Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
K. G. KHOSLA & CO. (P) LTD. & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT06/03/1979
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
DESAI, D.A.
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 1160 1979 SCR (3) 453
1979 SCC (2) 242
CITATOR INFO :
R 1981 SC 446 (6)
F 1981 SC1754 (9)
E&R 1992 SC1952 (8,9,12,15)
ACT:
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 S. 3(a)-Scope of-Goods
manufactured in the State of Haryana in accordance with
production programme advised by head office-Goods despatched
from Delhi-Whether inter-state or intra-state sale.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent company who was a manufacturer of air
compressors and garage equipment had its factory at
Faridabad (in the State of Haryana) and its head office in
Delhi (Union Territory of Delhi). The head office drew the
production programme and advised the factory to manufacture
the goods in accordance therewith. After the goods were so
manufactured in the factory they were collected by the head
office and brought to Delhi and despatched to various
customers whether outside Delhi or in Delhi. The price of
goods was received at the head office. In other words
excepting the manufacture of goods at the factory all other
activities, were carried out from the head office in Delhi.
In respect of sale of goods manufactured at Faridabad
the respondent company filed sales tax returns with the
sales tax authorities at Delhi on the ground that the sales
were effected from Delhi by the head office and that they
were intra-state sales within the territory of Delhi and
accordingly paid sales tax at Delhi.
In November, 1965, however, the sales tax authorities
of Haryana demanded payment of sales tax under the East
Punjab General Sales Tax, Act, 1948 for the period
commencing from April 1, 1961 and ending with the year 1964-
65 pointing out that the sales effected were inter-state
sales liable to be assessed by them under the Central Sales
Tax Act, 1956.
In its writ petition the respondent-company alleged
that since all its activities were being carried on by or
through the head office in Delhi and no sales were effected
by or from the factory at Faridabad sales tax was paid by it
in Delhi and since the sales tax authorities in Haryana were
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demanding payment of Central Sales Tax in respect of the
same transaction the High Court might resolve the
controversy.
The High Court held that the sales fell under s. 3(a)
of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 and were liable to be
assessed to inter-state sales tax by the Sales Tax
Authorities at Faridabad and accordingly ordered that the
sales tax paid by the respondent in Delhi be transferred to
the Sales Tax Authorities at Faridabad.
On appeal the Union of India contended that since the
situs of sale was Delhi Sales Tax was payable in Delhi.
Dismissing the appeal,
454
^
HELD: 1 (a) The High Court was right in holding that
the sales were inter state sales and that the turnover on
sales was assessable to sales tax under the Central Sales
Tax Act, 1956 and that the amounts of sales tax wrongly paid
in Delhi be transferred to the Sales Tax Authorities at
Faridabad. [462 A-B]
(b) In order that a sale may be regarded as an inter-
state sale it is immaterial whether the property in the
goods passes in one State or another. The question as
regards the nature of the sale, that is, whether it is an
inter State sale or an intra-State sale does not depend upon
the circumstance as to in which State the property in the
goods passes. It may pass in either and yet the sale can be
an inter-State sale. [461 G-H, 462 A]
In the instant case the contracts of sales were made at
Delhi and in pursuance of those contracts, goods were
manufactured at Faridabad according to specifications
mentioned in the contracts. This, therefore, is not that
type of case in which goods are manufactured in the general
course of business for being sold as and when offers are
received by the manufacturer for their purchase. Contracts
of sales were finalised in the instant case at Delhi and
specific goods were manufactured at Faridabad in pursuance
of those contracts. These were "future goods" within the
meaning of s. 2(6) of the Sale of Goods Act, 1930. After the
goods were manufactured to agreed specifications, they were
despatched to the head office at Delhi for being forwarded
to the respective customers at whose instance and pursuant
to the contracts with whom the goods were manufactured. The
despatch of goods of Delhi was but a convenient made of
securing the performance of contracts made at Delhi. Thus
the movement of goods was occasioned from Faridabad to Delhi
as a result or incident of the contracts of sale made in
Delhi. [458 H, 459 A-D
(c) For the purpose of s. 3(a) it is not necessary that
the contract of sale must itself provide for and cause the
movement of goods or that the movement of goods must be
occasioned specifically in accordance with the terms of
contract of sale. [459 E]
Tata Iron and Steel Co. Ltd., Bombay v. S. S. Sarkar &
Ors., [1961] 1 SCR 379; Central Marketing Co. of India v.
State of Mysore, [1963] 3 SCR 777; State Trading Corporation
of India v. State of Mysore, [1963] 3 SCR 792; Singareni
Collieries Co. v. Commissioner of Commercial Taxes,
Hyderabad, [1966] 2 SCR 190; K. G. Khosla & Co. v. Dy.
Commr. of Commercial Taxes, [1966] 3 SCR 352; Oil India Ltd.
v. The Superintendent of Taxes & Ors., [1975] 3 SCR 797;
followed.
Tata Eng. & Locomotive Co. Ltd. v. The Asstt. Commr. of
Commercial Taxes & Anr., [1970] 3 SCR 862; distinguished.
State of Bihar & Anr. v. Tata Eng. & Locomotive Co.
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Ltd., [1971] 2 SCR 849; referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2077 of
1972.
From the Judgment and Order dated 2-8-1971 of the Delhi
High Court in Civil Writ No. 162-D of 1966.
E. C. Agarwala and R. N. Sachthey for the Appellants.
Lal Narain Sinha, K. K. Jain, S. K. Gupta, Pramod Dayal
and Bishamber Lal for the Respondent No. 1
455
Rameshwar Dial, Adarsh Fial, and A. D. Mathur for
Respondents 2-3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, C. J.-This appeal by certificate raises an
interesting controversy between the Sales Tax Authorities in
the Union Territory of Delhi and those in Haryana, the
question being as to which of the two authorities can assess
respondent 1 to sales tax. One of the reliefs sought by
respondent 1 is that until the Sales Tax authorities of the
two territories settle their differences, no sales tax
should be levied or recovered from it since, it does not
know to whom to pay the tax. This controversy arises on the
following facts.
Respondent 1 is a private limited company called K. G.
Khosla & Co. (P) Ltd., having its head office in the Union
Territory of Delhi at 1, Deshbandhu Gupta Road, New Delhi.
The company carries on business in Air Compressors and
garage equipment which it manufactures in its factory at
Faridabad, which was formerly in the State of Punjab and is
now a part of the State of Haryana.
For the purposes of sales tax, respondent 1 is
registered as a dealer both in the Union Territory of Delhi
and in the State of Haryana. It filed returns of sales tax
with the sales Tax authorities in Delhi since, according to
it, the sale of goods manufactured in the factory at
Faridabad was being effected from Delhi by its head office.
The sales tax was being paid by the company under the Bengal
Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941 as extended to Delhi, on the
basis that the sales effected by the company were intra-
State sales within the territory of Delhi. On November 24,
1965, however, the Sales Tax Assessing Authority at Gurgaon,
which was then in the State of Punjab but which subsequently
became a part of the State of Haryana, sent a notice to the
company under sections 11 and 14 of the East Punjab Central
Sales Tax Act, 1948 and rule 33 made thereunder that, in
respect of the period commencing on April 1, 1961 and ending
with the year 1964-65, the sales made by the company were
liable to assessment in Haryana. On March 13, 1968 an
assessment was made by the Assessing Authority at Faridabad
on the basis that the sales effected by the company were
inter-State sales liable to be assessed to sales tax under
the Central Sales Tax Act, 74 of 1956. An appeal against the
order of assessment is said to be pending.
In the meanwhile, on February 14, 1966, the company
filed a writ petition before the Punjab High Court Circuit
Bench at Delhi which, after the recorganisation of States,
was dealt with by the Delhi High
456
Court. The Chief Commissioner of the Union Territory of
Delhi and the Assessing Authority of the territory were
impleaded as respondents 1 and 2 to the writ petition.
Respondent 3 was the State of Punjab and respondent 4 the
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Assessing Authority at Gurgaon. Respondent 3 was later
substituted by the State of Haryana.
The company contended by its writ petition that except
the manufacturing of goods at the Faridabad factory, all of
its activities, including those of booking of orders, sales,
despatching of goods, billing and receiving of sale price
were being done by and through the head office in Delhi and
that no sales were effected by or from the factory. Since,
however, both the Sales Tax authorities, namely, at Delhi
and Haryana, were demanding payment of sales tax on the same
sale transactions, the company prayed by its writ petition
that the High Court do resolve the controversy between the
Sales Tax authorities of the two States and decide the
question of their respective jurisdiction to assess its
turnover.
The State of Haryana contended by its counter affidavit
to the writ petition that the goods were manufactured by the
company at Faridabad in pursuance of contracts of sale with
outside purchasers, that those goods were appropriated to
the various contracts of sale in the State of Haryana and
that the movement of the goods from Faridabad to Delhi and
onwards was caused as a necessary incident of the contracts
of sale made by the company. The sales, according to the
State of Haryana had taken place at Faridabad during the
course of inter-State trade.
The Union of India, on the other hand, contended that
the goods were brought from Faridabad to Delhi and were
thereafter sold by the company to the various purchasers
outside Delhi. These sales according to the Union of India,
were governed by the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941 as
extended to Delhi, their situs being the Union Territory of
Delhi.
The Delhi High Court by its judgment dated August 2,
1971 allowed the writ petition and granted a declaration
that the sales effected by respondent 1 which fell under
section 3 (a) of the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 were liable
to be assessed to inter-State sales tax by the Sales Tax
authorities at Faridabad since, those sales caused the
movement of goods from Faridabad to Delhi. The High Court
added that the writ petition was confined to the goods
manufactured at Faridabad in pursuance of pre-existing
contracts of sales and therefore, its judgment would have no
application to the local sales
457
effected by respondent 1 at Delhi. In the result, the High
Court passed an order directing that the amount of tax which
respondent 1 had wrongly paid to the sales tax authorities
at Delhi on the inter-State sales between 1.4.1961 to 30-9-
1965 be transferred by the Sales Tax authorities at Delhi to
the Sales Tax authorities at Faridabad. The High Court has
granted a certificate of fitness to the Union of India to
file an appeal to this Court under Article 133, (1) (b) of
the Constitution.
The question which arises for decision is whether the
sales made by respondent 1 were made at Faridabad in the
course of inter-State trade as contended by the State of
Haryana or whether they are intra-State sales effected
within the Union Territory of Delhi as contended by the
appellant, the Union of India. The answer to this question
would depend upon the course and nature of transactions in
relation to which the movement of goods was caused from
Faridabad to Delhi and the terms of the contracts of sales
which caused that movement. But before adverting to those
aspects of the matter, it would be necessary to notice the
relevant provisions of the Central Sales Tax Act 74 of 1956
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("The Act").
Section 3 of the Act provides as follows:
"3. When is a sale or purchase of goods said to
take place in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce:-
A sale or purchase of goods shall be deemed to take
place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce if
the sale or purchase:-
(a) occasions the movement of goods from one
State to another; or
(b) is effected by a transfer of documents of
title to the goods during their movement from
one State to another."
There are two Explanations to the section but they have no
bearing on the appeal.
Section 9(1) of the Act provides as follows:-
9. "Levy and collection of tax and penalties (1)
the tax payable by any dealer under this Act on sales
of goods effected by him in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce, whether such sales fall within
clause (a) or clause (b) of section 3, shall be levied
by the Government of India and the tax so levied shall
be collected by that Government
458
in accordance with the provisions of sub-section (2),
in the State from which the movement of the goods
commenced."
There is a proviso to section 9(1) to which it is
unnecessary to refer since it has no application.
In the light of these provisions, what has to be
considered is whether the sales effected by respondent 1
occasioned the movement of goods from one State to another
State, which on the facts of the instant case would mean,
from the State of Haryana to the Union Territory of Delhi.
It is only if a sale occasions the movement of goods from
one State to another that it can be deemed to have taken
place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce within
the meaning of section 3 (a) of the Act. Clause (b) of
section 3 is not relevant for our purpose.
The course and manner of its business have been set out
by respondent 1 in paragraphs 3 and 27 of the writ petition
in the following terms:
"3. Orders for the supply of goods from various
parties are received by the petitioner’s company at its
head office in Delhi. The head office draws out a
production programme and advises the factory to
manufacture the goods in accordance therewith. After
the goods are so manufactured in the factory, the goods
are collected by the head office and brought to its
head office in Delhi. From its head office the goods
are despatched to various customers whether outside
Delhi or in Delhi. The price of goods is also received
at the head office. In short, the position is that
excepting the manufacture of goods at the factory, all
other activities including that of booking of orders,
sales, despatching and billing and receiving of sale
price are being carried out from the head office in
Delhi."
"27. The goods manufactured in the factory are
future goods within the meaning of the Sale of Goods
Act and the dispute does not relate to any ready
goods."
It is clear from these averments that goods were
manufactured by respondent 1 in its factory at Faridabad,
Haryana, in pursuance of specific orders received by its
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head office at Delhi. The contracts of sales were made at
Delhi and in pursuance of those contracts, goods were
manufactured at Faridabad according to specifications
mentioned in the contracts. This, therefore, is not that
type of case in which goods are manufactured in the general
course of business for being
459
sold as and when offers are received by the manufacturer for
their purchase. Contracts of sales were finalised in the
instant case at Delhi and specific goods were manufactured
at Faridabad in pursuance of those contracts. Those were
"future goods" within the meaning of section 2(6) of the
Sale of Goods Act, 1930. After the goods were manufactured
to agreed specifications, they were despatched to the head
office at Delhi for being forwarded to the respective
customers at whose instance and pursuant to the contracts
with whom the goods were manufactured. The goods could as
well have been despatched to the respective customers
directly from the factory but they were sent in the first
instance to Delhi as a matter of convenience, since there
are better godown and rail facilities at Delhi as compared
with Faridabad. The despatch of the goods of Delhi was but a
convenient mode of securing the performance of contracts
made at Delhi. Goods conforming to agreed specifications
having been manufactured at Faridabad, the contracts of sale
could be performed by respondent 1 only by the movement of
the goods from Faridabad with the intention of delivering
them to the purchasers. Thus, the movement of goods was
occasioned from Faridabad to Delhi as a result or incident
of the contracts of sale made in Delhi.
It is true that in the instant case the contracts of
sales did not require or provide that goods should be moved
from Faridabad to Delhi. But it is not true to say that for
the purposes of section 3(a) of the Act it is necessary that
the contract of sale must itself provide for and cause the
movement of goods or that the movement of goods must be
occasioned specifically in accordance with the terms of the
contract of sale. The true position in law is as stated in
Tata Iron and Steel Co. Ltd., Bombay v. S. R. Sarkar and
others(1) wherein Shah, J. speaking for the majority
observed that clauses (a) and (b) of section 3 of the Act
are mutually exclusive and that section 3(a) covers sales in
which the movement of goods from one State to another "is
the result of a covenant or incident of the contract of
sale, and property in the goods passes in either State"
(page 391). Sarkar, J. speaking for himself and on behalf of
Das Gupta, J. agreed with the majority that clauses (a) and
(b) of section 3 are mutually exclusive but differed from it
and held that "a sale can occasion the movement of the goods
sold only when the terms of the sale provide that the goods
would be moved; in other words, a sale occasions a movement
of goods when the contract of sale so provides" (page 407).
The view of the majority was approved by this Court in the
Central
460
Marketing Co. of India v. State of Mysore,(1) State Trading
Corporation of India v. State of Mysore(2) and Singareni
Collieries Co. v. Commissioner of Commercial Taxes,
Hyderabad.(3) In K. G. Khosla & Co. v. Deputy Commissioner
of Commercial Taxes,(4) counsel for the Revenue invited the
Court to reconsider the question but the Court declined to
do so. In a recent decision of this Court in Oil India Ltd.
v. The Superintendent of Taxes & others(5) it was observed
by Mathew, J., who spoke for the Court, that: (1) a sale
which occasions movement of goods from one State to another
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is a sale in the course of inter-State trade, no matter in
which State the property in the goods passes; (2) it is not
necessary that the sale must precede the inter-State
movement in order that the sale may be deemed to have
occasioned such movement; and (3) it is also not necessary
for a sale to be deemed to have taken place in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce, that the covenant regarding
inter-State Movement must be specified in the contract
itself. It would be enough if the movement was in pursuance
of and incidental to the contract of sale (page 801). The
learned Judge added that it was held in a number of cases by
the Supreme Court that if the movement of goods from one
State to another is the result of a covenant or an incident
of the contract of sale, then the sale is an inter-State
sale.
The decision in Tata Engineering & Locomotive Co.
Limited v. The Assistant Commissioner of Commercial Taxes
and Another(6) on which the Union of India relies, proceeds
on a different consideration and is distinguishable. The
appellant therein carried on the business of manufacturing
trucks in Jamshedpur in the State of Bihar. The sales office
of the appellant in Bombay used to instruct the Jamshedpur
factory to transfer stocks of vehicles to the stockyards in
various States after taking into account the production
schedule and requirements of customers in different States.
The stocks available in the stockyards were distributed from
time to time to dealers. The transfer of the vehicles from
the factory to the various stockyards was a continuous
process and was not related to the requirement of any
particular customer. It was the stockyard incharge who
appropriated the required number of vehicles to the contract
of sale out of the stocks available with him. Until such
appropriation of vehicles was made, it was open
461
to the company to allot any vehicle to any purchaser or to
transfer the vehicles from the stockyard in one State to a
stockyard in another State. At page 870 of the report, a
statement occurs in the judgment of Grover, J., that it was
not possible to comprehend how in the above situation it
could be held that "the movement of the vehicles from the
works to the stockyards was occasioned by any covenant or
incident of the contract of sale." This statement is relied
upon by the Union of India in support of its contention that
the contract of sale must itself provide for the movement of
goods from one State to another. We are unable to read any
such implication in the observation cited above. At page 866
of the report, after referring to certain decisions, the
Court observed that the principle admits of no doubt,
according to the decisions of this Court, that the movement
of goods "must be the result of a covenant or incident of
the contract of sale."
This decision may be usefully contrasted with another
decision between the same parties, which is reported in
State of Bihar & Anr. v. Tata Engineering & Locomotive Co.
Ltd.(1). In that case the turnover in dispute related to the
sales made by the company to its dealers of trucks for being
sold in the territories assigned to them under the
dealership agreements. Each dealer was assigned an exclusive
territory and under the agreement between the dealers and
the company, they had to place their indents, pay the price
of the goods to be purchased and obtain delivery orders from
the Bombay office of the company. In pursuance of such
delivery orders trucks used to be delivered in the State of
Bihar to be taken over to the territories assigned to the
dealers. Since under the terms of the contracts of sale the
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purchasers were required to remove the goods from the State
of Bihar to other States, no question arose in the case
whether it was or was not necessary for a sale to be
regarded as an inter-State sale that the contract must
itself provide for the movement of goods from one State to
another. If a contract of sale contains a stipulation for
such movement, the sale would, of course, be an inter-State
sale. But it an also be an inter-State sale, even if the
contract of sale does not itself provide for the movement of
goods from one State to another but such movement is the
result of a covenant in the contract of sale or is an
incident of that contract.
The decisions to which we have referred above show that
in order that a sale may be regarded as an inter-State sale,
it is immaterial whether the property in the goods passes in
one State or another. The question as regards the nature of
the sale, that is, whether it is an inter-
462
State sale or an intra-State sale, does not depend upon the
circumstances as to in which State the property in the goods
passes. It may pass in either State and yet the sale can be
an inter-State sale.
The High Court was, therefore, right in holding that
the sales in question are inter-State sales and that the
turnover of sales is assessable to sales tax under the
Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 at the instance of the Sales Tax
authorities at Faridabad. The amount of tax which respondent
has wrongly paid to the Sales Tax authorities at Delhi on
such inter-State sales from 1-4-1961 to 30-9-1965 shall have
to be transferred by the Sales Tax authorities at Delhi to
the Sales Tax authorities at Faridabad, as directed by the
High Court.
The appeal is accordingly dismissed but there will be
no order as to costs.
N.K.A Appeal dismissed.
463