Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 18
PETITIONER:
BHARAT HEAVY ELECTRICAL LIMITED ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/04/1996
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
THOMAS K.T. (J)
CITATION:
1996 AIR 1854 1996 SCC (4) 230
JT 1996 (4) 427 1996 SCALE (3)746
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
B.P.JEEVAN REDDY,J.
Leave granted in the Special Leave Petitions.
The Constitution [Sixth Amendment] Acts 1956 re-cast
Article 286 of the Constitution almost in its entirety. It
inserted sub-clause (g) in clause (1) of Article 269 and
introduced clause in Article 269. The Constitution [Forty
Sixth Amendment] Act, 1982 substituted clause (3) of Article
286. As amended by Sixth and forty Sixth Amendment Acts,
Article 286 reads:
"286(1). No law of a State shall
impose, or authorise the imposition
of, a tax on the sale or purchase
of goods where such sale or
purchase takes place-
(a) outside the State; or
(b) in the course of the import of
the goods into, or export of
the goods out of, the
territory of India.
(2) Parliament may by law formulate
principles for determining when a
sale or purchase of goods takes
place in any of the ways mentioned
in clause (1).
(3) Any law of a State shall, in so far
as it imposes, or authorises the
imposition of,- (a) a tax on the
sale or purchase of goods declared
by Parliament by law to be of
special importance in inter State
trade or commerce; or
(a) a tax on the sale or
purchase of goods
declared by Parliament by
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 18
law to be of special
importance in inter-State
trade or commerce; or
(b) a tax on the sale or
purchase of goods, being
a tax of the nature
referred to in sub clause
(b), sub-clause (c) or
sub-clause (d) of clause
(29A) of article 366,
be subject to such
restrictions and
conditions in regard to
the system of levy, rates
and other incidents of
the tax as Parliament may
by law specify."
Clause (1) places a restriction upon the power of the
State Legislatures to levy taxes on sale or purchase of
goods; a State cannot levy tax on a sale which takes place
outside that State nor can it tax a sale or purchase taking
place in the course of import into or export out of India.
Clause (2) empowers the Parliament to formulate principles
for determining when a sale takes place outside a State or
in the course of import or export, as the case may be.
Clause (3) places certain restrictions on the State
Legislatures in the matter of system of levy and rate etc.
in respect of certain goods and transactions.
Article 269 specifies the duties and taxes levied and
collected by the Government of India but assigned to the
States in the manner provided therein. Among the several
duties and taxes specified in clause (1) is the tax
mentioned under sub-clause (g) - "taxes on the sale or
purchase of goods other than newspapers where such sale or
purchase takes place in the course of interstate trade or
commerce". Clause (2) of Article 269 provides that the net
proceeds in any financial year of any such duty or tax
"Shall be assigned to the States within which that duty or
tax is leviable in that year and shall be distributed among
those States in accordance with such principles of
distribution, as may be formulated by Parliament by law".
Clause (3) empowers the Parliament to formulate principles
for determining when a sale or purchase of goods takes place
in the course of inter-State trade or commerce. By
Constitution [Forty Sixth Amendment] Act, the words "or
consignment of" were added in clause (3). Clause (3) now
reads:
"Parliament may by law formulate
principles for determining when a
sale or purchase of, or consignment
of goods, takes place in the course
of inter-State trade or commerce."
Soon after the Commencement of the Sixth Amendment Act,
the Parliament enacted the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956 [the
Act] to effectuate the provisions of Articles 286 and 269.
The Preamble to the Act reads:
"An Act to formulate principles for
determining when a sale or purchase
of goods takes place in the course
of inter-State trade or commerce or
outside a State or in the course of
import into or export from India,
to provide for the levy,
collection and distribution of
taxes on sales of goods in the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 18
course of inter-State trade or
commerce and to declare certain
goods to be of special importance
in the inter-State trade or
commerce and specify the
restrictions and conditions to
which State laws imposing taxes on
the sale or purchase of such goods
of special importance shall be
subject."
(Emphasis supplied)
Section 2 defines certain expressions occurring in the
Act. Section 3 defines inter-State sale or purchase. This
section is enacted pursuant to clause (3) of Article 269. An
inter-State sale or purchase shall be deemed to take place
if (a) the sale or purchase occasions the movement of goods
from one State another or (b) the sale or purchase is
effected by a transfer of documents of title to the goods
during their movement from one State to another. Two
Explanations are appended to this section which it is not
necessary to note for the purposes of these appeals. Section
3 reads:
"3. When is a sale or purchase of
goods to take place in the course
of inter-state trade or commerce.--
A sale or Purchase of goods shall
be deemed to take place in the
course of inter-State trade or
commerce if the sale or purchase-
(a) occasions the movement of goods
from one State to another; or
(b) is effected by a transfer of
document of title to the goods
during their movement from one
State to another."
Section 4 specifies when does a sale or purchase take
place outside a State. Sub-section (1) of Section 4 says
that where a sale or purchase of goods is determined in
accordance with subsection (2) [of Section 4] to have taken
place inside a State, such sale or purchase shall be deemed
to have taken place outside all other States. Sub-section
(2) sets out when shall a sale or purchase of goods be
deemed to have taken place inside a State. It is obvious
that Section 4 has been enacted to give effect to Article
286(1)(a) read with clause (2) of the said Article. Section
4 reads:
"4. When is sale or purchase of
goods to take Place outside a
State.--(1) Subject to the
provisions contained in Section 3,
when a sale or purchase of goods is
determined in accordance with sub-
section (2) to take place inside a
State, such sale or purchase shall
be deemed to have taken place
outside all other States.
(2) A sale or purchase of goods
shall be deemed to take place
inside a State, if the goods are
within the State-
(a) in the case of specific or
ascertained goods, at the time
the contract of sale is made;
and
(b) in the case of unascertained or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 18
future goods, at the time of
their appropriation to the
contract of sale by the seller
or by the buyer, whether
assent of the other party is
prior or subsequent to such
appropriation."
Section 5 specifies when shall a sale or purchase of
goods be deemed to take place in the course of export of the
goods out of the territory of India or in the course of
import of the goods into the territory of India, as the case
may be. Section 5 it is equally evidents has been enacted to
give effect to Article 286(1)(b) read with clause (2) of the
said Article. Though we are not concerned herein with sub-
section (3) of Section 5 we may yet set out Section 5 in
full:
"5. When is a sale or purchase of
goods to take place in the course
of import or export.-- (1) A sale
or purchase of goods shall be
deemed to take place in the course
of the export of the goods out of
the territory of India only if the
sale or purchase either occasions
such export or is effected by a
transfer of document of title to
the goods after the goods have
crossed the customs frontiers of
India.
(2) A sale or purchase of goods
shall be deemed to take place in
the course of the import of the
goods into the territory of India
only if the sale or purchase either
occasions such import or is
effected by a transfer of documents
of title to the goods before the
goods have crossed the customs
frontiers of India.
(3) Notwithstanding anything
contained in sub-section (1) the
last sale or purchase of any goods
preceding the sale or purchase
occasioning the export of those
goods out of the territory of India
shall also be deemed to be in the
course of such export if such last
sale or purchase took place after,
and was for the purpose of
complying with the agreement or
order for or in relation to such
export."
Section 14 of the Act declares the goods mentioned
therein to be goods of special importance in inter-State
trade or commerce. Section 15 sets out the restrictions and
conditions in regard to levy of tax on sale or purchase of
declared goods within a State. These two sections are
relatable to clause (3) of Article 286. It is not necessary
for the purpose of these appeals to refer to these
provisions.
Section 6 is the charging section. Tax is levied only
upon inter-State sales; as on today, no tax is levied on
inter-State purchases.
Clause (2) of Article 269 inter alia provides that "the
net proceeds in any financial year of any such duty or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 18
tax...shall be assigned to the State within which that tax
duty or tax is laviable in that year". It is, therefore,
extremely important, from the States point of view, in which
State is the Central Sales Tax leviable - for it is to that
State that the tax so collected ultimately goes back,
notwithstanding the fact that the tax is levied and
collected by the Central Government. The Central Sales Tax
Act has not created a machinery of its own to assess and
collect the tax levied by it. It has entrusted the job in
each State to the machinery created by the State Sales Tax
enactment [Section 9(2)]. The Central Sales Tax leviable in
that State will be collected by that machinery no doubt for
and on behalf of the Central Government, which will, of
Course, make it over to that State as contemplated by
Article 269. The provision in the Central Sales Tax Act
giving effect to the said provision in Article 269(2) of the
Constitution is sub-section (1) of Section 9, as it stands
now. The sub-section reads:
"9. Levy and collection of tax and
penalties,---(1) The tax payable by
any dealer under this Act on sales
of goods dealer under this Act on
sales of goods effected by him in
the course of inter-State trade or
Commerce, whether such sales fall
within clause (a) or clause (b) of
Section 3, shall be levied by the
Government of India, and the tax so
levied shall be collected by that
Government in accordance with the
provisions of Sub-section (2), in
the state from which the movement
of the goods Commended:
Provided that, in the Case of
a sale of goods during their
movement from one State to another,
being a sale subsequent to the
first sale in respect of the same
goods and being also a sale which
does not fall within sub-section
(2) of Section 6, the tax shall be
levied and collected-
(a) where such subsequent sale has
been effected by a registered
dealer , in the State from which
the registered dealer obtained or,
as the case may be, could have
obtained, the form prescribed for
the purposes of clause (a) of sub-
section (4) of Section 8 in
connection with the purchase of
such goods, and
(b) where such subsequent sale has
been effected by an unregistered
dealer, in the State from which
such subsequent sale has been
effected."
[Emphasis added]
We may pause here for a while and explain how the said
idea was expressed initially and how it has evolved into the
present provision Clause (a) in Section 2 defines the
expression "appropriate State". As it stands now, it reads:
"(a) ’Appropriate State’ means--
(i) in relation to a dealer who has
one or more places of business
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 18
situate in the same State, that
State;
(ii) in relation to a dealer which
has places of business situate in
different States, every such State
with respect to the Place or Places
of business situate situate within
its territory;"
As originally enacted, however, the definition
contained an Explanation defining the expression "place of
business". It read thus:
<sLs>
"’Place of business’ means--- (i)
in the case of a sale of goods in
the course of inter-State trade or
commerce falling within clause (a)
of section 3, the place from which
the goods have been by reason of
such sale;
(ii) in the case of any such sale
falling within clause (b) of
section 3, the place where the sale
is effected."
Sub-section (i) of Section 9, as originally enacted,
read:
"9. Levy and collection of tax. -
(1) The tax payable by any dealer
under this Act shall levied and
collected in the appropriate State
by the Government of India in the
manner provided in subsection (2)."
[Emphasis added]
It is thus clear that as originally enacted it was
clause (a) in Section 2 and in particular, the Explanation
appended thereto which specified the State in which the duty
or tax was leviable within the meaning of Article 269(2). By
Central Sales Tax (Second Amendment) Act, 1958, the
Explanation to clause (a) in Section 2 was omitted with
effect from October 1, 1958 and simultaneously Section 9 was
substituted. Subsection (1) of Section 9, as substituted by
the said Amendment Act, read:
"9.Levy and collection of tax and
penalties-- (1) The tax payable by
any dealer under this Act on sale
of goods effected by him in the
course of inter-State trade or
commerce whether such sales fall
within clause (a) or clause (b) of
section 3 shall be levied and
collected by the Government of
India in the manner provided in
sub-section (3) in the State from
which the movement of the goods
commenced.
Provided that, in the case of
a sale of goods during their
movement from one State to another
being a sale subsequent to the
first sale in respect of the same
goods, the tax shall, where such
sale does not fall within sub-
section (2) of section 6, be levied
and collected in the State from
which the registered dealer
effecting the subsequent sale
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 18
obtained the form prescribed for
the purposes of clause (a) of sub-
section (4) of section 8 in
connection with the purchase of
such goods."
[Emphasis added]
Then again by Central Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1969,
Section 9 was substituted with retrospective effect. It is
this substituted Section 9 which is in force now. Sub-
section (1) of Section 9 as it stands now has already been
set out by us hereinabove. Thus, notwithstanding the
legislative changes, the idea has remained the same, viz.,
that the State from which the goods have moved by reason of
the sale is the State in which the Central Sales Tax is
leviable, within the meaning of Article 269(2). We must make
it clear that what we have said with respect to Section 9 is
in the context of clause (a) of Section 3 of the Act which
alone falls for consideration in these appeals. For this
reason, we are not referring to the position under Section
3(b).
The aforesaid survey of the relevant provisions of the
Act clearly shows that Sections 3,4,5,9(1), 14 and is
pertain to and deal with distinct topics and different
aspects of Articles 286 and 269. It follows that if a
question arises whether a sale is an inter-State sale or
not, it has to be answered with reference to and on the
basis of Section 3 and Section 3 alone. Section 4, or for
that matter Section 5, is not relevant on the said question
- See the Constitution Bench decision in Tata Iron and Steel
Company Limited. Bombay v. S.R. Sarkar & Ors. [(1960) 11
S.T.C.655] and the decisions in Manganese Ore [India]
Limited v. The Regional Assistant Commissioner (1976 (3)
S.C.R.99) and Union of India v. K.S.Khosla & Company Limited
[(1979) 43 S.T.C.457]. Similarly, where the question arises,
in which State is the tax leviable, one must look to and
apply the test in Section 9(1); no other provision is
relevant on this question.
We may at this stage refer to the decision of the
Bombay High Court in Commissioner of sale Tax v. Barium
Chemicals Limited [(1981) 48 S.T.C. 121]. A particular
transaction of inter-State sale was subjected to Central
Sales Tax in Andhra Pradesh. The same sale was again sought
to be taxed under Central Sales Tax Act in Maharashtra,
which was questioned. The High Court adopted the following
approach: Central Sales Tax is levied and Collected by the
Central Government; it is immaterial in which State it is
collected; it cannot be levied or collected twice over; the
State Governments are merely agents of the Central
Government in the matter of levy and collection of Central
Sales Tax; if so, once levied and collected in one State,
rightly or wrongly it cannot be levied and collected in
another State. In our opinion, this may be an over-
simplification of the matter. May be an from the point of
view of the assesses, this approach is sound enough but from
the point of view of the States [keeping Article 269 in
mind] and the provisions of the Central Sales Tax acts this
may not be correct. Section 9(1) specifies the State wherein
Central Sales Tax shall be levied and collected’and the
Central Sales Tax has to be levied and collected in that
State and in no other State. The approach of the Bombay High
Court makes Section 9(1) [which is enacted pursuant to
Section 269(2), as pointed out hereinabove] otiose and
superfluous. It would not be proper to says in the light of
above constitutional and statutory provisions that the
dispute as to in which State is a particular inter-State
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 18
sale is to be taxed is a matter between the States and that
so far as the assessee is concerned, it is enough if he pays
the tax at one places whether it is really leviable in that
State as per Section 9(1) or not. The law requires that it
should be levied and collected in the State from which the
movement of goods commences [Section 9(1) read with Section
3(a)]. If a dispute arises in which State is the tax
lawfully leviable, the authorities under the Act have got to
decide it. If, in a given case, an assessee says that the
particular transaction which is sought to be taxed in State
’A’ has already been tailed in State ’B’, nothing prevents
him from impleading the State ’E’ in proceedings in State
’A’ and have the matter decided in the presence of all
parties. It must be remembered that while acting under
Central Sales Tax Acts the State machinery acts as the
machinery of the State Government and not as the machinery
of the State Government; in law, it is as if it belongs to
Central Government. This view of ours gets re-inforced if
one keeps the provisions in Section 8(2A) of the Central
Sales Tax Act in view.
It is necessary to bear these principles in mind while
examining the facts of the appeals before us to which we now
turn.
P A R T = II
Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited [BHEL] is a major
public sector corporations wholly owned by the Government of
India. It has its units in several places viz., Haridwars
Jhansi, Bhopal, Bangalore, Ramachandrapuram [Andhra Pradesh
- near Hyderabad], Ranipet and Tiruchi [Tamil Nadu] and so
off. Each of these units appears to specialise in the
manufacture of particular type or class of machinery - in
the interest of avoiding duplication and enhancing
efficiency. Generally speaking, BHEL is engaged in the
manufacture of heavy electrical machinery including
equipment and material necessary for setting up power
plants. Its dead Office is at New Delhi. It appears that
whenever it undertakes to set up a power-generation plant,
it enters into two contracts, one for the supply of
machinery and equipment called "the Supply Contract" and he
other for installation or erection of the plant called
"Service Contract". Once the job is undertaken, the Head
Office sends instructions to relevant units to manufacture
the appropriate machinery. for illustrating its method of
working, we may take a concrete instance,viz., the setting
up of five captive power plants [120 MW each] for the
aluminium smelter complex at Angul, Orissa for the National
Aluminium Company Limited, Bhuvaneshwar [NALCO], which too
is a public sector undertaking. The facts relating to this
contract are the following: on August 1, 1981, NALCO invited
tenders the said work. BHEL also submitted its tender. It
was accepted. NALCO issued a Letter of Intent [LOI] on June
3, 1982 specifying the time-schedule for the work. The units
were to be made ready for commercial operation between March
1985 and November 1986. Pursuant to the LOI, BHEL commenced
the work. It instructed its several units to manufacture the
requisite machinery and equipment. Formal contracts, viz.,
supply contract and service contract were entered into much
later, i.e., on March 15, 1985. The contract price under the
supply agreement is Rs.295.37 crores. The supply contract
specifies the price of each of the major items of
machinery/equipment separately. It also provides the manner
in which the contracted price was payable by NALCO. Now,
what happened is this: Tiruchi unit, it appears, is engaged
mainly in the manufacture of boiler systems. It was
designated as the executing agency for the job at Angul
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 18
including the responsibility of manufacturing and supplying
the boiler systems required for setting up the power plants
at Angul. The boiler system comprises innumerable parts and
components, some of which are manufactured at the Hyderabad
unit. The Tiruchi unit accordingly called upon the Hyderabad
unit to manufacture those components/parts. The Hyderabad
unit manufactured them and sent some of those parts/
components to Tiruchi for being incorporated into the boiler
system and sent the remaining directly to Angul Orissa] to
be incorporated into the boiler system in at the work-site.
according to the practice uniformly followed by BHELs and
accepted by the Andhra Pradesh Governments the parts
components manufactured by the Hyderabad unit for
incorporation in the boiler systems were treated as branch
transfers not involving an element of sale, irrespective of
the fact whether such parts/components were sent to Tiruchi
or to fingul. Conversely, if the Tiruchi unit manufactured
any parts/components to be incorporated in the machinery or
system, the manufacture of which was entrusted to Hyderabad
units the despatch of such parts/components from Tiruchi to
Hyderabad unit or the work-site were treated as branch
transfers arid not as sales. The tax was levied by the State
in which the main machinery system was manufactured. No tax
was levied by the State wherein the parts components were
manufactured and sent for incorporation into the main
machinery or system manufactured in other States. From the
year 1984, however, the State of Andhra Pradesh started
levying and demanding Central Sales Tax upon the value of
the parts and components which were manufactured at
Hyderabad unit and sent to Tiruchi or Anguls as the case may
be for incorporat on-into boiler system manufactured by
Tiruchi unit. BHEL protested against the said levy. It
submitted that it has been paying the Central Sales Tax upon
the value of the entire boiler system manufactured by the
Tiruchi unit in the Tamil Nadu State and that if Central
Sales Tax is levied upon the parts and components which were
manufactured at Hyderabad and sent to Tiruchi or Angul for
incorporation into the boiler system], it would amount to
double taxation insofar as the said parts and Components are
concerned. According to it, they were merely branch
transfers. The Andhra Pradesh State did not agree. Similar
stand was taken by other States as well and assessment
proceedings were in progress in various States. It is at
that stage that BHEL approached this Court by way of Writ
Petition (C) No.1608 of 1987 under Article 32 of the
Constitution complaining that more than one State is taxing
the same sale under the provision of the Act, which is
making its functioning difficult. It submitted that such
simultaneous taxing is Creating an uncalled for financial
burden upon it. It requested the Court to give appropriate
directions to ensure that an inter State sale is not taxed
by more than one State.
When the writ petition came up for hearing, it was
brought to our notice that the Andhra Pradesh Sales Tax
Appellate Tribunal has decided the said dispute [relating to
certain assessment years] and that Tax Revision Cases
preferred by BHEL were pending in the Andhra Pradesh High
Court. The judgment of the Andhra Pradesh Tribunal was also
placed before us. The Andhra Pradesh Tribunal had taken the
view that insofar as the parts and components manufactured
in the Andhra Pradesh unit and despatched to work-site at
Angul were concerned, they must be treated as inter-State
sales taxable in Andhra Pradesh State inasmuch as the said
goods moved from Andhra Pradesh pursuant to the supply
contract which was indeed a contract of sale. So far as the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 18
parts and components which were sent to Tiruchi are
concerned, the Tribunal held that they cannot be treated to
have been sold in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce but that they represent merely branch transfers.
While the State of Andhra Pradesh did not prefer any tax
revisions against the judgment of the Tribunal, BHEL did,
which meant that the decision of the Tribunal insofar as it
held that the despatch of parts/components to Tiruchi
constituted branch transfers became final. The only question
in the said Tax Revision Cases before the Andhra Pradesh
High Court,
therefore, was whether the Tribunal was right in holding
that the despatch of parts/components from the Andhra
Pradesh Unit to Angul for incorporation into the boiler
system at the work-site represented inter-State sales and
whether they were taxable in the State of Andhra Pradesh.
The High Court examined the said question at length and
dismissed the Tax Revision Cases filed by BHEL agreeing with
the view taken by the Tribunal, though on a different
reasoning. Civil Appeals Nos. 5369-75 of 1996 are preferred
against the judgment of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in the
aforesaid Tax Revision Cases.
Civil Appeals Nos.5362-68 of 1996 arise from the
judgment of the Andhra Pradesh High Court rendered in a
batch of writ petitions filed by BHEL. The writ petitions
raised the very same dispute as was involved in the Tax
Revision Cases aforesaid with this difference: BHEL
impleaded the States of Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka
Madhya Pradesh, Delhi and Union of India in addition to the
State of Andhra Pradesh as respondents to the writ petitions
an also claimed for a direction to the respondents to adjust
the Central Sales Tax collected by them in such a manner
that the amount is kept, or remitted to the State, which is
lawfully entitled to levy it and the States no entitled to
levy it do not keep the tax amounts collected by them. The
batch of writ petitions have been disposed of by the High
Court following its decision in the Tax Revision Cases. The
High Court has, however, declined to give a direction for
adjustment of tax as between the States as asked by BHEL]
mainly on the ground that this Court was seized of the
matter. it left the matter to this Court.
Whether a particular sale is an inter-State sale or an
inter-State sale is essentially a question of fact. Perhaps,
it may be more appropriative to say that it is a mixed
question of face and law. it is, therefore, necessary to
ascertain the factual position first. In Civil Appeals
Nos.5369-75 of 1996 and 5362-68 of 1996, it is this:
whenever BHEL enters into a supply contract with a party, it
designates one of its units as the executing unit. That is
treated as the main unit executing the work. sometimes this
is not done and each unit is entrusted a particular job.]
But it may happen that the executing unit does not
manufacture all the parts and components which are required
for completing the job entrusted to it. it, therefore,
requests other units of BHEL to manufacture the parts and
components required by it and to despatch the same. Some of
the parts and components so manufactured by other units are
sent directly to the executing unit for being incorporated
into the main machinery/system while some parts and
components are despatched directly to the work-site. To
revert to NALCO project aforementioned, referred to
hereinbefore, this is exactly what had happened. Tiruchi
unit was supposed to be the executing unit. But some parts
and components required for the boiler system and other
equipment [which was the responsibility of the Tiruchi unit
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 18
to manufacture] were being manufactured at the Hyderabad
unit. At the request of the Tiruchi unit - or on the
instructions of the Head Office, as the case may be - the
Hyderabad unit manufactured those parts and components and
despatched some of them to Tiruchi and some of them directly
to Angul in Orissa [work-site]. The consideration stipulated
in the supply contract was payable in the manner provided
therein. The following factual position found recorded in
the judgment of the High Court is of crucial relevance and
may, therefore, be set out in full:
"Copies of invoices and photo copy
of R.R./L.R. or Bill of Lading,
Pre-despatch Clearance
Certificate/Inspection report and
test certificate, if any, shall be
submitted to the Bank and various
Departments of NALCO, Angul for the
purpose of claiming payment through
letter of credit vide Clause 8.1.0.
As per Clause 8.2.0, the materials
shall be consigned to the Materials
Manager, NALCO Captive Power Plant,
Angul and the original R.R./L.R.
shall be sent by the supplier
directly to the site office for
arranging prompt delivery of
materials from the carriers. Clause
3.3.0 enjoins that the ’title of
all the plant and equipment and
materials shall pass on to the
purchaser in accordance with INCO
Terms’ and transfer of ownership to
purchaser shall be simultaneous
provided that such passing of
title, risk and property to the
purchaser shall not otherwise
absolve or dilute the
responsibility of the supplier
under this contract. Other clauses
in the agreement provide for
guarantee bond, warranty,
liquidated damages etc., which need
not be adverted to.
Certain debit notes raised by
the petitioner [Hyderabad unit]
while despatching the
materials/equipment to Trichy or
direct to NALCO have been placed
before us. One of the debit notes
is raised soon after the despatch
of one Bowl Mill to the Materials
Manager, NALCO, Angul. The work
Order No. L.R./R.R. number, Packing
slip number, Despatch advice number
are all mentioned in the debit note
in addition to the value of the
Bowl Mill. The excise duty payable
is also shown in the debit note.
Some copies of loading advice,
packing list, R.Rs./L.Rs. have also
been placed before us. The invoices
raised on NALCO by the Trichy unit
which is the executing unit
relating to Boiler components
despatched by Hyderabad, Ranipet
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 18
and other units with the price
worked out on pro-rata tonnage
basis are on record. Central Sales
Tax is also included in those
invoices. The certificates and
details regarding payment of C.S.T.
from time to time by Trichy unit in
regard to the despatches from
Hyderabad are also filed."
The High Court has also referred to another contract
entered into by BHEL with NTPC for setting up a super-
thermal power project at Farakka, West Bengal. In the case
of this work, it appears that no one unit of BHEL is
designated as the executing unit. The manufacture of
machinery etc. appears to have been distributed among
various units. The factual position in this behalf is stated
in the following words by the Court:
"...... allocation of
responsibility was in the nature of
an internal arrangement made by the
Head Office of the petitioner. But,
the reasonable presumption that
should be drawn in the light of
correspondence and despatch
documents, that NTPC must be well
aware of the division of
responsibility as regards S.G. and
T.G. packages between the various
units. The documents relating to
despatch of Boiler/Steam Generator
equipment such as Bowl Mills by
Hyderabad unit as per the request
of the Trichy Unit are filed. They
include loading adviced packing
list, debit note raised by the
Hyderabad unit on Trichy unit and
the invoice raised by Trichy unit
on NTPC which covers the
components/equipment sent by
Hyderabad unit directly to Farakka.
The name of the consignee as per
the Railway Receipt is Chief
Erection Manager, NTPC, Farakka
and the freight is pre-paid. The
certificate regarding payment of
CST confirms the payment of CST on
the invoice value by the Trichy
unit in respect of the components
despatched by Hyderabad unit."
Coming hack. to the findings recorded by the Andhra
Pradesh Tribunals it held, so far as the parts and
components sent to Tiruchi that they do not constitute
inter-State sales inasmuch as there was an interruption of
the movement of the said parts/components and more
particularly because the said parts/components lost their
identity by incorporation into the main system before they
were despatched by the executing unit to the work-site. This
part of the Tribunal’s Order has become finals not having
been questioned by the State of Andhra Pradesh. So far as
the parts/components sent by the Hyderabad unit directly to
the work-site at Angul or for that matter, to Farakka in
West Bengal are concerned the Tribunal has taken the view
that they do not constitute inter-State sales and that
Central Rules Tax is leviable thereon in the State of Andhra
Pradesh. This conclusion of the Tribunal has been affirmed
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 18
by the High Courts though on a some what different
reasoning. The contention urged by Sri V.R.Reddy, learned
Additional Solicitor General appearing for BHEL, is that
even the direct despatches [i.e. parts/components/material
sent by the Hyderabad unit directly to work-site at Angul]
do not constitute inter-State sales and that they are not
taxable in the State of Andhra Pradesh. His submission is
that in principle, there is no difference between the
material sent to Tiruchi for being incorporated and the
material sent directly to Angul because both of them get
ultimately incorporated into the main equipment/boiler
system which was being manufactured by the Tiruchi unit,
which happened to be the executing unit for the Angul
project. be find it difficult to agree with the learned
Additional Solicitor General in the light of the factual
position set out hereinabove. The parts/components, i.e.,
the goods in question, did move from the State of Andhra
Pradesh to the State of Orissa - or West Bengal, as the case
may be - and the said movement is occasioned by the supply
contract entered into by BHEL which is in truth a contract
of sale. The manner in which and the documentation under
which these goods were sent to Angul - in particular, Clause
3.3.0 of the Supply Contract do clearly establish that it
was not a case of branch transfer but one of sale of the
said goods to NALCO, pursuant to the supply contract.
Further, because the movement of the said goods has
commenced in the State of Andhra Pradesh, it is in the State
of Andhra Pradesh that the Central Sales Tax is leviable
according to Section 9(1) of the Act. We therefore, agree
with the view taken by the Andhra Pradesh High Court that in
the facts and circumstances concerning NALCO and NTPC
[Farakka] contracts and the terms thereof, the direct
despatch of goods by the Hyderabad unit to Angul or Farakka
constitutes an inter-State sale with in the leaning of
Section 3(a) and that tax thereon is leviable in the State
of Andhra Pradesh according to Section 9(1) of the Act.
The Andhra Pradesh Tribunal and High Court have stated
that there are as many as forty eight contracts during the
relevant assessment years and that though the contracts and
other documents relating to these contracts have not been
filed or have not been filed in full, the parties before
them did not dispute that "the salient features of the
contracts and the pattern of transactions ...are
substantially similar to the two contracts, i.e., NALCO and
NTPC contracts." The correctness of this statement has not
been challenged by either party before us.
So far as Civil Appeals Nos.5362-68 of 1996 are
concerned, the issues raised therein are identical to the
issues raised in Civil Appeals Nos.5369-75 of 1996 except
the direction asked for by BHEL far adjustment of tax
amounts between the concerned States in such a manner that
appropriate tax is collected in the State wherein it is
lawfully leviable and the State which is not entitled to
collect the tax but has yet collected it unlawfully, refunds
the same to BHEL or sends it to the State wherein it is
lawfully due and payable. We see no valid objection to
making such a direction. In fact, such a direction was made
by this Court in K.G. Khosla and Company Limited [supra].
Accordingly, there will be a direction to the above effect.
All refunds and adjustments consequent upon the judgment of
Andhra Pradesh High Court in Tax Revision Cases Nos.195-201
of 1989 shall be carried out and given effect to by the
parties within three months from today. In case of
disagreement or dispute, if any, in this regard, it is open
to the parties in approach the Andhra Pradesh High Court for
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 18
appropriate orders. If so approached, the High Court shall
hear the affected parties and pass appropriate orders which
shall be final and binding between the parties, subject to
any orders to the contrary by this Court.
Accordingly, Civil Appeals Nos.5369 of 1996 are
dismissed and Civil Appeals Nos.5362-68 of 1996 are disposed
of with the aforesaid direction regarding adjustment/refund
of taxes between the concerned States [who are parties to
these appeals].
P A R T = I I I
In this part, we shall deal with the controversy
between BHEL and Orissa. Three batches of appeals, viz.,
civil appeals arising from Special Leave Petitions (C)
Nos.5071-74 of 1991, 16840-49 of 1995 and Civil Appeals
Nos.629-30 of 1994 are concerned with this controversy. Of
these three batches of appeals, the third batch, Civil
Appeals Nos.629-30 of 1994 pertaining to Assessment Years
1983-84 and 1984-85 has become infructuous for the reason
that the assessment orders questioned therein have been set
aside by the Orissa High Court which has remanded the
matters to the assessing officer. Accordingly, these appeals
are dismissed as infructuous. Civil appeals arising from
Special Leave Petitions 71-74 of 1991 are preferred against
the judgment of the Orissa Sales Tax Tribunal and they
pertain to Assessment Years 1984-85 and 1985-86. Civil
appeals arising from Special leave Petitions (C) Nos.16840-
49 of 1995 pertain to Assessment Years 1988-89 to 1993-94.
These appeals are directed against the orders of assessment
made by the Orissa authorities under the Orissa Sales Tax
Act and against certain notices issued under the said Act.
The controversy between the State of Orissa and BHEL arises
in the following circumstances: BHEL has undertaken a number
of works in the State of Orissa for setting up power
generation plants. In each case, there are two contracts,
viz., a supply contract and a service contract. The pattern
of all these contracts is practically the same as the NALCO
contracts referred to hereinabove. The stand of the State of
Orissa is that the sale of the machinery and equipment
stipulated under the supply contracts is a sale within the
State of Orissa and, therefore, exigible to tax under the
Orissa Sales Tax Act. The learned counsel for the State of
Orissa says that there is many a reason in support of the
said stand - which he indeed wanted us to consider.
According to the learned counsel, the terms and conditions
of the supply contracts and other attendant circumstances do
establish that the sale of the machinery and equipment
[specified in the supply contracts] has taken place within
the State of Orissa and not in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce. We do not, however, think it necessary to
refer to the said material in view of the Order we are
proposing in these matters. It is enough if we deal with the
reasoning of the Tribunal contained in the judgment [under
appeal on the first batch of these appeals] upholding the
stand taken by the Orissa State in these matters. The
reasoning of the Tribunal, in short, is this: initially a
Letter of Intent was issued by the Orissa State, or by the
customer in the State of Orissa [to take a instance, NALCO],
on the basis of which BHEL commenced the work. The formal
contracts [supply contract and service contract] were
entered into much later. Under the Letter of Intent and the
formal contracts:
"The assessee [BHEL] agreed to send
goods from outside the State both
in Railway and through lorries on
road to the Materials Manager,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 18
NALCO who used to make endorsement
of such goods in favour of the
assessee and there after the
assessee used to bring it from
common carrier and keeps the same
in their stock at the work site of
the assessee at Angul where from
such parts are assembled in
manufacturing process of the
Captive Power Plants and Smelter
Division of the Plant of NALCO...
The crux of the entire case hinges
mainly on the decision of the
ground Nos.1, 2 and 3. The settled
law is that contract cf sale
U/s.3(a) of the Central Act must
itself cause, the movement of goods
which must be occasioned in
accordance with the forms of
contract of sale. In the instant
case, whether the goods despatched
were the goods contracted has to be
decided first before attracting the
provisions of Section 3(a) of the
Central Act. To determine on this
point, the intentions of the
parties as embodied in the letter
of intent and the subsequent
contract are most valuable material
and as such require minute
verification of the terms of
contract."
The Tribunal then referred to the Letter of Intent
issued on June 3, 1982 in respect of NALCO contract and the
correspondence that passed between the parties and to the
machinery and equipment mentioned in the annexures to the
Letter of Intent and the formal contract - and then
proceeded to observe:
"So it is to be meticulously
analysed whether the goods so
despatched are embodied in the
agreement of sale either in the
letter of intent dated 2.6.82 or in
the contract dated 15..3.85.....
From the facts of the present case,
it is seen that items agreed to be
purchased have been enumerated in
annexures 1 and 2 as stated above
whereas the goods to be sold are
not the DUs as claimed by the
assessee. So their cannot be a sale
of inter-state, i.e., the goods
which actually moved in the instant
case, i.e., with regard to the DUs
(despatchable units). The
contention of the learned standing
counsel was verified with respect
to the invoice found at page 40 of
the paper book (Vol.3). It is seen
from the said invoice that it
relates to the supply generator
which does not find place in the
annexure A. So also at page 41 of
the paper book (Vol.3) there is
another invoice for supply of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 18
bearing pedestal (H&P) and at page
45 for supply of loose items and
bearing pedestal and at page 53
Turbine components. Those D.Us do
not find place in Annexure-I. So,
the contention of the learned
counsel for the assessee in this
regard cannot be accepted."
Having thus ruled out Section 3, the Tribunal held that
the matter has to he examined in the light of Section 4. It
observed that inasmuch as on the date of Letter of Intent or
the date of execution of formal contracts, much of the
equipment/machinery agreed to be supplied was not in
existences, It is a contract relating to unascertained or
future goods. Purporting to apply the principles of the Sale
of Goods Act, the Tribunal held, the property in the goods
passed at Angul in the State of Orissa and not anywhere
outside the State of Orissa. The Tribunal opined that the
property in the goods passed to NALCO "inside the State of
Orissa after they are prepared and got ready for sale", In
this connection, the Tribunal took note of the fact that the
Railway receipts and other documents in respect of goods
sent by Rail or by Lorry to Angul were made out in the name
of NALCO and that after receiving the said goods, NALCO
endorsed them to the work-site. On the basis of these facts,
the Tribunal held that the sale has taken place inside the
State of Orissa and that being intra-State sale is exigible
to Orissa Sales Tax.
We find it difficult to appreciate the reasoning and
approach of the Tribunal. The first and main ground upon
which it has been held that it is not an inter-State sale is
that the goods sent [by rail or road] do not answer the
description of the goods mentioned in the annexure to the
LOI/supply contract. Obviously, the annexure mentions only
the major items of machinery and equipment. These major
items cannot be transported as such; transport has to be
effected in sections and parts and assembled at the spot.
For that reason, it cannot be said that the goods
transported are not the goods agreed to be supplied. It is
nobody’s case that BHEL supplied some other goods than the
goods agreed upon. Having thus erroneously excluded Section
3 of the Central Sales Tax Act, the Tribunal went to Section
4 and held that in the circumstances, the sales must be held
to have taken place inside the State of Orissa. The
discussion about endorsement of goods by NALCO to BHEL in
Orissa and so on is rather ambiguous. Indeed, we need not
pursue this discussion further for the reason that both Sri
Mohanty and Sri V.A.Mohta, appearing for the State of
Orissa, stated frankly that they cannot support the
reasoning of the Tribunal. The learned counsel,however,
submitted that in view of the several facts and reasons
mentioned by them, the conclusion of the Tribunal is
correct. The learned counsel submitted that NALCO contract
was a turn-key contract; that having regard to the terms and
conditions of the Letter of Intent, the formal contracts and
the correspondence which passed between the parties, it must
be held that the sale of the said machinery and equipment
has taken place within the State of Orissa. Learned counsel
also submitted that the factual basis upon which the Andhra
Pradesh High Court has rendered its decision is not admitted
by or acceptable to the State of Orissa. They pointed out
that State of Orissa was not made a respondent to the writ
petitions filed by BHEL in the Andhra Pradesh High Court
which are the subject-matter of Civil Appeals Nos.5362-68 of
1996 and that there are a number of facts and features upon
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 18
which it has to be held that the conclusion arrived at by
the Orissa Tribunal is correct though not its reasoning.
Counsel further submitted that the question whether a
particular sale is an inter-State sale or an intra-State
sale is a question of fact and is not a matter to be
adjudicated by this Court in a writ petition under Article
32 of the Constitution. They submitted that on this ground
alone these appeals should be dismissed and BHEL should be
asked to pursue the remedies provided by the Orissa Act.
They pointed out that some of the appeals are preferred
directly against the assessment orders or against the
notices issued by the assessing authorities under the Orissa
Act and that there is no reason why this Court should
entertain those appeals. It is also submitted that as
against the judgment of the Tribunal, BHEL could have
approached the Orissa High Court and that there is no
particular reason why the judgment of the Tribunal is sought
to be challenged directly in this Court under Article 136 of
the Constitution.
There can be no dispute about the proposition that the
question whether a particular sale is an inter-State sale or
an intra-State sale is essentially a question of fact. It
must be said, at the same time, that it is not a pure
question of fact inasmuch as the fact of a given case have
to be examined in the light of the provisions contained in
Section 3 of the Central Sales Tax Act. The main reason for
entertaining the present appeals under Article 136 of the
Constitution is the grievance of BHEL that the same
transaction of sale is being subjected not only to Central
Sales Tax more than one State that the Orissa State is
treating the very same transaction of sale as an intras-
State sale and levying the Orissa State Sales Tax thereon.
The grievance cannot be said to be not justified. The
dispute is not only between BHEL and the States, it is also,
in a sense, a dispute between the States inter se.
For the reasons given above, Civil Appeals Nos 7353-
56/96 arising from S.L.P. (C) Nos 5071-74 of 1941 are
allowed and the matter remitted to the Tribunal. It is made
clear that we have not expressed any opinion on the merits
of these appeals. All that we have done is to clarify the
legal principles [Part-I] and indicate the errors in the
approach of the Orissa Tribunal. The Tribunal shall now hear
the parties and dispose of the appeals according to law. The
Tribunal shall dispose of the appeals as early as possible
preferably within four months from today.
So far as civil appeals arising from Special Leave
Petitions (C) Nos.16840-49 of 1995 are concerned, it is
enough to direct that the proceedings impugned in these
appeals shall remain stayed for a period of six months
within which period we expect the Orissa State Sales Tax
Tribunal to render its decision pursuant to our. Orders. The
authorities will be entitled to proceed with the matter
after the expiry the six months in accordance with law.
These appeals are disposed with the above direction. We may
mention that the learned Additional Solicitor General had
also challenged the validity of Section 5(2)(AA) of the
Orissa Sales Tax Act. The attack was based upon the ratio of
the Constitution, Bench decision in Ganon Dunkerley and
Company Limited v. State of Rajasthan (1993 (1) S.C.C.364).
In view of the directions made by us in these matters,
however, the said issue becomes academic. That may arise if
and when the Orissa authorities include the inter-State
sales in the turn-over of the assessee [BHEL] determined
under the Orissa Sales Tax Act.
It may also he mentioned that no further orders are
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 18
called for in Writ Petition (C) No.1608 of 1987 in the light
of the directions and clarifications contained in this
judgment.
There shall be no order as to costs in any of these
matters.