Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
FIRM OF M/S. PEARE LAL HARI SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB & ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/04/1958
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BOSE, VIVIAN
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
DAS, S.K.
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 664 1959 SCR 438
ACT:
Sales Tax-Building contracts-State’s Power of taxation on
supply of materials in construction works-Whether building
contract comprises a distinct agreement for sale of
materials-East Punjab General Sales Tax Act, 1948 (East
Punjab XLVI of 1948), SS. 2(d)(j), 4(1)-Government of India
Act, 1935 (26 Geo. 5 Ch. 2), Sch. VII, List II, Entry 48.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners who were building contractors in the State
of Punjab were assessed to tax by the sales tax authorities
on the supply of materials in construction works treating it
as a sale, acting under the provisions of the East Punjab
General Sales Tax Act, 1948. The petitioners challenged the
legality of the assessment proceedings on the grounds, inter
alia, that the legislature of the Province of Punjab had,
under Entry 48 in List II of Sch. I’ll to the Government of
India Act, 1935, no power to impose tax on the supply of
materials in construction works as there was no sale in fact
or in law of those materials, and that the provisions of the
Act which sought to do it were ultra vires. The assessing
authorities contended that on a true construction of the
building contract entered into by petitioners with the
Government it comprised a distinct agreement for the sale of
materials and particularly relied on r. 33 of printed
General Conditions of Contracts issued by the Government :
Held, that there was no sale as such of the materials used
in the constructions by the petitioners and that no tax
could be levied thereon.
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Rule 33 which provides that the materials brought to the
site shall become the property of the Government but that
when the works are finally completed the surplus materials
shall revert and become the property of the contractor, has
for its object that materials of the right sort are used in
the construction and has not the effect of converting what
is a lump sum contract for construction of buildings into a
contract for the sale of materials used therein.
State of Madras v. Gannnon Dunkerley & Co. (Madras) Lid.,
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[1959] S.C.R. 379, followed.
Tripp v. Armitage, (1839) 4 M. & W. 687 and Reid v. Macbeth
JUDGMENT:
&
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 128 of 1957. Petition
under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for
enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
Gopal Singh, for the petitioner.
N. S. Bindra and T. M. Sen, for the respondents.
1958. April 7. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMA AIYAR J.-This is a petition under Art. 32 of the
Constitution, and the question that is raised therein for
our decision is as to the validity of certain provisions of
the East Punjab General Sales Tax Act, 1948 (East Pb. XLVI
of 1948), hereinafter referred to as the Act, imposing a tax
oil the supply of materials in construction works treating
it as a sale.
It will be convenient at this stage to refer to the relevant
provisions of the Act. Section 2(c) defines contract " as
meaning,
" Any agreement for carrying out for cash or deferred
payment or other valuable consideration(i) the construction,
fitting out, improvement, or repair of any building, road,
bridge or other immovable property; or
(ii) the installation or repair of any machinery affixed to
a building or other immovable property................."
"Dealer " is defined in s. 2((d) as any person engaged in
the business of selling or supplying goods. Section 2(h)
defines " sale " as meaning " any transfer
440
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 a
contract................ " Turnover " is defined in s. 2(j)
as including " the carrying out of any contract, less such
portion as may be prescribed of such amount, representing
the usual proportion of the cost of labour to the cost of
materials used in carrying out such contract ". Section 4(1)
enacts that,
"......... every dealer whose gross turnover during the year
immediately preceding the commencement of this Act exceeded
the taxable quantum shall be liable to pay tax under this
Act on all sales effected after the coming into force of
this Act."
Section 5 provides that the tax shall be levied every year
on the taxable turnover of a dealer at such rates as the
Provincial Government may by notification direct. Rule 28
prescribes the mode of computing the taxable consideration
with reference to contracts as provided in sub-cl. (ii) of
el. (i) of s. 2.
The petitioners are a firm of building contractors. In
December, 1956, they entered into a contract with the
Military Engineering Services Department of the Government
for the construction of certain buildings known as " Married
accommodation " at Ambala Cantonment and received a sum of
Rs. 32,000 on January 31, 1957, as advance. On February 14,
1957, the assessing authority, Jullundur District issued a
notice intimating the petitioners that as they had failed to
apply for registration under s. 7 of the Act assessment
would be made under s. 18, sub-s. (2), for the periods
commencing from April 1, 1955, onwards, and calling upon
them to produce their account books and attend the hearing
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on February 16, 1957. Thereupon, the petitioners filed the
present petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution
challenging the legality of the assessment proceedings, the
main ground of attack being that the legislature of the
Province of Punjab had under Entry 48 in List II of Sch.
VII to the Government of India Act, 1935, no power to impose
tax on the supply of materials in construction works as
there was no sale in fact or in law of those
441
materials, and that the provisions of the Act which sought
to do it were ultra vires. This question is now concluded
by the decision of this Court in The State of Madras V.
Gannon Dunkerley & Co. (Madras) Ltd. (1) wherein it has been
held that the expression " sale of goods" in Entry 48 has
the same import which it bears in the Indian Sale of Goods
Act, 1930, that in a building contract there is no sale of
materials as such, and that accordingly the Provincial
Legislature had no power to impose a tax thereon under Entry
48.
In this view, we have now to consider the contention
advanced by Mr. Bindra for the respondents that the building
contract entered into by the petitioners with the Government
was not an agreement simpliciter for the construction of
works, but that on its true construction, it comprised a
distinct agreement for the sale of materials. If that can
be established, it is not disputed that the respondents
would have ’a right to tax the transaction even apart from
the impugned provisions. The question is whether the
contract of the petitioners with the Government for
construction was one and indivisible, or whether it was a
combination of an agreement for sale of materials and an
agreement for work and labour. The evidence placed before
us leaves us in no doubt as to the true character of the
contract. The tenders which where called for and received
were for executing works for a lump sum, and in his
acceptance of the tender of the petitioners dated December
15, 1956, the Deputy Chief Engineer stated :
" The above tender was accepted by me on behalf of the
President of India for a lump sum of Rs. 9,74,961."
How this amount is made up is given in Annexure E to the
reply statement. It will be seen therefrom that the
petitioners were to construct nine blocks, and the amounts
are worked out treating each of the blocks as one unit, and
the figures are totalled up. It is impossible on this
evidence to hold that there was any agreement for sale of
the materials as such by the petitioners to the Government.
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 379.
56
442
For the respondents reliance was placed on the rules
appearing in the printed General Conditions of Contracts
issued by the Government. Rule 33 which was particularly
relied on provides:
" All stores and materials brought to the Site shall become
and remain the property of Government and shall not be
removed off the Site without the prior written approval of
the G. E. But whenever the works are finally completed, the
contractor shall at his own expense forthwith remove from
the Site all surplus stores and materials originally
supplied by him and upon such removal, the same shall retest
in and become the property of the Contractor."
It is argued that the true effect of this provision vesting
the materials in the Government is that those materials must
be taken to have been sold to it. That this is not the true
meaning of the rule will be clear when regard is had to
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other provisions in the rules. Thus, the materials which
are used in the construction must be approved by the
authorities as of the right quality, and they could be
condemned even after the construction is completed if they
are not according to contract or of inferior quality, in
which case the contractor has to remove them and rebuild
with proper materials. Terms such as these and those in r.
33 quoted above are usually inserted in building contracts
with the object of ensuring that materials of the right sort
are used in the construction and not with the intention of
purchasing them. If r. 33 is to be construed as operating
by way of sale of materials to the Government when they are
brought on the site, it must follow that the surplus
materials remaining after the completion of the work must be
held to have been resold by the Government to the
contractor, and that is not contended for.
In Tripp v. Armitage (1), a builder who had been engaged to
construct a hotel became insolvent, and dispute arose
between the assignees in bankruptcy and the proprietors of
the hotel as to the title to certain wooden sash-frames
which had been delivered by the insolvent on the premises of
the hotel and had been
(1) (1839) 4 M. & W. 687; 150 E. R. 1597, 16O3.
443
approved by the clerk and returned to the insolvent for the
purpose of being affixed. The contention on behalf of the
proprietors was that the goods having been approved by their
surveyor, they must be held to have been appropriated to the
contract and the property therein passed to them. In
negativing this contention, Parke B. observed:
" It is said that the approbation of the surveyor is
sufficient to constitute an acceptance by the defendants;
but that approbation is not given eo animo at all; it is
only to ascertain that they are such materials as are
suitable for the purpose; and notwithstanding that approval,
it is only when they have been put up, and fixed to the
house, in performance of the larger contract, that they are
to be paid for."
In Reid v. Macbeth & Gray(1), the facts were similar. The
dispute related to certain plates which had been prepared by
contractors to be fitted in a ship. These plates had been
passed by the surveyor and were marked with the number of
the vessel and with marks showing the position which each
plate was to occupy in the vessel. The ship-owners laid
claim to these plates on the ground that by reason of the
approval by their surveyor and by the markings the property
therein must be held to have passed to them, and that
accordingly the assignees in bankruptcy of the contractors
could not claim them. That contention war, negatived by the
House of Lords, who hold that the facts relied on did not
establish a contract of sale of the materials apart from the
contract to construct the ship, and that the title to the
materials did not as such pass to the shipowners. The
position is the same in the present case. Rule 33 has not
the effect of converting what is a lump sum contract for
construction of buildings into a contract for the sale of
materials used therein. It must therefore be held following
the decision in The State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley &
Co. (Madras) Ltd. (2) that there has been no sale of the
materials used by the petitioners in their constructions,
and that no tax could be levied thereon.
(1) [1904] A.C. 223.
(2) [1959] S.C.R. 379.
444
Counsel for the petitioners raised two other contentions,
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but they are unsubstantial and may be shortly disposed of.
One was that in the definition of " turnover " in s. 2 (j),
el. (ii) which is what is applicable to the present case,
there is no reference to sale of goods, and that,
accordingly, even if Entry 48 in List II is to be
interpreted in a wide sense, the provision as actually
enacted does not, in fact, tax the supply of materials in
works contracts, treating it as a sale. But the charging
section is s. 4 (1), which makes it clear that the tax is on
the gross turnover in respect of sales effected after the
coming into force of the Act, and the obvious intention is
to include the supply of materials in works contracts within
the category of taxable turnover.
It was next contended that the definition of " dealer in s.
2 (d) required that the person should be engaged in the
business of selling or supplying goods, that the petitioners
who were building contractors were not engaged in the
business of selling or supplying goods but of constructing
buildings, and that therefore they were not dealers within
that definition, and that as under s. 4 the tax could be
imposed only on a dealer, the petitioners were not liable to
be taxed. But if the supply of materials in construction
works can be regarded as a sale, then clearly building
contractors are engaged in the sale of materials, and they
would be within the definition of " dealers " under the Act.
There is no substance in this contention either.
The petitioners, however are entitled to succeed on the
ground that the impugned provisions are not within the
authority conferred by Entry 48, and a writ of prohibition
should accordingly issue restraining the respondents from
taking proceedings for assessment of tax in respect of
materials supplied by the petitioners in construction
contracts. We direct the parties to bear their own costs,
Petition allowed.
445