Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2124 of 2007
PETITIONER:
M/s Co-operative Company Ltd
RESPONDENT:
Commissioner of Trade Tax, U.P
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/04/2007
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Markandey Katju
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
[Arising out of S.L.P. (Civil) No. 13194 of 2006]
S.B. SINHA, J :
Leave granted.
Appellant is a co-operative society registered under the U.P. Co-
operative Societies Act. It carries on business of manufacture and sale of
India Made Foreign Liquor (for short, ’IMFL’) and country liquor.
In respect of the assessment year 1989-90, the books of accounts
maintained by it were rejected by the Assessing Authority, inter alia, on the
premise that tax would be payable in respect of bottles being containers of
the country liquor. An appeal was preferred thereagainst by Appellant
before the Deputy Commissioner (Appeal) and by reason of an order dated
11.01.1994, the said appeal was allowed in part holding that no sales tax
could be imposed on the bottling charges for country made liquor. A
Second Appeal thereagainst was preferred before the Trade Tax Tribunal by
the Revenue, which was dismissed. A Revision was preferred before the
High Court against the said judgment of the Tribunal and by reason of the
impugned judgment, the High Court opined that bottling charges are part of
the turnover and are liable to tax.
Mr. K. Radhakrishnan, the learned Senior Counsel appearing on
behalf of Appellant, would submit that the High Court committed a serious
error in passing the impugned judgment insofar as it failed to take into
consideration :
1) The assessee is not a dealer in bottles as it does not carry on any
business therein.
2) There being no other alternative, bottles are used as a cheap and
convenient mode of transport and sale of country made liquor.
3) Amounts of Rs. 2.60, Rs. 2.30 and Rs. 1.57 represent only the
charges for P.P. caps, sales and filling charges, which are collected
under the head of bottling charge and, thus, the same is a payment for
the job work undertaken for packing the country made liquor.
4) Neither there is any sale of bottles nor any price is charged therefor.
5) There is no express or implied agreement to sell bottles.
6) The department has not discharged its burden to prove that there was
an implied agreement to sell the bottles.
7) The purchasers were purchasing only country made liquor and the
appellant had only been selling the same.
8) Cost of packing material is very less and insignificant as compared to
the cost of country made liquor and price of the goods is the same
with or without bottles.
9) Tax on bottling charges is sought to be recovered only from tax free
country liquor, and in the course of sale of IMFL, the sale of bottle
has not been held to be a separate sale and, thus, double standards
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adopted by the department is not justified.
10) Section 3AB inserted in the U.P. Trade Tax Act, 1948 (for short, ’the
Act’) on 01.08.1990, being clarificatory/declaratory has retrospective
effect.
The learned counsel has placed strong reliance on a decision of the
Allahabad High Court in Chhatta Sugar Company Ltd. v. Commissioner,
Trade Tax, U.P., Lucknow [124 STC 33], in support of the said contention.
Mr. Dinesh Dwivedi, the learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf
of the respondent, on the other hand, would submit that as sale of bottles
finds place in Entry 20 in the Scheduled appended to the Act, despite the
fact that no sales tax is payable on country liquor, the assessee would be
liable therefor having regard to the definition of ’turnover’ as contained in
Section 2(i) of the Act.
A notification was issued on or about 07.09.1981 by the State of Uttar
Pradesh in exercise of its power conferred upon it under the proviso
appended to clause (e) of sub-section (1) of Section 3-A of the U.P. Sales
Tax Act, 1948, in terms whereof glass bottles and phials, other than hand
made glass phials is exigible to tax @ 4% have been included in Entry 20
thereof.
Appellant herein is a dealer of country liquor. It also carries on
business in IMFL. Curiously, whereas in respect of IMFL, no sales tax has
been levied on bottles, such a levy is sought to be made on bottles for sale
of country liquor. Business in country liquor is res extra commercium. It is
governed by the provisions of the U.P. Excise Act. Each stage of
manufacture, bottling, distribution and sale of country liquor is governed not
only by the provisions of the U.P. Excise Act and the rules framed
thereunder, but also the terms and conditions of licence.
It is not in dispute that Appellant charged from his customers a sum of
Rs.2.60, 2.30 and Rs.1.57 under the heading "P.P. Caps, Seal and Filling’.
The question which arose for consideration was as to whether imposition of
such charge would amount to the charge of price of the bottles as contra-
distinguished from the bottling charges.
The Assessing Officer found the same to be exigible to sales tax,
despite noticing that there existed a dispute as to whether sale of bottles was
admitted or the charges levied were bottling charges, it proceeded to hold :
"\005Thus, it is clear that for this purpose the bottles
purchased from outside the province has been used. In
view of the aforesaid, as far as the question of tax
liability on the amount of aforesaid bottles is concerned,
as per the order of the Commissioner Excise the rates of
2.30, 2.20 and 2.10 which has been fixed for the bottles
of 750 M.L. 375 ML and 180 ML capacity is completely
for the empty bottles for the sale of country liquor. As
far as the price of these empty bottles under these charges
is concerned, the alleged labour charges with regard to
the use of caps cork and labelling at different rates is
negligible in comparison to the price of the bottles of the
assessee and how much amount with regard to this work
is included in the said rate of 2-30, 2.20 and 2.10 has not
been mentioned in the aforesaid order of the Excise
Commissioner. In this way, the recovery of the amount
by the assessee under the head of bottling charges is the
sale of cap and cork and labelled empty bottles in a
separate contract under the definition of Section 2-H of
the Provincial Sales Tax Act. As far as the question of
two judgments referred by the assessee is concerned, the
facts of the aforesaid judgments were not relating to the
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bottling charges as the fact of this case. In the case of
M/s Gannon Dunkerley & Co., the Hon’ble Supreme
Court has held that to constitute sale, the existence of two
parties, transfer of goods and passing of consideration
from purchaser to seller for this purpose is necessary.
These all facts are present in the case under consideration
and in view of the same the amount shown as the bottling
charges, is the sale of label, cap & cork used on the
bottle. Under the case under consideration, the assessee
has shown the price of the bottles as bottling charges and
has not admitted the sale of the bottles, while amount
recovered in the form of bottling charges is the clear cut
sale of bottles\005"
The Appellate Authority, on the other hand, held :
"It is clear on the basis of the aforesaid principles
that the bottling charges have not been taken due to the
sale because in this case, the cost of the packing material
is very less than the price of the main material and the
appellant had no other business alternative that he could
sale and transport the liquor without packing materials
and there was no relaxation in price for the purchaser of
the liquor in case of absence of the packing materials.
Therefore, the sale of packing material could not be held
as a separate sale agreement and in case of sale no sales
tax could be imposed on the bottling charges.
It is also pertinent to mention here that the sale of
foreign liquor and the sale of bottles have not been held
to be a separate sale and the same rate has been imposed
over the same. The double standard adopted by the Tax
Assessment Officer in the same case shall not be held
justifiable."
The Trade Tax Tribunal opined :
"As regards the bottling charges, we are of the
opinion that the assessee is neither a dealer in bottles
nor does any business of bottles. The bottles have been
used by the assessee only as a cheap and convenient
mode of transport, since there was no commercial
alternative available, the amount of 2.60, 2.30, 1.57
only represents the charge for P.P. Caps, seals, labels
and filling charges and not for bottles and this charge
has been collected under the head of bottling charges
and the same does not represent any cost of the bottles,
label etc. It was merely a payment for the job work
undertaken for packing the liquor, since no price was
charged for bottles, there can be no sale of bottles as
was held by the Hon’ble Court in the case of State of
Madras v. Ganon Dunkerley & Co. Ltd. (1958) STC
383 S.C.
The Hon’ble Supreme Court and the various
High Courts have repeatedly held that it is the onus of
the department to prove that an implied agreement to
sell existed and how the price has been charged for the
packing material. The assessee was required to prove
negative. This burden has not been discharged
successfully by the department. Therefore, the
assessment to tax on this point was totally illegal.
The inference of alleged implied sale is baseless since
firstly no price for bottles is charged and whatever was
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the cost of bottles, it goes into the overheads of and is
debited to the profit and loss account. Moreover, the
packing material, which is used by the assessee is a
bare minimum necessary as the assessee has no other
commercial alternative."
Differing with the findings of fact arrived at by the Appellate
Authority as also the Tribunal, the High Court, in exercise of its revisional
jurisdiction, however, in its judgment which is being impugned before us
proceeded on the basis that in view of the definition of ’turnover’ as
contained in Section 2(i) of the Act, and also the fact that the liquor could
not be sold without packing, a contract of sale of bottles would be
presumed, holding :
"The aforesaid two decisions of the Apex Court
clearly hold that in case where the goods are sold in
packed form, there is implied contract for sale of material
even if the price are separately charged for. It has been
further held that the packing charges charged for the
packing material and for labour charges etc. falls within
the purview of "any sums charged for anything done by
the dealer in respect of the goods at the time of or before
the delivery thereof" and thus, it is the part of turnover.
Bottling of liquor is an integral part of the process of
manufacturing. Liquor becomes marketable only after
bottling. Liquor can not be sold without packing. Thus,
the packing charges are liable to be included in the
turnover and liable to tax. I do not agree that bottling
charges is a delivery charges."
There is no finding by the High Court that there was an implied
condition of sale in regard to sale of bottles. The High Court while arriving
at the said finding did not deal with the question as to whether the charges
levied by Appellant from its customers, which admittedly stand approved by
the Excise Authority, represent bottling charges or sale of bottles.
A contract of sale of goods must be construed having regard to the
terms and conditions thereof. A person purchasing a property must know as
to what he had bargained for. The parties might not have bargained for the
containers but might have bargained only for the contents.
In absence of any stipulation made in the contract of sale for the
purpose of levy of sales tax or otherwise, the Revenue Authorities must
arrive at a finding as to whether there had been any implied condition of
transfer, burden of proof wherefor would be on the Revenue. Consideration
of a part of goods may be held to be a condition precedent for constituting a
sale, but therefor each case must be judged on its own facts.
The High Court, in our opinion, failed to take into consideration the
fact that the question as to whether there had been an implied contract for
sale of bottles and any amount has separately been charged therefor was
required to be determined. Each case is required to be determined on
consideration of the relevant materials placed on record by the parties.
The Assessing Officer proceeded on the basis that the assessee
admitted to have levied charged for the bottles. It, however, failed to make a
distinction between ’bottling charges’ and the ’price of bottles’. When the
excise articles are sold in a bottle, it must have a label containing the
requisite informations as envisaged under the Excise Act and the Rules
framed thereunder or the terms and conditions of licence authorising the
dealer to deal with in the commodity in question. The Assessing Officer did
not proceed on the basis that the price of bottles form a part of the turnover
as contended by Mr. Dwivedi.
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The question came up for consideration before different High Courts.
We may notice only a few of them.
In Commissioner of Sales Tax, Madhya Pradesh, Indore v. The
Bhopal Sugar Industries Ltd. [48 STC 45], Division Bench comprising of
G.P. Singh and U.N. Bhachawat, J., (as the learned Judges then were)
opined :
"7. Sales tax on gunny bags can be imposed only
on the basis that the assessee sold the bags to the
purchasers of sugar. There was no express agreement for
sale of gunny bags. The Tribunal has stated that there
was no evidence to show even an implied agreement for
sale of gunny bags. The learned Government Advocate,
who appeared for the department, however, submitted
that the other facts stated by the Tribunal lead to the
inference that there was an implied sale of gunny bags. It
is this argument which we have to examine. The property
in the gunny bags no doubt passed to the purchasers of
sugar and the gunny bags did not become useless in the
hands of the purchasers. But from this alone it is not
possible to hold that there was an implied sale of gunny
bags. When goods packed in containers are sold, the
property in the containers no doubt is transferred to the
purchaser. But before holding that there was an implied
sale of containers, one has to exclude the possibility that
the containers were used by the dealer as a convenient
and cheap mode of transporting the goods to the
purchaser without charging any price for them. It has also
to be kept in mind that the burden of proof that there was
an implied sale of packing material or container is on the
department and the assessee is not required to prove the
negative. Viewed on these principles, in our opinion, the
facts do not warrant the conclusion of implied sale of
gunny bags. It is not practicable for a manufacturer of
sugar like the assessee to sell sugar in loose and the
assessee has to use some form of packing material for
transporting the sugar sold by it to the purchaser. Indeed,
the mode of packing sugar in gunny bags was prescribed
under the Control Order which was binding on the
assessee. The assessee did not charge any separate price
for gunny bags. The price of 100 kgs. of sugar packed in
gunny bag was fixed under the Control Order and it is
this price which the assessee charged from the
purchasers. May be, that in fixing the price of 100 kgs.
sugar packed in gunny bag, the Government took into
account the price of the packing material just as it must
have taken into account manufacturing cost and other
incidental charges and expenses of the producer. But
from this alone, it cannot be said that the assessee
charged the price of gunny bags from the purchasers or
that there was an implied sale of gunny bags to the
purchasers. The Sugar Control Order authorises the
Government to fix the ex factory price of sugar and not
the price of gunny bags. The price fixed by the Control
Order and charged by the assessee was the price of sugar.
The cost of gunny bag is insignificant as compared to the
cost of sugar packed in it. Having regard to all these
circumstances, in our opinion, it is not possible to infer
that there was any implied sale of gunny bags."
Yet again in Commissioner of Sales Tax, M.P. v. Swadeshi Cotton
and Flour Mills Ltd. [ 46 STC 138], Sohani, J., (as His Lordship then was)
stated the law thus :
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"4. Having heard the learned counsel for the
parties, we have come to the conclusion that this
reference must be answered in favour of the assessee and
against the department. As regards the grievance that the
Board had not given any clear findings, all that we can
say is that no such grievance can be made in view of the
question referred to us. That question is based on the
assumption that there was material before the Board for
giving a finding and that finding was accordingly given
by the Board that there was no implied sale of the
packing materials. In point of fact, the question referred
to this Court is a question of fact. The burden was on the
department to prove that there was an implied sale of the
packing materials. In the instant case, it was not disputed
that there was no express agreement for the sale of the
packing materials. The assessing authorities had not
found that price was separately charged for the packing
material. The contention advanced on behalf of the
assessee before the Board that the price charged by the
assessee for the cloth was either on the basis of meterage
or on the basis of weightage was impliedly upheld by the
learned Member as he relied upon the decision reported
in Binod Mills Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Sales Tax
1971 M.P.L.J. 1009, where a similar finding had been
given. It must, therefore, be held that the Board had
found that the burden to prove that there was sale of the
packing material was not discharged by the department.
In our opinion, therefore, the Board rightly relied upon
the decision reported in Binod Mills Co. Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Sales Tax 1971 M.P.L.J. 1009 for
coming to the conclusion that there was no implied sale
by the assessee of the packing materials."
This Court in Hyderabad Deccan Cigarette Factory v. The State of
Andhra Pradesh [17 STC 624], observed :
"This passage indicates that the Tribunal rejected
the contention on the ground that the value of the packing
materials must have been taken into consideration in
fixing the price of the cigarettes. But that reasoning does
not answer the contention that howsoever the price was
fixed, the cigarettes were sold, whether packed in
cardboards or wooden boxes, in or outside the State of
Andhra Pradesh, at the same rate. The High Court also
held that though there was no express contract to sell the
packing materials and the packets separately, such a
contract was implicit in the contract for the sale of the
goods. This implied agreement was based on the fact
that the packet cigarettes were sold at a price and on the
surmise that in fixing the price the assessee might have
taken into consideration the cost of all the materials used
in the packing. The High Court also ignored the
aforesaid contention of the assessee. It also did not
consider the relevant material to come to the conclusion
that the assessee agreed to sell the packing materials to
the customers.
A perusal of the orders of the various authorities
and the High Court shows that a simple question of fact
has been sidetracked by copious citations. Whether there
was an agreement to sell the packing materials is a pure
question of fact and that question cannot be decided on
fictions or surmises. That is what has happened in this
case. The Commercial Tax Officer invoked a fiction; the
Assistant Commissioner of Commercial Taxes relied
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upon the doctrine of "finished product", the Appellate
Tribunal relied upon surmises; and the High Court on the
principle of implied agreement\005"
Definition of ’turnover’, in our opinion, for the purpose of
determining the question, is not very relevant. Interpretation clause must be
construed having regard to the purport and object of the Act it seeks to
achieve. The term ’turnover’ may contain several ingredients. One of the
ingredients of the said term, however, cannot be taken in isolation for the
purpose of imposition of levy. Imposition of tax would be on the total
turnover, assuming that the prices of the bottles were to be included in the
price of the country liquor, provided one is leviable. If an exemption has
been granted, it would be on sale of the articles in a deliverable form.
There exists a serious dispute as to whether for the purpose of levying sales
tax, a part of the commodity which is sold as a composite whole would come
within the purview of the Act when sale of two different commodities can be
bifurcated for levy of tax.
Containers of the principal commodity which is the subject matter of
the contract of sale may have to be taken into consideration for the purpose
of arriving at the total turnover, but even for that purpose there has to be an
element of ad idem of mind between the purchaser and seller. If by reason
of express contract or implied contract, the containers are also sold,
indisputably the same would be exigible to tax, as has been held in
Commissioner of Taxes Assam v. Prabhat Marketing Co. Ltd., Gauhati
[AIR 1967 SC 602], but it is difficult to accept the contention of Mr.
Dwivedi that even in absence of such a contract, sales tax would be leviable.
Reliance has been placed by Mr. Dwivedi on Jamana Four and Oil Mills (P)
Ltd. v. State of Bihar [(1987) 3 SCC 404], wherein this Court was not
dealing with a situation of the present nature. It was held :
"3. The dealer filed a revision before the Tribunal
and contended that the demand of Sales Tax payable at
different rates on the calculated turnover of gunny bags
was not at all warranted as no price had been charged for
the containers. The Tribunal found:
(1) The dealer transferred the property in the gunny bags,
the packing material, to the purchasers for price.
(2) The price of the gunny bags was included in the
consolidated rates of price charged by the dealer.
(3) There was an implied agreement for the sale of gunny
bags between the dealer and the different purchasers to
whom the wheat products were supplied.
(4) The transfer of gunny bags was impliedly covered by
the contract of sale with regard to the wheat products.
On these findings the Tribunal held:
We hold that the learned lower courts were justified in
levying tax at a different rate on the turnover on account
of sale of gunny bags in which the wheat products were
sold.
It further found:
The learned Deputy Commissioner has given a direction
for determination of the turnover on account of sale of
gunny bags. On being asked the applicant accepted that
the accounts maintained by him would reveal the exact
number of gunny bags used in the transaction of sale
under consideration as also the price of the same. Hence
we direct in modification of the orders passed by the
learned Deputy Commissioner in this behalf that the
learned Assessing Officer should ascertain from the
accounts, the turnover on account of sale of gunny bags
as container of wheat products during the period under
consideration and assess tax thereon at the prescribed rate
of 4=per cent The balance turnover shall be assessed at 2
per cent."
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Reliance has also been placed by Mr. Dwivedi on M/s Chhatta Sugar
Company Ltd., Mathura v. Commissioner of Sales Tax [1991 UPTC 341],
wherein a learned Single Judge of the Allahabad High Court, without any
discussion, opined that the containers would also be taxed.
Inclusion of bottles as a separate item in the notification dated
07.09.1981, in our opinion, is not relevant. Appellant is not a dealer of
bottles. Had it been a dealer of the bottles, he might have been exigible to
sales tax in terms of the said provision.
Thus, without adverting to the question as to whether there had been
an implied sale, Entry 20 will have no role to play.
We may also consider the matter from another angle. A tax may be
leviable at different rates. Definition of ’turnover’ having undergone an
amendment and being expansive in nature, would it be permissible to
segregate it to make different commodities for the purpose of imposition of
tax at a higher rate, would, in our opinion, merit consideration. We are not
oblivious of the fact that if the sale is in relation to two different
commodities, it may be permissible to levy tax at different rates, but not
when the definition of ’turnover’ includes a wide range of subjects including
the package. Only for the purpose, the concept of implied contract of sale
would assume significance.
We, however, are not impressed with the arguments of Mr.
Radhakrishnan that Section 3AB of the Act introduced in the statute by
reason of the U.P. Trade Tax Tax (Amendment) Act, 1991 is clarificatory in
nature. The said amendment came into force with effect from 25.04.1990.
The assessment year, as noticed hereinbefore, is 01.04.1989 to 31.03.1990.
The Act having been brought into force from a particular date, no
retrospective operation thereof can be contemplated prior thereto. The said
provision furthermore contains a substantive provision which is itself a
pointer to the fact that for the earlier period packing materials would not be
exempted merely because main commodity is exempted from tax, but albeit
subject to the condition that there was an agreement to sell in respect
thereof. The amendment sought to deal with a matter which created some
problem in implementation of the Act.
We, therefore, are of the opinion that the matter requires
reconsideration by the High Court. The High Court must on the basis of the
materials available on records arrive at a finding as to whether there existed
any implied contract for sale and/or whether in effect and substance keeping
in view the fixation of price of different materials by the excise authorities in
terms of the U.P. Excise Act and/or rules framed thereunder any separate
charges have been levied for prices of the bottles separately or not.
For the reasons aforementioned, the impugned judgment cannot be
sustained, which is set aside accordingly. The appeal is allowed. The
matter is remitted to the High Court for its consideration afresh. No costs.