Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SINGARENI COLLIERIES CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
12/10/1965
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 563 1966 SCR (2) 190
CITATOR INFO :
R 1966 SC1216 (9,10)
R 1967 SC1348 (3)
RF 1968 SC 339 (6)
R 1979 SC1160 (15)
RF 1992 SC1952 (8)
ACT:
Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act, 1950, s. 2(k)-Supply of
coal to consumers outside State pursuant to allotment orders
under Colliery Control Order, 1945-Whether allotment order
covenant or incident of contract of sale-Whether sales tax
under State Act leviable-Or whether exempt under Explanation
to Art. 286(1) (a) or as inter-State sales.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company carried on the business of mining coal
from its collieries and supplying it to consumers both
within and outside the State. In proceedings for assessment
to Sales tax, the company claimed that it was not liable to
pay sales tax under the Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act,
1950, on the price of coal supplied to allottees outside the
taxing State pursuant to the directions of the Coal
Commissioner issued under the Colliery Control Order, 1945.
This claim was rejected by the Sales Tax Officer on the
ground that the coal in question was sold F.O.R. colliery
siding and was actually delivered to the consumers within
the State when it was loaded on their account in Railway
Wagons at the colliery siding. The appeals against that
decision to the appellate authorities as well as to the High
Court were dismissed.
On appeal to this Court,
HELD : The sales in question were not liable to be taxed
under the Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act, 1950. [203 D]
Sales of coal between April, 1, 1954 and September 6, 1955,
for delivery to consumers outside the State could not be
taxed under the Hyderabad Act because they were covered by
the explanation to Art. 286(1) (a) before it was amended.
[201 F]
Under the Colliery Control Order, supply, use and disposal
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of coal were regulated from the stage of production till
consumption. Coal supplied was meant for consumption by the
allottee; therefore when the allottee was outside the State,
it was supplied for the purpose of consumption in the State
in which the allottee resided or carried on business. The
expression "actually delivered" used in Explanation to Art.
286(1) (a) does not include mere symbolical or notional
delivery e.g. by entrusting goods to a common carrier, or by
delivery of documents of title like railway receipts. [194
H, 196 B, 200 F]
Shree Bajrang Jute Mills v. The State of Andhra Pradesh, 15
S.T.C. 430, followed.
Similar Sales during the period September 7, 1955 to
September 10, 1956 were also exempt because the Explanation
continued to remain in force till the latter date and
furthermore during that period the State had no power to
levy tax on inter-State sales. [201 G-H]
Bengal immunity Co. Ltd. Y. State of Bihar, (1955] 2 S.C.R.
603, referred to.
191
For the period September 11, 1956 to January 4, 1957
although Art. 286(2) stood repealed, there was no power in
the State to tax inter-state sales; and from January 5, 1957
to March 31, 1957 the power to tax inter-state sales rested
exclusively with the Central Government under the Central
Sales Tax Act, 1956. Coal was transported from the colliery
of the company to consumers outside the taxing State as a
result of a covenant or incident of the contract of sale and
therefore the sale must be regarded as an inter-State sale
within the meaning of s. 3 (a) of the Central Act and not
liable to be taxed under the Hyderabad Act. [202 D, 203 B]
Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. v. S. R.Sarkar, [1961] 1 S.C.R.
379, State Trading Corporation of India Ltd. v. State of
Mysore, 14 S.T.C. 188 and Cement Marketing Co. of India v.
State of Mysore, 14 S.T.C. 1751, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 950-952 of
1963.
Appeals from the judgment dated the November 15, 1960 of the
Andhra Pradesh High Court in T.R.C. No. 17 of 1960 and dated
the July 25, 1961 in Special Appeals Nos. 1 & 2 of 1961.
N. A. Palkhivala, S. N. Andley, Rameshwar Nath, P. L.
Vohra and Mohinder Narain, for the appellant.
D. Munikanniah and T. V. R. Tatachari, for the
respondents.
M. Adhikari, Advocate-General, Madhya Pradesh and I. N.
Shroff, for intervener no. 1.
M. C. Setalvad, N. A. Palkhivala, A. P. Sen, R. K. P.
Shankardass, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder
Narain, for intervener no. 2.
N. A. Palkhivala, A. P. Sen, R. K. P. Shankardas, J. B.
Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for intervener
no. 3.
J. B. Dadachanji, for intervener no. 4.
S. V. Gupte, Solicitor-General and R. N. Sachthey, for
inter-intervener no. 5.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. The question which falls to be determined in these
appeals is "whether the appellant Company is liable to pay
sales-tax assessed under the Hyderabad General Sales Tax
Act, 1950 on the price of coal supplied to allottees outside
the taxing State pursuant to directions of the Coal
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Commissioner issued under the Colliery Control Order, 1945".
The Company which has its registered office at Hyderabad in
the former Part ’B’ State of Hyderabad, and
192
now in the State of Andhra Pradesh, carried on the business
of mining coal from its collieries and supplying it to
consumers within and outside the State of Hyderabad.
These appeals relate to three financial years 1954-55, 1955-
56 and 1956-57, during which coal was a controlled
commodity, and its disposal and use could be made only under
orders issued by the appropriate authority under the
Colliery Control Order, 1945. The Company claimed that Rs.
1,75,67,286/1/2 in the year 1954-55, Rs. 1,17,39,636/11/8 in
the year 1955-56, and Rs. 1,55,18,937/6/5 in the year 1956-
57 were not liable to be included in the taxable turnover
for levying sales tax under the Hyderabad General Sales Tax
Act, 1950, because the State Legislature which enacted that
Act was, by Art. 286 of the Constitution, prohibited from
imposing tax on transactions of supply of coal outside the
limits of the State under orders of the Coal Commissioner.
The Commercial Tax Officer, Hyderabad, admitted the claim of
the Company for the years 1954-55 and 1955-56 for exemption
from liability. The claim of the Company for the year 1956-
57 was however rejected. The Company appealed to the Deputy
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes and to the Sales-tax
Appellate Tribunal, Hyderabad, against the order of
assessment for the year 195657, but without success. The
Company then applied to the High Court of Andhra Pradesh in
its revisional jurisdiction, and submitted in support of its
claim that a part of its turnover was exempt from liability
to sales-tax under the Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act
because the turnover was in respect of sales, (a) which had
taken place outside the State within the meaning of Art.
286(1)(a) read with the Explanation thereto, and (b) which
were effected in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce, and the Parliament had not by law removed the ban
against imposition of tax on such sales by the State
Legislature. The High Court rejected these contentions. In
the meanwhile the Commissioner of Commercial Taxes issued
notices to the Company to show cause why the orders of
assessment for the years 1954-55 and 1955-56 should not be
reopened and why the sales which were exempted by the. order
of the Commercial Tax Officer should not be charged to tax,
and by his orders respectively dated February 8, 1961 and
November 16, 1960 for the two years 1954-55 and 1955-56
brought to tax the turnover which was previously treated as
exempt. The orders were carried to the High Court in appeal
and the same grounds which were set up in the revision
application relating to the assessment year 1956-57 were set
up, beside the ground that the action for reopening the
assessments by the Commissioner of Commercial Taxes was
barred by limitation and was therefore incompetent. The
High Court
193
rejected these contentions. With certificate granted by the
High Court, these appeals are preferred by the Company.
At the material time, by s. 2(k) of the Hyderabad General
Sales Tax Act, 1950, the expression "sale" was defined as
under :
"’Sale’ with all its grammatical variations
and cognate expressions means every transfer
of property in goods by one person to another
in the course of trade of business for cash or
for deferred payment or other valuable con-
sideration and includes also a transfer of
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property in goods involved in the execution of
a works contract, but does not include a
mortgage, hypothecation, charge or pledge.
Explanation 2. -Notwithstanding anything to
the contrary in any other law for the time
being in force, a transfer of goods, in
respect of which no tax can be imposed by
reason of the provisions contained in Article
286 of the Constitution, shall not be deemed
to be ’sale’ within the meaning of this
clause."
The Explanation was evidently introduced into the definition
with a view to avoid its operation on transactions which are
outside the taxing power of the States by virtue of Art. 286
of the Constitution.
In these appeals, the Company submitted in the first
instance that within the meaning of the Hyderabad General
Sales Tax Act, there was no sale of coal which was supplied
to the consumers pursuant to directions issued by the Coal
Commissioner and therefore the taxing provisions of the Act
were not attracted, and placed reliance in support thereof
on the judgment of this Court in New India Sugar Mills Ltd.
v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, Bihar(1). But this contention
was never raised at any stage before the taxing authorities
or even before the High Court, and on the view we take on
the other contentions raised in these appeals, we need not
consider this contention. We proceed to deal with these
appeals on the footing that the transactions under which
coal was supplied by the Company to the consumers as
directed by the Coal Commissioner were sales under the
general law of sale of goods.
Two questions arise for determination :
(1) Whether the transactions of sale were
"Explanation sales" and on that account hit by
Art. 286 (1) (a) of the Constitution, before
it was amended by the Constitution (Sixth
Amendment) Act, 1956; and
(1) 14 S.T.C. 316.
194
(2) whether those transactions were sales
which took place in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce.
It is urged that for a part of the period to
which these appeals relate, the sales are hit
by both the legislative bans contained in Art.
286 (1) (a) and Art. 286 (2), and for the rest
by one or the other of such bans.
It is necessary in the first instance to summarise the
provisions of the Colliery Control Order, 1945, and to set
out the manner in which coal was supplied by the Company to
its constituents. The Central Government was authorised by
notification to fix the price of coal or different prices
for different grades of coal which may be sold by colliery
owners (cl. 4). The colliery owners and their agents were
prohibited from selling, or offering for sale coal at a
price different from the prices fixed in that behalf under
cl. 4, and from granting or agreeing to grant any
commission, rebate or such other concession in any form
having the effect of reducing either directly or indirectly
the said price (cl. 5). A colliery owner could with the
consent of the Deputy Coal Commissioner sell coal at the
price fixed under cl. 4 direct to a consumer, if an
allotment was made by the Deputy Coal Commissioner to the
consumer -for such direct sale (cl. 6). The Central
Government could issue directions to any colliery owner
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regulating the disposal of his stocks of coal or of the
expected output of coal in the colliery during any period
(cl. 8); and notwithstanding any contract to the contrary,
every colliery Owner to whom a direction was given under cl.
8 had to dispose of coal in accordance therewith and could
not dispose of coal in contravention thereof (cl. 9). The
Coal Commissioner could order that coal dispatched by any
colliery owner to any person which was in transit (terminal
whereof were defined by the Explanation) shall subject to
terms and conditions if any imposed by the Coal Commissioner
be diverted and delivered to another person specified in the
order [cl. 10-A(1)]. As soon as an order was made under sub
cl. (1), all the rights of the consignee, the owner of the
colliery, or other person in that consignment of coal were,
subject to the terms of the order, to devolve upon and vest
in the person to whom the coal was to be delivered under the
order [cl. 10-A(2)]. An allottee of coal could not use it
otherwise than in accordance with the conditions of the
order of allotment, nor divert or transfer any such coal to
any other person except under a written authority from the
Central Government (c]. 12-B) : and no person could acquire
or purchase or agree to acquire or purchase coal from a
colliery, and no colliery owner could dispatch or agree to
dispatch or transport any coal from the colliery except
under the authority and in accordance with the authority of
the Central Government (cl. 12-E).
195
Broadly speaking the scheme of the Colliery Control Order
was that no person could acquire or purchase or agree to
acquire or purchase any coal from a colliery and no colliery
owner could sell or agree to sell or dispatch coal from the
colliery, except under the authority and in accordance with
the conditions prescribed by the Coal Commissioner, and that
the person to whom coal was supplied also could not utilise
it for a purpose other than the purpose for which it was
supplied, nor could he dispose of coal supplied to him.
Supply, use and disposal of coal were therefore regulated
from the stage of production till consumption.
The manner in which the Colliery Control Order was adminis-
tered is illustrated by certain documents on the record.
The Coal Commissioner addressed a letter to a colliery
authorising it to dispatch on the request of the specified
consumers coal not exceeding the quantities mentioned during
certain months and according to the schedule appended. In
the Schedule appended to the letter were set out the names
of the concerns to whom coal was to be supplied. Intimation
of the dispatch instructions was given to the consumers
individually. Acting upon this intimation, the consumer
addressed a letter to the colliery requesting that the
quantities of coal allotted may be dispatched to him by
train and gave instructions regarding booking, the name of
the person to whom coal may be consigned, and also about the
collection of price of coal supplied. The colliery then
loaded coal in railway wagons making out a "sale note" men-
tioning the cost per ton F.O.R. Colliery with "freight to
pay" and dispatched the same by rail to the consumer at the
destination requested. In the "sale note" were set out the
name of the buyer, grade and quantity of coal allotted, the
terms of sale, cost per ton F.O.R. Colliery, other charges,
and particulars of dispatch, such as the name of the Railway
Station to which the coal should be booked and the name of
the consignee. The sale note was subject to conditions of
sale, that the colliery shall not be responsible for non-de-
livery of coal or for any loss occasioned in consequence of
fire, snow, heat, flood, strikes, lockouts, shortage of
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wagons, restrictions on booking, accidental losses, etc.
that any taxes, export duty, cess or other charges not in
force imposed by the Government after the date of the sale
note shall be borne by the purchaser; that the colliery
reserved the right to demand payment in advance and to have
a right of lien on all. coal despatched until it was paid
for : that the sale note was subject to the quantity
allotted by the Deputy Coal Commissioner for buyers outside
the State and in the event of the Deputy Coal Commissioner
cancelling the whole or any part of the said allotment, such
cancellation shall be deemed to apply equally to -the sale
note.
196
Under the terms of the "sale note" the property in the coal
consigned passed, so far as the colliery was concerned, to
the allottee original or substituted-when the goods were
loaded into the railway wagons for conveyance, and
thereafter all losses and any new taxes imposed were to be
borne by the purchaser, the colliery having only a right of
lien on coal not paid for. Coal supplied was meant for
consumption by the allottee : therefore when the allottee
was outside the State, it was supplied for the purpose of
consumption in the State in which the, allottee resided or
carried on business.
In view of the legislative developments which we will
presently notice, the period of the three assessment years
may be divided into four sub-periods. They are : April 1,
1954 to September 6, 1955; September 7, 1955 to September
10, 1956; September 11, 1956 to January 4, 1957 and January
5, 1957 to March 31, 1957. In making this sub-division we
have not taken into account the application of the States
Reorganisation Act as a result of which on November 1, 1956,
the Part ’B’ State of Hyderabad ceased to exist and the
State of Andhra Pradesh came into existence by merger of
certain areas including parts of the State of Hyderabad.
The effect of the Reorganisation Act had a bearing only on
the territorial operation of the constitutional prohibitions
under Art. 286.
Under the Government of India Act, 1935, it was open to
every Provincial Legislature to enact legislation
authorising_ the levy of tax on sale of goods in respect of
transactions whether within or outside the Province,
provided the Province had a territorial nexus with one or
more elements constituting the sale. This resulted in levy
of sales tax by many Provinces in respect of the same
transaction--each Province fixing upon one or more elements
constituting the sale with which it had a territorial nexus.
The Constitution with a view to prevent imposition of
manifold taxes on the same transaction of sale imposed by
Art. 286 restrictions on the levy of sale and purchase taxes
on certain classes of transactions. Article 286, as it was
originally enacted, read as follows
"(1) No law of a State shall impose, or
authorise the imposition of, a tax on the sale
or purchase of goods where such sale or
purchase takes place-
(a) outside the State; or
(b) in the course of the import of the goods
into, or export of the goods out of, the
territory of India.
Explanation. For the purposes of sub-clause
(a), a sale or purchase shall be deemed to
have taken place in the State in which the
goods have actually been delivered
197
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as a direct result of such sale or purchase
for the purpose of consumption in that State,
notwithstanding the fact that under
the general law relating to sale of goods the
property in the goods has by reason of such
sale or purchase passed in another State.
(2) Except in so far as Parliament may by
law otherwise provide, no law of a State shall
impose, or authorise the imposition of, a tax
on the sale or purchase of any goods where
such sale or purchase takes place in the
course of inter-State trade or commerce :
Provided that the President may by order
direct that any tax on the sale or purchase of
goods which was being lawfully levied by the
Government of any State immediately before the
commencement of this Constitution shall,
notwithstanding that the imposition of such
tax is contrary to the provisions of this
clause, continue to be levied until the
thirty-first day of March, 1951.
(3) No law made by the Legislature of a
State imposing, or authorising the imposition
of, a tax on the sale or purchase of any such
goods as have been declared by Parliament by
law to be essential for the life of the com-
munity shall have effect unless it has been
reserved for the consideration of the
President and has received his assent."
Article 286, thus imposed qua sales four bans upon
legislative power of the States. Clause (1) prohibited
every State from imposing or authorising, the imposition of,
a tax on outside sales and on sales in the course of import
into or export outside the territory of India. By cl. (2)
the State was prohibited from imposing tax on the sale of
goods where such sale took place in the course of inter-
State trade or commerce. But the ban could be removed by
the legislation made by the Parliament. By cl. (3) the
Legislature of a State was incompetent to impose or
authorise imposition of a tax on the sale or purchase of any
goods declared by the Parliament by law to be essential for
the life of the community, unless the legislation was
reserved for the consideration of the President and had
received his assent.
This Court in The Bengal Immunity Company Ltd. v. State of
Bihar(1) held that the operative provisions of the several
parts of Art. 286, namely cl. (1)(a), cl. (1)(b), cl. (2)
and cl. (3), are intended to deal with different topics and
one cannot be projected or read
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603.
197
198
into another, and therefore the Explanation in cl. (1)(a)
cannot legitimately be extended to cl. (2) either as an
exception or as a proviso thereto or read as curtailing or
limiting the ambit of cl. (2). This Court further held that
until the Parliament by law made in exercise of the powers
vested in it by cl. (2) of Art. 286 provides otherwise, no
State may impose or authorise the imposition of any tax on
sales or purchases of goods when such sales or purchases
take place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce,
and therefore the State Legislature could not charge inter-
State sales or purchases until the Parliament had otherwise
provided. The judgment in The Bengal Immunity Company’s
case(1) was delivered on September 6, 1955. The President
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then issued the Sales Tax Laws Validation Ordinance, 1956,
on January 30, 1956, the provisions of which were later
embodied in the Sales Tax Laws Validation Act, 1956. By
this Act notwithstanding any judgment, decree or Order of
any Court, no law of a State imposing, or authorising the
imposition of, a tax on the sale or purchase of any goods
where such sale or purchase took place in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce during the period between the
1st day of April, 1951 and the 6th day of September, 1955,
shall be deemed to be invalid or ever to have been invalid
merely by reason of the fact that such sale or purchase took
place in the course of inter-State trade or commerce; and
all such taxes levied or collected or purported to have been
levied or collected during the aforesaid period shall be
deemed always to have been validly levied or collected in
accordance with law. The Parliament thereby removed the ban
contained in Art. 286(2) of the Constitution retrospectively
but limited only to the period between April 1, 1951 and
September 6, 1955. All transactions of sale, even though
they were inter-State could for that period be lawfully
charged to tax. But Art. 286(2) remained operative after
September 6, 1955 till the Constitution was amended by the
Constitution (Sixth Amendment) Act, i.e., September 11,
1956. By the amendment, the Explanation to cl. (1) of Art.
286 was deleted and for cls. (2) & (3) the following clauses
were substituted :
" (2) Parliament may by law formulate
principles for determining when a sale or
purchase of goods takes place in any of the
ways mentioned in clause (1).
(3) Any law of a State shall, in so far as
it imposes,, or authorises the imposition of,
a tax on the sale or purchase of goods
"declared by Parliament by law to be of
special importance in inter-State trade or
commerce, be subject to such restrictions and
conditions in regard to the
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603;
199
system of levy, rates and other incidents of
the tax as Parliament may by law specify."
By cl. (2) of Art. 286 as amended, the Parliament was
authorised to formulate principle for determining when a
sale or purchase of goods takes place in any of the ways
mentioned in cl. (1), namely, outside the State or in the
course of the import into, or export out of the territory of
India. By the Constitution (Sixth Amendment) Act, the
Parliament was entrusted with power under Art. 269(3) to
formulate principles for determining when a sale or purchase
of goods takes place in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce; and to effectuate the conferment of that power in
the Seventh Schedule, Entry 92A was added in the First List
and Entry 54 in the Second List was amended. The Parliament
enacted, in exercise of that power, the Central Sales Tax
Act 74 of 1956 (which became operative as from January 5,
1957) to formulate principles for determining when a sale or
purchase of goods takes place in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce or outside a State or in the course of
import into or export from India, and to provide for the
levy, collection and distribution of taxes on sales of goods
in the course of inter-State trade or commerce and to
declare certain goods to be of special importance in inter-
State trade or commerce etc.
For the period April 1, 1954 to September 6, 1955 therefore
transactions which were inter-State were deemed, because of
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the Sales Tax Laws Validation Act, taxable by the States-the
bar contained in Art. 286(2) having been retrospectively
removed. For the period September 7, 1955 to September 10,
1956 Art. 286(2) having remained in operation and the Sales
Tax Laws Validation Act, 1956, not having been extended to
cover that period, interState sales could not be taxed by
the State Legislature. During the period September 11, 1956
to January 4, 1957 Art. 286(2) stood repealed by the
Constitution (Sixth Amendment) Act, 1956. but the Parliament
had assumed to itself the power under Entry 92A of the First
List in the Seventh Schedule to tax sale or purchase of
goods where such sale or purchase takes place in the course
of inter-State trade or commerce. In exercise of the power
to formulate principles for determining when a sale or
purchase of goods takes place in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce, the Parliament enacted the Central Sales
Tax Act, 1956 which was brought into force on January 5,
1957, and after that date interState sales could be taxed
under the provisions of the Central Sales Tax Act.
200
The Company claims that the transactions which are sought to
be charged for the period between April 1, 1954 to September
6, 1955 are not taxable, because they were covered by
Explanation to cl. (1)(a) of Art. 286 of the Constitution,
before it was amended.For the period between September 7,
1955 and September 10, 1956, it is claimed that the
transactions are not taxable, because they are covered by
the Explanation to Art. 286(1) and also because they are
inter-State sales. For the period September 11, 1956 to
January 4, 1957 the transactions are not taxable, because
they are interState sales not chargeable under any
statute--State or Parliamentary-and for the period January
5, 1957 to March 31, 1957, the transactions are not
chargeable by the State, because they are interState and are
chargeable under the Central Sales Tax Act alone.
The true effect of Explanation to Art. 286(1) and Art.
286(2) gave rise to conflicting opinions, but it is
unnecessary to enter upon a discussion of the earlier cases,
for the principles applicable thereto have now been settled
by decisions of this Court as to what transactions are
covered by the Explanation to cl. (1) of Art. 286 before it
was amended.
In Shree Bajrang Jute Mills Ltd. Guntur v. The State of
Andhra Pradesh(1), it was held by this Court that a sale
falls within the Explanation to Art. 286(1)(a) if goods have
actually been delivered as a direct result of the sale for
the purpose of consumption in the State in which they are
delivered, and the expression "actually delivered" in the
context in which it occurs can only mean physical delivery
of the goods, or such other action as puts the goods in the
possession of the purchaser. The expression "actually
delivered" does not include mere symbolical or notional
delivery e.g. by entrusting the goods to a common carrier,
or even by delivery of documents of title like railway
receipts. It was said that the rule contained in S. 39(1)
of the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930 has no application in
dealing with a constitutional provision which while imposing
a restriction upon the legislative power of the States en-
trusts exclusive power to levy sales tax to the State in
which the goods have been actually delivered for the purpose
of consumption. The Court also held that if the goods were
actually delivered for consumption in another State it was
immaterial whether the property in the goods passed in the
State from which they were dispatched.
Counsel for the State of Andhra Pradesh contended that in
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the present case coal dispatched from the territory of the
taxing State to purchasers in other States was actually
delivered within the tax-
(1) 15 S.T.C. 430.
201
ing State and therefore the principle of Shree Bajrang Jute
Mills’ case(1) did not apply to those transactions. That
contention has however no force. The Explanation defines
the State in which the goods have actually been delivered
for consumption, as the State in which for the purpose of
cl. (1)(a) of Art. 286 the sale shall be deemed to have
taken place. That State alone in which the sale is deemed
to take place has the power to tax the sale, and for this
purpose it is immaterial that property in the goods has
under the general law relating to sale of goods passed in
another State in which the allotted resided or carried on
business. Delivery of coal to the Railway Administration
may amount to delivery to the allottee for the purpose of
the general law relating to sale of goods, but thereby coal
cannot be said to be "actually delivered" within the meaning
of the Explanation to Art. 286(1)(a). It is also true that
under the terms of the sale-note under which coal was
dispatched on terms F.O.R. Singareni the Company was not
responsible for loss or damage to the consignment after it
was loaded in the wagons, that may indicate that the Company
had no property in the goods after it was in transit. But
determination of the State in which sale shall be deemed to
have taken place is artificially determined not by terms of
the contract of sale, nor by the legal concept of passing of
property in the goods sold by the delivery for the purpose
of consumption.. As observed by Das Ag. C.J. in the Bengal
Immunity Company’s case(1)
"The shifting of situs of a sale or purchase
from its actual ’situs’ under the general law
to a fictional ’situs’ under the Explanation
takes the sale or purchase out of the taxing
power of all States other than the State where
the ’situs’ is fictionally fixed."
Sales-tax under the Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act on
transactions of coal delivered to the Railway or other
carrier for carriage to places outside the taxing State and
for delivery for consumption therein is therefore not
leviable to be taxed by virtue of the Explanation to Art.
286(1).
For the period September 7, 1955 to September 10, 1956, the
turnover from sale of coal actually delivered outside the
State of Andhra for consumption in those States would also
be exempt from liability, because the Explanation continued
to remain in force till September 10, 1956. The Company
would also be entitled to exemption from liability to tax
because the State had during that period no power to levy
tax on inter-State sales. As
(1) 15 S.T.C 430.
(2) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603.
202
pointed out by Venkatarama Ayyar, J., in the Bengal Immunity
Company casc(1) :
"A sale could be said to begin the course of
interState trade only if two conditions concur
: (1) A sale of goods, and (2) a transport of
those goods from one State to another under
the contract of sale. Unless both these
conditions are satisfied, there can be no sale
in the course of inter-State trade."
In these transactions relating to supply of coal, which we
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have, assumed are sales, coal was transported in pursuance
of the allotment orders to other States. We have also
assumed for the purpose of this argument, that compliance
with allotment orders resulted in a contract of sale. The
transactions were unquestionably in the course of inter-
State trade.
For the period September 11, 1956 to January 4, 1957, Art.
286(2) stood repealed and there was no power in the State to
tax an inter-State sale. For the period between January 5,
1957 and March 31, 1957 the power to tax inter-State sales
was governed by the Central Sales Tax Act, 1956. By the
Constitution (Sixth Amendment) Act amending Art. 286(2) and
incorporating Entry 92A in List 1 of the Seventh Schedule
read with Art. 269(3) the power to tax sales in the course
of interState trade or commerce rested with the Central
Government. Sales-tax for the period from January 5, 1957
to March 31, 1957, has not been levied under the Central
Sales Tax Act, 1956, and if the transactions by the Company
were taxable under that Act, the State of Andhra Pradesh had
no power to tax those transactions. As transactions of sale
in the course of inter-State trade or commerce within the
meaning of s. 3, they could not be taxed under the Hyderabad
General Sales Tax Act, 1950. Section 3 of the Central Sales
Tax Act, 1956 provides that "a sale . . . of goods shall be
deemed to take place in the course of inter-State, trade or
commerce if the sale . . . occasions the movement of goods
from one State to another or is effected by a transfer of
documents of title to the goods during their movement from
one State to another". In Tata Iron and Steel Company Ltd.
v. S. R. Sarkar (2 ) this Court held that cl. (a) of s. 3
covers sales in which the movement of goods from one State
to another is the result of a covenant or incident of the
contract of sale, and property in the goods passes in either
State. That view was reaffirmed in The State Trading
Corporation of India Ltd. & Another v. The State of
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603.
(2) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 379.
203
Mysore and Another(1) and Cement Marketing Company of India
v. State of Mysore(1).
Coal in the appeals under review was transported from the
colliery of the Company to the consumers outside the taxing
State, as a result of the covenant or incident of the
contract of sale and therefore the sale must be regarded as
an inter-State sale and not liable to be taxed under the
Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act, 1950. The High Court was,
in our view, in error in holding that the turnover of the
Company in which coal was loaded in railway wagons for
conveyance to places outside the taxing State was taxable
under the Hyderabad General Sales Tax Act. In that view we
do not think it necessary to decide whether the Commissioner
of Commercial Taxes was right in reopening the assessments
for the years 1954-55 and 1955-56 in the manner he has
purported to do.
The appeals are allowed and the order passed by the High
Court is set aside. It is declared that the turnover of the
Company amounting to Rs. 1,75,67,286/1/2 for the year 1954-
55; Rs. 1,17,39,636/11/8 for the year 1955-56 and Rs.
1,55,18,957/6/5 for the year 1956-57 was exempt from
liability to sales tax under the Hyderabad General Sales Tax
Act, 1950. The Company will be entitled to its costs in the
appeals in this Court and the High Court. There will be one
hearing fee.
Appeals allowed.
(1) 14 T.C. 188.
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(2) 14 S.T.C 175.
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