Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ABDUL BAKHI AND BROS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
08/04/1964
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SUBBARAO, K.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 531 1964 SCR (7) 664
CITATOR INFO :
R 1967 SC1066 (4,7)
R 1967 SC1131 (7)
R 1967 SC1826 (5,14)
RF 1969 SC 348 (2,8)
R 1969 SC1276 (5)
R 1970 SC 253 (9)
F 1972 SC 87 (45)
F 1985 SC1748 (5)
ACT:
Sales Tax-Total Turnover included price for buying tanning
bark-That price is taxable--Dealer-Meaning of Hyderabad
General Sales Tax Act, 1950, s. 2(e), 2(m)-Sales Tax Rules,
rr. 5-(1), 5(2).
HEADNOTE:
The respondents are registered dealers carrying on the
business of tanning hides and skins and selling the tanned
skins. The authorities under the Hyderabad General Sales
Tax Act, 1950 assessed the respondent for the total turnover
which included the price paid by the respondent for
purchasing tanning bark used in the tanning process. The
respondent contended that the price paid for the purchase of
tanning bark should be excluded from the taxable turnover
because the tanning bark was bought by the respondent for
consumption and not for sale and hence the respondent was
not "dealer" qua the tanning bark. His contention was not
accepted by the Tax authorities. In a petition to the High
Court under s. 22(1) of, the Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act
the contention of the respondent was accepted and the
assessment was modified. In appeal filed with special
leave,
Held: The High Court was in error in holding that a
purchaser is liable to pay tax under r. 5(2) of the Sales
Tax Rules only when he is carrying on a business of buying
and selling a commodity specified in sub-r. (2) and not when
he buys it for consumption in a process for manufacturing a
commodity to be sold by him.
(ii) To regard an activity as a business there must be a
course of dealing either actually continued or contemplated.
to be continued with a profit motive and not for sport or
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pleasure. But to be a dealer a person need not follow the
activity of buying, selling and supplying the same
commodity. The Act requires merely that buying of the
commodity mentioned in r. 5(2) must be in the course of
business; that is it must be for sale or use with a view to
take profit out of the integrated, activity of buying and
disposal. The commodity may itself be converted into
another saleable commodity or it may be used as an
ingredient or in aid of a manufacturing process leading to
the production of such saleable commodity.
(iii) In the present case the tanning bark was not
bought by the respondent for any purpose unconnected with
the business. Consumption of the tanning bark in the
manufacturing process did not therefore exclude the
respondents from the definition of dealer qua the tanning
bark.
Sadak Thamby and Company v. State of Madras, 14 S.T.C. 753,
approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 473 of 1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order March
22, 1960, of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Tax Revision
Case No. 88 of 1960.
A. Ranganadham Chetty, B. R. G. K. Achar and R. N.
Sachthey, for the appellant.
The respondent did not appear.
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April 8, 1964. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SHAH, J.-The respondents who are registered as dealers under
the Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act, 1950 carry on the
business of tanning hides and skins and of selling the
tanned skins in the town of Hyderabad. For the purposes ’of
their business the respondents purchase undressed hides and
skins and also tanning bark and other materials required in
their tannery. For the assessment year 1954-55 the Sales-
tax Officer, Circle IV, Hyderabad, found that the total
turnover of the respondents was Rs. 5,70,417-12-4 (O.S.) in
respect of the hides, skins, wool and tanning bark. The
respondents disputed their liability to pay tax on Rs.
61,431-14-9 (O.S.) included in the turnover contending that
this amount represented the price paid for buying tanning
bark required in their tannery. They submitted that tanning
bark was bought for consumption in the tannery and not for
sale, and they were accordingly not dealers in tanning bark
and therefore the price paid for buying tanning bark was not
liable to duty under the Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act.
The Sales-tax Officer rejected the contention of the
respondents, and his order was confirmed in appeal by the
Deputy Commissioner, C. T., Hyderabad Division and also by
the Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal, Hyderabad. But the High
Court of Andhra Pradesh in a petition under s. 22(1) read
with rule 40 framed under the Andhra Pradesh General Sales
Tax Act VII of 1957 modified the order passed by the taxing
authorities and excluded from the computation of the taxable
turnover the price paid by the respondents for the tanning
bark used in the tannery. With special leave, the State of
Andhra Pradesh has appealed to this Court.
Section 2(e) of the Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act defines
"dealer" as meaning any person. local authority, company,
firm, Hindu undivided family or any association or
associations of persons engaged in the business of buying,
selling or supplying goods in the Hyderabad State whether
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for a commission, remuneration or otherwise and includes a
State Government which carries on such business and any
society, club or association which buys or sells or supplies
goods to its members. Section 2(m) defines "turnover" as,
meaning an aggregate amount for which goods are either
bought by or sold by a dealer, whether for a cash or for de-
ferred payment or other valuable consideration. By. s. 4 a
tax at the rate of three pies in the rupee in I. G. currency
on so much of the turnover for the year is is attributable
to transactions in goods other than exempted goods is
imposed. Rule 5(1) provides that save as provided in sub-
rule (2) the turnover of a dealer for the purpose of the
rules shall be the amount for which goods are sold by the
dealer. Rule 5(2) provides that in the case of certain
commodities the turnover
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of a dealer for the purpose of the rules shall be the amount
for which the goods are bought by the dealer. Those commo-
dities are: -
(a) Groundnut (shelled or unshelled);
(b) Bidi leaves;
(c) Tarwar and other tanning barks;
(d) Til, karad and castor seed;
(e) Cotton including kappas;
(f) Linseed, turmeric, dhania and other
agricultural produce including all kinds of
dhals and paddy (husked or unhusked) not
otherwise exempted under the said Act, but
excluding cotton seed, sugarcane, tea and
coffee seeds;
(g) Hides and skins;
(h) Wool, bones and horns.
The High Court of Andhra Pradesh rejected the claim of the
taxing authories to tax the tanning bark bought by the
respondents on the ground that a purchaser is liable to pay
tax under Rule 5(2) only when he is carrying on business of
buying and selling a commodity specified in the sub-rule (2)
and not when he buys it for consumption in a process for
manufacturing an article to be sold by him. Therefore, in
the view of the High Court if a dealer buys any commodity
included in Rule 5(2) for consumption in his business but
not for sale, he is not to be regarded as engaged in the
business of buying, selling ’or supplying that commodity and
the price paid for buying the commodity is not liable to
tax.
We are unable to agree with this view of the High Court. A
person to be a dealer must be engaged in the business of
buying or selling or supplying goods. The expression "busi-
ness" though extensively used a word of indefinite import,
in taxing statutes it is used in the sense of an occupation,
or profession which occupies the time, attention and labour
of a person, normally with the object of making profit. To
regard an activity as business there must be a course of
dealings, either actually continued or contemplated to be
continued with a profit motive, and not for sport or
pleasure. But to be a dealer a person need not follow the
activity of buying selling and supplying the same commodity.
Mere buying for personal consumption i.e. without a profit
motive will not make a person, dealer within the meaning of
the Act, but a person who consumes a commodity bought by him
in the course of his trade, ’or use in manufacturing another
commodity for sale, would be regarded as a dealer. The
Legislature has not made sale of the very article bought by
a person a condition for treating him as a dealer: the
definition merely requires that the buying of the commodity
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mentioned in Rule 5(2) must be in the course of business,
i.e. must be for sale
667
or use with a view to make profit out of the integrated
activity of buying and disposal. The commodity may itself
be converted into another saleable commodity, or it may be
used as an ingredient or in aid of a manufacturing process
leading to the production of such saleable commodity.
It cannot be said in the present case that the tanning bark
was bought by the respondent for any purpose unconnected
with the business carried on by them, viz., manufacture and
sale of dressed hides and skins. Consumption in the
business and not sale of the commodity bought therefore does
not exclude the respondents from the definition of dealer
aua the tanning bark. This is the view which has, in our
judgment, been rightly taken by the Madras Hight Court in
the interpretation of a similar statute in operation in the
State of Madras in L.M.S. Sadak Thamby and Company v. The
State of Madras(1).
The appeal is therefore allowed and the order passed by the
High Court is set aside and order passed by the Sales-tax
Appellate Tribunal restored. No order as to costs.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) 14 S.T.C., 753
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