Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S ACQUEOUS VICTUALS PVT. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/05/1998
BENCH:
S.B. MAJMUDAR, M. JAGANNADHA RAO
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.B. MAJMUDAR, J:
Leave granted.
All these three appeals arising from a common judgment
rendered by the High Court of judicature at Allahabad in
there writ petitions project a short question whether the
common appellant, original writ petitioner, was liable to
pay octroi duty during the relevant period from 1980 to 1987
to the respondent Municipalities on the weight of the glass
bottles which were brought within the municipal limits when
they were containing soft drinks like Gold Spot, Limca,
Thumps-up, Soda, Rim-Zim etc. For the sake of convenience,
we shall refer to the appellant as the writ petitioner and
the respondents as the respondent-Municipalities in the
latter part of the judgment. The contention of the writ
petitioner was that the beverages in liquid form were
imported by the wholesalers to whom the soft drinks were
sold. The Municipalities, therefore, could validly impose
octroi on the weight of liquid contents of the bottles and
not on the weight of bottles which were mere containers as
these bottles after taking out the liquid contained therein
were being sent back in their empty state to the writ
petitioner by the wholesalers for re-cycling and thus these
bottles were not imported within the local limits of the
Municipalities for consumption, use or sale therein. This
contention of the writ petitioner was rejected by the
Division Bench of the High Court relying on its earlier
decision in the case of Prem Nath Monga Bottlers (p) Ltd.
vs. Municipal Board, Meerut & Ors. in Civil Misc. Writ
Petition No. 6883 of 1973 decided on 11.02.1980. We shall
refer to the said judgment at the appropriate place in the
latter part of the judgment . In the impugned common
judgment, the division bench of the High Court held that
even though the cold drinks were being imported for being
sold within the municipal limits, the bottles in which they
were carried and filled in could be said to have been used
within the municipal limits, the bottles in which they were
carried and filled in could be said to have been used within
the municipal limits for the purpose of storing these
liquids till they were ultimately utilised by the consumers
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concerned. Therefore, even the weight of bottles containing
these liquids could legitimately be taken into consideration
by the Municipalities for imposing the octroi duty thereon.
It is the aforesaid decision of the High Court which is
brought in challenge by the writ petitioner. We have heard
learned counsel for the writ petitioner as well as learned
counsel appearing for the respondent-Municipalities of
Rampur and Moradabad and the State of Uttar Pradesh in
support of the decision rendered by the High Court. The
Municipalities of Pilibhit and Sahajahanpur, though served,
have not thought it fit to appear and contest these
proceedings.
RELEVANT FACTS:
It will be necessary to keep in view a few relevant
facts leading to these proceedings. The writ petitioner is a
Private Limited Company incorporated under the Indian
Companies Act, 1956. under an agreement with M/s Parle
(Exports) pvt. Ltd., Bombay, the writ petitioner is engaged
in the business of bottling soft drinks like Gold Spot,
Limca, Thumps-up, soda, Rim-Zim etc. Which are manufactured
by Parle Exports. After bottling these beverages at its
Plants at Bareilly, the writ petitioner distributes the same
to wholesalers in ten districts of Uttar Pradesh, which
include amongst others, the respondent-Municipalities,
namely, the Municipal Boards of Moradabad, Rampur,
Sahajahanpur and Pilibhit. According to the writ petitioner-
company after the beverages are consumed the consumers
within the municipal limits the bottles empty state are
returned to it and the title and ownership in the bottles
also remain with it. The Uttar Pradesh State Legislature
enacted an Act in 1916 called the U.P. Municipalities Act,
1916 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’). Under Section
128 thereof powers were conferred on the Municipal Board
governed by the State Act to impose an octroi on goods or
animals brought within the municipality for consumption, use
or sale therein. Under Section 298 of the Act, the Municipal
Boards are empowered to frame bye-lays for various purposes
of the Act. The bye-laws of Municipal Boards of Moradabad,
Rampur, Pilibhit and Sahajahanpur were enforced during the
period from 12.05.1977 to 01.09.1982. According to the writ
petitioner, these bye laws provided for levying octroi on
soft drinks like Cococola, Fanta, Vimgo, Soda Water, Lemon
etc. but they did not permit levying octroi on the weight of
bottles which contained these soft drinks. As the
respondent- Municipalities were seeking to levy octroi on
the basis of gross weight not only of the beverages
contained but also of the bottles containing the beverages
which were brought within the municipal limits of the
aforesaid Municipalities, the writ petitioner company filed
three writ petitions in the High Court of judicature at
Allahabad in the year 1983. The grievance made in the writ
petition was that from 1980 onwards the respondent-
Municipalities were illegally recovering octroi also on the
weight of bottle-containers which they were not entitled to
do and hence the respondent- Municipalities were required
to be ordered to refund the requisite amount of octroi
levied on the basis of the gross weight of bottles from 1980
onwards. During the pendency of the writ petitions in the
High Court from 1983 till 1987, by interim orders, the
respondent-Municipalities were restrained from recovering
octroi on the gross weight of bottles meaning thereby the
octroi duty was required to be confined only on the net
weight of the beverages contained in these bottles that were
imported by the writ petitioner within the municipal limits
of the aforesaid four Municipalities . During the pendency
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of these writ petitions, the State of Uttar Pradesh issued a
Government Order on 06.04.1987 directing all the
Municipalities functioning under the Act in the State not to
charge octroi on the basis of gross weight but only on the
weight of beverages contained in the bottles. Thus, from
06.04.1987 onwards, the weight of bottles and crates
containing the bottles got exempted from the octroi duty.
Consequently, it must be held that dispute got confined only
from 1980 till 06.04.1987. We may also note a further
development, namely, that after 1991 the provision of
Section 128 (i) (viii) got deleted, therefore, from that
date in the State of Uttar Pradesh no octroi duty is levied
by any of the Municipalities on any goods or animals
imported within the municipal limits of the Municipalities .
In the light of this factual backdrop, the main
grievance putforth by learned counsel for the writ
petitioner has to be examined.
RIVAL CONTENTIONS:
Learned counsel for the writ petitioner submitted that
under Section 135 of the Act, the State Government or the
prescribed Authority has to notify in the official Gazette
the imposition of the tax from the appointed date as laid
down by Section 135(2) of the Act. The Governor of Uttar
Pradesh had issued a Notification dated 26.5.1979 in
exercise of powers conferred under Section 135(2) of the Act
read with Section 21 of the U.P. General Clauses Act
notifying that the concerned Municipality had in exercise of
the powers under clause (viii) of Sub-section (1) of Section
128 of the Act imposed the following tax in the Municipality
of Moradabad with effect from the date of the said
Notification. The description of the taxes was to the
following effect:-
" Octroi on goods and animals
brought within the limits of the
Municipality of Moradabad for
consumption, use of sale therein be
levied according to the rates given
in Schedule I below subject to the
exemptions in Schedule II
thereunder:
SCHEDULE 1
Class 1.- Articles of food and drink for human and animal’s
consumption
----------------------------------------------------------
SI. No. Description of goods Rate of Octroi
------------------------------------------------------------
Rs. P.
1 to 16 ....................... ... - -
Aerated water like Cococola, Fanta, 2.25 per quintal
Vimto, sodawater lemon etc.
------------------------------------------------------------
It is of course true that the notification regarding
Municipality of moradabad was brought on record of this case
at page no. 47 of the main paper-book but we may mention
that similar notifications were issued by the Governor of
uttar Pradesh concerning the other three Municipalities
also. Learned counsel for the writ petitioner submitted that
aforesaid entry at SI. No. 17 includes aerated water like
cococola, fanta, vimto, sodawater, lemon etc. for which the
rate of octroi prescribed is 2.25 per quintal. That this
would show that no separate rate of octroi was sought to be
levied on the bottles containing these beverages. Therefore,
there could be no octroi imposed under the Act so far as the
bottles or containers of these beverages were concerned. It
was also submitted that the High Court in the impugned
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judgment had erroneously held that these bottles containing
the beverages were being used within the municipal limits
and were imported for that purpose. That they were brought
within the municipal limits only as containers, as only
beverages were sold and not the bottles within the municipal
limits. In fact, two Municipalities out of four contesting
Municipalities, namely, Moradabad and Sahajahanpur had not
disputed that the title of bottles remained with the writ
petitioner and only the liquid contents thereof were being
sold to the consumers through the wholesalers within the
municipal limits of the Municipalities and the empty bottles
were being sent back to the writ petitioner for the purpose
of recyling at its plant at Bareilly for further
circulation. It was further submitted that the bottles
containing the beverages, though physically entered the
municipal limits of the respondent Municipalities, they i.e.
the bottles were neither consumed nor used nor sold within
the municipal limits. Therefore, no octroi could be levied
on the weight of bottles brought within the municipal
limits. As at the entry point weigh of these bottles was
also subjected to the charge of octroi duty, the action of
the respondent-Municipalities must be held to the ultra
vires the Act, rules and the notification issued under the
Act. Consequently, respondent-Municipalities were required
to refund the illegally collected octroi duty on the gross
weight of bottles. The writ petitions were, therefore,
required to be allowed. They were erroneously rejected by
the High Court. In support of this contention, strong
reliance was placed on some of the decisions to which we
shall make a reference hereafter.
Learned counsel for the State of Uttar Pradesh as well
as learned counsel appearing for the two Municipalities, as
aforesaid, on the other hand, contended that beverages of
different types of cold drinks cannot enter the municipal
limits in loose or liquid from unless they are contained in
bottles and other receptacles or containers and these
containers are, therefore, in the nature of primary packing.
Consequently,, the gross weight of bottles containing
beverages as well as weigh of beverages contained therein as
to be taken into consideration for imposing the octroi duty,
that the bottles can be said to have been brought within the
municipal limits for the purpose of use or consumption till
the bottles get emptied at the end of the consumers within
the municipal limits and that the bottles remained in use
for storing the cold drinks. A lot of time is taken for
consumption of cold drinks. A lot of time is taken for
consumption of cold drinks. Bottles may also get destroyed
in the meanwhile or may not be returned by the consumers to
the retailers or wholesalers for being re-sent to the writ
petitioner for recycling. Therefore, for an indefinite
period the bottles can also be said to have entered the
municipal limits fro the purpose of use. Learned counsel for
the respondent-Municipalities accordingly submitted that the
view taken by the Division Bench of the High Court in the
impugned judgment and also the view taken by the earlier
Division Bench of the High Court in Civil Misc. Writ
petition No. 6883 of 1973 cannot be said to be erroneous in
any manner. They also invited our attention to some of the
judgments of this Court and also one judgment of the Orissa
High Court to which we shall make a reference hereafter.
Learned counsel for the respondent-Municipalities
further submitted that the writ petitioner never filed
relevant statement of objections as required by the Act and
that no details were furnished to the effect that the empty
bottles were being re-exported after the contents thereof
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were taken out by the consumers. It was also contended that
in substance the bottles could also be said to have been
sold within the municipal limits as the full value of
bottles was recovered in advance by the writ petitioner
company by way of security deposits and under these
circumstances if the bottles were not returned they remained
sold through the wholesalers. Some bottles may also get
destroyed any may never get out of the municipal limits for
recycling and that all these disputed questions of fact
could not have been decided by the High Court under Article
226 of the Constitution nor can they be decided by us in the
present proceedings. it was, therefore, contended that the
writ petitioner was not entitled to any refund in these
proceedings and in any case no refund can be ordered to the
writ petitioner without satisfying the concerned authorities
that they had not passed on the burden of disputed octroi
duty to their consumers. It was accordingly submitted that
the writ petitions were rightly dismissed by the High Court.
In the light of these rival contentions, the following
points arise for our consideration :-
POINT NO. 1:-
Whether the weight of bottles containing beverages
imported within the municipal limits of the respondent
Municipalities during the period from 1980 to 1987 could be
legally subjected to octroi duty by the respondent-
Municipalities under the Act ?
POINT NO. 2 : -
In the light of the decision on Point No. 1 what
further directions, if any, can be issued in the present
proceedings.?
We shall proceed to deal with the aforesaid two points
which arise for out consideration.
POINT NO. 1 : -
It is not in dispute between the parties that the writ
petitioner which is bottling beverages in its plant at
Bareilly in the State of Uttar Pradesh is selling beverages
through wholesalers functioning without the municipal limits
of the aforesaid four Municipalities for making them
available to the consumers within the municipal limits. The
writ petitioner has, therefore, to sell these beverages to
the wholesalers with in the municipal limits. consequently,
the cold drinks and beverages contained in bottles can be
said to have been brought within the Municipalities for the
purpose of sale. Accordingly, on the weight of beverages
contained in the bottles, octroi duty could be legally
levied by the respondent-Municipalities. There is no dispute
on this point.
The dispute centres round the weight of bottles
containing beverages. In order to resolve this controversy
between the parties, it is necessary to have a look at the
relevant provisions of the Act which held the field during
the period from 1980 to 1987. Section 128 of the Act
provides for taxes which may be imposed. Sub-section (1)
clause (viii) thereof lays down that subject to any general
rules or special orders of the State Government in this
behalf, the taxes which a Board may impose in the whole or
par of a Municipality can consist of octroi on goods or
animals brought within the Municipality for consumption, use
or sale therein. It is, therefore, obvious that before any
octroi is levied on any commodity by the Municipality, it
must be shown that the said commodity was brought within the
municipal limits for consumption, use or sale therein.
Section 134 of the Act deals with resolution of Board
directing imposition of tax. Sub-section (1) thereof lays
down that when the proposals have been sanctioned by the
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State Government, the State Government after taking into
consideration the draft rules submitted by the Board, shall
proceed forthwith to make under Section 296 such rules in
respect of the tax as for the time being it considers
necessary. Sub-section (2) of Section 134 provides that
when the rules have been made, the order of sanction and a
copy of the rules shall be sent to the board, and thereupon
the Board shall be special resolution direct the imposition
of the tax with effect from a date to be specified in the
resolution. Then follows section 135 regarding imposition of
tax to which we have made a reference earlier. A conjoint
reading of Section 128(1)(viii) and Section 134 and 135
leaves no room for doubt that tax by way of octroi on goods
brought within the municipal limits for consumption, use or
sale could legitimately be imposed by the authorities
concerned functioning under the Act. It is true, as pointed
out by learned counsel for the writ petitioner, that under
Section 135(2), notifications were issued by the Governor of
Uttar Pradesh permitting imposition of octroi duty on goods
and animals brought within the limits of the Municipalities
according to the rates given in Schedule I to the
Notification and subject to the exemptions in Schedule II
thereof. It is also true that in Schedule I at entry 17 for
aerated water like cococola, fanta, vimto, sodawater lemon
etc. the rate of octroi was specified. However, learned
counsel for the writ petitioner could not effectively
contend that merely because the rate of octroi as laid down
in the Notification, Schedule I refers to the aerated water
etc. and because the rate does not contain any reference to
the aerated water bottles, no octroi duty can be imposed on
such bottles. The imposition of octroi duty is in general
terms on goods or animals brought within the municipal
limits for consumption, use or sale therein. If it is so,
the bottles containing beverages - aerated water like
cococola etc. When brought within the municipal limits for
the purpose of consumption, use or sale would also become
liable to bear the burden of octroi tax. Our attention was
invited to specimen rules framed under the Nagarpalika
Moradabad Octroi Rules, 1978 which are at page 35 of the
main paperbook. Rule 2(vi) thereof defines ’octroi’ to mean
a tax on goods or animals brought within the Municipality
for consumption, use or sale therein. According to Rule
2(vii) ’Schedule’ means the schedule of rates at which
octroi shall be levied. Rule 4 thereof lays down that if the
octroi is levied according to weight it shall be calculated
on the gross weight of the consignments including bardana
and packing etc. Therefore, as per this rule it can be said
that if the packing or bardana by utilisation of which the
consignments of goods liable to octroi entered the municipal
limits the former would also as packing materials become
liable to bear the burden of octroi duty and gross weight
thereof would remain chargeable for octroi. However, despite
the said Rule 4, it has to be considered whether the said
the falls within the for corners of the charging provision
of Section 128(1)(viii) . In the light of this main charging
provision, it must be held that weight of bardana or packing
which contains the consignments of octroiable beverages
would remain liable to be included in the taxable gross
weight of the consignment provided such baradana or packing
which, even may be primary packing or secondary packing, is
shown to be brought within the municipal limits for the
purpose of its sale, consumption or use within the municipal
limits. If such primary or secondary packing is not brought
within the municipal limit for the purpose of consumption or
sale or use thereof and is found to have been taken out of
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the municipal limits after its contents were discharged
within the municipal limits, then the weight of such
outgoing bardana or packing, on the express language of the
charging provision, cannot be brought to octroi tax or if
such a tax is levied at the entry point, it would become
liable to be refunded. But this question in its turn will
raise further questions of fact whether such consignments
including packings contemplated by Rule 4 were actually sold
with their contents to the local consumers or wholesalers,
as the case may be, or whether they were consumed or used up
within the local limits or whether they were used for an
indefinite period and had ultimately rested within the
municipal limits and had not been taken out. These are all
disputed questions of fact which are required to be examined
and adjudicated upon when claims for refund on the
allegation that octroi was wrongly realised on the gross
weight of such bardana or packing of bottles which were
allegedly taken out of the municipal limits are placed for
consideration of the appropriate authorities.
We have, therefore, to see whether on the facts of the
present case the writ petitioner was justified in invoking
the writ jurisdiction of the High Court straightaway without
going to the competent authorities for lodging its claim for
refund of octroi levied on the weight of bottles in which
beverages were packed and brought within the municipal
limits of the respondent-Municipalities. Learned counsel for
the writ petitioner submitted that the High Court had
patently erred in taking the view that these bottles
containing beverages were brought within the municipal
limits for use and that the Division Bench had also equally
erred in taking the further view that liability to pay the
octroi duty on the weight of bottles also got fastened on
the relevant consignments. In this connection, our attention
was invited to two decisions of this Court. The first
decision is Burmah Shell Oil Storage & distributing Company
India Ltd. The Belgium Borough Municipality [1963 Supp. (2)
S.C.R. 216]. In that case, a Constitution Bench of this
Court speaking through Hidayatullah, j. examined the
question whether octroi duty was leviable from Burmah Shell
Oil Storage & Distributing Company, Which was the appellant
before this Court, when it brought within the municipal
limits of Belgium the goods (a) for consumption by itself;
(b) for re-export either by itself or through dealers
outside the area - which as was admitted by the
municipality, entitled the company to a refund of tax and
(c) for sale by it directly to consumers or to dealers who
distributed the goods within the area to ultimate consumers.
Considering the case of the appellant before this Court,
Hidayatullah, J. made the pertinent observations in
connection with the legal position concerning the imposition
of octroi duty by the Municipality. Interpreting the word
found in Entry 52 of the State List in the Constitution
dealing with taxes on the entry of goods into a local area
for consumption use or sale therein it was held as under:-
" It is not the immediate person
who brings the goods into a local
area who must consume them himself,
the act of consumption may be
postponed or may the performed by
someone in else but so long as the
goods have been brought into the
local area for consumption in that
sense, no matter by whom, they
satisfy the requirements of the
boroughs Act and octroi is payable.
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Added to the word "consumption" is
the word "use" also. There may be
certain commodities which though
put to use are not ’used up’ in the
process. A motor-car brought into
an area for use is not used up in
the same sense as food-stuffs. The
two expressions use and consumption
together therefore, connote the
bringing in of goods and animals
not with a view to taking them out
again but with a view to their
retention either for use without
using them up or for consumption
in a manner which destroys, wastes
or used them up....."
At page 233 of the Report, the following further
observations were made in connection with the entry
regarding octroi on goods brought within the municipal
limits for consumption, use or sale therein. Emphasising the
word "therein" at the end of the entry, it was stated:-
" ... The Word ’therein’ does not
mean that all the act of
consumption must take place in the
area of the municipality. It is
sufficient if the goods are brought
inside the area to be delivered to
the ultimate consumer in that area
because the taxable even ties the
entry of goods which are meant to
reach an ultimate user or consumer
in the area. Indeed, the consumer
may never consumer them as, for
example, a motorist buys a tin of
oil and finds that it does not suit
his vehicle and leaves it lying on
his shelf. The goods must be
regarded as having been brought in
for purposes of consumption when a
person brings them either for his
own use or consumption, or to put
them in the way of others in the
Area, who are to use and consume.
In this process the act of sale is
merely the means for putting the
goods in the way of use or
consumption. It is an earlier
stage, the ultimate destination of
the goods being ’use or
consumption’. The earlier stage,
namely, the sale by him, does not
save the person who brought the
goods into the local area from
liability to the tax if the goods
were brought inside for consumption
or use. In other words, a sale of
the goods brought inside, even
though not expressly mentioned in
the description of octroi as it
stood formerly, was implicit,
provided the goods were not re-
exported out of the area but were
bought inside for used or
consumption by buyers inside for
use or consumption by buyers inside
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for use or consumption by buyers
inside the area. In this sense the
amplification of the description
both in the Government of India
Act, 1935 and the Constitution did
not make any addition to the true
concept of ’octroi’ as explained
above. That concept included the
bringing in of goods in a local
area so that the goods come to a
repose there....."
In view of the aforesaid, decision, it becomes obvious
that the word ’retention’ is held to be synonym with the
word ’repose’, meaning thereby the article concerned must
finally rest within the municipal limits. In the light of
the aforesaid judgement of the Constitution Bench of this
Court, therefore, it is obvious that before a Municipality
can impose octroi duty on any commodity, it has to be shown
that the commodity concerned was brought within the
municipal limits for consumption that is for being totally
used up so that it ceases to exist within the municipal
limits themselves or it was to be used for an indefinite
period within the municipal limits so that it ultimately
rests within the municipal limits and does not go out
subsequently, or the commodity concerned must be shown to
have been brought within the municipal limits for the
purpose of sale within the said limits. Having laid down the
aforesaid legal position concerning the imposition of octroi
in the penultimate paragraph of the Report at page 234, the
Court observed that the Burmah Shell was liable to pay
octroi tax on goods brought into local area (a) to be
consumed by itself or sold by it to consumers direct and (b)
for sale to dealers who in their turn sold the goods to
consumers within the municipal area irrespective of whether
such consumers bought them for use in the area or outside
it. The company was, however, not liable to Octroi in
respect of goods which it brought into the local area and
which were re-exported. But to enable the company to save
itself from tax in that case it had to follow the procedure
laid down by rules for refund of taxes.
The aforesaid authoritative pronouncement of the
constitution Bench of this Court, therefore, sets at rest
the controversy in the present case. If it is the case of
the writ petitioner that during the relevant period from
1980 to 1987 it brought within the municipal limits of the
four respondent- Municipalities beverages packed in bottles
and the bottles were not sold within the municipal limits
and after the beverages were taken out of these bottles,
these very bottles were returned to the petitioner and were
taken back to Bareilly, then for claiming the refund of the
octroi paid on the weight of these bottles during the
relevant period when the consignments entered the municipal
limits from time to time, the writ petitioner had to follow
the procedure laid down by the Municipality concerned under
its rules for refund of taxes and had to comply with the
statutory gamut of these rules. It had also to show that the
burden of disputed octroi duty was borne by it and was not
passed on to consumers of beverages contained in these
bottles. In other words, it would not be guilty of unjust
enrichment if refund was granted. If the refund claim on
furnishing the relevant proofs was not ultimately granted,
the remedy of appeal provided under the rules had to be
followed.
In this connection, we may also refer to a decision of
a three-judge Bench of this Court in the case of S.M. Ram
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Lal & Co. vs. Secretary to Government of Punjabi, being an
unreported judgment of this Court, reported in [1969 (1)
U.J. (S.C.) 373]. J.C. Shah, J. speaking for the three-Judge
Bench considered the question whether the wool imported
within the municipal limits of Faridabad in raw from for
dyeing within the municipal limits could be said to have
been used in the municipal limits or consumed therein so as
to attract octroi duty thereon. In this connection, the
following pertinent observations were made in paragraph 3 of
the Report:-
" It is common ground that the
goods brought within the Notified
Area Committee of Faridabad were
not brought for consumption or
sale. It was argued, however, that
the goods were brought into the
Notified Area Committee for use,
and on that account octroi was
leviable. The expression "use" is
not defined in the Act. In its
ordinary meaning the word "use" as
a noun, is the act of employing a
thing; putting into action or
service; employing for or applying
to a given purpose. But the word
"use" occurs in Entry 52 List II of
the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution sandwiched between
"consumption " and "sale" and it
must take colour from the context
in which it occurs. It is a settled
rule of interpretation that when
two or more words which are
susceptible of analogous meaning
are coupled together they are
understood to be used in their
cognate sense. They take, as it
were, their colour from each other,
that is, the more general is
restricted to a sense analogous to
the less general: Maxwell on
Interpretation of Statutes, 11th
Edition, p.321. The coupling of
three words "consumption", "use"
and "sale" connotes that the
underlying common idea was that
either the title of the owner is
transferred to another, or the
thing or commodity ceases to exist
in its original form. Unless it is
proved that the wool brought within
the limits of the Notified Area
Committee, Faridabad, by the
appellant was intended to be so
employed that it was to become a
new commodity or a component of a
new commodity, no octroi would be
levied by the Notified Area
Committee on the entry of wool. "
It is, therefore, obvious that the underlying common
idea behind all the three relevant words ’sale’,
’consumption’ or ’use’ within the municipal limits of the
imported commodity so as to attract the levy of octroi
thereon would require proof of the fact that the concerned
commodity got consumed completely within the municipal
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limits or was used for an indefinite period in such a way
that it came to rest finally and permanently within the
municipal limits or was sold within the municipal limits. It
is no doubt true, as submitted by counsel for the writ
petitioner, that out of the four Municipalities, Moradabad
and Sahajahanpur Municipalities did not contest on the case
of the writ petitioner that the empty bottles in which the
imported beverages were packed by the writ petitioner
belonged to the writ petitioner company and were not sold to
anyone within the municipal limits but even if it is so the
moot question which would remain is to the effect whether
containers, namely, these bottles which were filled in with
beverages imported for sale within the municipal limits
could be said to have been consumed or used within the
municipal limits. It is, however, to be noted that other two
Municipalities, namely, pilibhit and Rampur Municipalities
have not admitted the title of these bottles inhering with
the writ petitioner and according to them the full market
value of the bottles was also recovered by the writ
petitioner from the wholesalers before despatching these
bottles filled in with beverages. Therefore, the question
whether the bottles were really sold by the writ petitioner
to the wholesalers or retailers within the municipal limits
of these four Municipalities will require resolution on
consideration of relevant facts. But that apart, even
assuming that the title of the writ petition in these
bottles might not have been transferred to anyone else
within the municipal limits, then the moot question will
remain whether these bottles on which the disputed octroi
duty was levied by the respondent-Municipalities were
brought within the municipal limits for consumption or use.
So far as the question of consumption is concerned, it does
not present any difficulty as it is no one’s case that the
empty bottles, if in fact found to be taken out of the
municipal limits can be said to be consumed or destroyed
within the municipal limits. However, a further questions
still would remain for investigation, namely, whether out of
the total consignments of bottled beverages imported within
the municipal limits, the entire consignments of the very
bottles after getting emptied got re-exported or whether
some of the said bottles forming part of the original
consignments got destroyed by way of breakage etc. or were
never returned by the consumers concerned and only rest of
the imported bottles were re-exported by enabling the
consumers and the retailers or wholesalers to get refund of
the price of the bottles paid by way of advance security
from the writ petitioner on return of these empty bottles
for recycling. it is axiomatic that if the bottles in which
beverages were brought within the municipal limits for sale
to consumers had themselves got destroyed by breakage etc.
or were not returned by consumers, they could be said to be
consumed within the municipal limits and hence there would
be not occasions for that exported at any time thereafter.
But apart from these vexed disputed questions of fact, a
further question would remain whether these bottles can be
said to have been used even temporarily within the municipal
limits even on the assumption that they were not consumed or
sold within the municipal limits. So far as this question is
concerned, the High Court in the impugned judgment had taken
the view that beverages in liquid from could not have
entered the municipal limits nor could they have been
brought within the municipal limits without being packed in
receptacles or bottles. These bottles till they were emptied
of their contents at the ultimate end of the consumers would
remain filled with liquid beverages contained therein.
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Therefore, to that extent according to the High Court, the
bottles could be said to have been brought within the
municipal limits as containers for storing beverages and
hence these bottles could be said to have been brought
within the municipal limits for the purpose of use for
storage even leaving aside the question whether they were
brought within the municipal limits for the purpose of sale
or consumption thereof. In support of this conclusion of the
High Court, our attention was invited to the decision of a
Division bench of the Allahabad High Court in Prem Nath
Monga Bottlers (p) Ltd.’s case (supra) referred to earlier.
Now a mere look at the said decision shows that relying on a
decision of this Court in a sales tax case, the Division
Bench of the High Court came to the conclusion that the
bottles and shells were being used for the purpose for which
they were intended to be used, namely, as containers and
this use was not merely for bringing in the contents but was
linked with the consumption of the contents and continued to
be used till the final consumption of the contents by the
actual consumers and that it was impossible to deny that a
bottle which contained the beverage till the beverage was
drunk by the actual consumer within the municipal limits
was not used by the consumer or whoever had the custody of
beverage till the consumption stage. Therefore, the bottles
and creates containing beverage could be said to have been
brought within the municipal limits for use till the
beverages contained therein were sold to the dealers and
retailers for ultimate consumption by the consumers. The
aforesaid reasoning of the Division Bench of the High Court
cannot bear scrutiny for the simple reason that this Court
in the Constitution Bench decision in Burmah Shell’s case
(supra) has clearly ruled that even though the use of the
commodity brought within the municipal limits may not amount
to its destruction or total using up, the commodity
concerned while being brought in the municipal limits must
have reposed within the municipal limits and was not taken
out later on. If the writ petitioner’s case on facts is
found true, namely, that the bottles which contained
beverages did not repose within the municipal limits in
empty form after their contents were consumed by the
consumers and were actually taken out of the municipal
limits, it could not be said, as assumed by the High Court
that the goods were used within the municipal limits. We
must, therefore, hold that if the writ petitioner satisfies
the authorities concerned that the bottles containing the
original consignments after getting emptied within the
municipal limits were actually taken out of the municipal
limits for recycling, then the writ petitioner would be
entitled to claim proportionate refund of the octroi duty
assessed on the weight of such empty bottles only subject to
the burden of such amount of duty not being shown to have
been passed on to consumer of beverages or to anyone else.
But that would require investigation of facts by the
authorities concerned, if and when such claim for refund is
lodged.
In this connection, we may also refer to a decision of
the Orissa High Court to which our attention was invited by
learned counsel for the respondent Municipalities. In M/s
Balasore Talkies (Pvt.) Ltd. & etc. etc. vs. Balasore
Municipality & Ors. (AIR 1986 Orissa 230), a Division Bench
of the Orissa High Court had to consider the question
whether cinematography films brought within the municipal
limits for exhibition could be validly subjected to octroi
duty. The contention of the importer was that the
cinematography films were not being consumed or used within
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the municipal limits as after the period for exhibiting
these films by way of picture shows in cinema halls was
over, these very films were taken out of the municipal
limits. The High Court on the facts of the case took the
view that it could not be said that the films were not
consumed or used as such within the municipal limits. It is
obvious that on the facts of the case before the Orissa High
Court, the said view was quite justified as the
cinematography films imported in original from would
naturally get exhausted by passage of time during which it
will have to be subjected to projection through projector on
the cinema screen on as many occasions as the picture shows
were held day in and day out spread over weeks and by the
time the picture shows were over and the films were taken
out of the municipal limits these films would never remain
the same as originally imported. Lot of wear and tear would
reduce their efficacy. Therefore, on the facts of that case,
the Division Bench of the High Court was justified in taking
the view that the term ’use’ is of wider connotation than
consumption. Any article that is put to such application
suffers waste or deterioration to some extent, though not
totally destroyed or used up and, therefore, it could be
held to have been used up to that extent. On the facts and
circumstance of the present cases, the aforesaid decision is
of no avail to the respondent-Municipalities as it is
nobody’s case that if empty bottles were actually taken out
of the municipal limits after their contents were discharged
within the municipal limits, they would get used up even
partially only because they remained for some time within
the municipal limits containing the beverages without having
reposed therein.
Learned counsel for the State of Uttar Pradesh placed
reliance on the Dictionary meaning of the term ’repose’ as
found in Shorter Oxford Dictionary, Volume 2, 3rd Edition,
p. 1799, wherein one of the meanings of the word ’repose’ is
mentioned as ’temporary rest or cessation from activity’.
That may be the dictionary meaning but the term ’repose’ in
the context of octroi duty is treated by the Constitution
Bench of this Court in Burmah Shell’s case (supra) as a
synonym for final resting of the commodity without being
later on taken out of municipal limits. It must, therefore,
be held that the commodity which is imported within the
municipal limits must either be sold or consumed or used up
completely or must be subjected to a continuous the without
total exhaustion but in every case the commodity concerned
must not have left the municipal limits. The word ’repose’
as explained by the Constitution Bench in the aforesaid
decision, therefore, has a special meaning and, therefore,
the dictionary meaning of the word ’repose’ cannot be of any
assistance in the context of the octroi levy as interpreted
by this Court in Burmah Shell’s case (supra).
We may also mention that our attention was invited by
learned counsel for the parties to certain decision of this
Court dealing with sales tax in deciding the question
whether the value of the bottles could be subjected to sales
tax and liable to be included in the taxable turn over
including the value of the Beer contained therein. The
decisions in Premier Braveries vs. State of Kerala [(1998) 1
SCC 641] and Tata Engineering & Locomative Company Ltd. &
Anr. vs. Municipal Corporation of the City of Thane & Ors.
[(19930 Suppl. 1 SCC 361] cannot be of any avail to the
learned counsel for the writ petitioner as strictly speaking
we are not concerned here with such a question in these
proceedings, and especially when we have direct decisions of
the Constitution Bench of this Court in Burmah Shell’s case
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(supra) and S.M. Ram Lal’s case (supra).
As a result of the aforesaid discussion, therefore, we
hold that if beverages in liquid from contained in bottles
are brought within the municipal limits and after such
beverages are taken out of these bottles, those very empty
bottles are found to have been re-exported from the
municipal limits without being sold therein, the octroi duty
paid on the weight of such bottles earlier could be
subjected to claim for refund by the exporter of such empty
bottles if the relevant factual data is found to the
satisfaction of the authorities before whom such claim id
lodged. The first point is, therefore, answered by holding
that if the writ petitioner proves to the satisfaction of
authorities that very bottles in which beverages were
imported in given contingency for sale and consumption
within the municipal limits were actually taken out of
municipal limits as empty bottles for re-cycling without
meanwhile, the octroi duty paid at the time of their entry
on the weight of bottles could be subjected to claim for
refund subject to the rider that it is also shown by the
writ petitioner that the octroi duty on such empty bottles
had not been passed on to the consumers or any other person
so that the writ petitioner will not be found to be guilty
of unjust enrichment by getting such refund. This question
was also to be examined by the authorities before whom claim
of refund is lodged. As held by the Constitution Bench of
this Court in Mafatlal Industries Ltd. & Ors. vs. Union of
India & Ors. [(1997) 5 SCC 536], the question of unjust
enrichment pertaining to such refund claims has to be
examined by the authorities concerned. Before parting with
discussion on Point No.1, we may also mention that one
decision of this court in Nagar Mahapalika, Meerut vs. Prem
Nath Monga Bottlers pvt. Ltd. & Anr. [(1996) 8 SCC 1] was
pressed in service by learned counsel for the writ
petitioner. In our view that decision is of no avail to the
writ petitioner on the facts of the present case. This Court
in the said decision was concerned with the question whether
the exemption of octroi granted to mineral water bottles
would include aerated water bottles also. It was held that
the mineral water bottles would include latter type of
bottles also. Such is not the controversy before us. Point
No.1 is answered accordingly.
In the light of the decision on Point No.1 Point No.2
will naturally require consideration of the question as to
what type of directions can be issued in the present case.
It is obvious that the dispute centres round the levy of
octroi on the weight of the containers, namely, the bottles
imported and brought within the municipal limits of four
respondent-Municipalities between 1980 and 1987 and as
there was already stay of recovery of octroi duty from the
High Court on the weight of such bottles from 1983 pending
the writ petitions till 1987, the writ petitioner had no
occasion to put forth their claim for refund till then. It
is of course true that for earlier period from 1980 to 1983
when there was no stay from any court, the writ petitioner
could have lodged claims for refund but presumably because
the writ petitioner thereafter raised this contention before
the High Court and the writ petitions remained pending
before the High Court for a number of years such claims were
not lodge. Under these circumstances, the writ petitioner
cannot be shut out from asking for refund on relevant
consignments by submitting appropriate data. Consequently,
on the peculiar fact of this case, we hold that it would be
unfair and unequitable to prevent the writ petitioner from
lodging any claims for refund of octroi duty paid on the
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weight of re-exported empty bottles during the relevant
period from 1980 to 1987. If the writ petitioner’s claim for
refund regarding the exported empty bottles covered by the
concerned consignments is found justified during the period
when there was stay against such recovery, nothing further
would survive and the assessments for the same will close
the chapter. However, if the claim is not justified then the
questions would survive for the authorities to proceed
further for recovery of the unpaid octroi duty on the
bottles covered by these consignments as they were till then
restrained from claiming such duty. So far as earlier period
of 1980 to 1983 is concerned, if the claim of the writ
petitioner for refund is found to be justified on the facts
concerning the given consignments and on the principle of
unjust enrichment, the writ petitioner is requited to be
non-suited, then the question of refund would survive for
consideration and appropriate refunds orders will have to be
passed by the authorities. The writ petitioner shall be
permitted to lodge such claims backed up by relevant
material before the authorities concerned within the period
of 12 weeks from today. The writ petitioner will have to
support such claim for refund by producing relevant evidence
on the following points:
(a) Nature of the consignments concerned with their
dates and the number of bottles packed with beverages
brought within the municipal limits with their weight.
b) Proof regarding the fact that these bottles were not
sold within the municipal limits to wholesalers retailers or
to any other person.
c) Number of bottles covered by the concerned
consignments which were subsequently taken out as empty
bottles beyond the municipal limits for recycling and weight
of such empty bottles;
d) Whether the bottles which are actually found to have
been taken out of the municipal limits were the very same
bottles containing beverages brought within the municipal
limits by way of relevant consignments;
e) Whether the value of such bottles and amount of
octroi duty on their weight was passed on to the consumers
or not?
When the relevant facts and figures are placed before
the authorities supported by relevant documentary evidence
and if the authorities concerned get satisfied about the
same then only the question of refund for the period from
1980 to 1987 or the question of non-recover of octroi duty
on the weight of bottles covered by the consignments for the
relevant period would survive for consideration and if the
authorities take any adverse decision in this connection on
the diverse claims of the writ petitioner, it will be open
to the writ petitioner to challenge such assessments by
filing appeals under the rules and relevant provisions of
the Act. Point No.2 for consideration is answered by issuing
the aforesaid relevant directions.
We may also mention, in this connection, that if such
claims are lodged by the writ petitioner within the time
aforesaid, then only they will be examined at the earliest
and preferably within a period of further 12 weeks from the
lodging of such claims and after hearing the petitioner or
his representative, appropriate assessment orders and
consequential refund orders, if any, may be passed by the
authorities concerned.
The appeals are allowed accordingly to the aforesaid
extent. The judgment and order of the High Court are set
aside. The writ petitions filed by the writ petitioner
before the High court will stand granted in the aforesaid
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terms with no order as to costs all throughout.