Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF SALES TAX, U.P.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
AURIAYA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, ALLAHABAD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT10/04/1986
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
SINGH, K.N. (J)
CITATION:
1986 AIR 1556 1986 SCR (2) 430
1986 SCC (3) 50 1986 SCALE (1)1068
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1990 SC 313 (23)
R 1992 SC 96 (14)
ACT:
Uttar Pradesh Sales Tax Act, 1948, s. 2(h), 7-F and 29
Sales Tax - Refund of - Tax paid under provision of law
subsequently held unconstitutional - Liability of State to
refund tax - Limitation period for claiming such refund.
Indian Contract Act 1872, s. 72 - Money paid under
mistake of law - Liability to return/refund.
HEADNOTE:
The proviso to s. 29 of the U.P. Sales Tax Act 1948
provides that no claim to the refund of any tax or other
amount paid under the Act shall be allowed unless it was
made within 24 months from the date on which the order for
assessment was passed or within 12 months of the final order
passed in appeal, revision or reference in respect of the
order of assessment whichever Period is later.
The respondent-assessee had been taxed on the basis of
sale of forward contracts for the assessment year 1949-50
and for subsequent years. After coming to know of the
decision of the Supreme Court in Sales Tar officer, Pilibhit
v. M/s. Budh Prakash Jai Prakash, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 243 that
the provision for taxation of sales tax on forward contract
was ultra vires, the respondent-assessee filed a Revision in
1955 for quashing the assessment order for the relevant year
1955 i.e. within a year of the assessment order. me revision
was dismissed in September 1958 on the ground that it had
been filed after a long delay and was barred by limitation.
m e assessee there after made a formal application before
the Sales Tax Officer for refund of the amounts which were
deposited in accordance with various assessment orders under
mistake. The Sales Tax Officer dismissed that application as
barred by period of limitation prescribed under Article 96
of the First Schedule of the Indian Limitation Act 1908. The
assessee then filed a revision to the court of Additional
Judge (Revision) Sales Tax, U.P. against the order of the
Sales Tax Officer. Relying
431
upon the decision of the Allahabad High Court in Sales Tax
Commissioner, U.P. v. Sada Sukh Veopar Mandal, 1959 S.T.C.
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57, the Additional Judge (Revision) held that there was no
period of limitation and ordered refund of sales tax of
Rs.3535.3 for 1948-49, Rs.9,205.12 for 1949-50, Rs.3,653.8
for 1950-51 and Rs.5,014.3.3 for 1951-52. me High Court also
upheld the order of the Additional Judge (Revision) in a
reference at the instance of the revenue. It held: (a) that
the period of limitation under Article 96 of the Limitation
Act could not be taken into consideration by the Sales Tax
Authorities in refusing to allow refund; and (b) that the
Additional Judge (Revisions) Sales Tax, U.P. was legally
justified in entertaining the revision application after the
lapse of several years from the date of the assessment order
and that the sums deposited by respondent-company towards
sales tax for the year 1949-50 and onwards were refundable
to the company.
Dismissing the appeal of the appellant-revenue, this
Court,
^
HELD: 1.(i) Article 265 of the Constitution enjoins
that no tax shall be levied or collected except by authority
of law. Therefore, when moneys are paid to the State which
the State has no legal right to receive, it is ordinarily
the duty of the State subject to any special provisions of
any particular statute or special facts and circumstances of
the case, to refund the tax of the amount paid. [437 D-H]
1.(ii) Where indubitably there is in the dealer legal
title to get the money refunded and where the dealer is not
guilty of any latches and where there is no specific
prohibition against refund, one should not get entangled in
the cobweb of procedures but do substantial justice. [445 F-
G]
Suresh Chandra Bose v. State of West Bengal, 38 S.T.C.
99 and State of West Bengal and Ors. v. Suresh Chandra Bose,
45 S.T.C. 118, approved.
2.(i) The rights and the obligations of the parties
must be found within the four corners of the Act and the
Supreme Court in an appeal under an Act must act under the
four corners of law, but in interpreting the relevant
procedural provisions, fairness and justice should be the
approach and
432
even in a fiscal statute, equity should prevail wherever
language permits. [438 H; 493 A]
2.(ii) Section 7-F of the Act is significant in the
sense that it proceeds on the basis that refund had to be
made in certain cases. The section enjoins that
notwithstanding anything contained in the Act, no tax, fee,
interest or penalty under the Act shall be recovered and no
refund shall be allowed if the amount involved for any
assessment year was less than five rupees. It recognises
liability and the obligation of refund if the amount is more
than rupees five. Sub-section (5) of section 9 stipulates
that if the amount of tax assessed, fee levied or penalty
imposed was reduced by the appellate authority under sub-
section (3), he shall order the excess amount of tax, fee or
penalty, if realised to be refunded. Section 29 stipulates
that the assessing authority shall, in the manner
prescribed, refund to a dealer any amount of tax, fees or
other dues paid in excess of the amount due from him under
the Act. Sub-section (3) of section 29 provides certain
embargo against refund in certain cases. Therefore, it is
apparent that the obligation to refund in cases of excess
realisation or excess payment by the Taxing Authority of the
dues from the seller as well as from the assessee is
recognised in the scheme of the Act. [439 G-H; 440 A-B; E-F]
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3.(i) Section 72 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872
recognises that a person to whom money has been paid, or
anything delivered by mistake or under coercion, must repay
or return it. Money paid under a mistake of law comes within
’mistake’ in section 72 of the Indian Contract Act, and
there is no question of estoppel when the mistake of law is
common to both the assessee and the taxing authority. [440
G; 443 D]
3.(ii) If law of limitation is applicable then section
5 of the Limitation Act is also applicable and it is
apparent that the application originally was made within
time before two years as contained in the proviso. Article
96 of the First Schedule of the Limitation Act, 1908
prescribes a period of limitation of three years from the
date when the mistake becomes known for filing a suit. If
that principle is also kept in mind, the assessee had made
the application in 1955, and it was not beyond time, since
the judgment came to be known in May. 1954. [445 D-F]
433
In the instant case, the mistake indubitably was there.
There was no dispute that the tax was not due and had been
collected wrongly. There is no dispute that the assessee is
entitled to the same. There is no dispute that the assesee
made application within a year of the knowledge of the
mistake. There is no dispute therefore that had a suit been
filed under Article 96 of the Limitation Act, 1908 or an
application made under section 29 of the Act, the claim
would have been allowed but the revision was dismissed on
the ground that it was belated. The revision of The
assessment order was wrong but the consequential relief of
refund could have been granted. The order of the Additional
Judge (Revision) was correct and the assessee was entitled
to refund. [443 G-H; 444 A-B]
Gannon Dunkerley and Co.’s case, 9 S.T.C. 353 and The
State of Kerala v. Aluminium Industries Ltd., 16 S.T.C. 689,
relied upon.
Sales Tax Commissioner, U.P. v. Sada Sukh Veopar
Mandal, 1959 S.T.C. 57; Raja Jagdamba Pratap Narain Singh v.
Central Board of Direct Taxes and Ors.., 100 I.T.R. 698;
Hindustan Sugar Mills Etc. v. State of Rajasthan & ors.,
[1979] 1 S.C.R.276 at 297; Commissioner, Sales Tax, Lucknow
v. Auraiya Chambers of Commerce, 30 S.T.C. 41; The State of
Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) v. Haji Hasan Dada, 17
S.T.C. 343; Commissioner of Income Tax, West Punjab v.
Tribune Trust, Lahore, 16 I.T.R. 214; K.S. Venkatara and
Co. (P) Ltd. v. The State of Madras, 17 S.T.C. 418; Gannon
Dunkerley & Co. v. The State of Madras, 5 S.T.C. 216;
Raleigh Investment Co. Ltd. v. Governor-General in Council,
74 I.A. 50 = 15 I.T.R. 332; The Sales Tax Officer, Banaras &
ors. v. Kanhaiya Lal and Lal Saraf & ors., 9 S.T.C. 747 and
Bharat Kala Bhandar (P) Ltd. v. Municipal Committee,
Dhamangaon, 59 I.T.R. 73, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 874-
876 of 1974.
From the Judgment and Order dated 19.1.1973 of the
Allahabad High Court in Sales Tax Reference No. 763, 764 and
765 of 1970.
R.A. Gupta for the Appellant.
434
A.K. Verma and D.N. Mishra for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. These appeals by special leave
arise from the decision of the High Court of Allahabad.
Under Section 11(3) of the U.P. Sales Tax Act, 1948 as
amended from time to time the following questions were
referred to the High Court for opinion at the instance of
the Commissioner of Sales Tax and statement of the case was
submitted.
"1. Whether, the observations (subject, however,
to the question of estoppel, waiver, limitation or
the like) made by their Lordships of the Hon’ble
Supreme Court in the case of Sales Tax Officer,
Banaras v. Kanhaiya Lal Mukundlal Saraf, (1958 STC
p. 747), imply that the provisions of the Indian
Limitation Act are applicable to cases under the
U.P. Sales Tax Act and whether these observations
are inconsistent with the view taken by the
Hon’ble High Court in the case of Sales Tax
Commissioner, U.P. v. Sadasukh Veopar Mandal,
(1959 STC p. 57) ?
2. Whether, in these cases in which refund was
claimed on the principle of section 72 of the
Indian Contract Act the period of limitation under
Article 96 of the Limitation Act could be taken
into consideration by the Sales Tax authorities in
refusing to allow refund?
3. Whether under the circumstances of this case as
stated above, the Addl. Judge (Revisions) Sales
Tax was legally justified in holding that the sums
deposited by the Company towards sales tax for the
year 1949-50, was refundable to the company?
4. Whether, the Addl. Judge (Revisions) Sales Tax
was legally justified in entertaining the revision
application in question of the aforesaid Company -
after the lapse of several years from the date of
the assessment order particularly when the appeal
and the revision application of the Company in
respect of the assessment year were dismissed?
435
The questions relate to the assessment year 1949-50 and
for subsequent years. In view of the decision of the
Allahabad High Court in Commissioner of Sales Tax, U.P.
Lucknow v. Aurlsya Chamber of Commerce which was in respect
of the assessment year 1948-49 reported in 30 STC page 41,
the High Court was of the opinion that question No. 1
aforesaid need not be answered, question No.2 aforesaid
should be answered in the negative, question No.3 aforesaid
in the affirmative and question No.4 aforesaid in the
affirmative.
The main question involved is the question of refund of
sales tax paid in respect of forward contract.
In The Sales Tax Officer, Pilibhit v. Messrs. Budh
Prakash Jai Prakash, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 243 = 5 S.T.C. 193 this
Court held on 3rd May, 1954 that section 2(h) of the Uttar
Pradesh Sales Tax Act, XV of 1948, enlarging the definition
of "sale" so as to include forward contracts must, to that
extent, be declared ultra vires. A bench of five learned
judges of this Court held that there was a well-defined and
well-established distinction between a sale and an agreement
to sell. m e words ’Taxes on the sale of goods’ in entry
No. 48, List II, Schedule VII of the Government of India
Act, 1935, conferred power on the Provincial Legislature to
impose a tax only when there had been a completed sale and
not when there was only an agreement to sell. For the same
reason explanation III to section 2(h) of the said Act which
provided that forward contract ’shall be deemed to have been
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completed on the date originally agreed upon for delivery’
and section 3B of the Act also must be held to be ultra
vires.
As a consequence, the assessee in this case filed a
revision in 1955 for quashing the order for this year. It
may be mentioned that the assessee had been taxed on the
basis of sale of such forward contracts. The revision was
dismissed in September, 1958 on the ground that it had been
filed after a long delay and was barred by limitation.
The assessee subsequently filed an application before
the Sales-tax Officer for refund of the amount which was
deposited in accordance with the assessment order for the
year and the subsequent years under mistake. This claim of
refund was again made on 24th May, 1959. The Sales-tax
Officer dismissed that
436
application as barred by period of limitation prescribed
under Article 96 of the First Schedule of the Indian
Limitation Act, 1908. m e assessee thereafter filed revision
to the Court of Additional Judge (Revision) Sales Tax U.P.
against the order of the Sales-tax Officer rejecting the
claim for refund.
The Court of Additional Judge (Revision) Sales Tax
U.P. directed refund of sales-tax of Rs.3,535.3 for 1948-49,
Rs.9,205.12 for 1949-50, Rs.3,653.8 for 1950-51 and Rs.
5,014.3.3 for 1951-52. It may be mentioned that prior to 1st
April, 1959, there was no section dealing with any period of
limitation for refund. Section 29 was added by U.P. Sales
Tax (Amendment) Act VII of 1959 and came into force with
effect from 1st April, 1959. The first proviso to section 29
is as follows :-
"Provided that no claim to the refund of any tax
or other amount paid under this Act shall be
allowed unless it was made within 24 months from
the date on which the order for assessment was
passed or within 12 months of the final order
passed in appeal, revision or reference in respect
of the order of assessment whichever period is
later."
It appears that the claim for refund in the instant
case was made after 1st April, 1959. At the time when the
taxes were paid and the assessment was made, there was no
limitation. m e Additional Judge (Revision) Sales Tax U.P.
held that there was no period of limitation and ordered
refund as mentioned hereinbefore. The said Additional Judge
placed reliance upon the decision of the Allahabad High
Court in Sales Tax Commissioner U.P. v. Sada Sukh Veopar
1959 S.T.C. 57
The said officer at the instance of the revenue
referred the four questions indicated above for the opinion
of the High Court under section 11(3) of the Act.
The main question therefore is : are these diverse
amounts refundable to the assessee?
It is undisputed that the tax was collected from the
437
assessee and the assessee paid the tax on the belief that
tax was due and payable. It was subsequently found that the
provision for taxation of sales-tax on forward contract was
ultra vires. Therefore the levy and collection of sales tax
on forward contracts was ultra vires. In other words, the
State had no right to that money. The assessee was not
liable to pay that money. This position in law came to the
knowledge of the parties only on this Court’s decision being
rendered on 3rd May, 1954. The assessee filed a revision as
appears from the statement of case for quashing the
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assessment for the relevant year in 1955 i.e. within a year
which was dismissed in 1958 on the ground that it had been
filed after a long delay and was barred by limitation. The
assessee thereafter made a formal application for refund on
24th May, 1959. That was dismissed on the ground of claim
being barred by limitation on the principles of article 96
of First Schedule of Indian Limitation Act, 1908.
Article 265 of the Constitution enjoins that on tax
shall be levied or collected except by authority of law. Tax
in this case indubitably has been collected and levied
without the authority of law. It is therefore refundable to
the assessee. The question is : is there any machinery for
refund of that tax to the assessee and if so, is there any
limitation for refund of the tax collected without the
authority of law? If State collects because of its powers
moneys not due to it, can it be directed to refund? If so,
then is there any period of limitation?
Though not in this context but in a different context,
the question whether tax collected by the State without
authority of law can be directed to be refunded without any
period of limitation was considered in a writ application by
the Calcutta High Court in Suresh Chandra Bose v. The State
of West Bengal, 38 S.T.C. 99. This decision of the single
judge of the Calcutta High Court was approved by the
Division Bench of that High Court in State of West Bengal &
Ors. v. Suresh Chandra Bose, 45 S.T.C. 118. me court under
Article 226 of the Constitution directed refund in that
case. The court emphasised that when moneys are paid to the
State which the State has no legal right to receive, it is
ordinarily the duty of the State subject to any special
provisions of any particular statute or special facts and
circumstances of the case, to refund the tax of the amount
paid.
438
This Court in Raja Jagdambika Pratap Narain Singh v.
Central Board of Direct Taxes & ors., 100 I.T.R. 698 had to
consider from the point of view of the Income-tax Act this
aspect. This court was dealing with the question of
limitation in granting relief in the background of Article
226 of the Constitution of India. But this Court observed
that any legal system, especially one evolving in a
developing country, might Permit judges to play a creative
role and innovate to ensure justice without doing violence
to the norms set by legislation. But to invoke judicial
activism to set at nought legislative judgment is subversive
of the constitutional harmony and comity of
instrumentalities.
Here in the instance case we have to find out within
the four corners of the provisions of U.P. Sales Tax Act,
1948 whether there is any prohibition prohibiting the
assessee from getting the refund as claimed for. If the
original claim of 1955 is accepted as sum claimed for
refund, then it cannot be Disputed that there was denial of
a rightful claim.
We might in this case bear in mind certain
observations, though we are conscious that the same were
rendered in a different context, of this Court in Hindustran
Sugar Mills Etc. v. State of Rajasthan & Ors., [1979] 1
S.C.R. 276 at 297 Where directing payment of certain sales
tax collected from the assessee, this Court observed that
though there was no legal liability on the Central
Government but as we are living in a democratic society
governed by the rule of law and every Government which
claims to be inspired by ethical and moral values must do
what is fair and just to the citizen, regardless of legal
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technicalities, this Court hoped and trusted that the
Central Government would not seek to defeat the legitimate
claim of the assessee for reimbursement of sales tax in that
case on the amount of freight by adopting a legalistic
attitude but would do what fairness and justice demanded.
It is true that this is an appeal from a reference
under section 11(3) of the U.P. Sales Tax Act, 1948. The
rights and the obligations of the parties must be found
within the four corners of the Act and this Court in an
appeal under an Act must act under the four corners of law
but in interpreting the Relevant procedural provisions,
fairness and justice should be
439
the approach and even in fiscal statutes equity should
prevail A wherever language permits. With this background,
let us examine the actual provisions of the Act.
As mentioned in the order of the High Court, the order
under appeal was passed by the High Court relying on the
order of the Special Bench of that High Court for the
assessment year 1948-49 in Commissioner, Sales Tax, Lucknow
v. Auriaya Chamber of Commerce, 30 S.T.C. 41. On a
difference of opinion between the two learned judges, the
matter was disposed of by the opinion of third learned
judge. m e year involved was the assessment year 1948-49.
Four identical questions were referred to the High Court.
Pathak, J. (as his Lordship then was of the Allahabad High
Court) expressed the view that the first question had been
framed in the abstract without relevance to the facts of the
present case and therefore need not be answered. With this
view the other learned judge, Gulati J. agreed. We are also
of the same opinion. The facts before the High Court were
identical with the facts of the present case.
In order to appreciate the contentions raised in this
case, it is necessary to bear in mind the relevant
provisions of the U.P. Sales Tax Act, 1948 (hereinafter
called the ’Act’). Section 3 of the Act enjoins that subject
to the provisions of the Act, every dealer shall, for each
assessment year, pay a tax at the rates provided by or under
section 3-A or section 3-D on his turnover of sales or
purchases or both as may be which shall be determined in
such manner as may be prescribed. It is not necessary for
the present purpose to deal in detail with the said
provisions.
Various sections of the Act deal with the various
stages of taxation. It is not necessary to deal with these
in detail.
Section 7-F deals with recovery or refund of petty
amounts to be ignored. The section is significant in the
sense that it proceeds on the basis that refund had to be
made in G certain cases. The section enjoins that
notwithstanding anything contained in the Act, no tax, fee,
interest or penalty under the Act shall be recovered and no
refund shall be allowed if the amount involved for any
assessment year was less than five rupees. It recognises
liability and the
440
obligation of refund if the amount is more than rupees five.
Section 8 deals with payment and recovery of tax. Section 8-
A deals with registration of dealers and realisation of tax
by dealers. The other sections are not very material except
that section 9 deals with appeal and sub-section (5) of
section 9 stipulates that if the amount of tax assessed, fee
levied or penalty imposed was reduced by the appellate
authority under sub-section (3), he shall order the excess
amount of tax, fee or penalty, if realised, to be refunded.
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Section 10 is not material for our present purpose. Section
11 deals with revision by the High Court in special cases,
and section 11(8) enjoins that the High Court shall, after
hearing the parties to the revision, decide the questions of
law involved therein, and where as a result of such
decision, the amount of tax, fee or penalty is required to
be determined afresh, the High Court may send a copy of the
decision to the Tribunal for fresh determination of the
amount and the Tribunal shall thereupon pass such orders as
are necessary to dispose of the case inconfirmity with the
said decision.
Section 5 of the Limitation Act has been made
applicable. The other material section for our present
purpose is section 29 which was added in the Act on 1st
April, 1959 provided for refund. Section 29 stipulates that
the assessing authority shall, in the manner prescribed,
refund to dealer any amount of tax, fees or other dues paid
in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. Then
there is provision for payment of interest if there is delay
in refund with which we are not concerned. Sub-section (3)
of section 29 provides certain embargo against refund in
certain cases. In the instant case, we are not concerned
with the same. Therefore, it is apparent that the obligation
to refund in case of excess realisation or excess payment by
the taxing authority of the dues from the seller as well as
from the assessee is recognised in the scheme of the Act.
Section 72 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 recognises
that a person to whom money has been paid, or anything
delivered, by mistake or under coercion, must repay or
return it. In this case it is not disputed that mistake of
law is also a mistake covered by the provisions of section
72 of the Indian Contract Act. If the law declared by this
court in Budh Prakash Jai Prakash’s case (supra) is correct,
as it must be,
441
then the payment of tax by the dealer, the respondent
herein, was under a mistake of law and realisation by the
revenue authorities was also under a mistake. Therefore such
sum should be refunded. This is recognised in the provisions
of the Act as we have noted before. The principle of section
72 of the Indian Contract Act has been recognised.
This was the view expressed by Pathak, J. on this
aspect. We are in respectful agreement. But the learned
judge was unable to find in the provisions of the Act any
authority for directing the refund without a suit. The
question therefore arises whether in a case where assessment
order determining the liability was void, but the same was
not set aside, can the sales tax authorities grant refund of
the tax assessed thereunder? The learned judge posed this
question and answered it by saying that if the assessment
could be said to have been under the Act, no such power
could be exercised by the sales tax authorities. The learned
Judge relied on the observations of this Court in The State
of Madhya Pradesh (now Maharashtra) v. Haji Hasan Dada, 17
S.T.C. 343. There this Court was dealing with section 13 of
the C.P. and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 (prior to its
amendment by Act 20 of 1953) and the Court said that the
refund might be granted only of the amount which was not
lawfully due, and whether a certain amount was lawfully due
or not must be determined by the officer in making the order
of assessment or re-assessment. Until the order of
assessment was set aside by appropriate proceedings under
the Act full effect must be given to the order even if it be
later found that the order was erroneous in law. It was held
by a bench of three learned judges that an application for
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refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment made
by the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax could not be
entertained by that officer on the plea that the order was
made on an erroneous view of the law unless the order was
set aside in appropriate proceedings. There the assessee had
paid that amount of tax assessed on him by the Assistant
Commissioner of Sales Tax on his turnover from his business
in yarn for the period 13th November, 1947, to 1st November,
1948, and then applied to that officer under section 13 for
an order refunding an amount on the plea that in the
turnover were included dyeing charges which were not
taxable. It was held that the application was not
maintainable under section 13 (as originally passed). There
this Court after referring to
442
the Judicial Committee’s decision in Commissioner of Income-
tax, West Punjab v. Tribune Trust, Lahore, 16 I.T.R. 214
held that such an order by the taxing authority was not
possible but it has to be borne in mind that in this case
the imposition of the tax was really without authority of
law as contemplated under Article 265 of the Constitution.
Therefore from the beginning the realisation was illegal and
a right of refund was embedded in the fact of payment.
In K.S. Venkataraman and Co. (P) Ltd. v. The State of
Madras, 17 S.T.C. 418 this Court had occasion to deal with
the problem similar to this. The appellant company there was
carrying on the business of building contractors and was
assessed to sales tax under the Madras General Sales Tax
Act, 1939, during the years 1948-49 to 1952-53 on the basis
that the contracts executed by them were works contracts. On
5th April, 1954, the Madras High Court held in Gannon
Dunkerley & Co. v. The State of Madras, 5 S.T.C. 216 that
the relevant provisions of the Act empowering the State of
Madras to assess indivisible building contracts to sales tax
were ultra vires the powers of the State Legislature. The
appellant issued a notice to the State of Madras under
section 80 of the Code of Civil Procedure claiming refund of
the amounts collected from them, and, as the demand was not
complied with, filed a suit in the City Civil Court on 23rd
March, 1955, for recovery of the amount of taxes illegally
levied and collected from them. The relevant provisions of
the Act empowering the Sales Tax Authorities to impose sales
tax on indivisible building contracts were unconstitutional
and void and the Sales Tax Authorities had not jurisdiction
to assess the appellant in respect of the transactions and
the appellant having paid the amounts under a mistake of law
was entitled to a refund of the same. Following the decision
of the Privy Council in Raleigh Investment Co. Ltd. v.
Governor-General in Council, 74 I.A. 50 = 15 I.T.R. 332 the
City Civil Court held inter alia that the suit was not
maintainable under section 18-A of the Act, and the Madras
High Court upheld that decision. On appeal this Court by a
majority held that on the facts, that the assessments were
made on the appellant in respect of indivisible works
contracts, and that this Court in Gannon Dunkerley and Co.’s
case 9 S.T.C. 353 had held that the provisions of the Act in
so far as they enabled the imposition of tax on the turnover
of indivisible building contract were ultra vires the
443
powers of the State Legislature, and, therefore, void, the
Sales Tax Authorities had acted outside the Act and not
under it in making the assessment on the appellant on the
basis of the relevant part of the charging section which was
declared ultra vires by this Court and therefore it was held
that section 18-A of the Act was not a bar to the
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maintainability of the suit. Shah and Ramaswami, JJ.,
however, took a different view. But if the realisation of
the tax and the collection of tax on forward contract was an
act beyond the authority and ultra vires then money retained
by the taxing authority should be refunded to the citizen
concerned. There is no express prohibition against that
refund.
In The State of Kerala v. Aluminium Industries Ltd., 16
S.T.C. 689 this Court reiterated that money paid under a
mistake of law comes within ’mistake’ in section 72 of the
Indian Contract Act, and there was no question of estoppel
when the mistake of law was common to both the assessee and
the taxing authority. Where the assessee did not raise the
question that the relevant sales were outside the taxing
State and were therefore exempt under Article 286(1)(a) of
the Constitution (as it then was), the Sales Tax Officer had
no occasion to consider it, and sales tax was levied by
mistake of law, it was ordinarily the duty of the State,
subject to any provision of law relating to sales tax, to
refund the tax. If the refund was not made, remedy through
court was open, subject to the same restriction and also to
the bar of limitation under Article 96 of the Limitation
Act, 1908. But this Court reiterated that it is the duty of
the State to investigate the facts when the mistake was
brought to its notice and to make a refund if the mistake
was proved and the claim was made within the period of
limitation. In the instant case before us as we have noted
mistake indubitably was there. There was no dispute that the
tax was not due and had been collected wrongly. There is no
dispute that the assessee is entitled to the same. There is
no dispute that the assessee made an application within a
year of the knowledge of the mistake. There is no dispute
therefore that had a suit been filed under Article 96 of the
Limitation Act, 1908 or an application made under section 29
of the Act, the claim would have been allowed but the
revision was dismissed on the ground that it was belated.
The revision of the assesment order was
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wrong but the consequential relief of refund could have been
granted. In that view of the matter we should construe the
provisions in such manner as there is no contra indication
which will ensure justice to the party and not denied to it
and hold that the order of the Additional Judge (Revision)
was correct and the assessee was entitled to refund.
In The Sales Tax Officer, Banaras, & Ors. v. Kanhaiya
Lal Mukund Lal Saraf & Ors., 9 S.T.C. 747 the contention was
raised on behalf of the Sales Tax Authorities to urge that
the procedure laid down in U.P. Sales Tax Act by way of
appeal and revision against the assessment order in question
ought to have been followed by a dealer and not having done
so, the dealer was debarred in Civil Court from obtaining
refund of tax paid by it. This Court overruled that
contention by reason of the categorical statement made by
the Advocate-General before the High Court. This Court
clearly laid down that when an amount has been recovered as
tax by an authority in exercise of the constitutionally
permissible amount, a suit of such amount would lie
notwithstanding the provisions in the statute barring a suit
in respect of the order made. This decision was rendered in
Bharat Kala Bhandar (Private) Ltd. v. Municipal Committee,
Dhamangaon., 59 I.T.R. 73.
As we read this order in the instant case, when the
assessee or dealer made an application for revision, the
Additional Judge (Revision) could direct refund because
money was being illegally retained by the revenue. If
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mistake either of law or of fact is established, the
assessee is entitled to recover the money and the party
receiving these is bound to return the same irrespective of
any other consideration. In this case there is no delay in
making the application for claiming the refund as set out
hereinbefore. It is apparent that the assessment order and
the realisation of the money was based on the ultra vires
provisions of the Act. This should have been and ought to
have been ignored. On that basis the present application was
made.
It is true that except special provisions indicated
before, there is no specific provision which prescribes a
procedure for applying for refund in such a case. But the
rules or procedures are hand-maids of justice not its
mistress. It is apparent in the scheme of the Act that sales
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tax is leviable only on valid transaction. If excess amount
is realised, refund is also contemplated by the scheme of
the Act In this case undoubtedly sales tax on forward
contracts have been illegally recovered on a mistaken view
of law. The same is lying with the Government. The assessee
or the dealer has claimed refund in the revision. In certain
circumstances refund specifically has been mentioned. There
is no prohibition against refund except the prohibition of
two years under the proviso of section 29. In this case that
two years prohibition is not applicable because the law was
declared by this Court in Budh Prakash Jai Prakash’s case on
3rd May, 1954 and the revision was filed in 1955 and it was
dismissed in 1958 on the ground that it had been filed after
a long delay. Thereafter the assessee had filed an
application before the Sales Tax Officer for refund. The
refund was claimed for the first time on 24th May, 1959. The
Sales Tax Officer had dismissed the application as barred by
limitation under Article 96 of the First Schedule of the
Indian Limitation Act, 1908.
The assessee filed revision before the court of
Additional Judge (Revisions) rejecting the claim for refund.
If law of limitation is applicable then section 5 of the
Limitation Act is also applicable and it is apparent that
the application originally was made within time before two
years as contained in the provisio. Article 96 of the First
Schedule of the Limitation Act, 1908 prescribes a period of
limitation of three years from the date when the mistake
becomes known for filing a suit. If that principle is also
kept in mind, then when the judgment came to be known in
May, 1954, then in our opinion, when the assessee had made
an application in 1955, it was not beyond the time.
Where indubitably there is in the dealer legal title to
get the money refunded and where the dealer is not guilty of
any latches and where there is no specific prohibition
against refund, one should not get entangled in the cobweb
of procedures but do substantial justice. The above
requirements in this Case, in our opinion, have been
satisfied and therefore we affirm the direction of the
Additional Judge (Revisions), Sales Tax for refund of the
amount to the dealer and affirm the High Court’s judgment on
this basis.
In the view we have taken, we are of the opinion that
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question No. 1 need not be answered. So far as question no.
2 is concerend, we are of the opinion that in the view we
have taken on question No. 3, this question also need not be
specifically answered. We are in agreement with the majority
view of the learned judges that question No. 3 should be
answered in the affirmative and that really disposes of the
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controversy between the parties. So far as question No. 4 is
concerned, in the way we read the facts of this case, we are
of the opinion that there has not been any lapse of several
years from the date of the assessment order and we are
further of the opinion that in the facts of this case, the
Additional Judge (Revision), Sales Tax was justified in
entertaining the application in question. The question is
answered accordingly.
The appeals accordingly fail and are dismissed with
costs.
M.L.A. Appeals dismissed.
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