Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ANANDAM VISWANATHAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/01/1989
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
RANGNATHAN, S.
CITATION:
1989 AIR 962 1989 SCR (1) 301
1989 SCC (1) 613 JT 1989 (1) 181
1989 SCALE (1)176
ACT:
Tamil Nadu General Sales Tax Act, 1959: Assessee entered
into contract with Universities and educational institutions
for printing question papers liability to sales tax--Nature
of contract----Contract for work and contract for labour and
work--Difference between--Ascertainment of intention of
parties and nature of contract--Need for:
HEADNOTE:
The respondent had entered into contracts with Universi-
ties and other educational institutions for printing of
question papers for them. In the demand notes prepared the
respondent gave the charges for printing, blocks, packing
handling, delivery, postal and also value of paper and value
of packing materials separately in the relevant assessment
years. On re-examination the Assessing Officer noticed that
printing charges and block making charges escaped assessment
and brought them to tax.
In respect of subsequent assessment also claims for
exemption towards printing charges and block making charges
were disallowed. The appeals preferred by the Respondents
were dismissed by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, who
reached a finding that the contracts were only for supply of
printed question paper as a finished product and that there
was no scope to disintegrate cost of paper with separate
charges for printing and block making though the bills were
made out in a different way..
The respondent preferred appeals to Sales Tax Appellate
Tribunal. The Tribunal held that the respondent was assessa-
ble only on the sale value of paper and that printing and
block making charges were not to be included in the assess-
ment.
Against the Tribunal’s Orders, the appellant preferred
tax cases before the High Court. The High Court dismissed
the cases and held that the contract between the assessee
and the Universities is of highly confidential nature and
that the printing of question papers could be entrusted only
to those in whom the institutions got the highest confi-
dence, and that the price paid for such confidentiality and
trust is not
302
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the price for the sale of goods.
The present appeals by Special Leave are against the
High Court’s Orders.
In this appeal, it was argued on behalf of the appellant
that printing charges and block making charges are includi-
ble in the assessable turnover of the Respondent. On behalf
of the Respondent it was argued that the contract entered
into between her and the educational institutions was a
contract of work and labour and in the performance of the
contract, indicentally she had to sell paper to them and
hence except to the extent of the cost of paper she was not
liable to pay sales tax in respect of the other amounts
receive by her.
Dismissing the appeals,
HELD: 1.1 Contract for work in the execution of which
goods are used may take one of three forms. The contract may
be for work to be done for remuneration and for supply of
material used in the execution of works in which the use of
materials is accessory or incidental to the execution of the
work; or it may be a contract for work and use or supply of
materials, though not accessory to the execution of the
contract, is voluntary or gratuitous. In the last class
there is no sale because though property passed it did not
pass for a price. Whether a contract is of the first or the
second class must depend upon the circumstances; if it is of
the first, it is a composite contract for work and sale of
goods; where it is of the second category, it is a contract
for execution of work not involving sale of goods. [307H;
308A-B]
1.2 In each case the nature of the contract and the
transaction must be found out. And this is possible only
when the intention of the parties is found out. The fact
that in the execution of a contract for work some materials
are used and the property/goods so used, passes to the other
party, the contractor undertaking to do the work will not
necessarily be deemed, on that account, to sell the materi-
als. Whether or not and which part of the job work relates
to that depends on the nature of the transaction. [316G-H]
1.3 Normally, it may be that the goods prepared by the
assessee which could not be exhibited for sale, would not be
decisive of the matter and could in certain circumstances be
sales liable to sales tax, but in all circumstances it
depends upon the nature of the sale and the nature of the
transaction involved. Printing of question papers at the
303
behest of University or educational institutions is rather a
delicate and confidential type of work and the price paid
for supplying such printed question papers or printed mat-
ters entails primarily the confidence, and secondly the
skill and to a very small measure the material. If that is
the position, it cannot be categorised as entailing sale of
goods but it is rather a contract for works done. [309G-H;
310A]
Government of A.P. v. Guntur Tobaccos Ltd., XVISTC 240
relied on.
Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. v. State of Kerala, [1984]
ISCC 706 and P.T. Varghese v. State of Kerala, 37 STC 1171
approved.
Saraswati Printing Press v. CST, Eastern Division Nag-
put, X STC 286 and State of A.P. v. Sri Krishna Power Press,
Vizianagaram, XI STC 498.
P.M. Venkatachalam Pillai v. State of Madras, XXIII STC
72; State of Orissa v. Ramnath Panda, XXVII STC 98; S.R.P.
Works and Ruby Press v. State of A.P., XXX STC 195 and STO,
Special Circle 11, Palghat v. I. V. Somasundaram, 33 STC 68.
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A.S. Hameed Bharath Press v. State of Tamil Nadu, 54 STC
379; CST v. Uma Art Press, 56 STC 300; Chandra Bhan Gosain
v. State of Orissa, XIV STC 766; CST v. M/s Sabarmati Reti
Udvog Sanakari Mandali Ltd., 38 STC 203 and Marcel (Furri-
ers) Ltd. v. Tapper, [1953] 1 WLR 49 referred to.
2.1 The primary difference between a contract for work
or service and a contract for sale is that in the former
there is in the person performing or rendering service no
property in the thing produced as a whole, notwithstanding
that a part or even the whole of the material used by him
may have been his property. Where the finished product
supplied to a particular customer is not a commercial com-
modity in the sense that it cannot be sold in the market to
any other person, the transaction is only a works contract.
[316E]
2.2 When the questions are set on a piece of paper and
sent for printing, the University remains the owner until it
divulges these to the intending candidates or the students.
But that is a matter which is relevant in the method of
communication of the question to the candidates appearing in
the examination. The means employees for such communication
entail use of mind, confidence, trust for the material,
304
paper and the technical skill of printing. It is a combina-
tion of these various factors that results in printing the
question papers and the payment made in the process entails
a composite payment for all these. Question papers as such,
after being printed are neither available commercially nor
available to any community--commercial or otherwise save
under specific circumstances for the candidates appearing at
a particular time in an examination. [308D-E; 309C]
Court Press Job Branch, Salem v. State of Tamil Nadu, 54
STC 382 and CST v. M.P.V. Ratna Fine Arts Printing Press, 56
STC 77 approved.
State of Madras v. Gannan Dunkerlay & Co. (Madras) Ltd.,
IX STC 353; Patnaik & Co. v. State of Orissa, XVI STC 364
and T.V. Sundaram lyengar & Sons v. State of Madras, 35 STC
24 referred to.
3. The contract in the present case is one, having
regard to the nature of the job to be done and the confi-
dence reposed, for work to be done for remuneration and
supply for paper was just incidental. Hence, the entire
price for the printed question papers would have been enti-
tled to be excluded from the taxable turnover, but since the
demand notes prepared by the assessee showed the costs of
paper separately, it appears that it has treated the supply
of paper separately. Except the materials supplied on the
basis of such contract, the contract will continue to be a
contract for work and labour and no liability to sales tax
would arise in respect thereof. [317A-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 2346-47
of 1978 Etc.
From the Judgment and Orders dated 5.8.1976 of the
Madras High Court in T.C. Nos. 436 and 437 of 1971.
R. Mohan and R.A. Perumal for the Appellant.
T.A. Ramachandran and Mrs. Janaki Ramachandran for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKARJI, J. Special leave granted in Special
Leave Petitions (C) Nos. 10539, 4704 and 92 1 of 1979.
305
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These appeals by leave under Article 136 of the Consti-
tution, are from the orders of the High Court of Madras,
involving a common question though for different assessment
years. It would be appropriate to deal with Civil Appeal
Nos. 2346-47/78, and the facts in other appeals are essen-
tially the same.
The assessee in these cases had entered into contracts
with the Universities and other educational institutions in
the country for printing question papers for the said educa-
tional institutions. The assessee in the demand notes pre-
pared, gave the charges for printing blocks, packing
charges, handling charges, delivery charges, postage, value
of paper and value of packing materials separately in the
relevant assessment years. The question involved is, whether
the taxable turnover should also include the printing and
block-making charges or not. It appears from the judgment of
the High Court that for the assessment year 1966-67, the
printing charges amounted to Rs.99,675.00 and block-making
charges amounted to Rs.2,923.95, totaling Rs.1,02,598.95.
Similarly, so far as the assessment year 1968-69 is con-
cerned, the printing charges amounted to Rs. 1,33,137 and
blockmaking charges amounted to Rs. 5,361.75 totaling Rs.
1,38,498.75.
The controversy involved in these appeals was, whether
these two amounts were includable in the assessable turnover
of the respondent in the respective years in question. The
case of the assessee was that the contract entered into
between her and the respective educational institutions was
a contract of work and labour and in the performance of that
contract, incidentally she had to sell paper to them and,
hence, except to the extent of the cost of paper, in respect
of the other amounts received by her she was not liable to
pay sales-tax. On the other hand, the Government’s stand was
that the contract was for the sale of printed materials by
the respondent to the respective educational institutions
and, therefore, the entire amount will have to be taken into
account as turnover liable to tax. In other words, would
printing question papers and incidentally supplying the
papers upon which such questions were printed, entail the
entire cost to be liable to sales-tax. As was put before us,
the question is, can one sell printed question papers and
charge for the same?
The High Court mentioned that till 1963 the assessee was
herself doing the printing and the Tribunal held that during
that period only the cost of paper was includable in the
taxable turnover. With effect from 3.11.1963 the printing
was done by a firm of which the assessee’s sons and daugh-
ters were partners. The contract, however, continued
306
to be entered into between the assessee and the respective
educational institutions. According to the Govt., as appears
from the judgment of the High Court, this made a difference
and, as such, the order of the Tribunal in the previous
years could not govern the assessment for the respective
years referred to above.
The Tribunal, however, held against the revenue holding
that only the value of paper was liable to be included in
the taxable turnover of the assessee. The correctness of
that decision was challenged before the High Court by two
Revision Cases under section 38 of the Tamil Nadu General
Sales Tax Act, 1959 (hereinafter called ’the Act’). The High
Court on an analysis of the facts and the several decisions
came to the conclusion that printing of question papers
involved confidentiality of the materials to be printed, and
held that apart from the paper nothing else could be includ-
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ed in the total taxable turnover of the assessee. The High
Court came to the conclusion that the contract entered into
between the assessee and the University and other education-
al institutions was a composite contract i.e., a contract
for work and labour, as well as a contract for sale of the
paper. It was contended on behalf of the revenue that in
case of sale of all printed materials, the sales-tax was
liable on the entire work. In that view of the matter if the
liability for sale of printed material would include the
entire price then there was no authority, according to the
revenue, to treat the question papers differently. It is,
however, clear as the High Court noted, that the printing of
question papers of educational institutions was an extremely
and highly confidential matter. This is the first aspect of
the matter which must be borne in mind. It was emphasised
that such printing could not be entrusted to any press of
one’s choice, and the Universities and other educational
institutions were only obliged to enter into such contracts
with those in whom they have got the highest confidence so
that the printer would not divulge the questions to be
printed by him/her and will preserve the confidential nature
of the transaction. Therefore, in printing question papers
entrusted by educational institutions to the printer the
value included the price of the confidentiality and the
confidence reposed in the printer. It has to be borne in
mind that the price paid for such confidentiality and trust
is not the price for the sale of goods. In case of printing
of other materials just like letter-heads, bills, account
books or even printing works like a novel, story, poem or
drama (subject to copyrights), the technical excellence and
the professional efficiency of the printer, among other
things, might enter into calculation for entrusting the job
to a particular printer and the performance thereof. Howev-
er, the position is different in case of printing of confi-
dential matters like question
307
papers of the Universities or other educational institu-
tions. The value paid for such printing job includes to a
large extent the price of not only the technical and profes-
sional work but also the value, if it could be measured in
terms of money, of the confidence and faith reposed that the
printing materials should not be disclosed to anyone save to
be returned back to the University or the educational insti-
tutions to be dealt with in accordance with its obligations.
The High Court noticed these points and came to the
conclusion that in view of these peculiar features which
will be present in the printing of matters which are confi-
dential in nature and will not be present in other case the
contracts pre-dominantly being contracts for work with
confidence and faith, should be treated mainly as contracts
for labour and not contracts for sale of any goods such as
printed materials. It may be that in the execution of the
contracts and for the purpose of completing the work, the
parties might enter into the contracts for sale of the paper
and in this context, it was a composite contract which can
be split up into contract for sale of paper and contract for
work and labour.
Relying on a decision of this Court in Govt. of Andhra
Pradesh v. Guntur Tobaccos Ltd., XVI STC 240, the High Court
was of the view that the cost of paper shown separately in
the contract would be liable to tax and except for that cost
of paper and the material supplied in other respect, the
contract was a contract for work and labour and there could
not be any liability for sales-tax. According to the High
Court, this would cover the printing charges. Blocks, it was
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found, were destroyed after the question papers had been
printed. Hence, there was no question of sale of blocks or
passing of the property. The High Court so held.
Following the aforesaid position in other matters which
are the subject-matters of other appeals where the _High
Court held accordingly, it dismissed the revision applica-
tion of the revenue. Aggrieved thereby, the appellant has
come up to this Court by leave.
Our attention was drawn by both Mr. Mohan, learned
counsel for the appellant and Mr. Ramchandran, counsel for
the respondent to the decision of this Court in Govt. of
Andhra Pradesh v. Guntur Tabacco Ltd., (supra), where this
Court laid down that a contract for work in the execution of
which goods are used may take one of three forms. The con-
tract may be for work to be done for remuneration and for
supply of materials used in the execution of the works for a
price; it
308
may be a contract for work in which the use of materials is
accesssory or incidental to the execution of the work; or it
may be a contract for work and use or supply of materials,
though not accessory to the execution of the contract, is
voluntary or gratuitous. In the last class there is no sale
because though property passed it did not pass for a price.
Whether a contract is of the first or the second class must
depend upon the circumstances; if it is of the first, it is
a composite contract for work and sale of goods; where it is
of the second category, it is a contract for execution of
work not involving sale of goods.
In our opinion, the aforesaid tests lay down correct
criteria for determining the question. Mr. Mohan, appearing
for the revenue, pressed before us that the said principle
requires clarification. He emphasised that Press has no
ownership over the materials or papers upon which the ques-
tions were printed. Who then, Mr. Mohan posed, was the
owner, author or the paper setter of the University or the
educational institution or the printing Press? In our opin-
ion, when the questions are set on a piece of paper and sent
for printing the University remains the owner until it
divulges these to the intending candidates or the students.
But that is a matter which is relevant in the method of
communication of the questions to the candidates appearing
in the examination. The means employed for such communica-
tion entail use of mind, confidence, trust for the material,
paper and the technical skill of printing. It is a combina-
tion of these various factors that results in printing the
question papers and the payment made in the process entails
a composite payment for all these and can only be dissected
and determined in the way laid down by the principle enunci-
ated in the aforesaid decision.
Our attention was, however, drawn by Mr. Mohan to a
decision of the Bombay High Court in Saraswati Printing
Press v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, Eastern Division, Nag-
pur, X STC 286. There the petitioner Press itself purchased
the stationery and did printing work upon it according to
the orders of individual customers and supplied the printed
stationery to the customers. It was held that there the
petitioner had produced a commercial commodity which was
capable of being sold or supplied and when the petitioner
sold the printed stationery to its customers, it sold goods
to the customers upon which sales tax was leviable. In those
circumstances, it was held that the transactions done by the
said petitioner Press were not in the nature of works con-
tracts but were sales of goods and therefore recourse to
rule 5(3) of the rules could not be made. It was further
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held that as the petitioner did not immediately dispose of
the stationery purchased by
309
it in favour of its constituents, but kept it in the Press
and did printing work upon it and then supplied the finished
product to its constituents, the provisions of clause (iv)
of Explanation I of clause (m) of section 2 were not at-
tracted.
The High Court relied on the decision of the Allahabad
High Court reiterating the principle that it is necessary to
determine the substance of the contract, and as the sub-
stance of the contract is that skill and labour that had
been exercised for the production of the article and sale of
material is only ancillary to that. In our opinion, the
principle upon which the High Court relied, is not applica-
ble in case of transactions of printing of question papers.
Question papers as such, after being printed are neither
available commercially nor available to any
community--commercial or otherwise, save under specific
circumstances for the candidates appearing at a particular
time in an examination. Mr Mohan also drew our attention to
the decision of Andhra Pradesh High Court in State of Andhra
Pradesh v. Sri Krishna Power Press, Vizianagaram, XI STC
498. There, the court reiterated that a transaction which
results in the transfer of property in finished goods to
another person cannot be described as a works contract. It
was further held that where the assessee Press itself pur-
chased stationery and did printing work upon it according to
the orders of individual customers and supplied the printed
stationery to the customers at an agreed price the transac-
tion was sales liable to sales tax and not works contract.
The fact that the goods prepared by the assessee could not
be exhibited for sale to the general public is not decisive
of the issue. According to the High Court the only test is
whether the contract is for the sale of finished product.
Mr. Mohan relying on the aforesaid observations submitted
that the goods prepared by the assessee could not be sold to
other customers, the person who placed order could be com-
pelled to accept it or claim damages from the printers. He
submitted that even in a case where goods are prepared
according to the specific requisition to suit the require-
ments of individual customer, yet printing materials sup-
plied thereto have been held to be sale of goods and he drew
our attention to the several decisions referred to by the
High Court of Andhra Pradesh in aid of his propositions.
Normally, it may be that the goods prepared by the assessee
which could not be exhibited for sale, would not be decisive
of the matter and could in certain circumstances be sales
liable to sales tax, but in all circumstances it depends
upon the nature of the sale and the nature of the transac-
tion involved. Printing of question papers at the behest of
University or educational institutions is rather a delicate
and confidential type of work and the price paid for supply-
ing such printed question
310
papers or printed matters entails primarily the confidence,
and secondly the skill and to a very small measure the
material. If that is the position then, in our opinion, it
cannot be categorised entailing sale of goods but it is
rather a contract for works done.
Mr. Mohan also relied on the decision of the Madras High
Court in P.M. Venkatachalam Pillai v. The State of Madras,
XXIII STC 72, where it was held that when a transaction is
claimed to be a works contract, a decision on the question
depends on the particular facts. The primary point to bear
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in mind in such cases is what is the intention of the par-
ties viewing the transaction as a whole; do they intend an
apportionment or view the transaction on compartmental basis
as that which represents labour and that which represents
sale of the materials. Different tests may be applied in
answering such a question as the stage of passing of proper-
ty, risk and the like. But all these tests converge towards
finding out what is the intention of the parties. There, the
question was whether the assessee’s turnover consisted of
the aggregate of labour charges and the cost of materials in
printing work or of outright sales of finished commodity.
The assessee relied on certain bills which showed the cost
of materials and labour charges but he did not produce order
books or other documents. The Tribunal found that the sepa-
rate entries were only a make-believe apportionment for the
purpose of sales tax and that what was sold was only a
finished product. In those findings the Tribunal justified
on the materials to uphold the liability for sales-tax. As
emphasised by the Division Bench of the Madras High Court,
the entire transaction should be viewed and the intention of
the parties found out.
Our attention was drawn by Mr. Mohan to the decision of
the Orissa High Court in the case of State of Orisssa v.
Ramnath Panda, XXVlI STC 98. There the High Court held that
in the case of an assessee, a printer supplying printed
materials, where the customers supply paper and the assessee
does nothing except printing on it, the contract is one of
labour and there is no sale. Where the customer enters into
an agreement that he would separately pay for the paper and
the assessee would merely print on it, then also there is no
sale. Where the customer does not enter into any separate
agreement but merely asks the assessee to supply the printed
materials, the contract is indivisible and the supply of
printed materials is a sale liable to sales tax. In such a
case charging separately for the paper and printing in the
bill issued to the customer does not alter the essential
character of the agreement, which is for the purchase of
printed materials.
311
Our attention was also drawn to another decision of
Andhra Pradesh High Court in S.R.P. Works and Ruby Press v.
State of Andhra Pradesh, XXX STC 195. There, the petitioner
was running a printing press, supplying cinema tickets
printed on paper of different colours to the customers. The
customers obtained samples from the petitioner and then
placed orders giving specifications. The petitioner while
making out bills, gave break-up figures, showing the cost of
paper and the cost of printing separately and the total
cost. The assessing authority assessed the petitioner only
on the value of the paper for printing the tickets and
granted exemption in respect of printing charges on the
ground that they represented the cost of labour. The Deputy
Commissioner revised the order and held that the transac-
tions involved were sales of finished goods, viz., the
tickets, and not merely of paper. The Tribunal agreed with
the finding of the Deputy Commissioner and confirmed the
order. On a revision it was held by the High Court on a
consideration of some of the orders placed by the customers,
that the orders were specifically for printing and supply of
tickets. The fact that break-up figures were given in the
bills was not decisive or conclusive in determining the
question whether there were two contracts--one for supply of
paper and the other for printing.
We agree that the transaction under its true perspective
must be viewed and the intention of the parties must be
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found out.
Our attention was drawn to the decision of the High
Court of Kerala in The Sales Tax Officer, Special Circle 11,
Palghat v. 1. V. Somasundaran, 33 STC 68. In that case by
printing something on paper, as in .the cases of printing
letter heads, invitation cards, wedding invitations, judg-
ments of courts, or ration cards, the printed matter does
not become "paper products" within the meaning of that
expression in item 42 of Schedule I to the Kerala General
Sales Tax Act, 1963. The High Court found that in such a
case a further question arises as to whether it was sale of
goods which could be taxed at all points. In order to spell
out a contract of sale there must be an agreement which may
be express or inferred from the circumstances. There can be
an agreement for work and labour or there can be one for
sale of goods. If essentially the agreement is one for work
and labour, complete exemption from taxation should be
allowed. If, on the other hand, it is a contract for sale,
the whole turnover should be taxed.
A contract for printing of judgment of courts is essen-
tially a contract for work and labour and there is no justi-
fication for bifurcating that contract into two different
contracts, one for cost of labour and
312
the other for sale of paper. Imposition of sales tax on the
turnover relating to printing of judgments of courts is,
therefore, unwarranted. In the case of contracts relating to
the printing of ration cards, it is in the nature of job-
works and it is essentially a contract for the sale of
finished articles.
In P.T. Varghese v. State of Kerala, 37 STC 171, the
assessee who was conducting a press and printing bill books,
vouchers, receipt books, letter heads, question papers and
notices as ordered by his clients contended that he only
executed a works contract for which he used his own paper,
that the sale of paper used for printing could not be taxed
under the Kerala General Sales Tax Act, 1963, as he was not
the first seller of paper in the State, and that the remu-
neration received by him from his clients for the work and
labour could not also be taxed under the Act. It was held
that the question really was whether the contract was for
the sale of paper as well as for work and labour or whether
it was a contract for printed materials as such or whether
it was a contract for work and labour. If it was a contract
for sale of paper and for work it would be a composite
contract where it might be possible to separate the sale
from the work. If, on the other hand, it was a contract for
printed materials, what was sold was not paper, but printed
materials. If the contract was for work and labour, in which
the use of materials was merely accessory or incidental, it
would be a works contract which would not involve any sale
and the charges received would not be assessable to tax
under the Sales Tax Act; and that the assessee’s contract
with the customers was not a contract for sale of paper in
which labour was also involved making it a composite trans-
action which was capable of bifurcation into a contract for
sale of materials and a contract for work and labour. What
was sold was something other than paper. It could not be
said that printed materials such as bills books, vouchers
and the like were mere paper or products of paper. Hence,
the supply of bills books, vouchers etc. was liable to be
taxed under the Act as finished products. It was further
held that the question papers, however, were the subject-
matter of a contract for work and labour and the charges
realised by the assessee for printing them were not liable
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to tax. The High Court at page 176 of the report observed:
"Only in respect of those goods to which title
has passed as a result of contract, can it be
said that the goods have been sold. Where a
person buys a "Picasso" or a "Ravi Varma", he
does not intend to buy or pay for the canvas
or the paint, although canvas and paint are
involved in the production of
313
the painting, and title to such materials is
transferred to him. But such transfer of title
to the materials is not pursuant to any agree-
ment for the sale of the materials as such. It
would never have been in his mind to pay
separately for the materials and for the
labour. What the buyer buys is a finished
product which is a work of art. On the other
hand, when a person gets his manuscript print-
ed as an article or a book of verses, the
printer does no more than a mechanical or
technical job. The printer does not create the
article or the poem, but merely renders his
services to print which is in the nature of a
job-work. The manuscript as such is the result
of the skill, industry and scholarship of the
author. In such a case, there is no sale of
the article or book by the printer; nor would
it be possible in such a case to spell out an
agreement for the sale of materials such as
paper or ink, which may have been incidentally
used in the production of the printed work.
While the painter sells a finished product
which is a work of art, quite distinct and
different from the materials used in its pro-
duction, the printer merely does a job-work
involving no sale; one is the work of an
artist who is endowed with the finer qualities
of imagination and taste and the other that of
an artisan who is trained as a mechanic or
technician- A printer of judgments, for exam-
ple, does not produce and sell them; his work
is purely that of a technician. This court has
therefore held that printing of judgments is
only a works contract. The work of a printer
in certain cases may involve more than print-
ing; he may be a producer of finished articles
such as bill books, vouchers and the like.
When such articles are printed and sold to the
customers, what is sold is not paper or paper
products but printed materials which are
finished products. Such contracts cannot be
considered as contracts for the sale of paper
coupled with an agreement to render service.
The sale of paper had never been the subject-
matter of the agreement between the parties.
Like in the case of painting which is a fin-
ished product being a work of art, the bill
books and voucher are new products being
printed materials; and the sale of such goods
does not involve a composite contract which
can be bifurcated into an agreement for the
sale of goods-be they canvas and paint or
paper and ink--and an agreement for work."
314
In our opinion, the High Court tightly applied the test
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in that case. Further, our attention was drawn by Mr. Mohan
to a decision of the Madras High Court in A.S. Hameed Bha-
rath Press v. State of Tamil Nadu, 54 STC 379. There, the
Tribunal found that the contracts between the assessee and
his customers were indivisible contracts under which the
assessee undertook to deliver printed material in accordance
with the customer’s instructions and therefore considered
the receipts in the assessee’s business as representing
turnover in sales of goods taxable under the Tamil Nadu
General Sales Tax Act, 1959, and that the order form was a
make-believe and did not reflect the real nature of the
transactions between the assessee and his customers. It was
held that given the finding by the Tribunal, the printed
conditions in the order form were not to be accepted at face
value and that the transactions between the assessee and the
customers involved only the supply of printed material at a
price. The High Court held that the decision of the Tribunal
that the entire receipts in the assessee’s business must be
held to be sales turnover liable to tax under the Act must
be upheld.
As mentioned hereinbefore, the High Court was dealing
entirely with sample printed materials of order forms of
bill books. The Allahabad High Court had to consider this
question in Commissioner of Sales Tax v. Uma Art Press, 56
STC 300. The decision in that case rested on the facts of
that case and in the nature of the contentions urged before
us in this case, it would not be relevant to discuss the
said decision in greater details.
In Chandra Bhan Gosain v. The State of Orissa & Ors.,
XIV STC 766 at 769, it was reiterated that in case of a
composite contract how to determine whether there was sale
of goods or there was works to be done depended upon the
facts of each case, and the intention of the parties, what
was the essence of the contract has to be found out. This
court had to consider in C.S.T., Gujarat v. M/s. Sabarmati
Reti Udyog Sahakari Mandali Ltd., 38 STC 203, whether the
contract was a works contract or contract for sale. There
the assessee had entered into a contract with the Public
Works Department of the Govt. of Gujarat for the manufacture
and supply of kiln-burnt bricks to that department. The
contract was found to be in a tender "for supply of materi-
als" containing a memorandum of the conditions. The nature
of the work was described as "manufacturing and supplying
kiln-burnt bricks for construction". In the tender the
assessee stated the condition and analysing the decision in
the light of Chandra Bhan Gosain’s case, this Court held
that the contract was one for sale and not a works contract.
315
Mr. Mohan further drew our attention to the observations
of the English decision in Marcel (Furriers) Ltd. v. Tapper,
[1953] 1 WLR 49. There, the defendant, on behalf of his
wife, ordered from the plaintiffs, a firm of furriers, a
mutation mink coat. The defendant’s wife selected skins of
the colour she desired and specified the style of the coat
she required, directing that it should be made with the
skins running horizontally. Her instructions were carried
out, but the coat was eventually rejected by her. The plain-
tiffs brought an action against the defendant claiming Pound
950 for work done and materials supplied in the making of
the coat. By his defence the defendant pleaded that the
contract was one for the sale of goods of the value of Pound
10 or over and was unenforceable pursuant to section 4 of
the Sale of Goods Act, 1893 of England by reason of the fact
that there was no note or memorandum in writing of the
contract signed by the party to be charged or his agent. It
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was held that although a high degree of skill and craftsman-
ship might be required in making of the coat, the contract
was no more than one for the making of an article for the
special use of the customer by someone whose business it was
to make it. The nature of the transaction, therefore, was
that it was one for the making and supply of a particular
article at a price and not one for work and labour done and
materials supplied, and there being no memorandum in writing
to satisfy the requirements of section 4 of the Sale of
Goods Act, 1893, the contract was unenforceable. Hence, the
principle following from the decision is that the nature of
transaction has to be found out, whether it is making and
supply of particular article or printing material.
Mr. Ramchandran, however, submitted before us that in
view of the principles laid down by this Court in The State
of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley & Co. (Madras) Ltd., IX STC
353 and Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. v. State of Karnataka, 55
STC 314, the High Court was right. He submitted that the
contract in essence was for supply of question papers which
are not commercial commodities. The blank papers ceased to
be the property of the dealer, the moment questions were
printed on these. These are the exclusive properties of the
University or other educational institutions, and were to be
kept secret until the University chose to divulge these at
the time of the examinations. The dealer cannot deal with
the printed question papers. Upon printing he lost his
capacity to contract, ceased to be the sole owner, and could
not sell to anybody he chose. He had to hand-over the entire
question papers to the University. It was a special kind of
job entrusted for confidence reposed and for the delicate
matter of the job to be performed. The work in connection
therewith was predominantly
316
in the transaction. The material and the skill in doing so,
both are incidental. In that view of the matter he submitted
that the High Court was right, and indeed a contract for
sale pre-supposes the capacity in the dealer to contract
with regard to the finished item. For this, reliance was
placed on the observations of this Court in The State of
Madras’s case (supra), and also on Hindustan Aeronautics
Ltd’s case (supra) at pages 320, 323 & 327. The thing pro-
duced must have individual existence as the sole property of
the party who produced it, which can be passed on for a
price, in order to be a sale. Reliance was placed on the
observations in Patnaik & Co. v. The State of Orissa, XVI
STC 364 and T.V. Sundram lyengar & Sons v. The State of
Madras, 35 STC 24.. The test is whether work and labour are
bestowed on anything that can properly become the subject of
sale.
The court has to find out the primary object of the
transaction and intention of the parties. In this connec-
tion, it is necessary to rely on the observations of this
Court in Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd’s case (supra) at pages
327,333-334 of the report.
The primary difference between a contract for work or
service and a contract for sale is that in the former there
is in the person performing or rendering service no property
in the thing produced as a whole, notwithstanding that a
part or even the whole of the material used by him may have
been his property. Where the finished product supplied to a
particular customer is not a commercial commodity in the
sense that it cannot be sold in the market to any other
person, the transaction is only a works contract. See the
observation in The Court Press Job Branch, Salem v. The
State of Tamil Nadu, 54 STC 383 and Commissioner of Sales
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Tax, M.P. v. Ratna Fine Arts Printing Press, 56 STC 77.
In our opinion, in each case the nature of the contract
and the transaction must be found out. And this is possible
only when the intention of the parties is found out. The
fact that in the execution of a contract for work some
materials are used and the property/goods so used, passes to
the other party, the contractor undertaking to do the work
will not necessarily be deemed, on that account, to sell the
materials. Whether or not and which part of the job work
relates to that depends as mentioned hereinbefore, on the
nature of the transaction. A contract for work in the execu-
tion of which goods are used may take any one of the three
forms as mentioned by this Court in The Government of Andhra
Pradesh v. Guntur Tobaccos (supra).
317
In our opinion, the contract in this case is one, having
regard to the nature of the job to be done and the confi-
dence reposed, for work to be done for remuneration and
supply of paper was just incidental. Hence, the entire price
for the printed question papers would have been entitled to
be excluded from the taxable turnover, but since in the
instant case the deemed notes prepared by the assessee
showed the costs of paper separately, it appears that it has
treated the supply of paper separately. Except the materials
supplied on the basis of such contract, the contract will
continue to be a contract for work and labour and no liabil-
ity to sales-tax would arise in respect thereof. The High
Court was, therefore, fight in the view it took in Civil
Appeals Nos. 2346-2347/78.
The facts in the other appeals are identical.
All these appeals are dismissed accordingly but without,
in the facts and circumstances of the case, any order as to
costs.
G.N. Appeals dismissed.
318