Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF TAMIL NADU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MADURAI SOUTH INDIA CORPORATION (P) LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/09/1972
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
HEGDE, K.S.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
CITATION:
1972 AIR 2263 1973 SCR (2) 10
ACT:
Inter-state Sale-Madras General Sales Tax Act 1959-Central
Saks Tax Act, 1956-Sale in the State of Tamil Nadu pursuant
to contract of inter-state sale Goods thus purchased by
branches outside State transferred to Tamil Nadu and sold to
local dealers-Whether again chargeable to tax in the State
as first sale.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent is a registered dealer with its head office
at Madras and branches inside the State of Tamil Nadu and
also in certain places in the States of Kerala and Andhra
Pradesh. During the years 1960-61 to 1964-65 and 1966-67 it
was dealing in various goods including cloth, yarn, etc. and
was being assessed to tax under the Act on the turnover of
the business. The gross turnover of the respondent included
the sales of yarn, by the Madurai Mills Limited to the
respondent to its head office in Madras and also to its
branches. The method which was followed by the head office
of the respondent was that it would place orders from Madras
on Madurai Mills Limited pursuant to which supplies would be
made by the Madurai Mills either to the respondent’s head
office or to its branches in accordance with the
instructions given by the head-office. Where deliveries
were made to the respondent inside the State the seller
collected the tax due under Madras General Sales-tax Act,
1959, with reference to item 3 of the second Schedule to the
Act. But in respect of deliveries made to the respondent’s
branches outside the State, the Madurai Mills collected tax
under s. 3 of the Central Sales-tax Act. During the year
1965-66 the respondent transferred to the State of Tamil
Nadu certain quantities of yarn from the stocks so purchased
at its branches in the States of Andhra Pradesh and Kerala
and sold the same to local dealers. The appellant thereupon
called upon the respondent to produce accounts and certain
other documents on the assumption that the sales so effected
were chargeable to tax as first sales in the State. The
respondent objected to these proceedings on the ground that
the sales were second sales not liable to tax and filed writ
petitions in the High Court. The writs were allowed by the
High Court. Dismissing the appeal
HELD : When cotton yarn was sold to the respondent in
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Madras, the goods were in the State of Tamil Nadu when the
contract of interstate sale was entered into, it will be a
first sale in the State. Once that sale has taken place,
and the goods were delivered in the States of Andhra Pradesh
and Kerala pursuant to that inter-state sale, there was not
further sale to the respondent when it transferred to its
branches those goods which have already been subject to tax
in the State of Tamil Nadu. They are exempted from being
taxed again since they have already been subjected to tax on
the first sale inside the State. [14 H]
[The Court did not find it necessary to consider the
question whether the provisions of section 15 of the Central
Sales-tax Act makes an inroad into the texture of the local
law so that section 6 of the local Act will have to be read
subject to and in conformity with the provisions of Section
15 and the policy underlining that section and whether
Section 6 will he inapplicable to sales of declared goods.]
[15A]
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 1845-1847
of 1969.
Appeals by certificate from the orders dated 3rd July 1967
of the High Court of Madras in Writ Petitions Nos. 2684 to
2686 of 1966.
S. T. Desai, A. V. Rangam and A. Subhashini, for the
appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Gobind Das and Lilly Thomas, for the
respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
P. JAGANMOHAN REDDY, J.-These three appeals by certificate
under Article 133(1)(c) of the Constitution are against the
judgment of the Madras High Court which allowed the three
Writ Petitions filed by the respondent under Article 226 of
the Constitution of India by which it challenged the pro-
ceedings proposed to be taken by the Sales Tax Officer under
the Madras General Sales Tax Act 1959 (hereinafter called
the Act) and the rules thereunder in respect of sale
transactions in the assessments 1960-61 to 1964-65 and 1966-
67 (upto October, 1966).
The first petition was for quashing the summons issued under
the Act and requiring the respondent to furnish certain
vouchers of cotton yam, branch transfer accounts and
particulars relating to the years 1960-61 to 1964-65 And
1966-67 (upto October, 1966). The second petition was for
directing the appellant to forbear from taking any steps for
verification and in disallowing the exemption for the second
and subsequent sales of yam purchased by the respondent
company from the Madurai Mills Limited in respect of the
aforesaid period. The third petition prayed for the issue
of mandamus to the appellant to forbear from disallowing the
exemption for the second and subsequent sales of yarn
estimated at Rs. 5.08,247/- for the assessment year 1965-66.
The High Court of Madras allowed all the three petitions and
quashed the proceedings as prayed for.
The respondent is a registered dealer with its head office
at Madras and branches in Madurai, Rajanalavam and Salem
inside the State of Tamil Nadu and also in certain places in
the States of Kerala and Andhra Pradesh including Hyderabad.
During the years 1960-61 to 1964-65 and 1966-67 upto
October, 1966, it was dealing in various good,, including
cloth, yarn, etc. and was being assessed to tax under the
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Act on the turnover of the business. The gross turnover of
the respondent included sales of yarn by the Madurai Mills
Limited to the respondent to its head
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office in Madras and also to its branches. The, method
which was followed by the head office of the respondent was
that it would place orders from Madras on Madurai Mills
Limited pursuant to which the supplies would be made by the
Madurai Mills Limited either to the respondent’s head office
or to its branches in accordance with the instructions given
by the head office. Where deliveries were made to the
respondent inside the State the seller collected the tax due
under the Act with reference to item 3 of the second
Schedule to the Act. But in respect of deliveries made to
the respondent’s branches outside the State, the Madurai
Mills collected tax under section 3 of the Central Sales Tax
Act (hereinafter called the Central Act). During the year
1965-66 the respondent transferred to Madras State certain
quantities of yam from the stock so purchased at its
branches in the State of Andhra Pradesh and Kerala and sold
the same to local dealers. The appellant thereupon called
upon the respondent to produce ,accounts and certain other
documents, on the assumption that the sales so effected were
chargeable to tax as first sales in the State. The
respondent objected to these proceedings on the ground that
the sales were second sales not liable to tax and filed
three writ petitions which are subject of these appeals.
It was not disputed that the sales by the Madurai Mills to
the respondent in which deliveries were made to branches in
the State of Andhra Pradesh and Kerala have been charged to
tax under the provisions of the Central Act. The only
question in ,controversy is whether the sales made locally
of yam transferred to the Madras State from the stocks of
yarn in the States of Andhra Pradesh and Kerala in respect
of Sales tax which had already been charged as inter states
sales are again liable to tax :as first sales in the State
of Madras.
In order to resolve this controversy, it would be useful to
notice the relevant provisions of the Act and Central Act.
Section 3 (1 ) of the Act imposes a multi point tax, while
sub-section (2) provides that notwithstanding anything
contained in sub-section (1) in the case of sale of goods
mentioned in the first Schedule the tax under the Act shall
be payable by a dealer at the rate and only at the point
specified therein on the turnover in each year relating to
such goods whatever may be the quantum of turnover in that
year. Section 4 deals with levying of tax in respect of
,declared goods, while section 4-A, which was introduced by
Madras Act 6 of 1963, provides for refund of tax in certain
cases. Section 6 enjoins that the tax under the Act is
addition to the tax under the Central Act or any other law.
Sections 4 and 4-A are as under :-
"4. Notwithstanding anything contained in
section
3, the tax under this Act shall be payable by
a dealer
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on the sale or purchase inside the state of
declared goods at the rate and only at the
point specified against each in the Second
Schedule on the turnover in such goods in each
year, whatever be the quantum of turnover in
that year."
4-A.-(1) Where a tax has been levied and col-
lected under section 4 in respect of the sale
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or purchase of declared goods and such goods
are sold in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce the tax so levied and collected shall
be refunded to such person in such manner and
subject to such conditions as may be
prescribed.
(2) Where a tax at the point of last
purchase in the State has been levied and
collected under this Act in respect of goods
liable to tax at such point and where the said
purchase ceases to be the last purchase in the
State by reason of a subsequent purchase of
such goods by another dealer in the State, the
tax so levied and collected shall be refunded
to the dealer concerned in such manner and
subject to such conditions as may be
prescribed."
The declared goods are specified in the second schedule to
the Act to which cotton yarn, excluding cotton yarn waste,
is liable to tax under the Act at the point of first sale in
the State at the, rate of 2 per cent. The Central Act
defines ’declared goods’ as those declared under Section 14
to be of special importance in inter-State trade or
commerce. Section 3 lays down the principles for
determining when a sale or purchase of goods is said to take
place. In the course of inter-state trade or Commerce
under section 14 (ii) (b) cotton yarn, but not including
cotton yam waste, has been declared to be of special
importance in inter-State trade or commerce. Section 15
ensures that in the case of declared goods they should in
all circumstances bear only a single burden at a specified
stage, and at the prescribed rate.. This section as amended
in 1958 is as follows :-
"Every sales tax law of a State shall, in so
far as it imposes or authorises the imposition
of a tax on the sale or purchase of declared
goods be subject to the following restrictions
and conditions, namely :-
(a) The tax payable under that law in
respect of any sale or purchase of such goods
inside the State shall not exceed two per cent
of the sale or purchase price thereof, and
such tax shall not be levied at more than one
stage;
14
(b) Where a tax has ben levied under that
law in respect of the sale or purchase inside
the State of any declared goods and such goods
are sold in the course of inter-state trade or
commerce, the tax so levied shall be refunded
to such person in such manner and subject to
such conditions as may be provided in any law
in force in that State."
The High Court of Madras on the interpretation of the afore-
said provisions and having regard to the modus operandi of
the respondent in respect of the inside sales or inter-state
sales of cotton yam was of the view :"Where the terms of a
first sale are such that it may well be said to be an inside
sale but it bears ,also the characteristics of an inter-
state sale, and, therefore, it has been taxed under the
Central Act, that sale being physically a first sale inside
the State out of which the inter-state sale has been carved
out, it should follow that as the tax levied on the inter-
state sale must prevail, there will be no tax liability on
the same sale under the local Act on the ground that it is
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an inside sale". In this view it held that when the goods
pursuant to the interstate sale have been delivered outside
the State but brought back into the State and then sold,
that sale cannot in fact or in law be regarded as the first
sale within the meaning of the second schedule to the local
Act. It did not, however, think it necessary to consider on
the facts of the case "what the position will be when a sale
is an inside sale within the meaning of Section 4 of the
’Central Act and is also an inter-state sale, because it
occasioned the movement of the goods to another State and
out of the goods delivered outside the State pursuant to the
inter-state sale, a part has been brought into the State and
sold again as an inside sale, in the sense that every
incident including delivery is in the State’. In our view,
this question does not arise because what we have to
consider is having regard to the course of transactions of
sale which has not been traversed by the appellant, whether
the sale by the Madurai Mills pursuant to the orders placed
by the respondent, the cotton yarn sold to its branches in
Andhra Pradesh and Kerala in respect of which the price was
paid in the State of Madras, is an inside sale, and also a
first sale in the State. It appears to us that when the
cotton yam was sold to the respondent in Madras as the goods
were in the State of Madras when the contract of inter-state
was entered into, it will be a first sale in the State.
Once that sale has taken place, and the goods were delivered
in the States of Andhra Pradesh and Kerala, pursuant to that
inter-state sale, there was no further sale to the
’respondent when it transferred to it-, branches those goods
which have already been subject to tax in Madras nor can
such sales if they were sold in Madras be subject to tax.
15
Whether the provisions of Section 15 makes an inroad into
the texture of the local law, so that section 6 of the local
Act will have to be read subject to and in conformity with
the provisions of section 15 and the policy underlining that
section and whether section 6 will be inapplicable to sales
of declared goods, need not be considered in this case
because we are clearly of the view that the sale of cotton
yam sold to the branches of the respondent in Andhra Pradesh
and Kerala though they were interstate sales of declared
goods, were the first sales inside the State of Tamil Nadu
and that being so if those goods are transferred to Madras
and sold in Madras, they are exempt from being taxed again
since they have already been subjected to tax on the first
sale inside the State. We are, therefore, in agreement with
the conclusions of the Madras High Court.
The appeal is, accordingly, dismissed with costs.
K.B.N. Appeal
dismissed
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