Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF GUJARAT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. RAIPUR MANUFACTURING COMPANY LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/09/1966
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1066 1967 SCR (1) 618
CITATOR INFO :
R 1967 SC1826 (15)
R 1969 SC 348 (3)
RF 1971 SC2054 (1)
F 1973 SC1045 (3,6)
R 1976 SC 10 (9)
R 1976 SC1813 (20)
F 1985 SC1748 (4,11)
R 1992 SC 959 (16)
ACT:
Bombay Sales-tax Act (3 of 1953), s. 2(6)-Dealer-"Carries on
business", test for.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent-Company was carrying on the business of
manufacturing and selling cotton textiles. In 1953-54,
because cloth, the company sold (i) old discarded items such
as stores, machinery, iron scrap,, cans boxes, cotton ropes,
rags etc., (ii) coal; (iii) by-products such as kolsi" or
cinders, and waste caustic liquor. In the case of the first
item the sales were frequent, the volume was large, and the
price realised was credited in the profit and loss account
of the Company, thus indirectly reducing the cost of
production of the textiles. In the case of coal it was a
commodity which the company required for its business and
which had been purchased for use in that business. There
was, however, ,no evidence as to what was the total quantity
of coal purchased by the company and what percentage thereof
was sold except that the value of the coal sold exceeded Rs.
16,000. In the case of the third item though the by-
products could not be used by the company, they were goods
which were produced continuously and regularly day after day
in the Company’s manufacturing process, and for which, there
was a market. The sales-tax authorities brought the
turnover from the sales of all these commodities to tax
under the Bombay Sales-tax Act, 1953. The High Court, on a
reference, held in favour of the Company.
in appeal to this Court,
HELD : (1) In disposing of miscellaneous old and discarded
items, the Company was not carrying on business of selling
those items. In order that receipts from the sale of a
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commodity may be included in the taxable turnover it must be
shown that the assessee was carrying on business in that
particular commodity,, and to prove that fact it must be
established that the assessee had an intention to carry on
business in that commodity. The characteristics of volume,
frequency, continuity and regularity indicating an intention
to continue the activity of carrying on the transactions
with a profit motive must exist. But no test is decisive of
the intention to carry on the business, and the intention
has to be inferred in the light of all the circumstances.
Where a person comes to own in the course of his business of
manufacturing or selling a commodity, some other commodity
which is not a. by-product or a subsidiary pro-duct of that
business, and he sells that commodity, cogent evidence that
he has intention to carry on business of selling that
commodity would be -required. In the present case, no
presumption can be raised, on the facts, that when the goods
were acquired there was an intention to carry on the
business in those discarded materials, nor can it be said
that the goods became part of or an incident of the main
business of -selling textiles., as they were not by-products
or subsidiary products arising in the course of
manufacturing textiles. [621 E-H; 624 B-C, E]
(ii) There were no circumstances existing at the time when
the coal was purchased, or which have come into existence
late, which establish an intention to carry on a business of
selling coal. The burden of proving that the Company was
carrying on the, business of selling coal lay
619
upon the Sales-tax Authorities and if they held against the
Company merely because of the frequency and the volume of
the sales, the inference cannot be sustained. [626 A-C]
(iii) The "Kolsi" or cinders and the waste caustic
liquor were byproducts or subsidiary products in the course
of manufacture of textiles and sale thereof was incidental
to the business of the Company. An intention to carry on
business in those commodities may be reasonably attributed
to the Company and the turnover with respect to those two
commodities would be liable to sales-tax. [624 G-H; 625 E-F]
Case law referred to.
Observation on p. 685 paragraph 7 in Gorsi Dairy V. State of
Kerala [(1961) 12 S.T.C. 683] not approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 603 of
1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
November 14th/15th, 1963 of the Gujarat High Court in Sales-
tax Reference No. 3 of 1962.
N. S. Bindra and R. H. Dhebar, for the appellant.
S. T. Desai, C. C. Gandhi and I N. Shroff, for the
respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. M/s Raipur Manufacturing Company hereinafter called
’the Company’-carries on the business of manufacturing and
selling cotton textiles. In the account year 1953-54 the
Company besides selling cloth sold coal and 25 different
items of discarded or unserviceable goods and waste products
from the factory. The goods sold may be classified under
three heads :
(1) Old containers-cans, boxes etc ; discarded stores,
machinery & iron scrap ; miscellaneous discarded items, such
as, cotton ropes’, chindis (rags) etc.
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(2) Kolsi (cinders), waste caustic liquor.
(3) Coal.
The Sales-tax authorities brought the turnover from sales of
those commodities to tax under the Bombay Sales Tax Act,
1953 and their order was confirmed in appeal by the Sales
Tax Tribunal. The Tribunal was of the view that "a cotton
textile mill manages to collect unserviceable articles in
the course of manufacture of cloth" and since these articles
have to be sold, if it is to survive as an economic unit,
sales of those articles must be regarded "as part of the
business of the textile mill" if the transactions of sale
are large and frequent. The Tribunal did not deal with the
sale of coal independently of the sale of other goods.
At the instance of the Company, three questions were
referred to the High Court of Gujarat, out of which one
alone is material in this appeal:
620
.lm15
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case,
was the Tribunal correct in holding that the applicants were
liable to be taxed on the sale of stores and old machinery
and other sundry articles ?"
The High Court answered the question in the negative. With
special leave, the State of Gujarat has appealed to this
Court.
Section 5 of Bombay Act 3 of 1953 imposes a general tax at
specified rates on his taxable turnover in respect of sale
of goods upon every dealer who was liable to pay general tax
under the Bombay Sales Tax Ordinance No. III of 1952 whose
turnover in respect of all the sales exceeds Rs. 30,000/-
during the year commencing on April 1, 1952. The expression
"dealer" is defined in s. 2(6) as meaning "any person who
carries on the business of selling goods in the State of
Bombay, whether for commission, remuneration or otherwise -
- -". Section 2(8) defines "goods" as meaning "all kinds of
movable property other than newspapers, actionable claims,
stocks, shares and securities, and includes all materials,
articles and commodities." Section 2(13) defines "sale" as
meaning "a sale of goods made within the State of Bombay for
cash or deferred payment or other valuable consideration and
includes any supply by a society or club or an association
to its members on payment of price or on fees or
subscription, but does not include . . ." Section 2(14)
defines "sale price" as meaning "the amount payable to a
dealer as valuable consideration for the sale of any goods,
less any sum allowed as cash discount according to trade
practice, . . .". "Turnover" is defined in s. 2(20) as
meaning "the aggregate of the amounts of sale price received
and receivable by a dealer in respect of any sale of goods
made during a given period after deducting the amount, if
any, refunded by a dealer to a purchaser, in respect of any
goods purchased and returned by the purchaser within the
prescribed period."
Under the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1953, the aggregate of the
price received and receivable by a person carrying on
business of selling goods is liable to be included in his
taxable turnover. It follows as a corollary that in the
turnover of a person carrying on the business of selling one
commodity will not be included the price received by him by
sale of another commodity unless he carries on the business
of selling that other commodity. That is so, because,
within the meaning of s. 2(6) of Bombay Act 3 of 1953 to be
a dealer a person must carry on the business of selling
those goods, price whereof is sought to be included in the
turnover. In other words, he must carry on the business of
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selling a commodity before his turnover from sale of that
commodity is taxable. As pointed out by this Court in State
of Andhra Pradesh v. M/s Abdul Bakshi and Bros.(’) a person
to be a dealer must be engaged
(1) (1964] 7 S.C.R. 664: A.I.R.1965 S.C. 531.
621
in the business of buying or selling or supplying goods.
The expression "business" though extensively used in taxing
statutes, is a word of indefinite import. In taxing
statutes, it is used in the sense of an occupation, or
profession which occupies the time, attention and labour of
a person, normally with the object of making profit. To
regard an activity as business there must be a course of
dealings, either actually continued or contemplated to be
continued with a profit motive, and not for sport or
pleasure. Whether a person carries on business in a
particular commodity must depend upon the volume, frequency,
continuity and regularity of transactions of purchase and
sale in a class of goods and the transactions must
ordinarily be entered into with a profit motive. By the use
of the expression "profit motive" it is not intended that
profit must in fact be earned. Nor does the expression
cover a mere desire to make some monetary gain out of a
transaction or even a series of transactions. It predicates
a motive which pervades the whole series, of transactions
effected by the person in the course of his activity. In
actual practice, the profit motive may be easily discernible
in some transactions : in others it would have to be in-
ferred from a review of the circumstances attendant upon the
transaction. For instance, where a person who purchases a
commodity in bulk and sells it in retail it may be readily
inferred that he has a profit motive in entering into the
series of transactions of purchase and sale. A similar
inference may be raised where a person manufactures finished
goods from raw materials belonging to him or purchased by
him, and sells them. But where a person comes to own in the
course of his business of manufacturing or selling a
commodity, some other commodity which is not a byproduct or
a subsidiary product of that business and he sells that
commodity, cogent evidence that he has intention to carry on
business of selling that commodity would be required. Where
a person in the course of carrying on a business is required
to dispose of what may be called his fixed assets or his
discarded goods acquired in the course of the business, an
inference that he desired to carry on the business of
selling his machinery or fixed assets or discarded goods
would not ordinarily arise. To infer from a course of
transactions that it is intended thereby to carry on
business ordinarily the characteristics of volume,
frequency, continuity and regularity indicating an intention
to continue the activity of carrying on the transactions
must exist. But no test is decisive of the intention to
carry on the business: in the light of all the circumstances
an inference that a person desires to carry on the business
of selling goods may be raised.
A large number of cases were cited at the Bar in support of
the contention that the goods sold by the Company must be
deemed to have been sold as part of the business of the,
Company, and on that account the turnover in respect thereof
was liable to taxation.
622
It is not necessary to enter upon a detailed examination of
those cases, because a majority of those cases are merely
illustrative of the general principles set out hereinbefore.
A few representative cases may be briefly referred to. In
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State of Bombay v. The Ahmedahad Education Society(’)
certain goods manufactured or imported by an Education
Society for the purpose of its own use were, when found
surplus, disposed of at cost, without any profit. The Bom-
bay High Court held that no business of selling or supplying
was intended to be carried on in those goods. In State of
M.P. v. Bengal Nagpur Cotton Mills Ltd.(2) a Company which
carried on the business of manufacturing textiles, supplied
steel and cement on several occasions to their contractors,
who were constructing buildings for the Company, and debited
the price of the materials to the contractor’s account. It
was held that the Company was not liable to pay sales tax as
the Company was not a dealer carrying -on the business of
selling steel and cement. In Commissioner of Sales Tax,
Madhya Pradesh, Indore v. Ram Dulare Balkishan and Bros,.(3)
a transport operator who sold unserviceable cars, trucks,
tyres and motor accessories was held -not to be a dealer
even though the activity was "continuous, serious and
large." In The State of Mysore v. The Bangalore Woollen,
Cotton and Silk Mills Co. Ltd,. (4) the assessee a
manufacturer of textiles who sold unserviceable goods like
waste cotton, useless ropes, scrap iron, worn out and broken
parts of machinery, old paper, and tubes, was held not to be
a dealer. In that case, no distinction (presumably because
there was no evidence in that case justifying the
distinction) was made between waste cotton and other
commodities sold.
It is clear from these cases that to attribute an intention
to carry on business of selling goods it is not sufficient
that the assessee was carrying on business in some commodity
and he disposes of for a price articles discarded, surplus
or unserviceable. It was urged, however, on behalf of the
State that where a dealer with a -view to reduce the cost of
production disposed of unserviceable articles used in the
manufacture of goods and credits the price received in his
accounts, he must be deemed to have a profit motive, for it
would be uneconomical for the business to store
unserviceable articles and to survive as an economic unit.
But the question is of intention to carry on business of
selling any particular class of goods. Undoubtedly from the
frequency, volume, continuity and regularity of transactions
carried on with a profit motive, an inference that it was
intended to carry on business in the commodity may arise.
But it does not arise merely because the price received by
sale of discarded goods enters the accounts of the trader
and may on an overall view enhance Ms total profit, or
indirectly reduce the cost of production of goods in the
business of selling of which he is engaged. An attempt to
realize price by sale of
(1)7 S.T.C. 497.
(2)14 S.T.C. 202.
(2) 12 S.T.C. 333.
(4) 13 S.T.C. 106.
623
surplus unserviceable or discarded goods does not
necessarily lead to an inference that business is intended
to be carried on in those goods, and the fact that
unserviceable goods are sold and not stored so that badly
needed space is available for the business of the assessee
also does not lead to the inference that business is
intended to be carried on in selling those goods.
Counsel for the State strongly relied upon a judgment of
this Court in State of Andhra Pradesh v. H. Abdul Bakhi &
Bros.(’) in support of the contention that goods purchased
for the purpose of being used in a manufacturing process are
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liable to purchase tax since the manufacturer must be deemed
to be carrying on business of purchasing those goods. It
was held in H. Abdul Bakhi’s case() that a person who
consumes a commodity bought by him in the course of his
trade or uses it in manufacturing another commodity for
sale, is a dealer, since the Legislature has not made sale
of the very article bought by a person a condition for
treating hint as a dealer. But the principle of that case
has no application in the present case. In that case this
Court declined to accept the view which prevailed with the
High Court of Andhra Pradesh that unless a person is
carrying on business both of purchasing and selling the same
commodity, purchase of articles used in the course of
manufacture of another commodity is not in the course of
carrying on the business of purchasing that article.
Counsel for the State also relied upon the judgment of the
Kerala High Court in Gosri Dairy, Vyttila v. The State of
Kerala(2). In -that case the assessee firm which was
registered as a dealer in dairy products sold a part of its
live-stock every year and replaced the same by fresh stock.
The question arose whether the proceeds of such sales were
to be treated as part of the turnover of the assessee liable
to sales tax. It was held that the frequency, regularity
and volume of sale transactions by the assessee were such
that they could be regarded as "an activity in the course of
the business of the assessee", and therefore the assessee’s
sales of cattle were part of its business. The Court in
that case inferred that the transactions by the assessee in
respect of its assets disclosed an intention to carry on the
business in those assets. We are not concerned to decide in
this case whether the ultimate decision of the Court was
correct, but we are unable to agree with the view expressed
by the High Court that "as regards sales tax all the sales
of a dealer in the course of his business attract taxation".
Merely because a person is carrying on business of selling a
commodity, it cannot be inffered from sale by him of another
commodity in the course of that business that he is carrying
on business in that other commodity also.
(1) A.I.R. 1965 S.C. 53. (2) 12 S.T.C. 683.
624
We may now consider whether the turnover from the goods sold
by the Company was taxable. The goods sold broadly fall, as
already observed, under three heads: viz., old discarded
machinery, stores and scrap and miscellaneous goods ; coal ;
and byproducts and subsidiary products such as "kolsi" and
waste caustic liquor, though not usable by the factory are
goods regularly and continuously produced in its
manufacturing processes. We are unable to hold that in
disposing of miscellaneous old and discarded items such as
stores, machinery, iron scrap, cans, boxes, cotton ropes,
rags etc. the Company was carrying on business of selling
those items of goods. These sales were frequent and the
volume was large, but it cannot be presumed that when the
goods were acquired there was an intention to carry on the
business in those discarded materials ; nor are the
discarded goods, by-products or subsidiary product of or
arising in the course of the manufacturing process. They
are either fixed assets of the Company or are goods which
are incidental to the acquisition or use of stores or
commodities consumed in the factory. Those goods are sold
by the Company for a price which goes into the profit and
loss account of the business and may indirectly be said to
reduce the cost of production of the principal item, but on
that account disposal of those goods cannot be said to
become part of or an incident of the main business of
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selling textiles. In order that receipts from sale of a
commodity may be included in the taxable turnover, it must
be established that the assessee was carrying on business in
that particular commodity, and to prove that fact it must be
established that the assessee had an intention to carry on
business in that commodity. A person who sells goods which
are unserviceable or unsuitable for his business does not on
that account become a dealer in those goods, unless he has
an intention to carry on the business of selling those
goods.
But in dealing with the liability to pay tax on the price
for sale of "kolsi" and "waste caustic liquor" different
considerations arise. As found by the High Court "kolsi"
(cinders) are small pieces of coal which are not fully
burnt. It appears that "kolsi" is not capable of "extreme
fuel potency required in the furnaces" of the appellant
Company, but it is still capable of being used in "lighter
furnaces". This "kolsi" is discharged from the furnaces
regularly and continuously day after day. The Company
collects that "kolsi" and sells it to intending purchasers
in bulk. "Kolsi" would be appropriately regarded as a
subsidiary product in the course of manufacture. "Kolsi"
results from coal which remains unburnt : it is on that
account a subsidiary product. When such subsidiary product
is turned out in the factory regularly and continuously and
is being sold from time to time, an intention to carry on
business in "kolsi" may be reasonably attributed to the Com-
pany. In this connection, the principle in the judgment of
the
625
Bombay High Court in The Aryodaya Spinning and Weaving Com-
pany Ltd v. The State of Bombay(’) would apply. In that
case a textile manufacturing Company produced "cotton waste"
in the course of its manufacture of cloth and yarn. The
cotton waste which was not required for use in the factory
was disposed of regularly and the Bombay High Court regarded
that as a subsidiary product or incident of the business of
the assessee. The normal business of the assessee in that
case was the business of manufacturing and selling cotton
textiles and cotton yarn, but it could still be regarded as
allied or incidental to business activity. The same
principle, in our judgment, applies to the disposal of
"kolsi" which was discharged continuously and regularly out
of the furnaces of the appellant Company.
"Waste caustic liquor" is also regularly and continuously
accumulated in the tanks in the process of mercerisation of
cloth. As pointed out by the High Court, sodium hydroxide
in water is used in different processes for mercerisation of
cloth. The liquid is kept in a tank in which cloth is
dipped. After this process is over, cloth passes through
other tanks where water is sprinkled over it and in that
process some of the sodium hydroxide falls into the tank.
The liquid is a light solution of sodium hydroxide which
cannot be used in the process of mercerisation, nor for
other process in the factory of the Company. This waste
material which is called "waste caustic liquor" has still a
market amongst other manufacturers or launderers. For
reasons which we have already set out in dealing with
"kolsi", we are of the view that waste caustic liquor may be
regarded as a by-product or a subsidiary product in the
course of manufacture and the sale thereof is incidental to
the business of the Company and the turnover in respect of
both "kolsi" and "waste caustic liquor" would be liable to
sales tax.
It appears from the statement furnished that coal of the
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value of Rs. 16,083/- was sold by the Company under 12 bills
in the year 1953-54. Coal is purchased by the Company for
the purpose of lighting its furnaces and heating boilers. A
part of the coal purchased was sold. The Tribunal merely
stated in respect of all the items of goods sold that
looking to the volume and frequency of their sale, the
Company should be regarded as a dealer in respect of those
goods. Unless there is evidence to show that there was an
intention to carry on business of selling coal, the mere
fact that coal of the value exceeding Rs. 16,000/- was sold
will not by itself make the Company a dealer carrying on
business in coal. We have no evidence on the record as to
what the total quantity of the coal purchased by the Company
was, and what percentage thereof was sold. No investigation
has been made as to the circumstances in which the coal came
to be sold. Mere sale of a com-
(1) 11 S.T.C. 141.
626
modity which a Company requires for the purpose of its
business and which has been purchased for use in that
business will not justify an inference that a business of
selling that commodity was intended, unless there are
circumstances existing at the time when the commodity was
purchased or which have come into existence later which
establish such an intention. It may be pointed out that the
burden of proving that the Company was carrying on business
of selling coal lay upon the Sales-tax authorities and if
they made no investigation and have come to the conclusion
mere because of the frequency and the volume of the sales,
the inference cannot be sustained.
On that view of the case, the answer recorded by the High
Court on the first question will be modified as follows :
"In the negative, except as to ’kolsi’ and waste caustic
liquor".
There will be no order as to costs in this appeal.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed in part.