Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
APPELLATE ASSTT. COMMR. ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
L.M.S. SADAK TAMBY & CO., ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/10/1974
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
CITATION:
1974 AIR 2344 1975 SCR (2) 427
1975 SCC (3) 371
ACT:
Madras Act 37 of 1964, Section 2(1)-Levy of tax on the sale
of tanned hides and skins-Tax on the amount for which hides
and skins were last purchased in the untanned condition-No
distinction between purchases made inside or outside the
State-Tax, whether contravenes Article 286 of the
Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
In Firm A.T.B. Mehtab Majid & Co. v. State of Madras, [1963]
Supp. 2 S.C.R. 435, the Supreme Court struck down Rule 16 of
the Madras General Sales Tax Rules made under Madras General
Sales Tax Act, IX of 1939, on the ground that where a tanner
buys raw hides and skins inside the State and sells them
after tanning he pays the tax only on the purchase price of
raw hides and skins whereas a dealer who purchases raw hides
and skins from outside the State and sells the tanned hides
and skins pays the tax on the price for which tanned hides
and skins are sold and therefore pays more tax. In order to
deal with this situation, the Madras Legislature passed Act
11 of1963. As section 2(1) of this Act provided a uniform
rate of 2 per cent for sales during the whole of the period
between 1st April 1955 and 31st March 1959, it was struck
down by the Supreme Court in A. Hajee Abdul Shakoor & Co. v.
State of Madras [1964] 8 S.C.P.. 217.
In order to get over this objection section 2(1) had been
enacted by Madras Act 37 of 1964. Under this section the
tax is leviable on the first seller of dressed hides and
skins at the rate of one and nine-sixteenth per cent for the
period between 1st April 1955 and 31st March 1957. For the
period between 1st April 1957 and 31st March 1959 it is to
be at the rate of two per cent. The tax is on the amount
for which such hides and skins were last purchased in the
untanned condition.
On the question whether section 2(1) of Madras Act 37 of
1964 contravenes Article 286 of the Constitution,
HELD : What is taxed under the impugned statute is not the
purchase of raw hides and skins whether inside or outside
the State. In both the cases it is On the first sale of
tanned hides and skins. Even if a person purchases raw
hides and skins inside the State and sells it after tanning
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he pays the tax on the sale of the tanned hides and skins
and not on the Purchase of raw hides and skins though the
amount of tax payable is calculated on the amount for which
such raw hides and skins were purchased. Similar is the
position with regard to raw hides and skins purchased
outside the State. Thus there is no discrimination between
the sellers of tanned hides and skins whether the raw hides
and skins out of which they were tanned were purchased
inside the State or outside the State. The tax is not
leviable even in the case of raw hides and skins imported
from another State but on hides and skins tanned from those
raw hides and skins. Only the tax is levied on the amount
for which the raw skins and hides ware purchased. This
amount is used only for the purpose of quantification of the
tax. The impugned statute does not suffer from the vice of
taxation of the imparted raw hides and skins. [430 C-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 1366, 1850
to 1863 & 2550 to 2551 of 1969, 1355 & 1356 of 1970,and 1292
and 1293 of 1973.
From the Judgments & Order dated the 1st March/26th
February’ 1969/29th July/2nd August, 1971 of the Madras High
Court in W.Ps. Nos. 1895 of 1966, 1084, 1192, 1194, 1800,
1896, 1898, 1907-1910, 2089 of 1966, 646 of 1967, 3536-3537
of 1965 and Tax Cases Nos. 57 & 58 of 1969 and 191 & 197 of
1971 respectively.
428
Govind Swaminathan, Advocate General for the State of Tamil
Nadu, A. V. Rangam, K. Venkataswami, N.S. Sivam and A.
Subhashini, for the appellants (In all the Appeals & SLP No.
1974/70)
A. Abdul Karim and K. Rajendra Choudhary, for the
respondents (In 1366, 1850-53 & 1858-1861/69)
K. V. Pillai, for the respondents (In 1854/69)
E.C Agarwala, for the applicant/intervener.
A.K. Sen and S. Gopalakrishnan, for respondents (In 2550-
51169, 1355-1356/70 and 1292-1293/73).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
ALGIRSWAMI, J.-These appeals raise the question of the
validity of section 2(1) of Madras Act 37 of 1964. That
section reads as follows
"Special provisions in respect of tax on sale of dressed
hides and skins in certain cases :-
Notwithstanding anything contained in the Madras General
Sales Tax Act, 1939 (Madras Act IX of 1939) (hereinafter
referred to as the said Act), or in the rules made
thereunder (hereinafter referred to as the said Rules), in
respect of sale of dressed hides and skins (which were not
subjected to tax under the said Act as raw hides & skins),
the tax under the said Act shall be levied from the dealer
who in the State is the first seller in such hides and skins
not exempt from taxation under sub-sec.
(3) of Sec. 3 of the said Act:-
(i) for the period commencing on the 1st April 1955 and
ending on the 31st March 1957, at the rate of one & nine-
sixteenth per cent, and
(ii) for the period commencing on the 1st April-, 1957 and
ending on the 31st March 1959, at the rate of two per cent,
of the amount for which such hides and skins were last
purchased in the- untanned condition."
In order to understand the implications of this section it
is necessary to refer to certain other provisions of law and
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two previous decisions of this Court. Rule 16 of the Madras
General Sales Tax, Rules made under Madras Act IX of 1939
read as follows :
"In the case of untanned hides and/or skins
the tax under Sec. 3(1) shall be levied from
the dealer who is the last purchaser in the
State not exempt from taxation under Sec. 3(3)
en the amount for which they are bought by
him.
2(i) In the case of hides or skins which have
been tanned outside the State the tax under
Sec. 3(1) shall be levied from the defer who
in the State is the first dealer in such hides
or skins not exempt from taxation under Sec.
3(3) on the amount for which they are sold by
him.
429
(ii)In the case of tanned hides or skins which
have been tanned within the State, the tax
under sec. 3(1) shall be levied, from a person
who is the first dealer in such hides or skins
not exempt from taxation under Sec. 3(3) on
the amount for which they are sold by him.
Provided that, if he proves that tax has
already been levied under Sub-rule (1)on the
untanned hides and skins out of which the
tanned hides and skins had been produced he
,hall not so liable. "
This Rule was struck down by this Court on the ground that
where a tanner buys raw hides and skins inside the State and
sells them after tanning he pays the tax only on the
purchase price of raw hides and whereas a dealer who
purchases raw hides and skins from outside the State and
sells the tanned hides and skins pays the tax on the price
for which tanned hides and skins are sold and therefore pays
more tax. The judgment of this Court in Firm A.T.B. Mehtab
Majid & Co. v. State of Madras is reported in [1963] Supp.
(2) S.C.R. 435. Thereafter the Madras Legislature passed
Act 11 of 1963 to deal with this situation. Section 2(1) of
that Act reads as follows, :
"Special provision in respect of tax on sale of dressed
hides and skins in certain cases--
Notwithstanding anything contained in the
Madras General Sales Tax Act 1939 (Act IX of
1939) (hereinafter referred to as the said
Act), or in the rules made thereunder
(hereinafter referred to as the said Rules),
during the period commencing on 1st April,
1955 and ending on the 31st March, 1959, in
respect of sale of dressed hides and skins
(which were not subjected to tax under the
said Act as raw hides and skins) the tax under
the said Act shall be levied from the dealer
who in the State is the first seller in such
bides and skins not exempt from taxation under
sub-sec. (3) of Sec. (3) of the said Act at
the rate of two par cent of the amount for
which such hides and skins were last purchased
in the untanned condition."
It would be noticed that this section deals with the soles
during the period between 1st April 1955 and 31st March
1959. From 1st April 1955 to 31st March 1957 the rate of
taxation in Madras State, was one and nine-sixteenth per
cent. As the section provided a uniform rate of two per
cent for sales during the whole of the period between ist
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April 1955 and 31st March 1959 it was struck down by this
Court in A. Hajee Abdul Shakoor & Co. v. State of Madras
[1964] 8 S.C.R. 217) on the ground that for the period from
1st April, 1955 to 31st March, 1957 there was a
discrimination between a tanner who tans from raw hides and
skins purchased inside the State who would pay only one and
nine sixteenth per cent on the raw hides and skins purchased
by him and a tanner who purchased skins and hides from
outside the State who would have to pay at the rate of two
per cent under this section. It
430
is to get over this objection that the section first
referred to has been passed.
Under the section the tax is leviable on the first seller of
dressed hides and skins at the rate of one and nine-
sixteenth per cent for the period between 1st April 1955 and
31st March 1957. For the period between 1 st April 1957 and
31st March 1959 it is to be at the rate of two percent. The
tax is on the amount for which such hides and skins were
last purchased in the untanned condition. It would be
noticed that it does not make any distinction between the
purchase of raw hides and skins inside the State and outside
the State. The tax itself is on the first sale of the
tanned hides and skins but it is calculated on the basis of
the purchase per price of the raw hides and skins whether
they word purchased inside the State or outside the State.
The out of-State purchase of raw hides and skins is not
taxed. That would be subject to tax under the Central Sales
Tax Act. But what is taxed under the impugned statute is
not the purchase of raw hides and skins whether inside or
outside the State. In both cases it is on the first sale of
tanned hides and skins. Even if a person purchases raw
hides and skins inside the State and sells it after tanning
he pays the tax on the sale of the tanned hides and skips
and not on the purchase of the raw hides and skins though
the amount of tax payable is calculated on the amount for
which such raw hides and skins were purchased. Similar is
the position with regard to raw hides and skins purchased
outside the State. Thus there is no discrimination between
the sellers of tanned hides and skins whether the raw hide
and skins out of which they were tanned were purchased
inside the State or outside the State. The tax is not
leviable even in ,case of raw hides and skins imported from
another State but on hides and skins tanned from those raw
hides and skins. Only the tax is levied on the amount for
which the raw skins and hides were purchased. This amount
is used only for the purpose of quantification of the tax.
The tax is not on the purchase of the raw hides and skins.
We do not, therefore, sea how the tax levied on the sale of
tanned hides and skins contravenes Articles 286 of the
Constitution. Actually as the value of hides and skins in
their tanned condition is higher than the value of raw hides
and skins from out of which they are tanned the person
importing raw hides and skins from outside the State can
have no grievance that the tax is levied not on the amount
for which the tanned hides and skins are sold but on the
amount for which raw hides and skins have been purchased.
Nor does he pay a higher tax than the person who sells hides
and skins tanned from locally purchased raw hides and skins.
It was open to the State to have levied the tax on the sale
price of tanned hides and skins in which case there could
have been no argument that it was a tax on the imported Raw
hides and skins. But the State chose to levy the tax on the
basis of the purchase price of raw hides and skins which
would mean lesser tax. it does not suffer from the vice of
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taxation of the imported raw hides and skins.
We are unable to understand the view of the High Court that
if the sale price were taxed and rebate were given then
there would be no objection to the tax. Wa do not
understand how that can be done.
431
We asked the learned advocates appearing for the respondents
to tell us how that can be done and they were not able to do
so. The cost of conversion of the raw hides and skins to
tanned hides and skins might differ from tanner to tanner.
It is much easier to get figures. for the purchase price of
the raw hides and skins or the sale price of the tanned
hides and skins than the cost of conversion. As the scheme
of taxation is not on the basis’ of the sale price of tanned
hides and skins the suggestion of the High Court cannot be
adopted. We, therefore, hold that the High Court was in
error in striking down the impugned provision of law.
In S.L.P. No. 1974 of 1970, special leave to appeal is
granted and the appeal allowed.
The appeals are allowed with costs.
Appeals allowed.
V.M.K.
432