Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
WEST BENGAL HOSIERY ASSOCIATION AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/08/1988
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 1814 1988 SCR Supl. (2) 378
1988 SCC (4) 134 JT 1988 (3) 347
1988 SCALE (2)280
CITATOR INFO :
D 1990 SC 820 (30,35)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950: Article 301 and 304 Levy of
sales tax by State-Discrimination between goods imported
from other States and goods manufactured and sold in that
State - Validity of.
%
Bihar Finance Act, 1981; Levy of sales-tax on hosiery
goods-Exempting hosiery goods manufactured and sold in that
State from such levy-Whether discriminatory and violative of
Articles 301 and 304 of the Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
The Bihar Government imposed sale-tax at 5 ad valorem on
all hosiery goods sold within the State irrespective of the
place of manufacture of such goods, effective from October
1. l983. However, by virtue of a notification dated August
1,1984 , it exempted from such levy, the hosiery goods
manufactured by hosiery industries in Bihar. This exemption
was sought to be given as an incentive to hosiery industries
in Bihar.
The petitioners have approached his Court by way of a
writ petition, contending that there has been discrimination
between hosiery goods imported into the State of Bihar and
hosiery goods manufactured in that State in the levy of
sales-tax. They prayed for the issue of a writ of mandamus
to the Respondents to rescind the notification dated August
1, 1984, and for a direction to the Respondents to forebear
from levying or collecting sales-tax on sale of hosiery
goods imported into the State of Bihar from other States,
and for refund of the sales-tax already levied and
collected. The petitioners contended that such
discrimination violated Art. 301 of the Constitution of
India, and that such discrimination could never be made by a
notification.
Allowing the writ petition and quashing the notification
in question, this Court
HELD: 1.1. A perusal of the Notifications would show
that prima facie a clear discrimination is made against
hosiery goods manufactured outside the State of Bihar and
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sold in the State of Bihar
PG NO 378
PG NO 379
as the sales of such goods are subjected to the levy of
sales-tax at the rate of 5 per cent whereas the sales of
similar goods manufactured by hosiery industries in the
State of Bihar are exempted from sales tax. From a
commercial or normal point of view, such a discriminatory
levy of sales-tax is bound to affect the free flow of
hosiery goods from outside States into the State of Bihar
and would, therefore, amount to hampering the free flow of
trade and commerce. The State of Bihar did not file any
counter to the petition to justify this discriminatory levy
as a regulatory measure or as a compensatory tax. The result
is that the discrimination made must be regarded as
violating the provisions of Article 301 read with Article
304(b) of the Constitution. [382H; 383A-C]
1.2. The general rate of sales-tax on hosiery goods was
5 per cent and it was the exemption for locally manufactured
hosiery goods, granted by the said Notification dated August
1, 1984 which constituted the departure. It is, therefore,
really this Notification which is discriminatory and which
must be struck down. [384A,B]
H. Anraj etc. v. Government of Tamil Nadu etc. [1985]
Suppl. 3 SCR 342; Firm A.T.B. Mehtab & Co. v. State of
Madras & Anr., [1963] Suppl. 2 SCR 435; The Indian Cement &
Ors. v. The State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors., [1988] 1 SCC
743; Weston Electroniks and Anr. v. State of Gujarat & Ors.,
[1988] 2 SCR 568, referred to.
[This Court directed that since there might be undue
hardship to the dealers in the State of Bihar who might have
sold locally manufactured goods without taking into
consideration the liability to sales-tax in view of the
exemption granted by the notification dated August 1, 1984,
the arrears of sales-tax payable by them should not be
collected.]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (Civil) No.
611 of 1986.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
H.K. Puri for the Petitioners.
M.P. Jha for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
PG NO 380
KANIA, J. This writ petition is filed under Article 32
of the Constitution of lndia by the West Bengal Hosiery
Association and certain Hosiery manufacturers and dealers in
the State of West Bengal against the State of Bihar and the
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes-cum-Special Secretary,
Bihar praying for a direction to the Respondents to forebear
from levying or imposing or collecting any sales tax on the
sale of hosiery goods imported into the State of Bihar from
other States for sale during the tenure of Circular No. So
934 dated 1st August, 1984, exempting from such tax, sales
of hosiery goods manufactured or produced in the State of
Bihar and to refund the amount of sales tax levied and
collected on the sale of hosiery goods imported into the
State of Bihar from other States in India from 1st August,
1984. The Petitioners have also prayed for a writ of
mandamus commanding the Respondents to cancel, withdraw or
rescind Notification No. SO. 934 dated August 1, 1984 by
which exemption was granted to hosiery industries of Bihar
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from the levy of sales tax as set out earlier and the
Petitioners have also prayed that the Respondents should be
directed to refrain from making any discrimination between
hosiery goods imported into the State of Bihar and hosiery
goods manufactured in the State of Bihar in the levy of
Bihar Sales Tax. The writ petition can be very shortly
disposed of because the point raised in the writ petition is
directly covered by decisions of this Court.
By a notification dated 30th September, 1983, on and
from October 1, 1983, Bihar Sales Tax at the rate of 5 per
cent ad valorem was imposed on all hosiery goods sold within
the State of Bihar irrespective of the place whether the
hosiery goods were manufactured. On August 1, 1984, a
Notification bearing no. SO 934 was issued whereby the
hosiery goods manufactured by hosiery industries in Bihar
were exempted from the levy of sales tax. The said
Notification stated that it would remain valid for a period
of five years. The reason given for this exemption was the
grant of incentives to hosiery industries in Bihar.
The contention raised before us by Mr. Sorabji, learned
Counsel for the Petitioners, is that by reason of the said
Notification all the sales of hosiery goods in Bihar
manufactured by hosiery industries outside the State of
Bihar are subjected to the levy of sales tax at the rate of
5 per cent whereas the sales of hosiery goods manufactured
by hosiery industries in Bihar are exempted from such levy
and thus the hosiery industries outside the State of Bihar
are clearly discriminated against. It is submitted by
learned Counsel that this discrimination violates the
provisions of Article 301 of the Constitution of lndia.
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The relevant Articles to consider in order to appreciate
the contention of the Petitioners are Articles 301 & 304 of
the Constitution of India. The said Articles run as follows:
301. Subject to the other provisions of this Part,
trade, commerce and intercourse throughout the territory of
lndia shall be free.
304. Notwithstanding anything in article 301 or article
303, the Legislature of a State may by law-
(a) impose on goods imported from other States or the
Union territories any tax to which similar goods
manufactured or produced in that State are subject, so,
however, as not to discriminate between goods so imported
and goods so manufactured or produced; and
(b) impose such reasonable restrictions on the freedom
of trade, commerce or intercourse with or within that State
as may be required in the public interest:
Provided that no Bill or amendment for the purposes of
clause (b) shall be introduced or moved in the Legislature
of a State without the previous sanction of the President."
A plain reading of these Articles would show that it is
not open to any State to levy any tax on goods imported from
other States or Union territories so as to discriminate
between goods so imported and goods manufactured and
produced in that State subject to the limitations contained
in clause (b). In the present case, clause (b) has no
application whatsoever because the exemption granted to the
sales of hosiery goods manufactured in the State of Bihar
has not been granted by any law passed by the legislature of
the State of Bihar but by a Notification. We find that the
contention urged on behalf of the Petitioners has been
accepted in several decisions of this Court.
In H. Anraj etc. v. Government of Tamil Nadu etc. [1985]
Supp. 3 S.C.R. 342 a Division Bench of this Court comprising
Tulzapurkar and Sabyasachi Mukharji, JJ., was called upon to
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consider whether an amendment made to the Tamil Nadu General
Sales Tax Act, 1959 and the Orders and Notification issued
thereunder whereby, in effect, exemption from the payment of
sales tax was granted to lottery tickets issued by the
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Government of Tamil Nadu but the lottery tickets issued by
other Government and sold within the State of Tamil Nadu
were subjected to sales-tax, was violative of Article 301
read with Article 304 of the Constitution. A similar
challenge was also made to the validity of the West Bengal
Taxation Laws (Second Amendment) Act, 1984 and Notification
No. 1020 FT dated March 29, 1984 issued by the State of West
Bengal. The Court took the view for the purposes of
questions raised in that case lottery tickets could be
regarded as "goods". The Court held that laws imposing taxes
can amount to restrictions on trade, commerce and
intercourse, if they hampered the free flow of trade and
they are not what can be termed to be compensatory taxes on
regulatory measures. It was held that the sales tax of the
kind in question before the Division Bench could not be said
to be a measure regulating any trade or a compensatory tax
levied for the use of trading facilities. Sales tax which
had the effect of discriminating between goods of one State
and goods of another might affect the free flow of trade and
would offend against Article 301 and would be valid only if
it came within the terms of Article 304(a). The real
question to be considered was whether the direct and
immediate result of the impugned Notification was to impose
an unfavourable and discriminatory tax burden on the
imported goods which in that case were lottery tickets of
other State when they were sold within the State of Tamil
Nadu and the State of West Bengal as against indigenous
goods and that this question had to be considered from the
normal business or commercial point of view. If the question
was so considered, it could be seen that the impugned
Notifications would have to be regarded as directly and
immediately hampering the free flow of trade, commerce and
intercourse. This view was taken after considering several
decisions of this Court and following the decision of this
Court in Firm A.T.B. Mehtab Majid and Co. v. State of Madras
& Anr., [1963] Suppl. 2 S.C.R. 435. A similar view has been
taken by a Division Bench of this Court comprising Ranganath
Misra & M.M. Dutt, JJ., in a judgment delivered as recently
as January 12, 1988 in The Indian Cement & Ors. v. The State
of Andhra Pradesh & Ors., [1988] 1 S.C.C. 743 where it has
been observed (p. 759) as follows:
"Variation of the rate of inter-State sales tax does
affect free trade and commerce and creates a local
preference which is contrary to the scheme of Part Xlll of
the Constitution."
In the present case, a perusal of the Notifications
referred to earlier show that prima facie a clear
discrimination is made against hosiery goods manufactured
PG NO 383
outside the State of Bihar and sold in the State of Bihar as
the sales of such goods are subjected to the levy of sales
tax at the rate of 5 per cent whereas the sales of similar
goods manufactured by hosiery industries in the State of
Bihar are exempted from sales tax. From a commercial or
normal point of view, such a discriminatory levy of sales
tax is bound to affect the free flow of hosiery goods from
outside States into the State of Bihar and would, therefore,
amount to hampering the free flow of trade and commerce. The
State of Bihar has not chosen to file any counter to the
petition or to justify this discriminatory levy as a
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regulatory measure or a compensatory tax. The result is that
the discrimination made must be regarded as violating the
provisions of Article 301 read with Article 304(b) of the
Constitution.
This brings us to the question as to the relief to which
the Petitioners are entitled. This Court in Weston
Electroniks and Anr v. State of Gujarat & Ors., [1988] 3
S.C.C. 568 dealt with a situation like the one in the case
before us. In that case the facts were that Section 7 of the
Gujarat Sales Tax Act, 1969 provides for the levy of sales
tax on the turnover of sales of goods specified in Part A
Schedule II of the said Act. Entry 80-A of Part A of
Schedule II specifies the rate of tax applicable to the
turnover of television sets. That rate was 15 per percent
originally and upto 1981; and the entry applied to all
television sets, whether manufactured and sold within the
State of Gujarat or imported from outside the State. In
1981, while the rate of tax on electronic goods entering the
State for sale therein was maintained at 15 per cent, the
rate in respect of locally manufactured goods was reduced to
6 per cent. By a Notification dated March 29, 1986, issued
under sub-section (2) of Section 49 of the said Act which
empowered the State Government to exempt in part r whole, in
public interest, any specified class of sales from the
payment of the whole or any part of the tax payable under
that Act, in 1986, the rate of sales tax in respect of
television sets imported from outside the State was reduced
from 15 per cent to 10 per cent and for goods manufactured
within the State, the rate of sales tax was reduced to 1 per
cent. The Petitioners before this Court submitted that the
Notification specifying a lower rate for local manufactures
should be quashed. It was held that the rate prescribed
under Section 7 of the Gujarat Sales Tax Act, 1969 is the
rate applied generally and it represents the normal standard
of levy. The lower rate applied to local manufacturers
represents a departure from or exception to the general
norm. In such a case the Court should, when granting relief,
choose the alternative which would give effect to the
statutory intention; and, following this principle, it was
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held that the impugned Notifications reserving a lower rate
of tax for local manufacturers must be quashed. In the case
before us we find that the general rate of sates tax on
hosiery goods was 5 per cent and it was the exemption for
locally manufactured hosiery goods, granted by the said
Notification No. SO 934 dated August 1, 1984, which
constituted the departure. It is, therefore, really this
Notification which is discriminatory and which must be
struck down.
We find that the said Notification No. SO 934 dated
August 1, 1984 is void for the reasons set out earlier and
we quash the same. We realise that quashing of this
Notification on the ground that it was void ab initio might
lead to undue hardship for the dealers in the State of Bihar
who might have sold locally manufactured hosiery goods
without taking into consideration any amount on account of
the liability to sales tax in view of the exemption granted
by the said Notification dated August 1, 1984. In order to
obviate this hardship, we direct that the arrears of sales
tax which would become payable by the dealers in the State
of Bihar in respect of sales of local hosiery goods made
during the period when the said Notification was in
operation should not be collected.
Rule is made absolute to the extent aforesaid. However,
taking into account the facts and circumstances of the case,
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we direct that there shall be no order as to costs.
G.N.