Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HINDUSTAN BROWN BOVERI LTD. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF GUJARAT
DATE OF JUDGMENT07/04/1981
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1055 1981 SCR (3) 435
1981 SCC (2) 743 1981 SCALE (1)607
ACT:
Gujarat Sales Tax Act, 1969-Sections 16 and 49(2)-Scope
of.
HEADNOTE:
Exercising power under section 49(2) of the Gujarat
Sales Tax Act, 1969, the State Government exempted the
entire tax payable on sale of goods (other than prohibited
goods) by a registered dealer to an electrical undertaking,
certified for the purposes by the Commissioner; if the
electrical undertaking, furnished to the selling dealer a
certificate in the requisite form that the goods purchased
were required for the generation or distribution of
electricity by the undertaking. But according to section 16
or the Act where a dealer has purchased any taxable goods
under a certificate given by him under section 13 and has
used the goods for a purpose contrary to such certificate,
such dealer becomes liable to pay tax on the purchase price
of the goods.
The appellants who were recognised dealers purchased
raw materials of taxable goods from registered dealers by
furnishing a certificate in Form 19 by reason of which no
sales tax had been paid by them. After manufacturing the
goods with raw materials,, they sold part of the
manufactured goods to an electrical undertaking in the State
against ’C’ forms to claim exemption from tax on them by
virtue of a notification issued under section 49(2) of the
Act. No tax had been paid on sales effected by them in
favour of the electrical undertaking.
On the ground that the undertaking furnished in form 19
had been violated, the Sales Tax officer levied purchase tax
under section 16 on the raw-materials purchased by the
appellants.
The appellants were unsuccessful in their appeals
before the Assistant Commissioner as well as before the
Sales Tax Tribunal. The High Court answered the references
against the assessees and in favour of the Revenue.
It was contended on behalf of the appellants (1) that
the goods manufactured by them not having been goods the
sale or purchase of which had been exempted from tax by
inclusion in Schedule I they could not be treated as having
infringed the terms of Form No. 19 notwithstanding the fact
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that particular sales made by them to the electrical
undertaking were exempted from payment of tax (2) the
condition in form 19 became satisfied immediately on the
436
goods being manufactured by the appellants as at that stage
the goods were really taxable and that a subsequent event of
sale to the electrical undertaking could not be considered
as a violation of the said condition and (3) in a
transaction of sale if the sale was exempted from tax it
could not be said that the purchase was also exempted.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD: (1) The expression "taxable goods’. defined in
section 2(33) of the Act means goods other than those on the
sales or purchase of which no tax is payable under section 5
and section 49 or a notification issued thereunder. By this
definition the dichotomy that existed between "taxable
goods" and "taxable events" in the now repealed Act (The
Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959 which was in force in the State
before the present Act) had been given a go by. It may be
that section 5 and Schedule I refer to goods only but
section 49 deals with only taxable events which result in
the exemption from payment of tax on the happening of the
conditions mentioned therein or in the notification even
though the good in question do not come under Schedule 1.
[446 F-H]
(2) To find out whether the goods are taxable goods or
not one has to wait till the disposal of the goods by the
dealer in view of the definition of the said expression
which takes away goods sold under circumstances attracting
section 49 from the scope of the meaning of that expression.
[447 A]
(3) If the sale is exempt from tax under section 49 the
goods sold would not be taxable good. [447 B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1185 of
1979,
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated 15.12.1978 of the Gujarat High Court in Sales Tax
Reference No. 24 of 1978.
AND
Civil Appeal No. 1187 of 1979.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated 27.11.1978 of the Gujarat High Court in Sales Tax
Reference No. 11 of 1977.
K H. Kaji, T. Sridharan, R.D. Pathak, Miss C. K.
Sucharita and Mrs. S. Bhandare for the Appellant in both the
Appeals.
S.T. Desai and M.N. Shroff for the Respondent in both
the Appeals.
437
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J. Since a common question of law is
involved in these two appeals by special leave, they are
disposed of by this common judgment.
The appellant in Civil Appeal No. 1185 of 1979 is M/s.
Hindustan Brown Boveri Ltd., a company engaged in the
business of manufacturing certain goods which are used in
electrical undertakings for the purpose of generating and
distributing electrical energy. It is registered as dealer
under the provisions of the Gujarat Sales Tax Act, 1969
(Gujarat Act No. I of 1970) (hereinafter referred to as ’the
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Act’). For the purpose of manufacturing the goods, the
appellant which was also a recognised dealer under the Act
purchased raw materials during the period between May 6,
1970 and March 31, 1971 after furnishing a certificate in
Form No. 19 as provided under section 13(1)(B) of the Act
read with Rule 24(4) of the Gujarat Sales Tax Rules, 1970
(hereinafter referred to as ’the Rules’) framed under the
Act stating that the raw materials purchased by it would be
used in manufacturing taxable goods which would be sold by
it in the State of Gujarat. Some part of the goods
manufactured by the appellant were sold to a certain
electrical undertaking in the State of Gujarat against ’C’
forms in order to claim exemption from payment of tax on the
said sales under the Act by virtue of a notification issued
under section 49(2) of the Act exempting the goods sold to
electrical undertakings for being used in generation and
distribution of electrical energy. On coming to know of the
said sales, the Sales Tax officer., who was the assessing
authority under the Act levied purchase tax under section 16
of the Act on the raw materials purchased be the appellant
on the ground that the undertaking given in Form No. 19 had
been violated. The appeals filed by the appellant before the
Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax and the Gujarat Sales
Tax Tribunal against the said levy were unsuccessful.
Thereafter at the instance of the appellant the Tribunal
referred the following question of law to the High Court of
Gujarat under section 69 of the Act:-
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, and on a correct interpretation of sub-
section (33) of section 2 of the Gujarat Sales Tax Act,
1969 the Tribunal was right in deciding that the
applicant was liable to pay purchase tax under section
16 of the Gujarat Sales Tax Act, 1969 on the ground
that certain electric goods manufactured
438
out of raw materials etc. purchased against declaration
in Form 19 were sold to Gujarat State Electricity Board
against declarations in Form prescribed in Entry 5 of
the Government Notification issued under section 49 of
the Gujarat Sales Tax Act, 1969 ?"
The appellant in Civil Appeal No. 1187 of 1979 is M/s.
Hindustan Engineering Co. Ltd. which is engaged in
manufacturing heavy machinery and gear conveyers. It is also
a recognised dealer under the Act. Like the appellant in
Civil Appeal 1185 of ]979, this appellant also purchased raw
materials by furnishing certificates in Form No. 19 and
later on sold a part of the goods manufactured by it to a
certain electrical undertaking against Form No. ’C’ and
claimed exemption under the notification issued under
section 49(2) of the Act. In this case also the Sales Tax
officer levied purchase tax under section 16 of the Act for
violation of the undertaking given in Form No. 19. The
appeals to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax and the
Gujarat Sales Tax Tribunal failed. Thereafter at the
instance of the appellant, the Gujarat Sales Tax Tribunal
referred the following question for the opinion of the High
Court of Gujarat:-
Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the Tribunal is justified in holding that the
sales of machineries and conveyers manufactured by the
applicant to an electrical undertaking against Form ’C’
under Entry 5 of the Government Notification issued
under section 49 of the Gujarat Sales Tax Act, 1969
resulted in the breach of the declarations in Form 19
as the goods so manufactured and sold did not amount to
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manufacture of taxable goods ?"
It is seen from the two questions referred to above
that they are substantially the same. The High Court
answered the said questions in favour of the Revenue and
against the assessees by two separate orders following its
earlier decision in M/s. Nawroji N. Vakil & Co. v. State of
Gujarat. The appellants have filed these appeals against the
decision of the High Court by special leave under Article
136 of the Constitution.
We shall now briefly refer to the relevant provisions
of the Act. Section 2(10) of the Act defines a ’dealer’ as
any person who
439
buys or sells goods in connection with his business and when
he obtains a certificate of registration he becomes a
registered dealer. Section 32 of the Act provides for the
recognition of a registered dealer. It says that where
during the previous or current year, the value of all
taxable goods manufactured for sale by a dealer registered
under section 29 or by a dealer registered under section 30,
whose turnover of sales or purchases has subsequently,
exceeded the limits specified in sub-section (4) of section
3, exceeds Rs. 3,000/- such dealer on application by him may
be granted recognition by the Commissioner and on such
recognition being granted, he becomes a recognised dealer.
Section S of the Act says that subject to the conditions or
exceptions (if any) set out against each of the goods
specified in column 3 of the Schedule I to the Act, no tax
shall be payable on the sales or purchases of any goods
specified in that Schedule. Section 6 of the Act provides
that subject to the provisions of the Act and to any rules
made thereunder there shall be paid by every dealer who is
liable to pay tax under the Act, the tax or taxes leviable
in accordance with the provisions of Chapter II of the Act.
Tn order to ensure that as far as possible the incidence of
tax under the Act is not felt at more than one point in the
series of transactions of sales and purchases of goods other
than declared good in the State of Gujarat, sections 7, 8
and 10 of the Act are enacted as follows:
"7. Levy of sales tax on goods in Schedule II,
Part A.-There shall be levied a sales tax on the
turnover of sales of goods specified in Part A of
Schedule II at the rate set out against each of them in
column 3 thereof, but after deducting from such
turnover,-
(i) resale of goods on the purchase of which the
dealer is liable to pay purchase tax under
sec. 16.
(ii) resales of goods purchased by him from a
Registered dealer
(iii) sales of goods, of resales of goods to which
clauses (i) and (ii) do not apply, to a
Recognised dealer or to a Commission agent
holding a permit who purchases on behalf of a
principal who is a Recognised dealer, upon
such dealer or Commission agent, as the case
may be, furnishing in the circumstances and
subject to the conditions specified in sub-
clause (B) and item (ii) of sub-clause (C) of
440
sub-see. (1) of sec. 13, a certificate as
provided therein, and
(iv) sales of goods or resales of goods to which
clauses (i) and (ii) do not apply, to a
Licensed dealer or to a Commission agent
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holding a permit who purchases on behalf of a
principal who is a Licensed dealer, upon such
dealer or Commission agent, as the ease may
be; furnishing in the circumstances and
subject to the conditions specified in item
(i) of sub-clause (A) and item (i) (a) of
sub-clause (C) of sub-sec. (I) of sec. 13, a
certificate as provided therein.
"8. Levy of general sales tax on goods in Schedule
II Part B-There shall be levied a general sales tax on
the turnover of sales of goods specified in Part of
Schedule II at the rate set out against each of them in
column 3 thereof, but after deducting from such
turnover,-
(i) resales of goods on the purchase of which the
dealer is liable to pay purchase tax under
see. 16;
(ii) resales of goods purchased from a Registered
dealer by a dealer who is not a Licensed
dealer at the time of such purchase, and
(iii) sales of goods, or resales of goods to which
clauses (i) and (ii) do not apply, to a
Licensed dealer, Recognised dealer or to a
Commission agent holding a permit, who
purchases on behalf of a principal who is a
Licensed dealer or a Recognised dealer, upon
such dealer or Commission agent as the ease
may be furnishing, in the circumstances and
subject to the conditions specified in see.
13, a certificate as provided therein."
" 10. Levy of sales tax and general sales tax on
goods specified in Schedule III.-(I) There shall be
levied a sales tax on the turnover of sales of goods
specified in Schedule III at the rate set out against
each of such goods in column 3 thereof, but after
deducting from such turnover,-
(i) resales of goods on the purchase of which the
dealer is liable to pay purchase tax under
see. 16,
441
(ii) resales of goods purchased by him from a
Registered dealer,
(iii)sales of goods. Or resales of goods to which
clauses (i) and (ii) do not apply, to a
Recognised dealer or to a Commission agent
holding a permit who purchases on behalf of a
principal who is a Recognised dealer, upon
such dealer or Commission agent, as the case
may be, furnishing in the circumstances and
subject to the conditions specified in sub-
clause (B) and item (ii) of sub-clause (C) of
sub-sec. (1) of sec 13, a certificate as
provided therein, and C
(iv) sales of goods or resales of goods to which
clauses (i) and (ii) do not apply, to a
Licensed dealer or to a Commission agent
holdings permit who purchases on behalf of a
principal who is a Licensed dealer, upon such
dealer or Commission agent as the case may
be, furnishing in the circumstances and
subject to the conditions specified in item
(i) of sub-clause (A) and item (i) (a) of
sub-clause (C) of sub-sec. (1) of sec. 13, a
certificate as provided therein.
(2) There shall be levied a general sales tax on
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the turnover of sales of goods specified in
Schedule III at the rate set out against each
of such goods in column 4 thereof, but after
deducting from such turnover-
(i) resales of goods purchased from a Registered
dealer, by a dealer who is not a Licensed
dealer at the time of such purchase; and
(ii) sales of goods, or resales of goods which
clause (i) does not apply to a Licensed
dealer, or Recognised dealer or a Commission
agent holding a Permit who purchases on
behalf of a principal who is a Licensed
dealer or a Recognised dealer upon such
dealer or Commission agent, as the case may
be, furnishing in the circumstances and
subject to the conditions specified in sec.
13 a certificate as provided therein."
442
It may be noted that in the above provisions that from
the turnover of sales of goods of a dealer which are
otherwise taxable, the turnover of goods sold to a
Recognised dealer, upon such Recognised dealer furnishing in
the circumstances and subject to the conditions specified in
sub-clause (B) of sub-section (1) of section 13 of the Act a
certificate as provided therein becomes deductible and no
tax is payable on such sales in favour of the Recognised
dealer. The relevant part of section 13 of the Act reads
thus:-
"13. No deduction from turnover except on a
certificate.-(1) There shall not be deducted from the
turnover of sales, sales of goods to a Licensed dealer,
Recognised dealer or to a Commission agent holding a
permit purchasing on behalf of his principal, as
provided in sections 7, 8 and 10 unless-
(A)......
(B) The Recognised dealer certifies in the
prescribed form, that the goods other than prohibited
goods sold to him are goods purchased by him for use by
him as raw or processing materials or as consumable
stores in the manufacture of taxable goods for sale by
him; or
Rule 24(4) of the Rules prescribes that the certificate
issued by a Recognised dealer shall be in Form No. 19. The
relevant part of Form No. 19 reads:-
".... and that the goods purchased by me/the said
.......... and specified in bill/cash memo/invoice No
.... dated..... of M/s..... address........ .... will
be used by me/the said...... as raw/or processing
materials or consumable stores in the manufacture of
taxable goods viz. ........ for sale by me/the
said..... and that such sale shall not take place
outside the State of Gujarat.
(Emphasis supplied)"
The expression ’taxable goods’ is defined by section
3(33) of the Act thus:-
"2(33). "taxable goods" means goods other than
those on the sale or purchase of which no tax is
payable under sec. 5 or sec. 49 or a notification
issued thereunder."
443
Sub-section (1) of section 49 provides that subject to
the conditions or exemptions. if any, specified in relation
to them, the classes of sales or purchases referred in
clauses (i) to (vii) of section 49(1) shall be exempt from
the payment of the whole of tax payable under the provisions
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of the Act. Sub-section 2 of section 49 of the Act
authorises the State Government to exempt any other
specified class of sales by a notification published in the
Official Gazette. Section 49(2) reads:-
"49. Exemptions (1)
(2) Subject to such conditions as it may impose,
the State Government may, if it considers it necessary
so to do in the public interest, by notification in the
Official Gazette, exempt any specified class of sales
or purchases from payment of the whole or any tax
payable under the provisions of this Act.’
By a notification dated April 29, 1970 issued under
section 49(2) of the Act the State Government exempted the
entire tax payable on sales of goods (other than prohibited
goods) by a registered dealer to an electrical undertaking,
certified for the purpose by the Commissioner, if the
electrical undertaking furnished to the selling dealer a
certificate in Form appended to the notification stating
inter alia that the goods purchased were required for the
use of the generation or distribution of electrical energy
by the undertaking. In view of the above notification the
sales made to the electrical undertaking become exempt from
payment of sales tax under the Act on the undertaking
furnishing the required certificate and no tax was paid by
the appellants in these two appeals on sales of goods
effected by them in favour of the electrical undertaking. It
is now necessary to refer to section 16 of the Act, the
relevant part of which reads :-
"16. Liability to purchase tax for contravention
of terms of certificate etc.-(1) Where any dealer or
Commission agent has purchased any taxable goods under
a certificate given by him under section 12 or 13, and
(a) contrary to such certificate, the goods are used
for another purpose, or are not resold or
despatched in the manner and within the period
certified, or
444
(b) on the resales in the course of inter-State trade
or commerce, of the goods so purchased, no tax
under the Central Sales Tax Act 1956 (LXXIV of
1956), is actually payable by him on account of
any deduction admissible under any of the
Provisions of the said Act.
then such dealer or Commission agent shall be liable to
pay tax on the purchase price of the goods purchased
under such certificate; and accordingly, he shall
include the purchase price thereof in his turnover of
purchases in his declaration or return under section 40
which he is to furnish next thereafter.
(2) .......
(3) the purchase tax leviable under this section
in respect of any goods specified in Schedule II or III
shall be the aggregate of all taxes which would have
been leviable thereon but for the certificate given
under section 12 or 13.
(4) If any question arises whether the purchase
price of goods purchased under a certificate given
under section 12 or 13 is not liable to be included in
the turnover of purchases of a dealer or Commission
agent under this section, the burden of so proving
shall be upon such dealer, or as the case may be, the
Commission agent."
Section 16 of the Act provides that where a dealer has
purchased any taxable goods under a certificate given by him
under section 13 and has used the goods for a different
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purpose contrary to such certificate, then such dealer shall
be liable to pay tax on the purchase price of the goods
purchased under such certificate and his liability has to be
computed in the manner stated in that section. It is this
liability of the appellants that is in dispute in these
appeals.
It is not disputed that the appellants are recognised
dealers; that they had purchased raw materials which were
taxable goods (other than prohibited goods) from registered
dealers against certificates issued by them in Form No. 19;
that no sales tax had been paid on sales in their favour;
that they had manufactured goods by using the said raw
materials that they had sold a part of the goods to an
electrical undertaking notified under section 49(2) of the
Act and that no tax had been paid on sales effected by them
in
445
favour of the electrical undertaking. It is also not
disputed that in Form No. 19 the appellants had stated that
the raw materials purchased by them would be used to
manufacture taxable goods which would be sold inside the
State of Gujarat. The question for consideration is whether
the appellants had used the raw materials for another
purpose contrary to the terms of Form No. 19. The contention
of the Department is that the appellants had contravened
Form No. 19 by manufacturing goods which were not ’taxable
goods’ and hence were liable to pay purchase tax on the
purchase of raw materials under section 16 of the Act and
the contention of the appellants is that the goods
manufactured and sold by them to the electrical undertakings
were ’taxable goods’ and merely because they were sold to an
electrical undertaking under transactions exempted by
section 49(2) of the Act, the goods did not cease to be
taxable goods. The solution to the question, therefore, lies
on the true meaning of the expression ’taxable goods’.
Relying upon the decision of this Court in the Stale of
Tamil Nadu v. M.K. Kandaswami and Ors. it is urged on behalf
of the appellants that the expressions ’taxable persons’,
’taxable goods’ and ’taxable events’ are entirely different
concepts in sales tax law; that the goods in question were
taxable goods as any sale of those goods not covered by
section 49(1) and (2) would make such sale taxable and that
section 49(1) and (2) of the Act referred to only events
which resulted in the exemption from payment of sales tax.
It is further argued that all goods the sale or purchase of
which is liable to tax under the Act are taxable goods and
that goods would not be taxable goods only when their sales
are exempted generally from payment of tax as provided in
section 5 of the Act. It is, therefore, contended that the
goods manufactured by the appellants not having been goods,
the sale or purchase of which had been exempted from tax by
inclusion in Schedule I to the Act, the appellants could not
be treated as having infringed the terms of Form No. 19,
notwithstanding the existence of the circumstance that the
particular sales made by them to the electrical undertakings
were exempt from payment of tax. The second ground urged on
behalf of the appellants is that the condition under Form
No. 19 became satisfied immediately on the goods being
manufactured by the appellants as at that stage the goods
were really taxable and that a subsequent event of sale to
the electrical undertaking cannot be considered as having
violated the said condition. The third ground urged by the
appel-
446
lants is that a transaction of sale involved two facets-a
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sale and a purchase and if a sale is exempted from tax, it
cannot be said the purchase is also exempted. On the above
footing it is contended that since under section 49(2) only
the tax on sale is exempted and nothing is said about the
liability of the purchaser to tax, it cannot be said that
the goods which were otherwise taxable had become non-
taxable on being sold under a transaction which attracted
section 49(2) of the Act.
We find no substance in any of the three grounds urged
on behalf of the appellants for the reason that the present
case is governed by the definition of the expression
’taxable goods’ in section 2(33) of the Act. It is
interesting to note that the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1959
(Bombay Act No. 1 of 1959) which was in force in the State
of Gujarat before the Act came into force and which was
repealed by section 88 of the Act contained the definition
of the expression ’taxable goods’ in section 2(33) thereof.
The expression ’taxable goods’ was defined in the Bombay Act
as ’goods other than those on the sale or purchase of which
no tax is payable under section 5’. In the Bombay Act there
was also a provision corresponding to section 49 of the Act
in section 41 thereof which empowered the State Government
subject to such conditions as it may impose to exempt by a
notification published in the Official Gazette any specified
class of sales or purchases from payment of the whole or any
part of any tax payable thereunder if the State Government
was satisfied that it was necessary so to do in the public
interest. Still the definition of ’taxable goods’ in that
Act did not refer to sales exempted under section 41
thereof. But in the Act which repealed and replaced the
Bombay Act the meaning of the expression ’taxable goods’ has
been narrowed down as section 2(33) of the Act reads-
’taxable goods’ means goods other than those on the sale or
purchase of which no tax is payable under section 5 (which
corresponds to section 5 of the Bombay Act) and section 49
of the Act (which corresponds to section 41 of the Bombay
Act) or a notification issued thereunder. By this
definition, the dichotomy that is stated to exist between
’taxable goods’ and ’taxable events’ has been given a go by.
It may be that section 5 and Schedule I refer to goods only
but section 49 deals with only taxable events which result
in the exemption from payment of tax on the conditions
mentioned therein or in the notification issued thereunder
being satisfied even though the goods in question do not
come under Schedule I. Secondly one has to wait till the
disposal of the goods by the dealer to find out whether the
goods are taxable goods or not in view of the
447
definition of the said expression which takes away goods
sold under circumstances attracting section 49 from the
scope of the meaning of that expression. Nor does the third
ground survive for the very same reason. If the sale is
exempt from tax under section 49 of the Act, the goods sold
would not be taxable goods. We need not go into the question
whether the purchaser in a sale under section 49 of the Act
has to pay tax in these cases. This reason also disposes of
an allied argument of the appellants that the possibility of
any liability arising under section 50 of the Act on the
breach of any condition imposed by section 49 or the
notification issued thereunder would absolve the appellants
of their liability to pay the tax under section 16 of the
Act. Any such levy made under section 50 has not been shown
to have any effect in law on the liability of the appellants
under section 16.
The scheme of the Act appears to be that sales tax
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should be levied on goods which are not included in Schedule
I at least once inside the State in the series of sales and
purchases even though they may have been converted into
manufactured goods and that is why Form No. 19 requires the
purchaser to state that the goods will be used by him as raw
or processing materials or as consumable stores in the
manufacture of taxable goods for sale by him inside the
State and section 16 of the Act provides that where any
dealer has purchased any taxable goods under a certificate
given by him under section 12 or section 13 of the Act and
contrary to such certificate the goods are used for another
purpose or are not resold or despatched in the manner and
within the period certified or on the resales in the course
of inter-State trade or commerce, of the goods so purchased
no tax under the Central Sales Tax Act is actually payable
by him on account of any deductions admissible under any of
the provisions of that Act, then such dealer shall be liable
to pay tax on the purchase price of the goods purchased
under such certificate. The deliberate alteration of the
definition of ’taxable goods’ in the Act also is
attributable to the said intention of the State legislature.
The appellants also cannot derive any assistance from
the decision of this Court in Polestar Electronic (Pvt.)
Ltd. v. Additional Commissioner, Sales Tax and Anr. as these
cases are governed by
448
the provisions of the Act and as there appears to be no
similarity between the facts of these appeals and the facts
involved in that case.
For the foregoing reasons, we do not find any merit in
these appeals. The appeals are dismissed with costs. Hearing
fee one set.
P.B.R. Appeals dismissed
449