Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TIKA RAM & SONS LTD. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF SALES TAX U.P., LUCKNOW
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
22/03/1968
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
SHAH, J.C.
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 1286 1968 SCR (3) 512
ACT:
U.P. Sales Tax Act (15 of 1948) as amended by Act 8 of 1954,
ss. 2(h), Explanation II (ii) and 11-Scope of Explanation-If
ultra vires-When Commissioner has right to ask for reference
to High Court Jurisdiction of Revising Authority to refer
and of High Court to decide constitutional validity of
provisions of Act.
HEADNOTE:
For the period 1st April 1948 to 25th January 1950, goods
(oil) were manufactured produced in the State of Uttar
Pradesh by the appellants who were carrying on business in
the State in those goods. Part of the goods were sent to
their depots outside the State before any contract of sale
in respect of them was made, and thereafter, sold to various
parties. those outside sales were also assessed to sales tax
under the U.P. sales Tax Act, 1948. The matter was taken to
the Appellate Authority and thereafter to the Revising
Authority constituted under the Act. Though the revision
was filed before last April 1954 when the Amending Act of
1954 came into force, it was disposed of in 1957, in favour
of -the appellants. On the application of the commissioner
of Sales Tax two questions of law were referred to the High
Court one of which related to the constitutional validity of
Explanation II (ii) to s. 2(h) of the Act, according to
which, the sale of any goods ’which are produced or
manufactured in U.P. by the producer or manufacture thereof,
shall, wherever the delivery ’or contract of We is made, be
deemed for the purposes of this Act to ,have taken place in
U.P’ The High Court decided both questions in favour of the
Commissioner.
In appeal to this Court it was contended that : (1) For
attracting tax liability the Explanation requires that the
goods should have been manufactured or produced in U.P.
after the contract of sale was entered into-, (2) the
Explanation was ultra vires as being outside legislative
competence, because, Wes tax legislation was concerned with
tax on the transaction of a completed sale, and a State
could not impose sales tax on the basis that one of the
component parts of sale constitutes sufficient nexus between
the taxing state and the sale; (3) the Revising Authority
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could not refer to the High Court and the High Court could
not decided on such reference, any question regarding the
constitutional validity the Explanation; and (4) the
Revising Authority could not make a reference to the High
Court under s. 11, at the instance of the Commissioner, as
the Commissioner had no power to apply when the revision was
filed before the Authority but was empowered to do so only
by the amending Act of 1954 which had no retrospective
operation.
HELD : (I) For the application of the Explanation and
attracting tax liability, it is only necessary that the
goods must have been sold by the person who produced or
manufactured them, but there is no requirement that he must
have manufactured or produced them after the contract of
sale and not before. (518 C]
(2)To confer jurisdiction upon the ’State Legislature to
impose sales tax, ’it is sufficient if there is a proper
territorial nexus or connection 512
513
between the taxing authority and the transaction sought to
be taxed. and, the fact that goods were manufactured in the
State constitutes a real and pertinent nexus. [519 C]
The Tata Iron and Steel Co. Ltd. v. State of Bihar, [1958]
S.C.R. 1355 and Bharat Siigar Mills v. The State of Bihar,
11 S.T.C. 793, followed-
(3) The appellants did not challenge the jurisdiction of the
High Court to examine the constitutional validity of the
Explanation; nor was any such challenge made in the special
leave petition to this Court or in the statement of case.
On the contrary, the appellants contended in the revision
before the Revising Authority that the Explanation was ultra
vires. Therefore, having- voluntarily submitted to the
jurisdiction of the Revising Authority it is not open to the
appellants to challenge the. jurisdiction Of the Revising
Authority to refer the question of the constitutional
validity of the Explanation- to the High Court, or of the
High Court to decide it. [522 E-G]
(4) The Commissioner had the power to apply for a reference
on the date he applied for a reference, as the amending Act
had by then come into force. There is nothing in the
language or in the context of s. 1 1 to suggest that he
could exercise the right only if it existed on the date on
which the revision was filed before the Revising Authority.
The rule that a statute should be interpreted, as far as
possible, so as to respect vested rights has no application
because,, the amendment does not affect any vested right of
the appellants, but only deals with a procedural matter.
[523 E-H]
Gardner v. Lucas, [1878] 3 A.C. 582, 603, applied.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 1682 to
1691 of 1967.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
November 30, 1962 of the Allahabad High Court in Misc.
Sales Tax Reference Nos. 144, 134, 143, 148, 124, 104, 105,
112 and 113 of 1958 respectively.
M.C. Chagla and S. S. Shukla, for the appellants (in all the
appeals).
C. B. Agarwala and 0. P. Rana, for the respondents (in all
appeals)
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ramaswami, J. These appeals are brought, by special leave
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from the judgment of the Allahabad High Court dated November
30, 1962 in Miscellaneous Sales Tax Reference No. 144 of
1958 and other connected references.
The appellants are manufacturers and dealers of oil in the
Province of Uttar Pradesh and they have their own depots
outside the Province. For the financial year 1948-49 and
the subsequent period from April 1, 1949 to January 25, 1950
the appellants had sent their goods to their depots outside
the-Province of Uttar Pradesh, for example, to Calcutta in
the State of West Bengal before any contract of sale in
respect of the goods was made.
514
After the goods had reached the depots outside the Province
of Uttar Pradesh, they were sold to various parties. The
Sales Tax Officers of Uttar Pradesh assessed the outside
sales of all the appellants to sales tax under the Uttar
Pradesh Sales Tax Act 15 of 1948, hereinafter called the
Act. It appears that this category of sales roughly
amounted to more than one crore of rupees in the case of the
appellants -and the sales tax was levied at the rate of 3
pies per rupee subject to a rebate under S. 5 of the Act and
certain other adjustments. Aggrieved by the assessments,
the appellants took the matter in appeal under s. 9 of the
Act. The appeals were heard by various Appellate Officers
called Judge, Appeals. Some of the Appellate Officers held
that the assessment was properly made, while some others
took the view that the assessments made for outside sales
were improper and the assessment order should be quashed.
The parties aggrieved by the appellate orders filed
revisions before the revising authority called Judge,
Revisions under S. 10 of the Act. By his judgment dated
July 10, 1957 the Judge, Revisions held that the out of
State sales would be taxable (1) if the goods were in
existence in the Province of Uttar Pradesh at the time when
the contracts for sale were made, and (2) if the goods were
manufacturer after the contracts for sale were made in
respect of them and were subsequently appropriated towards
those contracts. He further held that sales of goods which
were not only manufactured but also exported before any
contracts for sale were made would not be taxable. Under s.
II of the Act, the Commissioner of Sales Tax applied to the
Revising Authority for making a reference of the case to the
High Court, By its order dated January 23, 1958 the Revising
Authority drew up a statement of the case and referred to
the Allahabad High Court the following two questions of law
for determination :
"(1) Whether clause (ii) of the Explanation 11
to Section 2 (h) U.P. Sales Tax Act provides
for taxing sales in which goods were
manufactured or produced in U.P. but for which
the contract for sale was made after the goods
had left the State ?
(2) If the reply to the above is in
affirmative, whether this provision is ultra
vires ?"
By its judgment dated November 30, 1962, the High Court ans-
wered the first question in the affirmative and the second
question in the negative.
It is necessary at this stage to refer to the relevant
statutory provisions which were in force during the material
period. Section 99 of the Government of India Act, 1935
authorised a Provincial Legislature, subject to the
provisions of that Act, to make laws for the Province or for
any part thereof. Section
515
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100(3) of that Act provided that, subject to the two
preceding sub-sections, the Provincial Legislature had, and
the Federal Legislature had not, power to make laws for any
Province or any part thereof with respect to any of the
matters enumerated in List 11 of the Seventh Schedule to
that Act. The matter enumerated in Entry 48 in List 11 was
"Taxes on the sale of goods and on advertisements." It was
in exercise of this legislative power that the Uttar Pradesh
State Legislature enacted Act 15 of 1948 which came into
force on April 1, 1948. Section 3 of the Act Provides as
follows
"3. Liability to tax under the Act-Subject to
the provisions of this Act, every dealer shall
pay on turnover in each assessment year a tax
at the rate of 3 pies a rupee :
Provided that-
(i) the Provincial Government may, by
notification in the official Gazette, reduce
the rate of tax on the turnover of any dealer
or class of dealers or on the turnover in
respect of any goods or class of goods;
(ii) a dealer whose turnover in the previous
year is less than Rs. 12,000/- or such larger
amount as may be prescribed shall not be
liable to pay the tax under this Act for the
assessment year;
Section 2(c) defines a "dealer" to mean "any person or
association of persons carrying on the business of buying or
selling and supplying goods in the United Provinces, whether
for commission, remuneration or otherwise and includes any
firm or Hindu joint family and any society, club or
association which sells or supplies Goods to its members but
does not include any department of the Provincial Government
or of the Indian Union (hereinafter called the ’Dominion
Government’)". Section 2(h) is to the following effect
" ’sale’ means, with its grammatical
variations and cognate expressions, any
transfer of property in goods for cash or
deferred payment or other valuable conside-
ration and includes forward contracts but does
not include a mortgage, hypothecation, charge
or pledge
Explanation II-Notwithstanding anything. in
the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930, or any
other law for the time being in force, the
sale of any goods-
516
(i)which are actually in the United
Provinces at the time when in respect thereof,
the contract of sale as defined in section 4
of that Act is made,
(ii)or which are produced or manufactured in
the United Provinces by the producer or
manufacturer thereof, shall, wherever the
delivery or contract of sale is made, be
deemed for the purposes of this Act to have
taken place in the United Provinces.
Section 10 states
"Power of revision-(1)The Provincial Govern-
ment shall appoint as Revising Authority a
person qualified under subsection (3) of
section 220 of the Government of India Act,
1935, for appointment as Judge of a High
Court.
(2) The appellate authority appointed under
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section 9 shall be under the superintendence
and control of the Revising Authority.
(3) The Revising Authority may -in its
discretion at any time suo motu or on being
moved by the Commissioner of Sales Tax or on
the application of any person aggrieved, call
for and examine the record of any order made
or proceedings recorded by any appellate or
assessing authority under this Act for the
purpose of satisfying itself as to the
legality or propriety of such order or as to
the regularity of such proceedings and may
pass such order as he thinks fit.
(4) The Revising Authority shall not pass any
order under sub-section (3) adversely
affecting any person unless an opportunity has
been given to such person to be heard.
(5) If the amount of assessment is reduced by
the Revising Authority under sub-section (3)
it shall order the excess amount of tax if
already realized to be refunded."
Section 11 is to the following effect
"Statement of case to High Court-(I) Within
sixty days from the passing by the Revising
Authority of any order under sub-section (3)
of section 9 or subsection (1) of section 10
affecting any liability of any dealer to pay
tax under this Act, such dealer may, by
application in writing accompanied by a fee of
one hundred rupees, require the Revising
Authority
517
to refer to the High Court any question of law
arising out of such order.
(2) If, for reasons to be recorded in writing,
the Revising Authority refuses to make such
reference, the applicant may, within thirty
days of such refusal, either-
(a) withdraw his application (and if he does
so, the fee shall be refunded, or
(b) apply to the High Court against such
refusal.
(3) If upon the receipt of an application
under clause (b) of sub-section (2),the High
Court is not satisfied that such refusal was
Justified, it may require the Revising
Authority to state a case and refer it to the
High Court and on receipt of such requisition
the Revising Authority shall state and refer
the case accordingly.
(4)If the High Court is not satisfied that
’the statement in a case referred under this
section is sufficient to enable it to
determine’ the question raised thereby, it may
refer the case back to the Revising Authority
to make such additions thereto or alterations
therein as the High Court may direct in that
behalf.
By the Amending Act of 1954 (U.P. Act VIII of 1954) which
came into force on April 1, 1954 the following provisions
were substituted in place of sub-sections (1), (3) and (4):-
"(1) Within one hundred and twenty days from
the date of service of the order under sub-
section (3) of section 10, the person
aggrieved, may, by application in writing
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require the Revising Authority to refer to the
High Court any question of law arising out of
such order
(3) The provisions of subsection (1) shall
also be applicable to the Commissioner of
Sales Tax with the modification that it shall
not be necessary for him to deposit any fee.
(4) If on any application, being made under
subsection (1) or (3) the Revising Authority
refuses to state the case the person
aggrieved or the Commissioner of Sales Tax as
the case may be, may ... ...... apply to the
High Court ............"
It was argued by Mr. Chagla in the first place that cl. (ii)
of Explanation II to S. 2(h) of the Act means that the goods
should have been manufactured and produced in Uttar Pradesh
for sale
518
to the person who had contracted to buy them. In other
words, there must be a contract for the sale before
manufacture or produce. It was pointed out that in the
present case the contract was entered into after the goods
were manufactured and exported out of Uttar Pradesh. It was
contended that as a matter of construction Explanation II
does not cover these sales and the deeming provision will
not make the appellants liable to pay sales-tax in regard to
such sales. We are unable to accept this argument as
correct. There is nothing in the language or context of
Explanation II to suggest that the goods should be produced
or manufactured in Uttar Pradesh after the contracts for
sale had been entered-into. There is hence no warrant for
the argument that for attracting the tax liability the goods
must have been manufactured or produced after and not before
the agreement for sale. In other words, it is only
necessary for the application of Explanation 11 that the
goods must have been sold by the person who produced or
manufactured them but there is no requirement that he must
have manufactured or produced them after the agreement for
sale. It is the admitted position in these appeals that the
goods were manufactured or produced in Uttar Pradesh by the
appellants carrying on business in Uttar Pradesh in those
goods and therefore the appellants are liable to pay the tax
on their sales irrespective of where and when the contracts
for sale were entered into and also irrespective of the fact
that the contracts were entered into after the goods had
been exported out of Uttar Pradesh. We accordingly hold
that the first question was rightly answered by the High
Court.
We proceed to consider the next, and more important, ques-
tion arising in these appeals, namely, whether the deeming
provision contained in s. 2(h) Explanation II(ii) of the Act
was ultra vires the Government of India Act, 1935. It was
argued by Mr. Chagla that the doctrine of nexus was not
applicable to sales-tax legislation, because such
legislation was concerned with the tax on the transaction of
sale, that is to say, a completed sale and to break up a
sale into its component parts and to take one or more such
parts and to apply the theory to it would mean that the
State would be entitled to impose tax on one or more of the
ingredients or constituent elements of the transaction of
sale which by itself will not amount to a sale. An
identical question has been the subject-matter of
consideration by this Court in The Tata Iron & Steel Co.,
Ltd. v. The State of Bihar(’). It was held in that case
that the provisions of s. 4(1) read with S. 2(g) second pro-
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viso, of the Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as amended by the
Bihar Sales Tax Amendment Act, 1949 were within the
legislative competency of the Provincial Legislature of
Bihar. The second proviso added by the amending Act did not
extend the meaning
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1355.
519
of the expression "sale" so as to include a contract of sale
: what it actually did was to lay down certain circumstances
in which a sale, although completed elsewhere, was to be
deemed to have taken place in Bihar. The circumstances
mentioned in the proviso to S. 2(g) of the Bihar Sales Tax
Act, namely, the presence of the goods in Bihar at the date
of the agreement of sale or their production or manufacture
there must be held to constitute a sufficient nexus between
the taxing Province and the sale wherever that might take
place. It is manifest that a transaction of sale is a
composite transaction and consists of legal ingredients like
agreement of sale, passing of title and delivery of goods
but it is not necessary for the purpose of legislative
jurisdiction that all legal ingredients of sale or even the
-transfer of title should have taken place inside the
Province. It is sufficient if there is a proper territorial
nexus or connection between the taxing authority and the
transaction sought to be, taxed. The fact that the goods
are manufactured in the Province constitutes a real and
pertinent nexus or connection which confers jurisdiction
upon the Provincial Legislature to impose the tax. In
dealing with the question whether the production or
manufacture of goods constituted a sufficient nexus to the
subject-matter of taxation, S. R. Das, C.J., observed as
follows :
"For the purpose of the present case it is
sufficient to state that in a sale of goods
the goods must of necessity play an important
part, for it is -the goods in which, as a
result of the sale, the property will pass.
In our view the presence of the goods at the
date of the agreement for sale in the taxing
State or the production or manufacture in that
State of goods the property wherein eventually
passed as a result of the sale wherever that
might have taken place, constituted a
sufficient nexus between the taxing State and
the sale. In the first case the goods are
actually within the State at the date of the
agreement for sale and the property in those
goods will generally pass within the State
when they’ are ascertained by appropriation by
the seller with the assent of the purchaser
and delivered to the purchaser or his agent.
Even if the property in those goods passes
outside the State the ultimate sale relates to
those very goods. In the second case the
goods, wherein the title passes eventually
outside the State, are produced or
manufactured in Bihar and the sale wherever
that takes place is by the same person who
produced or manufactured the same in Bihar.
The producer or manufacturer gets his sale
price in respect of goods which were in Bihar
at the date when the important event of
agreement for sale was made or- which were
produced or manufactured in Bihar. These are
relevant facts on which the State could well
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fasten its tax."
520
The principle of this decision was reiterated -by this Court
in a subsequent case-Bharat Sugar Mills Ltd. v. The State of
Bihar(’). In The Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. v. The State of
Bihar(-’), the course of dealing between the manufacturers
and the purchasers was described as follows :
"The intending purchaser has to apply for a
permit to the Iron and Steel Controller I at
Calcutta, who forwards the requisition to the
Chief Sales Officer of the assessee working in
Calcutta. The Chief Sales Officer thereafter
makes a ’works order’ and forwards it to
Jamshedpur. The ’works order’mentions the
complete specification of the goods required.
After the receipt of the ’works order’ the
Jamshedpur factory initiates a ’rolling’ or
’manufacturing’ programme. After the goods
are manufactured, the Jamshedpur factory
sends, the invoice to the Controller of
Accounts who prepares the forwarding notes,
and on the basis of these forwarding notes,
railway receipts are prepared. The goods are
loaded in the wagons at Jamshedpur and
despatched to various stations, but the
consignee in the railway receipt is the
assessee itself and the freight also is paid
by the assessee. The railway receipts are
sent either to the branch offices of the
assessee or to its bankers, and after the
purchaser pays the amount of consideration,
the railway receipt is delivered to him.
These facts are admitted and the correctness
of these facts are not disputed by the State
of Bihar."
In our opinion, the ratio of this decision applies to the
present case and it must be accordingly held that
Explanation II to s. 2(h) of the Act is not ultra vires as
being outside the legislative competence of the State of
Uttar Pradesh.
Reference was made in he course of argument to
the recent decision of this Court in K. S.
Venkataraman & Co. v. State of Madras(3) in
which it was held by the majority judgment
that an authority created by a statute cannot
question the vires of the statute or any of
the provisions thereof under which it
functions. The authority must act under the
Act and not outside it and if it acts on the
basis of a provision of that statute which is
ultra vires, to that extent it would be acting
outside the Act. In that event,
a suit-to question the validity of such an
order made outside the Act would lie in a
civil court.. In this context it was pointed
out by the majority judgment that the
reasoning of the Judicial Committee in Raleigh
Investment Co’ (4) case was based upon the as-
sumption that the question of ultra vires can
be canvassed and finally decided through the
machinery provided under the Income-
(1) 11 S.T.C. 793.
(3) [1966] 2 S.C.R. 229.
(2) [1958] S.C.R. 1355.
(4) 74 I. A. 50.
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521
tax Act. The Judicial Committee held that S. 67 of the
Income tax Act, 1922 was a bar to the maintainability of the
suit. The argument on behalf of the assessee in that case
was that an assessment was not an assessment "made under the
Act" if the assessment gave effect to a provision which was
ultra vires the Indian Legislature; that in law such a
provision, being a nullity, was nonexistent; and ’that an
assessment justifiable in whole or in part by reference to,
or by such a provision was more aptly described as an
assessment not made under the Act than as an assessment made
under the Act. The argument was negatived by the Judicial
Committee for the reason that the circumstance that the
assessing officer had taken into account an ultra vires
provision of the Act was immaterial in determining whether
the assessment was "made under the Act". The main reason
that persuaded the Judicial Committee to accept the
construction they placed on S. 67 of the Income-tax Act may
be stated in their own words as follows:
"The absence of such machinery would greatly
assist the appellant on the question of
construction and, indeed, it may be added
that, if there were no such machinery and if
the section a effected to preclude the High
Court in its ordinary civil jurisdiction from
considering a point of ultra vires, there
would be a serious question whether the
opening part of the section, so far as it de-
barred the question of ultra vires being
debated fell within the competence of the
legislature."
It was held by this Court in K. S. Venkataraman & Co. v.
State of Madras(’) that the assumption underlying the
reasoning of the Judicial Committee was not correct and it
was not open to the Income-tax Officer the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner and the Appellate Tribunal to decide
any question as to the ultra wires character of any
provision of the Income-tax Act. In other words, the
question of ultra vires could not be deemed to arise out of
the Tribunal’s order and if an assessee raises such a
question, the Tribunal can only reject it on the ground that
it has no jurisdiction to entertain the objection or to
decide upon it. The High Court also cannot possibly give
any decision on the question of ultra vires, because its
jurisdiction under s. 66 is a special advisory jurisdiction
and its scope is strictly limited. On behalf of the
appellants it was suggested that in the present. case the
Revising Authority, under the Act cannot, on a similar line
of reasoning, refer to the High Court any question regarding
the constitutional validity of Explanation 11 of S. 2(h) of
the Act. It was, however, pointed out on behalf of the
respondents that in a number of cases in which proceedings
relating to taxation have reached the High Courts by way of
a reference, appeal or revision, the question of constitu-
(1) [1966] 2 S.C.R.229.
522
tional validity of the statute under which the authority
functioned was raised, entertained and decided. For
instance, in Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. v. State of Bihar(1)
a reference was made by the Board of Revenue raising
questions as to the validity of certain provisions of the
Bihar Sales-tax Act and decided by the High Court, and
ultimately by this Court. Similarly, in Sardar Baldev,
Singh v. C.I.T., Delhi’& Ajmer(2) in an appeal from the
order of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal with special
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leave, the constitutional validity of s. 23A of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 was permitted to be challenged. Again,
in Navinchandra Mafatlal v. The C.I.T., Bombay City(3) in a
refrence under S. 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 a
question as to the vires of s. 12-B of the Indian Income-tax
Act was raised before the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal and
was referred to the Bombay High Court. This Court in appeal
from the opinion expressed by the High Court on on the
reference also considered that question. Also, in Gannon
Dunkerley & Co. v. State of Madras(4), the proceeding
reached the High Court of Madras in a revision petition
under s. 12-B of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939 and
the High Court entertained the plea of ultra vires and
decided it in favour of the tax-payer.
It is, however, not necessary in the present case for us to
decide the question as to whether the principle laid down in
K. S. Venkataraman’s case(5) is applicable. The reason is
that the apellants did not challenge the jurisdiction of the
High Court to examine the question of law regarding the
constitutional validity of Explanation 11 to s. 2 (h) of the
Act. Nor was any such challenge made in the Special Leave
Petition to this Court or in the statement of the case. On
the contrary, the appellant has itself applied to the Judge,
Revisions under s. 10 of the Act contending the Explanation
II to s. 2(h) was ultra vires. It is not therefore open to
the appellants to deny the jurisdiction of the Revisional
Authority to decide the question or to challenge the
jurisdiction of the High Court to examine the question of
law referred to it under s. I 1 of the Act and to pronounce
upon the constitutional validity of the impugned section.
In other words, it must be taken that the appellants had
voluntarily submitted to the jurisdiction of the Revisional
Authority and of the High Court on the matter in issue and
having submitted to the jurisdiction and having taken the
chance of judgment in its favour, it is not right that the
Appellants should take exception to the jurisdiction of the
High Court when the judgment has gone against it. We cannot
therefore permit the appellants to canvass in this Court for
the first time the question whether it was competent for the
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1355. (2) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 482.
(3) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 829. (4) I.L.R. [1955] Mad. 832.
(5) [1966] 2 S.C.R.229.
523
High Court to decide the question of law referred to it
under s. 11 of the Act. We accordingly reject the, argument
of the appellants on this aspect of the case.
It was lastly submitted by Mr. Chagla that a reference to
the High Court under s. II of the Act at the instance of the
Commissioner of Sales-tax was incompetent as the
Commissioner was neither a dealee nor ’a person aggrieved
within the meaning of the section as it originally stood and
the amendment effected in sub-s. (3) of s. I 1 by U.P. Sales
tax Act 8 of 1954 which came into force on April 1, 1954 was
not retrospective in character and could not apply to
proceedings which had been initiated earlier before Sales-
tax authorities as well as before the Revising Authority.
It was pointed out that the appellate order was made on
January 4, 1952 and the revision application was filed
before the amending Act of 1954 came into force. It further
appears that the revision application was disposed of on
July 8, 1957 by the Revising Authority. The contention put
forward on behalf of the appellants was that the
Commissioner had no power to apply for a reference at the
time the appellants had made the application for revision.
It was conceded by Mr. Chagla that at the time the
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Commissioner applied for a reference under S. 11 of the Act
the amending Act 1954 had already come into force and under
the amended section the Commissioner was empowered to ask
for a reference. The point taken was that the material date
was the date on which the appellants made the application
for revision and not the date on which the application was
actually decided by the Revising Authority. We are unable
to accept this argument as correct. The right to apply for
a reference is conferred upon a person aggrieved by an order
passed under s. 10 and this right exists regardless of when
the application for revision was made. Only the existence
of an order under s. 10 is required for the accrual of the
right to make an application for a reference. It was
suggested by Mr. Chagla that the Commissioner did not have
the right to apply for a reference because the right did not
exist when the appellants had made the application for
revision. But the right did exist on the date on which the
Commissioner applied for a reference and -there is nothing
in the language or context of s. II to suggest that the
Commissioner could exercise the right only if it existed on
the date on which the application for revision had been
made. On behalf of the appellants Mr. Chagla referred to
the well recognised rule that a statute should be
interpreted, as far as possible, so as to respect vested
rights. But this rule has no application to the present
case for we do not think that amendment of s. 1 1 of the Act
by enabling the Commissioner also to ask for a reference of
a question to the High Court alters any vested or substan-
tive right of the assessee. On the contrary, we consider
that the
L7Sup.C.1168-9
524
amendment is merely a procedural matter and the present case
falls within the general principle that the presumption
against a retrospective construction has no application to
enactments which affect only the procedure and practice of
courts. For "it is perfectly settled that if the
legislature forms a new procedure, that, instead of
proceeding in this form or that, you should proceed in
another and a different way, clearly there bygone
transactions are to be sued for and enforced according to
the new form of procedure. Alterations in the form of
procedure are always retrospective, unless there is some
good reason or other why they should not be." (Gardner. v.
Lucas) (1). We, are accordingly of the opinion that
Mr.Chagla is Unable to make good his argument -on this
aspect of the case.’
For ’these reasons we hold that there is no merit in these
appeals which are accordingly dismissed with costs-there
will be one hearing fee.
V.P.S Appeals dismissed.
(1) [1878] 3 A.C. 582,603.
525