Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. LAXMI PAPER MART & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/02/1997
BENCH:
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, K.S. PARIPOORNAN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 4TH DAY OF FEBRUARY, 1997
Present :
Hon‘ble Mr. Justice B.P. Jeevan Reddy
Hon‘ble Mr. Justice K.S. Paripoornan
R.C. Verma and R.B. Mishra, Advs. for the appellants
V. Adhiyarujina, Solicitor General and Subrat Birla, Adv.
with him for the Union of India
H.K. Puri, Adv. for the Respondent
J U D G M E N T
The following judgment of the Court was delivered :
J U D G M E N T
B.P.JEEVAN REDDY, J.
A simple measure by the State of Utter Pradesh has
invited the wrath of Article 301 read with 304 (a) of the
Constitution of India. Tow notifications were issued by the
Government of Utter Pradesh on December 1, 1973. The effect
of these two notifications was that exercise books made from
paper purchased within Uttar Pradesh were exempt from sales
tax whereas all other kinds of exercise books were liable to
sales tax @ 5%. The High Court dealt with three categories
of cases, (1) exercise books made from paper purchased
within Uttar Pradesh. [Sale of paper within Uttar Pradesh
attracted sale tax @ 5%.], (2) exercise books made outside
the State of Uttar Pradesh and brought into and sold in
Uttar Pradesh and (3) exercise books made in Uttar Pradesh
but out of the paper purchased from outside the State of
Uttar Pradesh. The High Court has held that insofar as the
second category is concerned, it is hit by Article 301 read
with Article 304 (a). So for as the third category is
concerned the High Court did not find fault with it. It
declared that "Notification No. 6624 insofar as it imposes
sales tax on the import of exercise books is violative of
Article 301 of the Constitution and is unenforceable". Since
There is no appeal by the dealer, we need nor consider the
question whether the decision of the High Court with respect
to third category is correct or not. We confine out
attention only to Category (2), i.e., exercise books made
outside the State of Utter Pradesh and brought into and sold
in Uttar Pradesh.
In our opinion, the High Court was right in holding
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that exempting the exercise books produced in the State and
subjecting the exercise books produced outside the State but
sold in Uttar Pradesh to Sales tax @ 5% is discriminatory
and, therefore, offends clause (a) of Article 304. The
decision of this Court in Firm A.T.M. Mehtab Majid & Co. V.
State of Madras [1963 suppl. (2) S.C.R. 435] clearly governs
the issue. The said decision considered a situation where
the State of madras subjected the Tanned Hides and skins
imported from outside the state of Madras and sold within
the State of madras to a Higher rate of Tax than the tax
imposed on hides or skins tanned and sod within the State.
[It had also subjected the hides or skins imported from
outside the State after purchase in their raw condition and
then tanned inside the State to a higher rate of Tax than
the hides or skins purchased in raw condition in the State
and tanned in the State] the following holding in the said
decision is relevant:
"It is therefore now well settled
that taxing law can be restrictions
on trade, commerce and intercourse,
if they hamper the flow of trade
and if they are not what can be
termed to be compensatory taxes or
regulatory measures. Sales tax, of
the kind under consideration hare,
cannot be said to be a measure
regulating any trade or a
compensatory tax levied for the use
of trading facilities. Sale tax,
which has the effect of
discriminating between goods of one
State and goods of another, may
affect the free flow of trade and
it will then offend against Art.
301 and will be valid only if it
comes within the terms of Art. 304
(a).
Article 304 (a) enables the
Legislature of a State to make laws
affecting trade, commerce or
intercourse. It enable the
imposition of taxes on good from
other States if similar goods in
the State are subjected to similiar
taxes, so as not to discriminate
between the goods manufactured or
produced in that State and the
goods which are imported from other
States. This means that if the
effect of the sale-tax on tanned
hides or skins imported from
outside is that the latter becomes
subject to a higher tax by the
application of the proviso to sub-
rule of r. 16 of the Rules, then
the tax is discriminatory and
unconstitutional and must be struck
down."
Clause (a) of Article 304 has recently been considered
in Shree Mahavir Oil Mills & Anr. V. state of Jammu &
Kashmir [JT. (1996) 10 S.C. 837] wherein it was pointed out
that clause (a) of Article 304 "though worded in positive
language has a negative aspect. It is, in truth, a provision
prohibiting discrimination against the imported goods. In
the Matter of levy of tax- and this is important to bear in
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mind - the clause tells the State Legislatures: ’tax you may
the goods imported from other States/Union Territories, but
do not, in that process, discriminate against them vis-a-vis
goods manufactured locally’. In short, the clause says: levy
of tax on both ought to be at the same rate. This was and is
a ringing declaration against the States creating what may
be called "tax barriers’ - or ’fiscal barriers’, as they may
be called - at or along their boundaries, in the interest of
freedom of trade, commerce and intercourse throughout the
territory of India guaranteed by Article 301." Once the
discrimination is made out, the enquiry by court ends. The
price structure of the imported good vis-a-vis the locally
manufactured goods or the economics of the importer need not
be gone into.
The appeal is accordingly dismissed. No order as to
costs.