Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. KALYANI BREWERIES LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL& ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 15/09/1997
BENCH:
S.P. BHARUCHA, M. JAGANNADHA RAO
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 15TH DAY OF SEPTEMBER,1997
Present:
Hon’ble Mr. Justice S.p.Bharucha
Hon’ble Mr. Justice M.Jagannadha Rao
Sunil Gupta, Mrs.A.K.Verma, Advs. for M/S.JBD& Co., Advs.
for the appellant
B.Sen, Sr.Adv., Dilip Sinha, and J.R.Das.,Adv. with‘him for
the Respondents.
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgement of the Court was delivered:
J U D G M E N T
S.P. BHARUCHA
Under challenge in this appeal by special leave is a
judgement and order of the West bengal Taxation Tribunal.
The Assessment Year with which we are concerned is the
Assessment Year 1974-75. The Assessee, the appellant,
brewed and sold beer in beer bottles. For the beer it gave
to its purchasers one invoice and another for "the deposit
on bottles" there is another item, of "truck charge". It
was the case of the assessee that the rate per bottle of the
deposit was adjusted so as to cover the cost of the bottles
that were purchased by it. Upto 1st March 1974, the rate
was Rs. 4.80 per dozen bottles but, due to the increase in
their cost, the rate was raised to Rs.9/- per dozen bottles
with effect from 2nd March, 1974. The amounts received as
such deposit were credit to an account entitled "Deposit on
Bottles" in the assessee’s ledger. When the empty bottles
were returned by customers, refunds were made at the same
rate. There was no time limit for the return and bottles
taken from the assessee in one year might be returned was
adopted: Deposited for three months were kept in the
aforementioned account as a liability and the balance in
that account as a liability and the balance in that account
was transferred to an account called the "Bottle Deposit
Forfeited Account". The amount of bottle deposit receipts,
returns and forfeiture were shown by the assessee thus:
"1.4.74- By Balance Rs.6,84,152.00
Add Deposit Rs.30,57,143.00
less Refund Rs.37,41,295.00
less amount forfeited Rs16,55,355.00
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Balance on 31.3.75 Rs.9,22,966.00
The commercial Tax Officers treated the amount of
Rs.16,55,355/-, being the forfeited deposit amount
aforestated, as a part of the assessee’s sales realisations
and taxed it. The Assistant commissioner confirmed the
order, as did the West Bengal Commercial Taxes Tribunal.
The matter was carried to the West Bengal Taxation Tribunal,
whose order is under appeal. Both Tribunals placed emphasis
upon the fact that it had been admitted by the assessee that
there was no time limit for the return of the empty bottles.
They found that the transaction in respect of the beer
bottles was not one of a bailment as contended by the
assessee but one of sale.
Learned counsel for the appellant relied upon
Benjamin’s sale of Goods (Third Edition) where it is stated,
"It is a question of construction whether sacks, barrels,
bottles and similar containers in which goods are sold are
themselves the subject of a sale or are merely bailed to the
buyer, remaining at all times the property of the seller or
the original manufacturer. It is not decisive of the issue
that a charge is made for the non-return of the container,
nor will the payment of such charge necessarily transfer the
ownership of the container to the person who pays it".
learned counsel also referred to the Curzon’s Dictionary of
Law (Fourth Edition) which defines a deposit to mean "a sum
of money paid on terms under which it will be repaid...".
Great emphasis was laid be learned counsel on the judgement
of this court in United Breweries Ltd. vs. State of
A.P.,1997 (3) S.C.C.530, & Raj Steel and others vs. State of
A.P. and others, 1989 (3) S.C.C.262. In learned counsel’s
submission, what had to be seen was whether the transaction
in respect of the beer bottles was a sale. The intention of
the assessee transaction was not to sell the beer bottles.
The fact that the relevant invoice spoke of a deposit and
the fact that so substantial a sum as Rs.11 lakhs had been
refunded from out of the Bottles Deposit Account to
customers who returned the empties showed that there was
only a bailment of the beer bottles to the customers.
The United Breweries Ltd. case, decided by a Bench of
three learned Judges, involved a brewer making and selling
beer in bottles, In respect of the beer bottles the brewer
had issued circulars to its buyers. Four things were found
by this court to emerge therefrom, namely-
"(1) The refundable deposits were
being collected on the bottles and
the creates.
(2) The appellant advised its
customers to collect forty paise
per bottle from the customers as
deposit.
(3) The customers were advised to
collect the empty bottles from the
consumers ands return them to the
appellant.
(4) The empty bottles and creates
were to be taken back by the trucks
of the appellant, the drivers of
which were authorised to issue a
receipt for the empties against
which the appellant would issue
credit notes. At the time of the
booking of the next consignment,
the customers would get advantage
of the credit notes.
This arrangement suggested to this Court "a continuous
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process by which the appellant will sell beer to its
customers in bottles and crates and collect the sale price
of beer and also deposits for the crates and the bottles.
The customers, in their turn, will sell beer to the
customers and apart from the price of the beer, will recover
forty paise per bottle as deposit to ensure return of the
bottles. The bottles will ultimately be taken back by the
appellant for which the trucks will be sent and the credit
notes will be given to the customers for return of the
empties. This scheme of recycling the bottles and crates
will keep down the costs and ultimately will have the effect
of reducing the price of beer and encouraging the customers
to buy beer in large quantities". It was also found, as a
matter of fact, that the rate at which the customer was
required to make the deposit for the beer bottles was less
than the cost of the beer bottles. Upon this basis this
court came to the conclusion that the intention of the
brewer did not appear to have been to sell the beer bottles;
on the contrary, the brewer was trying to ensure that the
bottles in which the beer was supplied to customers through
its customers were brought back to it so that they could be
used again. It was in this context that it was said, "It
does not appear that any time-limit was fixed for return of
bottles in this case. But, even if such limit was fixed,
it is well settled that time is not of the essence of the
contract unless the parties specifically make it so".
In Raj Steel and Others vs. State of A.P. and others ,
1989 (3) S.S.C. 262, this court was again concerned with
brewers who sold beer in bottles and the question was
whether the bottles were exigible to sales tax. Learned
counsel for the assessee relied upon the following
observations therein.
"7. It is commonly accepted that a
transaction of sale may consist of
a sale of the product and a
separate sale of the container
housing the product with respective
sale considerations for the product
and the container separately; or it
may consists of a sale of the
product and a sale of the container
but both sales being conceived of
as integrated components of a
single sale transaction; or, what
may yet be a third case, it may
consists of a sale of the product
with the transfer of the container
without any sale consideration
therefor. The question in every
case will be a question of fact as
to what are the nature and
ingredients of the sale. It is not
right in law to pick on one
ingredients of the sale. It is not
right in law to pick on one
ingredient only to the exclusion of
the others and deduce from it the
character of the transaction. For
example, the circumstance that the
price of the product and the price
of the container are shown
separately may be evidence that two
separate transactions are
envisaged, but that circumstances
alone cannot be conclusive of the
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true character of the transaction.
It is not unknown that traders may,
for the advantage of their trade,
show what is essentially a single
sale transaction of product and
container, or a transaction of a
sale of the product only with no
consideration for the transfer of
the container, as divisible into
two separate transactions, one of
sale of the product, and the other
a sale of the container, with a
distinct price shown against each.
Similarly where a deposit is made
by the purchaser with the dealer,
the deposit may be pursuant to
transaction where there is no sale
of the container and its return is
contemplated, and in the event of
its not being returned the security
is liable to forfeiture.
Alternatively, it may be a case
where the container is sold and the
deposit represents the
consideration for the sale, and in
the event of the container being
returned to the dealer the deposit
is returned by way of consideration
for the resale. In every case, the
assessing authority is obliged to
ascertain the true nature and
character of the transaction upon a
consideration of all the facts and
circumstances pertaining to the
transaction. That the problem
almost always requires factual
investigation into the nature and
ingredients of the transaction has
been repeatedly emphasised by this
court. In Hyderabad Deccan
Cigarette Factory vs. State on
Andhra Pradesh, (1966) 17 S.T.C.624
(SC) this court said:
It is not possible to state as a
proposition of law that whenever
particular goods were sold in a
container the parties did not
intend to sell and buy the
container also. Many cases may be
visualized where the container is
comparatively of high value and
sometimes even higher than that
contained in it. Scent or whisky
may be sold in costly containers.
Even cigarettes may be sold in
silver or gold caskets. It may be
that in such cases the agreement to
pay an extra price for the
container may be more readily
implied. In the present case, if
we may say so with respect, all the
authorities, including the High
Court, dealt with the question as a
question of law without considering
the relevant factors which would
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considering the relevant factors
which would sustain or negative any
such agreement."
This court added that the question whether the packing
material had been sold or merely transferred without
consideration was dependent upon the contract between the
parties. It found ‘hat there was a lack of adequate and
clear factual material and, therefore, remanded the matter
to the assessing authority for fuller investigation.
There can be no doubt that the facts and circumstances
must be ascertained to determine whether or not the assesses
had sold the beer bottles to its customers so as to become
liable to pay sales tax on the price or deposit realised
therefor.
The two factors that may be said to militate agaist the
sale of the beer bottles are, first, the invoices that speak
of the "deposit on bottles" and, secondly, the refund of
Rs.11,62,974.00 out of the aggregate amount of the deposits,
namely, Rs.30,57,143.00.
Now, there is nothing on record which indicates that
the terms under which the deposits would be repaid were
communicated to the assessee’s customers. There is no
suggestion that there was an oral communication of such
terms to the customers or that there was any trade usage in
this behalf. it is difficult to visualise a bailment the
terms whereof are not made known to the bailee. The
forfeiture of amounts in the assessee’s "Deposit on Bottles"
account does not appear to bear out of the assessee’s case
that the empties were returnable at any time. This must
also be taken into account that the customers were required
to deposit for the beer bottles a rate which was exactly
equal to the cost of the bottles; this would suggest the
sale thereof more strongly than the intention to get them
back upon bailment. It seems to us upon these facts and
circumstances that there was really a sale of the bottles to
the customers, the assessee buying back the empties from
some customers. It is, therefore, that the assessee could
show a refund of Rs.11,62,974/- out of the total amount of
deposits, namely, Rs.30,57,143/-. Had there been a bailment
which necessarily pre-supposes that the bailee was aware of
the terms thereof, a large refund would have been shown.
The Judgement in the case of United Breweries Ltd.
proceeded upon the very clear terms of the bailment that
were made known by circulars to the customers. The
judgement found that the intention of the brewer was to get
the empties back, as evidenced by the fact that the rate of
the deposit’ was less that the cost of the beer bottles.
For the reasons aforestated, we are of the view that
the amount of Rs.16,55,355, being the amount shown as
forfeited as aforementioned, was rightly made liable to
sales tax.
The appeal fails and is dismissed. No order as to
costs.