Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 4
PETITIONER:
G. GILDA TEXTILE AGENCY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/04/1962
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAS, S.K.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1402 1963 SCR (2) 248
ACT:
Sales Tax-Agent of nonresident principal-Liability Madras
General Sales Tax Act, 1939 (Mad. 9 of 1939), s. 14A.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was an agent in Andhra Pradesh of certain non-
resident principals who were dealers in cloth. received
commission in some cases on the orders booked and in others
on all the sales effected by the principals in the terri-
tory. One kind of transactions it carried on in course of
its business related to goods sold by its principal to
buyers in the State. The appellant in these transactions,
besides booking orders, received the railway receipts from
the outside principals, handed them order to the buyers and
some times collected and transmitted the amount to the
outside principals. The appellant was assessed to sales tax
on its turnover for the years 1954-55 and 1955-56. The
question was whether in carrying on such transactions the
appellant was a dealer within s. 14A of the Madras General
Sales Tax Act, 1939. The Tribunal held that the appellant
was such a dealer and the High Court in affirming that
decision held that the non-resident principals were doing
the business of selling in the State and the sales in
question were by the appellant either on behalf the
principal or on its own behalf and that the-appellant was in
either cass liable.
Held, that the High Court had taken the right view the
matter.
Section 14A of the Act made the agent fictionally liable as
a dealer in the circumstances as specified by it, and the
agent was liable irrespective of whether the turn-over of
its business was more or less than the minimum prescribed by
the Act.
Mahadayal Premchandra v. Commercial Tax Officer Calcutta,
[1959] S. C. R. 551, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 397 and 398
of 1961.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 4
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
September 19, 1958, of the Andhra
249
Pradesh High Court in Tax Revision Cases Nos. 62 and 63 of
1956.
B. Sen and B. P. Maheshwari, for the appellants.
K. N. Rajagopal Sastri and D. Gupta for the respondents.
1962. April 19. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-These two appeals with special leave have
been filed by Messrs. G. Gilda Textile Agency, Vijayawada,
against the State of Andhra Pradesh. They are directed
against a common order of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh
in two revisions filed under s. 12-B(1) of the Madras
General Sales Tax Act, 1939 (9 of 1939).
The matter relates to the levy of sales tax from the
appellant on its turn-over for ,the years, 1954-55. and
1955-56. The appellant was an agent of several non-resident
principals, on whose behalf it booked orders and dealt with
the indents. There were agreements between the non-resident
principals and the appellant, and three such agreements
contained in letters have been produced as instances, and
are marked Exs. A-3, A-3(a) and A-3(b). Under these agree-
ments, the appellant was appointed as indenting agent in
Andhra Pradesh for cloth merchants, who, admittedly, resided
and carried on business outside Andhra Pradesh. It was
required to book orders and to forward them to the
principals, receiving commission on sale of goods despatched
to Andhra Pradesh. In some cases, this commission was only
available on the orders booked by the appellant and in
others, on all the sales effected by the principals in this
territory. The appellant did business in three different
ways, which have been described as three separate categories
in the case. In the first
250
category, the appellant took delivery of the goods found
buyers and delivered the goods to the buyers. This a
category of sales was hold to be within the Madras General
Sales Tax Act and the appellant, liable to the tax. The
appellant does not question this part of the decision. The-
second category was in which it merely booked orders and
forwarded them to Bombay and the principals sent the goods
with the railway receipts through the bank to the purchasers
in Andhra Pradesh. The connection of the appellant was Dot
considered sufficient to constitute it the ’,,dealer", as
defined in the Madras General Sales Tax Act, and such sales
were omitted from the turnover. No dispute, therefore,
arises about this category. The third category related to
goods sold by the outside dealers to buyers in the State.
The appellant in these transactions, besides booking orders,
received the railway receipts from the outside principal,
handed them over to the buyers and sometimes collected and
transmitted the amounts to the outside principal. The
period involved is covered by the Sales Tax Validation Act,
1956 (7 of 1956), and no question under the Constitution
arises. The only question is whether the appellant comes
within s. 14-A of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, and it
liable to tax Act, as a dealer.
It may be pointed out that the appellant did not produce any
correspondence between it and the non-resident principals or
the covering letters which must have been sent along with
the railway receipts. The Tribunal under the Madras General
Sales Tax Act, therefore, came to the conclusion that the
railway receipts which had been sent, must have been
endorsed by the sellers either in favour of the appellant or
in blank, to enable the appellant to claim the goods from
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 4
the railway or to negotiate them. The Tribunal, before,
hold that the appellant
251
must be deemed to be a "dealer" under s.14-A and thus liable
to tax under that section.
Section 14-A of the Act reads as follows
"In the case of any person carrying on the
business of buying and selling goods in the
State but residing outside it (hereinafter in
this section referred to as a ’non-resident’),
the provisions of this Act shall apply subject
to the following modifications and additions,
namely:
(i) In respect of the business of the non-
resident, his agent residing in the State
shall be deemed to be the dealer.
(ii) The agent of a non-resident shall be
assessed to tax or taxes under this Act at the
rate or rates leviable thereunder in respect
of the business of such non-resident in which
the agent is concerned, irrespective of the
amount of the turn-over of such business being
less than the minimum specified in Section 3,
sub-section (3).
(iii) Without prejudice to his other rights
any agent of a non-resident who is assessed
under this Act in respect of the business of
such non-resident may retain out of any moneys
payable to the non-resident by the agent, a
sum equal to the amount of the tax or taxes
assessed on or paid by the agent.
(iv) Where no tax would have been payable by
the non-resident in-respect of this business
in the State by reason of the turnover there
of being less
252
than the minimum specified in Section 3, sub-
section (3), he shall be entitled to have the
amount of the tax or taxes paid by his agent
refunded to him or application made to the
assessing authority concerned, or where more
than one such authority is concerned, to such
one of the authorities as may be authorised in
this behalf by the State Government by general
or special order.
(v) Such application shall be made with in
twelve months from the end of the year in
which payment was made by or on behalf of the
non-resident of the tax or taxes or any part
thereof."
The section makes the agent liable fictionally as a dealer
in the circumstances laid down in the section, viz., that be
is acting on behalf of a nonresident person doing business
of buying or selling goods in the State. The agent is
assessed to tax under the Act in respect of the business of
such non-resident in which the a cut is concerned,
irrespective of whether the turnover of such business is
more or less than the minimum prescribed in the Act. It is
contended that the first thing to decide is whether the non-
resident could be said to be carrying on the business of
selling in Andhra Pradesh in the circumstances of this case,
and reliance is placed upon a decision of this Court
reported in Mahadayal Premchandra v. Commercial Tax Officer,
Calcutta (1) In that case, this Court was called upon to
consider the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941 (6 of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 4
1941). There also, the agent was sought to be made liable
in respect of the sale of goods belonging to non-resident
(1) (1959) S. C. R, 551,
253
principal under a section which may be taken to be in pari
materia with the section, we are considering. This Court
held that the Kanpur Mille, whose agent the appellant in the
case was, were not carrying on any business of selling goods
in West Bengal and were selling goods in Kanpur and
despatching them to West Bengal for consumption. This part
of the judgment is called in aid to show that the first
condition of the liability of the agent in the present case
under the Madras General Sales Tax Act is not fulfilled.
Unfortunately for the appellant, in this case there is a
clear finding by the High Court that the non-resident
principals were carrying on the business of selling in
Andhra Pradesh. The High Court has observed that if the non-
resident principals took out railway receipts in their own
Dames, thereby manifesting their intention to remain the
owners and to retain. the control over the goods, the sales
must be taken to have been completed or to have taken place
in the State of Andhra Pradesh. From this, the High Court
came to the conclusion that the non-resident principals were
doing business of selling in Andhra Pradesh. The High Court
pointed out that inasmuch as the appellant after securing
the orders received the railway receipts from the sellers
and banded them over to the buyers and sometimes collected
the consideration and transmitted the same to the sellers,
the sales thus resulting must be hold to have taken place in
the State either on behalf of the appellant or on behalf of
the non resident principals, and whichever view be correct,
the appellant as agent was liable as a dealer within the
Act. Either it was a dealer itself, or it became a dealer
by the fiction created by s. 14-A, since the non-resident
principals had done business in each case in the State of
Andhra Pradesh. The case of this Court on which reliance
has been placed, turned on its own facts, and a
254
finding there cannot be used in the present case, because no
finding on the facts of one case can be applied to the facts
of another.
Sub-section (2) of s. 14-A was said to be connected with the
opening part, and it was argued that the tax was leviable on
the turnover relating to the business of a nonresident,
which was carried on by the non-resident in the taxable
territory. In our opinion, once the finding is given that
the non-resident principal carried on the business of
selling in Andhra Pradesh and the appellant was the admitted
agent through whom this business was carried on, the rest
follows without any difficulty. The High Court, in our
opinion, was, therefore, right in upholding the levy of the
tax from the appellant, in view of our decision that the
appellant came within the four corners of s. 14-A in
relation to the transactions disclosed in the last category.
The appeals fail, and are dismissed with costs, one hearing
fee.
Appeals dismissed.
255