Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF GUJARAT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. KAILASH ENGINEERING CO.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/09/1966
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 547 1967 SCR (1) 543
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1972 SC 744 (13)
D 1974 SC2309 (13)
RF 1976 SC2108 (48)
RF 1977 SC1537 (23)
ACT:
Bombay Sales-tax Act, 1953, s. 27-Contract for the
construction of Railway coach bodies-Provisions in contract
showing property in construction material vesting in Railway
on arrival at site and in coach bodies on completion-
Transaction whether sale or works contract.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent company, which was an engineering concern
with a workshop at Morvi, obtained a contract from the
Western Railway Administration for construction of third
class coaches. Under the contract the respondent
constructed three coaches and submitted a bill which was
properly certified on October 4, 1958, in accordance with
the agreement as to the work done by the respondent. After
the bill had been paid, the respondent wrote to the
Additional Collector of Sales-tax requesting him under
Section 27 of the Bombay Sales-tax Act, 1953 to hold that
the transaction was a works contract and not a sale, so that
no sales-tax was payable under the Act.
The Additional Collector held however that the transaction
was a sale on which tax was payable. Dismissing an appeal
from this decision, the Sales-tax Tribunal took the view
that the general conditions of the contract showed the
ownership of the coach bodies only passed to the Rail when
they were completed and handed over to the Railway, so that
way contract was for supply of coach bodies. Sales-tax was
therefore payable on the price of these coach bodies. Upon
a reference made to it, the High Court held however that the
contract clearly mentioned that the contract was for
performance of work of building, erecting and furnishing
coach bodies on Broad Gauge under frames which already be-
longed to the Railway. The terms of the contract further
showed that as soon as the materials were taken by the
respondent to the site of the construction of coaches, the
ownership in those materials vested in the Railway and all
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that the respondent had to do was to carry out the work of
erecting and furnishing the coach bodies. When the coach
bodies .were ready, the property in them vested in the
Railway automatically without any further transfer of rights
in it to the Railway. The ownership in the ready coach
bodies never vested in the respondent company at all and
although materials for their construction had to be obtained
by it and brought to the site, in purchasing those materials
it was acting more or less in the capacity of an agent !or
the Railway. Accordingly the High Court came to the-
finding that the contract between the parties was one entire
and indivisible contract for carrying out the works specifi-
ed in the agreement and that it did not envisage either the
sale of the materials by the respondent to the Railway, or
of the coach bodies as such; no sales-tax was therefore held
leviable on the transaction.
On appeal to this Court.
HELD : The terms of the contract led to the only inference
that the respondent was not to be the owner of the ready
coach bodies and that the property in those bodies vested in
the Railway even during the process of construction. The
transaction was therefore clearly a works contract which did
not involve any sale. [547 G]
544
Patnaik & Company v. State of Orissa, [1965] 2 S.C.R. 782:
distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 945 of 1965.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
December 14, 1962 of the Gujarat High Court in Sales Tax Re-
ference No. 16 of 1961.
N. S. Bindra and R. H. Dhebar, for the appellant.
M. V. Goswami, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J. This appeal under special leave granted by this
Court arises out of proceedings for assessment of sales-tax
under the Bombay Sales Tax Act III of 1953. Messrs.
Kailash Engineering Co. (hereinafter referred to as "the
respondent") was an engineering concern having their
workshop at Morvi on the meter gauge section of the Western
Railway. They obtained a contract from the Western Railway
Administration for construction of III class passenger
coaches on certain conditions described as the conditions of
tender. Under that contract which was reduced to writing
and was described as an agreement, the respondent
constructed three coaches and submitted a bill which was
properly certified in accordance with the agreement by the
Railway Administration on October 4, 1958. The net value of
the work done by the respondent was certified at Rs.
1,22,035/-. After receipt of this money, the respondent
wrote to the Additional Collector of Sales Tax requesting
him under S. 27 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1953, to hold
that this was a works contract, and that the transaction, in
respect of which the respondent received the money, did not
amount to a sale, so that no sales-tax was payable under
that Act. The Additional Collector held that two questions
fell for determination before him:
(1) Whether the transaction covered by the bill dated 4th
October, 1958, is a sale; and
(2) if it is a sale, whether any tax is payable in respect
of the same.
The Additional Collector answered both the questions in the
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affirmative against the respondent. The appeal before the
Gujarat Sales Tax Tribunal failed; and thereupon, the
respondent sought a reference to the High Court of Gujarat.
The Tribunal referred the following question for the opinion
of the High Court:-
"Whether on a proper construction of the
agreement as a whole and its general
conditions and specification, the work done
and covered by Contract Certificates No.
M/60(1)/B-PRTN, dated 4th October, 1958, for
the perfor-
545
mance of the works of building, erecting and
furnishing 3 B. G. Coaches over the chassis
supplied by the Railway is a works contract
not amounting to sale, or whether it is a
transaction of sale."
The High Court answered the question in favour of the
respondent, holding that the transaction was a works
contract carried out by the respondent and did not amount to
a sale. Consequently, this appeal has been brought up by
the State of Gujarat challenging the correctness of the
decision of the High Court.
The Tribunal, when dealing with the case, mentioned a few of
the terms of the contract entered into between the
respondent and the Western Railway Administration, and,
though there was a provision in one of the clauses of the
agreement that as soon as the plant and materials were
brought on the site where the coaches were to be
constructed, the ownership in them would vest in the
Railway, the Tribunal held that the ownership in those
materials never passed to the Railway because of the
indication given by another clause which provided that on
removal of contractor or on rescission of contract, the
Railway Authorities would be entitled to take possession and
retain all materials, tools, implements, machinery and
buildings. On this basis, the Tribunal held that, from the
general conditions of the contract, it appeared that the
ownership of the coach bodies only passed to the Railway
when completed and handed over to the Railway, so that the
contract was for supply of coach bodies. It was on supply
of these coach bodies that the respondent received the price
of those bodies, and thus received the amount subjected to
sales-tax as sale consideration for those bodies.
The High Court, however, in its judgment, reproduced the
preamble of the contract as well as a large number of
clauses of it to show that in the contract, at every stage,
it was clearly mentioned that the contract was for
performance of work of building, erecting and furnishing
coach bodies on Broad Gauge underframes which already
belonged to the Railway. The terms of the contract showed
that as soon as the materials were taken by the respondent
to the site of construction of the coaches, the ownership in
those materials vested in the Railway and all that the
respondent had to do was to carry out the work of erecting
and furnishing the coach bodies. When the coach bodies were
ready, the property in them vested in the Railway
automatically without any further transfer of rights in it
to the Railway. In fact, the ownership in the ready coach
bodies did not vest in the respondent at all. No doubt, the
materials for building the’ coach bodies had to be obtained
by the respondent and brought to the site of construction,
but the provision that the ownership in those materials
would vest in the Railway as soon as those materials were
brought to the site clearly indicated that the respondent,
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in purchasing those materials, was
546
acting more or less in the capacity of an agent for the
Railway. While the materials were at site, the effect of
vesting of their ownership in the Railway was that if they
were destroyed or damaged, the risk had to be borne by the
Railway, even though the Railway might have been entitled to
reimburse itself, because those materials -and goods were in
the custody of the respondent on behalf of the Railway. In
fact, under clause 29, there was a specific provision for
the contingency that the materials or plant may be lost,
stolen, injured or destroyed by fire, tempest or otherwise.
This special provision was to the effect that the liability
of the contractor was not to be diminished in any way, nor
was the Railway to be in any way answerable for loss or
damage on the happening of such contingency. This special
provision had to be made, because the ownership in the
materials vested in the Railway, though the contractor was
in actual physical possession of the materials and plant in
order to carry out the works contract. It was for this
reason that a specific provision had to be made that the
contractor would be liable to the Railway if any such loss
occurred.
Taking into account all the terms of the contract as a
whole, the High Court came to the finding that the contract
between the parties was one entire and indivisible contract
for carrying out the works specified in full details in the
agreement, and that it did not envisage either the sale of
materials by the respondent to the Railway, or of the coach
bodies as such.
In this connection, learned counsel for the appellant relied
on the decision of this Court in Patnaik & Company v. State
of Orissa.(1) In that particular case, the contract in
question was for the supply of bus bodies, and it was held
that when the bus bodies were supplied by the contractor and
money received by him, it amounted to a sale. It, however,
appears that the facts and circumstances, on the basis of
which the Court gave that opinion, do not find place in the
case,
Three main circumstances were relied upon in that case for
holding that the transaction amounted to a sale and not to a
works contract. The first circumstance was that the bus
bodies were, throughout the contract, spoken of as a unit or
as a composite thing to be put on the chassis, and this
composite body consisted not only of things actually fixed
on the chassis but movable things like seat cushions, and
other things which could be very easily detached. In the
contract, with which we are concerned, the coach bodies are
not separately described as units or components to be
supplied by the respondent to the Railway. The language
used in the contract everywhere describes the duty of the
respondent to be that of constructing, erecting and
furnishing coach bodies on the underframes supplied. At no
stage does the contract mention that ready coach
(1) [1965] 2 S.C.R. 782.
547
bodies were to be delivered by the respondent to the
Railway. In fact, even during the process of construction
of the coach bodies, the unfinished bodies in process of
erection were treated, under the terms of the contract, as
the property of the Railway.
The second circumstance found in that case was that if some
work was not satisfactorily done and the body builder, on
receipt of a written order, did not dismantle or replace the
defective work or material at his own cost within seven
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days, the Controller was entitled to get the balance of the
work done by another agency and recover the difference in
cost from the body builder; and for this, purpose, the
Controller was entitled to take delivery of the unfinished
body. In the contract before us, as we have already
mentioned in the preceding paragraph, the unfinished bodies
of the coaches were from the earliest stage treated as the
property of the Railway, and there was no question of
ownership of the unfinished body passing to the Railway only
after its seizure by it as was the case in the other
contract in which the property in the unfinished body did.
not pass to the Government till the unfinished body was
seized.
The third circumstance taken into account in that case was
the liability for the loss, if a fire took place and the bus
bodies were destroyed or spoiled. In that case, there was a
provision for insurance of the chassis, but there was no
such provision regarding. insurance of bus bodies, and the
Court inferred that till delivery was made, the bus bodies
remained the property of the appellant on whom the loss
would fall. On the other hand, in the contract with which
we are concerned, the terms envisaged the property in the
unfinished bodies vesting in the Railway, and since those
unfinished bodies were to be in charge of the respondent
during construction, a special provision had to be made
making the respondent responsible for the loss and throwing
upon the respondent the liability to reimburse the Railway
for loss by fire, etc. Thus, the terms of the contract in
this case are markedly different from those which came up
for consideration in that case. Here, we find that all the
terms of the contract lead to the only inference that the
respondent was not to be the owner of the ready coach bodies
and that the property in those bodies vested in the Railway
even during the process of construction. This was,
therefore, clearly a works contract which did not involve
any sale. The decision given by the High Court was correct.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
R.K.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
548