Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MESSRS ASHOK LEYLAND LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MADRAS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/03/1961
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1433 1962 SCR (1) 607
CITATOR INFO :
R 1962 SC1037 (4,5)
RF 1968 SC 331 (12)
D 1968 SC 339 (6)
ACT:
Sales Tax-Inter-State sales before the enactment of the
sales Tax Laws Validation Act-Such sales taxed on the
footing of sales inside the State-Sales found to be inter-
State sales-Validity of assessment after the passing of that
Act Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939 (Mad. 9 of 1939), SS.
2 (h), 22-Sales Tax Laws Validation Act, 1956 (7 of 1956),
S. 2-Constitution of India, Art. 286.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant firm had its factory in the State of Madras,
where it manufactured, assembled and sold motor vehicles,
spare parts and accessories. For the assessment year 1952-
53, the sales tax authority computed the appellant’s taxable
turnover of sales for that year excluding a sum which
represented the value of vehicles etc., sold outside the
State of Madras, but on revision, the taxable turnover was
increased by including a sum which related to certain
transactions with dealers outside the State of Madras on the
ground that the sales covered thereby were made within the
State of Madras and were therefore liable to tax under the
Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939. The appellant claimed
that these sales were in the course of inter-State trade and
commerce and not liable to sales tax by reason of the provi-
sions of Art. 286(2) Of the Constitution of India. The
matter was taken up to the Supreme Court and in the
meantime, the Sales Tax Laws Validation Act, 1956, had been
passed by Parliament. The question was whether the
transactions in question, even if they were considered as
having taken place in the course of inter-State trade, came
within the protection of the Validation Act of 1956 and,
therefore, the assessment in the present case was valid.
The appellant contended (1) that the Validation Act was
applicable only when the law of the State imposed, in
express terms, a tax on the sale or purchase of any goods in
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the course of inter-State trade or commerce, and (2) that
the new S. 22 inserted in the Madras General Sales Tax Act,
1939, by Madras Act 1 of 1957, which operated
retrospectively from January 26, 1950, talked of sales in
which the goods were delivered for consumption in the State
of Madras, and, therefore, the Validation Act did not
operate on sales of an inter-State character other than such
sales.
Held: (1) that the effect of the Sales Tax Laws Validation
Act, 1956, was to liberate the State laws from the
fetter placed on them by Art. 286(2) of the Constitution of
India and enable such laws to operate on their own terms.
Consequently, the transactions in question were liable to
tax under the provisions
608
of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939, and it was not
necessary to provide in that Act in express terms that it
was taxing sales in the course of the inter-State trade.
M. P. V. Sundararamier & Co. v. The State of Andhra
Pradesh and Another, [1958] S.C.R. I422, relied on.
(2) that the transactions in question came within the
definition of sale in S. 2(h) of the Madras General Sales
Tax Act, 1939, and the power to tax conferred on the State
by the charging section, S. 3, was not affected by S. 22 in
view of sub-s. (2) therein.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 446 of 1958.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 18, 1956, of
the High Court of Judicature at Madras in Tax Revision Case
No. 93 of 1955.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General of India, S. Swaminathan
and K. L. Mehta, for the appellants.
V. K. T. Chari, Advocate-General of Madras, M. M. Ismail
and T. M. Sen, for the respondent.
N. A. Palkhivala, J. B. Dadachanji, S. N. Andley,
Rameshwar Nath and P. L. Vohra, for the Intervener (Tata
Loco & Engineering Co. Ltd., Bombay).
1961. March 28. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
S. K. DAB, J.-This is an appeal on a certificate granted
by the High Court of Madras. The firm of Messrs. Ashok
Leyland Ltd., Ennore, is the appellant before us. For
brevity and convenience, we shall hereinafter refer to the
firm as the assessee. The State of Madras through the
Commercial Tax Officer, Saidapet, is the respondent before
us.
The assessee is a firm with its factory at Ennore in the
State of Madras, where it manufactures, assembles and sells
motor vehicles and spare parts and accessories thereof,
through an elaborate organisation spread over several
States. It is, perhaps, necessary to indicate briefly the
organisational set up in order to appreciate the point on
which the case was heard in the High Court and argued before
us. The system of distribution of its motor vehicles, spare
parts and
609
accessories at one uniform price to consumers in the various
States which the assessee adopted, consisted of the
appointment of a distributor (called a dealer) with a
definite territorial jurisdiction, both inside and outside
the State of Madras.. To every such dealer it granted the
sole right of selling the products of the firm within the
territory allotted to him. If the territory of the dealer
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was outside the State of Madras, the agreement entered into
by the dealer provided for the delivery of the products of
the firm by consignment, by rail or steamer or road
transport. The agreement specifically stipulated that the
dealer must not canvass or sell the products outside the
territory allotted to him, and in the event of infringement
or breach of the undertaking by the dealer, the assessee was
entitled to terminate the agreement forthwith. On such
termination, the assessee reserved the right to call upon
the dealer to return all or any of the products remaining
unsold at the date of such termination. The case set up by
the assessee was that a substantial number of motor vehicles
and accessories thereof were consigned to the dealers in
other States either by rail or steamer; but due to want of
such transport facilities, a number of vehicles were also
transported by road.
In the year relevant to the assessment year 1952-53, the
total turnover of the asaessee in respect of all its sales
came to Rs. 1,43,67,007 odd. The Deputy Commercial Tax
Officer, Madras, computed the taxable turnover of the
assessee for that year by excluding the sum of Rs.
1,12,21,707 odd which represented the value of vehicles,
spare parts, etc., sold outside the State of Madras and
consigned by rail or steamer or transported by road. The
balance of Rs. 31,45,299 odd was determined to be the net
assessable turnover of the company. The tax levied thereon
was a sum of Rs. 1,45,655-13-3 and this sum was duly paid by
the assessee.
Sometime thereafter, the Commercial Tax Officer, Madras,
purporting to act under the powers of revision given to him
by s. 12 of the Madras General Sales
77
610
Tax Act, 1939 (Madras Act IX of 1939), hereinafter called
the Act, called upon the assessee to produce its books of
account for the purpose of satisfying himself as to the
legality or propriety of the assessment made. After
scrutinising the accounts and other records produced by the
assessee, the Commercial Tax Officer issued a notice
proposing to revise the assessment by including a sum of Rs.
42,98,068 odd on the ground that the delivery of motor
vehicles, etc., in respect of sales covered by the aforesaid
sum was made within the State of Madras and was therefore
liable to tax under the Act. The assessee submitted its
objection to the revision of the assessment and contended
that on the sum of. Rs. 42 lacs odd the assessee was not
liable to pay sales tax as the transactions were in the
course of inter-State trade and commerce. This objection
was, however, overruled by the Commercial Tax Officer except
to a very small extent.
From that decision of the Commercial Tax Officer, an appeal
was taken to the Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal, Madras, and
the assessee contended in that appeal that the revision of
the assessment by the Commercial Tax Officer was without,
jurisdiction and that the inclusion of Rs. 42 lacs odd in
the taxable turnover was contrary to the provisions of Art.
286 of the Constitution. The Tribunal rejected the plea of
absence of jurisdiction, but held on merits that the sum of
Rs. 12,48,403 odd representing the value of vehicles driven
away on their own motive power through the assessee’s own
drivers to the places of business of the non-resident
dealers was not liable to sales, tax.
The assessee then preferred a revision to the High Court of
Madras under s. 12B(1) of the Act and repeated the
contention that the sales in question were in the course of
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inter-State trade and commerce and not liable to sales tax
by reason of the provisions of Art. 286(2) of the
Constitution. In the High Court the liability to tax was
challenged by the assessee in respect of the following four
items only:
(1) A sum of Rs. 1,43,072 odd which
represented the value of vehicles delivered
ex-factory to the
611
dealer’s drivers. The vehicles were driven
away by those drivers after temporary
registration of the vehicles in the name of
the dealer, outside the State of Madras.
(2) A sum of Rs. 28,01,357 odd which
represented the value of vehicles delivered to
the drivers of the dealers, which were driven
away under the trade number of the dealers,
outside the State of Madras.
(3) A sum of Rs. 7,866 odd which represented
the value of spare parts or other accessories
delivered along with the cars.
(4) A sum of Rs. 15,000 which represented
the value of spare parts consigned to the
dealers. These were delivered to the dealers
outside the State of Madras and the
consignments were sent by rail or steamer.
The High Court repelled the contention of the assessee in
respect of the first three item,,; aforesaid, holding that
they fell outside the purview of the ban imposed by Art.
286(2) of the Constitution. It modified the order of the
Tribunal with respect to the fourth item, as in its view
that item came within the scope of Art. 286(2). The
assessee then moved the High Court and obtained the
necessary certificate under Art. 133 of the Constitution.
When the learned Attorney-General appearing for the assessee
opened the appeal, he submitted in the forefront of his
argument that the High Court was in error in holding that
the transactions coming under the three items (1), (2) and
(3) above were outside the ban imposed by Art. 286(2) of
the’ Constitution, and contended that the transactions were
within the purview of the ban. We then drew his attention
to the Sales Tax Laws Validation Act, 1956 (hereinafter
called the Validation Act), and asked him to consider the
question whether the transactions in question came within
the protection of the Validation Act, an aspect of the case
which does not appear to have been considered in the High
Court. The argument before us then centered round the
question whether the assessment in respect of the three
items came within the protection of the Validation Act, and
it was conceded by the
612
learned Attorney-General that if it did, no other question
would survive and it would be unnecessary to determine in
this appeal the true scope and effect of Art. 286(2) of the
Constitution and whether the transactions in question came
within the ban imposed thereby. On behalf of an intervener
(Tata Locomotive & Engineering Co. Ltd,, Bombay) we have
been pressed to decide, on merits, whether the transactions
under consideration here come within the ban of Art. 286(2)
of the Constitution, on the ground that such decision will
be of assistance in a pending case to which the intervener
is party. We do not think that we can do so for the benefit
of the intervener. The intervener has no right to ask us to
decide a question which does not fall for decision if the
Validation -Act applies; for it is conceded that if the
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Validation Act applies, that will be decisive of the whole
appeal. We must, therefore, reject the plea of the
intervener.
We proceed now to consider the main point argued in this
appeal, namely, whether the Validation Act applies to the
transactions in question. It is convenient to read here s.
2, which is the relevant section, of the Validation Act:
"Section 2. Notwithstanding any judgment,
decree or order of any court, no law of a
State imposing or authorising the imposition
of, a tax on the sale or purchase, of any
goods where such sale or purchase took place
in the course of interstate trade or commerce
during the period between the 1st day of
April, 1951, and the 6th day of September,
1955, shall be deemed to be invalid or ever to
have been invalid merely by reason of the fact
that such sale or purchase took place in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce; and
all such taxes levied or collected or
purporting to have been levied or collected
during the aforesaid period, shall be deemed
always to have been validly levied or
collected in accordance with law".
It will be noticed at once that the transactions under
consideration in the present appeal came within the period
mentioned in the Validation Act. being transactions of a
period between April 1, 1951, and
613
March 31, 1952. Indeed, this is not disputed before us. It
is also clear that the wording of a. 2 is general and wide
enough to take in "the sale or purchase of any goods where
such sale or purchase took place in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce during the period between the 1st
day of April, 1951, and the 6th day of September, 1955." The
section states in effect that notwithstanding any judgment,
decree or order of any court, no law of a State imposing a
tax on the sale or purchase of goods referred to therein
shall be deemed to be invalid or ever to have been invalid
merely by reason of the fact that such sale or purchase took
place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce. The
learned Attorney-General has advanced two arguments in
support of his contention that the Validation Act does not
apply to the transactions under consideration here. His
first argument is that the Validation Act applies only when
the law of the State imposes, in express terms, a tax on the
sale or purchase of any goods in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce. He emphasises the expression "where such
sale or purchase took place in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce" occurring in the section and from that
expression he has drawn the inference that the law must in
express terms say that it is taxing transactions in the
course of interState trade and commerce. His second
argument is that by reason of s. 22 of the Act, inserted by
the amending Act of 1957, being Madras Act I of 1957, the
Act imposes no tax on transactions under consideration in
this appeal; it merely imposes a tax on transactions which
are generally known as Explanation sales referable to the
Explanation to Art. 286(l)(a), such as were considered in
the decision of this Court in M. P. V. Sundararamier & Co.
v. The State Of Andhra- Pradesh & Another (1). We shall
consider these two arguments one after the other.
It appears to us the first argument does not correctly
reflect the true scope and effect of s. 2 of the Validtion
Act. It is necessary, perhaps, to advert to the
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circumstances which led, to the enactment of
(1) 1958 J.s.S.C.R. 1422-
614
the Validation Act. The true meaning and scope of the
Explanation to Art. 286(1) of the Constitution came up for
consideration before this Court in The State of Bombay and
Another v. The United Motors (India) Ltd and Others (1). It
was therein held by the majority that though the sales
falling within the Explanation would, in fact, be in the
course of interState trade. they became intrastate sales by
the fiction introduced by the Explanation and were liable to
be taxed by the State within which the goods were delivered
for consumption. Then, came the decision in The Bengal
Immunity Company Limited v. The State of Bihar and Others
(2) where this Court held, again by a majority, that the
sales falling within the Explanation being inter-State in
character, could not be taxed by reason of Art. 286(2)
unless Parliament lifted the ban, that the Explanation to
Art. 286(l)(a) controlled only that clause and did not limit
the operation of Art. 286(2), and that the law in this
respect had not been correctly laid down in the United
Motors’ case (2). The decision in The Bengal Immunity’s
case (2) was rendered on September 6, 1955. The Sales Tax
Validation Ordinance No. III of 1956 was promulgated on
January 30, 1956, and that was later replaced by the
Validation Act. The constitutionality of the Validation Act
was challenged before this Court and in M. P. V.
Sundararami’s case (3) this Court upheld its validity,
though the sales referred to in the arguments in that case
were Explanation sales.
The Validation Act is legislation by Parliament, and it
lifts the ban imposed by Art. 286(2). Clause (2) of Art.
286 as it stood before the Constitution (Sixth Amendment)
Act, 1956, in these terms:
"(2). Except in so far as Parliament may by
law otherwise provide, no law of a State shall
impose,or authorise the imposition of, a tax
on the sale or purchase of any goods where
such sale or purchase takes place in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce."
In M. P. V. Sundraramier’s case(3) this court
observed:
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069. (2) [1955] 2
S.C.R.603
(3) [1958] S.C. 1422.
615
"Section 2 of the impugned Act which is the
only substantive enactment therein makes no
mention of any validation. It only provides
that no law of a State imposing tax on sales
shall be deemed to be invalid merely because
such sales are in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce. The effect of this
provision is merely to liberate the State laws
from the fetter placed on them by Art. 286(2)
and to enable such laws to operate on their
own terms. The true scope of the impugned Act
is, to adopt the language of this Court in the
decisions in the United Motors case (1) and
The Bengal Immunity Company’s case (2), that
it lifts the ban imposed on the States against
taxing inter-State sales and not that it vali-
dates or ratifies any such law."
It should be obvious that in 1939, long before the coming
into force of the Constitution, the Act could not have said
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in express terms that it was taxing sales in the course of
inter-State trade. What we have to see is that the fetter
under Art. 286(2) having been removed, does the Act
operating on its own terms affect the transactions in
question even though they be in the course of inter-State
trade? If it does, the assessment is no longer liable to
challenge on the ground of the ban imposed by Art. 286(2).
This brings us to the second argument of the learned
Attorney-General. One has merely to see the definitions of
’sale’ and ’turnover’ and s. 3, the charging section, to
come to the conclusion that the Act operating on its own
terms makes the transactions under consideration in this
appeal liable to sales tax. Explanation (2) to the
definition of ’sale’ says:
"The sale or purchase of any goods shall be
deemed, for the purposes of this Act, to have
taken place in this State, wherever the
contract of sale or purchase might have been
made-
(a) if the goods were actually in this State
at the time when the contract of sale or
purchase in respect thereof was made, or
(b) in the case the contract was for the
sale on purchase of future goods by
description, then, if the
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1069. (2) [1955] 2
S.C.R. 603.
616
goods are actually produced in this State at
any time after the contract of sale or
purchase in respect thereof was made."
There can be no doubt that the Explanation brings the
transactions in question within the definition -of ’sale’
under the Act. The point now is-does s. 22 of the Act make
any difference’,? We are clearly of the opinion that it
does not. A little history of that section is necessary
here. Section 22 of the Act, as it stood before the
amending Act of 1957, was inserted by the Adaptation of Laws
(Fourth Amendment) Order, 1952, made by the President in
exercise of the powers conferred on him by Art. 372(2) of
the Constitution. The section was then almost a verbatim
reproduction of Art. 286(l) and (2) of the Constitution.
The effect of the section as it stood then, was considered
in M. P. V. Sundararamier’s case (1) and it was held
that it had a positive content and the Explanation in
the context of s. 22 (as it then stood) authorised the State
of Madras to impose a tax on sales falling within its
purview. Then came the Validation Act in 1956, which lifted
the ban imposed by Art. 286(2). In 1957 new s. 22 was
inserted in the Act with restrospective effect from January
26, 1950, and old section 22 was repealed. The new section
reads:
"Section 22. Sale or purchase deemed to have
taken place inside the State in certain cases-
(1) Any sale or purchase which took place on
or before the 6th day of September, 1955,
shall be deemed to have taken place inside the
State if the goods have actually been
delivered as a direct result of such sale or
purchase for the purpose of consumption in the
State, notwithstanding the fact that under the
general law relating to sale of goods the
property in the goods has by reason of such
sale or purchase passed in another State, and.
be subject to tax under this Act accordingly.
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(2) The provisions of this section shall not
affect the liability to tax of any sale or
purchase under any other provision of this
Act."
The argument of the learned Attorney-General is that
(1)[1958] S.C.R. 1422.
617
the now section which operates retrospectively from January
26, 1950, talks of sales in which the goods are delivered
for consumption in the State of Madras; in other words, of
Explanation sales only; therefore, the Act does not operate
on sales of an interState character other than Explanation
sales. We are unable to agree. First of all, sub-s. (2) of
new s. 22 makes it quite clear that the section does not
affect the liability to tax of any sale or purchase under
any other provision of the Act. Secondly, after Parliament
had lifted the ban imposed by Art. 286(2), it was
unnecessary to repeat the provisions of that Article in the
Act and old s. 22 in so far as it repeated Art. 286(2)
became otiose. Therefore, new s. 22 has not the effect of
subtracting something from the power to tax conferred on the
State by the charging section, s. 3, read with the
definition of ’sale’ in s. 2(h). To repeat what we have
said earlier: after the removal of the fetter of Art. 286
(2), the Act operating on its own terms makes the
transactions in question liable to tax, and new s. 22 makes
no difference to that position.
For these reasons, we are unable to accept as correct the
arguments advanced on behalf of the assessee. In our view,
the Validation Act applies and the assessment on the
transactions in question cannot now be challenged on the
ground alleged by the assessee. The appeal fails and is
dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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618