Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
STEEL AUTHORITY OF INDIA LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ORISSA & ORS. ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25/02/2000
BENCH:
S.P.Bharucha, S.N.Phukan, Ruma Pal
JUDGMENT:
BHARUCHA, J.
Before it was held to be unconstitutional on 28th
April, 1993, Section 13AA of the Orissa Sales Tax Act read
thus : 13-AA : Deduction of tax at source from the
payment to works contractor
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in Section 13
or any other law or contract to the contrary, any person
responsible for paying any sum to any contractor for
carrying out any works contract in pursuance of a contract
between the contractor and (a) Central Government or any
State Government, or (b) any local authority, or (c) any
authority or Corporation established by or under a statute,
or (d) any Company incorporated under the Companies Act,
1956 (1 of 1956) including any State or Central Government
undertaking, or (e) any Co-operative Society or any other
Association registered under the Societies Registration Act,
1860, (21 of 1860)
shall at the time of credit of such sum to the account
of the contractor or at the time of payment thereof in cash
or by issue of a cheque or draft or any oter mode, whichever
is earlier, deduct an amount towards sales tax equal to two
percentum of such sum in respect of the works contract :
Provided that if the value of the works contract does
not exceed rupee one lakh, no such deduction shall be made.
(2) While making deduction as referred to in
sub-section (1), the deducting authority shall grant a
certificate to the contractor in the form prescribed and
shall send a copy thereof to the Sales Tax Officer within
whose jurisdiction the works contract is executed.
(3) The amount deducted from the Bills or Invoices
shall be deposited into the Government Treasury within one
week from the date of deduction in such form or challan as
may be prescribed.
(4) Such deposit into the Treasury shall be adjusted
by the Sales Tax Officer towards the sales tax liability of
the Works contractor and would also constitute a good and
sufficient discharge of the liability of the deducting
authority to the contractor to the extent of the amount
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
deposited.
(5) If any person contravenes the provisions of
sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) or sub-section (3) of
this Section, the Sales Tax Officer shall, after giving him
an opportunity of being heard, by an order in writing,
impose on such person penalty not exceeding twice the amount
required to be deducted and deposited by him into Government
Treasury.
Section 13AA, as it was then read, was struck down by
the High Court of Orissa on 28th April, 1993 in the case of
Brajendra Mishra vs. State of Orissa & Ors., [1994] 92 STC
17. The High Court held that Section 13AA did not provide
any mechanism to exclude a transaction from its purview even
if, ultimately, the transaction was not at all liable to the
levy of sales tax. In other words, even in the case of a
pure and simple labour contract or service contract where
the question of sale would not arise, the person responsible
for making any payment to a contractor had no option but to
deduct two per cent of such sum towards sales tax. Though a
transaction which might not be a sale at all was made liable
for levy of sales tax, yet in respect of that transaction
power had been conferred to make deduction of two per cent
from the amount to be paid. In the absence of any
discretion with the authority and in the absence of any
mechanism by which the contractor could approach any
authority and obtain a certificate to the effect that the
transaction did not amount to a sale, the deduction of two
per cent from the amount could not but be held to be grossly
discriminatory and confiscatory in nature and, therefore,
the same had to be struck down. The High Court added that
by conferring arbitrary, unbridled and uncanalised powers on
the person concerned to deduct two per cent from the sum
payable to the contractor, irrespective of the question
whether, ultimately, the transaction was liable for payment
of any sales tax at all, could not be held to be a levy of
tax under any valid legal provision. It was true that the
deduction of two per cent under Section 13AA was to be
ultimately adjusted where the transaction in question was
liable for levy of sales tax, but where the transaction was
not at all liable for levy of sales tax, there the question
of adjustment would not arise and, therefore, the deduction
would be confiscatory in character and effect and it could
not be held to be a valid provision within the legislative
competence of the legislature imposing the tax and
authorising the collection thereof. A bare reading of
Section 13AA made it explicitly clear that the amplitude of
the incidence of tax had been widened so as to include
transactions which were outside the sphere of taxation
available to the State legislature under Entry 54 of List II
of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. Inasmuch as
even in respect of a purely labour contract or service
charges, Section 13AA authorised deduction of two per cent
from the bills of the contractor, it could not but be held
to be unconstitutional and void. The decision of the High
Court was accepted and Section 13AA was replaced on 4th
October, 1993 in the following terms, which are now under
challenge. 13-AA : Deduction of tax at source from the
payment to works contractors
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in Section 13
or any other law or contract to the contrary, any person
responsible for paying any sum to any contractor
(hereinafter referred to in this section as the deducting
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
authority) for carrying out any works contract which
involves transfer of property in goods, in pursuance of a
contract between the contractor and
(a) Central Government or any State Government, or (b)
any local authority, or (c) any authority or Corporation
established by or under a statute, or (d) any Company
incorporated under the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956)
including any State or Central Government undertaking, or
(e) any Co-operative Society or any other Association
registered under the Societies Registration Act, 1860 (21 of
1860).
shall, at the time of credit of such sum to the
account of the contractor or at the time of payment thereof
in cash or by issue of a cheque or draft or any other mode,
whichever is earlier, deduct an amount towards sales tax
equal to (four percentum) of such sum in respect of the
works- contract, if the value of the works contract exceeds
rupee one lakh.
(2) While making deduction as referred to in
sub-section (1), the deducting authority shall grant a
certificate to the contractor in the form prescribed and
shall send a copy thereof to the Sales Tax Officer within
whose jurisdiction the works-contract is executed.
(3) The amount deducted from the Bills or Invoices
shall be deposited into a Government Treasury within one
week from the date of deduction in such form or challan as
may be prescribed.
(4) Such deposit into Government Treasury shall be
adjusted by the Sales Tax Officer towards the Sales Tax
liability of the contractor and would also constitute a good
and sufficient discharge of the liability of the deducting
authority to the contractor to the extent of the amount
deposited.
(5)(a) Where, on an application being made by the
contractor in this behalf, the Commissioner is satisfied
that any works contract of the nature referred to in
sub-section (1) involves both transfer of property in goods
and labour or service or involves only labour or service
and, accordingly, justifies deduction of tax on a part of
the sum in respect of the works-contract or, as the case may
be, justifies no deduction of tax, he shall, after giving
the contractor a reasonable opportunity of being heard,
grant him such certificate as may be appropriate, in the
manner prescribed :
Provided that nothing in the said certificate shall
affect the assessment of the sales tax liability of the
contractor under this Act.
(b) Where such a certificate is produced by a
contractor before the deducting authority, until such
certificate is cancelled by the Commissioner, the deducting
authority shall either make no deduction of tax or make the
deduction of tax as the case may be, in accordance with the
said certificate.
(6) If any person contravenes the provisions of
sub-section (1) or (2) or (3) or of clause (b) of sub-
section (5), the Sales Tax Officer shall, after giving him
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
an opportunity of being heard, by an order in writing impose
on such person penalty not exceeding twice the amount
required to be deducted and deposited by him into government
treasury.
The appellant has a steel plant at Rourkela in the
State of Orissa. A vast modernisation programme has been
implemented there. The appellant has entered into contracts
with parties in India and abroad for the design and
engineering of plant and equipment and for the manufacture
of plant, equipment, components, machinery and spares which
will be incorporated into the contracts for erecting the
modernised system and plant. In other words, it has entered
into, inter alia, works contracts. One of such works
contractors was M/s Mukund Iron and Steel Works Ltd.
(hereinafter called the Mukund). The contract between the
appellant and Mukund was for the design, engineering,
manufacture, supply, transportation, erection, installation,
testing and commissioning of a basic oxygen furnace plant.
The value thereof was Rs. 532 crores. According to the
appellant, the break-up thereof is as follows: (a) Supply
of equipments from States outside Orissa by way of CST
Sales. Central Sales Tax paid in Non-Orissa States. Both
under Section 3(a) and 6(2) of the CST.
Rs. 317 Crores (b) Supply of equipments from other
countries outside India on High Seas Sales basis under
Section 5 of the CST Act
Rs. 16 Crores (c) Supply of Steel by SAIL
Rs. 18 Crores (d) Design Engineering and other
services Rs. 103 Crores
(e) Fabrication, erection, structural, construction,
civil construction, etc. Rs. 78 Crores
Under the terms of Section 13AA, as presently enacted,
the appellant deducted sales tax at source at the rate of
four per cent in respect of payments to Mukund pertaining to
(d) and (e) above. It did not deduct tax at source in
respect of payments under items (a), (b) and (c) for the
reason that they were in respect of inter-State sales,
outside sales and import sales and, therefore, outside the
purview of the Orissa Sales Tax Act. The Commercial Tax
Officer, Rourkela, did not accept this stand of the
appellant and issued to it notices to show cause why penalty
proceedings should not be initiated in respect of the
Assessment Years 1994-95 and 1995-96. The notices were
challenged by the appellant by a writ petition filed in the
High Court of Orissa. At an interim stage, the authorities
were permitted to proceed with the hearing on the show cause
notices but the final order thereon was made subject to the
result of the writ petition. Thereafter, the High Court
ordered that no coercive steps for recovery should be taken
against the appellant. Pursuant to the show cause notices,
the Sales Tax Officer imposed penalties upon the appellant
for the Assessment Years 1994-95 and 1995-96 on the ground
that the appellant should have deducted four per cent of the
totality of its payments to Mukund. The penalties, in the
sum of Rs. 26.98 crores imposed by the order dated 11th
November, 1997 for the Assessment Years 1994-95 and 1995-96,
were challenged by the appellant in a fresh writ petition.
On the earlier writ petition the order under challenge in
the appeal was passed. It held that Section 13AA was not
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
ultra vires the Constitution. On the second writ petition
an order of deposit of fifty per cent of the demand was
made, and that order is separately challenged. Upon the
petition for leave to appeal to this Court, recovery of tax
and penalty was stayed pending the disposal of the appeal.
By virtue of Entry 54 of List II of the Seventh Schedule
read with Article 246 of the Constitution of India, the
States are empowered to levy taxes on the sale or purchase
of goods, other than newspapers. The Forty- sixth Amendment
to the Constitution introduced, inter alia, clause (29A)(b)
in Article 366 of the Constitution; as a result, tax on the
purchase or sale of goods included a tax on the transfer of
property in goods (whether as goods or in some other form)
involved in the execution of a works contract. Article
286(1) of the Constitution states that 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 outside the State or in the course of the import of
goods into, or export of goods out of the territory of
India. Article 286(2) authorises Parliament by law to
formulate principles for determining when a sale or purchase
of goods takes place in any of the ways mentioned in
sub-Article (1). Acting upon this power, Parliament has set
out in Sections 3, 4 and 5 of the Central Sales Tax Act,
1956 principles for determining when a sale or purchase of
goods can be said to take place in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce, when a sale or purchase of goods can be
said to take place outside the State and when a sale or
purchase of goods can be said to take place in the course of
import or export. In M/s Gannon Dunkerley and Co. & Ors.
vs. State of Rajasthan & Ors., (1993) 1 SCC 364, this Court
has held that it is necessary to exclude from the value of a
works contract the value of goods which are not taxable by a
State in view of Sections 3, 4 and 5 of the Central Sales
Tax Act, 1956. The value of goods involved in the execution
of a works contract has to be determined after making these
exclusions from the value of the works contract. With this
background, we turn to analyse Section 13AA as it presently
stands. By reason of sub-section (1) thereof, the person
responsible for paying any sum to any contractor for
carrying out any works contract which involves the transfer
of property in goods (now, for convenience, referred to as
the owner) is obliged to deduct, at the time of credit of
that sum to the account of the contractor or payment thereof
to him, an amount towards sales tax equal to four per cent
of such sum in respect of the works contract, provided the
value of the works contract exceeds rupees one lakh. The
deduction, therefore, is towards the sales tax that is
payable to the State upon the works contract and it is of
four per cent of the value of the works contract.
Sub-section (2) requires the owner to grant to the
contractor a certificate in respect of such deduction. By
reason of sub-section (3), the amount that the owner has
deducted must be deposited by him into the Government
treasury within a week of the deduction. By reason of sub-
section (4), such deposit is required to be adjusted by the
Sales Tax Officer towards the sales tax liability of the
contractor and it constitutes good and sufficient discharge
of the liability of the owner to the contractor to the
extent of the amount deposited. Sub-section (5)(a) permits
the contractor to make an application to the Commissioner of
Sales Tax and if the Commissioner is satisfied thereon that
any works contract involves both transfer of property in
goods and labour or service or involves only labour or
service and, accordingly, justifies deduction of tax on a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
part of the sum in respect of the works contract or, as the
case may be justifies no deduction of tax, he shall, .
grant him such certificate as may be appropriate in the
manner prescribed. To the extent of the amount mentioned in
the certificate the owner must, by reason of sub-section
5(b), make no deduction of tax. The Commissioner is
required only to see whether the works contract involves
transfer of property in goods and labour or service or only
labour or service. If it involves only labour or service,
he must certify that no deduction of tax shall be made and
if it involves both transfer of property in goods and labour
or service, he shall certify the deduction of a part of the
sum payable by the owner to the contractor. Sub-section
5(a) takes no account of the fact that even if a works
contract involves both transfer of property in goods and
labour or service, State sales tax may not be payable upon
the entire value ascribable to the transfer of property in
goods for the reason that it is in the course of inter-State
sales, outside sales or sales in the course of export; nor
is such account taken elsewhere in Section 13AA.
The form of the certificate which is referred to in
sub-section(5) of Section 13AA is to be found in Form XI-C
of the Orissa Sales Tax Rules. Part I thereof is the form
for the application for the grant of a certificate and Part
II is the form of the certificate itself. Both the forms
make it clear that all that the Commissioner is required to
look at is whether any labour or service is involved in the
works contract. Under sub-section(6) of Section 13AA, an
owner who acts contrary to the provisions of sub-sections
(1), (2), (3) and (5)(b) thereof is liable to penalty not
exceeding twice the amount required to be deducted and
deposited .. The owner, therefore, should he contravene
sub-section (1), would be liable to a penalty not exceeding
twice the amount that he should have deducted under that
sub-section. In Bhawani Cotton Mills Ltd. vs. State of
Punjab & Anr., (1967) 3 SCR 577, this Court said, - If a
person is not liable for payment of tax at all, at any time,
the collection of a tax from him, with possible contingency
of refund at a later stage, will not make the original levy
valid; because, if particular sales or purchase are exempt
from taxation altogether, they can never be taken into
account, at any stage, for the purpose of calculating or
arriving at the taxable turnover and for levying tax.
There can be no doubt, upon a plain interpretation of
Section 13AA, that it is enacted for the purposes of
deduction at source of the State sales tax that is payable
by a contractor on the value of a works contract. For the
purposes of the deduction neither the owner nor the
Commissioner who issues to the contractor a certificate
under Section 13AA(5) is entitled to take into account the
fact that the works contract involves transfer of property
in goods consequent upon of an inter-State sale, an outside
sale or a sale in the course of import. The owner is
required by Section 13AA(1) to deposit towards the
contractors liability to State sales tax four per cent of
such amount as he credits or pays to the contractor,
regardless of the fact that the value of the works contract
includes the value of inter-State sales, outside sales or
sales in the course of import. There is, in our view,
therefore, no doubt that the provisions of Section 13AA are
beyond the powers of the State legislature for the State
legislature may make no law levying sales tax on inter-State
sales, outside sales or sales in the course of import. It
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
was contended on behalf of the State that the appellant, as
owner, had no locus to challenge the validity of Section
13AA. It was contended that the moneys that were deducted
were moneys that belonged to the contractor and it was only
the contractor who could successfully lay such a challenge.
The contention ignores the fact that the appellant owner is
aggrieved and damnified by the penalty that has been imposed
upon it under sub-section (5) for contravention of
sub-section (1) of Section 13AA. It has, therefore, the
standing to contest the validity of Section 13AA. It was
then contended by learned counsel for the State that the
Preamble of the Orissa Sales Tax Act took account of the
fact that that statute was limited to the sale or purchase
of goods in Orissa. Unfortunately, it would appear that the
State legislature overlooked its limitations, even as
contained in the Preamble, when enacting Section 13AA. It
was also contended that the deduction that was required to
be made under Section 13AA(1) was of four per cent of the
amount credited or paid by the owner to the contractor,
whereas the sales tax liability of the contractor thereon
was eight per cent. It was contended that this requirement
proceeded on the assumption that half of the amount was not
liable to tax being in respect of inter-State sales, outside
sales and export sales. No such assumption based on the
rate of tax at any given point of time can be made. Section
13AA should have been precisely drafted to make it clear
that no tax was levied on that part of the amount credited
or paid that related to inter-State sales, outside sales and
sales in the course of import, particularly after the
previous Section 13AA had been struck down by the Orissa
High Court for the reason that it was couched in terms wider
than were permissible to the State legislature and that
judgment was accepted.
In the result, the appeal is allowed and the judgment
and order under appeal is set aside. Section 13AA of the
Orissa Sales Tax Act, as amended with effect from 4th
October, 1993, is struck down as being beyond the purview of
the Orissa State Legislature. Such amount as has been
collected from the appellant under the provisions of Section
13AA shall forthwith be refunded by the State. There shall
be no order as to costs. Civil Appeal Nos. 1748-1749 &
2606 of 1998 : Following the judgment just delivered in
C.A. No. 1750 of 1998, the appeals are allowed and the
orders under appeal are set aside. Such amount as has been
collected from the appellant under the provisions of Section
13AA shall forthwith be refunded by the State. No order as
to costs.