutta, and its laboratory and factory are
situated at Baranagar, 24 Parganas, West Bengal. The first
respondent is the State of Bihar, and respondents 2 and 3
are respectively the Secretary and the Assistant Secretary
of Commercial Taxes. On the 18th December 1951, the second
respondent issued a notice under section 13(5) of the Bihar
Sales Tax Act, 1947 (Act XIX of 1947) (hereinafter referred
to as the Act) calling upon the appellant to register itself
as a dealer under the Act and to submit a return for
assessment of sales tax., To this the appellant sent a reply
on the 8th January, 1952 disputing its liability on various
grounds, and after further correspondence between the
parties which it is needless to set out,, the third
respondent sent a notice on the 20th May 1952 that if the
appellant failed to comply with the notice dated the 18th
December 1951 by the 14th June 1952, steps would-be I taken
to assess tax on the basis of best judgment. The appellant
replied by filing the application out of which the present
appeal arises, under article 226 of the Constitution for a
writ of prohibition restraining the respondents from
proceeding with
763
the assessment. It was alleged in the petition that as the
appellant had no place of business within the State of
Bihar, the provisions of the Act under which it was sought
to be taxed were ultra vires as extraterritorial in
operation, and that further those provisions were repugnant
to article 286(2) of the Constitution and were therefore
void. The State of Bihar, which will hereafter be referred
to as the respondent, resisted the application on the ground
firstly, that it was not maintainable for the reason that
the appellant had, under the provisions of the Act, a right
of appeal against the assessment to the appropriate
authorities, and secondly, that as the sales proposed to be
taxed must be deemed to have taken place by reason of the
Explanation to article 286(1) (a) within Bihar, the
provisions of the Act imposing tax on a non-resident seller
were neither ultra vires nor unconstitutional. The learned
Judges of the High Court upheld both these contentions and
dismissed the application, and this appeal has been
preferred against their judgment on a certificate granted
under article 132(1) of the Constitution. In view of the
importance of the issues involved, leave of the Court was
sought by and granted to ten States, one commercial firm and
one individual dealer. Nine out of the ten States, namely
Orissa, PEPSU, Punjab, Madhya Pradesh, Madras, Mysore,
Rajasthan, Travancore-Cochin and Uttar Pradesh, have
intervened and supported the respondents. One State, West
Bengal, represented by the learned Attorney-General
supported the appellant, and so did the Tata Iron and Steel
Co., Ltd., and one M. K. Kuriakose.
On the arguments addressed before us, the following points
arise for determination:
1.Whether the application for a writ of prohibition is
maintainable?
2.Whether the Explanation to article 286(1)(a) confers
authority on the State Legislatures to impose tax on sales
falling within its purview?
3.Whether the sales covered by the Explanation to article
286(1) (a) are subject to the prohibition contained in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 100 of 147
article 286(2)?
97
764
4.Whether the Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1947 is invalid on the
ground that it is extra-territorial in its operation, and
ultra vires the power of the State Legislature?
5.Whether the assessment proposed to be made on the
appellant is not authorised by the Explanation to article
286(1) (a)?
1. On the question of the maintainability of the
application for a writ of prohibition, it was observed by
the learned Judges that under section 13(5) of the impugned
Act, the Commissioner was competent to decide whether the
appellant was a person liable to pay tax under the Act, that
even if he came to an erroneous conclusion on the merits,
that did not affect his jurisdiction over the subject-
matter, that the Act itself provided in sections 24 and 25 a
complete and effective machinery by way of appeal and
revision for correction of such errors, and that accordingly
a writ of prohibition was not the proper remedy. If the
learned Judges intended to lay down that a writ of
prohibition should not issue because another remedy was open
under the Act, that cannot be supported. The existence of
another remedy is a very material circumstance to be taken
into account when the Court is called upon to issue a writ
of certiorari, but wholly different considerations arise
when the writ asked for is prohibition. Writ of prohibition
is issued whenever a subordinate Court or Tribunal usurps
jurisdiction which does not belong to it, and when that has
been shown, the issue of the writ, though not of course, is
of right and not discretionary. The point to be determined,
therefore, is whether in taking proceedings under section
13(5) of the Act, respondents 2 and 3 acted without
jurisdiction or in excess of it. The contention of the
appellant is that the Bihar Legislature had no competence to
tax the sales in question, because they were effected in
Bengal, and the appellant was not carrying on business
within the State of Bihar. If this contention is well-
founded, then section 13(5) of the Act would be void and
inoperative in its application as against the appellant, and
the proceedings taken thereunder would
765
in consequence be without jurisdiction. We are not here
concerned with a statute whose vires is not in question, and
which confers jurisdiction on any authority to take
proceedings if certain facts exist and the enquiry directed
by the authority is as to whether those facts exist. The
determination in such a case is incidental to the effective
exercise by the authority of its undisputed jurisdiction and
if, as a result of that enquiry, it came to an erroneous
conclusion, there is no error of jurisdiction, and it might
well be contended in that case that the remedy of the party
aggrieved was to resort to the machinery provided in the
statute itself by way of appeal or revision, and that a writ
of prohibition would be misconceived. But here, the
contention of the appellant is that the statute itself is
void in so far as it authorises the imposition of a tax on
dealers who are not residents within the State or do not
carry on business there, and that, in consequence, the
proceedings taken under section 13(5) of the Act should be
restrained on the ground of want of jurisdiction. It is no
answer to this contention that the appellant should seek
redress through the channels provided in the Act therefor.
Indeed, the contention that the Act is ultra vires is not
one which the Tribunals constituted under the Act, whether
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 101 of 147
original, appellate, or revisional, could entertain,, their
duty being merely to administer the Act.
It was argued by Mr. N. C. Chatterjee that if the tax was
illegal, as contended by the appellant, then the proceedings
taken for imposing the same would amount to unconstitutional
interference with the fundamental right of the appellant to
carry on business guaranteed under article 19(1) (g), and
that the courts were bound to interfere under article 226.
He relied on the decisions of this court in Mahommad Yasin
v. The Town Area Committee, Jalalabad(1), The State of
Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd.("), and Himmatlal
Harilal Mehta v. The State of Madhya Pradesh(3). That is
undoubtedly the position in law, but as the appellant is a
Company registered under
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 578. (2) [1953] S.C.R. 1069,
(3)[1954] S.C.R. 1122.
766
the Indian Companies Act and the question whether a juristic
person is a citizen for the purpose of article 19(1) (g) is
still an open one, I would prefer not to rest my decision on
this ground. It is sufficient for the purpose of this
appeal to hold that a writ of prohibition should issue, if
the appellant establishes that the proceedings taken against
it under section 13(5) of the Act are without jurisdiction.
The contentions urged in support of that position must now
be examined.
2. It is firstly argued that the Explanation to article
286 (1) (a) on which the validity of the impugned Act
depends confers no authority on the State Legislature to
impose a tax on sales falling within its purview. To
appreciate the contentions advanced on either side, it must
be mentioned that the Act as passed in 1947 contemplated the
imposition of a tax on residents within the State. They
might be natural persons, or they might be juristic persons
carrying on business within the State. The business might
be carried on in person or through agents. But if the
persons who carried on the business of buying and selling
did not reside within the State or carry on business there,
then the Act did not authorise the imposition of tax on
them. That was the effect of the definition of "dealer" as
meaning "any person who carries on the business of selling
or buying goods in Bihar". Then came the Constitution, and
the Explanation to article 286(1) (a) enacted that sales
shall be deemed to have taken place in that State in which
the goods are delivered for consumption, notwithstanding
that title to them passed in another State. The
construction which the respondent puts on the Explanation is
that it confers on the States proprio vigore, a power to tax
sales when the conditions mentioned therein are satisfied.
Agreeably to this view, the Bihar Finance Act, 1950 (Act
XVII of 1950) substituted for the words "who carries on
business of selling or buying goods in Bihar" the word$ "who
sells or supplies any goods". The point to be noted is that
the words "in Bihar" which occurred in the previous
definition were omitted, In 1951 by the Adaptation
767
of Laws Order, a new section, section 33, was added, and
that is as follows:
"33. (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act,
(a) a tax on the sale or purchase of goods shall not be
imposed under this Act-
(i) where such sale or purchase takes place outside the
State of Bihar; or
(ii) where such sale or purchase takes place in the course
of import of the goods into, or export of the goods out of,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 102 of 147
the territory of India;
(b) a tax on the sale or purchase -of any goods shall not,
after the 31st day of March 1951, be Imposed where such sale
or purchase takes place in the course of inter-State trade
or commerce except in so far as Parliament may by law
otherwise provide.
(2) The Explanation to clause (1) of article 286 of the
Constitution shall apply for the interpretation of sub-
clause (1) of clause (a) of sub-section (1)".
(2) The contention of the respondent is that the appel-
lant has become liable to be taxed under these provisions.
The appellant replies that article 286(1) (a) is restrictive
in its scope, that it merely takes away a power to tax which
the State might otherwise possess, but that it does not
positively confer on a State a power to tax where it did not
previously exist, and that on its true construction, it
would operate to divest Bengal of its power to tax but not
to vest it in Bihar. To decide which of these two
contentions is the correct one, it is necessary to examine
what the law was prior to the enactment of article 286(1)
(a) and the Explanation, what the defect was which was
disclosed in the working of that law, and how it was
proposed to remedy it.
Under the Government of India Act, 1935, the power to enact
a law imposing tax on sale of goods was conferred on the
Provincial Legislature by Entry 48 in List II. Under
sections 99(1) and 100(3) that law must be for the Province,
and as interpreted in Wallace Bros. v. 1. T. Commissioner,
Bombay(1), that meant that there should be sufficient
territorial
(1) (1948] F.C.R. I.,
768
connection between the person proposed to be taxed and the
State seeking to tax with reference to the subject matter of
the taxation. Dealing with this aspect of the matter,
Patanjali Sastri, C. J. observed in The State of Bombay v.
The United Motors (India) Ltd.(1) as follows:
"The expression ’for such State or any part thereof’ cannot,
in our view, be taken to import into Entry 54 the
restriction that the sale or purchase referred to must take
place within the territory of that State. All that it means
is that the laws which a State is empowered to make must be
for the purposes of that
State.................................... In the case of
sales-tax it is not necessary that the sale or purchase
should take place within the territorial limits of the State
in the sense that all the ingredients of a sale like the
agreement to sell, the passing of title, delivery of the
goods, etc. should have a territorial connection with the
State. Broadly speaking, local activities of buying and
selling carried on in the State in relation to local goods
would be a sufficient basis to sustain the taxing power of
the State, provided of course, such activities ultimately
resulted in a concluded sale or purchase to be taxed".
This statement of the law was again adopted by this Court in
Pappatlal Shah v. The State of Madras(2) . Vide the
observations of Mukherjea, J. (as he then was) at pages 682
and 683. In this view, a law of the State imposing a tax on
sales must, to be valid, fulfill two conditions. Firstly,
there must be a completed sale involving the transfer of
title in the goods to the purchaser. It is only then that
the power to tax arises. That was held by this Court in The
Sales Tax Officer, Pilibhit v. Messrs Budh Prakash Jai
Prakash (1). Secondly, there must be sufficient territorial
nexus between the transaction and the State which seeks to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 103 of 147
tax it. This condition undoubtedly introduced an element of
uncertainty and vagueness in the law with the result that
the power to tax which was linked up with it, had
indefiniteness which could ].end itself to
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069. (2) [1953] S.C.R, 677.
(3) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 243,
769
abuse. How expansive was the area open to the State
Legislature to impose a tax on the basis of the nexus theory
is forcibly brought out by Bose, J. in the following
observations in The State of Bombay v. The United Motors
(India) Ltd.(1) at page 1101:
"The difficulty is apparent when one begins to split a sale
into its component parts and analyse them. When this is
done, a sale is found to consist of a number of ingredients
which can be said to be essential in the sense that if any
one of them is missing there is no sale. The following are
some of them: (1) the existence of goods which form the
subject-matter of the sale, (2) the bargain or contract
which, when executed., will result in the passing of the
property in the goods for a price, (3) the payment, or
promise of payment, of a price, (4) the passing of the
title. When all take place in one State, there is no
difficulty. The situs of the sale is the place in which all
the ingredients are brought into being. But when one or
more ingredients take place in different States, what
criterion is one to employ? It is impossible to say that
any of these ingredients is more essential than any other
because the result is always the same the moment you take
one away. There is then no sale".
Many were the problems which this state of the law created
both for the State and for the consumers. Whether the fact
on which a State law seeks to tax is sufficient nexus must,
except in some obvious cases, be open to debate, and until a
court pronounces on it, there must be a cloud of uncertainty
hanging over the validity of the enactment. More than that,
when the several elements which go to make up a sale are
distributed over different States it might happen that the
same transaction might be subjected to tax by more States
than one and the burden thereof must ultimately fall on the
consumers. It was this, the possibility of multiple
taxation that was the most serious defect in the law as it
stood prior to the Constitution, and it was to remedy this
that a new provision., article 286(1)(a) with its
Explanation was
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069.
770
enacted. It is as follows:
"286. (1) No law of a State shall impose, or authorise the
imposition of, a tax on the sale or purchase of goods where
such sale or purchase takes place-
(a) outside the State.
Explanation.-For the purposes of sub-clause (a), a sale or
purchase shall be deemed to have taken place in the State in
which the goods have actually been delivered as a direct
result of such sale or purchase for the purpose of
consumption in that State, notwithstanding the fact that
under the general law relating to sale of goods the property
in the goods has by reason of such sale or purchase passed
in another State".
It will be convenient hereafter to refer to the State in
which title to the goods passes as the selling State, and
the State in which goods are delivered for consumption as
the delivery State.
Now we may examine how this provision is designed to put an
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 104 of 147
end to multiple taxation. The scheme of the enactment is to
fix, what had not been done under the Government of India
Act, 1935, the situs of the sale, and for that purpose, to
classify it into two categories, sale inside the State and
sale outside the State. On what principle the situs was
fixed will presently be considered. But when once that is
done, the problem is solved. If a sale is inside a State,
the power of that State to tax it under Entry 54 remains
unaffected. But if the sale is outside a State, article
286(1) (a) prohibits that State from taxing it. This
process must have the effect of eliminating multiple
taxation, because a sale must be either inside or outside a
State, and if it is inside one State it must be outside all
other States. In this respect, article 286(1) (a) effected
a fundamental alteration in the law under Entry 48 in List
II and section 100(3) of the Government of India Act, 1935,
as construed by the courts. Whereas under these provisions
a State could tax irrespective of where a sale took place,
provided there was sufficient territorial nexus, under
article 286(1) (a) that power can be exercised only
771
when it takes place inside the State, mere nexi being
insufficient to support such a power. The theory of nexus
as a source of jurisdiction to tax was thus abandoned, and
the power to tax was annexed to the situs of the sale to be
exercised by the State wherein it is fixed and as a given
sale can take place only in one State and in no other, it
must follow that the power of taxing that sale is capable of
exercise only by one State and not others.
The foundation on which this scheme rests is the location of
a sale in a particular State. But how is this to be done?
When all the essential elements of a sale take place within
one State, the question presents no difficulty. But what,
if they are distributed over several States? It is to deal
with this situation that the Explanation has been enacted.
Its purpose is to fix the situs of a sale when it is of an
inter-State character,, and it does that by providing that
it shall be deemed to have taken place in that State in
which the goods are delivered for consumption. What the
significance of the words " for consumption" is, will be
considered in due course. But that apart, it is delivery of
the goods that has been adopted by the Constitution as the
determining factor in fixing the situs of the sale, not the
agreement to sell, nor the passing of title to the goods,
nor other ingredients of sale, and there is good reason for
this. Where an agreement to sell is concluded by
correspondence as generally it must be when the transaction
is of an inter-State character., difficult questions might
crop up as to where the agreement was concluded. Likewise,
the conception as to passing of property in the goods is
largely juristic and not seldom obscured by legal subtleties
and refinements, and it is conceivable that there might be
conflict among the States as to in which of them the title
has passed. ]But delivery is a matter of fact, about which
there ought to be no dispute, and it is consistent with the
purpose of article 286(1)(a) that the Explanation should
have chosen delivery as the determining element in the
transaction of sale. Now, the question to be decided ,is
whether in the light of the above discussion, the
98
772
contention of the appellant that the Explanation operates
only to deprive the selling State of its power to tax the
sale, and that it confers no authority on the delivery State
to impose a tax can be accepted. An obvious objection to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 105 of 147
this view might at once be stated. If the Explanation has
no application to any but the selling State, it must follow
that all the other States including the delivery State will
have power to impose a tax under Entry 54 uncontrolled by
the Explanation, and that will bring into play the nexus
theory with its attendant evil of multiple taxation. On
this contention, therefore, article 286 (1) (a) must be held
to have failed to achieve what it set about to do. A
construction which leads to such a conclusion cannot be
accepted unless there are cogent reasons therefor. What are
those reasons? It is urged that article 286 (1) (a) does
not, in terms, purport to confer a power on the State to
impose a tax on sale, that, on the other hand, it assumes
the pre-existence of such a power in the State, and then
proceeds to restrict it, that the substantive provisions
which confer power to tax are Entry 54 in List II and
article 246(3), that when a State has no power to tax under
those provisions, then article 286(1) (a) could have no
application as there could be no question of restricting
what does not exist, and that it could not, therefore,
operate to confer on it such a power. In support of this
position, reliance is placed on the form of article 286(1)
(a) that no law of a State shall impose a tax on outside
sale. This prescription, it is argued, is merely negative
and destructive and not positive and creative in its
content.
But this contention does not give sufficient effect to the
Explanation which is in substance and form positive, and it
also fails to take adequately into consideration the purpose
of the enactment. The object of article 286(1)(a)-and there
is no dispute about it -is to avoid multiple taxation and
that, as already stated, was sought to be achieved by fixing
the situs of sale in one State in accordance with the
Explanation. The scheme of the enactment must, by its very
nature, have both a positive and a negative
773
aspect. In so far as it lays down which of the several
States could tax-and it does that in the Explanation -it is
positive in its aspect, and in so far as it prohibits the
other States from imposing tax-and it does this in the body
of article 286(1)(a)-it is negative in its aspect. The body
of article 286(1) (a) and the Explanation together form
parts of a single enactment charged with a single purpose
and to refer to it either as negative or positive in
character can only be a partial and not an accurate
statement of the true position. It is no doubt true that
article 286 (1) (a) assumes that there is in the State a
power to tax aliunde, and then proceeds to restrict it. But
it is not inconsistent with this to construe the Explanation
as positive in character. The problem of multiple taxation,
which it is the object of the enactment to avoid, is
possible only when the sale is of an interState character,
and when the Explanation enacts that in such cases the sale
shall be deemed to have taken place in the delivery State,
that is at once a recognition and a declaration by the
Constitution that delivery is sufficient nexus on which the
State can tax the sale under Entry 54. The object of this
declaration was to remove the question from the arena of
controversy and settle it once and for all. It is thus a
positive enactment and not the less so, because it is
declaratory in character and it is also restrictive in that
it takes away by necessary implication the power of taxation
on the basis of other nexi which other States would have had
under Entry 54. No purpose would be served by entering into
a subtle disputation as to whether the Explanation conferred
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 106 of 147
a new and substantive power, or whether it affirmed an
existing power. In either case, the power of the delivery
State to tax could not be challenged.
Looking at the form of the Explanation, it is emphatically
positive in that it declares that the sale shall be deemed
to have taken place in the delivery State, and that is all
the more significant in view of the fact that the body of
article 286(1) (a) to which it is appended is negative in
form. The change over from the negative of the body of
article 286(1)(a) to
774
the positive of the Explanation is highly significant, and
the appellant has been unable to suggest any reason for
this, except inadvertence and slovenliness on the part of
the draftsman.
The marginal note to article 286 was also referred to as
showing that the Explanation was merely restrictive in
character. In Phakuraiit Balraj Kunwar v. Rae Jagat Pal
Singh(1) Lord Macnaghten observed:
"It is well settled that marginal notes to the sections of
an Act of Parliament cannot be referred to for the purpose
of construing the Act. The contrary opinion originated in a
mistake, and it has been exploded long ago. There seems to
be no reason for giving the marginal notes in an Indian
statute any greater authority than the marginal notes in an
English Act of Parliament".
The reason on which this rule rests was thus stated by
Baggallay, L. J. in Attorney-General v. G. E. Ry. (2):
"I never knew an amendment set down or discussed upon
marginal notes to a clause. The House of Commons has
nothing to do with a marginal note". Vide also the
observations of Lord Hanworth, M.R., in Nixon v.Attorney-
General(3). This reasoning applies with equal force to
marginal notes in Indian statutes. In my opinion, the
marginal note to article 286(1)(a) cannot be referred to for
construing the Explanation. It is clearly inadmissible for
cutting down the plain meaning of the words of the Constitu-
tion. Vide Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Ahmedbhai
Umarbhai and Co.(4).
Two other views as to the scope of the Explanation which
were discussed by the learned Attorney-General in the course
of his argument must now be noticed. One is that the
Explanation does not deprive the selling State of its power
to tax under Entry 54 but confers additional power of
taxation on the delivery State. And the other is that the
Explanation merely settles the competing claims of the
selling and of the delivery State, and leaves untouched the
power of the
(1) 31 I.A,. 132, 142, 143.
(3) [1930] 1 Ch. 666, 593.
(2) [1879] 11 Ch. D. 449 461.
(4) [1950] S.C.R. 835, 353.
775
other States to tax on the basis of the nexus theory.
Neither of these views has been pressed by any of the
parties before us, and both of them are open to the
objection that they would result in multiple taxation, which
it was the purpose of the Explanation to avoid, and must in
consequence be rejected. In the result, 7 whether regard is
had to the object of the enactment or its language, the
Explanation must be held to authorise the imposition of tax
by the delivery State.
3. It is next contended by the appellant that the sales
covered by the Explanation to article 286(1)(a) are within
the prohibition contained in article 286(2) and that in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 107 of 147
consequence the charge sought to be imposed on such sales by
the impugned Act is illegal and void. That raises the
question as to what the scope of the Explanation to article
286(1) (a) is, and whether it is controlled by article
286(2). The Explanation declaring as it does that the situs
of a sale for purposes of taxation is the delivery and not
the selling State can apply, by its very terms, only to
sales of an inter-State character, and that is the basis on
which the argument of both the parties to the appeal has
proceeded. Article 286(2) prohibits the imposition of tax
on sales in the course of inter-State trade. Thus, the
field on which the Explanation operates falls within the
area covered by article 286(2), and there is apparently a
conflict between them. Now the question is how the power of
a State to tax on the basis of the Explanation is affected
by the impact of article 286(2), and on that, three views
have been put forward:
(a) The Explanation fixes the situs of the sale in the
delivery State. It becomes thereby a sale inside that State
and outside all other States. It accordingly ceases to be a
sale in the course of inter-State trade and becomes an
intrastate sale and is, therefore, outside the purview of
article 286(2); and the power of the delivery State to tax
under the Explanation remains unaffected. That was the view
taken by the majority of the learned Judges in The State of
Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd. (1), and according
(1) [1953] B.C.R 1069.
776
to it, there is no conflict between the Explanation and
article 286(2).
(b) The sales to which the Explanation applies are in the
course of inter-State trade, and fall within the coverage of
article 286(2), and there is thus a conflict between the two
provisions, but the Explanation deals with a special topic,
and therefore prevails against article 286(2) on the
principle of generalia specialisus non derogant, and the
power to tax thereunder is unaffected. That was the view
taken by Bhagwati, J. in The State of Bombay v. The United
Motors(India) Ltd.(1).
(c)The sales to which the Explanation applies are in
the course of inter-State trade, and are hit by article
286(2) and unless Parliament lifts the ban as provided
therein, no tax can be levied on them. According to this
view, the two provisions are irreconcilably in conflict, and
article 286(2) must prevail as against the Explanation
unless its operation is superseded by Parliamentary
legislation. This was the view taken by Bose, J. in The
State of Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd.(1), and by
Das, J. in State of Travancore-Cochin v. Shanmugha Vilas
Cashew Nut Factory(2). The points for determination are thus
whether there is conflict between the Explanation to article
286(1)(a) and article 286(2), and if so, which of them is to
prevail. To decide this, it is necessary to examine first
what the position was under the Government of India Act,
1935, and next how it has been affected by the, provisions
of the Constitution.
Under the Government of India Act, 1935, the Provinces had
under Entry 48 in List II the exclusive power to make laws
in respect of taxes on sale of goods, and under Entry 27, in
respect of trade and commerce within its territory. There
was no entry relating to trade and commerce among the
Provinces though several topics relating to inter-State
trade and commerce were specifically enumerated in List 1.
Nor was there any provision for regulating inter-State com-
merce though under section 297 some restrictions were placed
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 108 of 147
on the powers of the Provincial Legislature with
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069.
(2) [1954] S.C.R. 53,
777
reference thereto. The conception of a commerce clause, as
we now have it, was unknown to the Government of India Act,
1935. It came in for the first time as part of the
Constitution. To understand its true scope, it would be
legitimate and indeed necessary to examine its bearings and
incidents in other systems of law. The American
Constitution is the oldest written Federal Constitution in
the world, and the problems it had to deal with were what
many Federal Governments have had since to face. The
commerce clause is one of its notable provisions, and it was
before the framers of the British North America Act, 1867
and of the Commonwealth Act of Australia, 1900. Our
Constitution also has largely been influenced by it, and it
would be useful to examine it to see what light it throws on
the present controversy.
In America the authority of the Congress to enact laws on
the matters delegated to it under the constitution is
supreme. In respect of all other matters, the States
possess plenary powers of legislation subject to the
inhibition contained in the Constitution. It is in exercise
of these powers that the States enact laws regulating sales
and imposing tax on them. Under section 8 of article I of
the Constitution, the power "to regulate commerce among the
States" is vested in the Congress. Thus, while intra-State
commerce is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the State,,
inter-State commerce is within the exclusive jurisdiction of
the Congress. A question which came up frequently for
decision before the Courts was whether the States had the
power to enact laws with reference to goods which had come
into a State in the course of inter-State trade, and it was
settled on the highest authority that if the sale was for
the purposes of consumption within the State it became
domestic in its character,, and fell within the power of the
State to regulate and to tax, but that if it was for
purposes other than consumption such as re-sale, then that
was in the course of interState commerce, and Congress alone
had the jurisdiction to legislate in respect of it. In
Pennsylvania
778
Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission(1) the question was as
to the validity of a statute of New York regulating the
rates which could be charged for sale of natural gas for
consumption within the State. The gas was transported into
the State by pipe lines from outside, and it was accordingly
held that the regulation was in respect of inter-State trade
and commerce, and was therefore "subject to applicable
Constitutional limitations" but that the State law was valid
because "the thing which the State Commission has undertaken
to regulate, while part of inter-State transmission, is
local in its nature, and pertains to the furnishing of
natural gas to local consumers within the city of Jamestown,
in the State of New York". In Missouri ex rel. Barrett v.
Kansas Natural Gas Co.(2), the facts were similar except
that the sales were not for consumption within the State but
for resale. It was held that those sales continued to
retain the character of inter-State trade, and fell within
the commerce clause. Vide also Public Utilities Commission
v. Attleboro Steam & Electric Co.(3). The principle
underlying these decisions would appear to be that goods
which are transported in inter-State trade must necessarily
come to the end of their journey when they are consumed, and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 109 of 147
that, therefore, sales for consumption take them out of the
course of inter-State trade. But if the goods are sold for
resale, they are still moving in inter-State journey and
therefore the commerce clause applies. In 1938 the Congress
enacted a legislation with reference to sales in the course
of inter-State trade for purposes of resale. Examining the
question whether the States had thereafter the power to
enact a law regulating sales which take place in the course
of inter-State trade but for local consumption, the Supreme
Court held in Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co. v. Public
Service Commission of India(1) that they had, and observed:
"Prior to that time (1938) this Court in a series of
decisions bad dealt with various situations arising from
State efforts to regulate the sale of imported
(1) 252 U.S. 23: 64 L.Ed. 434.
(3) 273 U.S. 83; 71 L. Ed. 549.
(2) 265 U.S. 298; 68 L. Ed. 1027.
(4) 332 U.S. 507; 92 L. Ed. 128.
779
natural gas. The story has been adequately told and we do
not stop to review it again or attempt reconciliation of all
the decisions or their groundings. Suffice it to say that
by 1938 the Court had delineated broadly between the area of
permissible state control and that in which the states could
not intrude. The former included interstate direct sales to
local consumers, the latter, service interstate to local
distributing companies, for resale".
It further held that, the Congress legislation was itself a
recognition of the distinction established by the decisions
"between sales for resale and direct sale for con’sumption.
"This decision was -followed quite recently in Panhandle
Eastern Pipeline Co. v. Michigan Public Service
Commission(1). Four propositions might accordingly be taken
as well-settled in American law:
(i)The States have plenary and exclusive power of
legislation in respect of intrastate sales.
(ii)Regulation of inter-State commerce is a topic within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the Congress.
(iii)Sales which take place in the course of interState
trade are local in character and within the jurisdiction of
the State, if they are for consumption within the State.
(iv)Where such sales are for other purposes than consumption
such as resale, they retain their character as sales in the
course of inter-State trade and are within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Congress.
The provisions of the Indian Constitution bearing on this
subject may now be referred to:-
(a)The States have exclusive jurisdiction under Entry 54 to
impose sales tax and under Entry 26 to regulate trade and
commerce within the State. Legislative powers in respect of
these matters were conferred on the Provinces by the
Government of India Act, 1935, and these powers have been
continued in the States by the Constitution.
(b)Article 301 enacts that trade and commerce within the
territory of India shall be free, and under Entry 42 in List
I, the power to legislate on interState trade and commerce
is vested exclusively in the
(1) 341 U.S. 329; 95 L. Ed. 993.
99
780
Union. There was nothing corresponding to, these provisions
in the Government of India Act, 1935.
(c) Under the Explanation to article 286(1)(a), a sale is
deemed to take place within the State in which the goods are
delivered for consumption. This again is a new provision
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 110 of 147
introduced in the Constitution.
(d) No law of a State can impose a tax on a sale which
takes place in the course of inter-State trade. That is
article 286(2) which is also a new provision.
Reading side by side the law on the subject both in America
and under the Indian Constitution, it is difficult to avoid
the conclusion that the Explanation to article 286(1) (a)
and article 286(2) have been inspired by the American law on
the subject, and that their spheres of operation correspond
respectively to the jurisdiction of the State and of the
Congress in America as delineated in Missouri ex rel.
Barrett v. Kansas Natural Gas Co.(1), and Panhandle Eastern
Pipe Line Co. v. Public Service Commission of India(2) .
I shall now pass on to consider which of the three views
which have been placed before us as to the effect of article
286(2) on the Explanation to article 286(1)(a) deserves to
be accepted. The first view is that the sales falling
within the Explanation are intra-State in character, and are
therefore outside the area covered by article 286(2). This
derives considerable support from the language of the
enactment. The scheme of article 286(1)(a) is, as already
stated, that it fixes the situs of the sales with a view to
avoid multiple taxation, and for that purpose it divides
them into two categories-inside sales and outside -sales-and
enacts that a State cannot tax an outside ,-sale. When in
the same context the Explanation declares that a sale in the
course of inter-State trade that this is its scope is common
ground-must be deemed to have taken place in the State in
which the goods are delivered for consumption, its purpose
is clearly to take it out of inter-State trade and stamp it
with the character of an intra-State sale. Under Entry 26
in List II, it is the State that has jurisdic-
(1) 265 TT.S. 298; 68 L.Ed. 1027.
(2) 332 U.S. 507; 92 L. Ed. 128.
781
tion in respect of trade and commerce within the State, and
reading that with the language of the Explanation that the
sales covered by it are deemed to take place in the State,
the inference is irresistible that the intention of the
Constitution-makers was to bring those sales within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the 7 State for purposes of
taxation under Entry 54. The result is that with reference
to sales for local consumption made in the course of inter-
State trade, the law under the Constitution is exactly what
it is in America and indeed, the similarity is too striking
to be merely accidental. The position may thus be summed
up: Article 286(2) applies to sales in the course of inter-
State trade. The sales which fall within the Explanation
are intrastate sales. The grounds covered by the two
provisions are distinct and separate. Each has operation
within its own sphere, and there is no conflict between
them.
The appellant resists this conclusion on several grounds,
and they will now be considered. It was argued firstly that
the conclusion that the Explanation and article 286(2)
relate to two different subjects and that they operate on
different fields could be reached only by importing the
Explanation into article 286(2), and that could not be done
because it is in terms stated to be "for the purposes of
subclause (a)" and also because such a course could not be
supported on any recognised rule of interpretation. Now,
what is the significance of the words "for the purposes of
sub-clause(a)" occurring in the Explanation? In the
context, its purpose is only to exclude its application to
article 286(1)(b). Article 286(1) deals with two matters,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 111 of 147
sales outside the State and sales in the course of export
and import. The former is dealt with in sub-clause (a) and
the latter in sub-clause (b). If the Legislature intended
that the Explanation should apply to the former and not to
the latter, the most natural and obvious mode of expressing
that intention would be to enact, as it has, that it is "for
the purposes of sub-clause (a)". This problem would not
have arisen if the two matters had been dealt with in two
different clauses as logically they
782
might have been. If that had been done, the article
simplifying it, would run as follows:
"286. (1) No law of a State shall impose a tax on
a sale, where it takes place outside that State.
Explanation:A sale shall be deemed to have taken place
within that State where the goods are delivered for
consumption as a direct result of the sale.
286. (4) No law of a State shall impose a tax on a sale in
the course of export or import".
Article 286(1) as drafted above, relegating sub-clause (b)
to a separate clause and omitting the words "for the
purposes of sub-clause (a)" in the Explanation would convey
precisely the import of article 286(1) (a) as it now stands
with sub-clause (b) and with the words"for the purposes of
sub-clause(a)". That would clearly show that the force of
the words "for the purposes of sub-clause (a)" becomes spent
when article 286 (1) (b) is excluded from the operation of
the Explanation.
But then, it is contended that whatever the form in which
the Explanation may be couched, it could not be extended
beyond article 286(1) (a) and projected into article 286(2),
and that unless that was done, it was not possible to hold
that the sales falling within the Explanation are taken out
of the purview of article 286(2). In my opinion, this
argument proceeds on a misconception of the real reasoning
on which the conclusion that the Explanation and article 286
(2) relate to two different subjects is based. In view of
the insistence with which this contention was pressed by the
appellant, it seems desirable to examine the position in
some detail. To start with, the two relevant provisions to
be considered are article 286(1)(a) with the Explanation and
article 286(2). Omitting what is not material, they would
run as follows:
"286. (1) No law of a State shall impose a tax on a sale,
where it takes place outside that State.
Explanation: A sale in the course of inter-State
783
trade is inside that State in which goods are actually
delivered for consumption.
(2) No law of a State shall impose tax on a sale in the
course of inter-State trade".
The argument of the appellant that article 286(2) is
comprehensive and includes all sales in the course of inter-
State trade and that therefore the sales covered by the
Explanation fall within its purview, takes into account only
article 286(2) and the Explanation, and it would have been
unassailable if the question had to be decided on a
construction only of these two provisions. But that,
however, is not the position. An explanation appended to a
section or clause gets incorporated into it, and becomes an
integral part of it, and has no independent existence apart
from it. There is, in the eye of law, only one enactment,
of which both the section and the Explanation are two
inseparable parts. "They move in a body if they move at
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 112 of 147
all". When, therefore, the question is whether sales
falling within the Explanation are comprised within article
286(2), what has to be construed is that article in relation
to, not merely the Explanation taken in isolation but to
article 286(1) (a) read with the Explanation. If the matter
is thus considered, the resultant position might thus be
stated. Article 286(1) (a) confers on States power to tax
sales inside their territory. Article 286(2) prohibits them
from taxing sales in the course of inter-State trade.
Explanation to article 286(1) (a) enacts that sales in the
course of inter-State trade in which goods are delivered for
consumption in a State shall be deemed to have taken place
inside that State. The combined effect of all these
provisions is that States can tax sales in the course of
inter-State trade if they fall within the Explanation. This
conclusion is reached, it will be seen, not by reading the
Explanation into article 286 (2) as a sort of exception but
giving to all the provisions the status of independent
enactments and determining what, on a construction of the,
language, their respective spheres of operation are.
In this view, the argument that if the Explanation could be
read into article 286(2) it might as well be
784
read into article 286 (1) (b) and article 286 (3) does not
call for consideration. As the question is one of
determining on a reading of the entire article the precise
operation of the several parts thereof, there can be no
objection to examining the scope of article 286(1) including
the Explanation in relation to article 286(1)(b) and article
286(3). Article 286(1) (a) relates to sales inside a State,
and article 286(1)(b) to sales in the course of export from
or import into the country, and there could not be any
interaction between them, and that is made abundantly clear
by the words "for the purposes of sub-clause (a)" in the
Explanation. Likewise, reading article 286(1) (a) including
the Explanation along with article 286 (3), the result is
that the power to tax which the State otherwise possesses
has to be exercised subject to the conditions mentioned in
the latter, when there is a Parliamentary declaration
thereunder. The impact of article 286(3) is, it should be
noted, not confined to the Explanation but extends to the
whole of article 286(1) (a). It operates not only on the
inter-State sales falling within the Explanation but also on
sales which are indisputably intrastate, and it controls
both of them on the principle of generalia specialibus non
derogant.
It is next contended that the sales to which the Explanation
applies, takes place as a fact in the course of inter-State
trade, and that the Explanation could not be construed as
altering that fact, and that its true scope was merely to
shift the situs of the sale from the selling to the delivery
State. Conceiving interState trade as a stream flowing from
point A in the selling State to a point B in the delivery
State, it was argued that what the Explanation did was to
shift the situs of the sale from point A to point B, that
the stream was still there despite the shifting and that the
sale therefore did not cease to be in the course of inter-
State trade. With respect, the fallacy in this argument
lies in thinking that after the shifting of the situs from
point A to B; the sale could be regarded as one in the
course of inter-State trade. A sale could be said to be in
the course of inter-State trade only if two conditions
concur: (1) A sale of goods,
785
and (2) a transport of those goods from one State to another
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 113 of 147
under the contract of sale. Unless both these conditions
are satisfied, there can be no sale in the course of inter-
State trade. Thus, if X, a merchant in State A goes to
State B, purchases goods there and transports them into A,
there is undoubtedly a movement of goods in inter-State
commerce. But that is not under any contract of sale. X
might be entitled under article 301 to certain rights in the
matter of transportation. But article 286C2) has no
application, as there is no sale in the course of interstate
trade or commerce. In the same illustration, if X after
transporting the goods into State A sells them, then also
there is no sale in the course of inter-State trade. It is
true that there is a sale, and there is also a movement of
goods from one State to another. But that movement has not
been under the sale, there having been no sale at the time
of transportation. In Rottschaefer on Constitutional Law
(1939 Edition) sale in the course of inter-State commerce is
thus defined:
"The activities of buying and selling constitute inter-State
commerce if the contracts therefor contemplate or
necessarily involve the movement of goods in inter-State
commerce".
The law is thus stated by Gavit in "Commerce Clause" (1932
Edn.)--
"The dividing line between an interstate sale and intrastate
sale is rather fine, although clear.. If the goods are
shipped into a State without a previous sale, any sale
within the State is intra-State commerce..................
Thus if the sale succeeds the transportation in point of
time, however close, the state may license it".
In William T. Wagner v. City of Covington(1), it was held
that local sales of goods brought into the State from
outside for the very purpose of the sale were not parts of
inter-State commerce. The following observations at page
197 might be quoted:
"Of course the transportation of plaintiffs’ goods
across the state line is of itself interState commerce;
(1) 252 U S. 95: 64 L.Ed. 157.
786
but it is not this that is taxed by the city of Covington,
nor is such commerce a part of the business that is taxed,
or anything more than a preparation for it. So far as the
itinerant vending is concerned the goods might just as well
have been manufactured within the State of Kentucky; to the
extent that plaintiffs dispose of their goods in that kind
of sales, they make them the subject of local commerce; and
this being so, they can claim no immunity from local
regulation, whether the goods remain in original packages or
not".
In the light of the above principles, what is the legal
character of the sales effected by the appellant and sought
to be taxed by the respondent? There is firstly the fact
that the goods were actually delivered in Bihar, and
secondly, there is the fiction enacted by the Explanation
that the sale had taken place not in Bengal but in Bihar.
If both sale and delivery are in Bihar, it is difficult to
see how the sale can be said to be in the course of inter-
State trade. The argument of the appellant that there was,
in fact, a movement of goods from Bengal to Bihar and that
stood unaffected by the fictional shifting of the situs of
the sale from Bengal to Bihar, overlooks that by this very
shifting, the character and complexion of the sale become
altered, because, as the sale follows the transport of
goods, it cannot, according to the principles already
stated, be said to be in the course of inter-State trade.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 114 of 147
It may be urged as against this conclusion that as the
Explanation to article 286(1) (a) merely shifts the situs of
the sales, and leaves unaffected the agreements to sell
which must in the present case be held to have been made at
Calcutta when the appellant executed the orders received
from the Bihar purchasers, the transport of goods from
Bengal to Bihar was under the above contracts to sell, and
that therefore the sales were in the course of inter-State
trade. Such a contention would be untenable, because the
expression "contract of sale" in this context has the same
meaning as the words "contract of buying and selling" I in
the definition of inter-State commerce given by Rottschaefer
in the passage already quoted,
787
and they both refer to the bargain resulting in the sale
irrespective of whether it is in the stage of an agreement
to sell, or whether it is a sale in which title to the goods
has passed to the purchaser. That is also the definition of
‘contract of sale’ in section 5(1) of the Indian Sale of
Goods Act. As there can be only 2 one final and concluded
bargain in respect of any particular sale, and as that is
fixed by the Explanation at Bihar, it follows that there
could not be any bargain with reference thereto in Calcutta,
and the movement of goods from Bengal to Bihar was not under
any contract of sale. The position in law is exactly the
same as if the goods had been sent by the seller from Bengal
to Bihar on his own account and then sold there and
delivered to the purchaser, in which case it would be
indistinguishable from William T. Wagner v. City of
Covington(1), and the sale would clearly be intrastate.
This conclusion does not negative the factum of inter-State
movement of goods, and does not prevent any rights being put
forward on that footing under article 36-1. it only
negatives the notion of a sale in the course of inter-State
trade, and thus takes it out of the purview of article 286(2
).
It was argued that the Explanation merely enacted a legal
fiction, and that it being a well-established rule of
construction that legal fictions should be limited to the
purpose for which they are enacted, it would be contrary to
this rule to hold that the Explanation not merely shifted
the situs of the sale but also obliterated the course of
inter-State commerce. But the conclusion that the sales
covered by the Explanation cease to be in the course of
inter-State trade is not the result of any extension of the
fiction because, as already stated, the factum of inter-
State transportation is not ignored. That is the legal
consequence of the fictional shifting of the situs. it will
be useful in this connection to quote what Lord Asquith ob-
served in dealing with a similar contention in East End
Dwellings Co. Ltd. v. Finsbury Borough Council(2).
"If you are bidden to treat an imaginary state of
(1) 251 U.S. 95: 64 L. Ed. 157.
(2) 11952] A.C. 109, 132.
100
788
affairs as real, you must surely, unless prohibited from
doing so, also imagine as real the consequences and
incidents which, if the putative state of affairs had in
fact existed, must inevitably have flowed from or ac-
companied it. One of these in this case is emancipation
from the 1939 level of rents. The statute says that you
must imagine a certain state of affairs; it does not say
that having done so, you must cause or permit your
imagination to boggle when it comes to the inevitable
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 115 of 147
corollaries of that state of affairs".
It is next contended that the view that sales in which goods
are delivered for consumption within the State are not
within article 286(2) would render that provision
practically useless, because sales for purposes other than
consumption such as for resale must be very few and
negligible. Why should a seller for consumption, it is
asked, get his goods from an intermediary and not directly
from the manufacturer? But then, the Constitution has
itself recognised in clear and unmistakable terms a
distinction between sales in which goods are delivered for
consumption and sales in which they are delivered for
purposes other than consumption such as resale, and what
purpose this distinction serves, the appellant has been
unable to explain. Besides, what are the materials on which
we can brush it aside on the ground that it is not one of
substance? One of the developments of modern big business
is the agency system under which middlemen enter into
contracts with manufacturers, stipulate for monopoly of the
distribution rights within a specified area, guarantee a
certain volume of business, and are granted liberal
commission on the sales. In such cases, retail sellers can
get the goods only from the distributors, and even when
there is no grant of monopoly, it is nothing unusual in
business that large distributors are able to get the goods
from the manufacturers on rates more favourable than retail
sellers can obtain and that consequently, it is more
economical for the latter to buy them from the distributors
than from the manufacturers. And it is not without
significance that the distinction between the two classes of
sales has been recognised in com-
789
mercially advanced America for now nearly a century and
recognised for this very purpose; and how can such a
distinction be characterised as unsubstantial?
It was finally contended by the learned Attorney-General
that if article 286(2) were to be construed as not
comprehending sales falling within the Explanation., then
there would be nothing on which it could operate. The
argument was thus presented: Article 286(1)(a) bars the
selling State, in the present case Bengal, from taxing the
sale because by reason of the Explanation, it becomes an
outside sale’, and if article 286(2) is to be construed as
not barring the delivery State, in the instant case Bihar,
from taking the sale, then there is no sale to which it can
apply, and it will serve no purpose. The error in this
argument lies in taking the illustration as exhausting the
entire range of inter-State trade. But that is not correct.
Inter-State commerce consists in a flow of goods not merely
from one State to another but in its continuous flow through
several States, and article 286(2) is designed to protect
such a flow without being burdened by State taxes. Thus, if
A in Bengal sells to B in Bihar., and if in his turn B sells
the same goods to C in U. P. for local consumption, there
will be interState commerce under article 286(2) and in the
course thereof, there will be two sales. Taking first the
sale from Bengal to Bihar, Bengal -can tax it under article
286(1) (a) because the Explanation thereto is not applicable
as the delivery to Bihar is not for local consumption. But
article 286(2) would interpose a bar. Bihar cannot tax the
sale under article 286(1) (a), because that is an outside
sale,, the Explanation being inapplicable. Coming next to
the sale by Bihar to U.P., Bihar will be entitled to tax
it under the body of article 286(1)(a) as the sale took
place inside its limits. But it cannot do so as under the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 116 of 147
Explanation, it becomes an outside sale. But U. P. will be
entitled to tax the sale under the Explanation as it was for
consumption within that State. Thus, the effect of the
combined operation of both article 286(2) and article 286(1)
(a) read with the Explanation is that the only State which
can tax the. sale is the one in
790
which the goods are sold for local consumption.
These are the objections advanced by the appellant against
the view that the sales covered by the Explanation are
outside article 286(2), and they are not of sufficient
weight to overthrow it.
The consideration of this question will, however, be
incomplete without an examination of the other two views
that have been put forward as to the true meaning and scope
of article 286(2). The second view-and that was taken by
Bhagwati, J. in The State of Bombay v. The United Motors
(India) Ltd.(2) -is that the sales covered by the
Explanation are in the course of inter-State trade and they
are, therefore, within the purview of article 286(2), but
that as the latter is a general provision covering all sales
in the course of inter-State trade, and the former deals
only with a special class thereof, the maxim generalia
specialibus non derogant applies, and the Explanation
prevails as against article 286(2). It will be noticed that
this agrees with the first view in its conclusion but it
differs from it on the reasoning by which it reaches it.
According to the first view, sales in the course of inter-
State trade contemplated by article 28612) include only
those under which goods are delivered for purposes other
than local consumption; whereas according to the second,
they include all sales including those in which goods are
delivered for consumption within the State and those in
which they are delivered for other purposes. According to
this view, therefore, there is conflict between the Expla-
nation and article 286(2), and the solution for it is to be
sought in the application of the rule of construction that
general provisions do not derogate from the special. As
between these two views, the first view in for the reasons
already given, to be preferred. But if the contention that
article 286(2) applies both to sales in which goods are
delivered for local consumption and those in which they are
delivered for other purposes is correct, then it is
difficult to see how the appellant can escape the conclusion
reached by Bhagwati, J. in The State of Bombay v. The United
(1) (1953] B.C.R. 1069.
791
Motors (India) Ltd.(1). The appellant is plainly in the
horns of a dilemma. Sales in which goods are delivered for
local consumption ’fall either outside article 286(2) or
inside it. If they fall outside article 286(2), then the
appellant can claim no immunity from taxation under that
provision. In case they fall inside article 286(2), then
the Explanation must prevail as against it on the principle
generalia specialibus non derogant, and the sales will be
liable to be taxed. To get out of this difficulty, the
appellant contended that article 286(2) and the Explanation
related to two different matters, and therefore the maxim in
question had no application. The argument was that article
286 imposed a number of restrictions on the power of the
State to tax sale of goods from different angles, e.g., when
they were outside the State, article 286(1)(a); in the
course of export or import, article 286(1)(b); in the course
of inter-State trade, article 286(2); and in relation to
commodities declared essential by Parliamentary legislation
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 117 of 147
under article 286(3); that the Explanation was enacted from
the standpoint whether the sales were outside or inside and
article 286(2) from the standpoint whether they were in the
course of inter-State trade or intraState trade, and that
the purpose and the policy of the two provisions being
different, their subject-matter must be held to be different
and that therefore the maxim was inapplicable.
I see no force in this contention. It is a cardinal rule of
construction that when there are in a Statute two provisions
which are in conflict with each other such that both of them
cannot stand, they should, if possible, be so interpreted
that effect can be given to both, and that a construction
which renders either of them inoperative and useless should
not be adopted except in the last resort. This is what is
known as the rule of harmonious construction. One
application of this rule is that when there is a law
generally dealing with a subject and another dealing
particularly with one of the topics comprised therein, the
general law is to be construed as yielding to the special in
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069.
792
respect of the matters comprised therein. Now, the reason
of the rule requires that it should apply whenever there is
overlapping of the fields occupied by two conflicting
enactments, and when that is shown, it would not be logical
to exclude its application on the ground that the enactments
have been made with a different purpose. It is the identity
of the subject matter of the conflicting provisions, not the
identity of their purpose or angle of vision that is
essential for the application of the maxim. No authority
was cited for limiting it in the manner contended for by the
appellant. Now, it is the appellant’s own contention that
the sales covered by the Explanation are within the purview
of article 286(1)(a), and are therefore exempt from taxation
thereunder, and that such taxation would be permissible only
when the hold of article 286(2) over the Explanation is
removed by Parliamentary legislation under that sub-clause.
That is to say, the subject-matter of the Explanation is
within the coverage of article 286(2), and that the two
provisions are directly in conflict. It is difficult to see
how consistently with this stand the appellant could resist
the application of the maxim aforesaid. It is true that
Bhagwati, J. who took that view in The State of Bombay v.
The United Motors (India) Ltd.(1) has now retreated from
that position. But with respect, there is irrefragable
logic in his reasoning in that decision, and that commends
itself to me.
Then, there is the third view that the sales to which the
Explanation applies are in the course of interState trade,
and therefore fall within the purview of article 286(2), and
that in consequence, the power of the delivery State to tax
those sales is incapable of exercise, as it is within the
prohibition contained in that article, and that when the
Parliament enacts a law in terms of article 286(2) lifting
the ban thereunder, then and not until then could the
Explanation have any operation. That was the view expressed
by Bose, J. in The State of Bombay v. The United Motors
(India) Ltd.(1) and by Das, J. in State of Travancore Cochin
v. Shanmugha. Vilas Cashew Nut Factory(2).
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069.
(2) [1954] S.C.R. 53.
793
Briefly, according to this view article 286(2) controls the
Explanation. Can this be sustained on the language of the
enactment?’ The Explanation is not expressed to be subject
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 118 of 147
to article 286 (2). Nor does the latter contain the words
"notwithstanding anything contained in the Explanation to
article 286(1) (a)". These are simple and familiar
expressions used by the legislature when it intends that a
particular provision in the Statute should be subject to or
override another. Nor is there anything in the language of
the Explanation providing that its operation is not to be in
praesenti but contingent on Parliamentary legislation under
article 286(2). To construe, therefore, article 286(2) as
controlling the Explanation, we must import into the Statute
words which are not there and thereby cut down the operation
of the Explanation which on its terms is of equal authority
and potency with article 286(2).
There being nothing express in the language of the enactment
to lead to the conclusion that the Explanation is controlled
by article 286(2), it has to be seen whether that conclusion
can be drawn on a construction of the relevant provisions of
the Statute. The appellant argues that it can be, and
relies firstly on the saving clause in article 286(2), and
secondly, on the proviso thereto as supporting it. The
argument based on the saving clause may thus be stated: The
contention that article 286(2) controls the Explanation
would have resulted in rendering the latter wholly nugatory,
if the words "except in so far as Parliament may bylaw
otherwise provide" had not been there. But that result is
avoided by the saving clause under which the Explanation can
come into operation when there is Parliamentary legislation
lifting the ban under article 286(2). This construction, it
is argued, gives effect to the plain language of the article
and also to both the provisions. But when examined, it will
be seen that far from giving effect to both the Explanation
and article 286(2), this construction results in destroying
one or the other of them. The harmonious construction which
the law favours is one which gives operation to both
794
the provisions at the same time but in their respective
spheres. But according to the appellant, if article 286(2)is
in force then the Explanation cannot operate, and if the
Explanation is to operate, it can only be if the Parliament
puts an end to article 286(2) by legislation thereunder.
This construction, far from reconciling the two provisions
and giving operation to both of them, renders them uncompro-
misingly hostile, and makes their coexistence and co-
operation impossible.
It is also open to question whether the saving clause could
be referred to for the purposes of determining the
respective spheres of operation of the Explanation and the
body of article 286(2). The scope of a saving clause or an
exception is that it operates within the area covered by the
main provision on which it is engrafted. It cannot add to
it though, when in force, it can detract from it. It would,
therefore " be inadmissible for enlarging what would
otherwise be the sphere in which article 286(2) would
operate. If the view that article 286(2) controls the
Explanation cannot be maintained on a construction of the
body of article 286(2) and the Explanation, it cannot
properly be adopted on the strength of the saving clause
annexed thereto.
There was considerable discussion before us as to the nature
and scope of the law that could be enacted under article
286(2). It must be confessed that the matter is not free
from doubts and difficulties. But about one thing, there
can be no dispute.The law to be enacted by Parliament
cannot runcounter to any of the provisions of the
Constitution.Thus, it cannot itself impose a tax on
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 119 of 147
sales, thatbeing within the exclusive jurisdiction of
the states under Entry 54 in List II. Nor can it confer a
power to tax a sale in the course of inter-State commerce on
any State of its own choice in contravention of the
Explanation to article 286(1) (a), Its operation can only be
negative. It can lift the ban imposed by article 286(2).
It was suggested for the appellant that it can do that as
regards particular commodities or with reference to
particular States, and that further in so limiting
795
the operation it could enact suitable provisions for an
equitable adjustment of the interests of all the States.
But laws limited in their operation to specified commodities
and States must in their very nature, be temporary
legislation to be withdrawn and re-enacted from time to time
suitable to the ever changing conditions of inter-State
trade and commerce. If that was the sort of legislation
that the Constitution-makers had in mind, one would have ex-
pected that the authority contemplated by article 307 would
have been empowered to deal not merely with the matters
mentioned in articles 301 to 304 but also article 286(2),
and it is also not a little surprising that no legislation
should have been enacted on those lines during all these
years. In any event, it must be a profitless task to
speculate on the scope and effect of a hypothetical
legislation under article 286(2), and it would be unsafe to
base any conclusion as to the true scope of the Explanation
on the existence of a power in the Parliament to enact a law
under article 286(2).
The contention based on the proviso to article 286(2) must
now be considered. It was argued that while the proviso is
to have operation notwithstanding anything contained in
article 286(2) it does not similarly override article 286
(1) (a) and that therefore when the President issued an
order under that proviso, the Explanation would have
operation, and that therefore it was not useless. To this
contention, there are two answers: (1) An order issued by
the President under the proviso can operate only to continue
existing taxes. It cannot go further, and authorise the
imposition of a tax even when the conditions mentioned in
the Explanation are satisfied, if, in fact, it had not been
previously collected. Therefore, the Explanation can have
no practical effect on the operation of the proviso. If, in
fact, a delivery State had been levying a tax before the
commencement of the Constitution, that would continue to be
valid under the proviso, not by the operation of the
Explanation but by reason of the fact that it had been
levied before. Thus, the Explanation as such has no opera-
tion. (2) It should also be mentioned that prior to
101
796
the Constitution no State was actually levying a tax on the
basis of delivery and therefore the Explanation could have
no practical effect even when the President made the order.
The Constitution-makers presumably had before them the sales
tax legislation of all the States, and it is a legitimate
inference that they could not have thought of the
Explanation as deriving any force or operation by reason of
an order of the President under the proviso.
Mr. Taikad Subramanya lyer, counsel for M. K. Kuriakose, one
of the interveners, arguing in support of the contention of
the appellant that article 286(2) is the controlling
provision, suggested a third category of cases wherein the
Explanation could operate apart from a law under the saving
clause in article 286(2) or the order of the President under
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 120 of 147
the proviso thereto. His argument was this: Suppose that
both the seller and the purchaser are in State ’A’ and the
goods are located in State ’B’. The instrument of sale is
executed in State A, and pursuant thereto, the purchaser
gets actual delivery of the goods in State B. Article 286(2)
has no application to the sale as there is no inter-State
movement of goods thereunder. But for the Explanation,
State A would have been entitled to tax the sale as it was
inside that State. But the Explanation bars it, and confers
on State B the right to tax it. This) it is contended,
gives operation to the Explanation consistently with the
view that it is controlled by article 286(2). The
assumption underlying this argument is that the property in
the goods passed in State A when the instrument of sale was
executed, though the goods were then located in State B. But
this is not correct. It is one thing to say that title to
the goods passes at the time when the instrument of sale was
executed and quite a different thing to state that it passes
at the place where it is executed. Considering the matter
with particular reference to the power of a State to impose
tax, sale is a practical conception having relation to the
right to enjoy and dispose of the goods, and it is a well-
settled feature of all sales-tax legislation that the power
to tax the sale is annexed to the place where
797
the goods are located at the time of the contract. Under
the general law also, the position is that title to the
goods passes in the State in which the goods are situated at
the time of the sale. In Badische c Anilin Und Soda Fabrik
v. Hickson(1), there was a contract of sale signed by both
the parties in England with reference to goods situated in
Switzerland. The action was laid in England for breach of
patent, and the point for decision was whether it was
maintainable there. It would have been maintainable there
if the sale was in England but not if it was in Switzerland.
It was held by the House of Lords that the sale was not in
England, and that the action did not lie. The position in
law was thus stated by Lord Loreburn, L.C. at page 421:
"As I understood him, Mr. Cripps argued that the defendant
had ’vended’ these goods in England within the terms of the
patent. He admitted that merely to make a contract of sale
would not be ’vending’ or, to use a word in sense equivalent
and in use more familiar, selling. But the maintained that
if the contract to sell was made in England, and, in pursu-
ance of it goods were, by the consent of buyer and seller,
appropriated to meet the contract, then the transaction
became a sale completed in England, and that it did not
signify whether the goods were at the time of such
appropriation in England or abroad.
I cannot accept that view. A contract to sell unascertained
goods is not a complete sale, but a promise to sell. There
must be added to it some act which completes the sale, such
as delivery or the appropriation of specific goods to the
contract by the assent ’ express or implied, of both buyer
and seller. Such appropriation will convert the executory
agreement into a complete sale.
In my opinion, if you must decide in what country an
appropriation of goods by consent takes place, it takes
place not where the consent is given, but where the goods
are at the time situate",
(1) [1906] A.C. 419,
798
In view of these observations, it cannot be contended that
the title to the goods passed in State A and that State B
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 121 of 147
gets the right to tax by reason of the Explanation. State B
gets the power to tax the sale not under the Explanation but
under the general law. This contention, it should be noted,
has reference to cases which ex hypothesi are outside
article 286(2), and has only an indirect bearing on the
question whether article 286(2) controls the Explanation.
It is necessary now to refer to the arguments addressed by
both parties based on what were stated to be the broad
principles underlying the Constitution and on considerations
of hardship or inconvenience arising from one view or the
other. It was argued for the appellant that the intention
of the Constitution-makers as disclosed in article 301 was
to encourage the free flow of trade and commerce within the
Union unimpeded and unobstructed by State legislation, that
article 286(2) was enacted in furtherance of that policy, as
taxation by the States might become so heavy as to become
burdensome to inter-State commerce; that the normal
situation envisaged by that article was, therefore, that no
tax should be levied on sales in the course of inter-State
trade, power being reserved in Parliament to intervene in
appropriate cases and that consistently with this policy,
article 286(2) should be construed as the controlling provi-
sion and the Explanation as an emergency reserve. The reply
of the respondent was that the intention of the Constitution
as expressed in article 286(1) (a) was to avoid multiple
taxation of sales in the course of inter-State trade, and
not to free them from any taxation, that the Constitution
did contemplate the levy of one tax on every sale, and that
the construction of the appellant, if accepted, must place
local sales in a greatly disadvantageous situation as
against sales in the course of inter-State trade, and that
must result in driving out local trade and business across
the borders of the State.
The appellant is undoubtedly right in his contention that
the Constitution intended trade and commerce within the
Union to be free. But the question
799
is whether that requires that there should be no tax at all
at any stage even when the goods have come to the end of
their journey as a result of sale. That clearly is not the
law in America where inter-State commerce is highly
developed and jealously protected. That the Constitution
did contemplate one tax on a sale-in the course of inter-
State trade when it is for local consumption is clear from
the Explanation. To argue that freedom from taxation under
article 286(2) is the normal condition, and that taxation
under the Explanation is an exception is to beg the very
question that we have got to decide. No other provisions of
the Constitution have been cited as expressive of that
intention. On the other hand, such indication as there is,
tends in the opposite direction. Article 304(a) which is an
exception to article 301 authorises the imposition of a tax
on imported goods when similar goods locally manufactured
are subject to a State tax provided that such imposition is
not discriminatory. It is true, as contended by the learned
Attorney General, that under article 304 (a) the taxis
levied on the goods whereas under article 286(2) it is laid
on the transaction of buying and selling. But on a question
of policy, what difference would it make whether the tax is
imposed on the transaction of sale or on the import of
goods, as in either case it must fall on the consumers?
That clearly is the reasoning of the majority of the learned
Judges in The State of Bombay v. The United Motors (India )
Ltd.(1), and there has been no satisfactory answer to it by
the appellant.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 122 of 147
On the other hand, article 304(a) lends considerable support
to the contention of the respondent that it could not have
been the intention of the Constitution to place local sales
in a worse position than sales in the course of inter-State
commerce, which must be the result of holding that sales in
the course of interState trade are immune from taxation
under article 286(2), while intrastate sales are liable to
be taxed under Entry 54. What reason or justice can there
be for making.a local purchaser of goods pay a higher price
therefore than what a purchaser of the same goods
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069, 1088.
800
across the State line would have to pay? The only answer
that was suggested was that the State might refrain from
taxing even intra-State sales of those commodities which are
the subject-matter of interState trade. Seeing that inter-
State trade is happily an expanding factor in national life,
and that it tends to comprehend an increasing variety of
goods, there will be left, if the suggestion of the
appellant is to be followed, very few commodities which the
State could tax, and Entry 54 might as well be effaced from
out of the Constitution. There is, besides, the apprehen-
sion expressed by the respondent-and it cannot be brushed
aside as fanciful-that if the contention put forward by the
appellant is accepted, then it must inevitably result in
local trade shifting on to adjacent States. If the scheme
of the Constitution is, as I conceive it to be, to put both
intrastate sales and sales in the course of inter-State
trade on the same footing -and that is manifest on the
language of article 301 -it must follow that as the former
are liable to be taxed under Entry 54, the latter should
also be similarly liable to be taxed, and that is precisely
what the Explanation provides for.
It was next argued for the appellant that the view that
under the Explanation delivery States would be entitled to
tax all sales in the course of inter-State trade if goods
are delivered for consumption there, would render sellers
liable to be taxed in all the States in which their goods
are sold, and that would subject them to a perplexing
multitude of assessment proceedings in several States and
that must cause great inconvenience and hardship in business
circles. Our attention was also invited to the provisions
of the impugned Act relating to assessment and collection of
tax, and it was contended that they must result in
considerable harassment of the assessees. As against this,
the respondent contended that the sellers had really no
grievance in the matter as the tax would be ultimately paid
by the consumers, and that, on the other hand, if the
contention of the appellant were to be accepted, the States
would have to lose a substantial portion of the revenue
derived from
801
sales tax and that must seriously affect their economy.
It must be conceded that in the view that the Explanation
authorises the imposition of tax on all sales in the course
of inter-State trade falling within its purview, non-
resident sellers will be liable to be taxed in every State
in which the goods are sold for consumption, and that they
must in consequence be exposed to multiple assessment
proceedings in different jurisdictions and that that must
cause inconvenience. But then, that is necessarily inherent
in the Explanation whether it operates when the ban under
article 286(2) is lifted by Parliamentary legislation as
contended for by the appellant, or even without such law, as
the respondent maintains. That does not, therefore, appear
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 123 of 147
to be very material in construing the scope of the
Explanation. The right which residents of one State have to
trade freely in other States is one conferred by article 301
and is a creature of the Constitution, and when the same
Constitution provides for taxation of sales in the course of
inter-State trade -by the Explanation to article 286(1) (a),
and the inconvenience complained of results from that
provision and is incidental to its enforcement, it does not
sound logical that the sellers should, while electing to
take the benefit under article 301, disclaim their
obligations under the Explanation.
The point of substance against the appellant is that the
sellers are not the persons really affected, as the
incidence of taxation will ultimately fall on the consumers.
The Explanation applies to goods delivered for consumption
within the State, and the tax imposed on the sale of such
goods is really a tax laid on the purchasers for
consumption. It might happen that such purchasers are
numerous and scattered all over the State, and that must be
so when the goods sold are,’ as in the present case,
medicines. The power to tax in such a case can be
effectively exercised only through the seller. No
administrative machinery can succeed in reaching the
consumers when their name is legion, and as the seller is
merely to pass on the tax to the consumer, he is, in fact,
constituted collector of the tax on behalf of the State.
This is the
802
practice largely adopted in America in the collection of Use
Tax, and its validity has been repeatedly affirmed. A
recent decision on the question is that in General Trading
Co. v. State Tax Commission of the State of Iowa(1). There,
the State of Iowa imposed a Use Tax on a foreign Company in
respect of goods distributed by it for consumption within
the State. In upholding the tax, Frankfurter, J. observed:
"To make the distributor the tax collector for the State is
a familiar and sanctioned device. Monamotor Oil Co. v.
Johnson(1), Felt & T. Mfg. Co. v. Gallagher(3)".
It was argued by the appellant that in the above case the
foreign company was "a retailer maintaining a place of
business" within the State. But as the tax in question was
not a sale-tax but a use tax payable by the purchasers it
would be wholly irrelevant whether the distributor bad a
place of business within the State, and that indeed is what
is stated in the judgment itself.
Even looking at the matter from the practical standpoint, it
is easy to exaggerate the inconvenience which the
Explanation might cause. If sellers have trade and commerce
all over the States, theirs must undoubtedly be a big
business. That means that they would have, for the purpose
of the business, adequate clerical establishment-
accountants, correspondence clerks and so forth. Regular
account books would be maintained showing the dispatch of
goods to dealers and purchasers in other States. And thus,
all the materials on which returns have to be made would be
already there. The additional burden will consist in this
that in posting the entries in the ledger accounts, separate
folios will have to be opened for the several States. This
is no doubt additional work thrown on the sellers, but
viewed in its true perspective, it is too unsubstantial to
deny the States a substantive power to tax. It is said that
there would be considerable harassment of the sellers under
the provisions of the impugned Act. But why should there
(1) 332 U.S. 385; 88 L. Ed. 1309.
(2) 292 U.S. 86; 78 L. Ea. 1141, 1147, 1148.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 124 of 147
(3 306 U.S. 62; 82 L. Ed. 488.
803
be? It must be presumed that sales-tax officers will do
nothing unfair or oppressive, and the correspondence between
the parties preceding the proceedings shows a just and
sympathetic attitude on the part of the respondent. True,
some of the provisions of the Act are of a stringent
character. But they have’ terrors only for those who would
evade and avoid tax, and persons like the appellant doing
big business Of an all-India character and maintaining
regular and correct accounts have nothing to fear from them.
Now, let us look at the other side of the picture. Prior to
the Constitution, the States bad the power to tax even sales
in the course of interstate trade and commerce, and it is
stated that a substantial portion of their revenue was
derived from this source. The Constitution enacted article
286 (1) (a) with a view to avoid multiple taxation of sales
in the course of inter-State trade, and it is the contention
of the respondent that the Explanation on its true
interpretation provides for a single taxation of those
sales, at the stage of consumption. If the contention of
the appellant as to the scope of the Explanation and of
article 286(2) is accepted, this tax could not be levied
after the 31st March 1951, and the States would have lost a
substantial source of revenue. What is the substitute that
the Constitution has provided therefor? None. In the
result, there must be, as argued by the respondent, a
financial crisis in the affairs of the States. The
position, therefore, is that we have to choose between
depriving the States of their power to impose a tax on which
their very existence depends, and exposing the sellers
having business outside their State to the inconvenience of
multiple assessment proceedings. In that situation, can
there be any doubt as to what our decision should be?
Surely, the claim of the State should have precedence over
that of individuals. It is very significant that all the
States which have intervened have, with one exception,
strongly supported the stand of the respondents. That
exception is the State of West Bengal. The learned
Attorney-General appearing for this State did not contend
for any right in it to tax the sales. His argu-
102
804
ment was that neither West Bengal nor Bihar was entitled to
tax by reason of article 286(2). The intervention of West
Bengal is, therefore, not for protecting its rights but for
the vindication of the law, as it
conceives it to be.
It was suggested for the appellant that the solution to the
problem lay in the Centre taking over the subject of tax on
sales in the course of inter-State trade, provision being
made for distribution of the receipts among the States under
article 269 after making the necessary amendments to the
Constitution. Our duty is to construe the provisions as
they stand and not to discuss questions of policy which it
is for the Legislature to decide; and if I examine the
suggestion of the appellant, it is only for the purpose of
finding out what light it throws on the present controversy,
and how far it will be an improvement on the present
position under the Constitution. Under Entry 48 in List II
of the Government of India Act, 1935, the States had the
power to impose tax on sale of goods and advertisements.
When dealing with this topic, the Constitution-makers took
over advertisement of newspapers to the Union List, the
residue being left to the States. Thus, the decision to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 125 of 147
entrust the power to tax sales to the States was deliberate,
and there is good reason for it. Sales might take place
either in the course of inter-State trade or be intraState.
There can be no question of the Centre taking over taxation
of intrastate sales. To confer a power on the Centre to tax
sales in the course of inter-State trade alone would be to
dichotomise the power to impose sales tax and distribute it
between the States and the Centre. For such a course, there
does not appear to be any precedent, anywhere, and the
practical inconvenience attendant thereon is obvious.
Moreover, let us assume that the Centre takes over the
taxation of sales in the course of inter-State trade. What
difference will it make in the present position? So far as
sellers are concerned, they will have to submit one
consolidated statement of all the sales outside their State
instead of splitting them according to the States in which
the sales are effected, and there will
805
be a single assessment proceeding instead of as many as the
States where the sales take place., That would no doubt
avoid much of inconvenience. But, so far as the burden of
taxation on the sellers is concerned, the position would be
exactly what it is now. And on what principle is the Centre
to distribute the tax realisations among the States? It can
only be on the basis of receipts from the several States.
And there is justice in each State claiming what is realised
from the consumers resident within its territory. That is
precisely the scope of the consumption tax under the
Explanation. Thus, the suggestion of the appellant, if
acted upon, will not relieve it from the liability to be
taxed; it will only reduce the assessment proceedings from
many to one. In other words, the relief will be with
reference not to substantive rights, but to a matter of
procedure. But the contention of the appellant that article
286(2) controls the Explanation is directed not against the
procedure in the assessment of tax, but against the very
liability to be assessed to it, the argumentum ab
inconvenienti being availed of as a ground for denying it.
The suggestion, therefore, that the taxation of sales in the
course of inter-State trade should be left to the Centre
lacks substance. ’Even with reference to the inconvenience
that might result from the multiplicity of assessment
proceedings, it is one which is capable of being removed
without disturbing the existing scheme of the Constitution,
by Parliament enacting a law constituting an authority under
article 367 and conferrinly on it power to receive from the
sellers one consolidated -statement of all their sales
outside their State and determining the precise extent
thereof effected in the several States and making that
determination final for purposes of assessment by the
States. That would, on the one hand, secure to the States
the finance legitimately due to them under the Explanation,
and at the same time,, save the sellers from the harassment
of multiplicity of proceedings. Such a law cannot be
impugned as trespassing on the exclusive domain of the
States to impose sales tax under Entry 54, as the authority
to impose the tax would continue
806
to be the States. It is the law of the several States that
will determine the conditions under which, and the rate at
which, the tax will be chargeable. It is the machinery set
up by the States that will make the assessment and collect
the taxes, and these realisations will find their way into
the coffers of the States. The effect of the Act would be
only to enact a rule of evidence, on which the assessing
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 126 of 147
authorities have to act. Such a law would not conflict with
any of the provisions of the Constitution. It is scarcely
necessary to add that this suggestion is only by way of
answer to the one put forward by the appellant, and even if
there are Constitutional difficulties in the way of acting
on it, that would not affect the decision of this appeal,
which must turn on the provisions of the Constitution as
they stand.
Having carefully considered the arguments addressed by the
learned counsel appearing for the parties to the appeal and
for the interveners, I am clearly of opinion that the sales
falling within the Explanation are, by reason of the fiction
enacted therein, intraState sales, that accordingly they
fall outside the ambit of article 286(2) and are unaffected
by the prohibition contained therein. In coming to this
conclusion, I have considered the question afresh and on its
own merits as if it were res integra. But, in fact, it is
concluded by the decision of this Court in The State of
Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd. (1)
to which reference has been made in the course of the
discussion. It is conceded that if this decision is to
govern, then this point would have to be found against the
appellant. But it is contended that it is erroneous and
should not be followed. That raises the question whether
this Court has the power to reconsider a previous judgment
given by it on the identical issue. As the point arises for
decision for the first time before this Court, and as our
pronouncement thereon must be of the highest importance, we
have heard arguments as to what the practice is in the
highest judicial tribunals of other countries with reference
to this matter.
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069.
807
In Street Tramways v. London County Council(,), it was held
by the House of Lords that its decision on a question of law
was conclusive and binding on the House in subsequent cases
and that if it was erroneous, it could be set right only by
an Act of Parliament. The practice before the Privy Council
however has been different. In Ridsdale v. Clifton(1), Lord
Cairns dealing with this question observed as follows:
"In the case of -decisions of final Courts of appeal on
questions of law affecting civil rights, especially rights
of property, there are strong reasons for holding the
decisions, as a general rule, to be final as to third
parties. The law as to rights of property in this country
is to a great extent based upon and formed by such
decisions. When once arrived at, these decisions become
elements in the composition of the law, and the dealings of
mankind are based upon a reliance on such decisions.
Even as to such decisions it would perhaps be difficult to
say that they were, as to third parties, under all
circumstances and in all cases absolutely final, but they
certainly ought not to be reopened without the very greatest
hesitation".
The case before the Board was one involving questions of
ecclesiastical law, and it was held that in such cases their
Lordships were free to examine for themselves the reason on
which the prior decision rested and to decide on their own
view of the matter. The authorities bearing on this
question were reviewed by the Privy Council at some length
in Re: Transferred Civil Servants (Ireland) Compensation(3),
and the result was thus summed up:
"There is no inherent incompetency in ordering a rehearing
of a case already decided by the Board, even when a question
of a right of property is involved, but such an indulgence
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 127 of 147
will be granted in very exceptional circumstances only. It
is of the nature of an extraordinarium remedium".
This opinion was reiterated in Attorney-General of Ontario
v. Canada Temperance Federation(1) wherein Viscount Simon
said:
(1) [1898] A.C. 875.
(2) [1877] 2 P.D. 276.
(3) [1929] A.C. 242.
(4) A.I.R. 1946 P.C. 88.
808
"Their Lordships do not doubt that in tendering humble
advice to His Majesty they are not absolutely bound by
Previous decisions of the Board, as is the House of ]Lords
by its own judgments. In ecclesiastical appeals, for
instance, on more than one occasion, the Board has tendered
advice contrary to that given in a previous case, which
further historical research has shown to have been wrong.
But on constitutional questions it must be seldom indeed
that the Board would depart from a previous decision which
it may be assumed will have acted upon both by Governments
and subjects".
Thus, the practice of the Privy Council has been to
recognise a power to reconsider its previous decisions, but
it is exercised only in exceptional circumstances. In James
v. Commonwealth(1) the High Court of Australia has ruled
that it has the power to examine the correctness of its
previous decisions. The practice of the Supreme Court of
America is that it has considered itself free to reconsider
its previous decisions especially when they relate to
questions of constitutional law. (Vide Willoughby on
Constitutional Law, Vol. 1, pages 74 and 75 and the cases
cited there). The reason given for this view is that while
errors of law not bearing on constitutional provisions could
be corrected by ordinary process of legislation, an error on
a question of constitutional law could be set right only by
resort to the dilatory and cumbersome machinery of amending
the Constitution. (Vide Smith v. Allright(2)). This
reasoning will also be applicable to decisions involving
interpretation of our Constitution. It was argued for the
respondents that article 141 gives the decisions of this
Court the status of law, and that, therefore, if they are to
be changed that could be only by process of legislation.
Article 141 only enacts that the decisions of this Court are
binding on all courts, and that does not stand in the way of
this Court itself, reversing or modifying a previous
decision, as when that is done, such decision would
thereafter become itself the law under that article. There
is, therefore, good
(1) 18 C.L.R. 54. (2) 321 U.S. 659: 88 L.Ed. 987.
809
reason for holding that this Court has the power to
reconsider, inappropriate cases, a previous decision given
by it.
The question then arises as to the principles on which and
the limits within which this power should be exercised. It
is of course not possible to enumerate them exhaustively,
nor is it even desirable that they should be crystallised
into rigid and inflexible rules. But one principle stands
out prominently above the rest, and that is that in general,
there should be finality in the decisions of the highest
courts in the land, and that is for the benefit and
protection of the public. In this connection, it is
necessary to bear in mind that next to legislative
enactments, it is decisions of Courts that form the most
important source of law. It is on the faith of decisions
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 128 of 147
that rights are acquired and obligations incurred, and
States and subjects alike shape their course of action. It
must greatly impair the value of the decisions of this
Court, if the notion came to be entertained that there was
nothing certain or final about them, which must be the con-
sequence if the points decided therein came to be re-
considered on the merits every time they were raised. It
should be noted that though the Privy Council has repeatedly
declared that it has the power to reconsider its decisions,
in fact, no instance has been quoted in which it did
actually reverse its previous decision except in
ecclesiastical cases. If that is the correct position, then
the power to reconsider is one which should be exercised
very sparingly and only in exceptional circumstances, such
as when a material provision of law had been overlooked, or
where a fundamental assumption on which the decision is
based turns out to be mistaken. In the present case, it is
not suggested that in deciding the question of law as they
did in The State of Bombay v. The United Motors (India)
Ltd.(1) the learned Judges ignored any material provisions
of law, or were under any misapprehension as to a matter
fundamental to the decision. The arguments for the
appellant before us, were in fact only a
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069.
810
repetition of the very contentions which were urged before
the learned Judges and negatived by them. The question then
resolves itself to this. Can we differ from a previous
decision of this Court, because a view contrary to the one
taken therein appears to be preferable? I would
unhesitatingly answer it in the negative, not because the
view previously taken must necessarily be infallible but
because it is important in public interest that the law
declared should be certain and final rather than that it
should be declared in one sense or the other. That, I
conceive, is the reason behind article 141. There are
questions of law on which it is not possible to avoid
difference of opinion, and the present case is itself a
signal example of it. The object of article 141 is that the
decisions of this Court on these questions should settle the
controversy, and that they should be followed as law by all
the Courts, and if they are allowed to be reopened because a
different view appears to be the better one, then the very
purpose with which article 141 has been enacted will be
defeated, and the prospect will have been opened of
litigants subjecting our decisions to a continuous process
of attack before successive Benches in the hope that with
changes in the personnel of the Court which time must
inevitably bring, a different view might find acceptance. I
can imagine nothing more damaging to the prestige of this
Court or to the value of its pronouncements. In James v.
Commonwealth(1), it was observed that a question settled by
a previous decision should not be allowed to be reopened
"upon a mere suggestion that some or all of the Members of
the later Court might arrive at a different conclusion if
the matter was res integra. Otherwise, there would be grave
danger of want of continuity in the interpretation of the
law" (per Griffiths, C.J. at page 58). It is for this
reason that article 141 invests decisions of this Court with
special authority, but the weight of that authority can only
be what we ourselves give to it.
It was suggested as a ground for reconsidering the
correctness of the decision in The State of Bombay v.
(1) 18 C.L.R. 64.
811
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 129 of 147
The United Motors (India) Ltd.(1) that it had caused great
hardship to the business world. I have already held that
there is not much of substance in this complaint. On the
other hand, acting on the view that the Explanation confers
on the delivery States power to tax the sales, several
States amended their Sales Tax Acts in 1951 by inserting
appropriate provisions and it is represented before us that
for some years, taxes have been collected by the States on
the basis of these provisions. If we are now to hold that
the view taken in The State of Bombay v. The United Motors
(India) Ltd.(1) is erroneous, the consequences will be to
render the amended provisions inoperative and the
collections of taxes made thereunder illegal. The States
will then be not merely powerless to tax sales falling
within the Explanation in future, but will have actually to
refund whatever they might have collected in the past. I
can see no end to the chaos, confusion and trouble that must
ensue on such a decisions situation that can be retrieved
only by Parliament removing article 286(2) out of the scene
with retrospective operation, and all this, to benefit not
the consumers who are the persons really affected but the
sellers who are only statutory middlemen for collection,
some of whom are stated to have collected sales tax from
purchasers outside their States. I consider it wholly
inexpedient that our power of reconsideration should be
exercised for that end. This, of course, is apart from my
conclusion that on a correct interpretation of the
Explanation and article 286(2), the respondents have the
power to tax. In the result, this point must be held
against the appellant.
4. I shall now consider the question urged by the
appellant that the Bihar Sales Tax Act is invalid on the
ground that it is extra-territorial in operation and ultra
vires the powers of the State Legislature. The
Constitutional provisions bearing on this question are
articles 245(1) and 246(3) which are as follows:
"245. (1) Subject to the provisions of this Constitution,
Parliament may make laws for the whole or any part of the
territory of India, and the Legis-
(1) (1953] S.C.R. 1069. 103
103
812
lature of a State may make laws for the whole or any part of
the State.
246.(3) Subject to clauses (1) and (2), the Legislature of
any State specified in Part A or Part of the First Schedule
has exclusive power to make laws for such State or any part
thereof with respect to any of the matters enumerated in
List II in the Seventh Schedule (in this Constitution
referred to as the "State List")".
The contention of the appellant is that the words "for the
whole or any part of the State" in article 245(1) and "for
such State or any part thereof with respect to any of the
matters enumerated in List II" in article 246(3), impose a
territorial limitation on the jurisdiction of the State
Legislature; that under these provisions it can enact laws
only for persons and properties within the State and that
the provisions of the Act to the extent that they impose tax
on sellers who are outside the State are ultra vires. It
was also contended that the impugned provisions were extra-
territorial in their operation, and were beyond the compe-
tence of the State Legislature. The questions thus raised
are of great importance involving the determination of the
nature and extent of the power which a State has to make
laws in respect of the matters enumerated in List II.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 130 of 147
It is necessary, to begin with, to define the precise
meaning of the words "extra-territorial operation". A
sovereign State has plenary jurisdiction to enact laws for
its own territory. Such laws may be in respect of persons
within the territory whether citizens or not, of property,
immovable or movable, situated within the State; or of acts
and events which occur within its borders. In Maxwell on
Interpretation of Statutes (10th Edn. p. 144) the law is
thus stated:
"Primarily, the legislation of a country is territorial.
The general rule is, that extra territorium jus dicenti
impune non paretur. The laws of a nation apply to all its
subjects and to all things and acts within its territories".
In "Conflict of Laws-Restatement of the Law" by
813
the American Law Institute, the position is thus summed up:
"47. A State has jurisdiction over a person:
(a) if he is within the territory of the State,,
(b) if he is domiciled in the State although not present
there,
(c) if he has consented or subjected himself to the
exercise of jurisdiction over him either before or after the
exercise of jurisdiction.
48. An immovable thing is subject to the jurisdiction of
the State within which it is.
49. A chattel is subject to the jurisdiction of the State
within which it is.
56. A State has jurisdiction over all acts done or events
occurring within the territory of the State, and over all
failures to act in cases where there is a legal duty to act
within the State".
The legislation in respect of the above matters is intra-
territorial, notwithstanding that it might operate on
persons residing outside the State. Thus, a law of a State
taking over the management of lands of absentee-landlords
must operate on owners who are residing abroad. But in
strictness, this is not extraterritorial legislation but
legislation in respect of lands within the State. Likewise,
a law with reference to acts or events which occur within
the State is not extra-territorial, though it might have to
be enforced against a person who is residing outside the
State. Such a law is one in respect of an act or event
within the State. These laws, though intra-territorial, are
often loosely described as extra-territorial in operation.
In this context the words "extra-territorial operation"
connote laws in respect of properties or acts or events
within a State but having impact or operation on persons
outside the State.
There is another sense in which these words are used. When
a State enacts a law with reference to an act or event which
takes place outside its territory, it is described as extra-
territorial, and such legislation is recognised as valid by
rules of International Law where it is directed against its
own nationals and persons in its service. Thus, in "Con-
814
flict of Laws-Restatement of Law" it is observed that "a
nation has jurisdiction over its nationals although not
present within the territorial limits of the nation". (Page
78). In Corpus Juris Secundum, extraterritoriality is
defined as "the act by which a State extends its
jurisdiction beyond its own boundaries into the territory of
another State", and it is added that "the almost self-
evident proposition should perhaps also be noted in this
connection that a sovereignty has power to make laws
regulating the conduct of its subjects, while beyond the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 131 of 147
limits of its territorial jurisdiction". (Volume 15, pages
868-869). ’Extra-territorial Legislation", says Wheare,
"simply means legislation which attaches significance for
courts within the jurisdiction to facts and events occurring
outside the jurisdiction". (Statute of Westminster and
Domination Status by Wheare, 4th Edition, page 167). A
typical illustration of this class of legislation is
furnished by section 4, Indian Penal Code, which enacts that
"the provisions of this Code apply also to any offence
committed by-
(1)any citizen of India in any place without and beyond
India;
(2)any person on any ship or aircraft registered in India
wherever it may be.
Explanation:In this section the word ’offence’ includes
every act committed outside (India) which, if committed in
(India) would be punishable under this Code.
Illustration:A (who is a citizen of India) commits a murder
in Uganda. He can be tried and convicted of murder in any
place in (India) in which he may be found".
In this connection, extra-territorial legislation means a
law of a State with reference to its own citizens in respect
of acts or events which take place outside the State.. In
discussing questions relating to extra-territorial
operation, it is desirable that the two connotations of the
words should be kept distinct and separate. As the impugned
Act purports to tax sales within its territory, its
operation against persons who are residing outside but in
respect of sales within the
815
State is extra-territorial in the first sense, ’and it is
the validity of the provisions of the Act in this sense that
this appeal is concerned with.
Now, the question is, can a State Legislature make laws with
extra-territorial operation in the sense stated above? The
appellant contends that it cannot, and calls in aid
observations and decisions of the Privy Council with
reference to the powers of a subordinate or colonial
legislature to enact laws with extra-territorial operation.
In Macleod v. AttorneyGeneral for New South Wales(1), the
point for decision was whether an Act of New South Wales
conferred, on its true construction, jurisdiction on the
Courts within the Colony to try an offence of bigamy com-
mitted presumably by its national in America. In construing
it as intended to apply to crimes committed within the
State, Lord Halsbury, L.C. observed that the jurisdiction of
the colonies to enact laws was "confined within their own
territories", and that "it would have been beyond the
jurisdiction of the Colony" to enact a law in respect of a
crime committed outside their territory. These observations
refer to extra-territorial operation in the second sense
stated above, and have no application when the law of the
State is in respect of an act or event taking place within
its territories. In Commercial Cable Company v. Attorney-
General of Newfoundland(3), the question was with reference
to a law of Newfoundland imposing a tax on telephone
companies in respect of cables landed or established in the
Colony. In discussing the scope of these provisions, Lord
Macnaghten observed at page 826:
"While, of course, it was competent to impose taxation on
cables within its territorial jurisdiction, it was not
competent for the Government to lay a tax on cables outside
its territorial jurisdiction".
These observations again have no bearing on the point now
under consideration whether a law enacted in respect of an
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 132 of 147
act or event occurring within the State is incompetent, if
it seeks to operate on a person concerned in the act but
residing outside the State. In
(1) (1891] A.C. 455.
(2) [1912] A.C. 820.
816
Nadan v. The King(1), the question was as to the validity of
section 1025 of the Criminal Code of the Dominion of Canada
which enacted that "no appeal shall lie in criminal case to
any authority in the United Kingdom by way of appeal or
petition to His Majesty in Council". It was held by
Viscount Cave, L.C., that that section was repugnant to the
Privy Council Acts of 1833 and 1844, and was therefore void
under the Colonial Laws Validity Act, 1865, and that
accordingly the appeal to the-Privy Council was competent.
He also observed that however widely the powers of the
Dominion Parliament be construed, they were confined to
action to be taken in the Dominion, and could not extend to
annulling the prerogative right of the King in Council to
grant special leave to appeal. As the law in question was
in respect of crimes committed within the State, these
observations are capable of the construction which the
appellant seems to put on them that such a law would be
incompetent to the extent that it is to have operation
outside the State. But it must be mentioned that the vires
of the action to be taken under the Act within the State
itself was affirmed in unqualified terms, and that is what
we are concerned with in this appeal. The question,
however, must now be taken to be settled by the decision in
Croft v. Sylvester Dunphy(1). There, the question related
to the validity of sections 151 and 207 of the Customs Act
of Canada under which the officers of the State were
authorised to search ships within 12 miles of the coast, and
seize dutiable goods found in them, the provisions being
obviously intended to aid in the effective collection of
customs. There was no dispute that the legislation was
within the competence of the Dominion Legislature, customs
being one of the topics enumerated in section 91 of the
British North America Act, 1867, but the attack was on the
validity of sections 151 and 207 on the ground that their
operation was extra-territorial. Thus, the question raised
is the very question which now arises for determination. In
holding that the legislation was valid, Lord Macmillan
observed as follows:
(1) (1926) A.C 482. (2) [1933] A.C. 156.
817
"Once it is found that a particular topic of legislation is
among those upon which the Dominion Parliament may
competently legislato as being for the peace, order and good
Government of Canada or as being one of the specific
subjects enumerated in section 91, British North America
Act, their Lordships see no reason to restrict the permitted
scope of such legislation by any other consideration than is
applicable to the legislation of a fully Sovereign State".
The law as settled by this decision may thus be stated:
Whether a subordinate Legislature has power to enact laws
with extra-territorial operation will depend on the terms of
the Constitution Act which creates it and subject to any
limitations contained therein, it has in respect of the
topics assigned to it powers of legislation as plenary as
the Sovereign Legislature which constitutes it.
It was argued by Mr. N. C. Chatterjee that subsequent to the
decision in Croft v. Dunphy(1) the Privy Council had again
to consider in British Coal Corporation v. The King(1) the
validity of a Canadian law which had extra-territorial
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 133 of 147
operation, and therein the grounds of the decision in Nadan
v. The King(1) were stated at page 516 with apparent
approval, and that though the legislation was held to be
valid, it was because of the Statute of Westminster, 1931,
and that in the absence of a similar statute for India, the
Legislature of this country had only the limited powers
recognised in Nadan v. The King(1), and that extra-
territorial legislation was incompetent. But there is
nothing in the observations in British Coal Corporation v.
The King(1) relied on by the appellant, to support the
contention that the view expressed in Nadan’s case(’.) was
adopted in preference to that taken in Croft v. Dunphy(1);
in fact, there was no decision at all on this point. Nor
does the fact that the Statute of Westminster has conferred
an express power on the Colonial Legislature to enact laws
with extra-territorial operation affect the weight to be
attached to the conclusions come to in Croft v. Dun-
(1) [1933] A.C. 156. (2) [1935] A.C. 500, 516.
(3)[1926] A.C. 482.
818
phy(1), because they were reached, not with reference to the
Statute of Westminster about the applicability of which
retrospectively to the case before the Board there was
controversy, but on general principles, and what is more to
the present case, it was the law as declared in Croft v.
Dunphy(1) that was before the framers of the Constitution
when they enacted sections 99 and 100 of the Government of
India Act, 1935.
Turning now to the Constitutional provisions under the
Indian law, this topic is dealt with in sections 99(1) and
100(3) of the Government of India Act. To understand the
precise scope of these provisions, it is necessary to
examine the position under the previous Constitution Acts.
Section 43 of the Charter Act, 1833 (3 and 4 Will. IV,
Chap. 85) conferred power on the Governor-General in Council
"to make laws and regulations for all
persons................ and for all Courts and for all
places and things whatsoever within and throughout the whole
and every part of the said territory". In the Government of
India Act, 1915 (5 and 6 Geo. V) Ch. 61) the corresponding
provision was section 65(1)(a) which enacted that the Indian
Legislatures have the "power to make laws for all persons,
for all Courts and for all places and things within the
British India". Under these provisions, it cannot be
doubted that the Indian Legislatures would have had no
jurisdiction to enact laws operating on persons who were not
within the State as that would be plainly opposed to the
limitation that they should be "for persons within the
territory". Both section 43 of the Charter Act, 1833 and
section 65(1) (a) of the Government of India Act, 1915 are
based on the theory which was then widely held that a
subordinate Legislature had no competence to enact laws with
extra-territorial operation. Then came the Government of
India Act, 1935. Sections 99(1) and 100(3) which are
relevant provisions are as follows:
"99. (1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Federal
Legislature may make laws for the whole or any. part of
British India or for any Federated
(1) [1933] A. C. 156.
819
State, and a Provincial Legislature may make laws for the
Province or for any part thereof.
100. (3) Subject to the two preceding sub-sections, the
Provincial Legislature has, and the Federal Legislature has
not, power to make laws for a Province or any part thereof
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 134 of 147
with respect to any of the matters enumerated in List II in
the said Schedule (hereinafter called the "Provincial
Legislative List")".
The language of these sections marks, it will be noticed, a
wide departure from that of section 43 of the Charter Act
and section 65 (1) (a) of the Government of India Act, 1915.
The limitation that the legislation should be for persons or
things within the territory has been removed. Instead, it
is enacted that it could be "for the whole or part of
British India in the case of Federal Legislature" and "for
the Province or part thereof in the case of Provincial
Legislature", and under section 100(3), the power is to make
laws for a Province or a part thereof with respect to the
matters enumerated in List II. Under sections 99(1) and
100, the legislative power of the Centre or the Province is
determined by two conditions. It must be for the territory
specified, and it must be in respect of the topics
enumerated in the respective lists. If these conditions are
satisfied, then the law is valid notwithstanding that it may
have impact or operation outside the State. The scope of
the legislative power conferred by sections 99(1) and 100 is
precisely the same as that conferred on the Legislatures of
Canada under sections 91 and 92 of the British North America
Act. That was also a power conferred on the Dominion
Parliament or the Provincial Legislature to make laws for
the Dominion or the Province in respect of the matters
mentioned in sections 91 and 92 respectively. It is on the
construction of these provisions that Lord Macmillan held in
Croft v. Dunphy(1) that the Dominion Legislature was
competent to enact laws in respect of those matters even if
they had extra-territorial operation. The framers of the
Government of India Act, 1935, changed the language of
section 65(1)(a) of the Gov-
(1) [1933] A.C. 156. 104
104
820
ernment of India Act, 1915, and substituted words similar to
those in sections 91 and 92 of the British North America
Act, 1867. It is a reasonable deduction to make that they
intended to give effect to the law as declared in Croft v.
Dunphy(’-). A law which satisfies the two conditions
prescribed in sections 99 (1) and 100, therefore, must be
held to be intra vires, even though it might have extra-
territorial operation.
The precise extent of the powers conferred by sections 99(1)
and 100 has also been the subject of considerable judicial
consideration. In Governor-General in Council v. Raleigh
Investment Co. Ltd.(1), the question was as to the liability
of a Company which was incorporated under the English
Companies Act having its main office in England and no place
of business in India to be assessed to income-tax under the
provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act. The Company held
the bulk of shares in nine Companies which were also
registered in England and controlled from there, and carried
on business in British India and earned profits. Dividends
in respect of these profits were declared in London and paid
to the assessee in London. The Explanation to section 4(i)
(c) of the Indian Income-tax Act enacts that a dividend paid
outside British India shall be deemed to be income accruing
in or arising in British India to the extent to which it has
been paid out of profits subjected to tax in British India.
The income-tax authorities claimed that the dividends
received by the assessee-Company were liable to be taxed
under this provision. The Company resisted the claim inter
alia on the ground that as it was not resident in British
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 135 of 147
India and did not carry on business there, the Indian
Legislature had no competence to impose a tax on it, and
that the provisions of the Act were ultra vires as extra-
territorial in their operation. This contention succeeded
before the High Court of Calcutta, the Chief Justice
observing that the impugned provision amounted to the
"Legislature of British India without specific or apparent
authority stretching out its legislative arm and physical
band beyond British
(1) [1983] A.C. 156.
(2) [19441 F.C.R. 229.
821
India into other countries in an attempt to tax persons and
property there not subject to its laws"; and Mitter, J.
characterising it as a "piece of extra-territorial
legislation not by a superior or Dominion Legislature but by
a subordinate Legislature". On appeal, this decision was
reversed by the Federal Court. Spens, C. J. who delivered
the judgment of the Court held firstly that as the source of
the income which was subjected to tax was Indian, it was
competent for the Indian Legislature to impose a tax
thereon, and no question of extra-territorial operation
arose. That is to say, Entry 54 in List I gave power to the
Indian Legislature to tax income which arises from British
India, even though the person to be taxed was not resident
within British India. He also held that even if an element
of extra-territoriality was involved, the legislation was
not bad on that account, because section 99(1) and section
100 of the Government of India Act, 1935 were intended to
embody the law as declared in Croft v. Dunphy(1) and to
confer on the Indian Legislature plenary powers of
legislation in respect of matters mentioned in the lists,
departing in this respect from the position under section
65(1)(a) of the Government of India Act, 1915.
In Wallace Brothers & Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-
tax, Bombay(1), the appellant was a Company registered in
England and controlled from there. It held a 14/32 share in
a firm called Messrs Wallace & Co., which was carrying on
business in Bombay. The appellant was sought to be taxed
not merely on its income as partner of the Bombay firm about
which there was no dispute but also on the income of over
seven lakhs of rupees which had arisen and bad accrued to it
abroad. The appellant resisted the claim on the ground that
the provisions of the Indian Act were ultra vires as their
operation was extra-territorial, inasmuch as they sought to
tax income of a non-resident received abroad. The Federal
Court rejected this contention. It held that if the person
proposed to be taxed had sufficient business connec-
(1) [1933] A. C. 156.
(2) [1945] F.C.R. 65.
822
tion with British India, that would confer a jurisdiction on
the Indian Legislature to tax him, and that what heads of
income in his hands should be taxed was a matter of policy
which was within the province of the Legislature to decide.
It also held that the provisions of the Act were "not in
their operation extraterritorial in the strict legal sense".
There was an appeal against this judgment to the Privy
Council, i.e., Wallace Bros. v. I. T. Commissioner,
Bombay(1). Affirming the judgment of the Federal Court,
Lord Uthwatt observed that the fact that the appellant "was
a member of the partnership carrying on business in British
India" was irrelevant in considering whether the legislation
was intra vires; that it was to be assumed that there was
"no connection between the Companies and British India
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 136 of 147
except the derivation from British India of the larger part
of their income", and that the validity of the legislation
should be determined on that basis. He then observed:
"There is no rule of law that the territorial limits of
subordinate legislature define the possible scope of its
legislative enactments or mark the field open to its vision.
The ambit of the powers possessed by a subordinate
legislature depends upon the proper construction of the
statute conferring those powers. No doubt the enabling
statute has to be read against the background that only a
defined territory has been committed to the charge of the
legislature. Concern by a subordinate Legislature with
affairs or persons outside its own territory may therefore
suggest a query whether the Legislature is in truth minding
its own business. It does not compel the conclusion that it
is not. The enabling statute has to be fairly construed".
He then referred to section 99(1) and section 100 of the
Government of India Act under which the Indian Legislature
had power to enact laws for the whole or part of British
India with respect to tax on incomes, and concluded:
"The resulting general conception as to the scope
(1) [1948] F.C.R. 1.
823
of income-tax is that given a sufficient territorial con-
nection between the person sought to be charged and the
country seeking to tax him income-tax may properly extend to
that person in respect of his foreign income............ The
principle-sufficient territorial connection-not the rule
giving effect to that principle -residence-is implicit in
the power conferred by the Government of India Act, 1935.
The result is that the validity of the legislation in
question depends on the sufficiency for the purpose for
which it is used of the territorial connection set forth in
the impugned portion of the statutory test".
It is the contention of the respondent that the present
question is concluded by this decision. In A. H. Wadia v.
I. T. Commissioner, Bombay(1), the question related to the
liability of the Gwalior Durbar to be assessed to income-tax
in respect of interest received at Gwalior. There was a
Company called the Providence Investment Co. Ltd. carrying
on business in Bombay. The shares of the Company were all
held by the Durbar or by its nominees. It was financed by
the Durbar, the transaction taking the form of loan advanced
at Gwalior. On these facts., the Income-tax Officer
assessed the Agent of the Durbar to tax on the interest
received at Gwalior. The validity of this assessment was
disputed on the ground that the statutory provisions under
which it was made were extra-territorial in their operation
and therefore ultra vires. It was held by all the learned
Judges following the decisions in Governor-General in
Council v. Raleigh Investment Co. Ltd.(1) and Wallace Bros.
v. I. T. Commissioner, Bombay(1) that the assessee would be
liable to tax if there was sufficient business connection
between him and British India, and that, in that event, the
provisions would not be bad on the ground of extra-
territorial operation. There was, however, a difference of
opinion among the learned Judges as to whether, on the
facts, sufficient territorial connection had been
established, the majority holding that it had been, while
two learned Judges
(1) [1949] F.C.R. 18.
(2) [1944] F.C.R. 229.
(3) [1948] F.C.R. 1.
824
thought otherwise. That, however, is not material to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 137 of 147
present discussion.
These authorities establish that under section 99(1) and
section 100 of the Government of India Act, a law enacted by
the Indian Legislature in respect of the matters enumerated
in the appropriate list$ would -be valid provided it is for
the territory entrusted to their charge; that whether it was
so or not would depend on whether there was sufficient
territorial connection between the person who is sought to
be charged or proceeded against under the law and the
country which enacts the law; and that when such connection
exists, the law is not strictly speaking extra-territorial,
and it is not ultra vires on the ground that the person is
not residing within the State which enacts the law.
Then, we come to the Constitution. Articles 245(1) and 246
which deal with this subject reproduce sections 99(1) and
100 with only alterations of a formal character.’ They
confer on the Parliament and the State Legislatures power to
enact laws in respect of the topics mentioned in the
respective lists to be exercised for the territory over
which they have jurisdiction. It is a well-settled rule of
construction that when a statute is repealed and re-enacted
and words in the repealed statute are reproduced in the new
statute, they should be interpreted in the sense which had
been judicially put on them under the repealed Act, because
the Legislature is presumed to be acquainted with the
construction which the Courts have put upon the words, and
when they repeat the same words, they must be taken to have
accepted the interpretation put on them by the Court as
correctly reflecting the legislative mind. On a
construction of articles 245(1) and 246, therefore, it will
be difficult to come to any other conclusion than that a
sales tax legislation of a State which is otherwise valid is
not ultra vires on the ground that the person proposed to be
taxed is not resident within the territorial limits of the
State.
Three other contentions urged in opposition to this
conclusion must now be considered;
825
1.It is only the Central or Federal Legislature that has the
power to enact laws with extra-territorial operation, and
that the Legislatures of the States forming units of a
Federal Union do not possess such power.
2. Under article 245 (2) there is a prohibition against
States enacting laws with extra-territorial operation.
3. Some of the provisions of the Act forming the machinery
sections for the assessment and collection of taxes are, in
any event, unauthorised and the whole Act is void on the
ground that the valid provisions thereof cannot be separated
from the invalid ones.
On the first question, it is argued by the learned Attorney-
General that the decision in Croft v. Dunphy(1) had
reference to a law enacted by the Legislature of Dominion of
Canada and not any of the Provinces, and that the decisions
in Governor-General in Council v. Raleigh Investment Co.
(1), Wallace Brothers & Co. v. The Commissioner of Income-
tax, Bombay(1) and A. H. Wadia v. Income-tax Commissioner.,
Bombay(1) related to the Indian Income-tax Act which was
enacted by the Central Legislature, and that to apply the
doctrine laid down in those cases to laws passed by the
States would be to extend its operation beyond recognised
limits, and that there was no warrant for it in the
Constitution. On principle, it is difficult to see why a
law enacted by the State in respect of the matters assigned
exclusively to its jurisdiction should stand on a different
footing from a law passed by Parliament on a matter within
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 138 of 147
its jurisdiction. Both the Legislatures derive their
authority from the same source, whether it be the Government
of India Act, 1935, or the Constitution of India. Under
these Statutes, the State is not subordinate to the Centre,
its authority being supreme in respect of the matters
entrusted to it. Under the Government of India Act, 1935,
when the British Government decided to change what was a
unitary into a Federal Government, the process adopted for
(1) [1933] A.C. 156.
(2) [1944] F.C.R. 229.
(3) [1948] F.C.R. 1.
(4) [1949] F.C.R. 18.
826
that purpose was that the Parliament resumed all the powers
that had been granted under the previous Constitution Act
and redistributed them between the Centre and the Province.
The terms on which the redistribution was made were
identical both for the Centre and the Province, their
authority under sections 99(1) and 100 being to enact laws
in respect, of the matters mentioned in the appropriate
lists an for their respective territory. The extent of this
authority must, therefore, be the same both in the case of
the Centre and the State, each being sovereign within its
own sphere. The principle laid down in Croft v. Dunphy(1)
that a subordinate Legislature has plenary powers in respect
of the topics assigned to it will apply as much to the State
with reference to the matters enumerated in List 11 as to
the Centre with reference to the topics mentioned in Lists I
and 111. In Hodge v. The Queen(1) which is one of the cases
on which the decision in Croft v. Dunphy(1) was based, the
law under challenge was that of the Province of Ontario in
Canada in respect of a topic enumerated in section 92 of the
British North America Act of 1867. The question whether
States as distinct from the Commonwealth have competence to
enact laws with extra-territorial operation has also been
considered in some of the decisions of the Australian High
Court. In Broken Hill South Limited v. The Commissioner of
Taxation (3) Evatt, J. in discussing this question observed
as follows at page 378:
"Some of the cases also illustrate the fact, occasionally
overlooked, that, constitutionally speaking, the status of
the States of Australia is equal to, or co-ordinate with,
that of the Commonwealth itself. Sovereignty is not
attributable to one authority more than to the others; it is
divided between them in accordance with the demarcation of
functions set out in the Commonwealth Constitution. Within
the limits so prescribed, the legislative authority of the
States is of precisely equivalent quality and potency to
that of the Commonwealth, the authority of which
(1) [1933] A.C. 156.
(2) [1883] 9 A.C. 117.
(3) 56 C.L.R. 337.
827
is, in sections 51 and 52 of the Commonwealth Constitution,
limited by reference to subject-matter. In short, the
Commonwealth Parliament may legislate for ’the peace, order
and good government of the Commonwealth with respect to’ a
large number of subject-matters. Similarly, the State of
New South Wales may legislate for ’the peace, welfare and
good government’ of New South Wales. In relation to such a
subject-matter as that of taxation, and subject, of course,
to any overriding provision of the Commonwealth
Constitution, it is quite impossible to deny to the States
in relation to their geographical area constitutional powers
precisely analogous to those possessed by the Commonwealth
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 139 of 147
Parliament in relation to its geographical area. The
legislation of the States cannot be deemed ultra vires
merely because of territorial reasons, unless analogous
legislation of the Commonwealth Parliament would similarly
be deemed unconstitutional and void".
These observations are very apposite to the present
controversy. The conclusion is inescapable that the powers
of the Union and the State under sections 99(1) and 100 of
the Government of India Act, as also under articles 245(1)
and 246 in respect of the matters mentioned in their
respective lists have the same content and quality, and that
if legislation with extra-territorial operation is within
the competence of the Union, it is equally within the
competence of the State.
Coming now to the second contention, the argument of the
appellant is that in enacting that "no law of Parliament
shall be deemed to be invalid on the ground that it would
have extra-territorial operation", article 245(2) prohibits
by implication the enactment of such laws by the States.
This contention is unsound. The words "extra-territorial
operation" are used, as already stated, in two different
senses as connoting firstly, laws in respect of acts or
events which take place inside the State but have operation
outside, and secondly, laws with reference to the nationals
of a State in respect of their acts outside; that in its
former sense, the laws are strictly
105
828
speaking intra-territorial though loosely termed ’extra-
territorial’, and that under article 245(1) it is within the
competence of the Parliament and of the State Legislatures
to enact laws with extra-territorial operation in that
sense. The words "laws with extraterritorial operation" in
article 245 (2) must be understood in their second and
strict sense as having reference to the laws of a State for
their nationals in respect of acts done outside the State.
Otherwise, the provision would be redundant as regards
legislation by Parliament and inconsistent as regards laws
enacted by States. This conclusion is placed beyond doubt
when regard is had to the history of legislation on this
topic. Section 43 of the Charter Act, 1833 while
restricting the scope of legislative authority to persons
and things within the State thus denying the power to enact
laws with extra-territorial operations in the first sense,
conferred a power to make laws "for all servants of the
Company within the Dominion of Princes and States in
alliance with the said Company". This was a power to enact
extra-territorial legislation in the second sense for
servants of the Company. Section 65(1) of the Government of
India Act, 1915 followed the same pattern, and while
limiting under sub-clause (a) the power of Indian
Legislatures to enact laws for persons and things within
British India conferred jurisdiction to enact laws with
extra-territorial operation in the second sense by sub-
clauses (b), (c), (d) and (e) which are as follows:
"65. (1) The (Indian Legislature) has power to make laws-
(b)for all subjects of His Majesty and servants of the Crown
within other parts of India; and
(c)for all native Indian subjects of His Majesty, without
and beyond as well as within British India; and
(d)for the government of officers, soldiers, (airmen)and
followers in His Majesty’s Indian forces, wherever they are
serving, in so far as they are not subject to the Army Act
(or the Air Force Act); and
(e) for all persons employed or serving in or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 140 of 147
829
belonging to the Royal Indian Marine Service". This topic
was again dealt with in section 99(2) of the Government of
India Act, 1935, which runs as follows:
"99. (2) Without prejudice to the generality of the powers
conferred, by the preceding sub-section, no Federal law
shall, on the ground that it would have extra-territorial
operation, be deemed to be invalid in so far as it applies-
(a) to British subjects and servants of the Crown in any
part of India; or
(b) to British subjects who are domiciled in any part of
India wherever they may be; or
(c) to, or to persons on, ships or aircraft registered in
British India or any Federated States where-ever they may
be; or
(d) in the case of a law with respect to a matter accepted
in the Instrument of Accession of a Federated State as a
matter with respect to which the Federal Legislature may
make laws for that State, to subjects of that State wherever
they may be; or
(e) in the case of law for the regulation or discipline of
any naval, military, or air force raised in British India,
to members of, and persons attached to, employed with or
following, that force, wherever they may be".
In Governor-General in Council v. Raleigh Investment Co.(1),
the question was raised whether these provisions were
restrictive of the power of the Indian Legislature to enact
laws with extra-territorial operation in respect of matters
other than those enumerated in -section 99(2). Spens, C.J.
held that as the impugned provisions were within the ambit
of legislative power under sections 99(1) and 100 of the
Government of India Act, 1935, they were not extra-
territorial in operation and that even if they were, the
words "without prejudice to the generality of the powers
conferred by the preceding sub-section" occurring in section
99(2) posited the existence of a power aliunde, and that the
enumeration of the specified topics in that sub-clause was
by way of abundant caution. On the
(1) [1944] F.C.R. 229.
830
14th August, 1947, acting under section 9 of the Indian
Independence Act the Governor-General issued an Adaptation
Order, and therein, for the words "for the whole or any part
of British India or for any Federated State" were
substituted the words "including laws having extra-
territorial operation for the whole or any part of the
Dominion"; and sub-section (2) was omitted. When the
Constitution was enacted, the words "including laws having
extra-territorial operation for the whole or any part of the
Dominion" were omitted and in their place, article 245(2)
was enacted. Thus, article 245(2) is a successor to section
65(1), sub-clauses (b), (c), (d) and (e) of the Government
of India Act, 1915 and section 99(2) of the Government of
India Act, 1935, and its scope is extraterritorial
legislation in the second sense. As we are concerned in
this appeal with extra-territorial operation in its first
sense- article 245 (2) has no application, and the attack on
the impugned Act on the ground that it is barred by article
245(2) must fail.
The third contention has reference to the machinery sections
of the Act relating to the assessment and collection of
taxes. The argument was that even if the Bihar Legislature
had the competence to enact under Entry 54 a taxation law
against non-residents, it had no power to enforce it outside
its own territorial limits, and some of the provisions were
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 141 of 147
bad on this ground, such as section 17 which authorised
search of premises and seizure of accounts, and section 26
which made it an offence to obstruct such search or seizure.
But we are not called upon in these proceedings to pronounce
on the validity of these provisions. The respondent issued
notice under section 13(5) of the Act calling upon the
appellant to send his returns and proposing in case of
default to make assessment on the basis of best judgment.
It was at this stage that the appellant rushed to the Court,
and moved for a writ of prohibition to restrain the pro-
ceedings on the ground of want of jurisdiction. That is the
one and the only question that now falls to be determined.
Even if some of the machinery sections ,Ire bad-it is a
question to be decided when it arises
831
whether they can be justified on the ground that they are
ancillary or incidental to the substantive provisions, as to
which see Attorney-General for Canada v. Cain(1) and Croft
v. Dunphy(2)-that would not affect the power of the State to
impose a tax, and it will therefore be foreign to the scope
of this appeal to enter into a discussion of their validity.
It was urged by the learned Attorney-General that if the
machinery sections were bad on the ground that they were
extra-territorial in their operation, and if the power to
tax was so mixed up with them as to be inseparable from
them, then, when they fall it must also fall. A power to
tax is a matter of substantive law, whereas the machinery
sections providing for the execution of that power such as,
assessment, and collection of tax, pertain to the domain of
adjectival law, and the two are distinct and separable. It
is elementary law that the power to tax does not depend on
the ability to realise it. In British Columbia Electric
Railway Co. Ltd. v The King(1) Viscount Simon observed:
"A legislature which passes a law having extraterritorial
operation may find that what it has enacted cannot be
directly enforced, but the Act is not invalid on that
account, and the courts of its country must enforce the law
with the machinery available to them".
Without expressing any opinion, therefore, on the validity
of the machinery sections, I must hold that the impugned Act
in so far as it authorises the imposition of tax on sales
falling within the Explanation to article 286(1) (a) is
neither ultra vires the powers of the State Legislature nor
bad on the ground that it is extra-territorial in its
operation.
5. Then there remains the contention of the appellant that
even assuming that the States could, under the Explanation,
enact a law imposing a tax on a non-resident and that such
law would not be hit by article 286(2), the impugned Act
must even then be held to be bad for the reason that it was
not auth-
(1) [1906] A.C. 542.
(2) [1933] A.G. 156.
(3) [1946] A.C. 527.
832
orised by the terms of the Explanation. Two grounds were
urged in support of this contention: (1) that under the
Explanation truly construed, a seller could be taxed only if
he is within the State, and (2) that the goods were actually
delivered not in Bihar but in Bengal and that therefore the
Explanation did not apply. The argument in support of the
first ground was that as the Explanation enacts that the
sale or purchase-not merely the sale-must be deemed to have
taken place in the delivery State, it must be construed in
the light of the presumption that the laws of a State are
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 142 of 147
intended to operate on persons or things within its
territory, and so construed, it should be held to authorise
the levy of a tax on the seller only if he was within the
State or on the purchaser who must be within the territory.
The assumption on which this argument rests is that States
have jurisdiction only over persons and property within
their territory: but this, as already shown, is not correct.
A State has jurisdiction to enact laws in respect of acts
and events which occur within its territory, and if a sale
takes place within the State as under the Explanation it
does by a legal fiction, then its jurisdiction to enact a
law imposing a tax thereon is complete, and no question of
its overstepping its territorial limits arises. It should
also be noted that the scope of the presumption that the
laws of a State are not intended to operate outside its
territory is, as stated by Maxwell, that "Parliament does
not design its Statutes to operate on its subjects beyond
the territorial limits of the United Kingdom" (Maxwell’s
Interpretation of Statutes, 10th Edn., page 145). That has
reference to extraterritorial operation in the second sense.
There is no presumption that the laws of a State made with
reference to acts and events occurring within its borders
are not intended to have operation outside its territory.
Moreover, a tax on sale of goods is, as observed in The
Province of Madras v. Messrs Boddu Paidanna & Sons(1) "a tax
levied on the occasion of the sale of goods" and the
liability to tax arises "on the occasion
(1) A.I.R. 1942 F.C. 33.
833
of a sale". In The State of Bombay v. The United Motors
(India) Ltd. (1), it was stated that the sales tax was a tax
imposed "on the occasion of the sale as a taxable event".
It is thus, in essence, a tax levied on the act of buying
and selling. Sale is the result of a contract, and is
bilateral in character. There can be seller only in
relation to a purchaser and vice versa. It therefore
follows that the power to impose a tax on sale imports a
power to tax either the seller or the purchaser.
In V. M. Syed Mohammad & Co. v. The State of Andhra(1), the
question was raised for decision whether Entry 48 in the
Provincial List of the Government of India Act 1935 "tax on
sale of goods" included a power to impose a tax on the
purchaser. It was held that it did, and it was observed
that when Entry 54 in List II of the Seventh Schedule of the
Constitution substituted for the words "tax on sales" occur-
ring in Entry 48 the words "tax on sale or purchase", it did
not thereby enlarge the powers previously conferred by Entry
48 but "merely expressed in clearer language what was
implicit in that corresponding entry". When article
286(1)(a)and the Explanation refer to a sale or purchase,
they merely conform to the terms of Entry 54, and these
words cannot therefore be construed as splitting up the
power to tax sales into two parts, one available against the
purchaser at all times, as in the very nature of it he must
be within the State, and the other against a seller if he is
within jurisdiction. The power is one and indivisible to be
exercised when the conditions mentioned in the Explanation
are satisfied against either a seller or buyer as the
Legislature might determine.
The language of the Explanation, it should be marked, does
not impose any limitation or condition on the exercise of
this power. It is general and unqualified, and will
comprehend all cases in which goods are delivered for
consumption in the taxing State irrespective of whether the
seller is within the State or not. To hold that the tax
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 143 of 147
could be imposed on a seller only if he is within the State
would be to
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069.
(2) [1954] S.C.R. 1117.
834
add words to the Explanation which are not there., and for
this, there is no justification. On the other hand, there
are good reasons why - the power should have been vested in
the legislature to determine whether it will tax the seller
or the buyer. The tax imposed under the Explanation really
falls on the consumer-purchaser. While it is possible that
with reference to certain classes of goods the tax can
effectively be imposed on the purchaser, it must happen that
with reference to other kinds of goods as, for example,
medicines in the present appeal, it cannot be so done, and,
as already pointed out, it is a "familiar and sanctioned
device" to make the seller the agent of the State for
collection of taxes. In leaving it to the States to
determine whether they will tax the seller or the buyer, the
Explanation has merely given recognition to a familiar
principle of taxation laws sanctioned by usage and upheld by
authority. This objection must accordingly be overruled.
It was then contended that the sales proposed to be taxed
did not take place in Bihar as the goods were actually
delivered as contemplated by the Explanation not there but
in Bengal. The argument is that the words "actual delivery"
in the Explanation are used in contrast to constructive or
symbolic delivery as meaning physical delivery of goods,
that under section 39(1) of the Sale of Goods Act, 1930 (Act
III of 1930) the common carrier is the agent of the
purchaser, and that therefore delivery of the goods to the
railway authorities in Bengal was actual delivery thereof to
the purchaser in Bengal. Section 39(1) is as follows:
"Where in pursuance of a contract of sale, the seller is
authorised or required to send the goods to the buyer,
delivery of the goods to a carrier whether named by the
buyer or not, for the purpose of transmission to the buyer,
or delivery of the goods to a wharfinger for safe custody is
prima facie deemed to be a delivery of the goods to the
buyer".
It is difficult to see what there is in this section to
support the contention that delivery to a common carrier is
actual delivery to the purchaser. The section
835
-does not say so. On the other hand, it proceeds on the
assumption that there was, in fact., no delivery to the
purchaser, actual or otherwise, a thing a being deemed to be
something only, when as a fact it is not that, and then
enacts on that basis a fiction that delivery to a common
carrier shall be deemed prima facie to be delivery to the
buyer. What is the purpose of this fiction? It is, as will
be clear from section 39(2), to fix on whom the loss is to
fall in case the goods are lost or damaged in course of
transit. But where no such question arises, the fiction has
to be ignored, and the matter will have to be decided on the
factual basis whether the goods were actually delivered.
A reference to section 51 (I) of the Sale of Goods Act is
very instructive. It runs as follows:
"Goods are deemed to be in course of transit from the time
when they are delivered to a carrier or other bailee for the
purpose of transmission to the buyer, until the buyer or his
agent in that behalf takes delivery of them from such
carrier or other bailee". In this clause, the word
"delivery" is used to denote both the delivery of goods by
the seller to the common carrier and the delivery to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 144 of 147
purchaser by the common carrier. They cannot both be actual
deliveries, as goods sold under a sale can actually be deli-
vered only once. If the delivery of the goods to the common
carrier was actual delivery, then what is the nature of
delivery when the purchaser took possession of the goods
from the common carrier? It is also physical delivery of
the goods, and is therefore actual delivery on the
appellant’s own definition.
The fact is that while for some purposes delivery to the
common carrier is treated as delivery to the purchaser,
there is delivery in fact and in its popular sense, only
when the purchaser obtains possession of the goods and it is
this that is connoted by the words "actual delivery". When
section 51 (I) refers to delivery to buyer or his agent, it
refers to actual delivery, and delivery to common carrier is
regarded as constructive, having regard to section 39(1).
The section, it will be noticed, proceeds on the. footing
that a
106
836
common carrier is not the agent of the buyer with reference
to actual delivery. He is the agent of the purchaser for
transmission of the goods to him.
This position was well-established in the common law of
England, and was thus stated by Parke, B., in James v.
Griffin(1) in the following terms:
"The delivery by the vendor of goods sold to a carrier of
any description, either expressly or by implication named by
the vendee, and who is to carry on his account, is a
constructive delivery to the vendee; but the vendor has a
right if unpaid, and if the vendee be insolvent, to retake
the goods before they are actually delivered to the vendee,
or some one whom he means to be his agent, to take
possession of and keep the goods for him, and thereby to
replace the vendor in the same situation as if he had not
parted with the actual possession........ The actual
delivery to the vendee or his agent, which puts an end to
the transitus or state of passage, may be at the vendee’s
own warehouse, or at a place which he uses as his own,
though belonging to another, for the deposit of goods:
(Scott v. Prettit(2): Rowe v. Pickford(3)); or at a place
where he means the goods to remain until a fresh
destination is communicated to them by orders from himself;
Dixon v. Baldwen(4); or it may be by the vendee’s taking
possession by himself or agent at some point short of the
original intended place of destination".
In Ex parte Rosevear China Clay Company. In Re Cock(1)
James, L.J. said:
"The authorities show that the vendor has a right to stop in
transitu until the goods have actually got home into the
hands of the purchaser, or of some one who receives them in
the character of his servant or agent".
In the same case, the position was stated even more fully by
Brett, L.J., in the following terms:
"As soon as the clay was appropriated by the vendors to this
contract and was placed on board the ship, the property in
it passed to the purchaser and
(1) 2 M. & W. 623; 115 E.R. 906, 910.
(2) [1803] 3 B. & P. 469.
(3) [1817] 8 Taunt. 83.
(4) [1804] 5 East 175.
(5) 11 Ch. D. 560.
837
at the same time as between the vendor and the purchaser,
there was a delivery of the claim to the latter. But it was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 145 of 147
a constructive not actual delivery".
The same learned Judge again observed in Kendal v.
Marshall(1) as follows:
"Where the goods have been appropriated by the 7 vendor, and
have been delivered by him to a carrier to be transmitted to
the vendee, a constructive possession exists in the vendee".
The law as declared in the above decisions was embodied in
section 32(1) of the English Sale of Goods Act, which has
been reproduced in section 51 (1) of the Indian Sale of
Goods Act Vide also Benjamin on Sales, Eighth Edn., page 889
where the possession of the carrier on behalf of the, buyer
is stated to be "constructive though not yet actual
possession". It must accordingly be held that the
expression "actual delivery" in the Explanation to article
286(1)(a) means delivery of the goods to the purchaser or
his agent, and delivery to the common carrier is not actual
delivery, and that, in this case, the goods were actually
delivered not in Bengal when they were delivered to the
common carrier but in Bihar when they were delivered to the
purchaser. This contention of the appellant must also be
rejected.
In the result, the appeal should, in my judgment, be
rejected with costs.
SINHA J.-I have had the advantage of perusing the judgments
prepared by my brothers, S. R. Das, N. H. Bhagwati, B.
Jagannadhadas and T. L. Venkatarama Aiyar. After a careful
and anxious consideration of the two viewpoints contained in
the judgments respectively of my brother S. R. Das holding
that the previous decision of this court in The State of
Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd. (2) should be
overruled, and of my brother T. L. Venkatarama Aiyar that it
should be followed, I have come to the conclusion that the
latter view is more acceptable.
We are all agreed that the present case is governed
(1) 11 Q.B.D. 356, 364.
(2) [1953] S.C.R. 1069.
838
by the previous decision of this Court just referred to and
that if that case lays down the correct rule of law, this
appeal should be dismissed. We are also agreed that the
language of article 286 of the Constitution on which the
case depends is not felicitous and free from vagueness, with
the result that the interpretation of that article is not
free from doubt and difficulty. The very fact that in the
case referred to, as also in the later decision of this
Court reported in State of Travancore-Cochin v. Shanmugha
Vilas Cashew Nut Factory(1) involving the construction of
article 286, the Court was divided in its opinion shows that
the interpretation of the articles in question is by no
means easy. The fact that the Court is sharply divided in
the present case also emphasizes the difficulty. The
question we have to determine at the outset is whether or
not we should follow the previous decision of this Court in
The State of Bombay v. The United Motors (India) Ltd.(1). We
are all agreed that in a proper case it is permissible for
this Court to go back upon its previous decision; but we are
again divided as to whether this is a fit occasion for
reviewing its previous decision. For the reasons given by
my brothers, Jagannadhadas and Venkatarama Aiyar, I would
agree with them in holding that sufficient grounds have not
been made out for overruling that decision which bad been
taken after bearing, all the parties interested in the
result of the case. Not only the parties directly concerned
with the case but a number of States by way of interveners
as in the present case were also heard. After giving a very
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 146 of 147
full hearing the Court gave its judgment which is a very
elaborate one,-the report of the case running into 60 pages
in print. It is true that much can be said for the opposite
view as adumbrated in the judgment of my brother S. R. Das;
but, in my opinion, simply because another view may be taken
of the points in controversy is not a sufficient
justification for our reviewing the previous judgment of
this Court. It has not been suggested that any relevant
provisions of the Indian Constitution or any
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 53.
(2) [1958] S.C.R. 1069.
839
other provision of law had been overlooked by this Court
when it pronounced its previous ruling; nor has it been
suggested that this Court on the previous occasion proceeded
on erroneous suppositions. Under the Constitution and even
otherwise this Court is naturally looked upon by the country
as the custodian of law and the Constitution, and if this
Court were to review its previous decisions simply on the
ground that another view is possible, the litigant public
may be encouraged to think that it is always worthwhile
taking a chance with the highest court in the land.
Definiteness and certainty of the legal position are
essential conditions for the growth of the rule of law. In
my opinion, therefore, this Court should review its previous
decisions’ only in exceptional circumstances as is the
practice of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in
the cases referred to by my brothers Jagannadhadas and
Venkatarama Aiyar. If this Court has taken a view of the
relevant provisions of the Constitution which does not
commend itself to the acceptance of the Legislature, the
latter can make necessary amendments, as has been done in
the recent past.
Coming to the merits of the case in hand, we are all agreed
that the Explanation to article 286(1) (a) of the
Constitution has created a legal fiction as a result of
which a transaction of sale or a purchase partaking of an
inter-State character has been treated as a domestic
transaction. The fiction has localized sales or purchases
contemplated by the Explanation, by converting such
transactions as would otherwise have’ been inter-State sales
or purchases into sales or purchases inside one State in a
sense in which it is placed in a class distinct and separate
from what is referred to as sales or purchases "outside the
state" in the main body of article 286(1) (a) which
prohibits imposition of tax by any State. There is a
general agreement amongst us, I take it, that the main
purpose of creating the fiction is to prevent multiple
taxation of the same transaction, but, it may be added, not
altogether to stop the taxation of such transactions. We
are’ also agreed that full effect must
840
be given to the legal fiction on the supposition that the
putative state of affairs is the real one. While thus
agreeing on the general principle bearing on the question of
the purpose and scope of a legal fiction, we are again
divided on the question of how far the legal fiction should
be carried in its actual application. For the reasons given
by my brother Venkatarama Aiyar, I agree with him that the
fiction created by the Explanation brings such a sale within
the taxing power of the State within which such a sale is
said to have taken place. Such a result is brought about
not by holding that the Explanation has conferred positively
the power on the relevant State to impose sales tax, but by
holding that such an inside sale is beyond the scope of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 147 of 147
prohibition contained in the main body of article 286 (1)
(a) which interdicts the imposition of a tax on a sale
"outside the State". The Explanation has got to be read as
an integral part of article 286(1) (a) and thus read, it
means negatively that a sale or purchase outside a State
cannot be taxed; and by necessary implication, that a sale
or purchase inside a State may be taxed by that State as
falling outside the mischief of the prohibition directed
against the imposition of a tax on a sale or purchase of
goods outside a State; in other words, as soon as a sale or
purchase of goods is declared to be outside the pale of the
prohibition contained in article 286(1)(a), the State’s
power of imposing a tax contained in article 246 read with
item 54 of List II of the 7th Schedule comes- into
operation. I do not find myself in agreement with the view
propounded by my brother S. R. Das chiefly because that view
goes beyond the purpose of the creation of the fiction which
admittedly was to prevent multiple taxation. The view as
propounded by him besides preventing multiple taxation goes
to the length of prohibiting any imposition of sales tax by
any State. Such, in my opinion, was not the intention of
the Constitution. Whereas the imposition of multiple sales
tax on transactions of sale or purchase may be an obstacle
to the free flow of inland trade and commerce, the imposi-
tion of sales tax by a single State in which the sale, is
841
deemed to have taken place by virtue of the Explanation
cannot be predicated as having such an effect. The view
propounded by my learned brother Venkatarama Aiyar is thus
not inconsistent with the avowed purpose of the
Constitution, as expressed in article 301, which provides
that trade, commerce and intercourse shall be free
throughout the territory of India. In my opinion, the view
propounded by my learned brother S. R. Das about the actual
application of the legal fiction stops short of giving full
effect to that fiction. Allied with this question is the
controversy as to whether clause (2) of article 286 is
subject to article 286(1)(a) read with the Explanation or
vice versa. In my opinion, for the reasons given by my
learned brother Venkatarama Aiyar the better view is that
clause (2) of article 286 of the Constitution is subject to
article 286(1)(a) read with the Explanation. On the whole,
therefore, I would agree with the view that the previous
decision of this Court in 1953 S.C.R. 1069 should continue
to hold good and govern the present controversy also. In
that view of the matter I would dismiss this appeal with
costs.
BY THE COURT.-The appeal is allowed and an order shall be
issued directing that, until Parliament by law provides
otherwise, the State of Bihar do forbear and abstain from
imposing Sales Tax on out-of State dealers in respect of
sales or purchases that have taken place in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce even though the goods have
been delivered as a direct result of such sales or purchases
for consumption in Bihar. The State must pay the costs of
the appellant in this Court and in the Court below. The
interveners must bear and pay their own costs.
842