Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. RAINBOW COLOUR LAB & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/02/2000
BENCH:
S.P.Bharucha, N.S.Hegde
JUDGMENT:
SANTOSH HEGDE, J.
Common questions involved in these appeals are whether
the job rendered by a photographer in taking photographs,
developing and printing films would amount to a works
contract as contemplated under Article 366(2A)(b) of the
Constitution read with Section 2(n) of the M.P.General Sales
Tax for the purpose of levy of sales tax on business
turnover of the photographers.
Prior to the 46th Constitutional Amendment, this
question was settled in favour of the assessees by the
judgment of this Court in the case of Assistant Sales Tax
Officer & Ors. vs. B.C. Kame (1977 (39) STC 237). Taking
advantage of the 46th Amendment of the Constitution and the
consequent amendment to the definition of sale in Section
2(n) of the local Sales Tax Act, the Commissioner of Sales
Tax, M.P. issued Circular dated 25.1.1992 opining that the
job done by the photographers amounted to works contract
and turnover from such work would be exigible to the levy of
sales-tax. This Circular prompted the concerned Assessing
Officers to re-assess the turnover of the assessees and to
issue them demand notices. Aggrieved assessees filed writ
petition before the M.P.High Court primarily contending that
the work done by them is only a service contract, out of
their skill and labour and there was no element of sale
involved in their work, hence their turnover was outside the
levy of sales-tax. The High Court, however, relying on the
judgment of this Court in Builders Association of India &
Ors. vs. Union of India & Ors. (1989 (73) STC 370) held
that, to the extent of the photo paper used in the printing
of positive prints by the appellants in their work, there is
a transfer of property in goods. Therefore, to this extent,
the job done by the appellants becomes a works contract as
contemplated under Article 366(2A)(b) of the Constitution
and as incorporated in Section 2(n) of the State Act. This
declaration of law is challenged before us in these appeals.
On facts, there is no dispute before us in regard to the
actual nature of work done by the appellants i.e. in the
course of their business. The appellants take photographs
of the objects desired by their customers, develop the
negatives and supply the prints. They also develop the
films brought by the customers, make positive prints thereof
and supply the positive prints and return the negative films
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back to the customers. In some of the cases, it is possible
that the appellants may undertake the work of enlarging the
photo prints also. It is also of common knowledge that the
photo prints supplied by them to their customers are not
marketable commodities and as goods they have no value. In
this background, we will now examine the question arising in
these appeals. This Court in Kames case (supra) while
considering the facts of a similar case held: When a
photographer like the respondent undertakes to take
photograph, develop the negative, or do other photographic
work and thereafter supply the prints to his client, he
cannot be said to enter into a contract for sale of goods.
The contract on the contrary is for use of skill and labour
by the photographer to bring about a desired result. The
occupation of a photographer, except in so far as he sells
the goods purchased by him, in our opinion, is essentially
one of skill and labour. x x x x x We, therefore, find no
cogent ground to disagree with the High Court in so far as
it has decided against the revenue and has held the contract
to be one for work and labour. Since this was a judgment
rendered prior to the coming into force of the 46th
Constitutional Amendment, we will have to consider whether
the said Amendment has brought about any change so as to
doubt the legal position enunciated in the above case. It
is true that by the 46th Constitutional Amendment by
incorporating Clause 29-A(b) in Article 366, the definition
of the words sale and works contract have been enlarged.
The State of Madhya Pradesh has also brought about a
consequent change in the definition of the word sale in
Section 2(n) of its Sales Tax Act but it is to be noticed
that in the said State Act the expression works contract
has not been specifically defined. Prior to the Amendment
of Article 366, in view of the judgment of this Court in
State of Madras vs. Gannon Dunkerley & Co. (1958 (9) STC
353), the States could not levy sales-tax on sale of goods
involved in a works contract because the contract was
indivisible. All that has happened in law after the 46th
Amendment and the judgment of this Court in Builders case
(supra) is that it is now open to the States to divide the
works contract into two separate contracts by a legal
fiction (i) contract for sale of goods involved in the
said works contract and (ii) for supply of labour and
service. This division of contract under the amended law
can be made only if the works contract involved a dominant
intention to transfer the property in goods and not in
contracts where the transfer in property takes place as an
incident of contract of service. The Amendment, referred to
above, has not empowered the State to indulge in microscopic
division of contracts involving the value of materials used
incidentally in such contracts. What is pertinent to
ascertain in this connection is what was the dominant
intention of the contract. Every contract, be it a service
contract or otherwise, may involve the use of some material
or the other in execution of the said contract. State is
not empowered by the amended law to impose sales-tax on such
incidental materials used in such contracts. This is clear
from the judgment of this Court in Hindustan Aeronautics
Ltd. vs. State of Karnataka (1984 (55) STC 314 at 322)
where it was held thus : ..Mere passing of property in
an article or commodity during the course of performance of
the transaction in question does not render the transaction
to be transaction of sale. Even in a contract purely of
work or service, it is possible that articles may have to be
used by the person executing the work, and property in such
articles or materials may pass to the other party. That
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would not necessarily convert the contract into one of sale
of those materials. In every case, the court would have to
find out what was the primary object of the transaction and
the intention of the parties while entering into it..
The Judgment in the above case was quoted with
approval by this Court in the case of Everest Copiers vs.
State of Tamil Nadu (1996 (103) STC 360) (to which judgment
one of us - Hon. Bharucha, J. - was a party) wherein it
was stated: Where the main object of the work undertaken
by the person to whom the price is paid is not the transfer
of a chattel as a chattel, the contract is one of work and
labour.
The main object of the work undertaken by the operator
of a photocopier or xerox machine is not the transfer of the
paper upon which the copy is produced; it is to duplicate
or make a xerox copy of the document which the payer of the
price wants duplicated. The paper upon which the
duplication takes place is only incidental to this
transaction. The object of the payment of the price is to
get the document duplicated, not to receive the paper. The
payer of the price has no interest in the bare paper upon
which his document is duplicated. He is interested in it
only if it bears such duplication. What is involved is not
a sale but a contract of work or labour.
In Bavens v. Union of India & Ors. (1995 (97) STC
161), a Division Bench of the Kerala High Court had taken
the view that Where a photographer takes a photograph of
his customer, develops the negative and supplies positive
prints in the desired size to the customer, the photographer
uses his own camera and his own film. The negative which is
subjected to further processing belongs to the photographer
and not to the customer. No basic goods are provided by the
customer which are subjected to processing, etc., by the
photographer so as to make the contract a works contract.
There is no accretion to goods or property or the nucleus of
a property which originally belonged to the customer. There
is no works contract involved in this category of a
photographers activity. However modernised the camera be,
the skill of the photographer is still important for getting
the best results. It cannot also be treated as a sale of
the photograph for the reason that it is not the intention
of the customer to buy a photograph from the photographer.
The photograph has no marketable value. What is expected
from the photographer is his service, artistic skill and
talent. If any property passes to the customer in the form
of photographic paper, it is only incidental to the service
contract. No portion of the turnover of a photographer
relating to this category of work would be exigible to sales
tax. We are in agreement with the view taken by the Kerala
High Court in the above case. The reliance placed by the
High Court in Builders case (supra) is misplaced. Though
this Court in the said case held that by the 46th Amendment
to the Constitution, the definition of the expression tax
on the sale or purchase of goods stood enlarged, it also
held that the 46th Amendment does no more than making it
possible for the States to levy sales-tax on the price of
goods and materials used in the works contract as if there
was a sale of such goods and materials. The Court also
observed : We are surprised at the attitude of the States
which have put forward the plea that on the passing of the
46th Amendment the Constitution had conferred on the States
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a larger freedom than what they had before in regard to
their power to levy sales tax under entry 54 of the State
List. The 46th Amendment does no more than making it
possible for the States to levy sales tax on the price of
goods and materials used in works contracts as if there was
a sale of such goods and materials. We do not accept the
argument that sub-clause (b) of article 366(29-A) should be
read as being equivalent to a separate entry in List II of
the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution enabling the States
to levy tax on sales and purchases independent of entry 54
thereof. As the Constitution exists today the power of the
States to levy taxes on sales and purchases of goods
including the deemed sales and purchases of goods under
clause (29- A) of article 366 is to be found only in entry
54 and not outside it. We may recapitulate here the
observations of the Constitution Bench in the case of Bengal
Immunity Co. Ltd. (1955) 6 STC 446; (1955) 2 SCR 603 in
which this Court has held that the operative provisions of
the several parts of article 286 which imposes restrictions
on the levy of sales tax by the States are intended to deal
with different topics, and one could not be projected or
read into another and each one of them has to be obeyed
while any sale or purchase is taxed under entry 54 of the
State List. Thus, it is clear that unless there is sale and
purchase of goods, either in fact or deemed, and which sale
is primarily intended and not incidental to the contract,
the State cannot impose sales-tax on a works contract
simpliciter in the guise of the expanded definition found in
Article 366(29-A)(b) read with Section 2(n) of the State
Act. On facts as we have noticed that the work done by the
photographer which as held by this Court in Kames case
(supra), is only in the nature of a service contract not
involving any sale of goods, we are of the opinion that the
stand taken by the respondent-State cannot be sustained.
For the reasons stated above, we are of the opinion
that the view taken by the Division Bench of the Madhya
Pradesh High Court in the impugned judgment cannot be
sustained. Hence, we allow these appeals, setting aside the
judgment under appeal and grant the prayer of the appellants
by quashing the assessment orders and the demand notices
impugned in the writ petitions before the High Court. No
costs. SLP © Nos.18089-90/97 :
Leave granted.
Following the judgment of this Court in CA
Nos.5350-51/97 etc. these appeals are also allowed. No
costs.